Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and Rep. Derrick Van Orden announce infrastructure funds and truck driver English enforcement in Wisconsin.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and Rep. Derrick Van Orden announce infrastructure funds and truck driver English enforcement in Wisconsin.
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Transportation secretary highlights Wisconsin infrastructure funds and renewed English-proficiency enforcement for truck drivers

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Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said Friday that the Trump administration is stepping up enforcement of a long-standing federal requirement that commercial truck drivers be able to read and speak English well enough to understand road signs and communicate with officials. Speaking during a visit to Monroe County, Wisconsin, alongside Rep. Derrick Van Orden, Duffy also highlighted about $8.4 million earmarked for local transportation improvements.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy traveled to Monroe County, Wisconsin, on Friday with Rep. Derrick Van Orden, a Republican who represents much of the area, to discuss roadway safety and infrastructure spending.

During the visit, Duffy pointed to a long-standing federal driver-qualification rule requiring commercial motor vehicle operators to be able to read and speak English sufficiently to understand traffic signs and communicate with the public and law enforcement. Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) guidance issued under the Trump administration has moved to strengthen how that rule is enforced, including restoring the possibility that inspectors can place a driver “out of service” for failing to meet English-language proficiency requirements.

“We have a longstanding rule that you have to speak English if you’re going to have a commercial driver’s license,” Duffy said at the event. “And the Obama administration had put a slap on the wrist for that offense. We brought a penalty back for not being able to be English proficient in the cab.”

Duffy and Van Orden also highlighted roughly $8.4 million allocated for infrastructure improvements tied to Monroe County and the Sparta area. Van Orden’s office and local reporting have described the funding as supporting freight-corridor and multimodal improvements intended to enhance safety and access to regional destinations such as Fort McCoy and the Tomah VA.

The renewed enforcement push builds on FMCSA’s position that the English-language requirement has remained on the books for decades, but that enforcement practices changed in 2016, when the Obama administration directed inspectors not to place drivers out of service solely for English-proficiency violations. The Trump administration has since moved to reverse that approach, arguing it is necessary for highway safety and effective communication during roadside inspections and crash investigations.

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Reactions on X to Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy's visit to Monroe County, Wisconsin, with Rep. Derrick Van Orden are predominantly positive. Users praise the $8.4 million in rural infrastructure funding and the emphasis on English proficiency enforcement for truck drivers to enhance road safety. Truckers and supporters express enthusiasm, urging further actions like revoking non-domiciled CDLs and HOS reforms. Media outlets highlighted the announcements neutrally.

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Illustration of a U.S. DOT official issuing a funding withholding warning to Pennsylvania, with symbolic elements of money, CDL cards, and security concerns for a news article on immigrant driver license practices.
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Trump administration threatens to withhold nearly $75 million from Pennsylvania over immigrant CDL practices

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The U.S. Department of Transportation warned Pennsylvania on Nov. 20 that it will withhold nearly $75 million in federal funds unless the state pauses certain commercial driver’s license issuances and fixes alleged compliance failures. The move follows the arrest of an Uzbek national in Kansas who held a Pennsylvania-issued CDL, which federal officials cite as a security concern. Gov. Josh Shapiro’s office says the state is following federal rules and verifying applicants through a DHS database.

Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons on Thursday warned that undocumented immigrants driving commercial trucks could pose security risks, a message delivered as federal and state officers announced 223 arrests — including 146 truck drivers — on northwest Indiana highways.

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The U.S. Department of Transportation said on Nov. 12, 2025, that California will revoke about 17,000 non-domiciled commercial driver’s licenses after a federal audit found widespread violations. The move follows an August crash in Florida that killed three people and a Florida lawsuit targeting California’s licensing practices.

The Trump administration has mobilized approximately 2000 federal immigration agents to Minnesota for a month-long operation targeting fraud and illegal immigration. The deployment follows allegations of a multibillion-dollar scam involving Somali-run daycares and nonprofits that siphoned taxpayer funds. Officials aim to investigate and deport those involved while addressing broader welfare program abuses.

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Top officials from U.S. immigration agencies testified before the House Homeland Security Committee on February 10, 2026, amid criticism over tactics following the fatal shootings of two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis. The hearing occurs as Congress faces a Friday deadline to fund the Department of Homeland Security, with Democrats demanding reforms to enforcement practices. Partisan tensions highlighted divides, though some bipartisan concerns emerged on training and oversight.

In response to federal immigration enforcement operations, activists in Minneapolis have set up makeshift roadblocks to monitor and restrict access to their communities. The actions follow the fatal shooting of anti-ICE protester Alex Pretti and have prompted a partial drawdown of federal agents. Local leaders and protesters cite public safety concerns, while federal officials emphasize cooperation with jails to target criminal immigrants.

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Minnesota’s Democratic leaders, including Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, spent weeks trying to contain political and public fallout from a large federal immigration enforcement surge in the Twin Cities after two U.S. citizens were killed in encounters involving federal agents. The operation, known as “Operation Metro Surge,” was later scaled back and then ended after widespread backlash and mounting legal and political pressure.

 

 

 

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