Pandemic waivers extended for eligible drivers
The FMCSA is continuing to relieve certain drivers from safety regulations due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The agency’s Emergency Declaration as well as its licensing and medical-card waivers were due to expire in August but were revised and extended yet again until November 30, 2021.
The emergency exemption provides hours-of-service relief to qualifying motor carriers supporting pandemic relief efforts. The latest three-month extension brings some important changes:
- The exemption was expanded to cover certain fuels, building supplies, and related materials, in addition to livestock, medical supplies, food, and other commodities that have been eligible for the exemption all year.
- The exemption was limited to offer relief only from the hours-of-service limits in §395.3, not all the other safety regulations from which drivers were exempted earlier in the year.
- Motor carriers that use the exemption must now report their usage to the FMCSA within five days after the end of each month, via their FMCSA Portal account.
Under the commercial driver licensing (CDL) waiver, states have the option to extend the validity of CDLs and learner’s permits that expired on or after March 1, 2020, until November 30, 2021. The licensing waiver is not binding on the states, so drivers should verify that their state is honoring it.
Under the revised medical-card waiver, a driver can qualify for an extension on an expiring medical certificate if that certificate was good for at least 90 days, it expired on or after June 1, 2021, the driver carries the expired certificate, and the driver does not develop any disqualifying medical conditions.
If a driver who takes advantage of the licensing or medical-card waiver is involved in a DOT-recordable crash, the motor carrier must notify the FMCSA by email within five days.
Motor carriers must document their use of any of these waivers. Keep the following for at least three years, as applicable:
- A copy of the FMCSA’s waiver/exemption notice(s) that applied, available at www.fmcsa.dot.gov/COVID-19;
- A copy of both the expired and renewed license and/or medial card;
- Documentation of the reason the credential could not be renewed earlier (e.g., the clinic was not doing exams, the state licensing agency was closed, etc.); and
- Evidence that the credential was renewed by November 30, 2021.
Key to remember: The FMCSA has extended its pandemic-related exemptions, with new restrictions. If you take advantage of an exemption, make sure you keep good documentation.