December 5, 2025 11:01 pm

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USDOT to WA state, comply or lose federal funding

WASHINGTON, D.C. – United States Department of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy on August 26 announced California, Washington, and New Mexico will lose federal funding unless they adopt and enforce English Language Proficiency (ELP) requirements for commercial motor vehicle drivers. The three states have 30 days to come into compliance before the Department will withhold up to 100% of funding from the Motor Carrier Safety Assistance Program (MCSAP).  

(L-R) Washington State Governor Bob Ferguson, Harjinder Singh, and U.S. Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy. Source: Image made by Lynnwood Times

“States don’t get to pick and choose which federal safety rules to follow,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean P. Duffy. “As we saw with the horrific Florida crash that killed three, when states fail to enforce the law, they put the driving public in danger. Under President Trump’s leadership, we are taking aggressive action to close these safety gaps, hold states accountable, and make sure every commercial driver on the road is qualified to operate a 40-ton vehicle.” 

The MCSAP formula grant provides financial assistance to State and local law enforcement agencies to increase commercial motor vehicle-related enforcement and safety activities nationwide.

Secretary Duffy announced on August 19 that his department’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) launched an official investigation into how failures at the Department of Licensing in the states of Washington and California led to the issuance of a Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) to Harjinder Singh, 28, a citizen of India, and an undocumented immigrant. Singh allegedly killed three on August 12 near Lucie County, Florida, while executing an illegal U-turn on the Florida Turnpike.

An investigation by FMCSA found significant failures by California, Washington, and New Mexico to properly place drivers out-of-service for ELP violations. In addition to the data, California Highway Patrol has also publicly stated it has no intention of following this important federal regulation.   

These actions also come as Secretary Duffy advances its nationwide audit of non-domiciled commercial driver’s license (CDL) issuance – part of a broader effort to enhance safety on America’s roads and restore order to the trucking industry.  

California, Washington, and New Mexico on Tuesday received notices, known as Notices of Proposed Determination of Nonconformity, which open a formal process that would result in the suspension of millions of dollars in federal funds through the Motor Carrier Safety Assistance Program if the states do not demonstrate full compliance with federal English Language Proficiency standards—that is roughly $10.5 million for Washington state alone, California could lose $30 million, and New Mexico, $7 million in federal funds.

An investigation by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration found significant failures by all three states to follow federal guidelines to properly place drivers out-of-service for ELP violations. From June 25 to August 21:

  • California – California has failed to adopt and enforce compatible ELP laws and regulations. From June 25, 2025 through August 21, 2025, of the roughly 34,000 inspections resulting in at least one reported violation, only one inspection involved an ELP violation resulting in a driver being placed out of service. Notably, at least 23 drivers with documented ELP out-of-service violations in other states were later inspected in California – yet the state failed to honor those violations or enforce ELP, allowing unqualified drivers to continue operating on our roads.
  • Washington – Washington has adopted the ELP regulation but is failing to enforce it. From June 25, 2025 through August 21, 2025, of the more than 6,000 inspections resulting in at least one reported violation, only four inspections involved an ELP violation resulting in a driver being placed out of service. Moreover, two inspections resulted in ELP citations but the driver was not placed out-of-service—contrary to Federal requirements. In addition, at least 4 drivers with documented ELP out-of-service violations in other states were later inspected in Washington – yet the state failed to honor those violations or enforce ELP, undermining federal safety standards and leaving dangerous gaps in enforcement.
  • New Mexico – New Mexico has adopted the ELP regulation but is failing to enforce it. From June 25, 2025 through August 21, 2025 the state reported placing zero drivers out-of-service for ELP violations and allowed at least seven unqualified drivers already found unable to meet ELP standards to keep driving and endangering the lives of others. 

2 Responses

  1. Why does this suspiciously sound like “they (the legal brown-skinned immigrants) are eating the dogs and cats” … again? Duffy and Trumpy-Dumpy are weaponizing highway safety.

    The issue really is, did this driver do something which was illegal but more importantly unsafe? The answer is yes, but that happens to many Americans who are fully proficient in English. Also, any driving test, state or federal, should require that drivers understand the rules of the road and can identify traffic signs and signals. If Florida or the Feds failded at doing that, that’s their faults.

    1. You are wrong again. Go ahead and make excuses, typical behavior from your type until you are impacted personally. Would be interested in your opinion if it was your three family members killed by his driving. I’m sure you would be singing a different tune.

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