S-1284-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
Sponsored by John Cornyn (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would direct the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) to permanently extend an existing temporary exemption that allows states to waive the "under-the-hood" engine compartment inspection portion of the commercial driver's license (CDL) skills test for school bus driver applicants. States choosing to participate must restrict exempted drivers to intrastate (within-state) school bus operation only, must still administer all other pre-trip vehicle inspection components, and must submit annual reports to FMCSA on the number of drivers licensed under the exemption.
Who benefits
Prospective school bus drivers who find the engine compartment inspection test a barrier to obtaining a CDL. School districts and private school bus contractors facing driver shortages, who would have a larger pool of eligible applicants. Students and families who depend on school bus transportation, particularly in rural or underserved areas where driver shortages are most acute. State motor vehicle licensing agencies that administer CDL testing, which would have a simplified, permanent rule to follow rather than a recurring temporary exemption. Small and rural school districts with limited resources to train drivers on engine inspection procedures.
Who is hurt
School bus drivers who currently hold a full CDL — including the engine inspection component — may face competitive disadvantage or wage pressure if the driver pool expands. Vehicle maintenance technicians and mechanics who argue that drivers with basic engine knowledge can catch problems before they become safety incidents. Parents and student safety advocates who believe the engine inspection requirement serves a meaningful safety function. States that prefer the flexibility of the current temporary exemption process, which allows periodic review and adjustment of terms and conditions, may lose that review mechanism under a permanent rule.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the under-the-hood inspection requirement is a significant and unnecessary barrier to school bus driver recruitment at a time when many districts face chronic shortages. They contend that school bus drivers are already required to complete all other pre-trip inspection components and are restricted to intrastate routes, meaning the engine compartment test adds minimal safety value for this specific population. The FMCSA itself has renewed this exemption repeatedly since its original issuance, suggesting the agency has found no evidence of increased safety incidents among drivers licensed under it.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the engine compartment inspection requirement exists because drivers who can identify mechanical problems — such as fluid leaks, belt wear, or cooling system issues — before a trip are a meaningful line of defense against breakdowns and accidents involving children. They contend that making the exemption permanent removes the periodic safety review built into the temporary exemption process, locking in a reduced standard without ongoing evidence-based evaluation. Critics may also argue that driver shortages are better addressed through pay increases or training incentives rather than by reducing licensing standards.