Are you ready for Roadcheck 2022?

The Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance (CVSA) has announced this annual 72-hour blitz of commercial vehicle inspections will take place May 17-19 across North America. This year, enforcement officers will concentrate on inspecting wheel end components, including brakes and slack adjusters.

According to CVSA, violations involving wheel-end components account for about one-fourth of the vehicle out-of-service violations discovered during past Roadcheck activities, and data from these enforcement blitzes identified wheel-end components as a top 10 violation. 

The top 20 violations listed by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) so far in fiscal 2022 include various wheel-end component violations. FMCSA reported the #3 violation being found at roadside inspections is a clamp or roto-type brake out of adjustment. Other top 20 violations listed by FMCSA include inoperative or defective brakes; chafing or kinking of brake hoses and tubing; and a half-dozen other brake-related violations. 

In effect, commercial enforcement officials will be conducting Level 1 and Level 2 inspections depending upon the inspection site(s) in each state. Vehicles that pass a Level 1 will receive a CVSA decal sticker to display, exempting these vehicles from other Level 1 inspections for three months. 

To ensure your vehicles have the best chance of earning that CVSA decal or to avoid being placed out of service, do thorough pre-trip inspections that focus on finding and correcting the “low-hanging fruit” that attracts officers’ attention. We’re talking about items like turn signal lights, bald or worn tires or failure to have a fire extinguisher on board (yes, these are among those top 20 violations). And be sure you are wearing your seat belt and not operating any hand-held devices while the truck is moving. 

What We Have Learned About Trucking After Hurricanes

10 October 2024

Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and now Hurricane Helene in 2024, with Milton bearing down on the Gulf Coast! Major storms, with major disaster areas and the need for emergency supplies, most of which come by truck.