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How many hours can a truck driver drive in a day?

by Guest33385  |  earlier

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How many hours can a truck driver drive in a day?

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  1. Legal drive time is 11 hours of driving with 10 hours of break thereafter.  

    The NEW rules require that after 14 hours from your begin time in a given day you have 10 hours break no matter how many miles you've driven.  

    Up to 70 hours in an 8 day period.  With NO overtime required to be paid after 40 hours.  

    After 34 hours off duty they may RESET their 70 hours to regain a full 70 hours for the new week.


  2. In the USA, a truck driver can drive for a maximum of 11 hours, and work for a maximum of 14 hours in a day, before having to take 10 hours off duty or in the sleeper. He is also limited to working no more than 70 hours in an 8 day period, before he has to take a 34-hour reset.  There are slightly different rules for bus drivers.

    These rules only apply to commercial drivers in the USA, and are not a universal standard.

  3. The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) today announced the first substantial change to the hours-of-service rules (HOS) since 1939.  The science-based HOS final rule will improve highway safety and help reduce the number of truck crashes and related fatalities and injuries by addressing commercial motor vehicle (CMV) driver fatigue.  

    Simultaneously, the agency plans to expand its research initiative on electronic onboard recorders (EOBR) and other technologies, including evaluating alternatives for encouraging or providing incentives for their use to ensure HOS recordkeeping and compliance.  While FMCSA has concluded that the safety and economic data needed to justify an EOBR requirement in the HOS final rule are not available at this time, there are several technologies that offer significant promise, FMCSA plans to investigate in this important area.  

    “Safety is the Bush Administration’s top transportation priority,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta.  ÃƒÂ¢Ã‚€ÂœOver the last several years, FMCSA has made great progress in reducing commercial vehicle crash fatalities, and this rule should help to continue that momentum.  If we can lower the cost of moving freight by 1 percent, the additional benefit to the economy would be more than $98 billion annually.”  

    The new rules allow drivers to drive 11 hours after 10 consecutive hours off-duty.  Also, drivers may not drive beyond the 14th hour after coming on-duty, following 10 hours off-duty.  Similar to existing rules, drivers may not drive after being on-duty for 60 hours in a seven-consecutive-day period or 70 hours in an eight-consecutive-day period.  This on-duty cycle may be restarted whenever a driver takes at least 34 consecutive hours off-duty.          

    Short-haul truck drivers – those drivers who routinely return to their place of dispatch after each duty tour and then are released from duty – may have an increased on-duty period of 16 hours once during any seven-consecutive-day period.  The 16-hour exception takes into consideration legitimate business needs without jeopardizing safety.  FMCSA estimates that without the extra two on-duty hours, the industry would be required to hire at least 48,000 new drivers, actually reducing crash-reduction benefits.  

    The current rule allows 10 hours of driving within a 15-hour on-duty period after eight hours of off-duty time.  Also, drivers may not drive after their 15th hour on duty in a workday or after 60 hours on-duty in seven consecutive days or 70 hours on-duty in eight consecutive days.  

    The FMCSA estimates the new rule will save up to 75 lives and prevent as many as 1,326 fatigue-related crashes annually.  There were an estimated 4,902 truck-related fatalities in traffic crashes in 2002.  

    Acting FMCSA Administrator Annette M. Sandberg stated, “The hours-of-service final rule represents a significant improvement in addressing driver fatigue over the current rule that has been in existence more than 60 years.  It is a rule that not only is based on science, but makes practical sense from both a lifesaving and operations perspective, ensuring greater safety without additional enforcement complexity.”  

    This rule governs drivers transporting freight in interstate commerce in a property-carrying commercial vehicle with a gross vehicle weight rating of 10,001 pounds or more, and operating vehicles transporting hazardous materials in quantities requiring vehicle placards.  Carriers will operate under current hours-of-service regulations through Jan. 3, 2004.  Drivers of buses (passenger-carrying CMVs) involved in interstate transportation will continue to use the current hours-of-service regulations.  

    Vehicles used in oil-field operations, ground-water well-drilling operations, utility service, and  transporting construction materials and equipment retain the 24-hour restart provision provided by the National Highway System Designation Act.  Agricultural operations will retain their current statutory exemption from driving time requirements when occurring within a 100 air-mile radius of a farm or distribution point during planting and harvesting seasons.  

    FMCSA and its state enforcement partners will begin enforcing the final rule beginning Jan. 4, 2004.  The implementation plan provides the FMCSA and states needed time to modify computer systems to reflect the regulatory changes, train more than 8,000 state and federal personnel, and provide education and outreach to the industry.  In addition, the implementation plan allows carriers and drivers time to become familiar with the new regulation and make any procedural changes necessary for compliance.  

    Rules for the record-of-duty status form, also known as a driver’s daily log, remain unchanged for truck and bus drivers.  Those truck and bus drivers operating within a 100 air-mile radius of the driver’s normal work location, who return to that location and are released from duty within 12 hours, will keep time cards as allowed under the current rules.

  4. most miles driven in 24 hours

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