Off duty or off track? PC violations continue to grow
Roadside truck and bus inspectors are ramping up enforcement against drivers who abuse the “personal conveyance” (PC) provision. Are your drivers using it properly?
The PC provision allows drivers to log commercial vehicle driving time as “off duty” rather than “driving.” Such off-duty driving is allowed only to “convey” or transport the driver for personal reasons, such as to commute to or from work or to get to a restaurant or grocery store.
The provision is subject to widespread abuse, however, because it can be used to mask time that should otherwise be logged as normal “driving.”
Up 32%
Though PC violations have occurred for decades, officers only had a way to single them out on inspection reports beginning in August 2021, by citing “395.8E1PC” as a distinct type of log falsification. Over 2,500 PC citations were issued in the last five months of that year.
Citations for PC abuse have only grown since then.
In 2022, the first complete year for which PC violations were cited, officers wrote up 11,026 occurrences. Last year, that figure rose to 14,562, a 32-percent increase (despite a less-than-one-percent increase in the number of roadside inspections). It was the 24th most-cited driver regulation in 2023.
7 CSA points, $7,000
Officers are not required to use the distinct PC citation, so some may still lump PC violations under 395.8(e), the catch-all rule for log falsification and the third most common driver violation of 2023.
In the Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) scoring system, the violation carries seven points, the same as any other violation for falsifying a log.
PC violations are not categorized separately from log falsification during audits, but log falsification was the number one violation cited during audits in 2023, with the average fine being over $7,000.
What’s allowed?
The hours-of-service regulations themselves do not mention personal conveyance. Instead, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) describes how to use PC in its official guidance for 49 CFR 395.8, Question 26.
To use a vehicle for personal conveyance, the driver:
- Must be relieved from work and all responsibility for performing work,
- Must not be too ill or fatigued to drive safely, and
- Must ensure that the movement will not benefit the company in any way.
Typically, acceptable PC usage will be a round trip, where the “personal use” starts and ends at the same location and the “business use” picks up where it left off.
Acceptable as PC | Not Acceptable as PC |
Driving from an en-route lodging (e.g., motel or truck stop) to and from restaurants, entertainment facilities, stores, etc., for personal reasons. Commuting between home and a terminal or a trailer drop lot. Driving to the first reasonably available and safe location to get required rest after running out of hours while loading or unloading and ordered to move the vehicle. Moving a vehicle at the request of a safety official during the driver’s off-duty time. Transporting personal property while off duty. Driving home from a remote jobsite or “base camp” where the driver was stationed for a period of time (such as when working for a construction or utility company). | Driving to a company terminal, the normal work-reporting location, or home after loading or unloading at a shipper or receiver. Driving that “enhances the operational readiness” of the company, such as by skipping an available rest area to get closer to the next work destination. Driving to or from a facility for maintenance or to get fuel. Continuing a trip to fulfill a business purpose, such as bobtailing or pulling an empty trailer to retrieve another load or repositioning a tractor or trailer at the company’s direction. After delivering a trailer, returning to the point of origin under the direction of the company to pick up another trailer. Driving to get rest after being placed out of service for exceeding the hours-of-service limits |