Using the ELD exemption for short-term rental trucks
Do your drivers have what it takes to use the ELD exemption for rental trucks?
Under a special exemption, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) allows drivers of short-term rental trucks to use paper logs in place of electronic logging devices (ELDs). However, strict conditions must be met, including the need for drivers to carry specific documentation.
The exemption applies only to commercial trucks that have been rented for a term of eight days or less, and enforcement officers will be watching carefully for drivers who try to skirt the rules.
In place since 2017, the exemption was recently extended another five years, until October 12, 2027. Because it’s billed as “temporary,” details are not found in the regulations but rather only through announcements made in the Federal Register.
Five conditions
If you want to take advantage of the exemption, make sure you and your drivers follow these rules:
- The rental agreement must be for a term of eight days or less. You cannot replace one rental with another on eight-day cycles or attempt to renew a rental agreement for the same vehicle for an additional eight days without installing an ELD.
- Drivers must carry a copy of the rental agreement in the vehicle and make it available to enforcement officers on request. Make sure the agreement identifies the rental company, the renter, the vehicle, and the dates of the rental period.
- Drivers must carry a copy of the exemption notice in the rental vehicle and present it to enforcement officers upon request. A digital copy is fine as long as it’s accessible and legible. The notice is available online at https://bit.ly/3qvUhon.
- Drivers must carry copies of their logs for the current day and any of the prior seven days on which logs were required. These can be paper, electronic, or on printouts.
- You as the motor carrier must notify the FMCSA within five days if there’s a crash involving a driver using the exemption. The Federal Register notice referenced above has details on who to contact and what information to include.
Motor carriers are not prohibited from installing ELDs on short-term rental trucks, but the exemption provides an option that can help make renting easier.
Dealing with the data
After a driver uses the exemption and then switches back to using an ELD once the rental truck is returned, what should be done with the logs the driver created during the rental period? There are two options:
- The driver can carry the paper (or digital) logs for the following seven days and present them — along with the ELD — during a roadside inspection, or
- The driver or an administrator can manually enter the logs into the ELD system so they’re all in one place.
The latter option is preferred since it will allow the ELD to make accurate calculations concerning the driver’s compliance with the hours-of-service rules.
Keep in mind that all other hours-of-service rules apply during the rental period. The exemption only affects the method used to record the driver’s hours.
Why eight days? The eight-day exemption period coincides with 395.34(d), which says that motor carriers need to fix malfunctioning ELDs within eight days.
Key to remember: An ELD exemption for eight-day rental trucks has been renewed another five years. Make sure your drivers are carrying the proper documentation if they want to use it.