HR-5800-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Highways and Transit.
Sponsored by Pat Harrigan (R-NC)
What it does
This bill would require all applicants for a new or renewed commercial driver's license (CDL) to pass a standardized English language proficiency test before the license is issued. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) would develop and approve the test, which would cover reading road signs, understanding spoken instructions and emergency communications, and writing driver logs and reports. States would administer the test as part of their CDL process and report annual compliance data to FMCSA. States that do not comply could have a portion of their federal highway funds withheld.
Who benefits
Motorists and the general public who share roads with commercial vehicles, if the requirement reduces communication-related safety incidents. English-speaking CDL applicants who would face no new barrier to licensure. Trucking companies that prefer English-proficient drivers for operational and compliance reasons. Emergency responders who communicate with commercial drivers during incidents. Domestic-born or English-fluent drivers who may face less competition from non-English-speaking applicants.
Who is hurt
Non-English-speaking or limited-English-proficient CDL applicants — including many immigrants and naturalized citizens — who would be unable to obtain or renew a CDL without passing the test. Trucking companies and freight carriers that rely on a multilingual driver workforce, particularly in regions with large immigrant labor pools. Agricultural and food supply chains that depend on immigrant truck drivers. Consumers who could see freight costs rise if the driver supply contracts. Language-minority communities whose members work in commercial driving. States that would bear administrative costs of developing and running the new testing infrastructure.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that commercial drivers must be able to read road signs, respond to emergency communications, and complete required federal documentation — all in English — and that existing federal regulations (49 C.F.R. § 391.11) already require interstate commercial drivers to read and speak English sufficiently, but enforcement has been inconsistent. They contend that a standardized, verified proficiency test would close that enforcement gap and reduce accidents caused by communication failures between drivers, dispatchers, and first responders. Proponents also argue that uniform federal standards would create a level playing field across all 50 states, replacing a patchwork of inconsistent state practices.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that federal regulations already require English proficiency for interstate commercial drivers, making this bill largely duplicative while adding a new bureaucratic testing layer that would disproportionately exclude immigrant workers from an industry facing a documented driver shortage estimated at over 80,000 positions by the American Trucking Associations. They contend that the bill's real-world effect would be to shrink the CDL workforce, raise freight costs, and burden supply chains — without clear evidence that language barriers, rather than other factors, are a primary cause of commercial vehicle accidents. Critics also note that the bill's fund-withholding mechanism could penalize states with large multilingual populations for reflecting their own labor market realities.
Constitutional context
Congress has broad authority to regulate commercial trucking under the Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3), as interstate freight transport is quintessentially economic activity with a direct nexus to interstate commerce under Wickard v. Filburn (1942). The fund-withholding enforcement mechanism is a well-established form of conditional spending, similar to mechanisms upheld in prior highway safety legislation. Post-Loper Bright v. Raimondo (2024), courts would independently review FMCSA's interpretation of its statutory authority to develop and administer the proficiency test, rather than deferring to the agency.
Checks and balances
Congress gains authority by adding a new federal licensing condition; FMCSA gains rulemaking and test-development power; states retain administrative responsibility but face fund withholding for noncompliance; Congress receives annual reports from the Secretary, providing an oversight check on executive implementation.
Historical precedent
Federal regulations at 49 C.F.R. § 391.11 have long required interstate commercial drivers to read and speak English, but no prior federal statute has mandated a standardized, verified proficiency test as a condition of CDL issuance.