Contributing Writer
Trucking Industry Urges FMCSA to End Label Rule

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For some time, fleet managers have faced the challenges that come with trailer rear-impact guard certification labels. Although small in physical size, the labels often serve as the difference between compliance or violations that can cause big headaches for fleet leadership.
Through the course of a trailerās time on the road, the labels often are damaged or destroyed by debris and wear and tear. However, manufacturers have been reluctant or unwilling to replace them, putting fleets in the awkward position of either risking a citation or retiring an otherwise-compliant rear-impact guard.
Their concerns had risen to the point that the Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance petitioned the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration earlier last year to rescind its rule concerning the certification labels. FMSCA denied the petition and, in December, that a missing or incomplete trailer rear-impact guard certification label wonāt be considered a violation of a rule requiring one to be affixed.
After FMCSA released its guidance, CVSAās board to re-petition the agency to change the rule, said Kerri Wirachowsky, CVSAās director of inspection programs.
Wirachowsky said the guidance means fleets should not worry about being charged with a violation.

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āAs long as this guidance stays on their website, all is well, to be honest, because this guidance is specifically telling enforcement officers from the federal government not to enforce that section,ā she said.
¹ó²Ń°ä³§“”ās , which is similar to CVSAās policy since 2018, says that illegible, incomplete or missing certification labels do not indicate a guard fails to meet National Highway Traffic Safety Administration strength and energy absorption requirements. Instead, it said inspectors should enforce the ruleās general requirements along with requirements for the guardās width, height, rear surface and the horizontal memberās cross-sectional vertical height.
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āFMCSA is also aware that a motor carrier may be unable to replace an illegible, incomplete, or missing certification label,ā the guidance stated.
Asked how and why the agency came to its decision, an FMCSA official wrote in an email, āThe agency issued the guidance to encourage state inspectors to focus enforcement efforts on other aspects of the rule, such as guard width and height.ā
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More Work to Do
Wirachowsky said CVSA still would like a rule change.
āCVSA is going to re-petition the agency to remove that section permanently because guidance can come and go, and guidance is hard to find, and it gets lost,ā she said. āSo if they are basically saying not to enforce it, then we still want them to remove it from the regulation.ā
Kevin Grove, American Trucking Associations director of safety and technology policy, said ATA would like to see a rule change, but thatās a lengthy process. FMCSA took five years to respond to CVSAās original petition that was submitted in 2019.

GroveĢż
āI think weād like a permanent solution, but this at least resolves the issue of otherwise missing labels leading to violations when thereās not actually an unsafe condition,ā he said.
The regulation requires that trailers with rear-impact guards be affixed with a label with the manufacturerās name and address, the month and year it was manufactured, and the letters āDOT,ā which certify that the guard conforms to federal requirements.
Historically, the rule rarely has been enforced. Data from 2017 and 2018 showed a lack of rear-impact guard violations of any kind, Wirachowsky said, and the citations that did occur often were not specified. Grove said the violation was not readily accessible within the software that inspectors use to document violations. Instead, inspectors would have to handwrite it, so it wasnāt at the top of their minds.
In 2018, to perform a one-week targeted enforcement blitz that focused on rear-impact guards.
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Officers inspected 10,112 trailers and found 3,170 violations. Of those, 72% were for incomplete or missing labels. More than 2,000 guards were in violation of the certification label requirement. Another 15% were for defective connections and mounting, 7% for improper width, 3% for height, 2% for the guard surfaceās rear inset, and 1% for the horizontal beam.
But replacing the labels was challenging, if not impossible. Grove said suppliers either didnāt want to provide labels for used equipment, or they required a time-consuming warranty claim where the asset would be pulled from service until the replacement labels arrived. Some ATA members were asked to sign legal documents. Rear-impact guards manufactured in Canada didnāt have a certification label.
āThey knew the condition of that guard when it left the factory,ā he said of the manufacturers. āThey canāt certify the condition of the guard after itās been put into use, so theyāre not necessarily going to certify something thatās out of their control. So in some cases it wasnāt even possible to get a replacement guard for a U.S. guard that was otherwise compliant. Many of our members thought a large portion of their fleets could be in violation.ā
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CVSA created a policy stating that inspectors should inspect the rear-impact guardās attachments and horizontal beam. It petitioned ĀFMCSA and NHTSA to rescind the certification rule in 2019. In a letter to NHTSA, Collin Mooney, CVSAās executive director, argued that the regulation was resulting in inspectors citing rear-Āimpact guards that otherwise met the regulationās physical requirements.
Wirachowsky said CVSA expected the petition to be granted. It wasnāt. , that the labels helped identify compliant guards and helped crash investigators determine if a guard had safety defects. FMCSA Deputy Administrator Vincent White wrote in a letter dated Sept. 4, 2024, that when a guard has become damaged beyond repair and is replaced, the label rule ensures the replacement complies with federal requirements.
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Fleet Reality
The situation had many real-world implications. Fleets would have had two weeks to rectify and document their compliance, but it was unclear if that would have been enough time. No one had tested the process, which would have been strained with every fleet trying to get replacement labels at once. Violations would affect fleetsā CSA scores, although a label didnāt affect safety. Checking for the label wasnāt even part of annual inspections.
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āYou could bring in your truck for its anĀnual inspection, pass, and drive it off the lot and immediately get pulled over and get a violation because it doesnāt have that sticker on it, or the metal plate is not readable,ā Grove said.
Nussbaum Transportationās James Grier, director of fleet service, and Tony Morthland, director of maintenance, watched the regulatory process closely. Were the rule enforced, Nussbaum would have had to replace entire bumpers.

GrierĢż
āWeāre a smaller fleet, but weāve got 1,600-1,700 trailers out there, and as these rear-impact guard labels deteriorate, thatās a lot of bumpers weāve got to end up replacing because itās a label that we cannot source,ā Grier said.
A lot check showed that some of Nussbaumās rear-impact guards werenāt compliant. Some had stickers, some labels were riveted, and in some the label was missing. None of its suppliers would let it purchase a replacement. Fleet managers discussed installing an outer protective covering on the guards when they arrived. Replacing perfectly fine bumpers would cost thousands of dollars, but leaving things as they were would result in violations that would affect the fleetās CSA score ā a point of pride for the company. There also was the concern that an inspector would deem a sticker illegible that the carrier believed to be in compliance.
The two noted that regulations already exist for the guardās condition. The carrier maintains the guards and replaces them if cracks appear. Labels wonāt last the 10 to 12 years the carrier tries to keep its trailers. Morthland noted that labels were located on the bumperās right-front side where road debris from the tires was certain to hit them. Simply locating it in the bumperās center would have helped.
The CVSA board voted to begin advising inspectors to enforce the certification label rule as of Oct. 15 if the federal government didnāt change its stance. Once it had ¹ó²Ń°ä³§“”ās denial letter, it could not advise officers to not enforce. But it also decided to again communicate with FMCSA about the issue.
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In October, CVSA, ATA, and the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association met with FMCSA. Going into the meeting, ATA asked members to provide examples of otherwise compliant equipment that had noncompliant labels.
āThere were trailers less than a year old where the metal plate was sheened to a mirror shine, just sandblasted due to the normal wear and tear of operational use,ā Grove said.
CVSA and trucking industry officials explained to FMCSA how many trucks would be in violation along with fleetsā difficulties acquiring replacement labels. They argued that the rule did not have a Āsafety benefit because it only certified the guardās manufacturing, not its current condition. Replacing a fully operational guard because of a label problem was a cost that far exceeded the benefits.
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The trucking groups asked FMCSA what paths forward existed.
āThey advised us that the previous petition was kind of a closed book but that the information that we had presented would warrant a new petition, and that it would be considered. ⦠We had not specifically asked for this discretion, but I think they looked at it internally and decided that it merited some interpretation on their part as well,ā Grove said.
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With that encouraging dialogue, CVSA board members decided to wait until the December board meeting before advising its inspectors to start enforcing the rule. After the guidance was released Dec. 10, the board decided to maintain the existing policy, and to again petition the agency to change the rule.
Wirachowsky noted the guidance was good news for trucking.
āI had people in the industry lined up,ā she said. āI said, āYou call me the week of the 10th. Iāll tell you what the boardās doing.ā And then they were calling me on the 11th, and I went, āIāve got good news for you. Hereās the guidance.ā ā
Nussbaumās Grier said that although the regulation wonāt be enforced, the fact that it still exists is a concern.
āItās in the back of our mind so itās still there, still kind of lingering over us,ā he said. āSo, itās still not over yet.ā