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Spotting and stopping false electronic logs
2023-01-19T06:00:00Z
If you are not actively looking for incidents of falsification in your electronic logging device (ELD) data, you may have a serious issue with falsification. Here are some of the most common falsification methods, how they can be found, and how they can be stopped.
- Type of falsification: Logging out and continuing to drive or not logging in to save hours for later in the day or to create a compliant break period.
- Spotting it: Review the unassigned driving time in the system and determine the driver it belongs to, if possible. If, when unassigned driving time is added to a driver’s day the driver is over hours, this is likely a falsification situation.
- Stopping it: Work with your drivers on logging in and out at the appropriate times. Immediately counsel, retrain, or discipline the driver if it is found the driver created the unassigned driving time to hide driving time.
- Type of falsification: Misuse of a special driving category.
- Spotting it: Review all uses of the special driving categories (personal use and yard move). Comparing the situation to the requirements for use. If the driver used personal use but was on a company assignment or moving along the assigned route line, the log is false. If the driver’s record shows yard use, but the position records show the driver was at a location other than a yard, the log is false.
- Stopping it: Make sure all drivers are trained on when the special categories can be used. If a driver is found misusing one of the special driving categories, immediately counsel, retrain, or discipline the driver.
- Type of falsification: Editing past correctly logged on-duty time to off-duty time to create more hours.
- Spotting it: Review all edits using supporting documents and look for a driver (or a supervisor) that changed correctly logged on-duty time to off-duty time.
- Stopping it: During training, discuss when an edit is acceptable (to correct errors and omissions) and when it is not (any other time). If a driver is found using edits to create more available hours (falsify), immediately counsel, retrain, or discipline the driver.
- Type of falsification: Logging everything off duty.
- Spotting it: Using supporting documents, look for known on-duty activities (inspections, fueling, loading, unloading, etc.). If there is no on-duty time at the time of the activity, the log is false.
- Stopping it: Emphasize what must be logged on duty during driver training. If a driver is found logging on-duty activities off duty, immediately counsel, retrain, or discipline the driver.
- Type of falsification: Using another driver’s log in.
- Spotting it: A driver that was off for the day, had been fired, or had quit is out moving a vehicle around (according to the ELD system).
- Stopping it: If a driver is found using another driver’s credentials, immediately counsel, retrain, or discipline the driver.
Key to remember: If you are not auditing your electronic logging system and actively looking for these issues, you may have a problem with false logs and not even know it.