HB 1118 -- Commercial Drivers' Licenses Sponsor: Schlottach This bill makes changes in the laws regarding commercial drivers' licenses. SCHOOL BUS ENDORSEMENT Any individual who operates a school bus must have a school bus endorsement on their driver's license. In order to obtain a school bus endorsement, an applicant must submit two sets of fingerprints. One set of prints will be used by the State Highway Patrol to search the criminal history repository, and the second set will be forwarded to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for searching the federal criminal history files. The applicant will pay the fee for the state criminal history information and the federal criminal history record. CRIMES The bill creates the following crimes: (1) Driving a commercial motor vehicle while revoked if a person operates a commercial motor vehicle and a prior violation has caused a license to be revoked, suspended, canceled, or the driver is disqualified from operating a commercial motor vehicle is a class A misdemeanor; (2) Driving a commercial motor vehicle on a fourth or subsequent offense with commercial driving privileges revoked or suspended, with no prior alcohol-related enforcement contacts, and the defendant waived the right to an attorney and the prior three offenses occurred within 10 years and the person served a 10-day sentence on the previous offenses is a class D felony; (3) Driving a commercial motor vehicle, while intoxicated, with commercial driving privileges revoked on the third and subsequent offense and the defendant waived the right to an attorney and the two prior offenses occurred within 10 years and the person received a 10-day sentence or more is a class D felony; (4) Driving a commercial motor vehicle, while intoxicated, with commercial driving privileges revoked on the second or subsequent conviction is a class D felony; and (5) Driving a commercial motor vehicle while revoked on a fourth or subsequent conviction for other offenses is a class D felony. DRIVING PRIVILEGES The bill adds the following: (1) Holders of a commercial driver's license (CDL) can avoid the assessment of points upon the completion of a driver-improvement program; and (2) CDL holders will not be allowed limited driving privileges for a commercial vehicle if their driving privileges are suspended, revoked, canceled, denied, or disqualified. However, they will be allowed to obtain a limited driving privilege for a noncommercial motor vehicle. TRAFFIC VIOLATIONS The bill adds to the list of serious traffic violations the following: (1) Driving a commercial motor vehicle without a CDL; (2) Driving a commercial vehicle without a CDL in possession; and (3) Driving a commercial vehicle without the proper CDL class or endorsement. STATE RECORD CHECKS The bill adds the following: (1) Applicants for a CDL must disclose the names of all states which have issued them a CDL during the previous 10-year period; (2) The Director of the Department of Revenue is required before the initial issuance of a CDL and for the first renewal to obtain driving record information from any state licensing system in which the person had been issued a license; and (3) A CDL driving record must contain a complete history of the driver, including information and convictions from previous states of licensure. DISQUALIFICATION The director is required to disqualify any driver the U. S. Secretary of Transportation has determined to constitute an imminent hazard. OUT-OF-SERVICE ORDERS Any driver who violates an out-of-service order is subject to a civil penalty not to exceed an amount determined by the U. S. Secretary of Transportation in addition to the disqualification. SENTENCING No federal, state, county, municipal, or local court can defer imposition of judgment, suspend imposition of sentence, or allow an individual who possesses or is required to possess a CDL to enter into a diversion program that will prevent a conviction for any violation of any traffic law from appearing on the driver's record maintained by the Department of Revenue. The bill will become effective September 30, 2005.Copyright (c) Missouri House of Representatives