Cut your crash rate with this optional report
Did you know that a simple, inexpensive report could reduce your commercial motor vehicle (CMV) crash rate by nearly 10 percent, and your driver out-of-service rate by nearly 20 percent?
The government’s Pre-employment Screening Program (PSP) offers motor carriers access to critical safety information about prospective drivers — information that can make or break a hiring decision.
What’s included?
For the cost of only $10, a PSP report provides data on:
- A driver’s most recent five years of reportable CMV crashes, including the date and location, the carrier for whom the driver was working, the crash report number, and whether there were any injuries or fatalities.
- A driver’s most recent three years of roadside inspections, including the date and type of inspection, details about any violations, and whether the driver was placed out of service.
PSP reports also include the driver’s license number at the time of each crash or inspection, helping motor carriers ensure they’ve obtained all necessary driving records.
Best practice
Reports from the PSP program are optional but are highly recommended as a risk management tool. A key limitation, however, is the fact that PSP reports may only be obtained on prospective drivers, to better inform the hiring decision.
Violations and crashes that appear on a driver’s PSP report will not harm the safety records of motor carriers that hire the driver in the future. However, the reports can bring to light any bad behaviors or other safety concerns from a driver’s past.
The reports are updated monthly and are available online at www.psp.fmcsa.dot.gov.
10 important facts about PSP reports
- A study by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration found that companies that use the PSP can reduce their crash rates by an average of 8 percent and their driver out-of-service rates by 17 percent.
- Drivers must grant written consent for each request of their PSP report, using a specific form. The required consent form is available on the PSP website or at JJKeller.com.
- Motor carriers must pay an annual subscription fee in addition to the per-report cost.
- Drivers can sign up for a free monitoring service to receive updates whenever their PSP record changes.
- Drivers can purchase their own PSP reports or may obtain them for free by submitting a “Privacy Act” request at www.fmcsa.dot.gov/foia.
- A PSP report will indicate if a crash was deemed “not preventable” if such a determination was made through the FMCSA’s Crash Preventability Determination Program.
- Motor carriers cannot obtain PSP reports on just any drivers, only those they are considering hiring. The PSP is a pre-employment screening tool.
- Motor carriers using the PSP can be audited for compliance, to make sure they’re having drivers sign the required release forms and are keeping those forms for at least three years (even for drivers who are not hired).
- A driver’s violations and crashes on their PSP report — accrued through a previous employer — will not harm the hiring carrier’s Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) scores.
- Using the PSP does not affect the need to obtain a prospective driver’s motor vehicle record from the state or other licensing authority.
Key to remember: Though they’re optional, PSP reports can play a vital role in a motor carrier’s overall safety management program.