2 ways an FMCSA accident decision can be determined non-preventable
There are two ways an accident can be determined to be non-preventable by Federal Motor Carriers Safety Administration (FMCSA). In both cases, if the accident is found to be non-preventable it will not be used in a specific calculation, but it must remain on the carrier’s accident register and it will remain in the carrier’s data at FMCSA.
1. Crash Preventability Determination Program (CPDP)
If an accident occurred on or after August 1, 2019, and it fits into one of 10 categories, you can ask that the crash be reviewed for preventability using the DataQs system (file a DataQs request, provide the police accident report and other supporting materials, etc.).
If the crash fits one of the eligible categories and is found to be non-preventable, the crash will not be used in your Crash BASIC scoring in CSA. However, it must stay on your accident register and it will stay in FMCSA’s data.
The 10 categories of crashes that are eligible under this program include:
- The CMV was struck in the rear
- The CMV was struck by a vehicle going the wrong direction or making an illegal turn
- The CMV was struck while legally parked or stopped
- The CMV was struck by a vehicle that failed to stop
- The CMV was struck by another motorist that was under the influence
- The CMV was struck by another motorist that admitted to a medical issue, falling asleep, or being distracted
- The CMV struck falling cargo or debris, or was involved in an infrastructure failure
- The CMV struck an animal
- The other driver committed or attempted suicide
- Rare and unusual situations (such as being hit by an airplane)
To be found non-preventable, the submission must include the police accident report, and the police report must support the carrier’s claim that the crash is eligible and was not preventable. Also, there cannot have been an out-of-service violation present prior to the crash. This includes the driver testing positive for drugs or alcohol following the crash.
To date, there have been 31,934 crashes submitted to FMCSA. Of those, almost 30 percent (8,683) have been closed and not acted on due to either the crash not matching the eligible categories or the carrier not responding to a request for more information. To improve your chances of having a crash declared non-preventable, verify that the crash matches the eligibility categories and check your DataQs account regularly when you have an open request in the system.
2. Factor 6 calculation during an audit or investigation
During an audit (compliance review) or an investigation, a carrier can request that a crash not be used in the calculation of the crash rate per million miles done in Factor 6. If the investigator and the investigator’s supervisor review the proof provided by the carrier (police accident report, insurance reports, reconstructionist reports, etc.) and agree the crash is non-preventable, it will not be used in the calculation. However, it will remain in FMCSA’s data and it must remain on the carrier’s accident register.
Key to remember: The first step in determining if a crash was non-preventable is conducting your own investigation. If you conclude it was non-preventable, the next step is remembering there are two ways an accident can be determined to be non-preventable by the FMCSA, depending on the situation.