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Senate transportation committee advances several bills on vehicles, licenses and administration

Senate Committee on Transportation · March 18, 2026

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Summary

On March 17 the committee advanced multiple transportation bills — including HB1510 (license-plate enforcement), HB1696 (lowering some CDL ages), HB2020 (renewal education), HB2417 (administrative revocations), HB2031 (DOT hearings division) — adopting committee recommendations and amendments where noted.

The Senate Committee on Transportation spent its March 17 agenda moving a package of bills aimed at licensing, enforcement and administrative processes.

Among the measures the committee recommended forwarding were HB1510 (license-plate obstruction enforcement), HB1696 (lower minimum age for certain commercial driver licenses from 19 to 18), HB2020 (driver-license renewal education and random exam authority), HB2417 (clarifying administrative license revocation procedures), HB2375 (towing-practices working group, recommended with amendments), HB2023 (active intelligent speed-assistance certification) and HB2031 (establishing a DOT administrative hearings division with related civil-service and hiring language).

Agencies and stakeholders offered written testimony or on-the-record comments across the package. DOT generally supported many items but raised technical concerns where statutory language could create operational confusion. The Attorney General recommended reinserting some Chapter 91 procedural language into HB2031 to ensure consistency with judicial-review standards, and HGEA objected to language that would create exempt hearing-officer positions, asking that those be civil-service hires.

Committee leaders adopted chair recommendations to pass a number of the bills with technical or non-substantive amendments and to include detailed committee-report language for items where additional review (for example by Judiciary) was warranted. Votes recorded in the hearing show committee recommendations adopted by the members present; the transcript recorded aye votes and noted adoption for each item during decision-making.