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Driver Record of Violations (391.27)
2022-06-08T05:00:00Z
Effective May 9, 2022, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) eliminated the Record of Violations (391.27) requirement.
This final rule:
- Streamlined records. Addressed the duplication of the annual list of violations with the annual motor vehicle record requirements, and
- Updated language. Replaced the term “state” with “licensing authority” to clarify that carriers obtain motor vehicle records (MVRs) from foreign agencies when the driver is licensed in Canada or Mexico.
What can carriers stop doing?
- On and after May 9, 2022, you do not have to request the Record of Violations, or List of Violations as it is also called, from drivers per the elimination of 391.27.
What must carriers keep doing?
- Retention requirements. In the driver qualification file, retain for three years from the document date any Record of Violations’ documents collected before May 9, 2022.
- Annual review and Annual MVR. At least annually per 391.25, obtain an MVR from each driver’s licensing authority from which a driver holds (or has held) a commercial motor vehicle (CMV) operator’s license or permit in the past year. A supervisor must also conduct an annual review of the MVR and any other safety information on the driver. After which, the same person must make a note of the review with their name and date of the review.
- Driver hiring. At the time of hire, have the driver enter on the DOT application, the prior three years of violations for which a driver has been convicted or foreited a bond or collateral per 391.21(b)(8). Also, run an MVR from each licensing authority where the driver holds (or held) a license in the preceding three years. Retain the DOT application and the initial MVRs for length of employment plus three years.
- Drivers outside the U.S.. Run MVRs for drivers licensed in Canada and Mexico and review those MVRs. Canadian and Mexican motor carriers are already required by their applicable safety codes to request MVRs for their drivers from their country’s licensing authorities.
Compliance tips:
- Carriers should consider a policy requiring CDL (commercial driver’s license) and non-CDL drivers to report traffic violations and convictions within a specific timeframe. Currently, only CDL drivers are required to report convictions within 30 days per 383.31.
- Carriers should consider continuous MVR monitoring to lower the risk of having a disqualified driver on the road. Disqualification can be due to a lapse in licensing triggered by traffic convictions, a loss of medical certification for CDL drivers, or other reasons such as failure to pay child support.
Keys to remember:
Only the driver-completed list of violations/record of violations requirement was eliminated. Carriers must continue to pull the annual MVR and document the annual review.