MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE
2023 Regular Session
To: Veterans and Military Affairs; Highways and Transportation
By: Senator(s) McDaniel
AN ACT TO AMEND SECTIONS 73-50-1 AND 63-1-208, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO CLARIFY THAT THE PROVISIONS OF THE MILITARY FAMILY FREEDOM ACT SPECIFICALLY APPLY TO PERSONS POSSESSING CERTAIN FEDERALLY APPROVED MILITARY DOCUMENTATION OF COMMERCIAL DRIVING EXPERIENCE ALLOWING THE PERSON TO APPLY FOR A COMMERCIAL DRIVER'S LICENSE LEARNING PERMIT; AND FOR RELATED PURPOSES.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI:
SECTION 1. Section 73-50-1, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
73-50-1. (1) This section shall be known as the "Military Family Freedom Act."
(2) As used in this section, the term:
(a) "License" means any license (other than a privilege license), certificate, registration or other evidence of qualification that an individual is required to obtain before he or she may engage in or represent himself or herself to be a member of a particular profession or occupation.
(b) "Occupational licensing board" means any state board, commission, department or other agency in Mississippi that is established for the primary purpose of regulating the entry of persons into, and/or the conduct of persons within, a particular profession or occupation, and which is authorized to issue licenses. For the purposes of this section, the State Department of Education shall be considered an occupational licensing board when issuing teacher licenses under Section 37-3-2.
(c) "Military" means the Armed Forces or Reserves of the United States, including the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Air Force, and the reserve components thereof, the National Guard of any state, the military reserves of any state, or the naval militia of any state.
(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an occupational licensing board shall issue a license to an applicant who is a member of the military, or an applicant who is married to or is a dependent of a member of the military, if, upon application to an occupational licensing board, the applicant satisfies the following conditions:
(a) The applicant has been awarded a military occupational specialty, completed a military program of training, completed testing or equivalent training and experience, and performed in the occupational specialty; or
(b) The applicant holds a current and valid license in another state in an occupation with a similar scope of practice, as determined by the occupational licensing board in Mississippi and has held this license from the occupational licensing board in the other state for at least one (1) year; and
(c) The applicant has not committed any act in the other state that would have constituted grounds for refusal, suspension or revocation of a license to practice that occupation in Mississippi at the time the act was committed, the occupational licensing board in the other state holds the applicant in good standing, and the applicant does not have a disqualifying criminal record as determined by the occupational licensing board in Mississippi under Mississippi law; and
(d) The applicant did not surrender a license because of negligence or intentional misconduct related to the applicant's work in the occupation in another state; and
(e) The applicant does not have a complaint, allegation or investigation pending before an occupational licensing board or other board in another state that relates to unprofessional conduct or an alleged crime. If the applicant has a complaint, allegation or investigation pending, the occupational licensing board in Mississippi shall not issue or deny a license to the applicant until the complaint, allegation or investigation is resolved, or the applicant otherwise satisfies the criteria for licensure in Mississippi to the satisfaction of the occupational licensing board in Mississippi; and
(f) The applicant pays all applicable fees in Mississippi.
(4) Notwithstanding any other law, the occupational licensing board shall issue a license to an applicant who is a member of the military, or an applicant who is married to or is a dependent of a member of the military, upon application based on work experience in another state, if all the following apply:
(a) The applicant worked in a state that does not use a license to regulate a lawful occupation, but Mississippi uses a license to regulate a lawful occupation with a similar scope of practice, as determined by the occupational licensing board;
(b) The applicant worked for at least three (3) years in the lawful occupation; and
(c) The applicant satisfies the provisions of paragraphs (c) through (f) of subsection (3) of this section.
(5) An occupational licensing board may require an applicant to pass a jurisprudential examination specific to relevant state laws in Mississippi that regulate the occupation if the issuance of a license in Mississippi requires an applicant to pass a jurisprudential examination specific to relevant state statutes and administrative rules in Mississippi that regulate the occupation.
(6) The occupational licensing board shall issue or deny the license to the applicant within one hundred twenty days (120) days after receiving an application.
If the application requires longer than two (2) weeks to process, the occupational licensing board shall issue a temporary practice permit within thirty (30) days after receiving the application if the applicant submits an affidavit, under penalties of perjury, affirming that he or she satisfies the provisions of subsection (3)(a) or subsection (3)(b) of this section and subsection (3)(c) through (e) and pays all applicable fees as required by subsection (3)(f), or satisfies the provisions of subsection (4)(a) through (c) and pays all applicable fees as required by subsection (3)(f).
The applicant may practice under the temporary permit until a license is granted, or until a notice to deny the license is issued, in accordance with rules adopted by the occupational licensing board. A temporary license will expire in three hundred sixty-five (365) days after its issuance if the applicant fails to satisfy the requirement for licensure in subsection (5), if applicable.
(7) (a) The applicant may appeal any of the following decisions of an occupational licensing board to a court of general jurisdiction:
(i) Denial of a license;
(ii) Determination of the occupation;
(iii) Determination of the similarity of the scope of practice of the license issued; or
(iv) Other determinations under this section.
(b) The court shall determine all questions of law, including the interpretation of a constitutional or statutory provision or a rule adopted by an occupational licensing board, without regard to any previous determination that may have been made on the question in any action before the occupational licensing board.
(8) An occupational licensing board shall prominently print the following on all license applications, any communication denying a license, and on the board's website: "Pursuant to the provisions of the Military Family Freedom Act, Mississippi shall recognize occupational licenses obtained from other states for military members and their families." An occupational licensing board shall prepare and place on the board's website an annual report detailing the number of applications submitted to the licensing board under this section during a calendar year and the actions taken by the board on the applications.
(9) An occupational licensing board shall adopt rules necessary to implement this section by January 1, 2021. In addition, an occupational licensing board shall make all reasonable efforts to issue a license to an applicant for a license under this section.
(10) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit a military applicant, spouse or dependent from proceeding under the existing licensure requirements established by an occupational licensing board in Mississippi.
(11) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to prevent Mississippi from entering into a licensing compact or reciprocity agreement with another state, foreign province or foreign country. A license issued under this section is valid only in Mississippi. It does not make the person eligible to work in another state under an interstate compact or reciprocity agreement unless otherwise provided in Mississippi law.
(12) Nothing in this section shall be construed to apply to the practice of law as regulated under Section 73-3-1 et seq.
(13) This section preempts any ordinances of any municipality, county and other political subdivisions of the State of Mississippi that regulate licenses.
(14) This section specifically applies to the provisions of Section 63-1-208, Mississippi Code of 1972, which authorizes persons possessing certain federally approved military documentation of commercial driving experience to apply for a commercial driver's license (CDL) learning permit.
SECTION 2. Section 63-1-208, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
63-1-208. (1) Except as otherwise provided, the commissioner shall not issue a commercial driver's license and commercial learner's permit to any person under the age of twenty-one (21) years.
(2) No person may be issued a commercial driver's license unless that person is domiciled in this state and has passed a knowledge and skills test for driving a commercial motor vehicle which complies with minimum federal standards established by federal regulation enumerated in 49 CFR, Part 383, subparts F, G and H and has satisfied all other requirements of Title XII of Public Law 99-570 in addition to other requirements imposed by state law or federal regulation. The tests shall be prescribed and conducted by the commissioner. If the applicant wishes to have a hazardous materials endorsement, the written test for a hazardous materials endorsement must be taken and passed. In addition, the applicant must successfully complete the security threat assessment required by 49 CFR, Part 1572.
(3) (a) Any person who has been certified to provide commercial driver's license testing by the International Driver Examiner Certification (IDEC) program administered by the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA) shall, for purposes of this section, be defined as a certified third party examiner (CTPE). In addition, the commissioner shall authorize any person, including an agency of this or another state, an employer, a private driver training facility, or other private institution, or a department, agency or instrumentality of local government, to administer the knowledge and skills test specified by this section, provided:
(i) The test is the same as would otherwise be administered by the state; and
(ii) Either: 1. The third party has entered into an agreement with this state which complies with requirements of 49 CFR, Part 383.75; or
2. The third party is a CTPE as defined in this subsection. The CTPE shall not be a direct employee of a trucking company.
(b) A CTPE performing testing under this section shall not be liable for any claim sounding in tort arising out of such testing.
(4) (a) The following tests may be waived as provided in this subsection (4):
(i) Knowledge test;
(ii) Driving skills test;
(iii) Passenger endorsement test;
(iv) Tank vehicle endorsement test; and
(v) Hazardous materials test.
(b) The commissioner, by rules adopted pursuant to the Mississippi Administrative Procedures Law, shall provide for a waiver of the tests specified in this section and entry level driver training for a commercial driver's license applicant who meets the requirements of 49 CFR, Part 383.77;
(c) The rules may establish deadlines by which applicants must claim entitlement and qualification to test waivers and may provide for the scheduling of group knowledge testing;
(d) The commissioner shall adopt rules and regulations to carry out the provisions of this subsection (4) as soon as practicable after July 1, 2022, but in any case no later than July 1, 2023.
(5) A commercial learner's permit shall be issued as follows:
(a) A commercial learner's permit may be issued to an individual who holds a valid Mississippi driver's license or who holds United States military driving credentials that satisfy the requirements of 49 CFR, Part 383, if the person has passed the vision and written tests required for the class of license authorizing the operation of the type of vehicle for which the permit application is being made;
(b) The commercial learner's permit shall be issued for a period of one (1) year for the fee prescribed in Section 63-1-43. Only one (1) renewal or reissuance may be granted within a two-year period. The holder of a commercial learner's permit may, unless otherwise disqualified, drive a commercial motor vehicle on a highway only when accompanied by the holder of a commercial driver's license valid for the type of vehicle driven who occupies a seat beside the individual for the purpose of giving instruction in driving the commercial motor vehicle.
(6) A commercial driver's license or commercial learner's permit may not be issued to a person while the person is subject to a disqualification from driving a commercial motor vehicle, or while the person's driver's license is suspended, revoked or cancelled in any state. A driver's license may not be issued to a person who has a commercial driver's license issued by any state unless the person first surrenders all driver's licenses issued by any state, which licenses shall be returned to the issuing states for cancellation.
(7) A person shall be entitled to take the test for a commercial driver's license unless the person's driver's license is, at the time of the requested test, suspended, revoked, cancelled or disqualified in any other state.
(8) Notwithstanding any requirement imposed by state law or state or federal regulations restricting the issuance of a commercial driver's license to a person suffering from diabetes, a person suffering from diabetes may be issued a commercial driver's license if the person otherwise meets all qualifications for issuance provided:
(a) The driver is physically examined every year, including an examination by a treating clinician attesting to the fact that the driver is:
(i) Free of insulin reactions (an individual is free of insulin reactions if that individual does not have severe hypoglycemia or hypoglycemia unawareness, and has less than one (1) documented, symptomatic hypoglycemic reaction per month);
(ii) Able to and has demonstrated willingness to properly monitor and manage the person's diabetes; and
(iii) Not likely to suffer any diminution in driving ability due to the person's diabetic condition.
(b) The driver agrees to and complies with the following conditions:
(i) A source of rapidly absorbable glucose shall be carried at all times while driving;
(ii) Blood glucose levels shall be self-monitored one (1) hour prior to driving and at least once every four (4) hours while driving or on duty prior to driving using a portable glucose monitoring device equipped with a computerized memory;
(iii) Submit blood glucose logs to the endocrinologist or medical examiner at the annual examination or when otherwise directed by the Department of Public Safety;
(iv) Provide a copy of the endocrinologist's report to the medical examiner at the time of the annual medical examination; and
(v) Provide a copy of the annual medical certification to the person's employer for retention in the driver's qualification file and retain a copy of the certification on his person while driving for presentation to a duly authorized federal, state or local enforcement official.
(c) The commercial license issued under this subsection (8) will bear an endorsement restricting commercial driving on the license to driving only within the boundaries of Mississippi.
(d) For purposes of this section, "treating clinician" means a healthcare professional who manages and prescribes insulin for the treatment of the individual's diabetes mellitus.
(9) The fees for all licenses, permits, renewals and endorsements shall be as prescribed in Section 63-1-43.
SECTION 3. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after July 1, 2023.