If you’re fined by the DOT, watch the deadlines
The fate of two motor carriers recently fined by the FMCSA serves as a warning to other carriers facing a similar situation: know the deadlines!
Both companies underwent routine audits from the FMCSA. Unfortunately, they both had violations and were sent notices that they were going to be fined.
No company wants to receive a “Notice of Claim” (the official name for the DOT letter notifying you that you’re being fined). But the steps you take after receiving such a notice are key to determining whether you really need to pay that fine (also known as a “civil penalty”) in full.
Fines can be contested
In one case, a Texas-based freight hauler was hit with a fine of $14,120, including:
- $9,900 for 15 counts of false logs, and
- $4,220 for failing to systematically inspect, repair, and maintain its vehicles.
In the other case, a small Arizona motor carrier was hit with a penalty of $2,860:
- $1,350 for using a driver before getting a negative pre-employment drug test result;
- $1,350 for operating a truck that didn’t have an annual inspection; and
- $160 for failing to keep inspection and maintenance records.
These penalties were only proposed, at first. The companies were given a chance to fight them and, perhaps, make them smaller. But in this case, that didn’t happen. Why? Because both companies dropped the ball.
The clock is ticking
By regulation (49 CFR 386.14), as soon as you’re served a Notice of Claim, the clock starts ticking. You have 30 days to respond, and you have three options:
- You can pay the fine in full;
- You can request to argue your case before a DOT judge, possibly having violations removed and/or the fine reduced; or
- You can admit to the violations but seek to have the fine reduced through binding arbitration.
Motor carriers commonly choose one of the latter options and fight for a reduced penalty — and they are often successful. The key is doing it on time.
The Arizona motor carrier, for example, waited 43 days to make a case that it had trouble complying with the regulations due to reduced operations, the pandemic, and being new to DOT compliance, but has since made a concerted effort to comply.
That type of argument could have resulted in a smaller fine — if it didn’t arrive 13 days too late.
Similarly, the Texas company waited 41 days to argue that its fine should be reduced because it took corrective actions — too little, too late.
Both companies were recently ordered to pay their fines in full, immediately.
One last chance
Getting your fine reduced starts with following the procedures and deadlines laid out in 49 CFR Part 386.
Even if you fail to respond to a Notice of Claim within 30 days, all is not lost. The FMCSA will then issue a “Notice of Default and Final Agency Order,” giving you another 20 days to file a petition asking the agency to reconsider. That’s your last chance to fight the fines before being ordered to pay up.
Key to remember
If you’re fined by the FMCSA, follow the procedures and timelines in 49 CFR Part 386 or risk being ordered to pay the full amount of the fine — without a chance to argue your case.