All Florida driver’s license examinations will be administered exclusively in English without the option of an interpreter, the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles said Friday. The ...
Starting Feb. 6, all printed tests in multiple languages and interpreter services for oral exams will be removed throughout the state.
Currently, exams for most non-commercial driver classifications are offered in English, Spanish and Haitian Creole.
This week, the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles announced that beginning Feb. 6, all driver’s license knowledge and skills exams will be administered in English only. That shift ...
All Florida driver's license knowledge and skills examinations will only be administered in English beginning February 6, ...
Florida will require all driver's license exams in English only starting Feb. 6, ending multilingual testing and translation ...
The Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles announced that it will not provide driver's license exams in ...
Florida will require all driver tests in English starting Feb. 6, citing safety as federal regulators sideline thousands of truckers over language rules.
The Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles will no longer offer exams in any language other than English starting on Feb. 6, officials announced Friday.
Florida’s latest move aligns with heightened national scrutiny of language proficiency in transportation safety.
The change will go into effect on Feb. 6, said the agency, which is ending all language-translation services and tests printed in other languages.
Previously, tests were administered in other languages.