Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) is described by FMCSA as its "data-driven safety compliance and enforcement program designed to improve safety and prevent commercial motor vehicle crashes, injuries, and fatalities". This program oversees carriers' safety performance through roadside inspections and crash investigations, issuing violations when instances of noncompliance with safety regulations are uncovered. The Agency's safety investigation team and state law enforcement partners are small compared to the millions of CMV companies and commercial driver license (CDL) holders nationwide. A key component of the CSA program – known as the Safety Measurement System (SMS) – relies on data analysis to identify non-compliant and unsafe companies to prioritize them for enforcement interventions. While the methodology for calculating SMS safety scores has evolved over time in response to suggestions from stakeholders, the program has proven effective at identifying unsafe, high-risk carriers. FMCSA is expected to publicly release additional changes to SMS designed to strengthen the Agency's ability to identify companies for investigation before they are involved in a crash. The program's future remains in doubt as it has been the subject of heavy criticism from the DOT's own Inspector General, the Government Accountability Office, and Congress itself in the FAST Act. That Act requires the National Research Council of the National Academies of Science (NAS) to conduct a thorough study of the Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) program, specifically the Safety Measurement System (SMS).
Hours of Service (HOS) and Driver Restart Study In July 2013, FMCSA updated HOS regulation to help reduce the incidence of CMV driver fatigue on the nation's roadways. The final rule required truck drivers who use the "34-hour restart" provision to maximize their weekly work hours to limit the restart to once a week and to include in the restart period at least two nights off duty from 1:00 to 5:00 a.m., when one's 24-hour body clock supposedly needs and benefits from sleep the most. In December 2014, Congress passed the FAST Act, which suspended the new 34-hour restart provision in the HOS rule and instructed FMCSA to study its effectiveness. In 2015, FMCSA selected Virginia Tech Transportation Institute (VTTI) to conduct the largest naturalistic study of its kind that the Agency had ever undertaken. FMCSA released the findings to Congress in March 2017. The study was unable to demonstrate that the 2013 restart rule provided a greater net benefit compared to the previous rule.
National Registry Implemented in 2014, the National Registry rule requires all Medical Examiners (ME) who conduct physical examinations and issue medical certifications for interstate CMV drivers to complete training on FMCSA's physical qualification standards, pass a certification test, and demonstrate competence through periodic training and testing. CMV drivers whose medical certifications expire must use MEs on the National Registry for their examinations. FMCSA has reached its goal of at least 40,000 certified MEs signing onto the registry, meaning drivers can now find certified medical examiners throughout the country who can competently perform their medical exam. FMCSA is preparing to issue a follow-on "National Registry 2" rulemaking that will require MEs to submit medical certificate information on a daily basis. These daily updates, which FMCSA will transmit to states electronically, will dramatically decrease the chance of drivers falsifying medical cards.
Entry-Level Driver Training (ELDT) FMCSA’s Entry Level Driver Training (ELDT) regulations set a baseline set of minimum training requirements for entry-level
commercial motor vehicle (CMV) drivers. These regulations also created a Training Provider Registry (TPR) to retain a record of which CDL applicants have completed the new ELDT training and certification process. Taken together, these measures improve the safety, reliability, and fairness of the training process for entry-level commercial CMV by ensuring that all drivers have received consistent, high-quality training. Since 2022 ELDT regulations apply to all individuals obtaining a commercial driver's license, upgrading an existing CDL license, or obtaining a passenger, school bus, or hazmat endorsement. As of Feb. 7, 2022 training providers are required to register with the TPR and upload documents to confirm applicants for CDL licenses have met the EDLT minimum standards. ==CSA overhaul==