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U.S.
Department of Transportation
Office
of Public Affairs
Washington,
D.C.
www.dot.gov/briefing.htm
News
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
FMCSA 8-00
Tuesday, June 9, 2000
Contact: David Longo
Telephone: 202-366-0456
U.S. DOT
Determined to Move
Hours-of-Service Regulation Forward, Will
Extend Time for Public Comment
In a letter
yesterday to U.S. Sen. Richard C. Shelby, Chairman of the Senate
Subcommittee on Transportation, U.S. Transportation Secretary Rodney
E. Slater strongly opposed the idea of adding to the pending DOT
appropriations bill a provision that would prohibit the Departments
new Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) from acting
on comments on its proposed hours-of-service rulemaking.
The U.S. Department
of Transportation is preparing a Federal Register notice that would
extend the comment to Oct. 30, 2000. The current comment period
ends July 31, 2000.
Also yesterday,
senior executives from Public Citizen, American Insurance Association,
Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety, and the Trauma Foundation
all signed a letter supporting the rulemaking process and opposing
the delaying provision, to Chairman Shelby and the Transportation
Trades Department of the AFL-CIO sent a supporting letter to U.S.
Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg, ranking member of the Transportation Subcommittee
on Appropriations.
"We have
heard from industry representatives about the pace of the rulemaking,
and I am prepared to extend the comment period for 90 days to allow
interested members of the public more time for in-depth analysis
of the proposals details and to clarify matters that have
arisen since the proposal was issued," Secretary Slater said.
Secretary Slater
on April 25 announced a proposed rulemaking on hours-of-service
that is science-based and designed to improve highway safety by
ensuring that drivers of large trucks and buses have the opportunity
to get adequate rest. The FMCSA is conducting eight public meetings
around the country to obtain comments on the rulemaking.
The rulemaking
is part of FMCSAs safety action plan which includes an overall
stretch goal of reducing truck-related fatalities by 50 percent
by the year 2010. In 1999, there were 5,203 truck-related fatalities.
President Clinton
on Dec. 9, 1999 signed legislation creating the FMCSA, effective
Jan. 1, 2000. It is a free-standing safety agency responsible for
regulating the trucking industry, among other things. Heavy trucks
are involved in almost 15 percent of all fatal highway crashes.
The notice of
proposed rulemaking would change current hours-of-service rules
that were originally established in 1935. Copies of Secretary Slaters
June 8 letter can be obtained by calling 202-366-0456.
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