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.
By Mike Hitchcock, ICSA Safety Consultant
When we follow up with ICSA members to remind them to schedule themselves or their drivers for hair testing for drugs, we are often asked, “Why does ICSA require hair testing when DOT doesn’t?”
Hair testing is the only drug testing method available that provides up to a 90-day history of repetitive drug use. When compared with urine testing, hair testing tends to provide a greater number of positives due to its longer detection window. Research shows that the positive rate for hair testing is over 5% compared to a urine positive rate in the 2% range.
Some drugs (like Cocaine and Meth) can leave the system within 3-5 days, so if a habitual user can stay “clean” for five days he or she can pass a urine test. Not so with hair testing. Hair testing can detect drug use that urine testing misses. As an organization whose primary mission is safety, ICSA knows that hair testing can have a positive impact on improving highway safety by getting habitual drug users out of the truck and off the road.
While hair testing is a requirement for members who wish to be covered through ICSA’s insurance services, the fact is that hair testing can mitigate risk and facilitate a healthier, safer work environment for ICSA members and all truck operators. Companies that publicize that they conduct hair testing may benefit from better quality candidates applying for driving jobs since candidates who are aware of an employer’s hair testing policy may choose to not apply.
A drug free workplace is both a safer environment and a more productive environment. Data from the US Department of Labor has shown that illicit drug users are more likely to incur worker’s compensation claims, have higher health insurance costs, are more likely to be absent and are less productive compared to non-illicit drug users. Lost work productivity (including absenteeism and poor job performance) associated with substance abuse is estimated at a $197 billion a year in the U.S.
From a risk management prospective, hair testing can help reduce litigation opportunities and result in lower claim and insurance costs. It is the BEST Practice in our industry and we at ICSA are committed to using this method to improve highway safety.
For more information, download the Drug Testing FAQs.
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”.