Be prepared for more rear bumper confusion
Due to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) denying a petition from the Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance (CVSA), officers may once again cite trailers that are missing the rear impact guard (rear bumper) certification label.
While the petition was being considered, CVSA had instructed officers to not cite trailers for a missing label. Now that the petition has been denied and officer issuing violation may return, so will the confusion.
The requirement
The regulation at 393.86, and by extension the National Highway Traffic Administration (NHTSA) regulation at 571.223, require that the manufacturer of a trailer with a GVWR of 10,001 pounds or more attach a certification label to the rear impact guard (bumper) verifying the trailer was built in compliance with 571.223. This applies to all trailers built on or after January 26, 1998. If the label is missing during a roadside inspection, the officer can issue a violation.
If a violation is issued for a missing label, the carrier must contact the trailer manufacturer to secure a replacement label, as they are the only entity that can issue one.
The confusion comes from misunderstandings
Here are some of the common misunderstandings related to the rear impact guard certification label that creates the confusion:
- An officer will place the trailer that is missing its rear impact certification label out of service. This is false. It is a violation to not have the label, but not an out-of-service violation.
- An officer will be looking for bumper certification labels on all vehicles. This is false. The covered trailers are the only ones that must have the label. Therefore, officer will only check the covered trailers for the certification label.
- During a periodic (normally annual) inspection the technician will not pass a covered trailer that is missing its label. This is also false. The technician will only be checking to make sure the rear bumper on a covered trailer is in good condition and the conspicuity tape is in place. The technician may check for the presence of the label and alert you it is missing, but a missing label will not result in a failed periodic inspection.
Key to remember: A covered trailer missing its rear impact guard certification label can be cited during a roadside inspection. If you receive such a violation, you need to work with the trailer manufacturer to get replacement label.