DOT testing violations now held against CDLs
Implementation of a second Drug and Alcohol Clearinghouse rule (Clearinghouse-II) ties commercial licensing to a driver’s Clearinghouse status effective November 18, 2024.
Drivers who are currently in a prohibited status face a denied or downgraded commercial driver’s license (CDL) or commercial learner’s permit (CLP).
Out of the 178,839 drivers currently in a prohibited status:
- 136,224 have yet to start the return-to-duty process,
- 17,368 are in process, and
- 25,247 show as eligible to take a return-to-duty test.
A prohibited status is placed on a driver’s Clearinghouse record as the result of DOT drug or alcohol violation under 49 CFR Part 382.
DMV must act on prohibited drivers
State driver’s licensing agencies (SDLAs) have been instructed by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) to:
- Deny CDL and CLP issuance, renewal, upgrade, or transfer for any driver that has an unresolved violation (prohibited status) in the Clearinghouse.
- Downgrade existing CDL and CLP holders while they are in prohibited status in the Clearinghouse.
The SDLA must report the downgrade within 60 days of learning of the status and reinstate privileges after learning that the driver is no longer prohibited.
Vague reinstatement procedures
The Clearinghouse regulations (383.73(q)) don’t outline administrative processes for the SDLA to reinstate CDL privileges. As a result, drivers can’t assume their licenses are automatically restored when the status changes from prohibited to not prohibited in the Clearinghouse. They must speak with the SDLA to learn how to reclaim their licenses and what actions and documentation might be required of them.
Monitoring the reinstatement status is one additional step for the motor carrier before allowing the driver to operate a commercial motor vehicle (CMV) again. It must ensure the driver is properly licensed or face a citation (using a driver without a CDL when one is required).
MVRs help identify prohibited drivers
Knowledge of a prohibited status will no longer be limited to just Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance (CVSA) inspectors during a roadside inspection. CVSA inspectors can see a driver’s status to determine if a driver should be placed out of service.
The implementation of this Clearinghouse rule now allows all safety enforcement officers to identify prohibited drivers after a license downgrade by conducting a license check during a routine traffic stop. This increased visibility will keep drivers from operating commercial vehicles when restricted.
In addition, tying the driver’s CDL or CLP to the Clearinghouse status provides a medium for motor carriers that are not subject to Part 382. These carriers don’t have a Clearinghouse account and no means of detecting a prohibited status. But a driver with an unresolved testing violation is restricted from the operation of all CMVs, including non-CDL CMVs. These motor carriers can avoid using a driver in a prohibited status through a motor vehicle record (MVR) or continuous MVR monitoring. Those who manage a carrier’s driver qualifications (DQ) files should be brought into the conversation, since the MVR will show a downgraded CDL.
Key to remember: Drivers who have a Part 382 violation, but do not pursue the return-to-duty process, will lose their ability to hold a CDL, since SDLAs now tie licensing to a driver’s Clearinghouse status.