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 Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has issued an alert that, effective immediately, a copy of a company officer’s own driver’s license must accompany the filing of MCS-150/150B/150Cand/or MCSA 5889 Forms. FMCSA is taking this step to combat fraudulent applications. This new requirement is effective for each of the applications listed below:
The MCS-150 form is used to update a USDOT number. (Initial registration for a USDOT number must still be made through the Unified Registration System (URS)).
The MCS-150B form combines the motor carrier identification report with the hazardous materials safety permit application.
The MCS-150C form is for intermodal equipment provider (IEP) registrations and updates.
The MCSA-5889 form can be used to submit requests for operating authority name and address changes, and also to request reinstatement of an operating authority.
ICSA reached out to the FMCSA Office of Registration for clarity: The agency is not requesting a copy of everyone’s driver’s license on the company payroll! Only one driver’s license copy is needed, from one of the company principals listed as "sole proprietor, partners or officers" on these forms. That is, from someone with authority to make decisions for the company.
Fraud is a real threat in trucking, with annual losses of over $1 billion reported from activities such as double-brokering and cargo theft by criminals impersonating legitimate truckers and brokers. Some of that fraudulent activity grew out of falsified applications to FMCSA for motor carrier or broker authority and USDOT numbers. Now FMCSA seeks to ensure that the companies filing registration forms are who they say they are.
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”.