7 Points for not switching to SB after Off Duty
Discussion in 'ELD Forum | Questions, Answers and Reviews' started by Noahd, Aug 14, 2018.
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Bank_Lbr, otterinthewater, laaylor and 1 other person Thank this.
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Nostalgic, JC1971, Hegemeister and 2 others Thank this.
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scottied67 Thanks this.
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SB is really only for two reasons. #1: Split break, where SB is specifically mentioned in the law. #2: Team driving, because you can't be off duty in a moving truck.
If you're not split-breaking and you're not teaming, then your Off Duty time means off duty. You aren't accountable to anyone, and the officer has no right to ask where you were or what you were doing. Whether you were in the sleeper, in a motel room or in someone else's bed, it ain't none of his business.
I'd love to see an aggressive legal team fight this, and settle the question once and for all.addrenjunky, Whistle Pete, kemosabi49 and 5 others Thank this. -
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There is no need to fight the regulations to settle anything. The regulation is set in stone and drivers will obey and properly log their time and their location whether they are in the Sleeper or not in the Sleeper or suffer the violation.
Now under CSA the carrier will be carrying some of the responsibility for the ignorant drivers out there improperly logging their time so you will see more training of drivers on this very easy regulation that some drivers are having just the most difficult time wrapping their minds around. -
Yeah, so was slavery. The only way you change the law is to challenge the law. Or you bend over and grab your ankles.Truckermania, addrenjunky, spyder7723 and 3 others Thank this. -
wore out Thanks this.
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Johnny Law is going to tell you it is on duty, every time, so location (Sleeper Birth) does NOT ALWAYS determine duty status. I think the argument is valid that Sleeper Berth is a duty status (as mentioned, related to teams and split sleeper status), and NOT always a location.
So the legal question is: can you be Off Duty in the Sleeper Berth? I think the argument is pretty strong that you can, if you can be ON duty in the sleeper berth.
But, Johnny Law's opinion holds much more force than mine.....trees, Truckermania, wore out and 6 others Thank this. -
Slightly OT but somebody mentioned "hotel receipt" earlier in this thread.
I can imagine a scenario in which a driver finds himself in a bad situation so he goes on Priceline and books a cheap hotel room but never goes to the room. He just wants the receipt for show.
Disclaimer: I do not advocate nor recommend illegal acts
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