HR-2360-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Highways and Transit.
Sponsored by John Carter (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would permanently extend an existing federal exemption that allows school bus drivers to skip the engine compartment ("under-the-hood") portion of the commercial driver's license (CDL) pre-trip vehicle inspection skills test. The exemption was originally granted by the Department of Transportation in December 2024 on a temporary basis. The bill would also require any state that participates in the exemption to submit annual reports to the Secretary of Transportation for six years, documenting how many drivers obtained a CDL under the exemption.
Who benefits
School bus driver candidates who would no longer need to demonstrate engine compartment inspection skills during CDL testing. School districts and private bus contractors facing driver shortages, who may find it easier to recruit and license new drivers. Rural and suburban communities that depend on school bus transportation. State motor vehicle agencies that administer CDL testing, which may see reduced testing complexity. Prospective drivers who lack mechanical knowledge but are otherwise qualified to safely operate a school bus.
Who is hurt
Students and families who rely on school buses and may have concerns about whether drivers are fully trained to identify mechanical problems before a trip. Vehicle maintenance workers and mechanics whose role in pre-trip safety checks may become more critical if drivers are less trained to catch engine issues. CDL training schools and instructors who teach the engine inspection component and may see reduced demand for that portion of their curriculum. Potentially, school districts or insurers if a mechanical failure goes undetected due to a driver's reduced inspection training.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that school bus drivers operate vehicles with fundamentally different engine configurations than standard commercial trucks, making the traditional under-the-hood inspection test largely irrelevant to their actual duties. They contend that the existing driver shortage in school transportation is a documented national problem, and that removing a testing barrier that does not reflect real-world school bus operation would expand the pool of qualified candidates without meaningfully reducing safety. The December 2024 DOT exemption itself found no safety risk sufficient to deny the temporary waiver, lending regulatory support to making it permanent.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that pre-trip vehicle inspections — including engine compartment checks — are a foundational safety skill for any commercial driver, and that exempting school bus drivers creates a lower safety standard for the operators of vehicles carrying children. They contend that mechanical failures such as fluid leaks, belt wear, or cooling system problems can be detected during an under-the-hood inspection, and that a driver untrained to perform this check may miss warning signs before a trip. Critics may also argue that addressing the driver shortage through reduced testing standards treats a symptom rather than the underlying causes, such as compensation and working conditions.