In a state where the vast majority of residents are white, the truck stops along Wyoming’s 400 miles of Interstate 80 stand out as racial and linguistic melting pots. 

Among the idling semi-trucks and in the lounge areas where people wait their turn at a shower, drivers speak to each other or into phones in Russian, Spanish, Nepali, Hindi and more. 

To some, including President Donald Trump and supporters of his Make America Great Again political movement, these roadside Babels represent a troubling trend — an increasing number of truck drivers who don’t speak English as a first language — and a public safety threat. 

Over the last two months, the Trump administration and Republican lawmakers, including Wyoming Rep. Harriet Hageman, have moved to take truck drivers who don’t speak a certain level of English off the road.

Federal law has long required commercial truck drivers to possess a certain level of English proficiency. But in 2016, the federal government issued guidance that while drivers could be cited if a law enforcement officer found they failed to meet that requirement, they could also drive on. 

On April 28, Trump reversed that policy and instituted a new crackdown. Beginning June 25, Wyoming Highway Patrol officers, along with their counterparts in other states, will work under new guidelines that call for them to test the English of drivers they interact with if they suspect a lack of language proficiency. Drivers could face those tests if pulled over on suspicion of a traffic offense, or during inspections that sometimes occur at weigh stations and the state’s port-of-entry facilities. 

If drivers fail the roadside test, they’ll be taken out of service — forced to park their truck until a different driver can reach Wyoming and take the wheel. Among immigrant truck drivers, that burdensome consequence has raised concerns about the arbitrariness of patrol officers and inspectors conducting language exams. 

Hageman has championed the issue, and this month announced her cosponsorship of legislation to codify Trump’s executive order into law — meaning a future president couldn’t just relax the enforcement requirement again.

A spokesperson for Hageman did not respond to an email requesting an interview with Wyoming’s lone representative. 

Trucker response

It’s a crackdown drawing mixed reactions among truck drivers passing through Wyoming. 

“I’m a native Russian speaker, but I feel it was my obligation to learn English,” Grey Kiroff, who has been driving trucks in the United States since 2002, told a WyoFile reporter Wednesday, after stepping down from his cab at Love’s Travel Stop outside Laramie. 

“This is an absolute necessity, it’s not just a good idea,” he said. 

But others considered the new emphasis on English proficiency another prong in the Trump administration’s assault on the country’s immigrant workers. 

“I have seen people who don’t speak English do this job really well,” one driver, who said he’d immigrated to the United States but declined to share his name or country of origin, told WyoFile. Lacking English proficiency is “not a barrier” to safe driving, the driver said, speaking to WyoFile next to his truck while stopped at the Akal Travel Center 20 miles further west. 

Another driver there, who spoke to a reporter in Spanish, said he could not converse in English but was perfectly capable of reading road signs. He also declined to share his name, as did several opponents of the Trump administration’s rule change, saying they did not want to draw attention to themselves.

Tightening the language requirement, the Spanish-speaking driver said, would hurt an economy that depended on many immigrant drivers.

Trucks line up for gas at the Akal Travel Center west of Laramie in June 2025. (Andrew Graham/WyoFile)

Nearly every truck driver interviewed by WyoFile agreed people need to be able to read road signage to some degree — particularly in Wyoming and the Mountain West, where signs identify steep grades or warn of inclement weather. 

“The hills are messed up,” Ron Brown, a driver from Pennsylvania, said. “If guys don’t know how to read the signs, they’re not even going to drop the Jake.” Brown was referring to using the engine brake on a long downslope, which can keep a truck from blowing its brakes and beginning an out-of-control descent.    

“I don’t feel that it’s racist, I feel that it’s necessary,” Kim Starr, a driver from California, said. 

But drivers disagreed on whether significant numbers of truckers were on the road, who couldn’t hit that threshold of English proficiency.

Inside the Akal travel center, reputed for a small restaurant churning out Indian cuisine, an employee said the many drivers he interacts with all have a sufficient grasp of English. Long-distance truck drivers crash because they’re using their phones or watching videos while driving, or they’re intoxicated, or they fall asleep at the wheel, said the employee, who gave his first name as Jamal but declined to share a last name.

“It’s not about the language,” Jamal said. “It’s all politics.”

Roadside test

Wyoming Highway Patrol officials provided WyoFile with a copy of the new testing rules, issued May 20 by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration. The new regulation calls for officers to first ask drivers a series of questions, such as “how long have you been driving today?” or “did you perform your pre-trip inspection before you started driving today?”

If officers decide someone is unable to respond well enough to those questions in English, they can take the driver out of service, preventing them from traveling on. If the drivers pass that portion of the test, however, officers are also directed to quiz the driver on traffic signs. 

The guidance obtained by WyoFile includes 37 images of highway signs. Officers are instructed to quiz drivers on four of them — and drivers must properly identify at least three to pass the test. 

Officers can pick from a set of signs that vary widely, from a simple speed limit sign to a sign stating “trucks over 10 tons must enter weigh station next right.” 

In Wyoming, troopers will escort a truck driver who fails the test, if it’s administered along the side of the highway, to the next good stopping point, Lt. Colonel Karl Germain told WyoFile.

Immigrant truck drivers are concerned about the potential for bias as state troopers and inspectors are given the power to determine a legal level of English. “Accents, cultural differences, or imperfect grammar should not be a reason to end someone’s career,” an online petition calling for federal regulators to rethink Trump’s executive order states. The petition had more than 7,500 signatures as of Friday. It also notes that with just 60 days from order to implementation, truck drivers and companies haven’t had time to prepare for the English tests. 

“We all contribute to this country, and we all deserve equal respect on the road,” the petition, which does not note an author, says.

A truck pulls into the Akal Travel Center west of Laramie in June 2025. (Andrew Graham/WyoFile)

Long-standing industry instability and legitimate public safety concerns are mixing with the current political climate, University of Minnesota economics professor and former long-haul truck driver Stephen Burks told WyoFile. Trucking companies have become places of high turnover, where drivers are worn down by firms’ desires to keep them on the road and away from home for long periods, coupled with often low pay, Burks, who studies the industry with an emphasis on labor economics, said.

Amid those pressures, and amid the impacts of free-trade agreements that allowed Canadian and Mexican drivers into the country in increasing numbers, American truck drivers have long worried about immigrants who accept lower pay and companies that skirt rules to bring in cheaper drivers. Companies that might bend the rules on foreign drivers are also likely to worry less about regulations that increase driver and motorist safety, Burks said. 

Regulating drivers’ English addresses those various anxieties.

“This English proficiency thing is kind of a new variant on the same concern, and it naturally meshes for the Trump folks with the anti-immigrant sentiment,” he said. “Is there a legitimate underlying issue? Yes, there is. I can not tell you how big it is.”

Connor’s Law 

Supporters of the crackdown, like Hageman, point to specific tragedies. The bill Hageman is cosponsoring is called Connor’s Law, and is named after Connor Dzion, an 18-year-old who was killed by a semi-truck driver in 2017, on Interstate 95 in Florida. I-95 is the principal north-south highway along the East Coast. 

Dzion’s family sued two truck companies, and a jury issued a $1 billion damage verdict after finding drivers for both companies were distracted and responsible for Dzion’s death. 

One driver, a Russian immigrant, created a mile-long traffic backup after crashing his tractor trailer, Jacksonville, Florida-based attorney Curry Pajcic, who litigated the case for the Dzions, told WyoFile. That driver was on drugs and watching pornography on a cell phone when he crashed, Pajcic said.

Dzion, in a Toyota Corolla his parents gifted him on his 16th birthday, was the last car in the traffic backup. A second truck driver, an Indian immigrant to Canada who had been driving for 25 hours straight from Montreal, smashed into Dzion and killed him. 

That driver drove by multiple signs warning of stopped traffic, keeping “the hammer down on cruise control at 70 mph,” Pajcic said. The truck crested a low rise in the road and hit the traffic on the other side. The driver was allowed to return to Canada after the crash, according to Pajcic. As a result, lawyers were unable to get his cell phone data or post-crash drug test results. 

Pajcic’s team proved the driver had falsified his driving logs, the attorney said, and they proved he couldn’t read signs in English in depositions. 

It’s possible the language barrier was one factor among others, Pajcic said, but he believed if the driver could have understood the signs, he may have slowed down in time. “There’s a reason the rules say ‘you gotta read fucking English,’ if you don’t you’re gonna kill someone,” Pajcic said. 

He and Dzion’s parents have worked with lawmakers on Connor’s Law, he said, because even if other factors are involved in such crashes, they believe stricter enforcement of English language proficiency could save lives. “We never want there to be another Connor,” he said. Pajcic too, though, said he thought the new rules could also protect jobs for U.S. drivers. 

“It takes away American jobs,” he said of companies bringing in foreign drivers. “It drives down the quality of our drivers and we need to protect American roads.” 

Andrew Graham covers criminal justice for WyoFile.

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  1. AWE the RACE card! Really Gordon? This thread keeps looking more like something out of Mother Jones! As the son of a migrant, ENGLISH was ALL we could speak from day one, even though my mother spoke three languages fluently. And yes, I’m white! Are the Bud Lites getting to you and Rod? Perhaps you guys need to board your covered wagons, head west to the Pacific Coast and be sure to fly the flag upside down so your receptance is sublime!

  2. This is a perfect opportunity for Rep Hageman to kill two birds with one stone. Just have some plain clothes ICE agents hang out at the truck stops along I 80 and whenever they find a (non-white ) driver who has trouble with English they can just zip him off to El Salvador and no one will be the wiser.
    Problem solved!

  3. I drive Wyoming’s interstate highways frequently (for 40+ years), especially I-80 between Cheyenne and Rawlins

    I’m more concerned about the lack of safe driving practices by some of the big rigs more so than by English language proficiency. I see “drifting” trucks all the time, and if I have a passenger in my vehicle, I’ll ask them to take a quick look at what’s going on as we pass by (yes, by briefly exceeding the speed limit!). Most of the time it’s a distracted driver looking at a phone, tablet, etc.

    In those circumstanced, doesn’t really matter to me if a distracted driver speaks proficient English or not, but I agree that a basic proficiency in English would be preferable. More importantly, don’t drive while distracted!

  4. Who would replace all these non-English speaking drivers when they’re gone, Harriet? I guess probably the same people who will be working in the factories that Dear Leader is magically bringing back.

  5. Interesting. I wonder what she thinks about self-driving trucks. They’re already running in Texas.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aurora_Innovation

    “As of May 2025, Aurora operates two driverless trucks on a daily basis and expects to scale up to “tens of trucks” by the end of the year. The company plans to own, operate, maintain, and insure its own trucks for carrier customers in the short term, with some trucks available on the Uber Freight network. Starting in 2027 or earlier, Aurora anticipates that customers will purchase self-driving trucks directly from manufacturers, transitioning to a driver-as-a-service model aimed at achieving higher gross margins.[57]”

  6. Perhaps Congress should look at the companies that sell trucks to owner/operators, a ploy in which it’s impossible to break even without driving long hours. The trucking industry used to be regulated, and since the rules were loosened or eliminated to ‘increase competition’ many companies with shady practices have entered the market, reducing public safety.

  7. I know that if I were to work in a foreign country, I would be expected to understand and speak the language. The U.S. should be no different.

    1. Good morning, it seems that the B.A.R. is effecting what is necessary for our/you/my “PUBLIC SAFETY” aka “We are the government and we are here to help you.”. Everyone knows that is the truth and nothing but the truth and LIBERTY is the foremost of importance because of our Constitution?

      However if this current situation was to NEVER have happened to begin with and has unfortunately happened was or is the LAW BROKEN? Is ignorance of “the Law” the defense for breaking the “LAW” and are “We the people” being lured into a situation to have dire consequences at a later time and date because it is a HORRENDOUS task to have a LAW changed, not to mention VERY EXPENSIVE and of course all at the TAX PRAYER’S expense.

      Why not when the driver is identified remove and replace the individual driver, find out EXACTLY where the person/homosapien received their “CDL” and correct it and ensure ALL STATE licensing departments get the “MEMO” that business as usual will be corrected and anyone not adhering will be IMMEDIATELY TERMINATED.

      Of course if we do not “codify” then who is going to be “fair game” in all or future continuing “law suits”? Either way it is the tax payer providing the “resources” but do you or I really want to affect our LIBERTY to operate a vehicle on these roads within this beautiful REPUBLIC? All in:

      “We are the government and we are here to help you.” for “Public Safety”.

      We the people” did not create this current situation the “governmental system” did, so correct the “system” and remove/replace the problem at the system’s core and we/I keep the LIBERTY to operate and enjoy this REPUBLIC a nation under God,

      Are we as a nation and individuals of this great Republic forgetting the meaning to the words written in our Preamble to the Constitution and “The Pledge of Allegiance”?

      Thank you WYOFILE for exercising your/our FIRST AMENDMENT, SEMPER FI!

  8. How about making it illegal to solicit money from the truckers to keep your truck in compliance. You have no idea what is a scam or what is real . I don’t make a living trucking but I am constantly being told I’m needing a biannual or a 2290 form or face fines and jail time . There is fake gov web sights willing to take your money and you never know what’s legal or not.

  9. It needs to happen. Wearing our heart on our sleeve in defense of the poor immigrants won’t fix the death toll on I80. It is time we started enforcement of the actual law.

  10. Harriet Hageman and the current republican…err, I mean MAGA party, continues to do what they do best, pit neighbor against neighbor, push our former allies farther from us, and create division where there wasn’t any to begin with.

    While I’ll be the first to agree that if you live and work in this country you should have enough respect for it to at least attempt to learn a bit of the language. However, this move by the republican’s…damn, there I go again… I mean MAGA… is just another, not so subtle, sign of the overt racism that is ingrained in this movement. If you aren’t a white, Christian, Trump fearing republican…whoops, my apologies…you better pack your bags and go back to where you came from. Or in this case, point your eighteen wheeler towards either border and put the hammer down and don’t bother stopping until you get across. And if you’re reluctant to leave I’m pretty sure Trump will be more than happy to give you a nice ICE/national guard escort.

    This isn’t how my country behaves and I hope a lot of you feel the same and will vote accordingly during our next elections.

  11. Just wondering out loud here. But if you can’t speak the language. How do you read a road map, road signs, speedometer and gauges, how to read tire pressures, fill out drivers logs, understand your load manifests, talk with dispatch, insurance agent, port of entry personal, truck repair people, arriving at load destination and arrange to load/unload? Some one explain all that. Do all this in SAFE MANNER. Where or who are buying these people their equipment? How do you deal with your bank/C. C company? How did they pass the written test? How do they do the Pre-Trip form? I have seen/experienced these non English speaking truck drivers. It a MESS!

  12. I came here to make the point already made by Mr. Vanderhoff: Do Rep. Hageman and Mr. Trump realize that there are many native-born, Caucasian truck drivers in the US who cannot read?

    Speaking English is fine, but it seems as though the safety issues require that drivers be able to READ English. We have many adults in the US who cannot.

    1. An excellent point. The problem goes beyond migrants. I dealt with many truck drivers when I was working. Many of the English speaking truckers are illiterate. That is why they took the job. It requires a minimum amount of literacy. They are not stupid; they memorize the signs. The problem arises when they have to read a non-standard sign or a message board. If this rule is uniformly enforced, it might make things safer. If it is just enforced on those who speak with an accent, it will not make things safer.

  13. Perfect English, no, but able to read the warning signs, traffic control signs, and paperwork related to your load and job.

  14. Years ago truck drives had to be able to speak english but that was changed in about 2009. Shortly after that several high school students from the Bridger Valley area were killed at the Urie exit because the truck drive did not know how to read a stop sign. The truck driver was was Eastern Europe. The trucking company us a major US based company that about in about 50 drivers from that area as an experiment to how the work in this country. Didn’t take long before they were all sent back. I had been told by one company that uses almost all foreign drivers, that if the driver gets in trouble, that person is on the next flight home. Al lot of the foreihn drivesrs aer coming in by the way of Canada.They can pick up in Canada and drop in the US or pick up in the US and go back to Canada to drop, they don’t even need a green card under NAFTA Agreement. But if they both pick up and drop the same load in the US are “supposed” to have a green card. I can tell many stories about these drivers they can’t speak very well English but I will them with just this one.

    1. Traffic signs (especially stop signs) have standard shapes and colors. Same shapes and colors in Europe as in US. The Urie accident was not likely a result of the eastern european’s lack of literacy.

  15. This is nothing but racism. Hageman (and Barrasso, and Lummis) only know how to lick Trumps feet. They are a disgrace. Please consider voting them out of office. I don’t recognize my native state.

    1. So Gordon. Explain what “race” this discrimination is against. Explain how you get “racism” out of this. We wait for your answer to clarify.

      1. It’s against non english speaking people. It sure isn’t about safety. So what’s it about Larry.

      2. Racism does not necessarily have to be against any faction; but includes a faction who thinks they are the only ones that matter. How do you get racism out of the equation? Quit thinking you are better than anyone else.

  16. There is a reason that the fore fathers did not include a national language in the constitution, is was so we could remain FREE.

  17. A few years ago my husband and I stopped our car on icy roads, to assist a semi driver trying to cross Granite Pass on Highway 14, about 9000′ elevation. The guy was from Alabama, he was Caucasian, spoke good English and was terrified at what he had encountered. He wore bermuda shorts and low shoes, no jacket, a little flashlight he waved us down with. We pointed him in the right direction and told him to calm down, got him to Bear Lodge where he could spend the night before descending to other side of the pass. His spoken language had nothing to do with his driving decisions. There is more to driving than speaking English. Harriet should probably leave these topics to knowledgeable, experienced professionals.

  18. We’re making steady progress toward becoming a fully authoritarian state. It’s been coming along for decades now. Glad I’m old…

  19. When did being mean-spirited become a Wyoming value? Because that is the attribute Hageman most consistently role models. She pretends this is all about safety but provides no data to back up her assertion. And with all due respect to the family and friends of Connor Dzion, driving 25 hours straight appears to be the overriding factor for the trucker involved, not an inability to read English. Wyoming deserves better.

  20. Time to outlaw foriegn tourists makes as much sense, how lon9g did wyoming allow drinking and driving a fought for the freedom to drive impaired.

  21. Hageman, who seemingly only knows the dialect of orange trumpanzee, should be the first in line to learn proper english.

  22. Everyone here – reporter included – seems to have forgotten that the highways run in both directions. I want to take a moment to address Rep. Harriet Hageman’s motivations . She is being her usual shortminded narrowminded closeminded self… don’t let the appearance of detailed argumentation fool you. She has no real world clue.

    By which I mean America exports roughly $ 350 billion in goods , manufactured products, and agricultural crops to Mexico every year, much of which travels by over the road trucks . Wyoming sells stuff to Mexico.

    What would be the consequence of Mexico’s very smart savvy President Claudia Scheinbaum suddenly mandating thjat all truck drivers entering Mexico from the USA be fluent in Spanish in order to function safely there ? Just reverse the argument. If Harriet demands Mexican truckers to be fluent in American English, it’s only fair that American truckers be likewise fluent in Spanish signage and Spanish road rules, and such . ¿ Si como no ?

    Let’s be honest . Hageman’s concerns are racially underpinned and ethnically driven by prejudice towards our Latin American neighbors, the same sentiments and biases driving Southern Border hysteria and MAGA immigration invectives. Twenty percent traffic safety and common carrier regulation , and eighty percent Trump-MAGA ideology rubber screeching the road.

    I have spent over three years of my life in Mexico and Central America. Back then hitchhiking was socially acceptable on both sides of the border, and I spent a LOT of time in the cabs of Kenworths and Peterbilts with Mexican drivers . I also rode shotgun with American truckers all across the Lower 48 states . You would be surprised how many Big Rig drivers born and raised in America were illiterate. On several occasions I was brought aboard to help American drivers navigate their 18-wheelers thru the Deep South and Midwest to avoid the scales and Smokeys.

    The highways run in both directions. Hageman does not.

    1. Might I add cruel. These MAGA “policies” have shown themselves to be merely a giant grift, and a narrative is invented to justify the desired outcome. Stealing taxpayer money from social programs which benefit society, only to waste it on extravagances for the already “”have it alls”. Shameful. Christian ideals indeed.

  23. Maybe we should be having an executive order to help people speak English and read the signs. In my opinion, this is just another racist order by a racist president who gets his rump kissed by Hagaman as he endorsed her.

    I was a CDL driver for 10 years, not on big rigs, but on a big truck. Most of the signs are very self-explanatory that you need to observe. You really don’t need to read signs. In most cases when I ran into immigrant drivers they were very friendly And could speak English. I realize times have changed but we need to create solutions not problems. It is estimated right now that we have a shortage of 60 to 100,000 truck drivers in the US. But I guess if we don’t buy foreign products from places like China we won’t need very many trucks.

    We, the consumers are already facing enormous cost increases. This will just add some more holes to our pocket where the money will leak out.