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Friday, October 4, 2024

ATA Repeats Call for Crash Accountability in CSA

The American Trucking Associations reiterated its call for the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration to immediately establish a process to remove from motor carriers’ records, crashes where it was plainly evident that the carrier was not at fault.

Earlier this week, FMCSAโ€™s Motor Carrier Safety Advisory Committee heard from a crash reconstructionist who contended that FMCSA could not determine fault in many instances based solely on information from police accident reports.

โ€œThis may be the case with some crashes,โ€ said ATA President and CEO Bill Graves, โ€œbut not when a drunk driver rear ends a gasoline tanker or the driver of a stolen car crosses a grassy median and strikes a truck head on.โ€

Currently, carriersโ€™ scores in FMCSAโ€™s safety monitoring system, Compliance, Safety, Accountability, are based on all carrier-involved crashes, including those that the companiesโ€™ drivers did not cause and could not reasonably have prevented. ATA pointed to several examples of such crashes that have occurred over the past year:

โ€œJust last month, police gave chase to a driver of a stolen car who crossed a grassy median and struck a truck head-on,โ€ said Graves. โ€œIt is clearly inappropriate for FMCSA to use these types of crashes to prioritize trucking companies for future government intervention, especially when responsibility for the crash is so obvious.

โ€œIncluding these types of crashes in the calculation of carriersโ€™ CSA scores, paints an inappropriate picture for shippers and others that these companies are somehow unsafe,โ€ he said.

Over a year ago, FMCSAย shelved plans to make just these sorts of determinations in favor of further study. ATA subsequently called on FMCSA to establish an interim process to address crashes where it is โ€œplainly evidentโ€ that the crash should not count against the trucking company.

โ€œFMCSA has been evaluating this issue for years and is not due to complete additional research until this summer,โ€ Graves said. โ€œWe donโ€™t need more research to conclude that it is inappropriate to use crashes like these to paint the involved trucking companies and professional drivers as unsafe.โ€