CDL drivers need to provide a medical card to the DMV for a little longer
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has further delayed the implementation of the second part of the Medical Examiner’s Certification Integration final rule.
This rule change was originally scheduled to go into effect in 2018 but was delayed until June 22, 2021. The rule change is now set to go into full effect on June 23, 2025.
What does this mean to your CDL driver?
The delay has two direct impacts on CDL drivers and carriers:
- CDL drivers will still have to provide the state driver’s licensing agency (SDLA) with a copy of the medical card when a medical exam is passed (in a few states, drivers must provide a copy of the examination long-form as well).
- Carriers must continue placing proof in the driver’s qualification (DQ) file that the medical examiner was on the National Registry of Certified Medical Examiners (NRCME) at the time of the medical exam for CDL drivers.
These two steps were to have disappeared from the process under the changes there were due to go into effect on June 22, 2021.
Review of the current process
Under the current regulations (in effect until June 23, 2025), here is the process that must be followed when a CDL driver passes a DOT medical examination:
- The medical examiner uploads the medical exam records to FMCSA by the end of the next day;
- The driver provides the state with a copy of the new medical card as soon as possible after the exam (and long-form in some states) and the state places the new medical certification information onto the driver’s MVR within 10 days;
- The driver provides the carrier with a copy of the medical card and the carrier places a copy of the medical card in the driver’s DQ file as proof the driver is medically qualified (though this proof is only valid for the first 15 days after the exam);
- The carrier verifies and documents that the medical examiner is listed on the NRCME;
- The driver carries the medical card as proof of being medically qualified for up to 15 days;
- The carrier runs an MVR to verify the new medical information is on the driver’s MVR within 15 days of the exam; and
- The carrier places the new MVR in the driver’s DQ file as proof the driver is medically qualified.
Key to remember
The FMCSA has delayed changes to the medical-card/CDL licensing process for another four years. This means current practices for the processing of medical certificates are not changing until June 23, 2025.