§395.15 Automatic on-board recording devices.
(a) Authority to use automatic on-board recording device.
(a)(1) A motor carrier may require a
driver to use an automatic on-board recording device to record the driver’s
hours of service in lieu of complying with the requirements of §395.8 of this
part.
(a)(2) Every driver required by a motor
carrier to use an automatic on-board recording device shall use such device to
record the driver’s hours of service.
(b) Information requirements.
(b)(1) Automatic on-board recording
devices shall produce, upon demand, a driver’s hours of service chart,
electronic display, or printout showing the time and sequence of duty status
changes including the drivers’ starting time at the beginning of each
day.
(b)(2) The device shall provide a means
whereby authorized Federal, State, or local officials can immediately check the
status of a driver’s hours of service. This information may be used in
conjunction with handwritten or printed records of duty status, for the
previous 7 days.
(b)(3) Support systems used in conjunction
with on-board recorders at a driver’s home terminal or the motor carrier’s
principal place of business must be capable of providing authorized Federal,
State or local officials with summaries of an individual driver’s hours of
service records, including the information specified in §395.8(d) of this part.
The support systems must also provide information concerning on-board system
sensor failures and identification of edited data. Such support systems should
meet the information interchange requirements of the American National Standard
Code for Information Interchange (ANSCII) (EIARS-232/CCITT V.24 port (National
Bureau of Standards “Code for Information Interchange,” FIPS PUB
1-1)).
(b)(4) The driver shall have in his/her
possession records of duty status for the previous 7 consecutive days available
for inspection while on duty. These records shall consist of information stored
in and retrievable from the automatic on-board recording device, handwritten
records, computer generated records, or any combination thereof.
(b)(5) All hard copies of the driver’s
record of duty status must be signed by the driver. The driver’s signature
certifies that the information contained thereon is true and correct.
(c) The duty status and additional information shall be recorded as follows:
(c)(1) “Off duty” or “OFF”, or by an
identifiable code or character;
(c)(2) “Sleeper berth” or “SB” or by an
identifiable code or character (only if the sleeper berth is used);
(c)(3) “Driving” or “D”, or by an
identifiable code or character; and
(c)(4) “On-duty not driving” or “ON”, or
by an identifiable code or character;
(c)(5) Date;
(c)(6) Total miles driving
today;
(c)(7) Truck or tractor and trailer
number;
(c)(8) Name of carrier;
(c)(9) Main office address;
(c)(10) 24-hour period starting time
(e.g., midnight, 9:00 a.m., noon, 3:00 p.m.);
(c)(11) Name of co-driver;
(c)(12) Total hours; and
(c)(13) Shipping document number(s), or
name of shipper and commodity.
(d) Location of duty status change.
(d)(1) For each change of duty status
(e.g., the place and time of reporting for work, starting to drive, on-duty not
driving and where released from work), the name of the city, town, or village,
with State abbreviation, shall be recorded.
(d)(2) Motor carriers are permitted to use
location codes in lieu of the requirements of paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
A list of such codes showing all possible location identifiers shall be carried
in the cab of the commercial motor vehicle and available at the motor carrier’s
principal place of business. Such lists shall be made available to an
enforcement official on request.
(e) Entries made by driver only. If a
driver is required to make written entries relating to the driver’s duty
status, such entries must be legible and in the driver’s own
handwriting.
(f)Reconstruction of records of duty status. Drivers are required to note any failure of automatic
on-board recording devices, and to reconstruct the driver’s record of duty
status for the current day, and the past 7 days, less any days for which the
drivers have records, and to continue to prepare a handwritten record of all
subsequent duty status until the device is again operational.
(g) On-board information.
Each commercial motor vehicle must have on-board the commercial motor vehicle
an information packet containing the following items:
(g)(1) An instruction sheet describing in
detail how data may be stored and retrieved from an automatic on-board
recording system; and
(g)(2) A supply of blank driver’s records
of duty status graph-grids sufficient to record the driver’s duty status and
other related information for the duration of the current trip.
(h) Submission of driver’s record of duty status.
(h)(1) The driver shall submit,
electronically or by mail, to the employing motor carrier, each record of the
driver’s duty status within 13 days following the completion of each
record;
(h)(2) The driver shall review and verify
that all entries are accurate prior to submission to the employing motor
carrier; and
(h)(3) The submission of the record of
duty status certifies that all entries made by the driver are true and
correct.
(i) Performance of recorders. Motor carriers that use automatic on-board recording devices
for recording their drivers’ records of duty status in lieu of the handwritten
record shall ensure that:
(i)(1) A certificate is obtained from the
manufacturer certifying that the design of the automatic on-board recorder has
been sufficiently tested to meet the requirements of this section and under the
conditions it will be used;
(i)(2) The automatic on-board recording
device permits duty status to be updated only when the commercial motor vehicle
is at rest, except when registering the time a commercial motor vehicle crosses
a State boundary;
(i)(3) The automatic on-board recording
device and associated support systems are, to the maximum extent practicable,
tamper-proof and do not permit altering of the information collected concerning
the driver’s hours of service;
(i)(4) The automatic on-board recording
device warns the driver visually and/or audibly that the device has ceased to
function. Devices installed and operational as of October 31, 1988 and
authorized to be used in lieu of the handwritten record of duty status by the
FMCSA are exempted from this requirement;
(i)(5) Automatic on-board recording
devices with electronic displays shall have the capability of displaying the
following:
(i)(5)(i) Driver’s total hours of driving
today;
(i)(5)(ii) The total hours on duty
today;
(i)(5)(iii) Total miles driving
today;
(i)(5)(iv) Total hours on duty for the 7
consecutive day period, including today;
(i)(5)(v) Total hours on duty for the prior
8 consecutive day period, including the present day; and
(i)(5)(vi) The sequential changes in duty
status and the times the changes occurred for each driver using the
device.
(i)(6) The on-board recorder is capable of
recording separately each driver’s duty status when there is a multiple-driver
operation;
(i)(7) The on-board recording
device/system identifies sensor failures and edited data when reproduced in
printed form. Devices installed and operational as of October 31, 1988 and
authorized to be used in lieu of the handwritten record of duty status by the
FMCSA are exempted from this requirement.
(i)(8) The on-board recording device is
maintained and recalibrated in accordance with the manufacturer’s
specifications;
(i)(9) The motor carrier’s drivers are
adequately trained regarding the proper operation of the device; and
(i)(10) The motor carrier must maintain a
second copy (back-up copy) of the electronic hours-of-service files, by month,
in a different physical location than where the original data is
stored.
(j) Rescission of authority.
(j)(1) The FMCSA may, after notice and
opportunity to reply, order any motor carrier or driver to comply with the
requirements of §395.8 of this part.
(j)(2) The FMCSA may issue such an order
if the FMCSA has determined that—
(j)(2)(i) The motor carrier has been issued
conditional or unsatisfactory safety rating by the FMCSA;
(j)(2)(ii) The motor carrier has required
or permitted a driver to establish, or the driver has established, a pattern of
exceeding the hours of service limitations of this part;
(j)(2)(iii) The motor carrier has
required or permitted a driver to fail, or the driver has failed, to accurately
and completely record the driver’s hours of service as required in this
section; or
(j)(2)(iv) The motor carrier or driver has
tampered with or otherwise abused the automatic on-board recording device on
any commercial motor vehicle.
[53 FR 38670, Sept. 30, 1988, as amended at 60 FR 38748, July 28,
1995; 68 FR 22516, April 28, 2003; 70 FR 50073, Aug. 25, 2005]