i was taught that "no responsibility" is away from the truck, the load, etc (ie, home, movies, dinner)
this is why many companies do not want you to leave the truck under a load, sleeper is not "no responsibility" but rest
Why CSA 2010 and E-Logs are a good thing.
Discussion in 'Trucking Industry Regulations' started by Theophilus, Nov 6, 2011.
Page 205 of 243
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I've never had my logs questioned once I started logging correctly after my first 3 months.
I used to go off duty for fueling and used to go off duty at customers. After having a talk with safety about it I was told fueling is on duty, so I log on duty now. (I was new lol)
Also, they told me sleeper birth is fine at customers as long as I am IN the sleeper.
Ethan -
wow really safety talked to you about that, not your DM? Things must be a'changin'
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I have a idea, we take away all logs and just make it legal to execute drivers if they go over hours.
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In our logbooks it is released from responsibility up to 10 hours, unless hauling 1.1, 1.2 or 1.3 explosives. Inside front cover.
DrtyDiesel Thanks this. -
Ethan -
The safety department goes to the front of the line, after all the enforcement officers should be held accountable.
I like how Vlad the impaler operated, leadership by example.Meltom and volvodriver01 Thank this. -
- (7) Can time spent waiting to be loaded or unloaded count toward the break requirement?
- Time spent waiting to be loaded or unloaded is on duty unless the driver has been released from all responsibility for the truck. Except for drivers attending loads of certain explosives, on-duty time cannot be considered as a break.
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