Regulations News Updates
Rule on Medical Examiners Issued
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration released its long-anticipated national registry for certified medical examiners last week, requiring medical professionals who examine commercial drivers to receive training on driver health issues.
April 23, 2012California High Court Issues Mixed Ruling on Employee Meal Breaks Regulation
A ruling by the California Supreme Court has given employers little clarity about a controversial law governing employee rest breaks, the state’s trucking association said.
April 23, 2012Trucking’s CSA Concerns Are Justified, Studies Claim
The trucking industry’s widely held concerns that recent changes to the federal safety-rating program are causing sudden, dramatic shifts in some carriers’ scores is justified, according to an analysis by several companies that help fleets manage their safety programs.
April 16, 2012FMCSA Rebuts Analyst’s Claim of No Link Between Truck Crash Rates, CSA Scores
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration took exception recently to a little-noticed stock analyst report that said there was no relation between two of the agency’s key safety scores and actual truck-involved crashes, saying there is actually a strong correlation between a carrier’s unfavorable safety scores and high crash rates.
April 9, 2012FMCSA Could Detect ‘Chameleon’ Carriers With Closer Scrutiny, GAO Report Says
Federal officials could reduce the number of fleets that evade enforcement penalties by gaining new operating authority if they closely compared new motor carriers’ information to old carriers that had legal issues, according to the Government Accountability Office.
April 2, 2012Groups Aim to Cut Hours, End Restart, in HOS Brief
Several interest groups currently challenging the federal government’s hours-of-service rule said they will ask an appeals court to reduce the maximum daily driving limit to less than 11 hours, reject the rule’s definition of driver off-duty time and eliminate the 34-hour restart provision.
April 2, 2012FMCSA’s Safety Scoring Changes Ignite Industry Complaints
Changes to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s safety ratings program that place additional emphasis on hazardous materials handling are apparently causing a steep spike in scores of some carriers with otherwise “exemplary†safety records, an executive with American Trucking Associations said last week.
April 2, 2012FMCSA Official Says Truckers Will Be Hit for Detectable Chassis Safety Violations
SAN ANTONIO — An official with the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration said the agency will begin soon to count some chassis safety violations against truckers, the next step toward full implementation of federal chassis safety rules.
April 2, 2012Food Safety Rules Likely to Affect Reefer Fleets, but Bigger Burden Will Hit Shippers, Experts Say
New federal food safety regulations will bring new requirements to refrigerated trucking fleets, although many of the rules — which will not affect carriers directly — simply could reflect current best practices in the industry, according to manufacturers and experts.
March 26, 2012FMCSA to Raise Hazmat Oversight
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has decided to raise the importance of hazmat handling under its new safety rating program, while it will reduce the emphasis on load securement.
March 26, 2012Trending
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