Cracks in the system: Disqualified drivers still on the road
A new study has found that disqualified drivers are evading the safeguards that are supposed to take them off the road. In some cases, up to three out of four disqualified drivers are getting through roadside inspections without being caught.
The study from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) examined how effective the states and court system are at:
- Removing driving privileges from commercial driver’s license (CDL) holders who have committed disqualifying offenses, and then
- Catching them on the road if they keep driving.
8 states, 3 years
Researchers examined data from eight states over the three-year period from 2016 to 2018. Among the findings:
- The rate at which disqualified drivers were caught during roadside inspections ranged from 24 to 66 percent. In other words, between one out of three and three out of four drivers were allowed to keep driving even though they had lost driving privileges.
- Court data showed potential “masking” in 0.5 to 18 percent of cases, usually due to conviction on reduced charges. Courts can mask disqualifying citations by reducing the charge or convicting on non-disqualifying offenses.
- Officers have discretion when issuing citations at the roadside, which presents an opportunity for drivers to avoid potentially disqualifying offenses depending on how the officer chooses to write it up.
- Disqualification records may be lost or compromised as they pass through multiple federal, state, and sometimes local recordkeeping systems. In the end, they may not get recorded in the master licensing database.
- Some state licensing agencies fail to apply the mandatory CDL disqualification periods listed in 49 CFR 383.51.
What can the DOT do?
Researchers recommend that the FMCSA take several steps to improve the disqualification process:
- Tighten the voluntary, free-form citation field on the roadside inspection form, while still leaving some discretion to inspectors.
- Improve the “mapping” of state citations to federal citations and agree on which state citations should be disqualifying.
- Train officers on how to record disqualifying offenses properly, and the consequences of not doing so.
- Do further research into how various disqualifying offenses are treated and how long they take to process.
What can motor carriers do?
Motor carriers are prohibited from allowing disqualified drivers behind the wheel, but how can you tell if a driver is disqualified?
- Your drivers are supposed to be reporting any loss of driving privileges to you within one day, as required in 391.15 and (for CDL drivers) 383.33.
- Your CDL-holding drivers must report traffic convictions to you within 30 days, in writing, per 383.31. Compare these against the list of disqualifying offenses in 383.51.
- You must review a driver’s motor vehicle record (MVR) within 30 days of hiring a new driver and at least annually. Check if the states where your drivers are licensed have monitoring/notification services that can notify you whenever there’s a change in a driver’s record. If an MVR shows that a driver has lost privileges, remove the driver from service immediately if the disqualification applies to the vehicle they’re driving.
- Watch roadside inspection data for disqualifying offenses that show up during roadside inspections.
Keep in mind: Only the FMCSA or state licensing agency may officially disqualify a driver (refer to the definition of “disqualification” in 383.5), but if you know that a driver is disqualified, you must not let them drive any vehicle for which they are not qualified. As stated by the FMCSA:
“Motor carriers have no authority to disqualify drivers. However, a conviction for a disqualifying offense automatically disqualifies a driver from driving for the period specified in the regulations. Thus, so long as a motor carrier knows, or should have known, of a driver’s conviction for a disqualifying offense, it is prohibited from using the driver during the disqualification period.”
Key to remember: A new study reveals gaps in the driver disqualification process. Until improvements are made, be sure you’re on the lookout for disqualifying offenses and suspended driving privileges.