FMCSA awards $77 million in grants for CMV safety
More than $77 million dollars in grants was awarded to states and educational institutions by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) to address commercial motor vehicle (CMV) safety.
The FMCSA awarded:
- $43.3 million in High Priority (HP) grants to enhance states' CMV safety efforts, as well as advance technological capability within states;
- $32 million in Commercial Driver's License Program Implementation (CDLPI) grants to enhance efforts by states to improve the national commercial driver's license (CDL) program; and
- $2 million in CMV Operator Safety Training (CMV-OST) grants to 16 education institutions to help train veterans for jobs as commercial bus and truck drivers.
The HP grant program consists of HP-CMV grants and HP-Innovative Technology Deployment grants. They are designed to provide financial assistance to state CMV safety efforts and to advance technology capability and promote the deployment of intelligent transportation system applications for CMV operations.
The CDLPI program helps to achieve compliance with FMCSA regulations for driver's license standards and programs. It also assists other entities capable of executing national projects that aid states in their compliance efforts.
The CMV-OST program awards grants to educational institutions that provide commercial truck and bus driving training, including accredited public or private colleges, universities, vocational-technical schools, post-secondary educational institutions, and state and local governments, including federally recognized Native American tribal governments.