USDOT Agency Nixes Upgraded Rear Impact Guards
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) last month rejected that the agency mandate stricter upgrades to rear impact guards on semi-trailers.
The October Regulatory Roundup article on broker transparency caught the attention of many members, so we want to update you on interim guidance posted just yesterday by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration in advance of possible rulemaking. FMCSA intends the guidance to help define key roles in the transport of goods. Is that company or person you hired to help you find loads truly the “dispatch service” they claim to be? Are they your “bona fide agent” serving your individual motor carrier needs? Have you actually engaged the services of a “broker,” one required under law to have broker authority, to post a $75,000 bond, and to obey federal regulations such as disclose load information including the broker’s compensation?
FMCSA’s interim guidance is intended to help carriers better define and understand these three roles in the trucking industry. Three quick things you need to know:
In the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), Congress directed FMCSA to clarify these three terms and discuss whether today’s technology calls for a formal change in the regulatory definitions of “broker” and “bona fide agent.” FMCSA did an initial review in June 2022. Commenters at that time agreed that the fact brokerage activities are now conducted on the Internet rather than over the telephone does not change the nature of the business. So, FMCSA has not initiated a rulemaking to adjust those definitions.
“Broker” is defined at 49 U.S.C. 13102(2) and at 49 CFR 371.2(a). In both places, a broker is a “person who, for compensation, arranges… the transportation of property by an authorized motor carrier.” Brokers, however, are not themselves motor carriers “or persons who are employees or bona fide agents of carriers.”
The distinguishing feature of “bona fide agents” under 49 CFR 371.2(a) is that they “are part of the normal organization” of the carrier, performing duties “under the carrier’s directions pursuant to a preexisting agreement” and do not have discretion “in allocating traffic between the carrier and others.”
A “dispatch service” may perform duties for a motor carrier unrelated to securing loads. But when it comes to loads, FMCSA indicates that among the critical facts are:
Once again, comments on the FMCSA interim guidance are due by January 17, 2023.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) last month rejected that the agency mandate stricter upgrades to rear impact guards on semi-trailers.
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.
FMCSA is hard at work on a new online registration system, to “improve the transparency and efficiency of FMCSA’s registration procedures”.