Bringing drivers back from layoffs and breaks in employment
How you handle a returning driver is determined by the intent of the layoff, furlough, or employment separation. Carriers need answers to the following questions:
- Was the time away from work temporary, with the understanding that the driver would be recalled or come back?
- Was the driver’s intent to not return to work, and the employment relationship would be severed?
This article examines the impact on driver qualification (DQ) during a temporary layoff or when the employment relationship ends.
Temporary layoff
Suppose the driver was told the layoff was temporary and to expect a callback. In that case, this is not a break in employment if the driver was an employee during the period away.
Carriers should not create a new DQ file if the driver was not “terminated” from the driver roster. When the driver returns, however, the carrier should verify that the DQ file documents and Department of Transportation (DOT) random test, if applicable, are current. These steps should occur before the driver operates a commercial motor vehicle (CMV).
Check the items that are due or overdue, such as:
- Annual Motor Vehicle Record (MVR) – 391.25
- Annual review – 391.25
- Medical certificate (do not let a medical card lapse, if possible, due to a potential CDL downgrade and cost for the driver) – 391.45
- Random drug test if the driver was in the latest pull and is expected to return before the end of the current testing cycle (do not test under the DOT program otherwise) – 382.305
Also, consider creating an off-duty notification policy for drug testing. Make the drivers aware they may be called for a drug screen during a layoff and must go once notified. Be careful not to inform a driver unless you know they can go for the test. It will be a refusal if they don’t go for the test.
Carriers may want to document the layoff dates in the DQ file. This makes it easy to prove that the driver did not operate a CMV with missing or incomplete qualification documents.
Termination
If the driver is not considered an employee after the separation, there is a break in employment.
Whether a carrier terminates a driver or a driver quits, the process is the same as for any new hire. The only difference is that valid documents in the old DQ file can be copied and used in the new DQ file, such as:
- Valid medical card with time left provided the driver has not experienced disqualifying conditions.
- Safety Performance History information from employers the driver worked at in the three years before being rehired provided the verifications were compliant with 391.23.
- Road test evaluation form and certificate, if completed less than three years ago per 391.33.
Create new documents based on the rehire date, not the original hire date, including:
- Driver application compliant with 391.21;
- Motor vehicle reports from each state in which the driver held a license in the prior three years per 391.23;
- DOT pre-employment negative drug test result per 382.301. If the driver was out of a carrier’s DOT testing program for NOT more than 30 days, the exception in 382.301(b) and (c) might be an option (CDL-vehicle driver only);
- Pre-employment drug screen question asking the driver about previous failed DOT pre-employment drug screens per 40.25(j) (CDL-vehicle driver only);
- Drug and alcohol educational materials and company policy are reissued per 382.601 and obtain a newly signed receipt with a date corresponding to the rehire date (CDL-vehicle driver only); and
- Pre-employment full Clearinghouse query if removed from the DOT testing program (CDL-vehicle driver only).
The original DQ file and DOT drug and alcohol testing program documents are kept three years from the termination date as if the driver never returned.
Keys to remember:
Transportation employment may include seasonal furloughs, temporary layoffs, or the permanent severing of driver employment. Knowing the compliance requirements before a driver returns to CMV driving is critical.