Particle.news
Download on the App Store

Immigrant Truckers Sue California DMV to Stop January Revocation of Thousands of CDLs

Plaintiffs argue DMV clerical errors—not driver misconduct—produced more than 20,000 cancellation notices, prompting a request for a court-ordered pause.

Overview

  • The Sikh Coalition and Asian Law Caucus filed a class-action lawsuit in California seeking to halt planned cancellations of non‑domiciled commercial driver’s licenses set to begin on January 5, 2026.
  • California’s DMV sent 60‑day notices to 17,299 drivers on November 6 after a federal audit flagged expiration‑date mismatches, with total notices now exceeding 20,000 and another roughly 2,700 targeted for mid‑February.
  • The complaint says state law requires the DMV to correct its own expiration‑date errors or allow reapplication, yet the agency has not reissued licenses or created a remedy process despite earlier indications it would start reissuing on December 17.
  • Federal scrutiny by the DOT and FMCSA includes threats to withhold as much as about $160 million in transportation funds and reviews in multiple states as part of a broader enforcement push that also tightened English‑proficiency checks.
  • Advocates say Punjabi Sikh drivers make up a large share of those affected and warn of profiling and potential supply‑chain disruptions, with industry estimates projecting major driver losses if stricter rules persist.