A compliance review is an examination of motor carrier operations to determine whether a motor carrier meets the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s (FMCSA) safety fitness standard.
Summary of requirements
New entrant. Before a motor carrier of property or passengers domiciled in the United States or Canada begins interstate operations, it must register with the FMCSA and receive a USDOT number.
Once a motor carrier receives a USDOT number, it is subject to monitoring by the FMCSA for the next 18 months.
The FMCSA monitoring includes a compliance review that will be conducted on the new entrant, once it has been in operation for enough time to have sufficient records to allow FMCSA to evaluate the adequacy of its basic safety management controls.
All records and documents required for the compliance review must be made available for inspection upon request by an individual certified under FMCSA regulations to perform safety audits.
Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA). A motor carrier’s safety fitness is assessed under a FMCSA program called Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA).
FMCSA uses CSA’s Safety Measurement System (SMS) to quantify motor carrier safety performance. Every month, SMS measures the previous 24 months of roadside violation and crash data performance and calculates a score in seven categories of safety behaviors — Behavior Analysis and Safety Improvement Categories (BASICs).
Poor BASICs scores can result a carrier being considered high risk and subject to a compliance review.
Compliance review. When a carrier is selected for a compliance review (audit), the carrier is notified by the FMCSA that the audit will take place in a certain number of days. Usually, a carrier is given at least 48 hours advance notice. The 48-hour time frame does not include Saturdays, Sundays, or federal holidays.
In that 48-hour time frame, the carrier is expected to produce all paperwork requested by the FMCSA. This is a requirement of Sec. 390.29 of the FMCSRs.
Records a carrier will need to produce include:
- Proof of financial responsibility;
- Driver qualification files (including all required forms);
- Drug and alcohol testing records (if applicable);
- Records of duty status and supporting documents;
- Driver vehicle inspection reports and maintenance records;
- Hazardous materials records (if applicable); and
- An accident register, and copies of all accident reports required by state or other governmental entities or insurers.
The compliance review is based on
Part 385 of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs). Parts of the FMCSRs and Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMRs) having similar characteristics are combined into five regulatory factors and an accident factor. The factors are:
Certain regulations are considered acute with others considered critical. There are also 16 egregious driver-focused red-flag violations that are always part of compliance reviews.
Acute regulations. Noncompliance with a single acute regulation is considered a serious violation. Noncompliance is so severe that it requires immediate corrective actions by a motor carrier. For each instance of noncompliance with an acute regulation during a compliance review, 1.5 points will be assessed to that safety rating factor.
Critical regulations. Critical regulations are identified as those where noncompliance relates to a breakdown in a carrier’s management controls. For each pattern of noncompliance with a critical regulation during a compliance review, one point will be assessed to that safety rating factor.
Exception. For each pattern of noncompliance with a critical regulation relative to Part 395, Hours of Service of Drivers, two points will be assessed.
A pattern of noncompliance is considered more than one violation. When a number of documents are reviewed, the number of violations required to meet a pattern of noncompliance is equal to at least ten percent of those examined.
Safety rating. Each safety factor is then rated as follows:
- Satisfactory: If the acute and/or critical = 0 points.
- Conditional: If the acute and/or critical = 1 point.
- Unsatisfactory: If the acute and/or critical = 2 or more points.
Once each of the six factors have been separately rated, the total number of conditional and unsatisfactory factors are added to determine the safety rating. The proposed safety rating will become effective 45 days after the date the notice of proposed safety rating is received by the motor carrier.