House bill puts the brakes on FMCSA’s speed-limiter plans
Purse strings at the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) may tighten if recently proposed legislation becomes law.
The House Appropriations Committee has passed a bill to fund the agency through fiscal year 2025, but the funds it authorizes may be less important than the spending it prohibits.
From speed limiters to ELDs
Among other provisions, the bill prohibits the FMCSA from using budgeted money to:
- Write any rules that would require speed limiters on vehicles over 26,000 pounds used in interstate commerce. The FMCSA has been working on such rules for years and was planning to issue a formal proposal early next year.
- Enforce the electronic logging device (ELD) rule on motor carriers transporting livestock or insects. This prohibition has been in place for several years already thanks to prior legislation.
- Reverse earlier decisions that meal- and rest-break rules enacted by California and Washington are in conflict with federal hours-of-service rules and cannot be enforced. This would not apply to the FMCSA’s decision regarding California’s rest-break rules for bus and motorcoach drivers, however.
- Require the use of inward-facing cameras or registration as an apprenticeship program as conditions for participating in the Safe Driver Apprenticeship Pilot (SDAP) program. This prohibition is already in place as part of this year’s (FY2024) FMCSA funding bill. The SDAP program allows a driver under 21 years of age to drive commercial vehicles in interstate commerce if certain conditions are met.
The bill includes $200 million to fund truck parking and says the money can only be used for parking facilities that won’t charge drivers for parking. It also prioritizes projects located in rural areas and near federal-aid highways.
The bill now heads to the full House of Representatives and will need to be reconciled with the Senate version before becoming law.
You can weigh in
The 2025 fiscal year begins in October, so the clock is ticking on legislators to pass a variety of funding bills, not only for the FMCSA but all other government agencies. There’s no official process for commenting on pending legislation, but the public can contact their representatives at any time to lobby for their preferences. Contact information is available at www.house.gov/representatives/find-your-representative.
Key to remember: The House of Representatives will soon be voting on a bill to fund the FMCSA for fiscal year 2025. The proposed legislation includes a variety of provisions affecting the agency’s ability to spend money.