Agency has appendix removed, medical forms revised
As it has most years, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has made a series of technical corrections to its safety regulations. Though minor, the changes will nevertheless affect some motor carriers, medical examiners, and supervisors of drivers who hold learner’s permits, among others.
The changes affected most parts of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations, and most changes went into effect on November 17, 2023.
Among the revisions:
- A minor change to the medical examination form and certificate,
- Clarification that a person who rides along and supervises a commercial learner’s permit (CLP) holder must be fully authorized to drive the vehicle,
- Clarification that the initial driving record (MVR) obtained at the time of hire must cover the prior three years (which is how the rule is normally interpreted),
- Clarification that drivers may only use a prohibited drug if “prescribed by a licensed medical practitioner” and not merely used “pursuant to the instruction of” such a practitioner,
- Removal of several appendices that no longer held any rules,
- The addition of broadband internet and cellular telephone operations as examples of utilities that may use the “utility service vehicle” exemption from the hours-of-service rules,
- Clarification of what needs to be included in estimates provided by household goods carriers,
- Correction of the telephone number for filing complaints (1-888-DOT-SAFT), and
- Minor wording changes to conform to the government’s style manual.
CLP supervisors must be qualified
The FMCSA amended 49 CFR 383.25 to specify that the CDL-holding driver who accompanies and observes a CLP holder in the front seat of the vehicle must not only be properly licensed for the vehicle but also “authorized to operate the [vehicle] for that trip.”
The change was requested by the enforcement community to avoid situations where the CDL holder may be properly licensed to operate the vehicle but not legally allowed to drive for other reasons, such as:
- Being listed as “prohibited” in the Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse,
- Not having a current medical certificate, or
- Being incorrectly self-certified with the licensing agency (such as being self-certified as “excepted” but performing a “non-excepted” trip).
January deadline for new forms
The FMCSA has revised both the Medical Examination Report Form and Medical Examiner’s Certificate to remove the option for a driver to be certified under 391.64, which was an old “grandfathering” provision for drivers with vision deficiencies. That option went away in March 2023.
The FMCSA is giving users of the forms until January 16, 2024, to start using the new versions, although the agency could issue a grace period as it has in the past.
Key to remember: The FMCSA has made a variety of rule changes throughout its safety regulations, including changes to the medical forms and the rules for supervising CLP holders.