Do these seven situations qualify as adverse driving conditions?
Less-than-ideal road, weather, or traffic conditions may cause a driver to get a headache, but do you know when they cross the line from being annoying to allowing an exception to daily driving limits?
The adverse driving condition exemption found in 395.1(b) allows a driver to exceed the daily driving and duty limits (see 395.3 and 395.5) by up to two hours to complete what normally could have been completed. This exemption is only applicable if the driver encounters an adverse road, weather, or traffic condition that could not reasonably have been known at time of dispatch and at the start of the driver’s workday.
What does ‘could not reasonably have been known’ mean?
To sum this up, a carrier and driver do not have to do extensive research to discover if there will be an adverse road, weather, or traffic condition causing a delay along the driver’s route. Normal activities, such as checking weather forecasts and traffic conditions along the route are all that is required.
Seven examples
- Yesterday’s weather forecast for the area the driver is entering was for heavy rain and flooding. The expected rain came, and the driver was delayed by 30 minutes as a result. As this was expected, the adverse driving conditions exemption cannot be applied and the driver cannot exceed the daily limits.
- Yesterday’s and this morning’s weather forecast for the area the driver is entering called for rain. However, the temperature unexpectedly dropped, leading to an ice storm. The driver was delayed two hours as a result. As this was not expected, the adverse driving conditions exemption could be applied and the driver can exceed the driving and duty limits by two hours.
- There was a bridge collapse on the highway. The driver was stuck on the road for a short period and then had to use a detour. As a result, the driver was delayed three hours. As this was not expected, the adverse driving conditions exemption could be applied, and the driver can exceed the driving and duty limits by two hours (not three hours; two is the maximum).
- The driver arrives in a major city (Chicago, Atlanta, Baltimore, Los Angeles, etc.) at 4 p.m. on a Tuesday. The driver is delayed by two hours due to heavy traffic. As this is a normal traffic condition, the adverse driving conditions exemption cannot be applied.
- The driver is going through a major city at 2:00 a.m. There is an accident that causes the driver to be delayed by an hour. As the delay was not expected, the adverse driving conditions exemption could be applied and the driver can drive up to one extra hour as this is how long the driver was delayed.
- The driver is delayed at a customer for four hours. As this is not an adverse road, weather, or traffic condition, the driver cannot use the adverse driving condition exemption.
- The driver’s vehicle broke down. The total delay is two hours. As this is not an adverse road, weather, or traffic condition, the driver cannot use the adverse driving condition exemption.
Key to remember: The critical factors in being able to use the adverse driving conditions exemption are: Did the adverse condition involve a road, weather, or traffic condition? And could the adverse condition have been known at time of dispatch and/or at the start of the driver’s workday?