Obama-era policy shift blamed for unsafe foreign truckers on U.S. highways
A startling trend has emerged on American highways, where lifelong truckers report being undercut by foreign drivers who struggle with basic English, a problem tracing back to a regulatory rollback nearly a decade ago.
According to the Daily Caller News, the Obama administration in 2016 weakened federal rules requiring commercial drivers to have sufficient English skills to communicate, read signs, and complete reports. This pause in enforcement, though later reversed under Trump, opened the door for companies to hire low-wage migrant labor, often at the expense of safety and fair competition.
American truckers, many with decades of experience, are sounding the alarm about an industry they see as under siege by greed. Gord Magill, a 30-year veteran of the trade, told the DCNF, "American truckers are targeted to be totally replaced by insourced labor." His words cut to the heart of a system that seems to prioritize profit over the well-being of those who built this backbone of our economy.
Tragic Crashes Highlight Systemic Failures
Recent incidents have thrust this issue into the national spotlight, revealing the human cost of lax standards. In August, a fatal crash on a Florida turnpike claimed three lives after an Indian national, unlawfully in the U.S., took an illegal U-turn with a tractor-trailer, later failing an English proficiency test administered by federal authorities.
Harjinder Singh, the driver in question, could only answer two out of 12 verbal questions and identify just one of four traffic signs, per Department of Transportation findings. DOT Secretary Sean Duffy minced no words, stating, "This crash was a preventable tragedy directly caused by reckless decisions and compounded by despicable failures."
Just weeks later, another wreck in Maine involving a Colombian driver, Victor Cardona Calderon, who overstayed his visa, underscored the pattern of communication barriers leading to chaos on the roads. These aren't isolated mishaps; they point to a deeper rot in how some states and companies skirt accountability.
Industry Greed Fuels Dangerous Hiring Practices
Truckers argue the root of this mess lies not just with policy but with an industry hungry for cheap labor at any cost. Justin Martin, a driver with over 15 years on the road, told the DCNF that companies exploit high turnover by "importing drivers from anywhere they could," often through shady social media recruitment, promising to fudge electronic logs for illegal driving hours.
Martin also pointed to a troubling trend of immigrant-owned firms exploiting their own, undercutting American drivers who refuse to work under such exploitative conditions. These outfits operate at a fraction of the cost of law-abiding companies, creating a race to the bottom that endangers everyone on the highway.
The American Trucking Associations, representing over 37,000 carriers, recently urged the Department of Homeland Security to crack down on cabotage, a scheme where unauthorized foreign drivers haul domestic loads, fattening corporate profits while slashing wages for American workers. It's a stark reminder that the free market, unchecked, can veer into reckless territory.
Policy Battles and State Resistance
While the Trump administration reinstated English proficiency rules and has vowed tougher enforcement, resistance from some states keeps the problem alive. DOT Secretary Duffy has threatened to withhold federal funds from California, Washington, and New Mexico if they don't comply with language requirements by the end of this month.
These Democrat-led states, often quick to champion progressive causes, seem less eager to prioritize highway safety when it conflicts with other agendas. The disconnect between federal intent and state action leaves truckers caught in a frustrating limbo, watching their livelihoods erode.
Meanwhile, past incidents like the 2022 Wyoming crash, where Haitian driver Saviol Saint Jean killed an EMT due to language barriers and poor judgment, show this issue isn't new. Jean, convicted on multiple counts including aggravated vehicular homicide, needed a translator in court, a detail that speaks volumes about the gaps in oversight.
American Truckers Bear the Burden
In the end, it's the American trucker who pays the steepest price for this regulatory and corporate negligence. Gord Magill put it bluntly to the DCNF, noting how "illiteracy tends to be a factor in the hiring decisions of various gangsters operating in the trucking industry," exploiting vulnerable workers while undercutting honest labor.
The ecosystem Magill describes, built on wage arbitrage, isn't just unfair; it's a direct threat to the safety of every driver sharing the road.
If we value the men and women who keep our goods moving, it's time to demand policies and enforcement that put their security and dignity first, not the bottom line of a few unscrupulous firms.





