Short haul drivers: Time record or log?
One question carriers frequently ask is, “If a driver normally uses the short-haul logging exemption, what happens when the driver goes too far or doesn’t make it back in time?”
To use a time record in place of a log, the driver must stay within 150 air-miles of the work reporting location and return to the work reporting location for the day within 14 hours.
As a result, any time the driver goes outside of the 150 air-mile radius circle or does not make it back to the work reporting location for the day within 14 hours, the driver must use a paper grid log or electronic logging device (ELD).
An ELD would be required if the driver has already had to use a paper log 8 days out of the last 30 days (see 395.8(a)). The grid log or ELD record would need to cover the entire 24-hour period. The driver would then need to carry the log (paper log or ELD record) for the next seven days.
Here is how it would work for a local driver that occasionally cannot meet the conditions of the short-haul logging exemption in 395.1(e)(1):
Monday
- The driver reports for work at the company’s office in Anytown, WI. The driver stays within 120 miles of Anytown, WI, and ends the workday there after 10 hours.
- HOS record needed: A time record is all that is required (stayed within the 150 air-miles and returned to the work reporting location for the day within 14 hours).
Tuesday
- The driver reports for work at the company’s office in Anytown, WI. The driver stays within 75 miles of Anytown, WI, and ends the workday there after 12 hours. However, during the day the driver crossed into IL.
- HOS record needed: A time record is all that is required (stayed within the 150 air-miles and returned to the work reporting location for the day within 14 hours – crossing into IL did not change the situation as the exemption is in the federal regulations).
Wednesday
- The driver is sent on a longer run and goes outside of the 150 air-mile radius circle. The driver is back to Anytown, WI, right at the 14th hour.
- HOS record needed: The driver would need to submit either a paper log or an ELD (an ELD would be required if the driver has already submitted a paper log 8 days out of the last 30 days) due to the driver going further than 150 air-miles away from the work reporting location.
Thursday
- The driver reports for work at the company’s office in Anytown, WI. The driver stays within 100 miles of Anytown, WI, and ends the workday there after 10 hours.
- HOS record needed: A time record is all that is required (stayed within the 150 air-miles and returned to the work reporting location for the day within 14 hours).
Friday
- The driver reports for work at the company’s office in Anytown, WI. The driver stays within 100 miles of Anytown, WI. However, due to workload the driver needs to use the 16-hour exemption at 395.1(o) and arrives back in Anytown, WI at the 15th hour.
- HOS record needed: The driver would need to submit either a paper log or an ELD (an ELD would be required if the driver has already submitted a paper log 8 days out of the last 30 days) due to the driver not being back to the work reporting location within 14 hours.
Key to Remember: Just because the driver normally uses the short-haul logging exemption, does not mean the driver gets to use it all the time. The decision on using it is a day-to-day activity.