I disagree . This is a guidance not a regulation . They are just giving a couple examples out of many possibilities . For example , if a driver was on his way home and went off the direct route to stop at a store would he be on duty going to the store ?
There are duties that are defined as " On Duty " . If activities are not defined as on duty they are off duty .
A company I worked for opened a new branch in Orlando and sent a couple of drivers from MA there for a month to train new drivers . They flew these drivers to FL and rather than rent cars for them allowed them to use the day cabs they drove for personal use . Was this off duty use in violation ?
Off duty Driving on paper logs
Discussion in 'Trucking Industry Regulations' started by Excorcist1, May 19, 2013.
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Second, "Personal conveyance" or off-duty driving is not found in the regulations. It is only found in the interpretations for 395.8 question 26. Question 26 does not include the words "for example" but lists two specific situations where driving an unladen CMV may be called off-duty.
So the ONLY way driving a CMV can be called off-duty is to comply with the conditions of question 26. That is the only place in the regs that allows off-duty driving and is very specific. ALL other time driving a CMV is line 3 - driving. -
However , here is the definition of driving time from another guidance . Using your strict logic driving time is at the direction of a motor carrier . That is not an example . Therefore , personal driving not at the direction of a carrier is not driving time .
http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/rules-regu...fmcsr/fmcsrruletext.aspx?reg=395.2&guidence=YLast edited: May 23, 2013
Roadmedic and volvodriver01 Thank this. -
Clearly states in this that they are only interested in time spent operating a cmv at the direction of the motor carrier.
This would mean that when we deliver and return, we are not under the fmcsa rules.volvodriver01 Thanks this. -
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QC has been nailed on several issues in audits but the auditor accepted the bobtail PC .volvodriver01 Thanks this. -
RickG Thanks this.
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RickG Thanks this.
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Most DOT honestly don't know whether it's legal or not. As long as they know you're empty, they really don't care. That doesn't mean you won't find the twerp who wants to ream you for it because you didn't do it to the letter.
As for Roadmedic, that's your decision. Just as I did when I was leased to a carrier. Doesn't mean if they send you out a load, that you can deadhead there for free, or even in the direction of the pick-up. And if you just decided to 'deadhead because I wanted to', and you knew freight was good in one city, why not just log Line 3 one way, and Line 1 the other and when you get there and finish your 'time off' just ask for another load. Would be a pretty convenient way around the HOS. But, then that's not what Off-Duty Driving is for. You've stated clearly it's personal use. Going to "San Antonio to visit my sister" is what you'd tell a cop if you got pulled over. There's nothing wrong there.
At the end of the day, Off-Duty Driving is all up to how well you can explain it on the side of the road to the guy who pulled you over. And really nothing more. But, for what little faith most have in the DOT, you're putting a lot of faith in them that they'll get this one in your favor when it counts.
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