Ok..I was born in the USA and live and work in Alberta, Canada now because I am a Dual USA/Canadian citizen. My question is simple. Can I work in Texas for an American company with my Canadian CDL...according to what I read, a driver must possess a valid CDL from their home state where he or she resides. I reside in Canada(for now) and hold a valid CDL but a lot of companies I talk to in Texas tell me that I must hold a Texas CDL to drive their truck and the usual " because of insurance" line...so, how do companies like Cal Frac, Baker Hughes and Slumberger send guys to the USA to work in the spring during spring break up get around that? Can someone enlighten me please lol Thanks
Can I run with my Canadian CDL in Texas???
Discussion in 'Oilfield Trucking Forum' started by Dennisrichard1966, Jan 9, 2015.
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Maybe US companies rotate drivers out before any residency laws take effect in Canada? Most oil jobs in Texas is local work. Home daily type of tankers. Day cabs. So they might only want local guys. If you live here with a permanent residency you need a TX CDL. You might need to find a company that is not a Texas company but do haul oil on Texas. Another thing your asking to work in America, for an American company. Might want to check out the work visa programs. That would be like me going to work in Canada for a Canadian company.
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TNMT....did you miss the part where I stated I was born in the USA? I don't need a visa, I am an American Citizen
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Simple answer is no. You will need to convert to the state where you reside within 30 days I think.
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Same if one of us was to move from 1 state to another for more than 30 days we have to transfer our license to that new state.
Dave ----Jerry12 Thanks this. -
Ok, the jobs I've been looking at are shifts like 21/7 or 4 weeks on and one week off kinda thing, living in the truck. How can a driver be coonsidered a resident of a state that the driver doesn't live in? What adress goes on your CDL if you don't reside in that state? So if what u guys are saying is right....if a guy lives in Louisianna and works for a company in Texas, if he works for 5 weeks at a time.....is he doing it illegally? Makes no sense to me...
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..."a driver must possess a valid CDL from their home state where he or she resides."..re-read that and what do you see?A valid CDL from their STATE and NOT "a valid CDL from their home state or country"...
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Ok, so, if I buy a home in Florida and reside in Florida...then I would have a Florida CDL and could work in Texas with my Florida CDL correct???
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Why go and buy a house in Florida
where i can sell you an ocean front property in Arizona?just kidding..All you need to do is call Texas DMV and ask how you can change your class 1 license to a class A...
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I live in NY, and work in OH, and still have my NY license. I work varying rotations, typically 14 on 7 off. This stuff about switching your CDL to the state you're going to work in only applies if you are relocating your residence there (unless Texas has some obnoxious rule about out-of-state workers). I do not know how having a Canadian license would fit in...shouldn't make a difference. Met plenty of Canadian folks (mostly Talisman staff) who were working here on the same sort of rotations I am, and I'm pretty certain they weren't asked to switch their licenses.
Of course, as they say around here... "This Ain't ##### Texas".
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