CSA data reflects over 1,300 new citation codes
Commercial vehicle inspectors are using new software to record roadside violations, which affects the way violations now appear in the Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) program.
As of February 1, 2023, over 1,300 new citations were added to the CSA violation list. Many of the added citations are not entirely new to the list, but rather are renumbered, reworded, or more granular versions of existing violations. The citation list now aligns with recent changes to roadside inspection software.
Note that the formulas used in the CSA calculations were unchanged in this most recent update. The CSA algorithms measure a motor carrier’s safety performance using the severity of violations, exposure, and how recent a violation occurred. The motor carrier’s measure is compared against those of similar motor carriers. The motor carrier is then assigned a percentile ranking (BASIC score) within the peer group.
How do the changes affect CSA data?
Any citations prior to February 1, 2023, will remain intact and unaltered. Enforcement will not backtrack to update previous codes.
Instead, motor carriers will see old and new citation codes in their data through January 2025, since the CSA’s Safety Measurement System (SMS) reflects the past two years’ worth of roadside inspections. Driver data, which is not available to the public, will have the same mixture of violation codes through January 2026.
How are PSP reports affected?
Both motor carriers and drivers will see a combination of old and new codes and descriptions reflected in Pre-employment Screening Program (PSP) driver reports through January 31, 2026. The PSP program assists motor carriers in vetting commercial drivers by providing the past three years’ worth of roadside inspections and five years of DOT crashes.
Sample violation
A revised violation will appear differently depending on when the event occurred. For example, prior to February 1, 2023, a roadside inspection notes reckless driving as “392.2R” with a description of “Reckless driving.” More recent violations will show as “392.2-SLLRD” with a description of “State/Local Laws - Reckless driving.”
Summary of changes by BASIC
The SMS groups violations using violation categories, or BASICs (Behavior Analysis and Safety Improvement Categories). The following summarizes the number of existing citations by BASIC that were carried over and the number of new citations added to the BASIC:
BASIC | Existing Citations | New Citations | Total Citations |
Unsafe Driving | 45 | 48 | 93 |
Hours-of-Service Compliance | 74 | 82 | 156 |
Vehicle Maintenance | 406 | 670 | 1,076 |
Controlled Substances/Alcohol | 11 | 7 | 18 |
Hazardous Materials Compliance | 369 | 528 | 897 |
Driver Fitness | 55 | 23 | 78 |
Total | 960 | 1,358 | 2,318 |
Key to remember: As motor carriers review roadside inspection data and PSP reports, they will see several new citations and changes to existing violations.