
[Federal Register: September 16, 2008 (Volume 73, Number 180)]
[Notices]               
[Page 53483-53490]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr16se08-107]                         

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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration

[Docket No. FMCSA-2004-18898]

 
Comprehensive Safety Analysis 2010 Initiative

AGENCY: Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, DOT.

ACTION: Notice of public listening session.

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SUMMARY: The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) 
announces a public listening session to obtain feedback from interested 
parties on the Agency's Comprehensive Safety Analysis 2010 (CSA 2010) 
initiative, a comprehensive review, analysis, and restructuring of 
FMCSA's current safety fitness determination process and enforcement 
programs. FMCSA will use the listening session to brief participants on 
the direction and progress of CSA 2010 and obtain feedback from its 
partners and stakeholders. FMCSA also requests comments on the CSA 2010 
operational model described in this notice.

DATES: The Public Listening Session will be held on October 16, 2008, 
from 8 a.m. to 2:45 p.m. Participant registration will be from 8 a.m. 
to 9 a.m. Written comments must be received by January 31, 2009.

ADDRESSES: The Public Listening Session will be held at the Key Bridge 
Marriott, 1401 Lee Highway, Arlington, VA 22209. You may submit 
comments identified by FDMS Docket ID Number FMCSA-2004-18898 and by 
any of the following methods:
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to http://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the on-line instructions for submitting 
comments.
     Mail: Docket Management Facility; U.S. Department of 
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., West Building Ground 
Floor, Room W12-140, Washington, DC 20590-0001.
     Hand Delivery: West Building Ground Floor, Room W12-140, 
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., 
Monday through Friday, except Federal Holidays.
     Fax: 1-202-493-2251.
    Each submission must include the Agency name and the docket ID for 
this Notice. Note that DOT posts all comments received without change 
to http://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information 
included in a comment. Please see the Privacy Act heading below.

[[Page 53484]]

    Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or 
comments, go to http://www.regulations.gov at any time or Room W12-140 
on the ground level of the West Building, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., 
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, 
except Federal holidays. The FDMS is available 24 hours each day, 365 
days each year. If you want acknowledgment that we received your 
comments, please include a self-addressed, stamped envelope or postcard 
or print the acknowledgement page that appears after submitting 
comments on-line.
    Privacy Act: Anyone may search the electronic form of all comments 
received into any of our dockets by the name of the individual 
submitting the comment (or of the person signing the comment, if 
submitted on behalf of an association, business, labor union, etc.).
    You may review the DOT's complete Privacy Act Statement in the 
Federal Register published on April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19476). This 
information is also available at http://Docketinfo.dot.gov.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Cathy McNair, Program Manager 
Assistant, CSA 2010, (202) 366-0790.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    Format of Listening Session: During the Public Listening Session, 
FMCSA will describe its progress on CSA 2010 to date and address 
specific aspects of the CSA 2010 operational model. FMCSA will accept 
comments on the CSA 2010 operational model and any additional 
information that commenters believe FMCSA should consider for the 
success of the CSA 2010 initiative. The session will include a one and 
one-half hour morning plenary session (9 a.m.), and two facilitated 
breakout sessions. Each breakout session will be run two consecutive 
times so that all attendees will have the opportunity to participate in 
both sessions. Each session will run for one and one-half hours, 
beginning at 11 am and 1:15 pm.
    The plenary and breakout sessions listed below will address 
specific aspects of the CSA 2010 initiative. Later sections of this 
notice provide supporting information for each of these areas.

(1) Plenary Session--Overview of CSA 2010 and the Operational Model 
Test
(2) Breakout Session--Safety Measurement System (SMS) and Safety 
Fitness Determination (SFD)
(3) Breakout Session--Safety Data Quality

    The agenda for the listening session is as follows:

Morning

8-9 Registration
9-10:45 Welcome and Agenda Overview/CSA 2010 Overview and Operational 
Model Test Panelist Q & A (Plenary Session)
10:45-11 Break
11-12:30 Breakout 1 (Participants attend SMS/SFD or Data Quality 
session)

Afternoon

12:30-1:15 Lunch
1:15-2:45 Breakout 2 (Participants attend SMS/SFD or Data Quality 
session)

Registration information and instructions: To attend the listening 
session, attendees can register online at http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/
csa2010-register. In addition to registration information, the 
registration Web site provides additional details about the agenda. If 
there are any questions, or if an attendee prefers to register via 
telephone, please contact the registration help desk at 206-284-7850.

Background

    In August 2004, FMCSA embarked on CSA 2010--a comprehensive review 
and analysis of the FMCSA motor vehicle safety compliance and 
enforcement programs (69 FR 51748, August 20, 2004). The goal of CSA 
2010 is to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of FMCSA's 
compliance and enforcement program with the ultimate goal of achieving 
a significant reduction in large truck and bus crashes, injuries, and 
fatalities. Under the CSA 2010 initiative, FMCSA is developing and 
deploying a new approach to using agency resources to identify drivers 
and motor carriers that pose safety risks based on their crash 
experience and violations of safety regulations and to intervene to 
reduce those risks as soon as they become apparent. FMCSA understands 
how important it is to obtain feedback on this approach from partners, 
stakeholders, and other interested parties.
    The Agency held the first series of public listening sessions on 
CSA 2010 in September and October of 2004. These sessions were designed 
to collect public input regarding ways FMCSA could improve its process 
of monitoring and assessing the safety performance of the motor carrier 
industry. The majority of participants supported the Agency's goal of 
improving the current safety fitness determination process through the 
CSA 2010 initiative. For further information on the public listening 
sessions held in 2004, visit the FMCSA Web site at http://
www.fmcsa.dot.gov/ (click on the CSA2010 link) and see the final 
report, ``Comprehensive Safety Analysis Listening Sessions.''
    On November 16, 2006, FMCSA held another listening session to 
gather information and feedback on CSA 2010 (71 FR 61131, October 17, 
2006). The session was held in Washington, DC, with close to 100 
attendees that included a cross-section of Federal, State, and local 
government agencies, motor carriers, industry associations, insurance 
and consulting firms, and safety advocacy groups. The event focused on 
four major aspects of CSA 2010: (1) Measurement; (2) Safety Fitness 
Determination; (3) Intervention Selection and Entity Characteristics; 
and (4) Safety Data and Tracking, Evaluation and Data Validation. 
Participants provided valuable information on these topics, which FMCSA 
has taken into account during its continued development of the CSA 2010 
operational model. For further information on the public listening 
session held in 2006, visit FDMS Docket Identification Number FMCSA-
2004-18898 at http://www.regulations.gov and see the final report, 
``Comprehensive Safety Analysis 2010, 2006 Listening Session.''
    On December 4, 2007, FMCSA held a listening session to brief 
stakeholders and partners on the progress that had been made since 2006 
(72 FR 62293, November 2, 2007). FMCSA provided detailed information in 
three breakout sessions on specific aspects of the CSA 2010 initiative: 
(1) Safety Measurement System; (2) Safety Fitness Determination (SFD); 
and (3) Operational Model Test. Participants in the 2007 listening 
session focused their comments and questions most frequently on issues 
relating to the CSA 2010 intervention process, concerns about the 
quality of safety data, and the proposed SFD methodology. For further 
information on the public listening session held in 2007, visit FDMS 
Docket Identification Number FMCSA-2004-18898 at http://
www.regulations.gov and see the final report, ``Comprehensive Safety 
Analysis 2010, 2007 Public Listening Session.''
    The purpose of the October 2008 listening session is for FMCSA to 
brief stakeholders, partners, and other interested parties on the 
progress that has been made since the listening session in December 
2007. FMCSA plans to hold additional listening sessions to continue the 
process of updating the public and to receive feedback.

[[Page 53485]]

Current Operational Model and Its Limitations

    FMCSA's current operational model employs SafeStat to analyze the 
safety status of individual motor carriers and to prioritize them for a 
compliance review (CR). SafeStat uses data from a variety of State and 
Federal sources to measure the relative safety of motor carriers in 
four Safety Evaluation Areas (SEAs): Accident, Driver, Vehicle, and 
Safety Management. (For a full description of the SafeStat methodology, 
visit the FMCSA Web site at: http://ai.fmcsa.dot.gov.) A CR is an on-
site examination of a carrier's operations, such as drivers' hours of 
service, to determine whether the carrier meets the safety fitness 
standard found at 49 CFR 385.5. Currently, a CR can result in one of 
three safety ratings: Satisfactory, Conditional, or Unsatisfactory.
    The current FMCSA enforcement intervention is very labor-intensive, 
allowing the Agency and its State partners to assess the safety 
performance of only a small fraction of the motor carrier industry. 
Because each CR may take one safety investigator an average of 3 to 4 
days to complete, depending on the location and size of the carrier, 
FMCSA can perform CRs at present staffing levels on only a small 
portion of the approximately 700,000 interstate carriers listed in the 
agency's census. Further compounding this limitation is the fact that 
the full CR is generally deployed at a carrier's place of business as a 
one-size-fits-all tool to address what may not be a comprehensive 
safety problem. Although FMCSA's current approach has contributed to a 
reduction in the rate of large truck and bus fatalities, the factors 
described above will make it increasingly challenging to sustain and 
further these improvements to large truck and bus safety over the 
coming years.
    For these reasons, along with improvements in the quality of data 
available to FMCSA and improved ways to measure the safety of motor 
carriers, FMCSA is exploring ways through CSA 2010 to improve its 
current process for monitoring, assessing, and enforcing the safety 
performance of motor carriers and drivers.

Comprehensive Safety Analysis 2010

    CSA 2010 is a major FMCSA initiative to improve the effectiveness 
of the Agency's compliance and enforcement programs. CSA 2010 will help 
the Agency assess the safety performance of a greater segment of the 
motor carrier industry and intervene with more carriers to change 
unsafe behavior earlier. The ultimate goal is to achieve a significant 
reduction in large truck and bus crashes, injuries, and fatalities, 
while making efficient use of the resources of FMCSA and its State 
partners. In contrast to the Agency's current operational model, CSA 
2010 is characterized by (1) a more comprehensive safety measurement 
system; (2) a broader array of progressive interventions; (3) a safety 
fitness determination (SFD) methodology that is based on performance 
data and not necessarily tied to an on-site compliance review; and (4) 
supporting information technology systems that will help FMCSA and its 
State partners implement and continuously evaluate each of these 
elements. To date, FMCSA has made significant progress in its 
development of the CSA 2010 operational model, launching a field test 
in February 2008.

Safety Measurement System

    The role of the Safety Measurement System (SMS) within the CSA 2010 
operational model is to monitor and quantify the safety performance of 
commercial motor carriers and drivers through data available in the 
Motor Carrier Management Information System (MCMIS), FMCSA's database 
for carrier census information, roadside inspection data, crash data, 
etc. Under CSA 2010, these data would include violations found during 
roadside inspections, traffic enforcement, and the intervention process 
(discussed below) as well as violations associated with crashes. SMS 
would group these data into seven Behavioral Analysis Safety 
Improvement Categories (BASICs), each of which includes regulatory 
requirements for both motor carriers and drivers: Unsafe Driving, 
Fatigued Driving, Driver Fitness, Controlled Substances and Alcohol, 
Vehicle Maintenance, Improper Loading/Cargo Securement, and Crash 
History. FMCSA developed the BASICs under the premise that commercial 
motor vehicle (CMV) crashes can ultimately be traced to the behavior of 
motor carriers and drivers. There are six important ways that the SMS 
is different than the Agency's current measurement system, SafeStat:
    1. SMS is organized by specific behaviors (BASICs) while SafeStat 
is organized into four broad SEAs.
    2. SMS identifies safety risks in the same structure in which CSA 
2010 addresses those risks, while SafeStat prioritizes carriers for a 
one-size-fits-all compliance review.
    3. SMS uses all safety-based inspection violations while SafeStat 
uses only out-of-service violations and selected moving violations.
    4. SMS uses risk-based violation weightings while SafeStat does 
not.
    5. SMS impacts the safety fitness determination of an entity, while 
SafeStat has no impact on an entity's safety rating.
    6. SMS assesses individual drivers and carriers, while SafeStat 
assesses only carriers.

The SMS methodology is described in more detail in the sections below 
headed ``Safety Measurement System'' and ``Safety Fitness 
Determination.''

Interventions

    The use of targeted interventions to improve unsafe behavior is a 
cornerstone of the CSA 2010 operational model. Interventions are 
actions taken by FMCSA or its State partners to address safety 
deficiencies that cause an entity to receive an unfavorable score in 
the SMS. Currently, FMCSA relies on the CR, a one-size-fits-all 
comprehensive audit of regulatory compliance, to determine enforcement 
actions and assess safety fitness. In contrast, CSA 2010 interventions 
respond to specific safety risks and are designed to be progressive. 
The goal is to reach a larger segment of the industry and to change 
unsafe behavior early on.
    The interventions developed for implementation in CSA 2010 can be 
grouped into one of two categories:
    Investigative interventions are an attempt to find the causal 
factors of a safety performance issue that is identified by the 
measurement system.\1\ FMCSA believes that such identification will, in 
many cases, help motor carriers and drivers to apply the most effective 
corrective actions. These interventions include targeted roadside 
inspections, offsite investigations, and on-site investigations 
(focused and comprehensive).
    Corrective interventions are aimed at encouraging a change in 
safety behavior by correcting causal factors identified by 
investigative interventions with actions that range from educational to 
punitive. These interventions include Warning Letters, Cooperative 
Safety Plans, Notices of Violation, Notices of Claim, and Settlement 
Agreements. Under FMCSA's planned SFD process, corrective interventions 
could result in FMCSA determining a carrier unfit

[[Page 53486]]

through the safety fitness determination process.
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    \1\ Although FMCSA believes that identifying causal factors 
through redesigned investigations will prove beneficial to safety, 
the Agency recognizes that it is ultimately the responsibility of 
motor carriers and drivers to know, understand, and comply with all 
applicable Federal safety regulations.
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Safety Fitness Determination

    Under 49 U.S.C. 31144, FMCSA is required to ``maintain by 
regulation a procedure for determining the safety fitness of an owner 
or operator.'' Under the Agency's current operational model, FMCSA uses 
the CR process to determine motor carrier safety fitness and issue 
safety ratings, which can be Satisfactory, Conditional, or 
Unsatisfactory and are defined under 49 CFR part 385.
    The development of an alternative SFD methodology is guided by 
concerns about FMCSA's current SFD process both from within and outside 
the Agency. In particular, National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) 
recommendation H-99-06 urges FMCSA to ``Change the safety fitness 
rating methodology so that adverse vehicle and driver performance-based 
data alone are sufficient to result in an overall unsatisfactory rating 
for the carrier.''
    In response to these concerns, FMCSA is developing an SFD 
methodology that would (1) allow it to assess the safety performance of 
a larger segment of the motor carrier industry; (2) not be tied to an 
onsite compliance review; and (3) take into account virtually all FMCSA 
safety regulations. This methodology is described in more detail in the 
sections below headed ``Safety Measurement System'' and ``Safety 
Fitness Determination.''

Information Technology Systems

    Information technology (IT) systems is the fourth major component 
of CSA 2010. New information resources and modified, existing 
information systems have been made available to FMCSA, State partners, 
and operational model test carriers to track and update the safety 
performance data from regulated entities as they are received, link 
relevant data to the correct entity, validate the data, and provide the 
mechanisms for correcting data. These systems will also allow FMCSA to 
provide important data to a third-party evaluator who will render an 
opinion of the relative effectiveness and efficiency of the CSA 2010 
processes relative to existing processes.
    COMPASS is the Agency's major IT modernization initiative. CSA 2010 
is coordinating closely with the COMPASS program so that the timelines 
of both programs are synchronized as much as possible. CSA 2010 full 
deployment will rely on modernized, flexible IT systems that COMPASS 
provides.

Current CSA 2010 Priorities

Operational Model Test

    In February 2008, FMCSA began testing the new CSA 2010 operational 
model. The purpose of the operational model test is to determine both 
the feasibility and effectiveness of the new CSA 2010 interventions and 
SMS. The test is scheduled to run in two Phases for 30 months into mid-
2010, at which time FMCSA is targeting full CSA 2010 implementation. 
The 30-month timeframe is designed to provide sufficient data for 
statistical purposes to support third-party evaluation of the 
operational model test results.
    During the operational model test, FMCSA is not providing any 
regulatory relief. Motor carriers are not rated under the CSA 2010 SFD 
methodology, because that methodology must yet be implemented through 
rulemaking. Instead, a motor carrier with poor safety performance, and 
found to be unresponsive to the new CSA 2010 interventions, undergoes a 
CR and is rated in accordance with the Agency's current compliance and 
enforcement process, and is subject to fines, penalties, and other 
actions to bring about compliance.
     The test is taking place in four States: Colorado, Georgia, 
Missouri, and New Jersey, which provides one test State for each of the 
four FMCSA Service Centers. FMCSA randomly divided motor carriers 
domiciled in the test States into two equal sized groups: A test group 
and a control group.
    The test group carriers receive CSA 2010 interventions based on 
information provided by the SMS. The control group is addressed through 
the Agency's current operational model, which involves the use of 
SafeStat to identify motor carriers for compliance reviews and any 
required enforcement actions. Again, motor carriers in the test group 
with poor safety performance, and found to be unresponsive to the new 
CSA 2010 interventions, undergo a compliance review and are rated in 
accordance with the Agency's current compliance and enforcement 
process.
     Phase I: In January 2008, FMCSA trained approximately 26 Federal 
and State investigators to carry out the new CSA 2010 interventions on 
the test group carriers during the operational model test. In February 
2008, the Agency initiated the first phase of the operational model 
test: This startup phase included only three BASICs: Unsafe Driving, 
Fatigued Driving, and Vehicle Maintenance.
     Phase II: Phase two of the operational model test is scheduled to 
begin in late-September, at which point the remaining BASICs will be 
added: Driver Fitness, Controlled Substances and Alcohol, Improper 
Loading/Cargo Securement, and Crash History. As the test progresses 
into phase two, FMCSA intends to add currently excluded SafeStat 
category A/B motor carriers to the test. Including A/B carriers will 
help demonstrate the effectiveness of the new interventions on the 
group of carriers that FMCSA traditionally targets.
     Implementation: As the test progresses and more data are gathered, 
the Agency anticipates being able to make ongoing quantitative and 
qualitative evaluations of the effectiveness of CSA 2010, which will 
guide broader implementation.

Safety Measurement System

    Implementation of CSA 2010 will rely on accurate, objective 
measurement of the safety performance of individual motor carriers and 
drivers. The CSA 2010 SMS is designed to monitor and quantify the 
performance of motor carriers and drivers through data available in the 
Motor Carrier Management Information System (MCMIS). Under CSA 2010, 
the data would include violations found during roadside inspections, 
traffic enforcement, and the intervention process (discussed below) as 
well as violations associated with crashes.
    As mentioned above, the SMS is organized into seven BASICs, each of 
which includes regulatory requirements for both motor carriers and 
drivers. These categories are derived from the existing FMCSA 
regulatory structure, the Large Truck Crash Causation Study, and other 
analyses and studies conducted by the Agency:
     Unsafe Driving. Operation of a CMV in a dangerous or careless 
manner. Examples of violations are speeding, reckless driving, improper 
lane change, and inattention.
    Fatigued Driving. Operation of a CMV by a driver who is in 
noncompliance with hours-of-service regulations. This BASIC includes 
violations of driving and on-duty time limits as well as failure to 
maintain complete, accurate logbooks.
    Driver Fitness. Operation of a CMV by a driver who is unfit due to 
lack of training or required qualifications. Examples of violations 
include failure to have a valid, appropriate commercial driver's 
license or being medically unqualified to operate a CMV.
    Controlled Substances and Alcohol. Operation of a CMV by a driver 
who is in possession of alcohol or illegal drugs or is impaired due to 
alcohol, illegal drugs, or misuse of prescription or over-the-counter 
medications. Examples of

[[Page 53487]]

violations include use or possession of controlled substances or 
alcohol.
    Vehicle Maintenance. CMV failure due to improper or inadequate 
maintenance. Examples of violations include faulty brakes or lights and 
other mechanical defects as well as failure to make required repairs.
    Improper Loading/Cargo Securement. CMV incidents resulting from 
shifting loads, spilled or dropped cargo, and unsafe handling of 
hazardous materials. Examples of violations include improper load 
securement, cargo retention, and unsafe handling of hazardous 
materials.
    Crash History. A history or pattern of crash involvement, including 
frequency and severity, based on information from State-reported 
crashes.
     The SMS measures the performance of an entity (motor carrier or 
driver) in each BASIC, employing a four-step process: (1) Relevant 
inspection, violation, and crash data from MCMIS are attributed to an 
entity to create a safety-event history; (2) the entity's violations 
and crashes are classified into BASICs; (3) time- and severity-
weighting, normalization, peer-grouping, and data-sufficiency criteria 
are applied to the data to form a quantifiable measure for the entity 
in each BASIC; and (4) on the basis of comparison of the entity's BASIC 
measure with those of its peers, a rank and percentile are assigned. A 
carrier's score in each BASIC is based on data from the past 24 months.
    FMCSA is designing one SMS consisting of the Carrier Safety 
Measurement System (CSMS) for carriers, and the Driver Safety 
Measurement System (DSMS) for drivers. The Agency is implementing both 
systems in their prototype stages to support the CSA 2010 operational 
model test.
    During the CSA 2010 operational model test, FMCSA is using SMS 
results to identify and monitor entities with safety problems for 
inclusion in the intervention process. Ultimately, in cases where 
measurement results indicate a strong crash risk to the public, FMCSA 
will apply those results, along with other factors, to the 
determination of a carrier's safety fitness.

Safety Fitness Determination

    In the November 2, 2007 Federal Register notice announcing last 
year's listening session, FMCSA laid out a preliminary SFD methodology 
(72 FR 62298--62299, November 2, 2007). This methodology is designed to 
meet the intent of the NTSB recommendation H-99-06 in the context of 
the new BASICs, while acknowledging the latest research that indicates 
that driver behavior is a major contributing factor in causing crashes.
    The methodology is based strongly on performance data, and does not 
require a comprehensive on-site review for a safety fitness 
determination, which would be issued regularly on all carriers for 
which the Agency has sufficient data. As shown in Table 1, under this 
methodology there would be three major factors that could impact a 
motor carrier's safety fitness determination: (1) Roadside inspection 
and crash data; (2) violations in the areas of essential motor carrier 
safety management found during the intervention process (see Table 2); 
and (3) 15 violations which FMCSA believes are so fundamental to 
ensuring safety that no motor carrier should be allowed to operate if 
any of these violations are found and not immediately corrected (see 
Table 3). As shown in Table 1, data obtained under factors (1) and (2) 
would align with the seven BASICs in the CSA 2010 SMS.
    Overall, the response to this proposed methodology was favorable 
from stakeholders attending the December 2007 listening session. In 
June 2008, after considering the potential safety benefits and 
operational feasibility, FMCSA's Motor Carrier Safety Advisory 
Committee recommended that the agency continue to work on CSA 2010 to 
address the NTSB's recommendation rather than making amendments to the 
cucrrent SFD to address the NTSB concerns prior to the implementation 
of CSA 2010. Accordingly, FMCSA is proceeding with the development of a 
notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) to address safety fitness 
determination under CSA 2010. The developmental basis for the 
rulemaking is the preliminary safety fitness methodology referenced 
above and summarized in Table 1. FMCSA is targeting publication of the 
NPRM in 2008.

                 Table 1--Proposed Preliminary CSA 2010 Safety Fitness Determination Methodology
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                                       Non-stand alone BASICs:
                                        Driver fitness, drug/
 Stand alone BASICs: Unsafe driving,        alcohol,cargo         Fifteen fundamental         Safety fitness
           fatigued driving              securement, vehicle           violations             determination
                                       maintenance, verifiable
                                              crash rate
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Number of BASICs:                      Number of BASICs:         See Table 3 below.....   Continue Operation,
(1) With SMS measure above Unfit       (1) With SMS measure or                            Marginal Unfit.
 threshold, or                          verifiable crash rate
(2) Where essential safety management   above Unfit threshold,
 violations are 10 percent or more of   or.
 records checked                       (2) Where essential
                                        safety management
                                        violations are 10
                                        percent or more of
                                        records checked.
 1...................................  .......................  .......................   Unfit.
 0...................................   Greater Than 1........  .......................   Unfit.
 0...................................   0.....................   1.....................   Unfit.
 0...................................   1.....................   0.....................   Marginal.
 0...................................   0.....................   0.....................   Continue Operation.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The methodology in Table 1 makes a distinction between ``stand 
alone'' and ``non-stand alone'' BASICs. For the ``stand alone'' BASICs 
a failure in only one of them would result in a proposed Unfit status, 
whereas for the ``non-stand alone'' BASICs a failure in more than one 
of them would be required for the proposed Unfit status. The rationale 
for this distinction is that, although each of the BASICs applies to 
both carriers and drivers, the ``stand alone'' BASICs are more directly 
related to driver behavior. Recent research indicates that driver 
behavior is a major contributing factor in causing crashes. In 
particular, an effectiveness study on the SMS, ``Incorporating the 
Carrier Safety Measurement System Results into the Proposed Safety 
Fitness Determination Process,'' November 2007, FMCSA and

[[Page 53488]]

John Volpe National Transportation Systems Center, has shown that 
carriers with past poor performance in the Unsafe Driving or Fatigue 
Driving BASICs were subsequently involved in crashes at a considerably 
higher rate than the overall crash rate of the motor carrier 
population.

Safety Data Quality

    Both the SMS and SFD methodologies depend on high quality roadside 
inspection and crash data to be collected and attributed to motor 
carriers' safety performance records. Because of this reliance on high 
quality data, FMCSA would like to share some details of its ongoing 
safety data quality improvement efforts.
    Through the State partnership in the Motor Carrier Safety 
Assistance Program (MCSAP), FMCSA shares a safety goal with the States 
to reduce the number and severity of crashes involving large trucks and 
buses on our Nation's highways. To meet this common goal, inspection 
and crash data that are collected and reported to FMCSA must meet high 
standards of uniformity, completeness, accuracy and timeliness. The 
FMCSA has made significant strides to improve the data quality of crash 
and inspection data by the development of a comprehensive program that 
includes: Raising the awareness of the these standards, developing a 
means to measure State safety data quality, and working directly with 
States through either a State on-site review process or direct 
technical assistance to improve the quality of State safety data.
    This comprehensive data quality program supports the Department of 
Transportation (DOT) data quality guidelines and addresses specific 
recommendations put forth in the DOT Inspector General's report, 
``Improvements Needed in the Motor Carrier Safety Status Measurement 
System'' (SafeStat) report, February 2004, available at the following 
url: http://www.oig.dot.gov/StreamFile?file=/data/pdfdocs/
mh2004034.pdf.
    High quality data are the underpinning of effective safety programs 
at the State and Federal levels, including CSA 2010. The data quality 
programs include the following key areas that promote improvements to 
data quality:
     DataQs is an online system accessible on the Analysis and 
Information (A&I) Online http://ai.fmcsa.dot.gov Web site that was 
developed to facilitate data challenges by motor carriers and to track 
corrective actions.
     The State Safety Data Quality Map (SSDQ) is an evaluation 
tool for State-reported crash and inspection data that is released to 
the public on a quarterly basis on the A&I Online Web site. This 
evaluation measures States on the completeness, timeliness, accuracy, 
and consistency of State-reported crash and inspection data in FMCSA's 
Motor Carrier Management Information System (MCMIS).
     Monthly monitoring provides information accessible to 
States and Federal personnel on the completeness, timeliness, accuracy, 
and consistency of State-reported crash and inspection data. This 
reporting summarizes the evaluation results and tracks the States' 
progress on a monthly basis.
     On-site and off-site reviews of State-reported crash and 
inspection data provide support to States to identify areas for 
potential process improvement and provide the technical assistance to 
implement recommendations.
     Crash data collection training provides State-specific 
crash investigation training on the crash data needed by FMCSA.
     Additionally, FMCSA provides technical and analytical 
assistance to States to help them use good quality safety data and 
analysis in developing their Commercial Vehicle Safety Plans (CVSPs).
    The quality of data submitted by States has shown marked 
improvement since the inception of the program. The federal oversight 
agency, Government Accountability Office (GAO), has taken notice as 
FMCSA has made efforts to improve the quality of CMV data. In 2005, GAO 
found that, while challenges remain, FMCSA's efforts have contributed 
to CMV data quality improvements. In particular, they reported that 
FMCSA's Safety Data Quality Improvement Program (SaDIP) supported state 
efforts to improve data quality. GAO concluded in that report, ``* * * 
FMCSA's collaborative efforts with states have had a positive impact on 
improving the quality of states' crash data, therefore ultimately 
enhancing the ability of both federal and state governments to make 
highway planning and safety enforcement decisions (GAO-06-102, Highway 
Safety: Further Opportunities Exist to Improve Data on Crashes 
Involving Commercial Motor Vehicles, p. 30). In 2007, GAO reported that 
FMCSA ``* * * acted to improve the quality of SafeStat data by 
completing a comprehensive plan for data quality improvement, 
implementing an approach to correct inaccurate data, and providing 
grants to states for improving data quality, among other things'' (GAO-
07-585, Identifying High Risk Motor Carriers, p. 5).
    The FMCSA is committed to evaluating States' data, developing 
improvement tools for States, and assisting individual States as they 
work toward improving their data collection processes. This approach 
will result in an effective and comprehensive approach to improving the 
quality of State safety data.

Comments Requested

    FMCSA requests comments from all interested parties on the CSA 2010 
program elements described in this notice. FMCSA is particularly 
interested in comments related to the Safety Measurement System, 
interventions, preliminary safety fitness determination methodology, 
and operational model test. Commenters are requested to provide 
supporting data and rationale wherever possible.

       Table 2--Areas of Essential Motor Carrier Safety Management
------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1. Scheduling a run which would necessitate the vehicle being operated
 at speeds in excess of those prescribed (Sec.   392.6).
 2. Operating a motor vehicle not in accordance with the laws,
 ordinances, and regulations of the jurisdiction in which it is being
 operated (Sec.   392.2)(Safety related violations only).
 3. No operating authority (392.9a(a).
 4. False reports of records of duty status (Sec.   395.8(e)).
 5. Requiring or permitting driver to drive more than 11 hours (Sec.
 395.3(a)(1)).
 6. Requiring or permitting passenger CMV driver to drive more than 10
 hours (Sec.   395.5(a)(1)).
 7. Requiring or permitting driver to drive after 14 hours on duty (Sec.
   395.3(a)(2)).
 8. Requiring or permitting passenger CMV driver to drive after 15 hours
 on duty (Sec.   395.5(a)(2)).
 9. Requiring or permitting driver to drive after 60 hours on duty in 7
 days (Sec.   395.3(b)(1)).
10. Requiring or permitting driver to drive after 70 hours on duty in 8
 days (Sec.   395.3(b)(2)).
11. Requiring or permitting passenger CMV driver to drive after 60 hours
 on duty in 7 days (Sec.   395.5(b)(1)).

[[Page 53489]]


12. Requiring or permitting passenger CMV driver to drive after 70 hours
 on duty in 8 days (Sec.   395.5(b)(2)).
13. Requiring or permitting short-haul property CMV driver to drive
 after 16 hours on duty (Sec.   395.1(o)).
14. No records of duty status (Sec.   395.8(a)).
15. Failing to submit record of duty status within 13 days (Sec.
 395.8(i)).
16. Failing to preserve records of duty status for 6 months (Sec.
 395.8(k)).
17. Failing to preserve supporting documents (Sec.   395.8(k)).
18. Fraudulent or intentional alteration of a supporting document (Sec.
  395.8(k)).
19. Requiring or permitting driver to drive after 70 hours in 7 days
 (Alaska)(Sec.   395.1(h)(1)(iii)).
20. Requiring or permitting driver to drive after 80 hours on duty in 8
 days (Alaska)(395.1(h)(1)(iv)).
21. Requiring or permitting driver to drive more than 15 hours
 (Alaska)(Sec.   395.1(h)(1)(i)).
22. Requiring or permitting driver to drive after being on duty 20 hours
 (Alaska)(Sec.   395.1(h)(1)(ii)).
23. Requiring or permitting passenger CMV driver to drive more than 15
 hours (Alaska) (Sec.   395.1(h)(2)(i)).
24. Requiring or permitting passenger CMV driver to drive after 20 hours
 on duty (Alaska)(Sec.   395.1(h)(2)(ii)).
25. Requiring or permitting passenger CMV driver to drive after 80 hours
 on duty in 8 days (Alaska)(Sec.   395.1(h)(2)(iv)).
26. Requiring or permitting passenger CMV driver to drive after 70 hours
 on duty in 7 days (Alaska)(395.1(h)(2)(iii)).
27. Failing to investigate driver's background (Sec.   391.23(a)).
28. Failing to maintain driver qualification file on each driver
 employed (Sec.   391.51(a))(Use current guidance of no element of DQ
 file requirements found).
29. Operating a CMV without a valid CDL (Sec.   383.23(a))(Safety
 related loss only).
30. Failing to train hazardous material employees as required (Sec.
 172.704(a) & Sec.   177.800(c)).
31. Using a driver not medically re-examined each 24 months (Sec.
 391.45(b)(1)).
32. Using a driver not medically examined and certified (Sec.
 391.45(a)).
33. Using a driver before receiving a negative pre-employment result
 (Sec.   382.301(a)).
34. Failing to perform random alcohol tests at the applicable rate (Sec.
   382.305(b)(1)).
35. Failing to perform random controlled substance tests at the
 applicable rate (Sec.   382.305(b)(2)).
36. Using a driver without a return to duty test (Sec.   382.309).
37. Failing to keep minimum records of inspection and maintenance (Sec.
  396.3(b)).
38. Requiring or permitting a driver to drive without the vehicle's
 cargo being properly distributed and adequately secured (Sec.
 392.9(a)(1)).
39. Transporting a HM without preparing a shipping paper (Sec.
 172.200(a) & Sec.   177.817(a))(no shipping paper at all).
40. Transporting HM in a package with an identifiable release of HM
 (Sec.   173.24).
41. Loading a cargo tank with an HM which exceeds the maximum weight of
 lading marked on the specification plate (Sec.   173.24b(d)(2)).
42. Loading HM not in accordance with the separation and segregation
 table (Sec.   173.30/177.848(d)).
43. Transporting HM in an unauthorized cargo tank (Sec.   173.33(a)).
44. Transporting or loading two or more materials in a cargo tank motor
 vehicle which resulted in an unsafe condition (Sec.   173.33(a)(2)).
45. Transporting a hazardous material in a cargo tank motor vehicle
 which has a dangerous reaction when in contact with the tank (Sec.
 173.33(b)(1)).
46. Transporting an unacceptable HM shipment (Sec.   177.801).
47. Failing to attend a cargo tank during loading/unloading (Sec.
 177.834(i)).
48. Offering a cargo tank which has not successfully completed a test or
 inspection which has become due (Sec.   180.407(a)).
49. Failing to test and inspect a cargo tank which has been in an
 accident and has been damaged (Sec.   180.407(b)(2)).
50. Failing to conduct a pressure test on a cargo tank which has been
 out of HM service for one year or more (Sec.   180.407(b)(3)).
51. Failing to test and inspect a cargo tank which has been modified
 (Sec.   180.407(b)(4)).
52. Failing to conduct a test or inspection on a cargo tank when
 required by DOT (Sec.   180.407(b)(5)).
53. Failing to periodically test and inspect a cargo tank (Sec.
 180.407(c)).
------------------------------------------------------------------------


                     Table 3--Fundamental Violations
------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1. Failing to implement an alcohol and/or controlled substance testing
 program (Sec.   382.115(a) or (b)).
 2. Using a driver who has refused to submit to an alcohol or controlled
 substances test required under part 382 (Sec.   382.211).
 3. Using a driver known to have tested positive for a controlled
 substance (Sec.   382.215).
 4. Knowingly allowing, requiring, permitting, or authorizing an
 employee with a commercial driver's license which is suspended,
 revoked, or canceled by a State or who is disqualified to operate a
 commercial motor vehicle as defined in Part 383 (Sec.   383.37(a)).
 5. Knowingly allowing, requiring, permitting, or authorizing a driver
 who is disqualified to drive a commercial motor vehicle (Sec.
 383.51(a)).
 6. Operating a motor vehicle transporting property without having in
 effect the required minimum levels of financial responsibility coverage
 (Sec.   387.7(a)).
 7. Using a disqualified driver (Sec.   391.15(a)).
 8. Using a physically unqualified driver (Sec.   391.11(b)(4)).
 9. Failing to require a driver to make a record of duty status (Sec.
 395.8(a)) (Complete lack of any records of duty status).
10. Requiring or permitting the operation of a motor vehicle declared
 ``out-of-service'' before repairs are made (Sec.   396.9(c)(2)).
11. Using a commercial motor vehicle not periodically inspected (Sec.
 396.17(a)). (Complete lack of any periodic inspections).
12. Operating a passenger carrying vehicle without having in effect the
 required minimum levels of financial responsibility (Sec.   387.31(a)).
13. Failing to implement a random controlled substances and/or an
 alcohol testing program (Sec.   382.305).
14. Failing to correct out-of-service defects listed by a driver in a
 driver vehicle inspection report before the vehicle is operated again
 (Sec.   396.11(c)).
15. Transporting a forbidden material (Sec.   177.801).
------------------------------------------------------------------------



[[Page 53490]]

    Issued on: September 10, 2008.
John H. Hill,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. E8-21561 Filed 9-15-08; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 4910-EX-P
