Driver background investigations one year in
Nearly one year has passed since the DOT removed the requirement for drivers to provide a list of past violations, yet questions remain about what motor carriers are required to do to verify their drivers’ backgrounds.
The situation is further complicated by recent changes to previous-employer inquiries.
Two key changes were made
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) made two key changes to driver background investigations over the past 11 months:
- May 9, 2022: The FMCSA removed 49 CFR 391.27, Record of violations. As of that date, motor carriers were no longer required to obtain an annual list of traffic violations from their drivers. Any list collected prior to that date, however, must still be retained for three years.
- January 6, 2023: Motor carriers are now required to query the Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse instead of contacting former employers for information about a driver-applicant’s FMCSA-mandated drug and alcohol testing history.
Six steps at hire
With these changes, what’s required today for commercial motor vehicle (CMV) driver background investigations? Motor carriers must take the following steps:
- Make sure driver-applicants continue to list their traffic convictions for the prior three years on the employment application, along with each unexpired CMV license or permit they currently hold, from any jurisdiction. The regulations do not specify what you should do with the conviction information, but the expectation is that you take violations into account when making a hiring decision.
- Ensure driver-applicants list their current and past employers on the application (even employers for whom they did not drive). For all drivers, three years of employment history are required. For drivers with a commercial driver’s license (CDL), an additional seven years are required, although the list must include only employers for whom the applicant drove a CMV and you are not required to contact those employers.
- For CDL drivers, run a pre-employment query of the Clearinghouse to verify the driver is not prohibited from operating a CMV. You must have the results of this query before the driver operates a CMV (or performs any other safety-sensitive functions) for you.
- Contact each current or past employer for whom the driver operated a CMV in the past three years, to verify employment and obtain the driver’s recordable crash history. You must obtain this information within 30 days of hire.
- For any driver who, in the past three years, worked in a job that required DOT drug or alcohol testing under another DOT agency besides FMCSA (such as the Federal Transit Administration or Federal Aviation Administration), contact the employer (with the driver’s consent) to verify the driver did not violate any DOT testing rules for that employer. This information must be on file within 30 days of employment.
- Obtain a motor vehicle record (MVR) within 30 days of hire from each licensing authority where the driver was licensed (including the U.S., Canada, or Mexico, as applicable). These initial MVRs must be retained for the duration of the driver’s employment plus three years. Again, the rules do not specify actions to take based on what you see on the MVR, but make sure the driver has a valid license and is properly self-certified as an interstate or intrastate driver.
Though optional, a final recommended step is to purchase a Pre-employment Screening Program (PSP) report to see the driver-applicant’s roadside violation and crash history, including events that would not necessarily appear on the application or MVR. If you obtain this report, be sure to keep the driver’s written consent on file for at least three years.
Three annual steps remain
After hiring a new driver, perform the following on an annual basis:
- Obtain an MVR from each licensing authority where the driver held a CMV license or permit over the prior year.
- Review the MVR(s) to determine whether the driver remains qualified to drive under state, federal, and/or company standards. Document this annual MVR review and keep your notes and the MVR in the driver’s file for three years. The note must include the name of the reviewer and the date of the review.
- Query the Clearinghouse for each CDL driver to verify they’re not prohibited from driving a CMV.
Key to remember: With the removal of drivers’ annual lists of violations and recent changes to previous-employer inquiries, there remain seven key steps to a background investigation of CMV drivers.