The U.S. Department of Transportation has enacted an emergency interim final rule to crack down on how states issue non-domiciled Commercial Learner’s Permits (CLPs) and CDLs. The rule is effective immediately.
What Changed
- States must now enforce tighter eligibility checks, including verifying employment-based visas and conducting federal immigration status checks via the SAVE system.
- Any improperly issued non-domiciled CDLs must be revoked.
- States like California have 30 days to comply or risk losing federal highway funding.
How & When This Could Impact Freight
Short term (weeks to months):
- Some carriers may see immediate capacity loss if drivers with now-invalid CDLs are removed from service.
- States must scramble to audit and revoke non-compliant licenses — causing operational disruptions.
- Brokers might face constraints in sourcing drivers for certain lanes until compliance stabilizes.
Medium term (3–6 months):
- Freight rates may pressure upward in hot zones as capacity tightens.
- Some shippers might find loads unservable in states where non-domiciled CDLs were widely used.
- Carriers will need to adapt driver recruiting to stricter compliance and vetting.
Bottom line: This is a fast-acting regulatory shift with ripple effects on capacity, rates, and driver availability, especially in regions with high reliance on non-domiciled drivers.