How to handle unassigned driving time (and prevent it)
Many carriers get hung up on how unassigned driving time is being created or the special circumstances that apply to their company. Those details are irrelevant, however, because once it has been created there are only these two options:
- Assign it to a specific driver, or
- Attach a comment to it explaining why it could not be assigned to a driver.
There is no third option. If the unassigned driving time is left in the unassigned driver account without a comment attached, it is a violation of 395.32. Worse, if unassigned driving time that should have been assigned to a driver is left in the unassigned driving account, you could be helping a driver operate over hours by falsifying. This is because driving when logged out is one of the most common ways drivers falsify when using an electronic logging device (ELD).
Preventing it
There are things a carrier can do to prevent unassigned driving time. These are the choices available to prevent it include:
- Have all personnel that could move a vehicle with an ELD assigned a driver account (if you are not willing to do this, you will have unassigned to deal with; it is unavoidable).
- Have drivers use the special driving categories in the ELD so they are not logging out when the driving time needs to be on a different duty line (such as off duty during personal use or when using certain exemptions, and on duty during yard moves).
- Work with the drivers (counselling, training, ongoing communications, remedial training, etc.) when they forget to log in or log out early, or they are not logging in for movements they mistakenly believe they do not need to be logged in for (if the vehicle moves, it is either driving time, yard time, or personal use time as far as the driver moving the vehicle is concerned, there is no other option).
- Instruct drivers that during the log-in process the device will ask you to accept any unassigned driving time that is on the device. If it is yours, accept it.
- Also instruct drivers that if they realize they drove while logged out, they should stop, log in, and accept the unassigned time that was created.
Key to remember: All unassigned driving time must be treated the same once it has been created. Also, preventing unassigned driving time is simply a matter of deciding which of the available options works best for you.