96-18063. Amendments to Laboratory Certification Requirements  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 137 (Tuesday, July 16, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 37015-37017]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-18063]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    
    Office of the Secretary of Transportation
    
    49 CFR Part 40
    
    [OST Docket No. OST-96-1532]
    RIN 2105-AC37
    
    
    Amendments to Laboratory Certification Requirements
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, DOT.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This final rule establishes provisions that would permit drug 
    testing laboratories located outside the U.S. to participate in the 
    Department's drug testing program. The Department of Transportation 
    would take action permitting the laboratories to participate based on 
    recommendations from the Department of Health and Human Services.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: This rule is effective on July 16, 1996.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert C. Ashby, Deputy Assistant 
    General Counsel for Regulation and Enforcement, Room 10424, (202-366-
    9306); 400 7th Street, SW., Washington DC 20590; or Mary Bernstein, 
    Director, Office of Drug Enforcement and Program Compliance, same 
    street address, Room 10317, (202) 366-3784.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Recently, the Federal Highway Administration 
    (FHWA) issued a final rule applying its drug and alcohol testing 
    requirements to foreign-based drivers operating in the United States 
    (60 FR 49322; September 22, 1995). Under the rule, Canadian and Mexican 
    drivers who come into the United States will be subject to testing on 
    the same basis as U.S. drivers, beginning July 1, 1996, for employees 
    of larger carriers and a year later for employees of smaller carriers.
        In any case, Canadian and Mexican employers who collect drug urine 
    specimens under FHWA rules will be able to have the specimens tested in 
    U.S. laboratories certified by the Department of Health and Human 
    Services (DHHS), on the same basis as U.S. employers. In the interest 
    of facilitating program implementation, the Department hopes that it 
    will be possible for Mexican and Canadian laboratories to participate 
    in the program as well. (If Canadian and Mexican laboratories are not 
    authorized to participate in the program as provided in this rule, 
    Canadian and Mexican employers must send specimens to DHHS-certified 
    laboratories in the U.S. for testing.)
        Canadian and Mexican laboratories may participate in the DOT-
    mandated testing program only if their participation is consistent with 
    the Department's statutory authority. Strict safeguards for the 
    accuracy and quality of laboratory tests are a key mandate of the 
    Omnibus Transportation Employee Testing Act of 1991.
        The motor carrier portion of the Act (49 U.S.C. 31306(b), which 
    parallels the other modal sections of the Act), provides that, in 
    carrying out the requirement to establish a motor carrier drug testing 
    program , the Secretary ``shall'' develop requirements ``that shall''
    
        (2) for laboratories and testing procedures for controlled 
    substances, incorporate the Department of Health and Human Services 
    scientific and technical guidelines dated April 11, 1988, and any 
    amendments to those guidelines, including mandatory guidelines 
    establishing--
        (A) comprehensive standards for every aspect of laboratory 
    controlled substances testing and laboratory procedures to be 
    applied in carrying out this section, including standards requiring 
    the use of the best available technology to ensure the complete 
    reliability and accuracy of controlled substances tests and strict 
    procedures governing the chain of custody of specimens collected for 
    controlled substances testing; * * *
        (C) appropriate standards and procedures for periodic review of 
    laboratories and criteria for certification and revocation of 
    certification of laboratories to perform controlled substances 
    testing in carrying out this section.
        (3) require that a laboratory involved in testing under this 
    section have the capability and facility, at the laboratory, of 
    performing screening and confirmation tests; * * *
    
        The language of these provisions is clearly mandatory, a point 
    which the legislative history reinforces. Senate Report 102-54 (May 2, 
    1991), concerning S. 676, the bill that became the Act, notes, in 
    response to concerns about testing accuracy and false positive tests, 
    that ``By incorporating laboratory certification and testing procedures 
    developed by HHS and DOT * * * the Committee has taken affirmative 
    steps to ensure accuracy.'' (S. Rept. 102-54 at 7.) Later, in speaking 
    of the laboratory and other safeguards in the bill, the report says 
    that
    
        These safeguards are critical to the success of any testing 
    program. They are designed to ensure that * * * there is 
    accountability and accuracy of testing. They provide what the 
    Committee believes are the basic minimums * * * the Secretary is 
    urged to carefully review the safeguards in any testing program to 
    ensure they are adhered to in a vigorous manner. (Id. at 31)
    
        More specifically on laboratory matters, the Committee said that
    
        Incorporating the HHS guidelines relating to laboratory 
    standards and procedures * * * as DOT has done in Part 40 * * * is 
    an essential component of the procedural safeguards specified in 
    this subsection.* * * Realizing that these guidelines may be subject 
    to future modification, the Committee has acted to specify that the 
    basic elements of certain provisions now in effect are mandated, 
    including the need for comprehensive standards and procedures for 
    all aspects of laboratory testing of drugs * * * [and] the 
    establishment of standards and procedures
    
    [[Page 37016]]
    
    for the periodic review of laboratories and the development of 
    criteria for laboratory certification or revocation of such 
    certification. (Id. at 32)
    
        It is noteworthy that Congress explicitly accepts an active DOT 
    role in establishing and carrying out the laboratory-related provisions 
    of the statute. What is mandatory is not that one agency or the other 
    play any particular administrative role in the process, but that the 
    protections embodied in the DHHS guidelines be applied, through DOT's 
    rules, to participants in the program. There is no bar in the statutory 
    language to a DOT rule assigning to DOT the task of reviewing and 
    certifying laboratories, so long as these actions by DOT are based on 
    the conformity of the laboratories to DOT's incorporation of DHHS 
    laboratory standards. Consequently, DOT has broad legal discretion to 
    take action in the area of drug testing procedures, extending to the 
    certification of laboratories.
        DOT and DHHS are working closely together with respect to the 
    potential certification of foreign laboratories. As the two agencies 
    envision the process, there could be two different ways in which 
    foreign laboratories become certified. First, DHHS could review the 
    application of the foreign laboratory, in the same manner that it 
    reviews applications from U.S. laboratories. If the laboratory meets 
    DHHS standards, DHHS would recommend that DOT certify the laboratory 
    under DOT authority. (The direct certifying authority of DHHS extends 
    only to laboratories that would participate in the Federal employee 
    testing program.) Second, DHHS could review the standards and 
    procedures of a foreign certifying agency. If DHHS determined that the 
    foreign agency had standards, procedures, and authority equivalent to 
    those of DHHS, DHHS would recommend to DOT that DOT deem the foreign 
    agency to be an equivalent certifying authority. Laboratories that the 
    foreign agency certified would then be permitted to participate in the 
    DOT testing program.
        DOT and DHHS have discussed laboratory issues with officials of 
    Transport Canada, the Canadian Trucking Association and its affiliates, 
    and the Standards Council of Canada (a potential laboratory 
    certification organization in Canada), as well as representatives of 
    some Canadian laboratories. We have also had discussions with Mexican 
    officials concerning program and laboratory matters. Following these 
    discussions, the Department proposed a change to 49 CFR 40.39 to 
    accommodate the possibility that foreign laboratories may be able to 
    participate in DOT-mandated drug testing (61 FR 13809; March 28, 1996).
        The NPRM proposed to add a new paragraph to authorize the 
    participation of foreign laboratories in the DOT drug testing program 
    in the two circumstances outlined above (i.e., based on a 
    recommendation by DHHS that a particular laboratory meets DHHS 
    certification requirements, or based on a certification by a foreign 
    certifying organization whose standards and process had been deemed 
    equivalent to those of DHHS). The Department received three comments on 
    the proposal, all of which supported it. Two of the comments sought 
    assurances that the rule would result in foreign laboratories that 
    fully met all DHHS requirements, including periodic inspections and re-
    certifications.
        The Department is adopting the proposal without change. The rule 
    will result in full compliance with DHHS procedures and standards for 
    laboratory certification by foreign laboratories authorized to 
    participate in the program, including inspection and re-certification 
    provisions. It should be emphasized that the rule does not have the 
    effect of actually certifying any foreign laboratories. It simply puts 
    in place a mechanism that would allow such laboratories to participate, 
    if and when DOT and DHHS determine that all issues had been resolved 
    satisfactorily, in full compliance with DHHS requirements for 
    laboratory certification. Once authorized to participate in the DOT 
    drug testing program by this process, a Canadian or Mexican laboratory 
    would be on the same footing as any DHHS-certified laboratory 
    concerning program participation, including the ability to test 
    specimens collected in the U.S. by U.S. employers.
    
    Regulatory Process Matters
    
        The proposed rule is considered to be a nonsignificant rulemaking 
    under DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures, 44 FR 11034. It also is a 
    nonsignificant rule for purposes of Executive Order 12886. The 
    Department certifies, under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, that the 
    rule does not have a significant economic effect on a substantial 
    number of small entities. The rule does not impose any costs or burdens 
    on regulated entities, since it deals with a subject (applying for 
    laboratory certification) that is completely voluntary. Laboratories 
    that are able to meet DHHS standards are typically not small entities, 
    in any case. The rule makes it possible for Canadian and Mexican motor 
    carriers to use laboratories that are closer to them than laboratories 
    in the U.S., which may result in somewhat lower costs for these 
    carriers, which include some small entities. The rule has also been 
    analyzed in accordance with the principles and criteria contained in 
    Executive Order 12612, and it has been determined that it does not have 
    sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a 
    Federalism Assessment.
        The rule is being made effective immediately. The Department has 
    good cause to do so, on the basis that in order to give the Department 
    the opportunity to authorize foreign laboratories to participate in the 
    DOT drug testing program by the July 1, 1996, compliance date for 
    Canadian and Mexican motor carriers, the Department needs this rule to 
    be in place. Making this rule effective now will permit the Department 
    to respond in a timely way if DHHS determines that foreign laboratories 
    or certifying organizations meet DHHS standards. Even if foreign 
    laboratories are not in a position to be approved for participation by 
    July 1, it is important that the Department's authority to approve 
    foreign laboratories be in place, as a matter of good faith on our part 
    toward our trading partners.
    
    List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 40
    
        Drug Testing, Alcohol Testing, Reporting and Recordkeeping 
    Requirements, Safety, Transportation.
    
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 49 CFR part 40 is 
    amended as follows:
        1. The authority citation for part 40 continues to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 102,301,322; 49 U.S.C. app. 1301nt., app. 
    1434nt., app. 2717, app. 1618a.
    
        2. Section 40.39 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 40.39  Use of certified laboratories.
    
        (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, employers 
    subject to this part shall use only laboratories certified under the 
    DHHS ``Mandatory Guidelines for Federal Workplace Drug Testing 
    Programs,'' April 11, 1988, and subsequent amendments thereto.
        (b) Employers subject to this part may also use laboratories 
    located outside the United States if--
        (1) The Department of Transportation, based on a written 
    recommendation from DHHS, has certified the laboratory as meeting DHHS 
    laboratory certification standards or deemed the laboratory fully 
    equivalent to a laboratory meeting DHHS laboratory certification 
    standards; or
        (2) The Department of Transportation, based on a written 
    recommendation
    
    [[Page 37017]]
    
    from DHHS, has recognized a foreign certifying organization as having 
    equivalent laboratory certification standards and procedures to those 
    of DHHS, and the foreign certifying organization has certified the 
    laboratory, pursuant to those equivalent standards and procedures.
    
        Issued this 9th day of July 1996, at Washington, DC.
    Federico Pena,
    Secretary of Transportation.
    [FR Doc. 96-18063 Filed 7-15-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-62-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
7/16/1996
Published:
07/16/1996
Department:
Transportation Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
96-18063
Dates:
This rule is effective on July 16, 1996.
Pages:
37015-37017 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
OST Docket No. OST-96-1532
RINs:
2105-AC37: Amendments to Laboratory Certification
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/2105-AC37/amendments-to-laboratory-certification
PDF File:
96-18063.pdf
CFR: (1)
49 CFR 40.39