Weekly WWYD: Do your drivers need a hazmat endorsement and training?
If you transport even small amounts of hazardous materials, your drivers may need hazmat training and a hazmat endorsement (HME) on their commercial driver’s license (CDL). And when it comes to transporting hazmat, penalties for non-compliance can be steep. How do you know when your drivers should have the training or endorsement?
WWYD scenario: Do your drivers need a hazmat endorsement and training?
Before reading the rest of the article below, let's see what you would do if faced with this common hazmat question. Check outthis scenario to see if you know how to stay compliant.
The hazmat CDL endorsement: Who needs it?
To determine whether the HME is required, look at federal safety regulations relating to CDLs.
A driver must obtain the HME on their CDL to operate a motor vehicle that is used to transport a hazardous material.
The rules then define a hazardous material as:
- Any material that has been designated as hazardous and is required to be placarded, or
- Any quantity of a material listed as a select agent or toxin in 42 CFR Part 73.
So basically, when placards are required by the hazmat regulations, the HME is required for the driver of that load. If no placard is required, and the load does not contain any of the listed agents or toxins, no endorsement is needed.
Hazmat training: Who needs it?
Drivers are specifically mentioned in the list of who needs hazmat training. Under the hazmat rules, training is required for hazmat employees who:
- Load, unload, or handle hazardous materials,
- Prepare hazardous materials for transportation,
- Are responsible for the safety of transporting hazmat,
- Operate a vehicle used to transport hazardous materials, or
- Design, manufacture, repair, or test packaging use for transporting hazmat.
Drivers are also called out in the type of training that is required. To meet the minimum requirements, hazmat employees must receive proper training in:
- General awareness/familiarization,
- Function-specific,
- Safety,
- Security awareness,
- In-depth security (when applicable), and
- Modal specific (drivers).
The bottom line
If they transport regulated hazmat, drivers need the hazmat training required in 172.704 and 177.816. That’s because loads of hazardous materials – even those that do not require placards (such as limited quantity or less than 1,001 pounds of Table 2 materials) – are still regulated hazmat. Therefore, they’re still subject to the hazmat training requirements unless there is a specific exception.
If drivers transport any hazardous materials that are required to be placarded (49 CFR Part 172) or any quantity of a select agent or toxin (42 CFR Part 73), then they must have the HME on their CDL in order to drive the vehicle. If neither of those applies, the endorsement would not be required.
Key to remember: If you transport even small amounts of hazardous materials, your drivers may need hazmat training and a hazmat endorsement on their CDL. Be sure to understand when each is required, since your drivers may need one or both.