In The News
FMCSA will use GPS data for enforcement
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has rescinded a policy
barring use of GPS records to verify compliance with the hours of
service rules.
Since 1997 the agency has taken a hands-off approach to using data from
advanced technologies such as GPS as an enforcement tool "in order to
promote and encourage use of these new technologies by the industry."
Now that goal has been achieved, the agency said. And field staff have
begun to see situations in which the hands-off policy is harming
enforcement, said FMCSA Administrator John Hill. Enforcement officials
were reporting that they could see obvious violators of the hours rules
but could not get to their GPS records to prove it, Hill said.
"I can't look at people in the face who are not compliant with HOS and
say, 'I've got this old policy that says we won't use GPS records,'" he
said. "I just think it's ludicrous. If you've got GPS records that show
you're getting around the HOS rules, we're going to use those as part
of our enforcement process."
Hill said he could not quantify how many GPS users are dodging the
hours rules. "But I will tell you that this is something I hear
routinely from the field. I don't think it's anecdotal. It happens more
than you would imagine."
The policy change will go into effect Dec. 19.