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TransportationBlogsLawsuit Seeks to Halt FMCSA's Non-Domiciled CDL Final Rule
Lawsuit Seeks to Halt FMCSA's Non-Domiciled CDL Final Rule
TransportationLegal

Lawsuit Seeks to Halt FMCSA's Non-Domiciled CDL Final Rule

•February 27, 2026
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Overdrive
Overdrive•Feb 27, 2026

Why It Matters

The outcome will determine whether thousands of immigrant and DACA drivers retain CDL access, affecting the trucking labor pool and broader road‑safety policy.

Key Takeaways

  • •Petition seeks emergency stay of March 16 rule effective date
  • •Plaintiffs claim rule is arbitrary, capricious, harms drivers
  • •FMCSA cites 17 fatal crashes as safety justification
  • •Non‑domiciled CDL holders are 5% of drivers, 0.2% crashes
  • •Congress may codify restrictions, impacting immigrant driver workforce

Pulse Analysis

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s final rule on non‑domiciled commercial driver’s licenses aims to tighten eligibility by barring drivers whose licenses were issued outside the United States unless they meet additional safety screens. The agency points to 17 fatal crashes in 2025 involving such drivers as evidence that the existing state‑administered vetting process is insufficient. Critics, however, highlight agency data showing that non‑domiciled CDL holders constitute roughly five percent of the trucking workforce yet account for only two‑tenths of a percent of fatal collisions, raising questions about the rule’s proportionality.

The petitioners, led by owner‑operator Jorge Rivera Lujan, have filed an emergency motion seeking a stay of the March 16 effective date, arguing that the rule was adopted in an arbitrary and capricious manner. A prior emergency stay on the interim version of the rule was granted after a court found the agency’s safety rationale unconvincing, noting the low crash involvement of non‑domiciled drivers. If the stay is denied, trucking firms could lose a pool of experienced drivers, intensifying the chronic driver shortage and potentially driving up freight rates for shippers.

Congressional leaders and the Trump administration have signaled intent to codify the FMCSA’s restrictions, turning a regulatory proposal into statutory law. Such a move would cement tighter licensing standards, but it could also trigger litigation from immigrant advocacy groups and exacerbate labor market tensions in an industry already grappling with recruitment challenges. Observers suggest that a balanced approach—enhancing driver screening while preserving access for qualified non‑citizen operators—may offer the best path to improve road safety without compromising the supply chain.

Lawsuit seeks to halt FMCSA's non-domiciled CDL final rule

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