94-22662. Safety Fitness Procedure; Safety Ratings  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 177 (Wednesday, September 14, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-22662]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: September 14, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    Federal Highway Administration
    [FHWA Docket No. MC-94-22]
    
     
    
    Safety Fitness Procedure; Safety Ratings
    
    AGENCY: Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), DOT.
    
    ACTION: Notice and request for comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: In March and December 1993 the FHWA modified its Safety 
    Fitness Rating Methodology (SFRM) used to rate a motor carrier's 
    compliance with the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs), 
    applicable Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMRs), and to assess its 
    operational safety. These modifications incorporated more performance-
    based information into the SFRM. Vehicle out-of-service (OOS) rates are 
    now used as a first indicator to evaluate a motor carrier's compliance 
    with the Inspection, Repair, and Maintenance regulations found in part 
    396 of the FMCSRs. A second modification gave more weight to violations 
    of the safety regulations which are acute or critical. These 
    modifications enable the SFRM to reflect more accurately the regulatory 
    scheme set forth in 49 CFR part 385 to determine the safety rating of 
    motor carriers.
        Beginning October 1, 1994, violations of the safety regulations 
    which are acute or critical will be used to rate each of the five 
    regulatory factors when performing a compliance review (CR). On the 
    same date the FHWA will discontinue use of the safety review (SR). 
    Experience has demonstrated that the CR is a more objective tool for 
    measuring a motor carrier's compliance. Although the SR will no longer 
    be used, the education and technical assistance aspect of the SR will 
    continue to be an important part of the overall motor carrier safety 
    program.
        This notice explains the 1993 SFRM changes as well as the changes 
    to be implemented on October 1, 1994. This notice also solicits 
    comments concerning the forthcoming rating methodology changes, and the 
    direction that future modifications should take.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received on or before November 14, 1994.
    
    ADDRESSES: Submit written, signed comments to FHWA Docket No. MC-94-22, 
    room 4232, HCC-10, Office of Chief Counsel, Federal Highway 
    Administration, 400 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590. All 
    comments received will be available for examination at the above 
    address from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. e.t., Monday through Friday, except 
    Federal holidays. Those persons desiring notification of receipt of 
    comments must include a self-addressed, stamped postcard.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. William C. Hill, Federal Programs 
    Division, Office of Motor Carrier Field Operations (202) 366-1795, or 
    Mr. Charles Medalen, Office of Chief Counsel, (202) 366-1354, Federal 
    Highway Administration, 400 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590. 
    Office hours are from 7:45 a.m. to 4:15 p.m. e.t., Monday through 
    Friday, except Federal holidays.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Information Regarding the Safety Rating Process
    
        Section 215 of the Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984 (49 U.S.C. 
    31144, formerly 49 U.S.C. App. 2512) directed the Secretary of 
    Transportation, in cooperation with the Interstate Commerce Commission 
    (ICC), to establish a procedure to determine the safety fitness of 
    owners and operators of commercial motor vehicles (CMVs) operating in 
    interstate commerce. The Secretary's responsibility was delegated to 
    the FHWA.
        The FHWA promulgated a regulation entitled ``Safety Fitness 
    Procedures,'' 49 CFR part 385, which established a ``safety fitness 
    standard'' that a motor carrier must meet in order to obtain a 
    ``Satisfactory'' safety rating.
        To meet the ``safety fitness standard,'' a motor carrier must 
    demonstrate that it has adequate safety management controls in place 
    which function effectively to ensure acceptable compliance with the 
    applicable safety requirements. The rule also sets forth the factors 
    that will be considered in determining a motor carrier's safety 
    fitness.
        The FHWA developed an SFRM which uses data from SRs or CRs, to 
    evaluate a motor carrier's safety fitness and to assign one of three 
    possible safety ratings (Satisfactory, Conditional or Unsatisfactory) 
    to carriers operating in interstate commerce. This process is based on 
    49 CFR 385.5, Safety fitness standard, and Sec. 385.7, Factors to be 
    considered in determining a safety rating. The process also identifies 
    motor carriers needing improvement in their compliance with the FMCSRs 
    and applicable HMRs. The safety rating process is used to focus the 
    FHWA's limited resources on examining the operations of these motor 
    carriers to promote compliance with applicable regulations, which 
    reduces the risk of highway accidents and hazardous materials 
    incidents. Motor carriers rated as ``Unsatisfactory,'' especially those 
    transporting passengers and hazardous materials, customarily receive a 
    higher priority in the FHWA's on-site compliance and enforcement 
    efforts. In addition, the Motor Carrier Act of 1990 (49 U.S.C. 5113, 
    formerly 49 U.S.C. App. 1814) prohibits all motor carriers which 
    receive ``Unsatisfactory'' safety ratings from the FHWA from operating 
    CMVs to transport placardable quantities of hazardous materials or more 
    than 15 passengers, including the driver. This prohibition becomes 
    effective 45 days after the motor carrier receives an 
    ``Unsatisfactory'' safety rating and remains in effect until the 
    carrier is issued a ``Conditional'' or ``Satisfactory'' rating.
    
    Gathering Information
    
        The rating process used by the FHWA is built upon two operational 
    tools, the SR and the CR. Although the SR will be eliminated after 
    October 1, 1994, it is currently an integral part of the SFRM.
        The SR is an assessment of ``unrated'' motor carriers conducted by 
    Federal and State safety specialists. The SR generally requires 4 to 6 
    hours to complete, depending upon the size of the motor carrier. The 
    safety specialist interviews management officials and inspects samples 
    of the records required to be maintained by the FMCSRs and applicable 
    HMRs at a motor carrier's principal place of business.
        The SR document, which is completed during the on-site visit, 
    contains 70 questions. The SFRM assigns values to each of these 
    questions in the SR document depending on the carrier's compliance or 
    non-compliance with the subject matter of the question. The questions 
    are answered either ``yes'' or ``no'' based upon the safety 
    specialist's observations of the motor carrier's operations, records, 
    management controls, and the information provided by its 
    representatives.
        The CR is a more in-depth examination of a motor carrier's 
    operations and is used: (1) To conduct a follow-up investigation on 
    motor carriers that were rated ``Unsatisfactory'' or ``Conditional'' as 
    a result of a previous SR or CR, or were the subjects of previous 
    enforcement actions, (2) to investigate complaints, or (3) to respond 
    to a request by a motor carrier to reevaluate its safety rating. 
    Documents such as those contained in driver qualification files, 
    records of duty status and vehicle maintenance records are thoroughly 
    examined for compliance with the FMCSRs and applicable HMRs. Violations 
    are recorded on the CR document. Performance-based information, when 
    available, is utilized to evaluate the carrier's compliance with the 
    FMCSRs' vehicle regulations. Recordable/preventable accident 
    information is collected and used by the FHWA in the rating process. It 
    consists of the motor carrier's accident history for the 365-day period 
    prior to the SR or CR. If the accidents meet the FHWA's recording 
    criteria provided in the definition of an accident in Sec. 390.5 of the 
    FMCSRs, and are determined by the safety specialist to have been 
    preventable (could have been avoided by driver/carrier action), they 
    are divided by vehicle miles travelled (VMT) to produce an accident 
    rate.
    
    Transforming the Information into a Safety Rating
    
        Upon completion of the CR, the same 70 questions used in the SR 
    document are answered by the safety specialist to initiate the safety 
    rating process. The safety specialists receive guidance and training on 
    how to complete this form. They identify areas of noncompliance with 
    regulations that are considered acute, where noncompliance is so severe 
    to require immediate corrective actions, or critical, where 
    noncompliance relates to management and/or operational controls. 
    Specific regulations are linked to specific questions. If noncompliance 
    with an acute regulation, as it relates to a specific question, is 
    discovered, the safety specialist marks that question ``No.'' Questions 
    that are linked to critical regulations are marked ``No'' only after a 
    pattern of noncompliance is discovered. Patterns are used to 
    demonstrate more than isolated instances of noncompliance. When large 
    numbers of documents are reviewed, the number of violations required to 
    establish a pattern is equal to at least 10 percent of those records 
    examined.
        The FHWA has developed a computerized algorithm, which is an 
    integral part of the SFRM, for assessing the information obtained from 
    the SR or CR document and assigning a safety rating. Those requirements 
    of the FMCSRs and applicable HMRs that have similar characteristics are 
    combined into five regulatory areas called ``rating factors.'' The five 
    regulatory factors are: (1) Parts 387 and 390; (2) parts 383 and 391; 
    (3) parts 392 and 395; (4) parts 393 and 396; and (5) parts 397 and 
    177. A sixth factor is included in the process to address the accident 
    history of the motor carrier. Each of the six factors is equally 
    weighted, and a rating for each factor is determined by computing the 
    results of the responses to the applicable questions. The results for 
    each of the six factors are then entered into a rating table which 
    establishes the motor carrier's overall safety rating.
    
    Review of the Safety Rating
    
        Section 385.15 provides motor carriers that believe their safety 
    ratings are erroneous because of unresolved factual or procedural 
    disputes the opportunity to petition for a review of their ratings. 
    Section 385.17 provides motor carriers the right to request another 
    review after corrective action has been taken.
    
    Changes to the SFRM in 1993
    
        In March 1993, two SFRM changes were implemented which affected the 
    way motor carrier safety ratings were computed when a CR is performed. 
    The first involved evaluation of a motor carrier's compliance with the 
    vehicle factor (Parts 393 and 396). Prior to this change, the vehicle 
    factor was evaluated on the basis of the recordkeeping requirements in 
    Part 396 and on the number of Out-Of-Service (OOS) defects discovered 
    when vehicles were inspected during a CR. The change made the vehicle 
    factor entirely performance-based when a combination of three or more 
    vehicle inspections were either reported in the Motor Carrier 
    Management Information System (MCMIS) in the 24 months prior to the CR 
    or performed at the time of the review. The vehicle factor was rated 
    ``Satisfactory'' if the vehicle OOS rate was less than 17 percent, 
    ``Conditional'' if it fell between 17 and 33 percent, and 
    ``Unsatisfactory'' if greater than 33 percent. More than 1.6 million 
    vehicles are inspected on the roadside each year by State and Federal 
    officials. The results of these inspections are maintained in the 
    MCMIS. The data base is now sufficiently comprehensive to make it a 
    reliable source of information on carrier compliance for a period of 
    several years. This information is central to the FHWA's rating of 
    motor carriers. It also enables motor carriers to gauge the success of 
    their maintenance program and ultimately to reduce OOS rates during 
    roadside inspections.
        The second modification related to all the regulatory factors. When 
    a pattern of noncompliance with a critical regulation or a single 
    instance of noncompliance with an acute regulation resulted in an 
    enforcement action (i.e., a notice of claim for a civil penalty, or a 
    criminal proceeding), the rating for that factor was 
    ``Unsatisfactory.'' Noncompliance with acute regulations and patterns 
    of noncompliance with critical regulations have been demonstrated 
    through data analysis to be linked to inadequate safety management 
    controls and higher than average rates of recordable/preventable 
    accidents.
        In December 1993 these two changes were refined in the SFRM. The 
    December refinements were the result of experience following the 
    adoption of the March 1993, SFRM changes, which had placed greater 
    emphasis upon performance-oriented motor carrier evaluation than did 
    the previous SFRM. It was decided to place more emphasis upon the part 
    396 requirements to evaluate the vehicle factor because it had become 
    apparent that vehicle roadside inspections were not truly random and 
    that inspectors were targeting vehicles and drivers either because of 
    previous noncompliance or because the violations were evident to the 
    inspectors. Experience also indicated that a factor rating in which 
    noncompliance with an acute regulation resulted in an enforcement 
    action was more appropriately rated no higher than ``Conditional,'' as 
    a violation of an acute regulation by itself was not representative of 
    compliance with the entire factor.
        With the first refinement, the vehicle factor is now rated on a 
    performance basis if a combination of three or more inspections have 
    been recorded in the MCMIS in the twelve months (rather than 24 months) 
    prior to the carrier review or performed at the time of the review. 
    Moreover, because OOS rates were higher than would otherwise be the 
    case because of the non-randomness of the roadside inspections, a new 
    two category system was adopted: OOS rates of 34 percent or higher 
    create an initial factor rating of ``Conditional,'' while those below 
    that figure create an initial factor rating of ``Satisfactory.'' The 
    carrier's compliance with the inspection, repair and maintenance 
    requirements (Part 396) is examined during each review. The results 
    could lower the initial ``Satisfactory'' factor rating to 
    ``Conditional'', and the initial ``Conditional'' factor rating to 
    ``Unsatisfactory'' if noncompliance with an acute regulation and/or a 
    pattern of noncompliance with a critical regulation is discovered. If 
    the examination of the part 396 requirements discloses no such problems 
    with the systems the motor carrier is required to maintain for 
    compliance, the vehicle factor remains ``Satisfactory'' and 
    ``Conditional,'' respectively. The second refinement in December 1993 
    required that when an enforcement case is initiated based upon 
    noncompliance with an acute regulation, the pertinent regulatory factor 
    will not be rated higher than ``Conditional.'' If the enforcement case 
    is based upon noncompliance with two or more acute regulations within 
    the same factor, that factor will be rated ``Unsatisfactory.''
        There was no change in the treatment of a pattern of noncompliance 
    with a critical regulation resulting in an enforcement action; the 
    pertinent factor rating remains ``Unsatisfactory.''
    
    Additional Information on the Current SFRM
    
        Anyone interested in obtaining a more comprehensive printed 
    explanation of the current Safety Rating process should contact the 
    Regional Director, Office of Motor Carriers (See 49 CFR 390.27 for the 
    appropriate address), or the Office of Motor Carrier Field Operations, 
    Room 3421, Attn: HFO-10, 400 7th Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. A 
    copy of that printed explanation has been placed in the docket for 
    public review.
        The March and December 1993 changes to the SFRM were not published 
    in the Federal Register or codified in the FMCSRs because the SFRM 
    simply sets forth the FHWA's rules of procedure and practice for 
    implementing Part 385, Safety Fitness Procedures. The SFRM is not a 
    separate regulatory standard.
    
    October 1, 1994, Changes to the SFRM
    
        Analysis of the SFRM confirms the reasonableness of emphasizing 
    noncompliance with acute regulations or patterns of noncompliance with 
    critical regulations to measure a motor carrier's overall compliance 
    with the FMCSRs and applicable HMRs. The modifications direct the 
    attention of motor carriers to the regulations shown to have the 
    greatest impact upon safety improvement. They simplify the rating 
    process, since only noncompliance with acute regulations or patterns of 
    noncompliance with critical regulations will be used for evaluating the 
    regulatory factors. It should be noted that a ``Satisfactory'' rating 
    is only a passing grade and only full compliance with all of the safety 
    regulations will assure that motor carriers meet the provisions of part 
    385, Safety fitness standard.
        Beginning October 1, 1994, a further modification will be initiated 
    to emphasize the importance of compliance with part 395. Studies have 
    shown that driver error is a significant factor in the majority of 
    accidents. A large component of driver error is fatigue or loss of 
    alertness. Part 395 regulations are an extremely important part of a 
    motor carrier's safety fitness rating.
        Compliance with the regulatory factors, (1) Parts 387 and 390; (2) 
    parts 383 and 391; (3) parts 392 and 395; (4) parts 393 and 396, when 
    there are less than 3 vehicle inspections in the last 12 months to 
    evaluate; and (5) parts 397 and 177, will thereafter be evaluated as 
    follows: For each instance of noncompliance with an acute regulation or 
    each pattern of noncompliance with a critical regulation discovered 
    during a CR, one point will be assessed. However, each pattern of 
    noncompliance with a critical regulation relative to Part 395, Hours of 
    Service of Drivers, will be assessed two points. By increasing the 
    point value for patterns of noncompliance with critical regulations 
    relating to part 395, motor carriers with significant hours of service 
    problems will receive no higher than an overall ``Conditional'' safety 
    rating. The assignment of the points for the three ratings are a result 
    of an October 1993 work-group's analysis of data on noncompliance with 
    acute regulations and patterns of noncompliance with critical 
    regulations.
        The FHWA regulatory factor ratings will be derived as follows:
    
    Satisfactory--if the critical and/or acutes=0 points
    Conditional--if the critical and/or acutes=1 point
    Unsatisfactory--if the critical and/or acutes=2 points
    
        When there are a combination of three or more inspections recorded 
    in the MCMIS in the twelve months prior to the carrier review or 
    performed at the time of the review, the Vehicle factor (parts 393 and 
    396) will be evaluated on the basis of OOS rates and noncompliance with 
    acute regulations and/or a pattern of noncompliance with a critical 
    regulation.
        The accident factor (recordable/preventable accident rate) will be 
    modified to exclude the accident rates for all motor carriers that have 
    only one recordable/preventable accident in the twelve months prior to 
    the review. This change is being made to reflect the variability of 
    accident rates for small motor carriers from one year to the next.
        The formula for assigning a safety rating is not being modified. 
    Each of the six factors will continue to be equally weighted, with the 
    results of each factor rating being entered into a rating table which 
    establishes the motor carrier's overall safety rating.
        The FHWA is soliciting comments concerning the October 1, 1994, 
    rating methodology changes; the direction that should be taken when 
    future modifications to the SFRM are made; and suggestions on how to 
    get information to the industry on new regulations or changes, and FHWA 
    programs to encourage ``voluntary compliance.''
    
    (49 U.S.C. 31144 (1994); 49 CFR 1.48)
    
        Issued on: September 7, 1994.
    Rodney E. Slater,
    Federal Highway Administrator.
    [FR Doc. 94-22662 Filed 9-13-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-22-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
09/14/1994
Department:
Federal Highway Administration
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Notice and request for comments.
Document Number:
94-22662
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before November 14, 1994.
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: September 14, 1994, FHWA Docket No. MC-94-22