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The minimum age for a commercial driver's license is generally 18 years old, but federal law requires commercial drivers to be at least 21 years of age to operate a commercial motor vehicle in interstate commerce. An unrestricted driver's license is a prerequisite in all states before a commercial driver's license can be issued. [14] [15]
Ohio may soon reinstate the driver's licenses of hundreds of thousands of residents who lost the ability to drive because of unpaid court debts. The state General Assembly passed a bipartisan bill ...
Currently, there are nearly 70 offenses that could cause the loss of a driver’s license in Ohio, including several drug crimes that have nothing to do with driving. Those, according to the bill ...
With nearly 900,000 suspended drivers in Ohio, state lawmakers are looking for ways to help them get legally back on the road. With nearly 900,000 suspended drivers in Ohio, state lawmakers are ...
PennDOT Driver License Center in Huntingdon Valley, Pennsylvania Almost all long-term residents ("long term" in this case means over 30 days) of a state who wish to operate motor vehicles must possess a driver's license issued by their state DMV, and their vehicles must show license plates (and current registration tags or stickers) issued by ...
The Driver License Compact, a framework setting out the basis of a series of laws within adopting states in the United States (as well as similar reciprocal agreements in adopting provinces of Canada), gives states a simple standard for reporting, tracking, and punishing traffic violations occurring outside of their state, without requiring individual treaties between every pair of states.
A ruling from Ohio's 10th District Court of Appeals may help thousands of Ohioans with suspended driver's licenses get behind the wheel again legally.
In the first twelve months, a little over 600,000 people in California met all the eligibility requirements to obtain a driver's license. [21] This number continued to increase in the following months. [22] By mid 2017, a little over 900,000 people without proof of legal presence in California obtained a driver's license under the AB 60 law. [23]