In The News
FMCSA says California meal/break regs applicable to commercial drivers
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration rejected a petition to
exempt commercial vehicle drivers subject to federal hours of service
regulation from the California laws and regulations requiring employers
to provide employees with meal and rest breaks.
The agency ruled that petition does not satisfy the threshold
requirement for preemption under 49 U.S.C. 31141(c) because the
provisions at issue are not "laws and regulations on commercial
motor vehicle safety," but rather laws and regulations applied generally to California employers.
On July 3, 2008, James H. Hanson, Esq., Scopelitis, Garvin, Light,
Hanson & Feary, P.C., petitioned the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration on behalf of a group of motor carriers to preempt the
California statutes and rules requiring transportation industry
employers to give their employees meal and rest breaks during the work
day, as applied to drivers of commercial motor vehicles subject to the
FMCSA hours-of-service regulations.
The petitioners argued that "motor carrier operations are carefully timed to take advantage of the flexibility available under the HOS Regulations and, in some
instances, to take advantage of the full complement of driving hours
provided as well. Some carriers schedule driver meals to take place at
carrier facilities once the driver has delivered a load so that
unloading, sorting, and loading of outbound shipments can take place
during the break. The Meal and Rest Break Rules, by mandating when
meals breaks must be taken, interfere with such arrangements, meaning
that the driver will miss the inbound appointment, which in turn has
the domino effect of delaying outbound operations."
In addition, they noted that because drivers must find a place to pull
over, park and shut down their equipment before the break can start,
"as a practical matter, the Meal and Rest Break Rules impose a much
greater burden on the driver than a simple reading of the rules ...
would at first suggest, and the burden is exacerbated in congested
areas."
You can read the full notice in the Federal Register here.