How an intrastate driver can move an interstate load
Situations may arise requiring a normally intrastate driver to move an interstate load. The resulting question is often, “Can they?” The driver can if the carrier has an active interstate USDOT number; and the driver is not restricted from doing so.
Driver restrictions
For the intrastate driver to be able to move an interstate load, the driver must be qualified to the federal standards of 49 CFR 391. This means a full driver qualification file, safety performance history file, medical certification, etc. If the driver is a commercial driver license (CDL) holder, it also means the driver self-certified with the state as an interstate driver.
Intrastate versus interstate hours of service
To receive federal highway dollars, states must adopt the federal regulations or their equivalent for the state’s intrastate drivers. However, several exclusions are allowed – including for hours of service (HOS). These exclusions frequently result in the state’s HOS rules being more permissible than the federal rules. This could mean the driver while operating intrastate did not have any HOS limits, could work more hours in an eight-day period or in a work shift, or have fewer hours off-duty between shifts. But the driver needs to be compliant with the federal rules while operating interstate – before, during, and after the interstate movement.
One of the longest and most complicated federal motor carrier safety regulation interpretations is question number 24, 49 CFR 390.3. The interpretation answers the question, “To what extent does the federal government have jurisdiction to regulate the qualifications and hours of service of CMV (Commercial Motor Vehicle) drivers engaged in interstate or foreign commerce if the drivers only occasionally operate in interstate or foreign commerce?” If printed in its entirety, this article would continue for many more pages – and the reader may still not fully understand how to comply. The simple(r) explanation of the official interpretation has come to be known as the “14/15-day rule.”
To be compliant with the federal HOS rules, an otherwise intrastate driver must:
- Before the trip:
Seven days before drivers begin a trip in interstate commerce in a CMV, they must begin preparing records of duty status (logs), unless they are exempt from logging under a short-haul exception.
On the day the interstate trip is to begin, drivers must have in their possession logs for the previous 7 consecutive days (unless a short-haul exception is used). This is required even if the driver operated only in intrastate commerce during that 7-day period.
During the 7-day period prior to the interstate trip, the driver may follow state hours-of-service limits concerning driving and on-duty time, rather than federal rules. Before the interstate trip begins, however, the driver must have the appropriate amount of off-duty time (8-consecutive hours for a passenger carrying driver or 10-consecutive hours for a property carrying driver) and must follow the 60- or 70-hour limits. - During the trip:
During the interstate trip, the driver is subject to roadside enforcement of the federal hours-of-service rules – including the use of an ELD (Electronic Logging Device) if applicable. The driver would not be allowed to follow alternative state-specific hours-of-service rules for any part of the trip.
FMCSA investigators will cite drivers for violations of the 11- or 14-hour rules (for property-carrying vehicles), the 10- or 15-hour rules (for passenger-carrying vehicles), or the 60- or 70-hour rules that are committed while on the interstate trip. - After the trip:
Any driver who begins a trip in interstate commerce must continue to meet the federal requirements through the end of that day and the next 7 to 8 consecutive days, depending which rule the motor carrier operates under (i.e., the 60- or 70-hour limits).
Drivers must continue to comply with the federal requirements even if they operate exclusively in intrastate commerce for the remainder of the 60/70 hour period (i.e., 7-8 day schedule) at the end of the interstate trip. Note that the 14/15-day policy was enacted before truck drivers were allowed to get a 34-hour “restart,” so the policy does NOT say that getting a restart will eliminate the need to continue complying with federal rules for the 7/8-day period after returning to intrastate operations.
FMCSA investigators will cite drivers for violations of the federal rules that are committed during the 7 or 8 days after completing the interstate trip.
In addition to enforcement action, if the driver is involved in a serious property damage, injury, or fatality accident the carrier should anticipate the plaintiff’s attorney will closely review the driver’s HOS records for the entire 14/15-day period.
Key to remember
To make even a single interstate movement, the driver, carrier, and vehicle must all be compliant with the federal rules. For an interstate move to occur, the driver never needs to leave his or her state. If the movement is interstate in nature, the federal rules apply. For hours-of-service compliance, this means driver and carrier responsibilities before, during, and after the move.