Training Blueprint - Vehicle Inspections
Professional drivers should always be prepared for a roadside inspection any time of year. Roadcheck 2021 is great motivation to ensure your drivers are ready.
Each year during International Roadcheck, the Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance (CVSA), through its member jurisdictions, captures and reports data on specific areas of motor carrier compliance. This year’s event will focus on two areas: Hours-of-service (HOS) compliance and lighting.
Roadcheck 2021 is scheduled May 4-6. Inspectors will use the North American Standard Out-of-Service Criteria to help identify vehicle and driver-related out-of-service conditions. Vehicles that are placed out of service cannot be operated until the identified out-of-service conditions have been corrected.
TIP: If your company has specific inspection requirements or policies, consider distributing and discussing them to refresh drivers’ memories ahead of a potential roadside inspection.
Inspectors will use the North American Standard Out-of-Service Criteria to help identify vehicle and driver-related out-of-service conditions. Vehicles that are placed out of service cannot be operated until the identified out-of-service conditions have been corrected.
During last year’s Roadcheck, which was delayed from May until September, CVSA conducted more than 50,000 inspections. Of the inspections conducted, 20.9 percent resulted in out-of-service (OOS) violations. While the emphasis this year is on HOS and vehicle lighting, it’s important to remember that critical violations of any kind will also render a driver out of service.
For instance, though last year’s focus was on driver requirements, more than 12,000 drivers were placed OOS due to vehicle violations. The most common vehicle violations were found in brake systems (25.8 percent), tires (19 percent), and lights (13.5 percent).
In addition, of the drivers placed OOS due to the driver requirement focus, more than a third (34.7 percent) were found in violation of HOS requirements. This fact may have played a role in making HOS a focus of the 2021 event.
The first area of focus for this year’s campaign is HOS compliance. Drivers who are subject to the HOS rules must be able to present a week’s worth of logs during an inspection. This means drivers using electronic logging devices (ELDs) must know how to operate them well enough to present the data to authorities.
The second area of focus this year will be lighting. This include headlamps, tail lamps, clearance lamps, identification lamps, license plate and side marker lamps, stop lamps, turn signals, and lamps on projecting loads.
These violations can be largely avoided by checking the condition and location of lighting components during every pretrip inspection.
TIP: Not only are drivers required to inspect their vehicles before and after every trip, doing so can help ensure smoother roadside inspections.
Similar to Roadcheck 2020, enforcement will conduct inspections following regional health and safety protocols during this year’s event.
Another priority during the enforcement campaign is to make sure COVID-19 vaccine shipments continue to their destination, quickly and safely. Vaccine shipments will not be held up for inspections, unless there is an obvious serious violation that is an imminent hazard.