FMCSA is requesting comments by September 23 on the necessity and appropriateness of records retention requirements in Part 379 of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs). The agency noted that Appendix A to Part 379 provides a generalized listing of retention times for records required to be prepared or compiled by certain for-hire motor carriers and brokers subject to the commercial regulations. However, only a few of the FMCSRs refer to the record-keeping requirements in Part 379, it said. FMCSA’s Federal Register notice poses several questions related to retention times and the numbers and costs of records retention. For the Federal Register notice, visit https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2021-18169.
FMCSA has extended through November 30 emergency regulatory enforcement relief for motor carriers directly supporting coronavirus (COVID-19) relief efforts. As modified several times since originally granted in March 2020, FMCSA’s emergency declaration applies to commercial vehicle operations providing direct assistance in support of emergency relief efforts related to COVID-19 and is limited to transportation of:
FMCSA continues to stress that direct assistance does not include non-emergency transportation of qualifying commodities or routine commercial deliveries, including mixed loads with a nominal quantity of qualifying emergency relief added to obtain the benefits of this emergency declaration. To be eligible for the exemption, the transportation must be both of qualifying commodities and incident to the immediate restoration of those essential supplies. For full details of the emergency declaration, visit https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/COVID-19.
Meanwhile, FMCSA last month submitted for immediate Office of Management and Budget approval a proposed information collection under related to the emergency COVID-19 declaration. The agency noted that neither the emergency declaration nor regulations covering emergency declaration require that carriers or drivers operating under it report their operation to FMCSA.
"Given the unprecedented period that the expanded modified Emergency Declaration No. 2020-0022 has now been in place, FMCSA has determined that it is necessary to seek information on the number of motor carriers and drivers relying upon Emergency Declaration No. 2020-002, and any subsequent extension currently in effect, to evaluate the need for future extensions or modifications if that Agency determines that additional extensions are needed,"" the agency said in its Federal Register notice. For FMCSA’s notice of the proposed information collection, visit https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2021-18442.
As required by the Fixing America's Surface Transportation Act (FAST Act), which was enacted nearly six years ago, FMCSA has incorporated by reference into its regulations the Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance's (CVSA) “Operational Policy 4: Inspector Training and Certification.” The CVSA policy provides the current policy and practices for FMCSA employees, State or local government employees, and contractors to obtain and maintain certification for conducting driver or vehicle inspections. Previously, it was Attachment A to FMCSA's “Certification Policy for Employees Who Perform Inspections, Investigations, and Safety Audits.” For the Federal Register notice, visit https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2021-18474.
FMCSA is requesting comments by September 23 on a report from the agency’s Medical Review Board (MRB) that recommends changes in the alternative vision standard that was proposed in January. The proposed rule, which was issued in the final days of the Trump administration, would allow individuals who cannot meet either the current distant visual acuity or field of vision standard, or both, in one eye to be physically qualified to operate a commercial motor vehicle (CMV) in interstate commerce.
In May, FMCSA asked MRB to review and analyze comments from medical and professionals and associations on the proposal and to make recommendations to FMCSA. The MRB Task 21-1 report is available at https://www.regulations.gov/document/FMCSA-2019-0049-0117. For the Federal Register notice seeking comment on the report, visit https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2021-17850.
FMCSA is seeking comments by November 2 on a plan to submit the National Consumer Complaint Database (NCCDB) to the Office of Management and Budget for renewal of its approval. The NCCDB allows consumers, drivers, and others to file complaints against “unsafe and unscrupulous companies” and/or their employees, including shippers, receivers, and transportation intermediaries, depending on the type of complaint. Complaints may cover a wide range of activities, such as driver harassment, coercion, movement of household goods, financial responsibility instruments for brokers and freight forwarders, Americans with Disability Act, electronic log devices, medical review officers, and Substance Abuse Practitioners. For the Federal Register notice, visit https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2021-19079.
FMCSA has determined that it now receives enough waiver and exemption requests per year to require OMB approval for recordkeeping and reporting requirements associated with them. The agency is requesting comments by October 15 on the agency’s proposed information collection related to waivers and exemptions. For the Federal Register notice, visit https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2021-17418.
FMCSA is requesting comments by September 17 on an application from Werner Enterprises, Inc. for an exemption that would allow commercial learner's permit (CLP) holders who have successfully passed the commercial driver's license (CDL) skills test but who have not received the CDL document to drive a commercial motor vehicle (CMV) without having a CDL holder seated beside them in the CMV. Under the exemption, the CDL would have to be present in the truck, but not necessarily in the passenger seat. For the Federal Register notice, visit https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2021-17690.
FMCSA requests comments by September 27 on an application for exemption submitted by Cleveland-Cliffs Steel, LLC (Cliffs) that would allow its employee-drivers with CDLs who transport scrap metal on two trucks between their production and shipping locations on public roads to work up to 16 hours per day and to return to work with less than the mandatory 10 consecutive hours off duty. The exemption is similar to the hours-of-service (HOS) exemption that applies to Cliffs’ drivers transporting steel coils. However, unlike the steel coil exemption, the scrap metal trucks would comply with the heavy hauler trailer definition, height of rear side marker lights restrictions, tire loading restrictions, and the coil securement requirements in the FMCSRs. For the Federal Register notice, visit https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2021-18330.
Reps. John Garamendi (D-California) and Dusty Johnson Sen. Todd Young (R-Indiana) have introduced legislation (H.R. 4996) that would represent the first major update of federal regulations concerning the ocean shipping industry in more than 20 years. The bill, which is supported by several organizations related to trucking, would require ocean carriers or marine terminal operators to certify that any detention or demurrage charges comply with federal regulations and would shift the burden of proof regarding reasonableness from the invoiced party to the ocean carrier or marine terminal operator. The bill would also authorize the Federal Maritime Commission to investigate on its own initiative ocean carriers’ business practices and apply enforcement measures as appropriate. For more information on H.R. 4996, visit https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/house-bill/4996.
A little over a year ago, the American Trucking Associations filed a complaint with FMC alleging that the Ocean Carrier Equipment Management Association and 11 ocean carriers have overcharged motor carriers and their customers for intermodal container chassis at ports and inland terminals throughout the U.S. Adjudication of that complaint is slowly working its way through the FMC process. For the ATA complaint and other documents related to the proceeding, visit at https://www2.fmc.gov/readingroom/proceeding/20-14.
The date for a key U.S. Supreme Court decision regarding whether to review California’s AB 5 as it applies to motor carriers will be pushed off a bit as the court has granted California’s request delay its response by a month. In August, the California Trucking Association (CTA) asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review the ruling of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit that California’s restrictive ABC test for worker classification contained in the law known as AB is not preempted by federal law. (For details, see Regulatory Update, August 2021.) The original deadline had been September 10.
In a letter to the Supreme Court, the state said an extension “would allow for adequate time for internal review and would better enable preparation of a response that respondent believes would be most helpful to the Court.” California also noted that it had consented to the filing of multiple amicus briefs, so the extension would allow time to review and respond to those briefs. So far, three organizations – the Washington Legal Foundation and the National Motor Freight Traffic Association, Inc., and the Minnesota Trucking Association – have filed amicus briefs, both in support of CTA. For CTA’s petition and subsequent filings in the docket, visit https://bit.ly/CTAvBonta.
The Supreme Court already has at least two other petitions seeking review of decisions related to the scope of Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act (F4A) preemption. The Supreme Court already has at least two other petitions seeking review of decisions related to the scope of F4A preemption. One also involves preemption against California’s worker classification regulations. See https://bit.ly/Cal-Cartage. The other case involves whether the “safety exception” to federal preemption under F4A includes common law damage claims against brokers. See https://bit.ly/CHRvMiller.
Several topics mentioned above require highlighting:
The Insurance Crisis Revisited
As discussed in the July update Congress considering more than doubling the BMC 91X minimum insurance requirements. Although this is lost in the regulatory fog because of recent nuclear verdicts and market changes, this topic remains a top issue.
An astronomical $100 million verdict in Florida and the bankrupting of an Arkansas carrier who attempted to hire a third party carrier for power only service have frightening implications and toxic potential consequences. Clearly the courts and the jury system do not understand the traditional transportation law – that the FMCSA is the policing agency which decides which carriers are fit to operate on the nation’s roadways.
In the absence of direct negligence or coercion the customer should not be liable as a defendant for the acts or omissions of the licensed, authorized and regulated carrier which it hires. These cases will only further alarm the fragile insurance market resulting in higher, if not totally prohibitive, costs especially for small and new entrants.
As previously noted, the number of new applicants for authority is off the charts. This is largely attributable to the rush of owner operators to the power only model in response to AB5 and similar legislation aimed at destroying the independent contractor model.
The marketplace discrepancies as reflected in the cost per unit for large and small carriers is already a high hill for a new entrant to climb. With new entrant premiums of approximately $25,000 per year, a new entrant can easily pay four or five times the coverage amount paid by large carriers. If the federal minimum is raised to $2 million, a new entrant could easily pay 40% more or $35,000 per unit per year. In this context, large Wall Street backed carriers enjoy distinct advantages by being able to post higher self-insured retention reserves and gain easier access to insurance markets based on volume.
A recent study of insurers posting BMC-91Xs for for-hire carriers is telling. Although there are 481 insurers writing for-hire liability policies, one company (Progressive) writes over 50% the carriers. The next largest insurer underwrites only 2.7% of the policies. These statistics make clear that the vast majority of truck underwriters simply have little or no appetite for writing small carriers. This indicates that the insurance market is in precarious shape and is ill equipped to handle an influx of experienced new drivers seeking to change their status from owner operators to small carriers.
When interstate trucking was deregulated starting in 1980, it was with the intent to encourage competition and small business entrepreneurship. Approximately 95% of the for-hire carriers subject to Federal Regulation are small businessmen whose future is in real jeopardy as a consequence of the nuclear verdict scare and the resulting insurance crisis.