- Redmon discusses ‘Ice Road Truckers’ 100 comment(s)
- New rule retains the 11-hour driving limit 21 comment(s)
- Ice Road Truckers head to Himalayas 17 comment(s)
- FMCSA proposes to mandate EOBRs 17 comment(s)
- Dave Redmon: ‘Ice Road’ firing was scripted 9 comment(s)
- Path to own authority paved in paperwork 8 comment(s)
- Cat debuts CT660 vocational truck 8 comment(s)
- Truckers News Celebrity Series 2011-2012 7 comment(s)
- Choosing the most profitable loads 6 comment(s)
- Make healthier fast-food choices 3 comment(s)
Agency defends CSA 2010
December 7, 2010
| by: Avery Vise
Claims that disclosure of data related to the Comprehensive Safety Analysis 2010 program will have disastrous consequences for many trucking companies fail to acknowledge that similar data have been available for more than a decade without causing such problems, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration told a federal appeals court Dec. 6.
Moreover, various arguments that the new data is misleading and inaccurate “do not withstand scrutiny,” the agency said. FMCSA was responding to a motion for an emergency stay filed with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit last week by three trucking organizations.
The inability to show irreparable harm is one of three principal reasons FMCSA said the groups haven’t met the criteria for justifying a stay. The agency said it did not need to use notice-and-comment rulemaking because the actions in launching CSA do not establish or amend any law, standard or rule concerning the federal determination of whether a carrier is sufficiently safe to operate a motor vehicle. “It instead establishes a procedure for concentrating the agency’s limited enforcement resources where they are needed most.”
And public interest weighs heavily against a stay because it “would deprive the entire industry of better information on safety performance and impair the Secretary’s ability to implement procedures proven to be successful in targeting enforcement resources where they are needed most,” FMCSA said.
Although CSA’s Safety Measurement System looks at inspection and crash data in a different way than SafeStat, the type of information available to the public is the same, FMCSA said. Even the percentile rankings that have generated the most concerns with CSA are available for safety evaluation areas within SafeStat. And as with SafeStat, the data alone will not be used — at least not now — to establish a safety fitness determination, the agency said.
“The safety measurement system will compile safety data,” FMCSA told the court. “But it does not establish or modify any federal safety standard. And though the system will rank carriers’ safety performance, the percentile rankings merely reflect a carrier’s performance relative to other carriers and emphatically do not reflect a federal determination as to whether the carrier is safe enough to operate a commercial motor vehicle.”


