FMCSA investigation due to ELD violations? What to expect?
Discussion in 'Trucking Industry Regulations' started by dztruck, Apr 27, 2021.
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Trucker61016, Rubber duck kw, Bean Jr. and 1 other person Thank this.
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HOS were created and forced on this industry to stop the abuse of the drivers that were taking place in the 30’s (it should have happened in 1934), and in many situations, drivers were driving so much out of fear of losing their job that they lost their lives and many cases killing innocent people because they were so fatigued that they were hallucinating, if you ever had serious sleep deprivation, you will understand how that happens.
times haven’t changed, the human body hasn’t either and those who worked under the last good iteration of HOS from the 60’s knew what they were for, safety and abuse prevention.
Those who started driving in the part 25 years seem to be the most ignorant to what this was all about, they keep thinking that they can do what they want and the government has been interfering with their ability to run their truck as they want to is tiring when they don’t get this isn’t about them but the idiots who think they have to listen to the company no matter what and end up killing someone.mjd4277, Cattleman84, Bean Jr. and 8 others Thank this. -
Rubber duck kw and Coffey Thank this.
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This industry is composed of 99% sheep that will do whatever TF they're told by dispatch. Soften the regs, and it will go back to the way it used to be - "You can keep driving, or I'll hire one of these guys standing in line that will."Trucker61016, Bean Jr., Magoo1968 and 2 others Thank this. -
You’ll likely be put on a probation and there’s certainly a chance that your rating could be moved from satisfactory to conditional. That alone can affect your ability to get loads from certain brokers.
Going forward you need to immediately stop violating the law. If you’re only an hour out and you run out of hours then you need to park it and get home in the morning- no exceptions ever.
If you were to get in an accident- even if it was a drunk driver hitting you it’s quite possible that you can do prison time. Because if you’d been obeying the law then you wouldn’t have been on that piece of road and subsequently the other driver wouldn’t have hit you.
The time to stop cheating is over. -
I can share a little bit of our own experience. We ran a one truck operation at the time, and the driver got put OOS,the day after getting the trailer DOT’d, for a cracked rim. Fast forward a month, and he gets put OOS for not having the previous 7 days of his log book — he just came back from a 10 day vacation. Stupid, but crap happens. Had another write up for brakes out of adjustment in the same year.
Next thing we know, we get audited. Auditor comes in, we hand him a binder with everything in it, including redone DOT’s on the equipment that was put OOS, the logging software we trained the driver on, rather than using paper, and the updated maintenance program. He found a couple of little things, but his attitude went from negative to positive within 30 minutes, and I credit us being pro-active and addressing things as they had come up. No negative consequences from the audit, but now I’m a bit of a compliance nazi because of it.kylefitzy, mjd4277, Brettj3876 and 9 others Thank this. -
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Trucker61016, Badmon, F4T6UY and 1 other person Thank this.
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I already admitted i screwed up and ask for tips and if anyone had gone through this, but seems like you are the type of person to #### on someone when they needed help. I’ll keep trying to help my fellow trucker instead of telling him how much better i am than he is. Thanks anyway.Trucker61016, Badmon and lester Thank this.
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