How long do I have to file a DataQs?
There is a persistent rumor that a carrier must file a DataQs challenge within 60 days of an inspection or crash. While 60 days is used in the DataQs program, it is not the filing deadline if you want to challenge an inspection, inspection violation, or the recordability of a crash.
According to the DataQs Analyst Guide, states must accept a DataQs challenge (called a request for data review, or RDR) for up to three years for roadside inspections and five years for crashes. States are also required to put forth a “good faith effort” to investigate all RDRs. Therefore, a carrier has three years to file an RDR on a roadside inspection, and five years on crash data.
However, the longer the delay between the inspection and the RDR filing, the greater the odds that the state will have purged their internal records of an inspection (the inspector’s notes, pictures, etc.). If the DataQs investigator cannot access the records to investigate the RDR, the investigator will generally leave the inspection and any associated violations stand as is.
In reality, the RDR will generally need to be filed within one year of the inspection. This way, the investigator will likely be able to conduct the investigation effectively.
At this point you may be asking, what do states have to do with this? In most cases, roadside inspection and crash reports are generated by a state (or a local agency operating under the state’s authority). Therefore, the state involved is the entity that must make any corrections. The FMCSA’s role in this process is only to provide the tool (DataQs) that allows carriers to challenge the data.
The 60-day limit in DataQs has to do with the carrier providing the investigator with additional supporting documents when requested. If the investigator requests additional documents or information from the carrier and it is not provided within 14 days, the investigator can close the RDR at any time after the 14 days. In all cases, if the information is not provided in 60 days, the RDR will be closed.
The DataQs Analyst Guide may be found online at: https://bit.ly/3pyBveF
You have up to three or five years to file a DataQs RDR. However, the sooner the better.


















































