What to know about the fight over whether New York should lose $74M for not revoking immigrant CDLs


New York filed a lawsuit Friday to challenge the federal Transportation Department’s decision to withhold nearly $74 million in highway money because the state refused to revoke nearly 33,000 questionable commercial driver’s licenses for immigrants since an audit uncovered problems last year.

New York joins California in suing over Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy’s efforts to tighten up the rules for which immigrants can qualify to get a commercial driver’s license and make sure the states are properly enforcing the existing rules.

The federal government declined to comment on the new lawsuit Friday, but officials have been clear about the problems they found with more than half of the 200 licenses they reviewed. Officials said they found significant flaws such as licenses remaining valid long after an immigrant was authorized to be in the country. New York’s computer system defaulted to issuing licenses valid for eight years regardless of how long a driver’s visa remained valid, according to the Transportation Department.

The issue became prominent after an August crash in Florida involving a truck driver who Duffy said shouldn’t have ever had a license performing an illegal U-turn that killed three people. California has lost $200 million over concerns about its non-domiciled commercial driver’s licenses and whether it is enforcing English language requirements for truckers. Several other states — including Pennsylvania, Minnesota and North Carolina — have been warned they are at risk of losing funding.

But most states have either complied or remain in negotiations with the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration. The federal government has reviewed records related to these non-domiciled CDLs in every state.

New York officials say this is ‘political payback’

New York Attorney General Letitia James said the state believes it properly followed all the rules for commercial licenses that were in place at the time they were issued, so it doesn’t plan to revoke the licenses.

New York officials reviewed all those cases and found that all the recipients were authorized to be in the country when they received their licenses. The state pointed that out to federal officials in January, so James said it’s unfair for the federal government to withhold money the state relies on to help provide safe roads and bridges.

“By canceling this funding, the federal government is putting jobs and communities at risk. New Yorkers are counting on these investments, and we will not let the president jeopardize our communities’ safety,” she said.



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