ATA President and CEO Bill Graves asked Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters yesterday to push for a stay of the Court of Appeals ruling on Hours of Service (HOS) regulations, stating there was “no compelling safety reason” to eliminate the two provisions the Court challenged.
On July 24, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit vacated the 11-hour driving time provision and the 34-hour restart provision of the HOS regulations. The Court’s decision did not say the new rules were unsafe. It said the FMCSA did not follow procedures in approving the new rules.
“FMCSA can readily address the procedural flaws identified by the Court, and we believe that’s what they should do,” Graves said.
He said research, recent data and drivers’ accounts have shown that the Hours of Service that were enacted in 2005 and ruled on last week are safe. The number of deaths from large truck-involved crashes declined by 4.7 percent in 2006, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. That year was the first full year for which the 2005 Hours of Service regulations were in effect, and the decrease is the largest drop in 14 years.
“The 2005 HOS regulations should be reviewed in their totality,” Graves said. “While they ALLOW one additional hour of driving time, they MANDATE two additional hours of rest. The reality is that trucking is as safe as ever operating under these new rules.”
A study by the American Transportation Research Institute found that most drivers experienced less fatigue and preferred the 11 hours driving, 10 hours off, and 34-hour restart provisions.