FMCSA extends COVID-19 emergency exemptions
The FMCSA has once again extended its emergency exemptions enacted in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The agency’s Emergency Declaration as well as its licensing and medical-card exceptions were due to expire on February 28, 2022. Now, the emergency declaration has been extended through May 31, 2022, and a new enforcement policy extends the CDL/CLP/med card exceptions through April 15, 2022.
Emergency declaration
In place since March 2020, the emergency exemption provides hours-of-service relief to qualifying motor carriers supporting pandemic-relief efforts. As before, the exemption applies to the transportation of a limited list of commodities, including:
- Livestock and livestock feed;
- Medical supplies and equipment related to the testing, diagnosis, and treatment of COVID-19;
- Vaccines, constituent products, and medical supplies and equipment including ancillary supplies/kits for the administration of vaccines, related to the prevention of COVID-19;
- Supplies and equipment necessary for community safety, sanitation, and prevention of community transmission of COVID-19 such as masks, gloves, hand sanitizer, soap, and disinfectants;
- Food, paper products, and other groceries for emergency restocking of distribution centers or stores;
- Gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, and ethyl alcohol; and
- Supplies to assist individuals impacted by the consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic (e.g., building materials for individuals displaced or otherwise impacted as a result of the emergency).
The latest extension continues to offer relief from the hours-of-service limits in 49 CFR 395.3. This means eligible drivers are not required to have a minimum amount of rest and may drive after the normal 11-hour driving limit, 14-hour duty limit, and/or 60/70-hour weekly limit. They must be in compliance, however, with all other federal safety requirements related to driver qualification, vehicle inspections and maintenance, drug and alcohol testing, licensing, cargo securement, etc. They also must log their time as they normally would, whether using paper logs, electronic logs, or short-haul time records.
Reporting requirement remains
Motor carriers must continue to report their usage of the emergency exemption to the FMCSA. Specifically, motor carriers that use the exemption must log in to their FMCSA Portal account within five days after the end of each month to report their use of the exemption. Carriers are to access the “Emergency Declaration Reporting” tool under the “Available FMCSA Systems” section on the Portal website.
Licensing enforcement
Drivers having trouble updating their commercial licenses due to the pandemic have a little more time to renew their credentials. The FMCSA let its licensing “waiver” expire but has replaced it with a new enforcement policy that’s in place until April 15.
Under the policy, the FMCSA will not take enforcement action against drivers operating with an expired CDL or CLP (learner’s permit) if the license or permit expired on or after March 1, 2020.
The new enforcement policy is not binding on the states, so drivers should verify that their state is honoring it.
Medical-card enforcement
Under the new enforcement policy for medical certificates, the FMCSA will not take enforcement action against a driver operating with an expired certificate if his or her existing medical card expired on or after December 1, 2021. The driver must carry a copy of his or her expired medical certificate and any required variance.
The enforcement policy for medical certificates expires on April 15, 2022, unless revoked sooner.