Tag Archives: Trucks

North Carolina’s CDL Program Just Failed a Federal Inspection

If there’s one thing the modern auto industry understands, it’s that regulation is rarely subtle. When Washington decides a system is broken, it doesn’t send a polite warning light—it yanks the keys and threatens to tow the whole operation. That’s exactly what’s happening now as the Trump administration’s Department of Transportation tightens the lug nuts on state commercial driver’s license programs, with North Carolina becoming the latest—and most dramatic—example.

According to U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean P. Duffy, more than half of North Carolina’s commercial truck licenses issued to immigrant drivers should never have been approved in the first place. A federal audit found that 54 percent of the non-domiciled CDLs reviewed violated federal rules, a failure rate that would get any automaker hauled before Congress, if not recalled outright.

The penalty for this kind of bureaucratic misfire isn’t a slap on the wrist. The federal government is threatening to withhold $50 million in transportation funding unless North Carolina immediately halts all new non-domiciled CDL issuances and submits to a full compliance teardown. Think of it less like a warning ticket and more like pulling a state’s racing license mid-season.

This isn’t an isolated incident, either. A nationwide audit of state truck-licensing systems has already put California, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, and New York on notice. North Carolina just happens to be the latest state to discover that the federal government has been watching the gauges closely—and didn’t like what it saw.

What Went Wrong Under the Hood

The audit revealed a familiar and troubling pattern. Many licenses were issued with expiration dates extending well beyond a driver’s documented legal presence in the United States, echoing the same problem previously uncovered in California. In other cases, CDLs were granted to drivers deemed ineligible for non-domiciled licenses altogether, though federal officials haven’t yet explained precisely how those determinations were bypassed.

Perhaps most concerning from a systems perspective, some licenses were issued before the state verified whether applicants were lawfully allowed to be in the country at all. That’s the administrative equivalent of sending a semi down the interstate without checking whether the brakes work.

FMCSA Administrator Derek D. Barrs didn’t mince words, calling the level of noncompliance “egregious.” In regulatory language, that’s roughly the same as saying the engine block is cracked and the oil light’s been ignored for miles.

Under the new federal directive, North Carolina must now identify every active CDL that fails to meet Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration standards, revoke and reissue licenses for drivers who do qualify, and conduct a full internal audit to figure out how the process went off the rails in the first place.

The Politics Hit the Rev Limiter

Secretary Duffy’s public statements, however, have gone well beyond dry compliance talk. In announcing the crackdown, he framed the issue as a direct threat to public safety, calling the state’s failure “dangerous” and urging leadership to “remove these dangerous drivers from our roads.”

That kind of rhetoric may play well in press releases, but it glosses over a more complicated reality. Licensing failures don’t automatically translate to unsafe drivers, and the audit itself focuses on administrative noncompliance, not crash data, inspection failures, or accident rates. Conflating paperwork errors with road safety risks is a convenient shortcut, but it’s not especially precise—something engineers and regulators alike usually care deeply about.

In other words, this looks less like a sudden discovery of reckless truckers and more like a long-ignored backend system finally collapsing under scrutiny.

A National Problem, Not a Single-State Spin

The bigger takeaway here isn’t that North Carolina did something uniquely reckless. It’s that multiple states—across political and geographic lines—have been operating CDL programs that don’t fully align with federal standards. The audit didn’t just stumble onto a single bad actor; it exposed a structural issue in how states manage non-domiciled commercial licenses.

For an industry already strained by driver shortages, aging infrastructure, and rising compliance costs, this adds another layer of uncertainty. States are now being told to slam the brakes on entire categories of licenses while they rebuild systems mid-drive. Trucking companies, meanwhile, are left wondering how many of their legally working drivers could suddenly find their credentials pulled for reasons unrelated to performance or safety.

The Road Ahead

Whether this crackdown results in safer highways or simply cleaner spreadsheets remains to be seen. What’s clear is that the federal government is no longer content to let states run CDL programs with loose tolerances and crossed wires. The era of “close enough” licensing appears to be over.

For North Carolina, the task now is less about rhetoric and more about execution: fix the system, audit the failures, and prove that compliance can coexist with a functioning commercial trucking workforce.

Because in transportation—as in cars—when the warning lights finally come on, ignoring them only makes the eventual repair more expensive.

Source: FMCSA

The Garmin dēzl DualView Is Built to Watch What Truck Mirrors Can’t

If you’ve ever spent time around a long-haul truck—or worse, driven next to one in traffic—you know blind spots aren’t just an inconvenience. They’re a physics problem measured in feet, mirrors, and unforgiving sheet metal. Garmin’s latest solution, the dēzl DualView camera system, is designed to shrink those blind spots down to something a driver can actually manage, and it does so with the kind of practicality you’d expect from a company that’s been living in dashboards for decades.

The DualView system is aimed squarely at professional drivers, not gadget collectors. Instead of chasing novelty, Garmin focused on the moments that make truck driving stressful: lane changes, tight maneuvers, and the what-just-happened chaos of an unexpected incident. The setup uses two side-mounted cameras that stream a real-time view of both sides of the truck, keeping a constant watch over the blind spots that mirrors alone can’t fully cover.

Video quality matters here, and Garmin didn’t cheap out. The cameras record in 1080p HD, automatically capturing footage when incidents occur. That means no scrambling to hit record after the fact—the system is already doing the job. Footage is stored on a microSD card, turning the DualView into both a safety aid and a rolling witness if questions come up later.

Durability is another box Garmin clearly wanted checked. The cameras carry an IPX7 rating, which translates to real-world survivability: rain, sun, and even pressure washing won’t knock them out of commission. This isn’t consumer electronics pretending to be rugged; it’s hardware built for vehicles that don’t get to hide in garages.

Inside the cab, the system is flexible about how it presents information. Drivers can view the camera feed on a dedicated in-cab display, a connected tablet, or directly on a Garmin dēzl OTR truck navigator or compatible RV navigator. When a vehicle slips into a blind spot or a lane change starts to look questionable, the system delivers visual alerts—subtle enough not to overwhelm, but clear enough to demand attention.

Garmin says the DualView was developed with real-world trucking in mind, not just lab testing or spec-sheet bragging rights. Susan Lyman, Garmin’s vice president of sales and marketing, points out that the system is meant to help drivers feel more confident behind the wheel. Just as important, recorded footage can provide an extra layer of protection when fault is disputed—an increasingly common concern in today’s dashcam-everywhere traffic ecosystem.

None of this comes cheap. The dēzl DualView goes on sale January 8 with a suggested retail price of $999.99 in the U.S. That’s not impulse-buy territory, but in the context of commercial trucking—where a single minor incident can cost far more—it’s easier to justify. You’re not just buying cameras; you’re buying situational awareness and documentation.

Garmin’s DualView won’t magically make traffic smarter or impatient drivers more predictable. But it does give truckers better information, faster, in the places where it matters most. And in a vehicle where visibility is always compromised by sheer size, that extra set of digital eyes could be the difference between a close call and a costly mistake.

In other words, it’s not flashy. It’s not fun. And that’s exactly why it makes sense.

Source: Garmin

Amazon Delivery Truck Gets Stuck Under Queens Bridge

There are few things more unforgiving than a low bridge. Gravity doesn’t negotiate, steel doesn’t flex, and clearance signs are suggestions only if you’re willing to turn your trailer into modern art. Unfortunately for one Amazon delivery driver in Queens, New York, that lesson arrived the hard way—and on Facebook.

A video posted by Trashy Trucker Media has gone viral after capturing the aftermath of an Amazon box truck attempting to slip under an iron bridge in Astoria. It didn’t fit. The bridge won. Traffic lost. And the internet, predictably, feasted.

The footage shows the truck wedged firmly beneath the bridge, its trailer roof peeled back like the lid of a sardine can. Police are already on scene. Cars stack up behind the immovable object. Meanwhile, the video’s narrator—a trucking veteran with a megaphone-style delivery and zero sympathy—provides live commentary.

“Ain’t having no fun up here in Astoria, Queens, New York, folks,” he declares, before delivering the line that launched a thousand comments: “Driver, that’s unacceptable!”

By the time the clip finished making the rounds, it had racked up more than 436,000 views, turning a routine infrastructure mishap into a holiday-season spectacle. Trashy Trucker Media labeled the incident a “door dummy” moment—industry slang for a driver who misses the basics—and many viewers were happy to agree.

And to be fair, low-bridge strikes are about as avoidable as trucking mistakes get. Older cities like New York are packed with legacy infrastructure, where bridge clearances dip well below modern interstate standards. That’s why height restrictions are posted early, often repeatedly, and in numbers large enough to read from orbit. Professional drivers are trained—drilled, really—to know their vehicle’s height and treat clearance signs as gospel.

Amazon, for its part, says it stacks the deck even further. In a statement to Motor1, a company spokesperson emphasized that safety is a top priority and that drivers have access to commercial-grade navigation through Amazon’s Relay app, designed to route trucks away from low bridges, narrow streets, and other urban booby traps. When everything works as intended, you never see a truck playing chicken with 19th-century steel.

But “when everything works as intended” is doing a lot of lifting here.

Online commenters were quick to point fingers at the driver, with many arguing that the incident represented a failure at the most basic level of commercial driving. “Got to do better, driver,” one wrote. Another wondered aloud how it even got that far: “At what point does he notice his truck getting too close? There are measurements everywhere.” A third cut straight to the credentialing issue: “I thought CDL school taught reading signs.”

Others leaned into gallows humor, suggesting the mishap might explain some mysteriously delayed packages. “So much for Xmas presents,” one joked. “So that’s where my package is,” another added.

Still, not everyone was eager to throw the driver under the bridge—figuratively speaking. One trucker chimed in with a more empathetic take, recounting his own early-career brush with a low-clearance scare in Queens. He caught the signs too late, needed help backing out, and escaped with nothing worse than wounded pride. No damage, no delays, no viral video. Just a lesson learned.

That’s the quiet part of trucking the internet rarely sees: most mistakes don’t end in shredded trailers and comment-section dogpiles. They end with embarrassment, paperwork, and a renewed respect for signs bolted to old steel.

This time, though, the consequences were loud, visible, and expensive. Bridge strikes are dangerous, disruptive, and costly—not just for the driver and the company, but for everyone stuck behind the mess. They’re also almost entirely preventable, which is why they draw so much heat when they happen.

In the end, this wasn’t a story about Amazon, algorithms, or even bad luck. It was about overconfidence meeting immovable infrastructure. The bridge didn’t move. The truck didn’t fit. And the internet, as always, was ready to remind everyone why clearance signs exist in the first place.

Source: Trashy Trucker Media via Facebook