Proposed rule changes that could impact you
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has proposed several rule changes that will impact all motor carriers if finalized.
Summary: This proposed change would add the rear impact guard (the rear bumper on a trailer) to the periodic/annual inspection requirements. It would also:
- Provide mounting options for the certification label on impact guards, and
- Add “road construction controlled (RCC) horizontal discharge trailers” to the list of trailers exempt from the rear impact guard requirements.
Potential impact: The periodic/annual inspection forms you or your vendors use will need to be updated. The new forms will need to be in use by the date specified in the final rule, if or when it is published
Summary: Due to requests from industry and enforcement, FMCSA is proposing to clarify when vehicle movement can be considered a “yard move.” Currently, if a movement is in a yard, the time can be logged as on-duty/not driving time. This is logged on line four on a paper log or by using the “yard move” special driving category on an electronic log.
However, FMCSA has not provided clarity on what constitutes a yard, and therefore when driving can be logged as on-duty time. Under the proposal, drivers will be able to consider driving a “yard move” only if “the movement of the CMV occurs in a confined area on private property...or briefly on public roads.” Movement on public roads could be considered a yard move only if the vehicle is briefly on the public road (such as crossing a street) and traffic is fully controlled while the commercial vehicle is on the road.
Potential impact: The impact would depend on what a carrier currently allows its drivers to do. If you are using the current (unofficial) interpretation that a yard is a privately-owned area that the public cannot access due to signs and/or gates, the proposed change will make no difference to you. However, if you have been allowing your drivers to log on-duty time/yard move for movements in public areas, such as at retail store docks, then this will cut back how often your drivers can use on-duty time/yard move. This will cause more time to count against your drivers’ 10- or 11-hour driving limit.
Summary: This proposal seeks to eliminate the requirement that drivers submit an annual list of their traffic violations, known as a Certificate of Violations. The FMCSA says this list is no longer necessary because all convictions should be visible in the annual motor vehicle report (MVR) that carriers must run, regardless of where the violation occurred.
Potential impact: This change would streamline the annual review process by eliminating one step. However, the other steps in an annual review would still be required. If this proposal becomes a final rule, an annual review would involve running the annual MVR (or having the driver enrolled in a “push-type” employer notification system), reviewing it, and placing a supervisor’s note into the driver’s qualification file.
Key to remember: These three recent FMCSA proposals all bear watching as they will have an impact on your operation.