12/21/2025
A major fraud case has put Calgary’s trucking training system under the microscope after Alberta officials charged Delta Driving School with serious violations tied to commercial driver licensing. Investigators allege the school submitted falsified training records and issued certifications to students who never completed the mandatory MELT commercial driver training, a program designed to ensure new truck drivers meet strict safety standards before hitting the road.
According to authorities, the alleged scheme undermined the very foundation of road safety. MELT is meant to verify that drivers receive hands-on instruction, logged hours, and proper evaluations. Prosecutors say Delta Driving School bypassed these safeguards, allowing unqualified drivers to obtain credentials they had not earned. That raises troubling questions about how many improperly trained drivers may have ended up operating heavy commercial vehicles.
The case has reignited concerns across Canada’s trucking industry, where training integrity directly affects public safety. Regulators are now reviewing oversight gaps, warning that falsified certifications do not just break the law, they put lives at risk.
If a licensed driving school can allegedly cut corners this easily, how confident are we that every commercial driver on the road was truly trained to standard?