Prohibiting Coercion of Commercial Motor Vehicle Drivers, 74695-74710 [2015-30237]
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[FR Doc. 2015–30307 Filed 11–27–15; 8:45 am]
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration
49 CFR Parts 386 and 390
Scope of subpart.
*
*
*
*
(b) A contracting activity from one
DoD Component may provide
acquisition assistance to deployed DoD
units or personnel from another DoD
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■ 3. Sections 217.502 and 217.502–1 are
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[Docket No. FMCSA–2012–0377]
217.502
SUMMARY:
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217.502–1
General.
(a) Determination of best procurement
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Follow the procedures at PGI 217.502–
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(b) Written agreement on
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administration—(1) Assisted
acquisitions. Follow the procedures at
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RIN 2126–AB57
Prohibiting Coercion of Commercial
Motor Vehicle Drivers
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration (FMCSA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
FMCSA adopts regulations
that prohibit motor carriers, shippers,
receivers, or transportation
intermediaries from coercing drivers to
operate commercial motor vehicles
(CMVs) in violation of certain
provisions of the Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Regulations (FMCSRs)—
including drivers’ hours-of-service
limits; the commercial driver’s license
(CDL) regulations; drug and alcohol
testing rules; and the Hazardous
Materials Regulations (HMRs). In
addition, the rule prohibits anyone who
operates a CMV in interstate commerce
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74695
from coercing a driver to violate the
commercial regulations. This rule
includes procedures for drivers to report
incidents of coercion to FMCSA,
establishes rules of practice that the
Agency will follow in response to
reports of coercion, and describes
penalties that may be imposed on
entities found to have coerced drivers.
This rulemaking is authorized by
section 32911 of the Moving Ahead for
Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP–
21) and the Motor Carrier Safety Act of
1984 (MCSA), as amended.
DATES: This final rule is effective
January 29, 2016.
Petitions for Reconsideration of this
final rule must be submitted to FMCSA
Administrator no later than December
30, 2015.
ADDRESSES:
Availability of Rulemaking Documents
For access to docket FMCSA–2012–
0377 to read background documents and
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov at any time, or to
Docket Services at U.S. Department of
Transportation, Room W12–140, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington,
DC 20590, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays.
Privacy Act
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(c),
DOT solicits comments from the public
to better inform its rulemaking process.
DOT posts these comments, without
edit, including any personal information
the commenter provides, to
www.regulations.gov, as described in
the system of records notice (DOT/ALL–
14 FDMS), which can be reviewed at
www.dot.gov/privacy.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Charles Medalen, Regulatory Affairs
Division, Office of Chief Counsel, (202)
493–0349. FMCSA office hours are from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Abbreviations and Acronyms
II. Executive Summary
III. Legal Basis for This Rulemaking
IV. Background
V. Discussion of Comments
VI. Section-by-Section Description
VII. Regulatory Analyses
I. Abbreviations and Acronyms
CDL Commercial Driver’s License
CMV Commercial Motor Vehicle
DOT Department of Transportation
FMCSA Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration
FMCSRs Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Regulations
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HOS Hours of Service
HMRs Hazardous Materials Regulations
ICC Interstate Commerce Commission
MAP–21 Moving Ahead for Progress in the
21st Century Act
MCSA or 1984 Act Motor Carrier Safety Act
of 1984
NAICS North American Industry
Classification System
OIG Office of Inspector General
OSHA Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
SBA Small Business Administration
STAA Surface Transportation Assistance
Act of 1982
II. Executive Summary
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Purpose and Summary of the Major
Provisions
Congress required FMCSA to ensure
that the regulations adopted pursuant to
the MCSA, as amended by MAP–21, do
not result in coercion of drivers by
motor carriers, shippers, receivers, or
transportation intermediaries to operate
CMVs in violation of certain provisions
of the FMCSRs and the HMRs.
The major provisions of this rule
include prohibitions of coercion,
procedures for drivers to report
incidents of coercion to FMCSA, and
rules of practice that the Agency will
follow in response to reports of
coercion.
Benefits and Costs
The FMCSA believes that this rule
will not have an economically
significant impact. The motor carriers,
shippers, receivers, freight forwarders,
brokers and transportation
intermediaries that previously engaged
in acts of coercion against truck or bus
drivers will incur compliance costs to
operate in accordance with the
regulations, and they will lose whatever
economic benefit coercion provided;
however, the cost of compliance with
existing regulations has already been
captured in the analysis supporting the
implementation of those regulations, so
we do not consider them here. There
will be safety benefits from increased
compliance with the regulations and
driver health benefits if HOS violations
decrease. In the absence of coercion, the
drivers will conduct their safetysensitive work in a manner consistent
with the applicable Federal regulations.
During the four-year period from 2009
through 2012, OSHA determined that
253 whistleblower complaints from
CMV drivers had merit. In the same
period, FMCSA validated 20 allegations
of motor carrier coercion of drivers that
were filed with DOT’s OIG. This is an
average of 68.25 acts of coercion per
year during the four-year period. The
Agency estimates that the cost of
eliminating this level of coercion would
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be less than the $100 million threshold
required for economic significance
under E.O. 12866.
III. Legal Basis for This Rulemaking
This rule is based on the authority of
MCSA [49 U.S.C. 31136(a)], as amended
by MAP–21 [Pub. L. 112–141, section
32911, 126 Stat. 405, 818, July 6, 2012]
and on 49 U.S.C. 13301(a), as amended
by the ICC Termination Act of 1995
[Pub. L. 104–88, 109 Stat. 803,
December 29, 1995].
The 1984 Act confers on DOT
authority to regulate drivers, motor
carriers, and vehicle equipment. The
1984 Act stated that at a minimum, the
regulations shall ensure that—(1)
commercial motor vehicles are
maintained, equipped, loaded, and
operated safely; (2) the responsibilities
imposed on operators of commercial
motor vehicles do not impair their
ability to operate the vehicles safely; (3)
the physical condition of operators of
commercial motor vehicles is adequate
to enable them to operate the vehicles
safely; and (4) the operation of
commercial motor vehicles does not
have a deleterious effect on the physical
condition of the operators [49 U.S.C.
31136(a)].
Section 32911 of MAP–21 enacted a
fifth requirement, i.e., that the
regulations ensure that ‘‘(5) an operator
of a commercial motor vehicle is not
coerced by a motor carrier, shipper,
receiver, or transportation intermediary
to operate a commercial motor vehicle
in violation of a regulation promulgated
under this section, or chapter 51 or
chapter 313 of this title’’ [49 U.S.C.
31136(a)(5)].
The 1984 Act also includes more
general authority to ‘‘(10) perform other
acts the Secretary considers
appropriate’’ [49 U.S.C. 31133(a)(10)].
This rule includes two separate
prohibitions. One prohibits motor
carriers, shippers, receivers, or
transportation intermediaries from
coercing drivers to violate regulations
based on section 31136 (which is the
authority for many parts of the
FMCSRs), 49 U.S.C. chapter 313 (the
authority for the commercial driver’s
license (CDL) and drug and alcohol
regulations), and 49 U.S.C. chapter 51
(the authority for the HMRs). This is
required by 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(5).
A second provision prohibits entities
that operate CMVs in interstate
commerce from coercing drivers to
violate the commercial regulations. As
explained more fully below, this
provision is based on the broad general
authority of 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(1)–(4),
especially paragraphs (a)(1) and (2).
Banning coercion to violate the safety-
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related commercial regulations is well
within the scope of section 31136(a)(1)–
(4). Applying the same ban to
commercial provisions that are not
immediately related to safety is
nonetheless consistent with the goals of
section 31136 and will help to inhibit
the growth of a culture of indifference
to regulatory compliance, a culture
known to contribute to unsafe CMV
operations. Banning coercion to violate
the commercial regulations is also
within the broad authority transferred
from the former ICC to prescribe
regulations to carry out Part B of
Subtitle IV of Title 49, United States
Code (49 U.S.C. 13301(a)). This
prohibition applies to operators of
CMVs, which are mainly motor carriers,
but not to shippers, receivers, or
transportation intermediaries, since they
are not subject to section 31136(a)(1)–(4)
or section 13301.
Together, these two provisions cover
most kinds of coercion drivers might
encounter.
This rule also adopts procedures for
drivers to report coercion and rules of
practice the Agency will follow in
addressing such reports.
FMCSA believes the reduction of
regulatory violations caused by coercion
will prove conducive to improved
driver health and well-being, consistent
with the objectives of section
31136(a)(2)–(4).
Before prescribing any regulations,
FMCSA must consider their ‘‘costs and
benefits’’ [49 U.S.C. 31136(c)(2)(A) and
31502(d)]. Those factors are discussed
in this rule.
IV. Background
Section 32911 of MAP–21 is the most
recent example of Congress’ recognition
of the important role the public plays in
highway safety. In the 1980s, Congress
implemented new financial
responsibility requirements for motor
carriers of property and passengers to
encourage the insurance industry to
exercise greater scrutiny over the
operations of motor carriers as one
method to improve safety oversight
(section 30 of the Motor Carrier Act of
1980 (Pub. L. 96–296) and section 18 of
the Bus Regulatory Reform Act of 1982
(Pub. L. 97–261)).
Section 32911 of MAP–21 represents
a similar congressional decision to
expand the reach of motor carrier safety
regulations from the supply side (the
drivers and carriers traditionally
regulated by the Federal government) to
the demand side—the shippers,
receivers, brokers, freight forwarders,
travel groups and others that hire motor
carriers to provide transportation and
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whose actions have an impact on CMV
safety.
Economic pressure in the motor
carrier industry affects commercial
drivers in ways that can adversely affect
safety. For years, drivers have voiced
concerns that other parties in the
logistics chain are frequently indifferent
to the operational limits imposed on
them by the FMCSRs. Allegations of
coercion were submitted in the docket
for the Agency’s 2010–2011 HOS
rulemaking.1 Also, drivers and others
who testified at FMCSA listening
sessions and before Congress said that
some motor carriers, shippers, receivers,
tour guides, and brokers insist that a
driver deliver a load or passengers on a
schedule that would be impossible to
meet without violating the HOS or other
regulations. Drivers may also be
pressured to operate vehicles with
mechanical deficiencies, despite the
restrictions imposed by the safety
regulations. Drivers who object that they
must comply with the FMCSRs are
sometimes told to get the job done
despite the restrictions imposed by the
safety regulations. The consequences of
their refusal to do so are either stated
explicitly or implied in unmistakable
terms: Loss of a job, denial of
subsequent loads, reduced payment,
denied access to the best trips, etc.
Although sec. 32911 of MAP–21
amended 49 U.S.C. 31136(a), it did not
amend the jurisdictional definitions in
49 U.S.C. 31132, which specify the
reach of FMCSA’s authority to regulate
motor carriers, drivers, and CMVs.
Thus, it appears that Congress did not
intend to apply all of the FMCSRs to
shippers, receivers, and transportation
intermediaries that are not now subject
to those requirements. (Motor carriers,
of course, have always been subject to
the FMCSRs.) Instead, sec. 32911
prohibited these entities from coercing
drivers to violate most of the FMCSRs.
This necessarily confers upon FMCSA
the jurisdiction over shippers, receivers,
and transportation intermediaries
necessary to enforce that prohibition.
Although MAP–21 did not address
coercion to violate the commercial
regulations that the Agency inherited in
the ICC Termination Act of 1995,
FMCSA is adopting a rule in order to
ensure that there is no significant gap in
the applicability of the coercion
prohibition. As discussed above in the
Legal Basis section, the MCSA gives the
Agency broad authority to ensure that
CMVs are maintained, equipped,
loaded, and operated safely, and that the
responsibilities imposed on drivers do
not impair their ability to operate CMVs
1 See
76 FR 81162.
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safely [49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(1)–(2)]. Some
of the commercial regulations have
effects related to safety. Designation of
a process agent under 49 CFR part 366
ensures that parties injured in a CMV
crash can easily serve legal documents
on the carrier operating the CMV,
wherever the location of its corporate
offices. Registration as a for-hire motor
carrier under 49 CFR part 365, or as a
broker under 49 CFR part 371, ensures
that an applicant has met the minimum
standards for safe and responsible
operations. Coercion of drivers to
violate requirements such as these could
have an effect on their ability to operate
CMVs safely, e.g., requiring a driver to
operate a vehicle in interstate commerce
when the owner had neither obtained
operating authority registration from
FMCSA nor filed proof of insurance.
The minimum requirement to obtain
FMCSA authority to operate as a for-hire
motor carrier, freight forwarder, or
broker under 49 U.S.C. 13902, 13903, or
13904, respectively, is willingness and
ability to comply with ‘‘this part and the
applicable regulations of the Secretary
. . . .’’ Among those ‘‘applicable
regulations’’ are this rule’s ban on
coercing drivers to violate the
commercial regulations. For-hire motor
carriers are subject to an even more
explicit requirement to observe ‘‘any
safety regulations imposed by the
Secretary’’ [49 U.S.C. 13902(a)(1)(B)(i)],
including § 390.6(a)(2). Moreover,
independent of MAP–21, FMCSA has
statutory authority under 49 U.S.C.
13301(a), formerly vested in the ICC, to
prescribe regulations to carry out
chapter 139 and the rest of Part B of
Subtitle IV of Title 49. The prohibition
on coercing drivers to violate the
commercial regulations is within the
scope of this authority.
Because both of the coercion
prohibitions described above are based
on 49 U.S.C. 31136(a), codified in
subchapter III of chapter 311, violations
of those rules would be subject to the
civil penalties in 49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(A),
which provides that any person who is
determined by the Secretary, after notice
and opportunity for a hearing, to have
committed an act that is a violation of
the regulations issued by the Secretary
under subchapter III of chapter 311
(except sections 31138 and 31139 2) or
section 31502 of this title shall be liable
to the United States for a civil penalty
in an amount not to exceed $10,000 for
each offense.
2 Sections 31138 and 31139 prescribe minimum
financial responsibility standards for the
transportation of passengers and property,
respectively.
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74697
However, pursuant to the Debt
Collection Improvement Act of 1996
[Pub. L. 104–134, title III, chapter 10,
sec. 31001(s), 110 Stat. 1321–373], the
maximum inflation-adjusted civil
penalty per offense is $16,000 (49 CFR
part 386, App. B, Paragraph (a)(3)).
V. Discussion of Comments
Overview
On May 13, 2014, the Agency
published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) (79 FR 27265) to
implement the MAP–21 prohibition of
coercion.
Between May 13 and September 4,
2014, 94 submissions were posted to the
docket. One of the submissions was a
duplicate,3 and three were nonresponsive,4 leaving 90 submissions
from the following:
• One Federal agency: OSHA.
• Six motor carriers: Kimberly
Arnold, Louisiana Transport, Inc.,
Mason/Dixon Lines, Inc., Schneider
National, Inc., Wayne Yoder, one
anonymous company, and the Motor
Carrier Coalition comprised of 12
additional motor carriers.
• Ten industry associations:
American Trucking Associations (ATA),
Association of Independent Property
Brokers & Agents (AIPBA), Institute of
Makers of Explosives (IME), National
Customs Brokers and Forwarders
Association of America, Inc.(NCBFAA),
National Grain and Feed Association
(NGFA), National Industrial
Transportation League (NIT League),
National Shippers Strategic
Transportation Council, Inc.
(NASSTRAC), Owner-Operator
Independent Drivers Association, Inc.
(OOIDA), Snack Food Association, and
Transportation Intermediaries
Association (TIA).
• Two advocacy organizations:
Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety
(Advocates) and Road Safe America.
• One labor union: Transportation
Trades Department, AFL–CIO (TTD).
• One transportation intermediary:
Armada.
• One commercial carrier consultant:
Richard Young; and
• 67 individuals including 15 who
self-identified as drivers and 2 owner
operators.
Comments Supporting the Rulemaking
Fifteen commenters, including two
safety advocacy groups, two trade
associations, a driver, an owneroperator, a union, OSHA, and seven
individuals, expressed their general
3 Submission number 0080 is a duplicate of
number 0089.
4 Submission numbers 0010, 0015, and 0016.
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support for the proposed rule. Road Safe
America and Advocates support the
Agency’s efforts to end the practice of
coercion, but Advocates recommended
that FMCSA take additional steps, such
as investigating all reported incidents of
coercion, and exercise its authority to
suspend the registration of those that
engage in documented instances of
coercion. ATA and AIPBA support
prohibiting coercion, but expressed
reservations about the potential impact
the proposed rule would have on
commercial relations between motor
carriers and shippers, receivers, and
intermediaries. OSHA, which is
responsible for enforcing the
whistleblower protection provisions of
the Surface Transportation Assistance
Act of 1981 (STAA) and 21 other
statutes, supports the proposal and
offered suggestions to make it more
effective. TTD, a driver, an owneroperator, and seven individuals
expressed strong support for the NPRM.
Many of these commenters stated that
the rule would finally make shippers,
receivers and transportation
intermediaries accountable for their
actions.
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Comments in Opposition to the
Rulemaking
Eighteen commenters, including nine
individuals, seven trade associations
and two drivers expressed their general
disapproval of the NPRM. Many of these
commenters stated that they agree with
FMCSA that CMV drivers should not be
coerced into violating any laws or
regulations; however, they believe the
requirements proposed in the NPRM
will lead to unintended consequences.
Several commenters stated there is no
need for this regulation because existing
regulations already prohibit coercion.
Three trade associations contend that
the NPRM misapplies the legal doctrine
of respondeat superior 5 in attempting to
hold shippers and receivers legally
responsible for drivers that they do not
hire, direct or manage. NASSTRAC
stated the proposed rules are ‘‘arbitrary
and capricious, contrary to law,
impracticable and certain to do more
harm than good.’’ Another commenter
argued that the Agency has not
accurately assessed the cost of these
requirements, and expressed concern
that the complaint reporting process is
highly subjective. Two drivers wrote
that new regulations are not necessary;
instead drivers need to stand up to
anyone trying to coerce them into
5 ‘Respondeat superior’ is a legal concept meaning
that an employer is responsible for the wrongful
acts of its employees or agents who are acting
within the scope of their employment or agency.
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violating the rules. Two individuals
commented that this NPRM does not
impose any new requirements on
shippers or receivers that will prevent
them from detaining a driver for hours
and then requiring the driver to leave
the property even if the driver is out of
hours.
FMCSA Response
These comments are discussed in
detail below under the appropriate
subject heading.
Definition of Coercion
OSHA commented that ‘‘coercion is
broader than just threats related to loss
of work, future business, or other
economic opportunities. Coercion and
coercive tactics may also include threats
of violence, demotion, reduction of pay,
and withdrawal or reduction of benefits,
or any action that is capable of
dissuading a reasonable employee from
engaging in whistleblowing activity.’’
OSHA therefore recommended that the
proposed definition of coercion, which
referred to ‘‘a threat . . . to withhold, or
the actual withholding of, current or
future business, employment, or work
opportunities from a driver . . .’’ be
amended to refer to ‘‘a threat . . . to
take or permit any adverse employment
action against a driver . . .’’
NCBFAA pointed out that if a
shipper, receiver, or transportation
intermediary discovered an ‘‘HOS
issue—which would likely only be the
case because the driver happened to say
something about it—any decision to
refuse to tender the shipment could be
construed as violating the proposed
regulation. For then, it would be
knowingly ‘withholding . . . work
opportunities from a driver’ when it
‘knew’ the driver was unable to lawfully
handle the load. In that case, because
the motor carrier elected to dispatch a
driver that could not lawfully handle
the load, the cargo would not be able to
move until such time as the driver in
question was again able to operate the
equipment.’’ ‘‘The NCBFAA believes
that where a shipper or transportation
intermediary learns that a driver may
not haul a load because he/she does not
have the available hours, it should be
able to freely advise the trucker of the
situation so it can provide another
driver who does have available hours to
complete the haul in a timely manner.
Alternatively, the shipper/
transportation intermediary should be
able to use another carrier entirely,
particularly one that is sufficiently
responsible and knowledgeable about
the status of its drivers.’’
TIA made the same point. ‘‘Read
literally, the definition would now make
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it a violation for a shipper or
transportation intermediary to refuse a
load to a driver if it ‘knew or should
have known’ that the driver was about
to exceed or already had exceeded the
HOS regulations. Yet, the shipper or
transportation intermediary could not
properly request that the driver perform
the transportation, as it would then be
both ‘coercing’ the driver and aiding
and abetting the HOS violation. So, if a
driver assigned by a motor carrier
shows up to pick up a load and advises
the shipper or transportation
intermediary that he or she cannot
lawfully handle the load due to HOS or
other concerns, the shipper or
transportation intermediary would not
be able to contact the carrier and request
that they replace the driver. Instead the
load would just sit. This is a catch 22
. . .’’
NIT League offered a similar
comment. ‘‘If a shipper attempts to
confirm a delivery appointment with
the driver, does that equate to directing
‘a driver to complete a run in a certain
time’? It may not in the mind of the
shipper but what if the driver has a
different interpretation? If the driver
objects to meeting that appointment due
to HOS rules and the shipper gives the
load to another carrier who can timely
make the delivery, does that loss of
business equate to coercion? What if the
driver associates the selection of an
alternative carrier with its objection but
the shipper simply needed to meet its
delivery requirements? The answers to
these questions are far from clear. . . .
[T]he League suggests that FMCSA
modify its proposal to require the driver
to inform the shipper of the potential
safety violation at the time he/she
lodges the objection and to promptly
record the alleged coercion event.
Specifically, the League suggests that
FMCSA require a driver who is
concerned about violating a safety rule
to take the following steps before
accepting the load: (1) Clearly articulate
the objection to the allegedly coercing
party and such objection must identify
the specific FMCSA regulation that will
be violated; and (2) record in a
contemporaneous writing his/her
objection and the facts and
circumstances associated with the
alleged coercion incident.’’
ATA also recommended ‘‘that the rule
require a driver alleging coercion to
make the objection at a time
contemporaneous with the incident in a
writing that identifies the regulation(s)
that would be violated if the driver
operated the CMV.’’
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FMCSA Response
FMCSA has revised and clarified the
NPRM’s definition of ‘‘coercion.’’
Readers may find it helpful to keep in
mind the new definition (see § 390.5) as
they review the Agency’s response to
specific comments.
Although the language proposed by
OSHA is similar to that used in the
NPRM, FMCSA agrees that OSHA’s
recommendation would clarify the
intended scope of the definition. The
Agency has therefore included the
phrase ‘‘take or permit any adverse
employment action,’’ which has the
added benefit of resolving other
concerns about the definition.
The NCBFAA, TIA, and NIT League
comments correctly identified an
unintended consequence of the
proposed definition of ‘‘coercion.’’
Obviously, a shipper or transportation
intermediary should not be liable for
withholding a load from a driver who
has stated that he or she could not make
the trip without violating the FMCSRs.
In that situation, both the driver and the
shipper or transportation intermediary
are acting appropriately. The Agency
has therefore amended the reference to
the withholding of ‘‘current or future
business, employment, or work
opportunities’’ by striking the reference
to ‘‘current or future’’ business and
adding the phrase ‘‘take or permit any
adverse employment action.’’ The
revised definition thus allows the
shipper or transportation intermediary
to take either of the actions that
NCBFAA proposed without violating
the rule, i.e., to call the motor carrier
and request another driver or to give the
load to a different motor carrier. Neither
action would attempt to force a driver
to violate the FMCSRs, nor would it
involve a threat to take other adverse
employment action against the driver.
The removal of the word ‘‘current’’
resolves most of the TIA’s and NIT
League’s concerns. There is no coercion
to violate the FMCSRs when a shipper
gives a load to another carrier after the
original driver states that he or she
cannot meet the requested delivery
schedule without an HOS or other
violation. On the contrary; that change
of carriers is an attempt to ensure that
no such regulatory violation occurs.
The Agency has also revised the
definition of ‘‘coercion’’ to require the
driver to identify ‘‘at least generally’’ the
rules that he or she would have to
violate in the course of the delivery.
FMCSA is not requiring drivers to
‘‘identify the specific FMCSA regulation
that will be violated,’’ as the NIT League
and ATA requested. The FMCSRs are
complex and drivers cannot be expected
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to have full command of regulatory
citations. Nonetheless, the driver must
be able to identify the problem clearly
enough to enable FMCSA personnel to
determine that it falls within a
requirement or prohibition of the
Agency’s regulations. It will be
sufficient, for example, if the driver
indicates that he or she objects to a
particular trip because of an HOS
problem (‘‘they told me to keep driving
even when I hit 11 hours’’), a
maintenance issue (‘‘the last inspection
certificate was 3 years old’’), or bad tires
(‘‘there was no tread on the front tires;
I could see the ply in a couple of
places’’).
Similarly, the Agency will not require
the driver to record his objection in ‘‘a
contemporaneous writing.’’ On the other
hand, if the shipper or transportation
intermediary attempts to coerce the
driver to take the load after hearing the
objection, it would be in the driver’s
best interests to document that attempt
as soon as practicable.
Additional Burdens Created by Rule
Many of the commenters believe
shippers would have to adopt extensive
and burdensome procedures to comply
with the proposed rule. NASSTRAC
wrote that ‘‘[t]he aspect of the proposed
rules that will cost the most (far more
than the zero dollars FMCSA projects),
and which is most contrary to
established law, is the ‘duty to inquire.’
. . . It remains the case that every
shipper would have to discuss HOS
status for every scheduled shipment
with every driver.’’
The TIA commented that ‘‘[t]he
NPRM would place the shipper and
transportation intermediary into the role
of employee management having to ask
about hours of service availability.’’
NGFA noted that ‘‘[i]n current
operations, a shipper or receiver . . .
does not check a driver’s hours-ofservice (HOS) log or inspect the driver’s
commercial motor vehicle—and it could
be argued that the shipper or receiver
does not have a duty or even a right to
do so—if the driver is employed by
another company. . . . Even if drivers
and their employers are fully
cooperative in this respect, the resulting
burden and added costs for shippers
and receivers would be tremendous.’’
The NIT League objected to
‘‘FMCSA’s apparent intent to impose a
duty on the shipper or receiver to
inquire as to a for-hire driver’s
compliance with the HOS rules.’’
Schneider National, on the other
hand, wrote that ‘‘[i]f we understand
FMCSA’s proposal correctly, exposure
for a claim of coercion is triggered by an
objection from a driver under
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74699
circumstances which the intermediary
‘knew or should have known’ would
require the driver to violate the safety
regulations. Thus, it would appear that
absent a driver’s objection, there is no
obligation on the part of those other
than the motor carrier to whom the
driver is directly employed or leased to
independently assure compliance with
the hours of service or other
regulations.’’ IME also interpreted the
language of the NPRM as requiring the
driver to object before a finding of
coercion could be made.
FMCSA Response
Schneider National and IME are
correct. This final rule does not require
shippers, receivers, and transportation
intermediaries (unlike motor carriers) to
monitor a driver’s compliance with the
HOS rules or other regulations. As the
preamble to the NPRM stated, a shipper,
receiver, or transportation intermediary
‘‘may commit coercion if it fails to heed
a driver’s objection that the request
would require him/her to break the
rules’’ (79 FR 27267, emphasis added).
There would be no requirement or even
occasion to inquire into the driver’s
available hours unless the driver had
raised an objection to the delivery
schedule; and an inquiry would not be
necessary if the shipper or
transportation intermediary agreed to
change the delivery schedule to match
the driver’s available hours or arranged
with the motor carrier to have a
different driver take the load.
Nevertheless, because many shippers,
receivers, and transportation
intermediaries believe that, in order to
avoid potential liability, they must
inquire about HOS compliance, and
perhaps document all of their
interactions with drivers, the Agency
has amended the definition of
‘‘coercion’’ to make clear that the driver
has an affirmative obligation to inform
the motor carrier, shipper, receiver, or
transportation intermediary when he or
she cannot make the requested trip
without violating one or more of the
regulations listed in the definition.
Motor carriers, shippers, receivers, and
transportation intermediaries cannot
commit coercion under the final rule
unless and until they have been put on
notice by the driver that he or she
cannot meet the proposed delivery
schedule without violating the HOS
limits or other regulatory requirements.
The purpose of that notice is, of course,
to ensure that the driver is not coerced
to commit such violations.
Agents, Officers, or Representatives
The NPRM proposed to apply the
prohibition on coercion not only to
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principals, but also to ‘‘their respective
agents, officers or representatives.’’
Many commenters focused on this issue.
A coalition of 12 motor carriers 6
(hereafter Coalition) described a
hypothetical situation where ABC
Transportation, Inc. hires John Doe
Trucking, an independent owneroperator, which coerces one of its
drivers to violate the HOS rules without
the knowledge or approval of ABC
Transportation. The Coalition asked
‘‘[a]gainst which entity in this scenario
and under the proposed regulation
would FMCSA take enforcement action?
One would expect John Doe Trucking.
After all, it is the entity responsible for
the coercive behavior. But if John Doe
Trucking is considered an ‘agent,
officer, or representative’ of ABC
Transportation, Inc., ABC could, in fact,
be on the hook. . . . In order to avoid
the inequitable situation described
above, the FMCSA . . . should consider
narrowly defining the terms ‘agents,’
‘officers,’ and ‘representatives’ to
specifically exclude independent
contractors with whom motor carriers
contract to haul freight and who are not
specifically authorized to act on their
behalf.’’
ATA agreed with the Coalition’s
comments and urged the Agency ‘‘to
clarify that, for purposes of the
definition of ‘coercion’ and proposed
section 390.6, a motor carrier’s agents,
officers or representatives only include
anyone who is authorized to act on
behalf of a motor carrier. In the instance
where an independent contracting
entity engaged in the act of coercion
against one of its drivers, only that
entity should be liable under proposed
section 390.6—not the motor carrier to
whom the equipment and driver are
leased.’’
Schneider National commented that it
‘‘utilizes the services of approximately
2,000 independent contractors
including a number of fleet owners. As
such, Schneider shares the concerns
raised in such comments relative to the
use of terms ‘agents,’ ‘officers’ and
‘representatives’ used in conjunction
with the term ‘motor carrier’ in
§ 390.6(a)(2), and adopts their comments
as filed. . . . [S]imilar issues may arise
in the context of brokerage operations.
Consider, for example, a motor carrier
contracted by a broker with respect to a
particular shipment. In the normal
circumstance, the broker would arrange
6 C.R. England, Inc.; CRST International, Inc.;
Central Refrigerated Service, Inc.; Cowan Systems,
LLC; Dart Transit Company; Greatwide Truckload
Management; Liquid Transport Corp.; National
Carriers, Inc.; Oakley Trucking, Inc.; PGT Trucking,
Inc.; Roadrunner Transportation Systems, Inc.; and
Schneider National, Inc.
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15:17 Nov 27, 2015
Jkt 238001
for the transportation on a schedule
which can be accomplished consistent
with the hours of service regulations,
provided the involved motor carrier has
an available driver with appropriate
‘hours’. The broker would not normally
be privy to the motor carrier’s driver/
load assignment process. Under this
circumstance, is the motor carrier, by
virtue of the typical broker/carrier
arrangement, an ‘agent’ or
‘representative’ of the broker such that
the broker would be liable under the
proposed rule for any motor carrier
violation? The use of the terms ‘agent’,
‘officers’ and ‘representatives’ might
suggest that liability in the foregoing
circumstances could be attributed to the
broker. Such a result would be
inequitable.’’
FMCSA Response
The issues raised by these comments
were resolved by Congress in the MCSA
of 1984. The prohibition on coercion is
codified in the amended version of that
statute at 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(5). For
purposes of the MCSA, ‘‘ ‘employee’
means an operator of a commercial
motor vehicle (including an
independent contractor when operating
a commercial motor vehicle), a
mechanic, a freight handler, or an
individual not an employer, who—(A)
directly affects commercial motor
vehicle safety in the course of
employment; and (B) is not an employee
of the United States Government, a
State, or a political subdivision of a
State acting in the course of the
employment by the Government, a
State, or a political subdivision of a
State’’ [49 U.S.C. 31132(2)].
Independent owner operators
employed by a motor carrier are
statutorily defined as employees of that
carrier for purpose of the FMCSRs,
including this final rule. In the
hypothetical situation described by the
Coalition, the independent owner
operator who owns John Doe Trucking
is an employee of ABC Transportation.
Any attempt by John Doe Trucking to
coerce one of its drivers is therefore an
attempt by ABC Transportation, through
one of its employees, to coerce one of
its drivers.
FMCSA published regulatory
guidance on this issue on April 4, 1997
[62 FR 16370, 16407]:
Question 17: May a motor carrier that
employs owner-operators who have their
own operating authority issued by the ICC or
the Surface Transportation Board [authority
that is now issued by FMCSA] transfer the
responsibility for compliance with the
FMCSRs to the owner-operators?
Guidance: No. The term ‘‘employee,’’ as
defined in § 390.5, specifically includes an
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independent contractor employed by a motor
carrier. The existence of operating authority
has no bearing upon the issue. The motor
carrier is, therefore, responsible for
compliance with the FMCSRs by its driver
employees, including those who are owneroperators.
Brokers, however, are not employees
of a motor carrier, nor are motor carriers
agents or representatives of brokers. In
a normal arms-length transaction, the
broker deals with a motor carrier, not an
individual driver. The motor carrier has
an obligation to comply with the
FMCSRs and thus to assign a driver who
has sufficient hours to complete the trip
on the schedule outlined by the broker
and to provide equipment that meets
applicable standards. Any coercion that
occurred would typically be committed
by the motor carrier that employed the
driver. However, as TIA pointed out, a
State court has held that where a broker
contracted with a motor carrier but in
fact exercised direct control over the
driver, that broker was liable for a tort
committed by the driver [Sperl v. C. H.
Robinson Worldwide, Inc., 946 NE.2d
463 (2011)]. A broker could be found
liable for coercion if it interacted
directly with a driver, instead of with
the carrier, and attempted to force the
driver to make a delivery on a schedule
that would require a violation of the
FMCSRs. The Agency has no
information about how often direct
interactions between transportation
intermediaries and drivers may occur.
Respondeat Superior
Many commenters objected to the
NPRM’s assertion that the ‘‘knew or
should have known’’ standard in the
definition of coercion ‘‘is essentially a
restatement of the common law
principle of ‘respondeat superior,’
which holds the ‘master’ (employer)
liable for the acts of his ‘servant’
(employee).’’ Schneider National offered
a brief critique that captures the general
reaction: ‘‘FMCSA should retract its
discussion on respondeat superior and
make clear that it is basing the
rulemaking on MAP–21. At the very
least, it need[s to] make clear that its
regulations are limited to dealing with
the issue of possible driver coercion and
such regulations or any enforcement
actions thereunder are not a recharacterization of the employment
relationship generally. Absent this,
those against whom an enforcement
action is brought may have greatly
enhanced incentive to fully litigate
every citation, unduly burdening
FMCSA’s enforcement effectiveness.’’
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FMCSA Response
FMCSA agrees with Schneider
National’s comment. This final rule is
based on the authority of 49 U.S.C.
31136(a)(5). The discussion of
‘‘respondeat superior’’ in the NPRM was
not intended to make shippers,
receivers, and transportation
intermediaries vicariously liable,
because Congress made them directly
liable through section 32911 of MAP–
21. FMCSA emphasizes that any
evidence gathered in response to a
written complaint by a driver would
point to specific individuals and that
persons at higher levels in the
organization would not necessarily be
implicated.
In any case, the revised definition of
coercion adopted in this final rule
eliminates the ‘‘knew or should have
known’’ standard by emphasizing more
strongly the driver’s duty to object as a
predicate for any subsequent allegation
of coercion.
Coercion That Fails
NASSTRAC objected to FMCSA’s
intent to ‘‘penalize unsuccessful
coercion, i.e., customer requests that a
driver ignores.’’ NASSTRAC argued that
‘‘[p]enalizing coercion resulting in
violations better addresses the conduct
Congress wanted to discourage. FMCSA
has cited no analogous regulatory
program that would penalize millions of
Americans’ words or requests even if
they produce no actions. The Foreign
Corrupt Practices Act and similar antibribery laws penalize inducements to
violate laws, but they generally require
some direct or indirect payment in
addition to an oral or written request. In
addition, penalizing shippers, receivers
and intermediaries for words that
produce no actions, let alone violations,
implicates First Amendment
considerations, as well as concerns
about overkill.’’
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with RULES
FMCSA Response
Drivers of CMVs are required to
comply with all applicable regulatory
standards. Those who resist coercion do
not lose the benefit of this rule. The act
of coercion is complete when the
attempt is made; it does not require
success. If Congress had wished to
impose limits on the common
understanding of coercion, it would
have said so in 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(5).
Coercion does, however, require some
kind of threat; merely asking a driver to
make a trip that would violate a
regulation would not constitute
coercion. If the driver refused to make
such a trip, a further discussion of his
or her response and related issues might
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or might not cross the line into coercion.
The answer would depend on the
substance of the conversation and the
existence of a threat, explicit or implied,
to make the driver pay an economic
price for refusing to violate an FMCSA
regulation.
Burden of Proof
Two trade associations, ATA and
NITL, Advocates, Mr. Wayne Yoder,
who is a carrier, and four anonymous
individuals commented on who should
bear the burden to prove coercion.
Among these commenters, ATA and two
individuals argued that the driver
should bear the burden of proof in
coercion cases. The individuals said it
must be the driver’s responsibility
because only the driver controls the
information on his logs.
On the other hand, Advocates stated
that ‘‘once a complaint is determined by
FMCSA to meet the substantive criteria
outlined in Section 386.12(e) of the
NPRM a prima facie showing of
coercion has been made under the
proposed regulations. As such, the
burden of proof should shift to the
alleged offender to demonstrate that
there was a valid reason for the actions
in dispute as is the current legal
framework applied in cases alleging
employment discrimination in violation
of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of
1964.’’
A carrier and three individuals (Mr.
Nick Scarabello and two anonymous
people) noted the driver is not well
positioned to provide evidence of
coercion. The carrier responding to the
NPRM stated that a motor carrier is
better able to provide evidence by way
of rate agreements, contracts, orders, or
bills of lading from the customer, but
the driver has no way of printing or
saving messages sent via companyowned and installed communication
devices. An anonymous individual
suggested that trucking companies
should be required to record all phone
conversations with drivers as a way to
prevent or provide evidence of coercion.
A commenter stated after a driver files
a report of an incident, FMCSA should
request written transcripts of the
conversation and supporting
documents. An anonymous commenter
wrote that ‘‘if you don’t put the burden
of proof on the carrier or dispatcher[,]
then it’s the driver[’]s word against the
company and the driver still ends up
being punished.’’
OOIDA stated that FMCSA places the
enforcement burden on drivers to prove
a violation of the law that results in the
issuance of penalties and fines for the
government. OOIDA argued FMCSA
should take the lead in coercion
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74701
enforcement activities instead of placing
the responsibility to initiate and prove
incidents of coercion upon those least
able to deal with the problem directly,
the target of the coercion.
ATA and the NIT League
recommended that the Agency adopt a
standard of ‘‘clear and convincing
evidence,’’ rather than ‘‘preponderance
of the evidence.’’ The NIT League
argued that this standard is appropriate
because of the significant consequences
associated with a violation of the
coercion prohibition, which include
potential monetary penalties and
suspension or revocation of the
registration of an offender. Conversely,
OOIDA stated FMCSA should not
weaken the rule by adopting an
evidentiary standard that exceeds the
standard for determining other safety
violations.
FMCSA Response
When imposing a civil penalty for
coercion, the government has the
burden of proof. The driver, however, is
typically the only person in a position
to provide the critical evidence needed
to sustain the action against a carrier,
shipper, receiver, or transportation
intermediary. The NPRM simply
acknowledged this reality. While it may
sometimes be difficult for the driver to
provide relevant evidence, as OOIDA
and others argued, there is no realistic
alternative. The Agency will not require
motor carriers to record all phone
conversations and other
communications with drivers, a farreaching requirement which was not
proposed for public comment in the
NPRM. FMCSA will investigate timely
complaints that meet the standards
outlined in § 386.12 and may be able to
locate or generate additional
information, but the driver must supply
the essential facts.
There is no good reason to adopt a
‘‘clear and convincing’’ evidentiary
standard for coercion cases when the
‘‘preponderance’’ standard is used for
all other motor carrier enforcement
actions. The potential penalties
applicable to a violation of 49 U.S.C.
31136(a)(5) and this rule’s
implementing regulations are the same
as those applicable to a violation of 49
U.S.C. 31136(a)(1)–(4) and the
implementing FMCSRs.
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of
1964 prohibits certain employers from
discriminating against employees on the
basis of race, color, religion, sex, or
national origin. There is nothing in
MAP–21 to indicate that Congress
intended to make CMV drivers who are
subject to coercion a protected class in
the same sense as individuals subject to
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racial, religious, sexual, or other
discrimination. The shifting of the
burden of proof under Title VII is
therefore not indicative of a similar
legislative intent to shift the burden to
carriers, shippers, receivers or
transportation intermediaries after a
driver files a non-frivolous coercion
complaint. The burden of proof in
coercion cases remains with FMCSA.
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with RULES
Application to Governmental Entities
NASSTRAC commented that
‘‘FMCSA has asserted that state and
local governments would be unaffected,
as would Indian Tribal Governments.
However, Indian Tribal Governments,
and state and local governments (and
federal government entities) are
shippers and receivers of freight
transported by CMVs. The Department
of Defense ships and receives large
volumes every year. All of these
shippers would apparently have a duty
to inquire as to HOS and other
compliance by every driver, even
though many probably have no idea that
HOS rules even exist.’’
TIA provided a similar comment:
‘‘TIA urges the Agency . . . to clearly
define the scope of this rule to include
the Department of Defense (DOD), the
General Services Administration (GSA),
Port Terminal Operators, and all other
applicable entities that contract with
motor carriers to haul their specific
goods along the transportation supplychain.’’
FMCSA Response
The MAP–21 prohibition on coercion
amended 49 U.S.C. 31136(a), a
provision originally enacted by the
MCSA. Under the MCSA, the term
‘‘employer’’ ‘‘(A) means a person
engaged in a business affecting
interstate commerce that owns or leases
a commercial motor vehicle in
connection with that business, or
assigns an employee to operate it; but
(B) does not include the [Federal]
Government, a State, or a political
subdivision of a State.’’ [49 U.S.C.
31132(3) (emphasis added)]. MAP–21
subjected motor carriers, shippers,
receivers, and transportation
intermediaries to the prohibition on
coercion [§ 31136(a)(5)], but it did not
limit the governmental exemption in
§ 31132(3). FMCSA has no authority to
apply this final rule to Federal, State or
local governmental entities. Whether a
terminal operator qualifies as a political
subdivision of a State will require a
case-by-case evaluation.
Deadline To File Coercion Complaints
OSHA recommended that the
proposed 60-day filing deadline be
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extended to 180 days. ‘‘The 60-day
filing period for the anti-coercion rule
would greatly limit the ability of DOT
to act on valid complaints of coercive
activity that drivers have timely filed
under the STAA [i.e., 49 U.S.C. 31105,
enacted by the Surface Transportation
Assistance Act of 1982 (STAA)].
Consequently, the short period
decreases the effectiveness of the statute
and weakens its overall deterrence
value. The Department of Labor/OSHA
has found that by providing workers
with a filing period of 180 days [as
authorized by 49 U.S.C. 31105], it is
able to pursue a greater number of
meritorious complaints and more fully
fulfill its mandate under STAA.’’ An
individual, Lisa Pate, also noted the
inconsistency between FMCSA’s
proposed 60-day deadline and OSHA’s
180-day deadline.
OSHA recommended ‘‘tolling of the
filing deadline, in case there are delays
in transferring the allegation to the
appropriate Division Administration.’’
Similarly, the Advocates wrote that
‘‘[v]ictims of coercion should not be
time-barred from seeking an appropriate
remedy under the law for the failure of
FMCSA to promptly request further
information or transfer the complaint to
the appropriate Division
Administrator.’’
The NIT League, on the other hand,
wrote that ‘‘because the allegations of
coercion will often involve verbal
communications at freight pick-up
locations, . . . it will be critical for
complaints to be filed promptly and for
the accused party to be provided with
prompt notice of the complaint. This
would help ensure that any internal
investigation of the driver’s allegations
either by the driver’s employer or the
alleged coercer can be conducted
expeditiously, any relevant evidence
can be preserved, and witnesses can be
interviewed before memories fade.
Thus, the NIT League suggests that the
time period for drivers to file
complaints be reduced to 30 days and
that any party accused of coercion be
served with the complaint upon its
filing with FMCSA.’’
FMCSA Response
OSHA regulations (29 CFR 1978.100
et seq.) and the underlying statute (49
U.S.C. 31105) protect employees who
are discharged, disciplined, or
discriminated against under certain
circumstances. Those actions are likely
to generate records that can be reviewed
months later. Coercion, on the other
hand, may occur without leaving clear
documentary evidence. FMCSA
continues to believe that a deadline
shorter than 180 days is appropriate to
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ensure that a complaint is filed while
the recollections of both the driver and
the alleged coercer are fresh. However,
the Agency considers the 30-day
deadline proposed by the NIT League to
be unfair to drivers, some of whom are
on the road for weeks at a time and may
not be in a position to file a complaint
that quickly. In order to ensure that
drivers have sufficient time to prepare
and submit a coercion complaint, the
final rule extends the 60-day period
proposed in the NPRM to 90 days.
Criteria To Evaluate Coercion Claims
OSHA commented that ‘‘the proposed
requirement that the complaint be ‘nonfrivolous’ is overly vague and should be
eliminated. The current proposed
requirement of ‘non-frivolity’ would
allow for enormous amounts of
discretion across FMCSA Divisions.
Gross discretion will undoubtedly lead
to regional disparities in the
enforcement of the provision and
severely limit the overall effectiveness
of the provision.’’
The NIT League suggested that the
Agency clarify the criteria that will be
used in evaluating reported incidents of
coercion. IME expressed concern over
the burden imposed on carriers,
shippers, receivers, and transportation
intermediaries to defend against driver
complaints. IME argued that the
proposed rule is, ‘‘by its very nature,
. . . fraught with subjectivity. In order
to avoid or defend against complaints of
coercion, carriers, shippers and
receivers will be compelled to
memorialize every significant
interaction they have with drivers.’’
FMCSA Response
The MCSA includes the following:
‘‘(a) Investigating complaints.—The
Secretary of Transportation shall
conduct a timely investigation of a
nonfrivolous written complaint alleging
that a substantial violation of a
regulation prescribed under this
subchapter is occurring or has occurred
within the prior 60 days’’ [49 U.S.C.
31143(a)]. The ‘‘nonfrivolous’’ standard
has been used in 49 CFR 386.12(b) for
many years without the adverse
consequences OSHA predicted, and the
Agency believes its use in 49 CFR
386.12(e)(2) will be comparably
straightforward and effective.
FMCSA does not agree with
commenters’ assessment of the burden
involved in defending against driver
complaints. The ‘‘subjectivity’’ that IME
feared has been virtually eliminated by
the revised definition adopted in this
final rule, which requires the driver to
state explicitly that he or she cannot
deliver the load without violating the
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applicable regulations, and why that is
the case. There can be no coercion
unless the shipper, receiver, or
transportation intermediary responds
with an equally explicit threat to force
the driver to make the delivery despite
the regulatory violation it would entail.
While groundless allegations of coercion
are possible, such accusations are also
possible under OSHA’s whistleblower
rules, yet they appear to be a relatively
minor problem and are readily
dismissed for want of evidence.
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with RULES
Penalties
Advocates argued that the Agency
should suspend the operating authority
of motor carriers found to have
committed coercion, rather than just
issue ‘‘meaningless fines.’’ Coercion
involving private carriers should be
reported to the relevant States ‘‘so that
the state licensing authority may take
the appropriate action as well as have a
complete record of the entities they are
responsible for monitoring.’’ Advocates
noted that an $11,000 fine (since
increased to $16,000) ‘‘pales in
comparison to the $250,000 punitive
fine that can be levied against a
company by the Department of Labor
under the Surface Transportation
Assistance Act (STAA) after a finding
that a driver was dismissed for refusing
to compromise a health or safety
standard.’’
An individual commenter, Jim Duvall,
wrote that ‘‘Any fine or monetary
penalty should directly benefit the
driver(s) harmed in the action.’’
Three commenters stated that the
final rule should impose penalties
against drivers who make false claims of
coercion. One commenter said there
should be a penalty for drivers who
make false accusations because they
either refuse to take responsibility for
their own failure to properly calculate
their hours or knowingly violate the
HOS rules because they do not want to
‘‘miss the load.’’ Two other individuals
stated that there should be penalties for
drivers who are disgruntled and file
baseless coercion complaints to get back
at their employer. AIPBA noted that the
imposition of significant penalties
against drivers who are found to have
falsely accused a broker will deter ‘‘such
improper and fraudulent conduct by
unscrupulous drivers.’’
FMCSA Response
FMCSA will take aggressive action
when a violation of the prohibition
against coercion can be substantiated.
This action will include civil penalties
consistent with the regulations, and may
include initiation of a proceeding to
revoke the operating authority of a for-
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hire motor carrier. Under 49 U.S.C.
13905, a carrier that engages in willful
non-compliance with an Agency
regulation or order may have its
operating authority revoked. FMCSA’s
policy on revocation was set forth in a
notice published on August 2, 2012 (77
FR 46147). The Agency agrees that
coercion is the type of violation that
may fall into this category.
Some commenters appear to regard a
coercion allegation that cannot be
substantiated as a false accusation. That
is not necessarily true. Despite its best
efforts, FMCSA may not be able
adequately to document some
allegations that are in fact correct. In
any case, neither section 32911 of MAP–
21 nor the Agency’s general civil
penalty statute authorizes penalties
against drivers who make false
accusations of coercion.
As for Mr. Duvall’s recommendation,
‘‘All penalties and fines collected under
this section shall be deposited into the
Highway Trust Fund (other than the
Mass Transit Account)’’ in the U.S.
Treasury [49 U.S.C. 521(b)(10)]. The
Agency cannot pay drivers the civil
penalties it collects for incidents of
coercion. And unlike OSHA, FMCSA
has no authority to require the violator
to compensate the driver for injuries he
or she has suffered.
Coercion as an Acute Violation
ATA argued that a violation of
proposed § 390.6, which prohibits
coercion, should not necessarily be
classified as an acute violation in
Appendix B, section VII of Part 385, as
proposed in the NPRM. Instead,
coercion should be acute, critical, or
neither, depending on the classification
of the regulation the driver was coerced
to violate.
FMCSA Response
FMCSA agrees that a carrier’s safety
fitness should be determined on the
basis of the regulations it violates or
coerces a driver to violate. In other
words, coercion itself should not be
treated as acute (or critical). The final
rule therefore eliminates the NPRM’s
proposed amendments to Appendix B of
49 CFR part 385. This is consistent with
the Agency’s practice of limiting acute
and critical classifications to regulations
which, if violated, are likely to increase
the risk of crashes. Because FMCSA
currently has no data showing a link
between coercion and crashes, it seems
appropriate not to classify coercion as
acute. If new data or further analysis
shows such a link, the Agency may
revisit this decision. As indicated above,
however, FMCSA will impose
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significant penalties when reports of
coercion can be proved.
Coercion of Carriers
NASSTRAC described a hypothetical
situation where Shipper A hires Carrier
B to deliver a load on a reasonable
schedule. However, when Carrier B’s
driver arrives to pick up the load, he
tells Shipper A that he has to go off duty
in a few hours under the HOS
regulations, making it impossible to
meet Shipper A’s delivery schedule.
‘‘Shipper A says in frustration, ‘That’s
the last time I use Carrier B.’ Is Shipper
A subject to a penalty of up to $11,000
just for saying those words, even if no
safety violation occurs? How many
penalties could Shipper A face if it
makes no more use of Carrier B?’’
ATA urged ‘‘FMCSA to consider
amending the proposed definition in
section 390.5 to cover not only the
driver as the target of withholding or
coercion, respectively, but also his/her
employer.’’
FMCSA Response
NASSTRAC has described a normal
and completely legal business response
to inadequate service. Shipper A has not
coerced the driver to violate the HOS
rules, nor has it coerced Carrier B to put
pressure on the driver to violate the
rules. It has simply decided not to use
a carrier that does not dispatch drivers
who can meet the agreed upon delivery
schedule.
Section 32911 of MAP–21 applies
only to the coercion of drivers, not to
the coercion of motor carriers. Under 49
U.S.C. 31136(a)(5), the Agency’s
regulations must ensure that ‘‘(5) an
operator of a commercial motor vehicle
is not coerced by a motor carrier,
shipper, receiver, or transportation
intermediary . . .’’ (emphasis added).
Because an ‘‘operator’’ is distinct from
a ‘‘motor carrier,’’ the term ‘‘operator’’
necessarily refers only to drivers. While
shippers may sometimes coerce motor
carriers to pressure their drivers to
violate the FMCSRs, the coercion of
motor carriers is not covered by MAP–
21 or this rule.
Miscellaneous Comments
Driver Confidentiality. OOIDA argued
that FMCSA must have whistleblower
protections in place. ‘‘This includes a
guarantee of a certain amount of
confidentiality in driver
communications with the agency, and
procedures at the agency to take action
against parties who retaliate against
drivers who submit good faith
allegation[s] of coercion to the agency.’’
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FMCSA Response
FMCSA is required by 49 U.S.C.
31143(b) to keep the identity of a
complainant confidential unless
‘‘disclosure is necessary to prosecute a
violation.’’ Because a party accused of
coercion cannot defend itself without
knowing the name of the accuser, and
when and where the alleged incident
occurred, the driver’s identity cannot be
confidential. Retaliation for reporting
incidents that, for whatever reason
cannot be substantiated, is not covered
by this rule. OSHA, however, may be
able to provide relief.
Communications with Drivers.
‘‘OOIDA suggests that FMCSA require
all parties providing drivers with
instructions, rules, or other conditions
on the transportation to maintain all
such communications as they do
supporting documents under the HOS
rules. OOIDA is aware that many motor
carriers, brokers and third parties
already retain such communication, and
so this requirement should not be a
significant burden. Such records should
be regularly reviewed during safety
audits and compliance reviews. The
potential safety benefits of motor
carriers knowing that these records will
be available to enforcement would
outweigh any added burden.’’
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with RULES
FMCSA Response
The Agency could not act on such a
far-reaching and controversial proposal
without first publishing it for notice and
comment. The NPRM proposed no such
requirement, and it is not included in
this final rule.
Notifying Carriers and Consumer
Reporting Agencies. OOIDA commented
that, ‘‘One form of coercion and
retaliation against drivers is the
reporting of negative information about
a driver in an employment history
submitted to a consumer reporting
agency. Other motor carriers purchase
that employment history from the
consumer reporting agency to fulfill
their FMCSR hiring requirements, and
they often make negative hiring
decisions based on those reports. On
their face, some of the information
reported appears performance related,
such as ‘late pick-up/delivery.’ But there
is nothing to protect drivers from being
tagged with a negative mark on their
employment history if the late pickup or
delivery resulted from conditions or
circumstances that caused the driver to
run out of legal hours to make the
delivery on time. Resistance to coercion
(i.e., the driver objections proposed by
the Notice) may be reported as ‘refused
dispatch’ or ‘insubordination.’ These
employment records can effectively
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disqualify a driver from being
considered for employment by motor
carriers or make it much harder for the
driver to find employment. The result is
that safety-conscious drivers who do the
right thing and resist coercion get bad
employment reports and are driven out
of the industry. Other drivers who
capitulate to demands to violate the
rules and save their jobs can keep fairly
clean employment records and stay in
the industry. . . . FMCSA should
impose penalties upon motor carriers
who submit such information to
consumer reporting agencies and who
refuse to remove such information after
it is submitted.’’
FMCSA Response
Negative reports about a driver by a
motor carrier could constitute ‘‘adverse
employment actions’’ prohibited by this
final rule. However, there would be
significant evidentiary obstacles to
making a coercion case in these
situations. A late pickup or delivery
may not have been caused by unrealistic
demands the driver was coerced to
meet. Bad planning on the part of the
driver or carrier, unexpected traffic
congestion, or other factors could also
explain some delays. Tracing reports of
‘‘insubordination’’ back to the driver’s
refusal to be coerced would inevitably
involve a detailed examination of one or
more incidents and conflicting accounts
of the reason for the alleged
insubordination. While FMCSA will
review all reported incidents, the
Agency cannot take action against a
carrier for coercion unless there is
evidence that an unfavorable report on
a driver was motivated by a desire to
punish the driver for refusal to be
coerced.
The Rule Should Govern the Demands
of Receivers. OOIDA argued that ‘‘[t]he
most powerful tool that receivers have
over drivers is the withholding of a
signature or receipt from the driver
acknowledging receipt of the freight—a
document the driver needs as a
condition for being compensated by
their carrier or third-party and that the
driver must obtain before driving away
to get rest or new business. Withholding
such receipt is commonly used by
receivers to coerce drivers to [1] accept
the receiver’s schedule to unload a
vehicle (no matter when the driver
arrived at the docks, when the driver’s
next scheduled pickup or delivery may
be, or what the driver’s Hours of Service
status may be); . . . [3] require the
driver to break down pallets and sort
and stack freight.’’ OOIDA also
described situations where drivers are
held at a receiver’s dock past the 14th
hour after coming on duty, and then
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forced to drive away from the receiver’s
facility in violation of § 395.3(a)(2).
FMCSA Response
While the situation OOIDA described
involving a signature or receipt was not
discussed in the NPRM, withholding a
delivery receipt might be used to coerce
a driver to violate the FMCSRs. A
receiver that forces a driver to leave its
premises is not threatening the driver
with an adverse employment action; it
is asserting its right as a property owner
to control access to the property.
Comments on Issues Outside the Scope
of This Rulemaking
Fourteen commenters raised issues
beyond the scope of this rulemaking,
involving lack of adequate parking;
detention time and detention pay; and
various HOS provisions. Because none
of these issues was related to coercion
of drivers to violate FMCSA regulations,
the Agency will not comment on them
in this document.
VI. Section-by-Section Description
A. Part 386
Section 386.1, ‘‘Scope of the rules in
this part,’’ is amended by adding a new
paragraph (c) referring to the filing and
handling of coercion complaints under
new § 386.12(e).
The NPRM’s § 386.12(e) is called
‘‘Complaint of coercion.’’ The
procedures to file and handle coercion
complaints outlined in the NPRM have
been revised. The complaint must be
filed within 90 days after the event with
the Agency’s on-line National Consumer
Complaint Database (https://
nccdb.fmcsa.dot.gov), or with the
Division Administrator where the driver
is employed. FMCSA may reassign the
complaint to the Division Administrator
best situated to investigate it. In
addition, the final rule removes a
sentence included in the NPRM stating
that the Division Administrator may
issue a Notice of Claim or Notice of
Violation when appropriate. Because
that statement could be read as a
limitation on the Agency’s enforcement
options, it has been deleted.
B. Part 390
Section 390.3(a) is amended to
include a reference to the coercion
provisions in § 386.12(e) and § 390.6,
and describe the applicability of those
provisions.
Section 390.5 is amended to add
definitions of ‘‘Coerce or coercion,’’
‘‘Receiver or consignee,’’ ‘‘Shipper,’’
and ‘‘Transportation intermediary.’’ The
definitions of ‘‘Receiver or consignee,’’
‘‘Shipper,’’ and ‘‘Transportation
intermediary’’ make these entities
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subject to the prohibition on coercion in
§ 390.6 only when shipping, receiving
or arranging transportation of property
(and in the case of ‘‘transportation
intermediaries,’’ passengers) in
interstate commerce. Although the term
‘‘transportation intermediary’’ is
commonly associated with brokers and
freight forwarders, it also includes travel
agents and similar entities that arrange
group tours or trips and contract with
motorcoach operators for transportation
services. Such intermediaries and their
agents are subject to the prohibition on
coercion. Because the HMRs apply to
transportation in intrastate commerce,
the definitions make clear that the
prohibition on coercion applies to
parties that ship, receive, or arrange
transportation of hazardous materials in
interstate or intrastate commerce. The
NPRM’s definition of ‘‘coerce or
coercion’’ has been amended (1) by
removing the reference to ‘‘current or
future’’ business; (2) adding a
prohibition on ‘‘any adverse
employment action against a driver,’’
and (3) deleting references to violations
of §§ 385.105(b), 385.111(a), (c)(1), or
(g), which were erroneously included.
Section 390.6(a)(1) is added to
prohibit motor carriers, shippers,
receivers, or transportation
intermediaries, or the agents, officers, or
representatives of such entities, from
coercing drivers to operate CMVs in
violation of 49 CFR parts 171–173, 177–
180, 380–383, or 390–399, or §§ 385.415
or 385.421. These parts correspond to
the statutory language in 49 U.S.C.
31136(a)(5). Parts 171–173 and 177–180
are the HMRs applicable to highway
transportation promulgated under 49
U.S.C. chapter 51. Parts 382–383 are the
commercial driver’s license (CDL) and
drug and alcohol testing regulations
promulgated under 49 U.S.C. chapter
313. Parts 390–399 are those portions of
the FMCSRs promulgated under the
authority (partial or complete) of 49
U.S.C. 31136(a). The other parts or
sections listed are based on one or more
of the statutes referenced in 49 U.S.C.
31136(a)(5).
Section 390.6(a)(2) is added to
prohibit operators of CMVs or their
agents, officers, or representatives, from
coercing drivers to violate 49 CFR parts
356, 360, or 365–379. This subsection is
based on the authority of 49 U.S.C.
31136(a)(1)–(4) and 49 U.S.C. 13301(a).
Section 390.6(b) describes the
procedures for a driver to file a
complaint of coercion with FMCSA.
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VII. Regulatory Analyses
A. Regulatory Planning and Review and
DOT Regulatory Policies (E.O. 12866)
and Procedures as Supplemented by
E.O. 13563)
FMCSA has determined that this rule
is a significant regulatory action under
E. O. 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4,
1993), as supplemented by E. O. 13563
(76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011), and
significant within the meaning of the
DOT regulatory policies and procedures
(44 FR 11034, February 26, 1979). The
estimated economic costs of the rule
will not exceed the $100 million annual
threshold (as explained below).
Extent of Economic Impact
The 1982 STAA includes
whistleblower protections for motor
carrier employees (49 U.S.C. 31105).
OSHA, which administers the
complaint process created by section
31105, received 1,158 complaints from
CMV drivers between FY 2009 and FY
2012.7 OSHA found that 253 of them (22
percent) had merit.8 Between FY 2009
and FY 2012, the OIG hotline received
91 complaints alleging that motor
carriers had coerced or retaliated against
drivers. FMCSA determined that 20 of
these complaints had merit.9 The
average number of verified complaints
for that 4-year period was therefore
68.25 per year [(253 + 20)/4 = 68.25].
Some unknown portion of the 253
complaints filed with OSHA during that
period almost certainly dealt with
coercion or similar actions. Even if all
of them were coercion-related, this
number—combined with the 20
substantiated complaints filed with the
OIG—remains small compared to the
total population of CMV drivers. Section
31105, however, applies only to
employers (basically motor carriers)
while this rule will also cover shippers,
receivers, and transportation
intermediaries. The Agency is unable to
estimate the number of coercion
allegations it may receive, whether
triggered by actions of motor carriers or
other entities made subject to this rule
by MAP–21.
7 U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Safety
& Health Administration (OSHA), Whistleblower
Protection Program: Investigative Data Fact Sheets.
Available at https://www.whistleblowers.gov/wb_
data_FY05-12.pdf.
8 Ibid., Footnote 3.
9 U.S. Department of Transportation, Office of the
Inspector General (OIG). This averaged 23
complaints per year, (with 44 in 2010), which the
OIG referred to FMCSA. FMCSA substantiated 20
complaints (22 percent) of violations of acute and
critical regulations due to driver allegations of
unlawful discrimination or discipline (See 29 CFR
1978.100 et seq.). Available at https://
www.oig.dot.gov/Hotline.
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74705
In view of the small number of
coercion-related complaints filed with
OSHA and DOT’s OIG, the aggregate
economic value to motor carriers of
these coercion-related incidents is likely
to be low. Therefore, the cost to carriers
of eliminating those incidents—
assuming the rule has that effect—and
incurring the higher costs of
compliance, would also be low;
however, the cost of compliance with
existing regulations has already been
captured in the analysis supporting the
implementation of those regulations, so
we do not consider them here. We
believe that the application of this rule
to shippers, receivers, brokers, freight
forwarders, and other transportation
intermediaries will not significantly
increase the number of coercion
complaints, since drivers generally have
more frequent and direct contacts with
their employers than with these other
parties. In addition, even though the
rule applies to a larger population,
FMCSA also notes that the rule should
have a deterrent effect on entities
considering coercion.
The roughly 68 annual complaints
noted above is the only available
estimate of coercion in the trucking
industry now. This rule would be
expected to reduce the amount of
coercion that takes place, but there is no
available measure of the effectiveness of
the rule. The relatively low number of
complaints suggests that the overall
economic impact will be less than the
$100 million threshold of economic
significance under E.O. 12866.
Benefits
If coercion creates situations where
CMVs are operated in an unsafe manner,
then there are consequences for safety
and driver health risks. By forcing
drivers to operate mechanically unsafe
CMVs or drive beyond their allowed
hours, coercion increases the risk of
crashes. Reduction of these behaviors
because of this rule would generate a
safety benefit. Additionally, the
operation of CMVs beyond HOS limits
has been shown to have negative
consequences for driver health. A
reduction of this practice would create
an improvement in driver health. The
Agency lacks data to quantify the safety
or health benefits attributable to the
rule.
Costs
This rule, as an enforcement measure,
would impose compliance costs on
carriers and on other business entities
utilizing the motor carrier industry. If
drivers now operate CMVs in violation
of HOS rules, or if coercion had caused
drivers to operate their CMV even
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though there were mechanical defects,
carriers would potentially have to
reorganize their schedules or hire new
drivers to operate in compliance.
Maintenance costs might also accelerate
as a result of this rule, as the industry
improves compliance with the existing
safety standards resulting from
increased risk of enforcement action.
Additionally, the entities that practice
coercion would lose the economic
benefit of that coercion. This economic
benefit could be time-related (if drivers
are coerced into driving when they
should stop and rest, stop and wait for
CMV maintenance, or drive a vehicle
they are not qualified to operate rather
than wait for a qualified driver).
Drivers alleging coercion will have to
provide a written statement describing
the incident along with evidence to
support their charges. This total
paperwork burden is difficult to
estimate but is not likely to be very
large. Similarly the Agency believes that
the investigation of those reports will
not have a large cost.
Summary
The Agency does not believe that the
benefits and costs of this rule would
create a large economic impact. The
safety benefits and compliance costs are
likely to be very small based on the
small number of expected cases each
year. Therefore, the Agency believes
that the rule will not be economically
significant.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires Federal
agencies to consider the effects of their
regulatory actions on small business and
other small entities and to minimize any
significant economic impact. The term
‘‘small entities’’ comprises small
businesses and not-for-profit
organizations that are independently
owned and operated and are not
dominant in their fields, as well as
governmental jurisdictions with
populations of less than 50,000.10
Accordingly, DOT policy requires an
analysis of the impact of all regulations
on small entities and mandates that
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10 Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.)
see National Archives at https://www.archives.gov/
federal-register/laws/regulatory-flexibility/601.html.
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agencies strive to lessen any adverse
effects on these businesses.
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act,
as amended by the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (Pub. L. 104–121, 110 Stat. 857),
the rule is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. As
indicated above, OSHA found merit in
only 253 complaints filed by CMV
drivers over a 4-year period, or about 63
per year. Even if all of the complaints
were classified as coercion-related, that
number would be very small when
compared to the size of the driver
population and motor carrier industry.
The Small Business Administration
(SBA) classifies businesses according to
the average annual receipts. The SBA
defines a ‘‘small entity’’ in the motor
carrier industry [i.e., general freight
truck transportation, subsector 484 of
the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS)] as
having revenues of less than $27.5
million per firm. Likewise,
transportation intermediaries (i.e.,
subsector 488 of NAICS) which include
brokers and freight forwarders, are
classified as small if their annual
revenue is under $15 million.11
Table 1 presents a breakdown of
FMCSA’s revenue estimates for the
populations in various categories. By
SBA standards, the vast majority of all
businesses in the motor carrier and
related industries are ‘‘small entities.’’
Although general freight transportation
arrangement firms fall under the $15
million threshold, there is an exception
for ‘‘non-vessel household goods
forwarders.’’ 12 This exception stipulates
11 U.S. Small Business Administration Table of
Small Business Size Standards matched to North
American Industry Classification System Codes
(NAICS), See NAIC subsector 484 (Truck
Transportation) and 488 Support Activities for
Transportation).effective July, 2012. The Small
Business Size Standards used in the Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Act analysis (IRFA) were
released by the Small Business Administration in
January 2012. The SBA issued revised Small
Business Standards in July 2014. See downloadable
PDF file at https://www.sba.gov/content/smallbusiness-size-standards.
12 According to the 2007 Economic Census data,
2,221 establishments were classified as non-vessel
common carriers. These establishments accounted
for 10.2 percent of the number of, and 5.2 percent
of the annual revenue for, the total number of
establishments classified under NAICS Code
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that the revenue threshold, for this subset of freight forwarders in the trucking
industry is $27.5 million. As indicated
above, fewer than 70 coercion
complaints per year have been filed
with OSHA and FMCSA in the past few
years. We have no reason to believe that
number will increase significantly
under the rule. In fact, the potential
penalty for coercing a driver should
have a deterrent effect. Even if the
penalty assessed might have a
‘‘significant economic impact,’’ the
limited number of recent coercion
complaints suggests that the penalty
would not affect ‘‘a substantial number
of small entities,’’ given that there are
nearly 500,000 firms in the industry that
qualify as small entities.
This rule does not affect industry
productivity by requiring new
documentation, affecting labor
productivity or availability, or
increasing expenditures on maintenance
or new equipment. The fines, which are
the only impact (unless the carrier’s
operating authority is suspended or
revoked), can be avoided by not
coercing drivers into violating existing
regulations. Furthermore, by regulation,
the Agency’s fines are usually subject to
a maximum financial penalty limit of 2
percent of a firm’s gross revenue. For
the vast majority of small firms, a fine
at this level would not be ‘‘significant’’
in the sense that it would jeopardize the
viability of the firm.
The table below excludes shippers
and receivers subject to the prohibition
on coercion, a group which is a large
portion of the entire U.S. population,
because anyone who sends or receives
a package would be considered a
shipper or receiver. However,
compliance with the prohibition on
coercion of drivers is not expected to
have significant economic impact on
many of them. Consequently, because
they are not expected to be in a position
to coerce a driver, I certify that the
action will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
488510-Freight Transportation Arrangement. In
2007, the average revenue for all entities classified
to NAICS Code 488510 was $1.8 million. Therefore,
the results of the analysis are the same regardless
of whether the Small Business Standard is $15
million or $27.5 million.
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TABLE 1—TOTAL NUMBER OF ENTITIES AND DETERMINATION, 2012
Type of entity
Number
Motor carriers (property) .............................................................
Motor carriers (passenger) .........................................................
Freight forwarders ......................................................................
Property brokers .........................................................................
13 523,239
12,184
16 14,319
21,565
Determination
99%
99%
97%
99%
below
below
below
below
27.5 million.14
$15 million.15
$27.5 million.
$27.5 million.
Source: Motor carrier (passenger), and property broker numbers is updated from the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act analysis (IRFA) to reflect
revisions reported in ‘‘2014 Pocket Guide to Large Truck and Bus Statistics,’’ Federal Motor Carrier Administration, October 2014. The 2014
Pocket Guide is available at https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/safety/data-and-statistics/commercial-motor-vehicle-facts.
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with RULES
C. Assistance for Small Entities
In accordance with section 213(a) of
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996,
FMCSA wants to assist small entities in
understanding this rule so that they can
better evaluate its effects on themselves
and participate in the rulemaking
initiative. If the rule affects your small
business, organization, or governmental
jurisdiction and you have questions
concerning its provisions or options for
compliance, please consult the FMCSA
point of contact, Mr. Charles Medalen,
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section of this rule.
Small businesses may send comments
on the actions of Federal employees
who enforce or otherwise determine
compliance with Federal regulations to
the SBA’s Small Business and
Agriculture Regulatory Enforcement
Ombudsman and the Regional Small
Business Regulatory Fairness Boards.
The Ombudsman evaluates these
actions annually and rates each agency’s
responsiveness to small business. If you
wish to comment on actions by
employees of FMCSA, call 1–888–REG–
FAIR (1–888–734–3247). DOT has a
13 Includes interstate motor carriers and intrastate
hazardous materials motor carriers.
14 The results show that 99 percent of all motor
carriers (property) with recent activity have 148
PUs or fewer.
15 The methodology used to determine the
percentage of motor carriers (property and
passenger) is the same methodology described in
detail at pages 31 through 34 of the September 2014
Initial RFA prepared for the proposed rule on Motor
Carrier Safety Fitness Determination.
16 The number of freight forwarders reported
(21,809) in the IFRA was obtained from the U.S
Census Bureau 2007 Economic Census. The 21,809
entities are the number of establishments, not the
number of firms that operated for all or part of 2007.
An establishment is a place of business. A firm may
operate out of more than one establishment. Hence,
the number of firms is a subset of the number of
establishment. In the 2007 Economic Census,
15,180 firms were classified to NAICS Code 488510Freight Transportation Arrangement. The number of
firms that operated for all or part of the year
accounted for 69.6 percent of establishments
(15,180 ÷ 21,809). The product of 69.9 percent and
20,573 establishments reported the 2012 Economic
Census yielded an estimated 14,319 firms in 2012.
These data are available on the Census Bureau
American Fact Finder Web site at https://
factfinder.census.gov/faces/nav/jsf/pages/
searchresults.xhtml?refresh=t.
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policy ensuring the rights of small
entities to regulatory enforcement
fairness and an explicit policy against
retaliation for exercising these rights.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
This rule will not impose an
unfunded Federal mandate, as defined
by the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1532, et seq.), that will
result in the expenditure by State, local,
and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector, of $155 million
(which is the value of $100 million in
2015 after adjusting for inflation) or
more in any 1 year.
E. Federalism (E.O. 13132)
A rulemaking has implications for
Federalism under section 1(a) of E.O.
13132 if it has a substantial direct effect
on State or local governments and
would either preempt State law or
impose a substantial direct cost of
compliance on State or local
governments. FMCSA analyzed this
action in accordance with E.O. 13132.
This rule does not preempt or modify
any provision of State law, impose
substantial direct unreimbursed
compliance costs on any State, or
diminish the power of any State to
enforce its own laws. FMCSA has
determined that this rule will not have
substantial direct costs on or for States
nor will it limit the policymaking
discretion of States. Accordingly, this
rulemaking does not have Federalism
implications.
F. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
This rule meets applicable standards
in sections 3(a) and 3(b) (2) of E.O.
12988, Civil Justice Reform, to minimize
litigation, eliminate ambiguity, and
reduce burden.
G. Protection of Children (E.O. 13045)
E.O. 13045, Protection of Children
from Environmental Health Risks and
Safety Risks (62 FR 19885, Apr. 23,
1997), requires agencies issuing
‘‘economically significant’’ rules, if the
regulation also concerns an
environmental health or safety risk that
an agency has reason to believe may
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disproportionately affect children, to
include an evaluation of the regulation’s
environmental health and safety effects
on children. The Agency determined
this rule is not economically significant.
Therefore, no analysis of the impacts on
children is required. In any event, the
Agency does not anticipate that this
regulatory action could in any respect
present an environmental or safety risk
that could disproportionately affect
children.
H. Taking of Private Property (E.O.
12630)
FMCSA reviewed this rule in
accordance with E.O. 12630,
Governmental Actions and Interference
with Constitutionally Protected Property
Rights, and has determined it will not
effect a taking of private property or
otherwise have takings implications.
I. Privacy Impact Assessment
FMCSA conducted a privacy impact
assessment (PIA) of this rule as required
by section 522(a)(5) of division H of the
FY 2005 Omnibus Appropriations Act,
Public Law 108–447, 118 Stat. 3268
(Dec. 8, 2004). The assessment
considered impacts of the final rule on
the privacy of information in an
identifiable form and related matters.
The final rule will impact the handling
of personally identifiable information
(PII). FMCSA has evaluated the risks
and effects the rulemaking might have
on collecting, storing, and sharing PII
and has evaluated protections and
alternative information handling
processes in developing the final rule in
order to mitigate potential privacy risks.
For the purposes of both transparency
and efficiency, the privacy analysis
conforms to the DOT standard Privacy
Impact Assessment (PIA) and will be
published on the DOT Web site at
www.dot.gov/privacy concurrently with
the publication of the rule. The PIA
addresses the rulemaking, associated
business processes contemplated in the
rule and any information known about
the systems or existing systems to be
implemented in support of the final
rulemaking. A PIA for the Coercion
NPRM was previously developed and is
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currently available to the public on the
DOT Web site at www.dot.gov/privacy.
The PIA has been reviewed, and revised
as appropriate, to reflect the final rule
and will be published not later than the
date on which the Department initiates
any of the activities contemplated in the
Final Rule determined to have an
impact on individuals’ privacy and not
later than the date on which the system
(if any) supporting implementation of
the Final Rule is updated.
As required by the Privacy Act,
FMCSA and the Department will
publish, with request for comment, a
revised system of records notice (SORN)
that will cover the collection of
information that is affected by this final
rule. Since coercion complaints will be
stored in the National Consumer
Complaint Database (NCCDB), the
SORN for the NCCDB (DOT/FMCSA
004—National Consumer Complaint
Database (NCCDB)—75 FR 27051—May
13, 2010) will be revised to reflect the
new collection of information and
published in the Federal Register not
less than 30 days before the Agency is
authorized to collect or use PII retrieved
by unique identifier. Additionally,
FMCSA will revise the PIA for NCCDB
(formally the Safety Violations and
Household Goods Consumer Complaint
Hotline Database) posted on June 6,
2006 and an updated PIA will be
available to the public on the DOT Web
site at www.dot.gov/privacy.
The privacy risks and effects
associated with the cases resulting from
this rule are not unique and have
previously been addressed by the
enforcement case file storage
requirements in the Electronic
Document Management System (EDMS)
PIA posted on June 6, 2006 and the
DOT/FMCSA 005—Electronic
Document Management System SORN
(71 FR 35727) published on June 21,
2006.
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with RULES
J. Intergovernmental Review (E.O.
12372)
The regulations implementing E.O.
12372 regarding intergovernmental
consultation on Federal programs and
activities do not apply to this program.
K. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.),
Federal agencies must obtain approval
from the OMB for each collection of
information they conduct, sponsor, or
require through regulations. Information
submitted by drivers alleging coercion is
exempt from PRA requirements because
it is collected pursuant to ‘‘an
administrative action or investigation
involving an agency against specific
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15:17 Nov 27, 2015
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individuals or entities’’ [44 U.S.C.
3518(c)(1)(B)(ii)].
it does not require a Statement of Energy
Effects under E.O. 13211.
L. National Environmental Policy Act
and Clean Air Act
O. Indian Tribal Governments (E.O.
13175)
This rule does not have tribal
implications under E.O. 13175,
Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments, because it
does not have a substantial direct effect
on one or more Indian tribes, on the
relationship between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes.
FMCSA analyzed this rule in
accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA) (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.). FMCSA
conducted an environmental assessment
and determined that the rule has the
potential for minor environmental
impacts. Based on the limited data
FMCSA has concerning the extent of the
affected CMV driver population, these
impacts would be very small and
FMCSA does not expect any significant
impacts to the environment from this
rule. The environmental assessment has
been placed in the rulemaking docket.
In addition to the NEPA requirements
to examine impacts on air quality, the
Clean Air Act (CAA) as amended (42
U.S.C. 7401 et seq.) also requires
FMCSA to analyze the potential impact
of its actions on air quality and to
ensure that FMCSA actions conform to
State and local air quality
implementation plans. The additional
contributions to air emissions from any
of the alternatives are expected to fall
below the CAA de minimis thresholds
as per 40 CFR 93.153 and are, therefore,
not expected to be subject to the
Environmental Protection Agency’s
General Conformity Rule (40 CFR parts
51 and 93).
M. Environmental Justice (E.O. 12898)
FMCSA evaluated the environmental
effects of this rule in accordance with
Executive Order 12898 and determined
that there are no environmental justice
issues associated with its provisions nor
is there any collective environmental
impact resulting from its promulgation.
Environmental justice issues would be
raised if there were a ‘‘disproportionate’’
and ‘‘high and adverse impact’’ on
minority or low-income populations.
None of the alternatives analyzed in the
Agency’s EA, discussed under National
Environmental Policy Act, would result
in high and adverse environmental
impacts.
N. Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
(E.O. 13211)
FMCSA has analyzed this rule under
E.O. 13211, Actions Concerning
Regulations That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use.
The Agency has determined that it is
not a ‘‘significant energy action’’ under
that order because it is not a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ likely to have a
significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy. Therefore,
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P. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (Technical
Standards)
The National Technology Transfer
and Advancement Act (NTTAA) (15
U.S.C. 272 note) directs agencies to use
voluntary consensus standards in their
regulatory activities unless the agency
provides Congress, through OMB, with
an explanation of why using these
standards would be inconsistent with
applicable law or otherwise impractical.
Voluntary consensus standards (e.g.,
specifications of materials, performance,
design, or operation; test methods;
sampling procedures; and related
management systems practices) are
standards that are developed or adopted
by voluntary consensus standards
bodies. This rule does not use technical
standards. Therefore, we did not
consider the use of voluntary consensus
standards.
List of Subjects
49 CFR Part 386
Administrative practice and
procedures, Brokers, Freight forwarders,
Hazardous materials transportation,
Highway safety, Motor carriers, Motor
vehicle safety, Penalties.
49 CFR Part 390
Highway safety, Intermodal
transportation, Motor carriers, Motor
vehicle safety, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, FMCSA amends parts 386
and 390 in 49 CFR chapter III,
subchapter B, as follows:
PART 386—RULES OF PRACTICE FOR
FMCSA PROCEEDINGS
1. The authority citation for part 386
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 113, chapters 5, 51,
59, 131–141, 145–149, 311, 313, and 315;
Sec. 204, Pub. L. 104–88, 109 Stat. 803, 941
(49 U.S.C. 701 note); Sec. 217, Pub. L. 105–
159, 113 Stat. 1748, 1767; Sec. 206, Pub. L.
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106–159, 113 Stat.1763; subtitle B, title IV of
Pub. L. 109–59; and 49 CFR 1.81 and 1.87.
2. Revise the heading of part 386 as set
forth above.
■ 3. Amend § 386.1 by revising
paragraph (a) and adding paragraph (c)
to read as follows:
■
§ 386.1
Scope of the rules in this part.
(a) Except as indicated in paragraph
(c) of this section, the rules in this part
govern proceedings before the Assistant
Administrator, who also acts as the
Chief Safety Officer of the Federal Motor
Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA),
under applicable provisions of the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Regulations (FMCSRs) (49 CFR parts
350–399), including the commercial
regulations (49 CFR parts 360–379), and
the Hazardous Materials Regulations (49
CFR parts 171–180).
*
*
*
*
*
(c) The rules in § 386.12(e) govern the
filing by a driver and the handling by
the appropriate Division Administrator
of complaints of coercion in violation of
§ 390.6 of this subchapter.
■ 4. Amend § 386.12 as follows:
■ a. Revise the section heading;
■ b. Add and reserve paragraph (d); and
■ c. Add paragraph (e).
§ 386.12
Complaints.
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(d) [Reserved]
(e) Complaint of coercion. (1) A driver
alleging a violation of § 390.6(a)(1) or (2)
of this subchapter must file a written
complaint with FMCSA stating the
substance of the alleged coercion no
later than 90 days after the event. The
written complaint, including the
information described below, must be
filed with the National Consumer
Complaint Database at https://
nccdb.fmcsa.dot.gov or the FMCSA
Division Administrator for the State
where the driver is employed. The
Agency may refer a complaint to
another Division Administrator who the
Agency believes is best able to handle
the complaint. Information on filing a
written complaint may be obtained by
calling 1–800–DOT–SAFT (1–800–368–
7238). Each complaint must be signed
by the driver and must contain:
(i) The driver’s name, address, and
telephone number;
(ii) The name and address of the
person allegedly coercing the driver;
(iii) The provisions of the regulations
that the driver alleges he or she was
coerced to violate; and
(iv) A concise but complete statement
of the facts relied upon to substantiate
each allegation of coercion, including
the date of each alleged violation.
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(2) Action on complaint of coercion.
Upon the filing of a complaint of
coercion under paragraph (e)(1) of this
section, the appropriate Division
Administrator shall determine whether
the complaint is non-frivolous and
meets the requirements of paragraph
(e)(1).
(i) If the Division Administrator
determines that the complaint is nonfrivolous and meets the requirements of
paragraph (e)(1) of this section, he/she
shall investigate the complaint. The
complaining driver shall be timely
notified of findings resulting from such
investigation. The Division
Administrator shall not be required to
conduct separate investigations of
duplicative complaints.
(ii) If the Division Administrator
determines the complaint is frivolous or
does not meet the requirements of
paragraph (e)(1) of this section, he/she
shall dismiss the complaint and notify
the driver in writing of the reasons for
such dismissal.
(3) Protection of complainants.
Because prosecution of coercion in
violation of § 390.6 of this subchapter
will require disclosure of the driver’s
identity, the Agency shall take every
practical means within its authority to
ensure that the driver is not subject to
harassment, intimidation, disciplinary
action, discrimination, or financial loss
as a result of such disclosure. This will
include notification that 49 U.S.C.
31105 includes broad employee
protections and that retaliation for filing
a coercion complaint may subject the
alleged coercer to enforcement action by
the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration.
PART 390—FEDERAL MOTOR
CARRIER SAFETY REGULATIONS;
GENERAL
5. Revise the authority citation for part
390 to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 504, 508, 31132,
31133, 31136, 31144, 31151, 31502; sec. 114,
Pub. L. 103–311, 108 Stat. 1673, 1677–1678;
sec. 212, 217, 229, Pub. L. 106–159, 113 Stat.
1748, 1766, 1767; sec. 229, Pub. L. 106–159
(as transferred by sec. 4114 and amended by
secs. 4130–4132, Pub. L. 109–59, 119 Stat.
1144, 1726, 1743–1744), sec. 4136, Pub. L.
109–59, 119 Stat. 1144, 1745; and 49 CFR
1.81, 1.81a and 1.87.
■
6. Revise § 390.3(a) to read as follows:
§ 390.3
General applicability.
(a)(1) The rules in subchapter B of this
chapter are applicable to all employers,
employees, and commercial motor
vehicles that transport property or
passengers in interstate commerce.
(2) The rules in 49 CFR 386.12(e) and
390.6 prohibiting the coercion of drivers
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74709
of commercial motor vehicles operating
in interstate commerce:
(i) To violate certain safety regulations
are applicable to all motor carriers,
shippers, receivers, and transportation
intermediaries; and
(ii) To violate certain commercial
regulations are applicable to all
operators of commercial motor vehicles.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Amend § 390.5 by adding
definitions of ‘‘Coerce or Coercion,’’
‘‘Receiver or consignee,’’ ‘‘Shipper,’’
and ‘‘Transportation intermediary,’’ in
alphabetical order, to read as follows:
§ 390.5
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Coerce or Coercion means either—
(1) A threat by a motor carrier,
shipper, receiver, or transportation
intermediary, or their respective agents,
officers or representatives, to withhold
business, employment or work
opportunities from, or to take or permit
any adverse employment action against,
a driver in order to induce the driver to
operate a commercial motor vehicle
under conditions which the driver
stated would require him or her to
violate one or more of the regulations,
which the driver identified at least
generally, that are codified at 49 CFR
parts 171–173, 177–180, 380–383, or
390–399, or §§ 385.415 or 385.421, or
the actual withholding of business,
employment, or work opportunities or
the actual taking or permitting of any
adverse employment action to punish a
driver for having refused to engage in
such operation of a commercial motor
vehicle; or
(2) A threat by a motor carrier, or its
agents, officers or representatives, to
withhold business, employment or work
opportunities or to take or permit any
adverse employment action against a
driver in order to induce the driver to
operate a commercial motor vehicle
under conditions which the driver
stated would require a violation of one
or more of the regulations, which the
driver identified at least generally, that
are codified at 49 CFR parts 356, 360,
or 365–379, or the actual withholding of
business, employment or work
opportunities or the actual taking or
permitting of any adverse employment
action to punish a driver for refusing to
engage in such operation of a
commercial motor vehicle.
*
*
*
*
*
Receiver or consignee means a person
who takes delivery from a motor carrier
or driver of a commercial motor vehicle
of property transported in interstate
commerce or hazardous materials
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transported in interstate or intrastate
commerce.
*
*
*
*
*
Shipper means a person who tenders
property to a motor carrier or driver of
a commercial motor vehicle for
transportation in interstate commerce,
or who tenders hazardous materials to a
motor carrier or driver of a commercial
motor vehicle for transportation in
interstate or intrastate commerce.
*
*
*
*
*
Transportation intermediary means a
person who arranges the transportation
of property or passengers by commercial
motor vehicle in interstate commerce, or
who arranges the transportation of
hazardous materials by commercial
motor vehicle in interstate or intrastate
commerce, including but not limited to
brokers and freight forwarders.
*
*
*
*
*
■
8. Add § 390.6 to read as follows:
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with RULES
§ 390.6
Coercion prohibited.
(a) Prohibition. (1) A motor carrier,
shipper, receiver, or transportation
intermediary, including their respective
agents, officers, or representatives, may
not coerce a driver of a commercial
motor vehicle to operate such vehicle in
violation of 49 CFR parts 171–173, 177–
180, 380–383 or 390–399, or §§ 385.415
or 385.421;
(2) A motor carrier or its agents,
officers, or representatives, may not
coerce a driver of a commercial motor
vehicle to operate such vehicle in
violation of 49 CFR parts 356, 360, or
365–379.
(b) Complaint process. (1) A driver
who believes he or she was coerced to
violate a regulation described in
paragraph (a)(1) or (2) of this section
may file a written complaint under
§ 386.12(e) of this subchapter.
(2) A complaint under paragraph
(b)(1) of this section shall describe the
action that the driver claims constitutes
coercion and identify the regulation the
driver was coerced to violate.
(3) A complaint under paragraph
(b)(1) of this section may include any
supporting evidence that will assist the
Division Administrator in determining
the merits of the complaint.
Issued under the authority of delegation in
49 CFR 1.87 on: November 23, 2015.
T.F. Scott Darling, III,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2015–30237 Filed 11–27–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–EX–P
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 120404257–3325–02]
RIN 0648–XE215
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; 2015
Commercial Accountability Measure
and Closure for South Atlantic Golden
Tilefish Hook-and-Line Component
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; closure.
AGENCY:
NMFS implements
accountability measures for the
commercial hook-and-line component
for golden tilefish in the exclusive
economic zone (EEZ) of the South
Atlantic. NMFS projects commercial
hook-and-line landings for golden
tilefish will reach the hook-and-line
component’s commercial annual catch
limit (ACL) on December 8, 2015.
Therefore, NMFS closes the commercial
hook-and-line component for golden
tilefish in the South Atlantic EEZ on
December 8, 2015, and it will remain
closed until the start of the next fishing
year on January 1, 2016. This closure is
necessary to protect the golden tilefish
resource.
DATES: This rule is effective 12:01 a.m.,
local time, December 8, 2015, until
12:01 a.m., local time, January 1, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mary Vara, NMFS Southeast Regional
Office, telephone: 727–824–5305, email:
mary.vara@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
snapper-grouper fishery of the South
Atlantic includes golden tilefish and is
managed under the Fishery
Management Plan for the SnapperGrouper Fishery of the South Atlantic
Region (FMP). The FMP was prepared
by the South Atlantic Fishery
Management Council and is
implemented by NMFS under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act) by
regulations at 50 CFR part 622.
On April 23, 2013, NMFS published
a final rule for Amendment 18B to the
FMP (78 FR 23858). Amendment 18B to
the FMP established a longline
endorsement program for the
commercial golden tilefish component
of the snapper-grouper fishery and
allocated the commercial golden tilefish
SUMMARY:
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ACL among two gear types, the longline
and hook-and-line components.
The commercial ACL (equivalent to
the commercial quota) for the hook-andline component for golden tilefish in the
South Atlantic is 135,324 lb (61,382 kg),
gutted weight, for the current fishing
year, January 1 through December 31,
2015, as specified in 50 CFR
622.190(a)(2)(ii).
Under 50 CFR 622.193(a)(1)(i), NMFS
is required to close the commercial
hook-and-line component for golden
tilefish when the hook-and-line
component’s commercial ACL has been
reached, or is projected to be reached,
by filing a notification to that effect with
the Office of the Federal Register. NMFS
has determined that the commercial
ACL for the hook-and-line component
for golden tilefish in the South Atlantic
will be reached by December 8, 2015.
Accordingly, the commercial hook-andline component for South Atlantic
golden tilefish is closed effective 12:01
a.m., local time, December 8, 2015, until
12:01 a.m., local time, January 1, 2016.
The commercial longline component
for South Atlantic golden tilefish closed
on February 19, 2015, for the remainder
of the fishing year, until 12:01 a.m.,
local time, January 1, 2016 (80 FR 8559,
February 18, 2015). Furthermore,
recreational harvest for golden tilefish
closed on August 11, 2015, for the
remainder of the fishing year, until
12:01 a.m., local time, January 1, 2016
(80 FR 48041, August 11, 2015).
Therefore, because the commercial
longline component and the recreational
sector are already closed, and NMFS is
closing the commercial hook-and-line
component through this temporary rule,
all fishing for South Atlantic golden
tilefish is closed effective 12:01 a.m.,
local time, December 8, 2015, until
12:01 a.m., local time, January 1, 2016.
The operator of a vessel with a valid
Federal commercial vessel permit for
South Atlantic snapper-grouper having
golden tilefish on board must have
landed and bartered, traded, or sold
such golden tilefish prior to 12:01 a.m.,
local time, December 8, 2015. During
the closure, the sale or purchase of
golden tilefish taken from the EEZ is
prohibited. The prohibition on sale or
purchase does not apply to the sale or
purchase of golden tilefish that were
harvested by hook-and-line, landed
ashore, and sold prior to 12:01 a.m.,
local time, December 8, 2015, and were
held in cold storage by a dealer or
processor. For a person on board a
vessel for which a Federal commercial
or charter vessel/headboat permit for the
South Atlantic snapper-grouper fishery
has been issued, the sale and purchase
provisions of the commercial closure for
E:\FR\FM\30NOR1.SGM
30NOR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 229 (Monday, November 30, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 74695-74710]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-30237]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
49 CFR Parts 386 and 390
[Docket No. FMCSA-2012-0377]
RIN 2126-AB57
Prohibiting Coercion of Commercial Motor Vehicle Drivers
AGENCY: Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: FMCSA adopts regulations that prohibit motor carriers,
shippers, receivers, or transportation intermediaries from coercing
drivers to operate commercial motor vehicles (CMVs) in violation of
certain provisions of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations
(FMCSRs)--including drivers' hours-of-service limits; the commercial
driver's license (CDL) regulations; drug and alcohol testing rules; and
the Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMRs). In addition, the rule
prohibits anyone who operates a CMV in interstate commerce from
coercing a driver to violate the commercial regulations. This rule
includes procedures for drivers to report incidents of coercion to
FMCSA, establishes rules of practice that the Agency will follow in
response to reports of coercion, and describes penalties that may be
imposed on entities found to have coerced drivers. This rulemaking is
authorized by section 32911 of the Moving Ahead for Progress in the
21st Century Act (MAP-21) and the Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984
(MCSA), as amended.
DATES: This final rule is effective January 29, 2016.
Petitions for Reconsideration of this final rule must be submitted
to FMCSA Administrator no later than December 30, 2015.
ADDRESSES:
Availability of Rulemaking Documents
For access to docket FMCSA-2012-0377 to read background documents
and comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov at any time, or
to Docket Services at U.S. Department of Transportation, Room W12-140,
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Privacy Act
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(c), DOT solicits comments from the
public to better inform its rulemaking process. DOT posts these
comments, without edit, including any personal information the
commenter provides, to www.regulations.gov, as described in the system
of records notice (DOT/ALL-14 FDMS), which can be reviewed at
www.dot.gov/privacy.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Charles Medalen, Regulatory
Affairs Division, Office of Chief Counsel, (202) 493-0349. FMCSA office
hours are from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Abbreviations and Acronyms
II. Executive Summary
III. Legal Basis for This Rulemaking
IV. Background
V. Discussion of Comments
VI. Section-by-Section Description
VII. Regulatory Analyses
I. Abbreviations and Acronyms
CDL Commercial Driver's License
CMV Commercial Motor Vehicle
DOT Department of Transportation
FMCSA Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
FMCSRs Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations
[[Page 74696]]
HOS Hours of Service
HMRs Hazardous Materials Regulations
ICC Interstate Commerce Commission
MAP-21 Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act
MCSA or 1984 Act Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984
NAICS North American Industry Classification System
OIG Office of Inspector General
OSHA Occupational Safety and Health Administration
SBA Small Business Administration
STAA Surface Transportation Assistance Act of 1982
II. Executive Summary
Purpose and Summary of the Major Provisions
Congress required FMCSA to ensure that the regulations adopted
pursuant to the MCSA, as amended by MAP-21, do not result in coercion
of drivers by motor carriers, shippers, receivers, or transportation
intermediaries to operate CMVs in violation of certain provisions of
the FMCSRs and the HMRs.
The major provisions of this rule include prohibitions of coercion,
procedures for drivers to report incidents of coercion to FMCSA, and
rules of practice that the Agency will follow in response to reports of
coercion.
Benefits and Costs
The FMCSA believes that this rule will not have an economically
significant impact. The motor carriers, shippers, receivers, freight
forwarders, brokers and transportation intermediaries that previously
engaged in acts of coercion against truck or bus drivers will incur
compliance costs to operate in accordance with the regulations, and
they will lose whatever economic benefit coercion provided; however,
the cost of compliance with existing regulations has already been
captured in the analysis supporting the implementation of those
regulations, so we do not consider them here. There will be safety
benefits from increased compliance with the regulations and driver
health benefits if HOS violations decrease. In the absence of coercion,
the drivers will conduct their safety-sensitive work in a manner
consistent with the applicable Federal regulations. During the four-
year period from 2009 through 2012, OSHA determined that 253
whistleblower complaints from CMV drivers had merit. In the same
period, FMCSA validated 20 allegations of motor carrier coercion of
drivers that were filed with DOT's OIG. This is an average of 68.25
acts of coercion per year during the four-year period. The Agency
estimates that the cost of eliminating this level of coercion would be
less than the $100 million threshold required for economic significance
under E.O. 12866.
III. Legal Basis for This Rulemaking
This rule is based on the authority of MCSA [49 U.S.C. 31136(a)],
as amended by MAP-21 [Pub. L. 112-141, section 32911, 126 Stat. 405,
818, July 6, 2012] and on 49 U.S.C. 13301(a), as amended by the ICC
Termination Act of 1995 [Pub. L. 104-88, 109 Stat. 803, December 29,
1995].
The 1984 Act confers on DOT authority to regulate drivers, motor
carriers, and vehicle equipment. The 1984 Act stated that at a minimum,
the regulations shall ensure that--(1) commercial motor vehicles are
maintained, equipped, loaded, and operated safely; (2) the
responsibilities imposed on operators of commercial motor vehicles do
not impair their ability to operate the vehicles safely; (3) the
physical condition of operators of commercial motor vehicles is
adequate to enable them to operate the vehicles safely; and (4) the
operation of commercial motor vehicles does not have a deleterious
effect on the physical condition of the operators [49 U.S.C. 31136(a)].
Section 32911 of MAP-21 enacted a fifth requirement, i.e., that the
regulations ensure that ``(5) an operator of a commercial motor vehicle
is not coerced by a motor carrier, shipper, receiver, or transportation
intermediary to operate a commercial motor vehicle in violation of a
regulation promulgated under this section, or chapter 51 or chapter 313
of this title'' [49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(5)].
The 1984 Act also includes more general authority to ``(10) perform
other acts the Secretary considers appropriate'' [49 U.S.C.
31133(a)(10)].
This rule includes two separate prohibitions. One prohibits motor
carriers, shippers, receivers, or transportation intermediaries from
coercing drivers to violate regulations based on section 31136 (which
is the authority for many parts of the FMCSRs), 49 U.S.C. chapter 313
(the authority for the commercial driver's license (CDL) and drug and
alcohol regulations), and 49 U.S.C. chapter 51 (the authority for the
HMRs). This is required by 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(5).
A second provision prohibits entities that operate CMVs in
interstate commerce from coercing drivers to violate the commercial
regulations. As explained more fully below, this provision is based on
the broad general authority of 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(1)-(4), especially
paragraphs (a)(1) and (2). Banning coercion to violate the safety-
related commercial regulations is well within the scope of section
31136(a)(1)-(4). Applying the same ban to commercial provisions that
are not immediately related to safety is nonetheless consistent with
the goals of section 31136 and will help to inhibit the growth of a
culture of indifference to regulatory compliance, a culture known to
contribute to unsafe CMV operations. Banning coercion to violate the
commercial regulations is also within the broad authority transferred
from the former ICC to prescribe regulations to carry out Part B of
Subtitle IV of Title 49, United States Code (49 U.S.C. 13301(a)). This
prohibition applies to operators of CMVs, which are mainly motor
carriers, but not to shippers, receivers, or transportation
intermediaries, since they are not subject to section 31136(a)(1)-(4)
or section 13301.
Together, these two provisions cover most kinds of coercion drivers
might encounter.
This rule also adopts procedures for drivers to report coercion and
rules of practice the Agency will follow in addressing such reports.
FMCSA believes the reduction of regulatory violations caused by
coercion will prove conducive to improved driver health and well-being,
consistent with the objectives of section 31136(a)(2)-(4).
Before prescribing any regulations, FMCSA must consider their
``costs and benefits'' [49 U.S.C. 31136(c)(2)(A) and 31502(d)]. Those
factors are discussed in this rule.
IV. Background
Section 32911 of MAP-21 is the most recent example of Congress'
recognition of the important role the public plays in highway safety.
In the 1980s, Congress implemented new financial responsibility
requirements for motor carriers of property and passengers to encourage
the insurance industry to exercise greater scrutiny over the operations
of motor carriers as one method to improve safety oversight (section 30
of the Motor Carrier Act of 1980 (Pub. L. 96-296) and section 18 of the
Bus Regulatory Reform Act of 1982 (Pub. L. 97-261)).
Section 32911 of MAP-21 represents a similar congressional decision
to expand the reach of motor carrier safety regulations from the supply
side (the drivers and carriers traditionally regulated by the Federal
government) to the demand side--the shippers, receivers, brokers,
freight forwarders, travel groups and others that hire motor carriers
to provide transportation and
[[Page 74697]]
whose actions have an impact on CMV safety.
Economic pressure in the motor carrier industry affects commercial
drivers in ways that can adversely affect safety. For years, drivers
have voiced concerns that other parties in the logistics chain are
frequently indifferent to the operational limits imposed on them by the
FMCSRs. Allegations of coercion were submitted in the docket for the
Agency's 2010-2011 HOS rulemaking.\1\ Also, drivers and others who
testified at FMCSA listening sessions and before Congress said that
some motor carriers, shippers, receivers, tour guides, and brokers
insist that a driver deliver a load or passengers on a schedule that
would be impossible to meet without violating the HOS or other
regulations. Drivers may also be pressured to operate vehicles with
mechanical deficiencies, despite the restrictions imposed by the safety
regulations. Drivers who object that they must comply with the FMCSRs
are sometimes told to get the job done despite the restrictions imposed
by the safety regulations. The consequences of their refusal to do so
are either stated explicitly or implied in unmistakable terms: Loss of
a job, denial of subsequent loads, reduced payment, denied access to
the best trips, etc.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See 76 FR 81162.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although sec. 32911 of MAP-21 amended 49 U.S.C. 31136(a), it did
not amend the jurisdictional definitions in 49 U.S.C. 31132, which
specify the reach of FMCSA's authority to regulate motor carriers,
drivers, and CMVs. Thus, it appears that Congress did not intend to
apply all of the FMCSRs to shippers, receivers, and transportation
intermediaries that are not now subject to those requirements. (Motor
carriers, of course, have always been subject to the FMCSRs.) Instead,
sec. 32911 prohibited these entities from coercing drivers to violate
most of the FMCSRs. This necessarily confers upon FMCSA the
jurisdiction over shippers, receivers, and transportation
intermediaries necessary to enforce that prohibition.
Although MAP-21 did not address coercion to violate the commercial
regulations that the Agency inherited in the ICC Termination Act of
1995, FMCSA is adopting a rule in order to ensure that there is no
significant gap in the applicability of the coercion prohibition. As
discussed above in the Legal Basis section, the MCSA gives the Agency
broad authority to ensure that CMVs are maintained, equipped, loaded,
and operated safely, and that the responsibilities imposed on drivers
do not impair their ability to operate CMVs safely [49 U.S.C.
31136(a)(1)-(2)]. Some of the commercial regulations have effects
related to safety. Designation of a process agent under 49 CFR part 366
ensures that parties injured in a CMV crash can easily serve legal
documents on the carrier operating the CMV, wherever the location of
its corporate offices. Registration as a for-hire motor carrier under
49 CFR part 365, or as a broker under 49 CFR part 371, ensures that an
applicant has met the minimum standards for safe and responsible
operations. Coercion of drivers to violate requirements such as these
could have an effect on their ability to operate CMVs safely, e.g.,
requiring a driver to operate a vehicle in interstate commerce when the
owner had neither obtained operating authority registration from FMCSA
nor filed proof of insurance.
The minimum requirement to obtain FMCSA authority to operate as a
for-hire motor carrier, freight forwarder, or broker under 49 U.S.C.
13902, 13903, or 13904, respectively, is willingness and ability to
comply with ``this part and the applicable regulations of the Secretary
. . . .'' Among those ``applicable regulations'' are this rule's ban on
coercing drivers to violate the commercial regulations. For-hire motor
carriers are subject to an even more explicit requirement to observe
``any safety regulations imposed by the Secretary'' [49 U.S.C.
13902(a)(1)(B)(i)], including Sec. 390.6(a)(2). Moreover, independent
of MAP-21, FMCSA has statutory authority under 49 U.S.C. 13301(a),
formerly vested in the ICC, to prescribe regulations to carry out
chapter 139 and the rest of Part B of Subtitle IV of Title 49. The
prohibition on coercing drivers to violate the commercial regulations
is within the scope of this authority.
Because both of the coercion prohibitions described above are based
on 49 U.S.C. 31136(a), codified in subchapter III of chapter 311,
violations of those rules would be subject to the civil penalties in 49
U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(A), which provides that any person who is determined
by the Secretary, after notice and opportunity for a hearing, to have
committed an act that is a violation of the regulations issued by the
Secretary under subchapter III of chapter 311 (except sections 31138
and 31139 \2\) or section 31502 of this title shall be liable to the
United States for a civil penalty in an amount not to exceed $10,000
for each offense.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Sections 31138 and 31139 prescribe minimum financial
responsibility standards for the transportation of passengers and
property, respectively.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, pursuant to the Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996
[Pub. L. 104-134, title III, chapter 10, sec. 31001(s), 110 Stat. 1321-
373], the maximum inflation-adjusted civil penalty per offense is
$16,000 (49 CFR part 386, App. B, Paragraph (a)(3)).
V. Discussion of Comments
Overview
On May 13, 2014, the Agency published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) (79 FR 27265) to implement the MAP-21 prohibition of
coercion.
Between May 13 and September 4, 2014, 94 submissions were posted to
the docket. One of the submissions was a duplicate,\3\ and three were
non-responsive,\4\ leaving 90 submissions from the following:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Submission number 0080 is a duplicate of number 0089.
\4\ Submission numbers 0010, 0015, and 0016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One Federal agency: OSHA.
Six motor carriers: Kimberly Arnold, Louisiana Transport,
Inc., Mason/Dixon Lines, Inc., Schneider National, Inc., Wayne Yoder,
one anonymous company, and the Motor Carrier Coalition comprised of 12
additional motor carriers.
Ten industry associations: American Trucking Associations
(ATA), Association of Independent Property Brokers & Agents (AIPBA),
Institute of Makers of Explosives (IME), National Customs Brokers and
Forwarders Association of America, Inc.(NCBFAA), National Grain and
Feed Association (NGFA), National Industrial Transportation League (NIT
League), National Shippers Strategic Transportation Council, Inc.
(NASSTRAC), Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association, Inc.
(OOIDA), Snack Food Association, and Transportation Intermediaries
Association (TIA).
Two advocacy organizations: Advocates for Highway and Auto
Safety (Advocates) and Road Safe America.
One labor union: Transportation Trades Department, AFL-CIO
(TTD).
One transportation intermediary: Armada.
One commercial carrier consultant: Richard Young; and
67 individuals including 15 who self-identified as drivers
and 2 owner operators.
Comments Supporting the Rulemaking
Fifteen commenters, including two safety advocacy groups, two trade
associations, a driver, an owner-operator, a union, OSHA, and seven
individuals, expressed their general
[[Page 74698]]
support for the proposed rule. Road Safe America and Advocates support
the Agency's efforts to end the practice of coercion, but Advocates
recommended that FMCSA take additional steps, such as investigating all
reported incidents of coercion, and exercise its authority to suspend
the registration of those that engage in documented instances of
coercion. ATA and AIPBA support prohibiting coercion, but expressed
reservations about the potential impact the proposed rule would have on
commercial relations between motor carriers and shippers, receivers,
and intermediaries. OSHA, which is responsible for enforcing the
whistleblower protection provisions of the Surface Transportation
Assistance Act of 1981 (STAA) and 21 other statutes, supports the
proposal and offered suggestions to make it more effective. TTD, a
driver, an owner-operator, and seven individuals expressed strong
support for the NPRM. Many of these commenters stated that the rule
would finally make shippers, receivers and transportation
intermediaries accountable for their actions.
Comments in Opposition to the Rulemaking
Eighteen commenters, including nine individuals, seven trade
associations and two drivers expressed their general disapproval of the
NPRM. Many of these commenters stated that they agree with FMCSA that
CMV drivers should not be coerced into violating any laws or
regulations; however, they believe the requirements proposed in the
NPRM will lead to unintended consequences. Several commenters stated
there is no need for this regulation because existing regulations
already prohibit coercion. Three trade associations contend that the
NPRM misapplies the legal doctrine of respondeat superior \5\ in
attempting to hold shippers and receivers legally responsible for
drivers that they do not hire, direct or manage. NASSTRAC stated the
proposed rules are ``arbitrary and capricious, contrary to law,
impracticable and certain to do more harm than good.'' Another
commenter argued that the Agency has not accurately assessed the cost
of these requirements, and expressed concern that the complaint
reporting process is highly subjective. Two drivers wrote that new
regulations are not necessary; instead drivers need to stand up to
anyone trying to coerce them into violating the rules. Two individuals
commented that this NPRM does not impose any new requirements on
shippers or receivers that will prevent them from detaining a driver
for hours and then requiring the driver to leave the property even if
the driver is out of hours.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ `Respondeat superior' is a legal concept meaning that an
employer is responsible for the wrongful acts of its employees or
agents who are acting within the scope of their employment or
agency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FMCSA Response
These comments are discussed in detail below under the appropriate
subject heading.
Definition of Coercion
OSHA commented that ``coercion is broader than just threats related
to loss of work, future business, or other economic opportunities.
Coercion and coercive tactics may also include threats of violence,
demotion, reduction of pay, and withdrawal or reduction of benefits, or
any action that is capable of dissuading a reasonable employee from
engaging in whistleblowing activity.'' OSHA therefore recommended that
the proposed definition of coercion, which referred to ``a threat . . .
to withhold, or the actual withholding of, current or future business,
employment, or work opportunities from a driver . . .'' be amended to
refer to ``a threat . . . to take or permit any adverse employment
action against a driver . . .''
NCBFAA pointed out that if a shipper, receiver, or transportation
intermediary discovered an ``HOS issue--which would likely only be the
case because the driver happened to say something about it--any
decision to refuse to tender the shipment could be construed as
violating the proposed regulation. For then, it would be knowingly
`withholding . . . work opportunities from a driver' when it `knew' the
driver was unable to lawfully handle the load. In that case, because
the motor carrier elected to dispatch a driver that could not lawfully
handle the load, the cargo would not be able to move until such time as
the driver in question was again able to operate the equipment.'' ``The
NCBFAA believes that where a shipper or transportation intermediary
learns that a driver may not haul a load because he/she does not have
the available hours, it should be able to freely advise the trucker of
the situation so it can provide another driver who does have available
hours to complete the haul in a timely manner. Alternatively, the
shipper/transportation intermediary should be able to use another
carrier entirely, particularly one that is sufficiently responsible and
knowledgeable about the status of its drivers.''
TIA made the same point. ``Read literally, the definition would now
make it a violation for a shipper or transportation intermediary to
refuse a load to a driver if it `knew or should have known' that the
driver was about to exceed or already had exceeded the HOS regulations.
Yet, the shipper or transportation intermediary could not properly
request that the driver perform the transportation, as it would then be
both `coercing' the driver and aiding and abetting the HOS violation.
So, if a driver assigned by a motor carrier shows up to pick up a load
and advises the shipper or transportation intermediary that he or she
cannot lawfully handle the load due to HOS or other concerns, the
shipper or transportation intermediary would not be able to contact the
carrier and request that they replace the driver. Instead the load
would just sit. This is a catch 22 . . .''
NIT League offered a similar comment. ``If a shipper attempts to
confirm a delivery appointment with the driver, does that equate to
directing `a driver to complete a run in a certain time'? It may not in
the mind of the shipper but what if the driver has a different
interpretation? If the driver objects to meeting that appointment due
to HOS rules and the shipper gives the load to another carrier who can
timely make the delivery, does that loss of business equate to
coercion? What if the driver associates the selection of an alternative
carrier with its objection but the shipper simply needed to meet its
delivery requirements? The answers to these questions are far from
clear. . . . [T]he League suggests that FMCSA modify its proposal to
require the driver to inform the shipper of the potential safety
violation at the time he/she lodges the objection and to promptly
record the alleged coercion event. Specifically, the League suggests
that FMCSA require a driver who is concerned about violating a safety
rule to take the following steps before accepting the load: (1) Clearly
articulate the objection to the allegedly coercing party and such
objection must identify the specific FMCSA regulation that will be
violated; and (2) record in a contemporaneous writing his/her objection
and the facts and circumstances associated with the alleged coercion
incident.''
ATA also recommended ``that the rule require a driver alleging
coercion to make the objection at a time contemporaneous with the
incident in a writing that identifies the regulation(s) that would be
violated if the driver operated the CMV.''
[[Page 74699]]
FMCSA Response
FMCSA has revised and clarified the NPRM's definition of
``coercion.'' Readers may find it helpful to keep in mind the new
definition (see Sec. 390.5) as they review the Agency's response to
specific comments.
Although the language proposed by OSHA is similar to that used in
the NPRM, FMCSA agrees that OSHA's recommendation would clarify the
intended scope of the definition. The Agency has therefore included the
phrase ``take or permit any adverse employment action,'' which has the
added benefit of resolving other concerns about the definition.
The NCBFAA, TIA, and NIT League comments correctly identified an
unintended consequence of the proposed definition of ``coercion.''
Obviously, a shipper or transportation intermediary should not be
liable for withholding a load from a driver who has stated that he or
she could not make the trip without violating the FMCSRs. In that
situation, both the driver and the shipper or transportation
intermediary are acting appropriately. The Agency has therefore amended
the reference to the withholding of ``current or future business,
employment, or work opportunities'' by striking the reference to
``current or future'' business and adding the phrase ``take or permit
any adverse employment action.'' The revised definition thus allows the
shipper or transportation intermediary to take either of the actions
that NCBFAA proposed without violating the rule, i.e., to call the
motor carrier and request another driver or to give the load to a
different motor carrier. Neither action would attempt to force a driver
to violate the FMCSRs, nor would it involve a threat to take other
adverse employment action against the driver.
The removal of the word ``current'' resolves most of the TIA's and
NIT League's concerns. There is no coercion to violate the FMCSRs when
a shipper gives a load to another carrier after the original driver
states that he or she cannot meet the requested delivery schedule
without an HOS or other violation. On the contrary; that change of
carriers is an attempt to ensure that no such regulatory violation
occurs.
The Agency has also revised the definition of ``coercion'' to
require the driver to identify ``at least generally'' the rules that he
or she would have to violate in the course of the delivery. FMCSA is
not requiring drivers to ``identify the specific FMCSA regulation that
will be violated,'' as the NIT League and ATA requested. The FMCSRs are
complex and drivers cannot be expected to have full command of
regulatory citations. Nonetheless, the driver must be able to identify
the problem clearly enough to enable FMCSA personnel to determine that
it falls within a requirement or prohibition of the Agency's
regulations. It will be sufficient, for example, if the driver
indicates that he or she objects to a particular trip because of an HOS
problem (``they told me to keep driving even when I hit 11 hours''), a
maintenance issue (``the last inspection certificate was 3 years
old''), or bad tires (``there was no tread on the front tires; I could
see the ply in a couple of places'').
Similarly, the Agency will not require the driver to record his
objection in ``a contemporaneous writing.'' On the other hand, if the
shipper or transportation intermediary attempts to coerce the driver to
take the load after hearing the objection, it would be in the driver's
best interests to document that attempt as soon as practicable.
Additional Burdens Created by Rule
Many of the commenters believe shippers would have to adopt
extensive and burdensome procedures to comply with the proposed rule.
NASSTRAC wrote that ``[t]he aspect of the proposed rules that will cost
the most (far more than the zero dollars FMCSA projects), and which is
most contrary to established law, is the `duty to inquire.' . . . It
remains the case that every shipper would have to discuss HOS status
for every scheduled shipment with every driver.''
The TIA commented that ``[t]he NPRM would place the shipper and
transportation intermediary into the role of employee management having
to ask about hours of service availability.''
NGFA noted that ``[i]n current operations, a shipper or receiver .
. . does not check a driver's hours-of-service (HOS) log or inspect the
driver's commercial motor vehicle--and it could be argued that the
shipper or receiver does not have a duty or even a right to do so--if
the driver is employed by another company. . . . Even if drivers and
their employers are fully cooperative in this respect, the resulting
burden and added costs for shippers and receivers would be
tremendous.''
The NIT League objected to ``FMCSA's apparent intent to impose a
duty on the shipper or receiver to inquire as to a for-hire driver's
compliance with the HOS rules.''
Schneider National, on the other hand, wrote that ``[i]f we
understand FMCSA's proposal correctly, exposure for a claim of coercion
is triggered by an objection from a driver under circumstances which
the intermediary `knew or should have known' would require the driver
to violate the safety regulations. Thus, it would appear that absent a
driver's objection, there is no obligation on the part of those other
than the motor carrier to whom the driver is directly employed or
leased to independently assure compliance with the hours of service or
other regulations.'' IME also interpreted the language of the NPRM as
requiring the driver to object before a finding of coercion could be
made.
FMCSA Response
Schneider National and IME are correct. This final rule does not
require shippers, receivers, and transportation intermediaries (unlike
motor carriers) to monitor a driver's compliance with the HOS rules or
other regulations. As the preamble to the NPRM stated, a shipper,
receiver, or transportation intermediary ``may commit coercion if it
fails to heed a driver's objection that the request would require him/
her to break the rules'' (79 FR 27267, emphasis added). There would be
no requirement or even occasion to inquire into the driver's available
hours unless the driver had raised an objection to the delivery
schedule; and an inquiry would not be necessary if the shipper or
transportation intermediary agreed to change the delivery schedule to
match the driver's available hours or arranged with the motor carrier
to have a different driver take the load.
Nevertheless, because many shippers, receivers, and transportation
intermediaries believe that, in order to avoid potential liability,
they must inquire about HOS compliance, and perhaps document all of
their interactions with drivers, the Agency has amended the definition
of ``coercion'' to make clear that the driver has an affirmative
obligation to inform the motor carrier, shipper, receiver, or
transportation intermediary when he or she cannot make the requested
trip without violating one or more of the regulations listed in the
definition. Motor carriers, shippers, receivers, and transportation
intermediaries cannot commit coercion under the final rule unless and
until they have been put on notice by the driver that he or she cannot
meet the proposed delivery schedule without violating the HOS limits or
other regulatory requirements. The purpose of that notice is, of
course, to ensure that the driver is not coerced to commit such
violations.
Agents, Officers, or Representatives
The NPRM proposed to apply the prohibition on coercion not only to
[[Page 74700]]
principals, but also to ``their respective agents, officers or
representatives.'' Many commenters focused on this issue. A coalition
of 12 motor carriers \6\ (hereafter Coalition) described a hypothetical
situation where ABC Transportation, Inc. hires John Doe Trucking, an
independent owner-operator, which coerces one of its drivers to violate
the HOS rules without the knowledge or approval of ABC Transportation.
The Coalition asked ``[a]gainst which entity in this scenario and under
the proposed regulation would FMCSA take enforcement action? One would
expect John Doe Trucking. After all, it is the entity responsible for
the coercive behavior. But if John Doe Trucking is considered an
`agent, officer, or representative' of ABC Transportation, Inc., ABC
could, in fact, be on the hook. . . . In order to avoid the inequitable
situation described above, the FMCSA . . . should consider narrowly
defining the terms `agents,' `officers,' and `representatives' to
specifically exclude independent contractors with whom motor carriers
contract to haul freight and who are not specifically authorized to act
on their behalf.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ C.R. England, Inc.; CRST International, Inc.; Central
Refrigerated Service, Inc.; Cowan Systems, LLC; Dart Transit
Company; Greatwide Truckload Management; Liquid Transport Corp.;
National Carriers, Inc.; Oakley Trucking, Inc.; PGT Trucking, Inc.;
Roadrunner Transportation Systems, Inc.; and Schneider National,
Inc.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ATA agreed with the Coalition's comments and urged the Agency ``to
clarify that, for purposes of the definition of `coercion' and proposed
section 390.6, a motor carrier's agents, officers or representatives
only include anyone who is authorized to act on behalf of a motor
carrier. In the instance where an independent contracting entity
engaged in the act of coercion against one of its drivers, only that
entity should be liable under proposed section 390.6--not the motor
carrier to whom the equipment and driver are leased.''
Schneider National commented that it ``utilizes the services of
approximately 2,000 independent contractors including a number of fleet
owners. As such, Schneider shares the concerns raised in such comments
relative to the use of terms `agents,' `officers' and `representatives'
used in conjunction with the term `motor carrier' in Sec. 390.6(a)(2),
and adopts their comments as filed. . . . [S]imilar issues may arise in
the context of brokerage operations. Consider, for example, a motor
carrier contracted by a broker with respect to a particular shipment.
In the normal circumstance, the broker would arrange for the
transportation on a schedule which can be accomplished consistent with
the hours of service regulations, provided the involved motor carrier
has an available driver with appropriate `hours'. The broker would not
normally be privy to the motor carrier's driver/load assignment
process. Under this circumstance, is the motor carrier, by virtue of
the typical broker/carrier arrangement, an `agent' or `representative'
of the broker such that the broker would be liable under the proposed
rule for any motor carrier violation? The use of the terms `agent',
`officers' and `representatives' might suggest that liability in the
foregoing circumstances could be attributed to the broker. Such a
result would be inequitable.''
FMCSA Response
The issues raised by these comments were resolved by Congress in
the MCSA of 1984. The prohibition on coercion is codified in the
amended version of that statute at 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(5). For purposes
of the MCSA, `` `employee' means an operator of a commercial motor
vehicle (including an independent contractor when operating a
commercial motor vehicle), a mechanic, a freight handler, or an
individual not an employer, who--(A) directly affects commercial motor
vehicle safety in the course of employment; and (B) is not an employee
of the United States Government, a State, or a political subdivision of
a State acting in the course of the employment by the Government, a
State, or a political subdivision of a State'' [49 U.S.C. 31132(2)].
Independent owner operators employed by a motor carrier are
statutorily defined as employees of that carrier for purpose of the
FMCSRs, including this final rule. In the hypothetical situation
described by the Coalition, the independent owner operator who owns
John Doe Trucking is an employee of ABC Transportation. Any attempt by
John Doe Trucking to coerce one of its drivers is therefore an attempt
by ABC Transportation, through one of its employees, to coerce one of
its drivers.
FMCSA published regulatory guidance on this issue on April 4, 1997
[62 FR 16370, 16407]:
Question 17: May a motor carrier that employs owner-operators
who have their own operating authority issued by the ICC or the
Surface Transportation Board [authority that is now issued by FMCSA]
transfer the responsibility for compliance with the FMCSRs to the
owner-operators?
Guidance: No. The term ``employee,'' as defined in Sec. 390.5,
specifically includes an independent contractor employed by a motor
carrier. The existence of operating authority has no bearing upon
the issue. The motor carrier is, therefore, responsible for
compliance with the FMCSRs by its driver employees, including those
who are owner-operators.
Brokers, however, are not employees of a motor carrier, nor are
motor carriers agents or representatives of brokers. In a normal arms-
length transaction, the broker deals with a motor carrier, not an
individual driver. The motor carrier has an obligation to comply with
the FMCSRs and thus to assign a driver who has sufficient hours to
complete the trip on the schedule outlined by the broker and to provide
equipment that meets applicable standards. Any coercion that occurred
would typically be committed by the motor carrier that employed the
driver. However, as TIA pointed out, a State court has held that where
a broker contracted with a motor carrier but in fact exercised direct
control over the driver, that broker was liable for a tort committed by
the driver [Sperl v. C. H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc., 946 NE.2d 463
(2011)]. A broker could be found liable for coercion if it interacted
directly with a driver, instead of with the carrier, and attempted to
force the driver to make a delivery on a schedule that would require a
violation of the FMCSRs. The Agency has no information about how often
direct interactions between transportation intermediaries and drivers
may occur.
Respondeat Superior
Many commenters objected to the NPRM's assertion that the ``knew or
should have known'' standard in the definition of coercion ``is
essentially a restatement of the common law principle of `respondeat
superior,' which holds the `master' (employer) liable for the acts of
his `servant' (employee).'' Schneider National offered a brief critique
that captures the general reaction: ``FMCSA should retract its
discussion on respondeat superior and make clear that it is basing the
rulemaking on MAP-21. At the very least, it need[s to] make clear that
its regulations are limited to dealing with the issue of possible
driver coercion and such regulations or any enforcement actions
thereunder are not a re-characterization of the employment relationship
generally. Absent this, those against whom an enforcement action is
brought may have greatly enhanced incentive to fully litigate every
citation, unduly burdening FMCSA's enforcement effectiveness.''
[[Page 74701]]
FMCSA Response
FMCSA agrees with Schneider National's comment. This final rule is
based on the authority of 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(5). The discussion of
``respondeat superior'' in the NPRM was not intended to make shippers,
receivers, and transportation intermediaries vicariously liable,
because Congress made them directly liable through section 32911 of
MAP-21. FMCSA emphasizes that any evidence gathered in response to a
written complaint by a driver would point to specific individuals and
that persons at higher levels in the organization would not necessarily
be implicated.
In any case, the revised definition of coercion adopted in this
final rule eliminates the ``knew or should have known'' standard by
emphasizing more strongly the driver's duty to object as a predicate
for any subsequent allegation of coercion.
Coercion That Fails
NASSTRAC objected to FMCSA's intent to ``penalize unsuccessful
coercion, i.e., customer requests that a driver ignores.'' NASSTRAC
argued that ``[p]enalizing coercion resulting in violations better
addresses the conduct Congress wanted to discourage. FMCSA has cited no
analogous regulatory program that would penalize millions of Americans'
words or requests even if they produce no actions. The Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act and similar anti-bribery laws penalize inducements to
violate laws, but they generally require some direct or indirect
payment in addition to an oral or written request. In addition,
penalizing shippers, receivers and intermediaries for words that
produce no actions, let alone violations, implicates First Amendment
considerations, as well as concerns about overkill.''
FMCSA Response
Drivers of CMVs are required to comply with all applicable
regulatory standards. Those who resist coercion do not lose the benefit
of this rule. The act of coercion is complete when the attempt is made;
it does not require success. If Congress had wished to impose limits on
the common understanding of coercion, it would have said so in 49
U.S.C. 31136(a)(5). Coercion does, however, require some kind of
threat; merely asking a driver to make a trip that would violate a
regulation would not constitute coercion. If the driver refused to make
such a trip, a further discussion of his or her response and related
issues might or might not cross the line into coercion. The answer
would depend on the substance of the conversation and the existence of
a threat, explicit or implied, to make the driver pay an economic price
for refusing to violate an FMCSA regulation.
Burden of Proof
Two trade associations, ATA and NITL, Advocates, Mr. Wayne Yoder,
who is a carrier, and four anonymous individuals commented on who
should bear the burden to prove coercion. Among these commenters, ATA
and two individuals argued that the driver should bear the burden of
proof in coercion cases. The individuals said it must be the driver's
responsibility because only the driver controls the information on his
logs.
On the other hand, Advocates stated that ``once a complaint is
determined by FMCSA to meet the substantive criteria outlined in
Section 386.12(e) of the NPRM a prima facie showing of coercion has
been made under the proposed regulations. As such, the burden of proof
should shift to the alleged offender to demonstrate that there was a
valid reason for the actions in dispute as is the current legal
framework applied in cases alleging employment discrimination in
violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.''
A carrier and three individuals (Mr. Nick Scarabello and two
anonymous people) noted the driver is not well positioned to provide
evidence of coercion. The carrier responding to the NPRM stated that a
motor carrier is better able to provide evidence by way of rate
agreements, contracts, orders, or bills of lading from the customer,
but the driver has no way of printing or saving messages sent via
company-owned and installed communication devices. An anonymous
individual suggested that trucking companies should be required to
record all phone conversations with drivers as a way to prevent or
provide evidence of coercion. A commenter stated after a driver files a
report of an incident, FMCSA should request written transcripts of the
conversation and supporting documents. An anonymous commenter wrote
that ``if you don't put the burden of proof on the carrier or
dispatcher[,] then it's the driver[']s word against the company and the
driver still ends up being punished.''
OOIDA stated that FMCSA places the enforcement burden on drivers to
prove a violation of the law that results in the issuance of penalties
and fines for the government. OOIDA argued FMCSA should take the lead
in coercion enforcement activities instead of placing the
responsibility to initiate and prove incidents of coercion upon those
least able to deal with the problem directly, the target of the
coercion.
ATA and the NIT League recommended that the Agency adopt a standard
of ``clear and convincing evidence,'' rather than ``preponderance of
the evidence.'' The NIT League argued that this standard is appropriate
because of the significant consequences associated with a violation of
the coercion prohibition, which include potential monetary penalties
and suspension or revocation of the registration of an offender.
Conversely, OOIDA stated FMCSA should not weaken the rule by adopting
an evidentiary standard that exceeds the standard for determining other
safety violations.
FMCSA Response
When imposing a civil penalty for coercion, the government has the
burden of proof. The driver, however, is typically the only person in a
position to provide the critical evidence needed to sustain the action
against a carrier, shipper, receiver, or transportation intermediary.
The NPRM simply acknowledged this reality. While it may sometimes be
difficult for the driver to provide relevant evidence, as OOIDA and
others argued, there is no realistic alternative. The Agency will not
require motor carriers to record all phone conversations and other
communications with drivers, a far-reaching requirement which was not
proposed for public comment in the NPRM. FMCSA will investigate timely
complaints that meet the standards outlined in Sec. 386.12 and may be
able to locate or generate additional information, but the driver must
supply the essential facts.
There is no good reason to adopt a ``clear and convincing''
evidentiary standard for coercion cases when the ``preponderance''
standard is used for all other motor carrier enforcement actions. The
potential penalties applicable to a violation of 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(5)
and this rule's implementing regulations are the same as those
applicable to a violation of 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(1)-(4) and the
implementing FMCSRs.
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits certain
employers from discriminating against employees on the basis of race,
color, religion, sex, or national origin. There is nothing in MAP-21 to
indicate that Congress intended to make CMV drivers who are subject to
coercion a protected class in the same sense as individuals subject to
[[Page 74702]]
racial, religious, sexual, or other discrimination. The shifting of the
burden of proof under Title VII is therefore not indicative of a
similar legislative intent to shift the burden to carriers, shippers,
receivers or transportation intermediaries after a driver files a non-
frivolous coercion complaint. The burden of proof in coercion cases
remains with FMCSA.
Application to Governmental Entities
NASSTRAC commented that ``FMCSA has asserted that state and local
governments would be unaffected, as would Indian Tribal Governments.
However, Indian Tribal Governments, and state and local governments
(and federal government entities) are shippers and receivers of freight
transported by CMVs. The Department of Defense ships and receives large
volumes every year. All of these shippers would apparently have a duty
to inquire as to HOS and other compliance by every driver, even though
many probably have no idea that HOS rules even exist.''
TIA provided a similar comment: ``TIA urges the Agency . . . to
clearly define the scope of this rule to include the Department of
Defense (DOD), the General Services Administration (GSA), Port Terminal
Operators, and all other applicable entities that contract with motor
carriers to haul their specific goods along the transportation supply-
chain.''
FMCSA Response
The MAP-21 prohibition on coercion amended 49 U.S.C. 31136(a), a
provision originally enacted by the MCSA. Under the MCSA, the term
``employer'' ``(A) means a person engaged in a business affecting
interstate commerce that owns or leases a commercial motor vehicle in
connection with that business, or assigns an employee to operate it;
but (B) does not include the [Federal] Government, a State, or a
political subdivision of a State.'' [49 U.S.C. 31132(3) (emphasis
added)]. MAP-21 subjected motor carriers, shippers, receivers, and
transportation intermediaries to the prohibition on coercion [Sec.
31136(a)(5)], but it did not limit the governmental exemption in Sec.
31132(3). FMCSA has no authority to apply this final rule to Federal,
State or local governmental entities. Whether a terminal operator
qualifies as a political subdivision of a State will require a case-by-
case evaluation.
Deadline To File Coercion Complaints
OSHA recommended that the proposed 60-day filing deadline be
extended to 180 days. ``The 60-day filing period for the anti-coercion
rule would greatly limit the ability of DOT to act on valid complaints
of coercive activity that drivers have timely filed under the STAA
[i.e., 49 U.S.C. 31105, enacted by the Surface Transportation
Assistance Act of 1982 (STAA)]. Consequently, the short period
decreases the effectiveness of the statute and weakens its overall
deterrence value. The Department of Labor/OSHA has found that by
providing workers with a filing period of 180 days [as authorized by 49
U.S.C. 31105], it is able to pursue a greater number of meritorious
complaints and more fully fulfill its mandate under STAA.'' An
individual, Lisa Pate, also noted the inconsistency between FMCSA's
proposed 60-day deadline and OSHA's 180-day deadline.
OSHA recommended ``tolling of the filing deadline, in case there
are delays in transferring the allegation to the appropriate Division
Administration.'' Similarly, the Advocates wrote that ``[v]ictims of
coercion should not be time-barred from seeking an appropriate remedy
under the law for the failure of FMCSA to promptly request further
information or transfer the complaint to the appropriate Division
Administrator.''
The NIT League, on the other hand, wrote that ``because the
allegations of coercion will often involve verbal communications at
freight pick-up locations, . . . it will be critical for complaints to
be filed promptly and for the accused party to be provided with prompt
notice of the complaint. This would help ensure that any internal
investigation of the driver's allegations either by the driver's
employer or the alleged coercer can be conducted expeditiously, any
relevant evidence can be preserved, and witnesses can be interviewed
before memories fade. Thus, the NIT League suggests that the time
period for drivers to file complaints be reduced to 30 days and that
any party accused of coercion be served with the complaint upon its
filing with FMCSA.''
FMCSA Response
OSHA regulations (29 CFR 1978.100 et seq.) and the underlying
statute (49 U.S.C. 31105) protect employees who are discharged,
disciplined, or discriminated against under certain circumstances.
Those actions are likely to generate records that can be reviewed
months later. Coercion, on the other hand, may occur without leaving
clear documentary evidence. FMCSA continues to believe that a deadline
shorter than 180 days is appropriate to ensure that a complaint is
filed while the recollections of both the driver and the alleged
coercer are fresh. However, the Agency considers the 30-day deadline
proposed by the NIT League to be unfair to drivers, some of whom are on
the road for weeks at a time and may not be in a position to file a
complaint that quickly. In order to ensure that drivers have sufficient
time to prepare and submit a coercion complaint, the final rule extends
the 60-day period proposed in the NPRM to 90 days.
Criteria To Evaluate Coercion Claims
OSHA commented that ``the proposed requirement that the complaint
be `non-frivolous' is overly vague and should be eliminated. The
current proposed requirement of `non-frivolity' would allow for
enormous amounts of discretion across FMCSA Divisions. Gross discretion
will undoubtedly lead to regional disparities in the enforcement of the
provision and severely limit the overall effectiveness of the
provision.''
The NIT League suggested that the Agency clarify the criteria that
will be used in evaluating reported incidents of coercion. IME
expressed concern over the burden imposed on carriers, shippers,
receivers, and transportation intermediaries to defend against driver
complaints. IME argued that the proposed rule is, ``by its very nature,
. . . fraught with subjectivity. In order to avoid or defend against
complaints of coercion, carriers, shippers and receivers will be
compelled to memorialize every significant interaction they have with
drivers.''
FMCSA Response
The MCSA includes the following: ``(a) Investigating complaints.--
The Secretary of Transportation shall conduct a timely investigation of
a nonfrivolous written complaint alleging that a substantial violation
of a regulation prescribed under this subchapter is occurring or has
occurred within the prior 60 days'' [49 U.S.C. 31143(a)]. The
``nonfrivolous'' standard has been used in 49 CFR 386.12(b) for many
years without the adverse consequences OSHA predicted, and the Agency
believes its use in 49 CFR 386.12(e)(2) will be comparably
straightforward and effective.
FMCSA does not agree with commenters' assessment of the burden
involved in defending against driver complaints. The ``subjectivity''
that IME feared has been virtually eliminated by the revised definition
adopted in this final rule, which requires the driver to state
explicitly that he or she cannot deliver the load without violating the
[[Page 74703]]
applicable regulations, and why that is the case. There can be no
coercion unless the shipper, receiver, or transportation intermediary
responds with an equally explicit threat to force the driver to make
the delivery despite the regulatory violation it would entail. While
groundless allegations of coercion are possible, such accusations are
also possible under OSHA's whistleblower rules, yet they appear to be a
relatively minor problem and are readily dismissed for want of
evidence.
Penalties
Advocates argued that the Agency should suspend the operating
authority of motor carriers found to have committed coercion, rather
than just issue ``meaningless fines.'' Coercion involving private
carriers should be reported to the relevant States ``so that the state
licensing authority may take the appropriate action as well as have a
complete record of the entities they are responsible for monitoring.''
Advocates noted that an $11,000 fine (since increased to $16,000)
``pales in comparison to the $250,000 punitive fine that can be levied
against a company by the Department of Labor under the Surface
Transportation Assistance Act (STAA) after a finding that a driver was
dismissed for refusing to compromise a health or safety standard.''
An individual commenter, Jim Duvall, wrote that ``Any fine or
monetary penalty should directly benefit the driver(s) harmed in the
action.''
Three commenters stated that the final rule should impose penalties
against drivers who make false claims of coercion. One commenter said
there should be a penalty for drivers who make false accusations
because they either refuse to take responsibility for their own failure
to properly calculate their hours or knowingly violate the HOS rules
because they do not want to ``miss the load.'' Two other individuals
stated that there should be penalties for drivers who are disgruntled
and file baseless coercion complaints to get back at their employer.
AIPBA noted that the imposition of significant penalties against
drivers who are found to have falsely accused a broker will deter
``such improper and fraudulent conduct by unscrupulous drivers.''
FMCSA Response
FMCSA will take aggressive action when a violation of the
prohibition against coercion can be substantiated. This action will
include civil penalties consistent with the regulations, and may
include initiation of a proceeding to revoke the operating authority of
a for-hire motor carrier. Under 49 U.S.C. 13905, a carrier that engages
in willful non-compliance with an Agency regulation or order may have
its operating authority revoked. FMCSA's policy on revocation was set
forth in a notice published on August 2, 2012 (77 FR 46147). The Agency
agrees that coercion is the type of violation that may fall into this
category.
Some commenters appear to regard a coercion allegation that cannot
be substantiated as a false accusation. That is not necessarily true.
Despite its best efforts, FMCSA may not be able adequately to document
some allegations that are in fact correct. In any case, neither section
32911 of MAP-21 nor the Agency's general civil penalty statute
authorizes penalties against drivers who make false accusations of
coercion.
As for Mr. Duvall's recommendation, ``All penalties and fines
collected under this section shall be deposited into the Highway Trust
Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account)'' in the U.S. Treasury [49
U.S.C. 521(b)(10)]. The Agency cannot pay drivers the civil penalties
it collects for incidents of coercion. And unlike OSHA, FMCSA has no
authority to require the violator to compensate the driver for injuries
he or she has suffered.
Coercion as an Acute Violation
ATA argued that a violation of proposed Sec. 390.6, which
prohibits coercion, should not necessarily be classified as an acute
violation in Appendix B, section VII of Part 385, as proposed in the
NPRM. Instead, coercion should be acute, critical, or neither,
depending on the classification of the regulation the driver was
coerced to violate.
FMCSA Response
FMCSA agrees that a carrier's safety fitness should be determined
on the basis of the regulations it violates or coerces a driver to
violate. In other words, coercion itself should not be treated as acute
(or critical). The final rule therefore eliminates the NPRM's proposed
amendments to Appendix B of 49 CFR part 385. This is consistent with
the Agency's practice of limiting acute and critical classifications to
regulations which, if violated, are likely to increase the risk of
crashes. Because FMCSA currently has no data showing a link between
coercion and crashes, it seems appropriate not to classify coercion as
acute. If new data or further analysis shows such a link, the Agency
may revisit this decision. As indicated above, however, FMCSA will
impose significant penalties when reports of coercion can be proved.
Coercion of Carriers
NASSTRAC described a hypothetical situation where Shipper A hires
Carrier B to deliver a load on a reasonable schedule. However, when
Carrier B's driver arrives to pick up the load, he tells Shipper A that
he has to go off duty in a few hours under the HOS regulations, making
it impossible to meet Shipper A's delivery schedule. ``Shipper A says
in frustration, `That's the last time I use Carrier B.' Is Shipper A
subject to a penalty of up to $11,000 just for saying those words, even
if no safety violation occurs? How many penalties could Shipper A face
if it makes no more use of Carrier B?''
ATA urged ``FMCSA to consider amending the proposed definition in
section 390.5 to cover not only the driver as the target of withholding
or coercion, respectively, but also his/her employer.''
FMCSA Response
NASSTRAC has described a normal and completely legal business
response to inadequate service. Shipper A has not coerced the driver to
violate the HOS rules, nor has it coerced Carrier B to put pressure on
the driver to violate the rules. It has simply decided not to use a
carrier that does not dispatch drivers who can meet the agreed upon
delivery schedule.
Section 32911 of MAP-21 applies only to the coercion of drivers,
not to the coercion of motor carriers. Under 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(5), the
Agency's regulations must ensure that ``(5) an operator of a commercial
motor vehicle is not coerced by a motor carrier, shipper, receiver, or
transportation intermediary . . .'' (emphasis added). Because an
``operator'' is distinct from a ``motor carrier,'' the term
``operator'' necessarily refers only to drivers. While shippers may
sometimes coerce motor carriers to pressure their drivers to violate
the FMCSRs, the coercion of motor carriers is not covered by MAP-21 or
this rule.
Miscellaneous Comments
Driver Confidentiality. OOIDA argued that FMCSA must have
whistleblower protections in place. ``This includes a guarantee of a
certain amount of confidentiality in driver communications with the
agency, and procedures at the agency to take action against parties who
retaliate against drivers who submit good faith allegation[s] of
coercion to the agency.''
[[Page 74704]]
FMCSA Response
FMCSA is required by 49 U.S.C. 31143(b) to keep the identity of a
complainant confidential unless ``disclosure is necessary to prosecute
a violation.'' Because a party accused of coercion cannot defend itself
without knowing the name of the accuser, and when and where the alleged
incident occurred, the driver's identity cannot be confidential.
Retaliation for reporting incidents that, for whatever reason cannot be
substantiated, is not covered by this rule. OSHA, however, may be able
to provide relief.
Communications with Drivers. ``OOIDA suggests that FMCSA require
all parties providing drivers with instructions, rules, or other
conditions on the transportation to maintain all such communications as
they do supporting documents under the HOS rules. OOIDA is aware that
many motor carriers, brokers and third parties already retain such
communication, and so this requirement should not be a significant
burden. Such records should be regularly reviewed during safety audits
and compliance reviews. The potential safety benefits of motor carriers
knowing that these records will be available to enforcement would
outweigh any added burden.''
FMCSA Response
The Agency could not act on such a far-reaching and controversial
proposal without first publishing it for notice and comment. The NPRM
proposed no such requirement, and it is not included in this final
rule.
Notifying Carriers and Consumer Reporting Agencies. OOIDA commented
that, ``One form of coercion and retaliation against drivers is the
reporting of negative information about a driver in an employment
history submitted to a consumer reporting agency. Other motor carriers
purchase that employment history from the consumer reporting agency to
fulfill their FMCSR hiring requirements, and they often make negative
hiring decisions based on those reports. On their face, some of the
information reported appears performance related, such as `late pick-
up/delivery.' But there is nothing to protect drivers from being tagged
with a negative mark on their employment history if the late pickup or
delivery resulted from conditions or circumstances that caused the
driver to run out of legal hours to make the delivery on time.
Resistance to coercion (i.e., the driver objections proposed by the
Notice) may be reported as `refused dispatch' or `insubordination.'
These employment records can effectively disqualify a driver from being
considered for employment by motor carriers or make it much harder for
the driver to find employment. The result is that safety-conscious
drivers who do the right thing and resist coercion get bad employment
reports and are driven out of the industry. Other drivers who
capitulate to demands to violate the rules and save their jobs can keep
fairly clean employment records and stay in the industry. . . . FMCSA
should impose penalties upon motor carriers who submit such information
to consumer reporting agencies and who refuse to remove such
information after it is submitted.''
FMCSA Response
Negative reports about a driver by a motor carrier could constitute
``adverse employment actions'' prohibited by this final rule. However,
there would be significant evidentiary obstacles to making a coercion
case in these situations. A late pickup or delivery may not have been
caused by unrealistic demands the driver was coerced to meet. Bad
planning on the part of the driver or carrier, unexpected traffic
congestion, or other factors could also explain some delays. Tracing
reports of ``insubordination'' back to the driver's refusal to be
coerced would inevitably involve a detailed examination of one or more
incidents and conflicting accounts of the reason for the alleged
insubordination. While FMCSA will review all reported incidents, the
Agency cannot take action against a carrier for coercion unless there
is evidence that an unfavorable report on a driver was motivated by a
desire to punish the driver for refusal to be coerced.
The Rule Should Govern the Demands of Receivers. OOIDA argued that
``[t]he most powerful tool that receivers have over drivers is the
withholding of a signature or receipt from the driver acknowledging
receipt of the freight--a document the driver needs as a condition for
being compensated by their carrier or third-party and that the driver
must obtain before driving away to get rest or new business.
Withholding such receipt is commonly used by receivers to coerce
drivers to [1] accept the receiver's schedule to unload a vehicle (no
matter when the driver arrived at the docks, when the driver's next
scheduled pickup or delivery may be, or what the driver's Hours of
Service status may be); . . . [3] require the driver to break down
pallets and sort and stack freight.'' OOIDA also described situations
where drivers are held at a receiver's dock past the 14th hour after
coming on duty, and then forced to drive away from the receiver's
facility in violation of Sec. 395.3(a)(2).
FMCSA Response
While the situation OOIDA described involving a signature or
receipt was not discussed in the NPRM, withholding a delivery receipt
might be used to coerce a driver to violate the FMCSRs. A receiver that
forces a driver to leave its premises is not threatening the driver
with an adverse employment action; it is asserting its right as a
property owner to control access to the property.
Comments on Issues Outside the Scope of This Rulemaking
Fourteen commenters raised issues beyond the scope of this
rulemaking, involving lack of adequate parking; detention time and
detention pay; and various HOS provisions. Because none of these issues
was related to coercion of drivers to violate FMCSA regulations, the
Agency will not comment on them in this document.
VI. Section-by-Section Description
A. Part 386
Section 386.1, ``Scope of the rules in this part,'' is amended by
adding a new paragraph (c) referring to the filing and handling of
coercion complaints under new Sec. 386.12(e).
The NPRM's Sec. 386.12(e) is called ``Complaint of coercion.'' The
procedures to file and handle coercion complaints outlined in the NPRM
have been revised. The complaint must be filed within 90 days after the
event with the Agency's on-line National Consumer Complaint Database
(https://nccdb.fmcsa.dot.gov), or with the Division Administrator where
the driver is employed. FMCSA may reassign the complaint to the
Division Administrator best situated to investigate it. In addition,
the final rule removes a sentence included in the NPRM stating that the
Division Administrator may issue a Notice of Claim or Notice of
Violation when appropriate. Because that statement could be read as a
limitation on the Agency's enforcement options, it has been deleted.
B. Part 390
Section 390.3(a) is amended to include a reference to the coercion
provisions in Sec. 386.12(e) and Sec. 390.6, and describe the
applicability of those provisions.
Section 390.5 is amended to add definitions of ``Coerce or
coercion,'' ``Receiver or consignee,'' ``Shipper,'' and
``Transportation intermediary.'' The definitions of ``Receiver or
consignee,'' ``Shipper,'' and ``Transportation intermediary'' make
these entities
[[Page 74705]]
subject to the prohibition on coercion in Sec. 390.6 only when
shipping, receiving or arranging transportation of property (and in the
case of ``transportation intermediaries,'' passengers) in interstate
commerce. Although the term ``transportation intermediary'' is commonly
associated with brokers and freight forwarders, it also includes travel
agents and similar entities that arrange group tours or trips and
contract with motorcoach operators for transportation services. Such
intermediaries and their agents are subject to the prohibition on
coercion. Because the HMRs apply to transportation in intrastate
commerce, the definitions make clear that the prohibition on coercion
applies to parties that ship, receive, or arrange transportation of
hazardous materials in interstate or intrastate commerce. The NPRM's
definition of ``coerce or coercion'' has been amended (1) by removing
the reference to ``current or future'' business; (2) adding a
prohibition on ``any adverse employment action against a driver,'' and
(3) deleting references to violations of Sec. Sec. 385.105(b),
385.111(a), (c)(1), or (g), which were erroneously included.
Section 390.6(a)(1) is added to prohibit motor carriers, shippers,
receivers, or transportation intermediaries, or the agents, officers,
or representatives of such entities, from coercing drivers to operate
CMVs in violation of 49 CFR parts 171-173, 177-180, 380-383, or 390-
399, or Sec. Sec. 385.415 or 385.421. These parts correspond to the
statutory language in 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(5). Parts 171-173 and 177-180
are the HMRs applicable to highway transportation promulgated under 49
U.S.C. chapter 51. Parts 382-383 are the commercial driver's license
(CDL) and drug and alcohol testing regulations promulgated under 49
U.S.C. chapter 313. Parts 390-399 are those portions of the FMCSRs
promulgated under the authority (partial or complete) of 49 U.S.C.
31136(a). The other parts or sections listed are based on one or more
of the statutes referenced in 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(5).
Section 390.6(a)(2) is added to prohibit operators of CMVs or their
agents, officers, or representatives, from coercing drivers to violate
49 CFR parts 356, 360, or 365-379. This subsection is based on the
authority of 49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(1)-(4) and 49 U.S.C. 13301(a).
Section 390.6(b) describes the procedures for a driver to file a
complaint of coercion with FMCSA.
VII. Regulatory Analyses
A. Regulatory Planning and Review and DOT Regulatory Policies (E.O.
12866) and Procedures as Supplemented by E.O. 13563)
FMCSA has determined that this rule is a significant regulatory
action under E. O. 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), as
supplemented by E. O. 13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011), and
significant within the meaning of the DOT regulatory policies and
procedures (44 FR 11034, February 26, 1979). The estimated economic
costs of the rule will not exceed the $100 million annual threshold (as
explained below).
Extent of Economic Impact
The 1982 STAA includes whistleblower protections for motor carrier
employees (49 U.S.C. 31105). OSHA, which administers the complaint
process created by section 31105, received 1,158 complaints from CMV
drivers between FY 2009 and FY 2012.\7\ OSHA found that 253 of them (22
percent) had merit.\8\ Between FY 2009 and FY 2012, the OIG hotline
received 91 complaints alleging that motor carriers had coerced or
retaliated against drivers. FMCSA determined that 20 of these
complaints had merit.\9\ The average number of verified complaints for
that 4-year period was therefore 68.25 per year [(253 + 20)/4 = 68.25].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Safety & Health
Administration (OSHA), Whistleblower Protection Program:
Investigative Data Fact Sheets. Available at https://www.whistleblowers.gov/wb_data_FY05-12.pdf.
\8\ Ibid., Footnote 3.
\9\ U.S. Department of Transportation, Office of the Inspector
General (OIG). This averaged 23 complaints per year, (with 44 in
2010), which the OIG referred to FMCSA. FMCSA substantiated 20
complaints (22 percent) of violations of acute and critical
regulations due to driver allegations of unlawful discrimination or
discipline (See 29 CFR 1978.100 et seq.). Available at https://www.oig.dot.gov/Hotline.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some unknown portion of the 253 complaints filed with OSHA during
that period almost certainly dealt with coercion or similar actions.
Even if all of them were coercion-related, this number--combined with
the 20 substantiated complaints filed with the OIG--remains small
compared to the total population of CMV drivers. Section 31105,
however, applies only to employers (basically motor carriers) while
this rule will also cover shippers, receivers, and transportation
intermediaries. The Agency is unable to estimate the number of coercion
allegations it may receive, whether triggered by actions of motor
carriers or other entities made subject to this rule by MAP-21.
In view of the small number of coercion-related complaints filed
with OSHA and DOT's OIG, the aggregate economic value to motor carriers
of these coercion-related incidents is likely to be low. Therefore, the
cost to carriers of eliminating those incidents--assuming the rule has
that effect--and incurring the higher costs of compliance, would also
be low; however, the cost of compliance with existing regulations has
already been captured in the analysis supporting the implementation of
those regulations, so we do not consider them here. We believe that the
application of this rule to shippers, receivers, brokers, freight
forwarders, and other transportation intermediaries will not
significantly increase the number of coercion complaints, since drivers
generally have more frequent and direct contacts with their employers
than with these other parties. In addition, even though the rule
applies to a larger population, FMCSA also notes that the rule should
have a deterrent effect on entities considering coercion.
The roughly 68 annual complaints noted above is the only available
estimate of coercion in the trucking industry now. This rule would be
expected to reduce the amount of coercion that takes place, but there
is no available measure of the effectiveness of the rule. The
relatively low number of complaints suggests that the overall economic
impact will be less than the $100 million threshold of economic
significance under E.O. 12866.
Benefits
If coercion creates situations where CMVs are operated in an unsafe
manner, then there are consequences for safety and driver health risks.
By forcing drivers to operate mechanically unsafe CMVs or drive beyond
their allowed hours, coercion increases the risk of crashes. Reduction
of these behaviors because of this rule would generate a safety
benefit. Additionally, the operation of CMVs beyond HOS limits has been
shown to have negative consequences for driver health. A reduction of
this practice would create an improvement in driver health. The Agency
lacks data to quantify the safety or health benefits attributable to
the rule.
Costs
This rule, as an enforcement measure, would impose compliance costs
on carriers and on other business entities utilizing the motor carrier
industry. If drivers now operate CMVs in violation of HOS rules, or if
coercion had caused drivers to operate their CMV even
[[Page 74706]]
though there were mechanical defects, carriers would potentially have
to reorganize their schedules or hire new drivers to operate in
compliance. Maintenance costs might also accelerate as a result of this
rule, as the industry improves compliance with the existing safety
standards resulting from increased risk of enforcement action.
Additionally, the entities that practice coercion would lose the
economic benefit of that coercion. This economic benefit could be time-
related (if drivers are coerced into driving when they should stop and
rest, stop and wait for CMV maintenance, or drive a vehicle they are
not qualified to operate rather than wait for a qualified driver).
Drivers alleging coercion will have to provide a written statement
describing the incident along with evidence to support their charges.
This total paperwork burden is difficult to estimate but is not likely
to be very large. Similarly the Agency believes that the investigation
of those reports will not have a large cost.
Summary
The Agency does not believe that the benefits and costs of this
rule would create a large economic impact. The safety benefits and
compliance costs are likely to be very small based on the small number
of expected cases each year. Therefore, the Agency believes that the
rule will not be economically significant.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.)
requires Federal agencies to consider the effects of their regulatory
actions on small business and other small entities and to minimize any
significant economic impact. The term ``small entities'' comprises
small businesses and not-for-profit organizations that are
independently owned and operated and are not dominant in their fields,
as well as governmental jurisdictions with populations of less than
50,000.\10\ Accordingly, DOT policy requires an analysis of the impact
of all regulations on small entities and mandates that agencies strive
to lessen any adverse effects on these businesses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) see
National Archives at https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/laws/regulatory-flexibility/601.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, as amended by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-121,
110 Stat. 857), the rule is not expected to have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. As indicated above,
OSHA found merit in only 253 complaints filed by CMV drivers over a 4-
year period, or about 63 per year. Even if all of the complaints were
classified as coercion-related, that number would be very small when
compared to the size of the driver population and motor carrier
industry.
The Small Business Administration (SBA) classifies businesses
according to the average annual receipts. The SBA defines a ``small
entity'' in the motor carrier industry [i.e., general freight truck
transportation, subsector 484 of the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS)] as having revenues of less than $27.5
million per firm. Likewise, transportation intermediaries (i.e.,
subsector 488 of NAICS) which include brokers and freight forwarders,
are classified as small if their annual revenue is under $15
million.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ U.S. Small Business Administration Table of Small Business
Size Standards matched to North American Industry Classification
System Codes (NAICS), See NAIC subsector 484 (Truck Transportation)
and 488 Support Activities for Transportation).effective July, 2012.
The Small Business Size Standards used in the Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Act analysis (IRFA) were released by the Small Business
Administration in January 2012. The SBA issued revised Small
Business Standards in July 2014. See downloadable PDF file at
https://www.sba.gov/content/small-business-size-standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 1 presents a breakdown of FMCSA's revenue estimates for the
populations in various categories. By SBA standards, the vast majority
of all businesses in the motor carrier and related industries are
``small entities.'' Although general freight transportation arrangement
firms fall under the $15 million threshold, there is an exception for
``non-vessel household goods forwarders.'' \12\ This exception
stipulates that the revenue threshold, for this sub-set of freight
forwarders in the trucking industry is $27.5 million. As indicated
above, fewer than 70 coercion complaints per year have been filed with
OSHA and FMCSA in the past few years. We have no reason to believe that
number will increase significantly under the rule. In fact, the
potential penalty for coercing a driver should have a deterrent effect.
Even if the penalty assessed might have a ``significant economic
impact,'' the limited number of recent coercion complaints suggests
that the penalty would not affect ``a substantial number of small
entities,'' given that there are nearly 500,000 firms in the industry
that qualify as small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ According to the 2007 Economic Census data, 2,221
establishments were classified as non-vessel common carriers. These
establishments accounted for 10.2 percent of the number of, and 5.2
percent of the annual revenue for, the total number of
establishments classified under NAICS Code 488510-Freight
Transportation Arrangement. In 2007, the average revenue for all
entities classified to NAICS Code 488510 was $1.8 million.
Therefore, the results of the analysis are the same regardless of
whether the Small Business Standard is $15 million or $27.5 million.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This rule does not affect industry productivity by requiring new
documentation, affecting labor productivity or availability, or
increasing expenditures on maintenance or new equipment. The fines,
which are the only impact (unless the carrier's operating authority is
suspended or revoked), can be avoided by not coercing drivers into
violating existing regulations. Furthermore, by regulation, the
Agency's fines are usually subject to a maximum financial penalty limit
of 2 percent of a firm's gross revenue. For the vast majority of small
firms, a fine at this level would not be ``significant'' in the sense
that it would jeopardize the viability of the firm.
The table below excludes shippers and receivers subject to the
prohibition on coercion, a group which is a large portion of the entire
U.S. population, because anyone who sends or receives a package would
be considered a shipper or receiver. However, compliance with the
prohibition on coercion of drivers is not expected to have significant
economic impact on many of them. Consequently, because they are not
expected to be in a position to coerce a driver, I certify that the
action will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
[[Page 74707]]
Table 1--Total Number of Entities and Determination, 2012
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Type of entity Number Determination
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Motor carriers (property)......... \13\ 523,239 99% below 27.5
million.\14\
Motor carriers (passenger)........ 12,184 99% below $15
million.\15\
Freight forwarders................ \16\ 14,319 97% below $27.5
million.
Property brokers.................. 21,565 99% below $27.5
million.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: Motor carrier (passenger), and property broker numbers is
updated from the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act analysis (IRFA) to
reflect revisions reported in ``2014 Pocket Guide to Large Truck and
Bus Statistics,'' Federal Motor Carrier Administration, October 2014.
The 2014 Pocket Guide is available at https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/safety/data-and-statistics/commercial-motor-vehicle-facts.
C. Assistance for Small Entities
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Includes interstate motor carriers and intrastate hazardous
materials motor carriers.
\14\ The results show that 99 percent of all motor carriers
(property) with recent activity have 148 PUs or fewer.
\15\ The methodology used to determine the percentage of motor
carriers (property and passenger) is the same methodology described
in detail at pages 31 through 34 of the September 2014 Initial RFA
prepared for the proposed rule on Motor Carrier Safety Fitness
Determination.
\16\ The number of freight forwarders reported (21,809) in the
IFRA was obtained from the U.S Census Bureau 2007 Economic Census.
The 21,809 entities are the number of establishments, not the number
of firms that operated for all or part of 2007. An establishment is
a place of business. A firm may operate out of more than one
establishment. Hence, the number of firms is a subset of the number
of establishment. In the 2007 Economic Census, 15,180 firms were
classified to NAICS Code 488510-Freight Transportation Arrangement.
The number of firms that operated for all or part of the year
accounted for 69.6 percent of establishments (15,180 / 21,809). The
product of 69.9 percent and 20,573 establishments reported the 2012
Economic Census yielded an estimated 14,319 firms in 2012. These
data are available on the Census Bureau American Fact Finder Web
site at https://factfinder.census.gov/faces/nav/jsf/pages/searchresults.xhtml?refresh=t.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In accordance with section 213(a) of the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, FMCSA wants to assist small entities
in understanding this rule so that they can better evaluate its effects
on themselves and participate in the rulemaking initiative. If the rule
affects your small business, organization, or governmental jurisdiction
and you have questions concerning its provisions or options for
compliance, please consult the FMCSA point of contact, Mr. Charles
Medalen, listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
rule.
Small businesses may send comments on the actions of Federal
employees who enforce or otherwise determine compliance with Federal
regulations to the SBA's Small Business and Agriculture Regulatory
Enforcement Ombudsman and the Regional Small Business Regulatory
Fairness Boards. The Ombudsman evaluates these actions annually and
rates each agency's responsiveness to small business. If you wish to
comment on actions by employees of FMCSA, call 1-888-REG-FAIR (1-888-
734-3247). DOT has a policy ensuring the rights of small entities to
regulatory enforcement fairness and an explicit policy against
retaliation for exercising these rights.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
This rule will not impose an unfunded Federal mandate, as defined
by the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1532, et seq.),
that will result in the expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $155
million (which is the value of $100 million in 2015 after adjusting for
inflation) or more in any 1 year.
E. Federalism (E.O. 13132)
A rulemaking has implications for Federalism under section 1(a) of
E.O. 13132 if it has a substantial direct effect on State or local
governments and would either preempt State law or impose a substantial
direct cost of compliance on State or local governments. FMCSA analyzed
this action in accordance with E.O. 13132. This rule does not preempt
or modify any provision of State law, impose substantial direct
unreimbursed compliance costs on any State, or diminish the power of
any State to enforce its own laws. FMCSA has determined that this rule
will not have substantial direct costs on or for States nor will it
limit the policymaking discretion of States. Accordingly, this
rulemaking does not have Federalism implications.
F. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
This rule meets applicable standards in sections 3(a) and 3(b) (2)
of E.O. 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to minimize litigation, eliminate
ambiguity, and reduce burden.
G. Protection of Children (E.O. 13045)
E.O. 13045, Protection of Children from Environmental Health Risks
and Safety Risks (62 FR 19885, Apr. 23, 1997), requires agencies
issuing ``economically significant'' rules, if the regulation also
concerns an environmental health or safety risk that an agency has
reason to believe may disproportionately affect children, to include an
evaluation of the regulation's environmental health and safety effects
on children. The Agency determined this rule is not economically
significant. Therefore, no analysis of the impacts on children is
required. In any event, the Agency does not anticipate that this
regulatory action could in any respect present an environmental or
safety risk that could disproportionately affect children.
H. Taking of Private Property (E.O. 12630)
FMCSA reviewed this rule in accordance with E.O. 12630,
Governmental Actions and Interference with Constitutionally Protected
Property Rights, and has determined it will not effect a taking of
private property or otherwise have takings implications.
I. Privacy Impact Assessment
FMCSA conducted a privacy impact assessment (PIA) of this rule as
required by section 522(a)(5) of division H of the FY 2005 Omnibus
Appropriations Act, Public Law 108-447, 118 Stat. 3268 (Dec. 8, 2004).
The assessment considered impacts of the final rule on the privacy of
information in an identifiable form and related matters. The final rule
will impact the handling of personally identifiable information (PII).
FMCSA has evaluated the risks and effects the rulemaking might have on
collecting, storing, and sharing PII and has evaluated protections and
alternative information handling processes in developing the final rule
in order to mitigate potential privacy risks.
For the purposes of both transparency and efficiency, the privacy
analysis conforms to the DOT standard Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA)
and will be published on the DOT Web site at www.dot.gov/privacy
concurrently with the publication of the rule. The PIA addresses the
rulemaking, associated business processes contemplated in the rule and
any information known about the systems or existing systems to be
implemented in support of the final rulemaking. A PIA for the Coercion
NPRM was previously developed and is
[[Page 74708]]
currently available to the public on the DOT Web site at www.dot.gov/privacy. The PIA has been reviewed, and revised as appropriate, to
reflect the final rule and will be published not later than the date on
which the Department initiates any of the activities contemplated in
the Final Rule determined to have an impact on individuals' privacy and
not later than the date on which the system (if any) supporting
implementation of the Final Rule is updated.
As required by the Privacy Act, FMCSA and the Department will
publish, with request for comment, a revised system of records notice
(SORN) that will cover the collection of information that is affected
by this final rule. Since coercion complaints will be stored in the
National Consumer Complaint Database (NCCDB), the SORN for the NCCDB
(DOT/FMCSA 004--National Consumer Complaint Database (NCCDB)--75 FR
27051--May 13, 2010) will be revised to reflect the new collection of
information and published in the Federal Register not less than 30 days
before the Agency is authorized to collect or use PII retrieved by
unique identifier. Additionally, FMCSA will revise the PIA for NCCDB
(formally the Safety Violations and Household Goods Consumer Complaint
Hotline Database) posted on June 6, 2006 and an updated PIA will be
available to the public on the DOT Web site at www.dot.gov/privacy.
The privacy risks and effects associated with the cases resulting
from this rule are not unique and have previously been addressed by the
enforcement case file storage requirements in the Electronic Document
Management System (EDMS) PIA posted on June 6, 2006 and the DOT/FMCSA
005--Electronic Document Management System SORN (71 FR 35727) published
on June 21, 2006.
J. Intergovernmental Review (E.O. 12372)
The regulations implementing E.O. 12372 regarding intergovernmental
consultation on Federal programs and activities do not apply to this
program.
K. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq.), Federal agencies must obtain approval from the OMB for each
collection of information they conduct, sponsor, or require through
regulations. Information submitted by drivers alleging coercion is
exempt from PRA requirements because it is collected pursuant to ``an
administrative action or investigation involving an agency against
specific individuals or entities'' [44 U.S.C. 3518(c)(1)(B)(ii)].
L. National Environmental Policy Act and Clean Air Act
FMCSA analyzed this rule in accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.). FMCSA
conducted an environmental assessment and determined that the rule has
the potential for minor environmental impacts. Based on the limited
data FMCSA has concerning the extent of the affected CMV driver
population, these impacts would be very small and FMCSA does not expect
any significant impacts to the environment from this rule. The
environmental assessment has been placed in the rulemaking docket.
In addition to the NEPA requirements to examine impacts on air
quality, the Clean Air Act (CAA) as amended (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.)
also requires FMCSA to analyze the potential impact of its actions on
air quality and to ensure that FMCSA actions conform to State and local
air quality implementation plans. The additional contributions to air
emissions from any of the alternatives are expected to fall below the
CAA de minimis thresholds as per 40 CFR 93.153 and are, therefore, not
expected to be subject to the Environmental Protection Agency's General
Conformity Rule (40 CFR parts 51 and 93).
M. Environmental Justice (E.O. 12898)
FMCSA evaluated the environmental effects of this rule in
accordance with Executive Order 12898 and determined that there are no
environmental justice issues associated with its provisions nor is
there any collective environmental impact resulting from its
promulgation. Environmental justice issues would be raised if there
were a ``disproportionate'' and ``high and adverse impact'' on minority
or low-income populations. None of the alternatives analyzed in the
Agency's EA, discussed under National Environmental Policy Act, would
result in high and adverse environmental impacts.
N. Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use (E.O. 13211)
FMCSA has analyzed this rule under E.O. 13211, Actions Concerning
Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or
Use. The Agency has determined that it is not a ``significant energy
action'' under that order because it is not a ``significant regulatory
action'' likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy. Therefore, it does not require a
Statement of Energy Effects under E.O. 13211.
O. Indian Tribal Governments (E.O. 13175)
This rule does not have tribal implications under E.O. 13175,
Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments, because
it does not have a substantial direct effect on one or more Indian
tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government and Indian
tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities between
the Federal Government and Indian tribes.
P. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (Technical
Standards)
The National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA) (15
U.S.C. 272 note) directs agencies to use voluntary consensus standards
in their regulatory activities unless the agency provides Congress,
through OMB, with an explanation of why using these standards would be
inconsistent with applicable law or otherwise impractical. Voluntary
consensus standards (e.g., specifications of materials, performance,
design, or operation; test methods; sampling procedures; and related
management systems practices) are standards that are developed or
adopted by voluntary consensus standards bodies. This rule does not use
technical standards. Therefore, we did not consider the use of
voluntary consensus standards.
List of Subjects
49 CFR Part 386
Administrative practice and procedures, Brokers, Freight
forwarders, Hazardous materials transportation, Highway safety, Motor
carriers, Motor vehicle safety, Penalties.
49 CFR Part 390
Highway safety, Intermodal transportation, Motor carriers, Motor
vehicle safety, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, FMCSA amends parts 386 and
390 in 49 CFR chapter III, subchapter B, as follows:
PART 386--RULES OF PRACTICE FOR FMCSA PROCEEDINGS
0
1. The authority citation for part 386 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 113, chapters 5, 51, 59, 131-141, 145-149,
311, 313, and 315; Sec. 204, Pub. L. 104-88, 109 Stat. 803, 941 (49
U.S.C. 701 note); Sec. 217, Pub. L. 105-159, 113 Stat. 1748, 1767;
Sec. 206, Pub. L.
[[Page 74709]]
106-159, 113 Stat.1763; subtitle B, title IV of Pub. L. 109-59; and
49 CFR 1.81 and 1.87.
0
2. Revise the heading of part 386 as set forth above.
0
3. Amend Sec. 386.1 by revising paragraph (a) and adding paragraph (c)
to read as follows:
Sec. 386.1 Scope of the rules in this part.
(a) Except as indicated in paragraph (c) of this section, the rules
in this part govern proceedings before the Assistant Administrator, who
also acts as the Chief Safety Officer of the Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Administration (FMCSA), under applicable provisions of the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs) (49 CFR parts 350-
399), including the commercial regulations (49 CFR parts 360-379), and
the Hazardous Materials Regulations (49 CFR parts 171-180).
* * * * *
(c) The rules in Sec. 386.12(e) govern the filing by a driver and
the handling by the appropriate Division Administrator of complaints of
coercion in violation of Sec. 390.6 of this subchapter.
0
4. Amend Sec. 386.12 as follows:
0
a. Revise the section heading;
0
b. Add and reserve paragraph (d); and
0
c. Add paragraph (e).
Sec. 386.12 Complaints.
* * * * *
(d) [Reserved]
(e) Complaint of coercion. (1) A driver alleging a violation of
Sec. 390.6(a)(1) or (2) of this subchapter must file a written
complaint with FMCSA stating the substance of the alleged coercion no
later than 90 days after the event. The written complaint, including
the information described below, must be filed with the National
Consumer Complaint Database at https://nccdb.fmcsa.dot.gov or the FMCSA
Division Administrator for the State where the driver is employed. The
Agency may refer a complaint to another Division Administrator who the
Agency believes is best able to handle the complaint. Information on
filing a written complaint may be obtained by calling 1-800-DOT-SAFT
(1-800-368-7238). Each complaint must be signed by the driver and must
contain:
(i) The driver's name, address, and telephone number;
(ii) The name and address of the person allegedly coercing the
driver;
(iii) The provisions of the regulations that the driver alleges he
or she was coerced to violate; and
(iv) A concise but complete statement of the facts relied upon to
substantiate each allegation of coercion, including the date of each
alleged violation.
(2) Action on complaint of coercion. Upon the filing of a complaint
of coercion under paragraph (e)(1) of this section, the appropriate
Division Administrator shall determine whether the complaint is non-
frivolous and meets the requirements of paragraph (e)(1).
(i) If the Division Administrator determines that the complaint is
non-frivolous and meets the requirements of paragraph (e)(1) of this
section, he/she shall investigate the complaint. The complaining driver
shall be timely notified of findings resulting from such investigation.
The Division Administrator shall not be required to conduct separate
investigations of duplicative complaints.
(ii) If the Division Administrator determines the complaint is
frivolous or does not meet the requirements of paragraph (e)(1) of this
section, he/she shall dismiss the complaint and notify the driver in
writing of the reasons for such dismissal.
(3) Protection of complainants. Because prosecution of coercion in
violation of Sec. 390.6 of this subchapter will require disclosure of
the driver's identity, the Agency shall take every practical means
within its authority to ensure that the driver is not subject to
harassment, intimidation, disciplinary action, discrimination, or
financial loss as a result of such disclosure. This will include
notification that 49 U.S.C. 31105 includes broad employee protections
and that retaliation for filing a coercion complaint may subject the
alleged coercer to enforcement action by the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration.
PART 390--FEDERAL MOTOR CARRIER SAFETY REGULATIONS; GENERAL
0
5. Revise the authority citation for part 390 to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 504, 508, 31132, 31133, 31136, 31144,
31151, 31502; sec. 114, Pub. L. 103-311, 108 Stat. 1673, 1677-1678;
sec. 212, 217, 229, Pub. L. 106-159, 113 Stat. 1748, 1766, 1767;
sec. 229, Pub. L. 106-159 (as transferred by sec. 4114 and amended
by secs. 4130-4132, Pub. L. 109-59, 119 Stat. 1144, 1726, 1743-
1744), sec. 4136, Pub. L. 109-59, 119 Stat. 1144, 1745; and 49 CFR
1.81, 1.81a and 1.87.
0
6. Revise Sec. 390.3(a) to read as follows:
Sec. 390.3 General applicability.
(a)(1) The rules in subchapter B of this chapter are applicable to
all employers, employees, and commercial motor vehicles that transport
property or passengers in interstate commerce.
(2) The rules in 49 CFR 386.12(e) and 390.6 prohibiting the
coercion of drivers of commercial motor vehicles operating in
interstate commerce:
(i) To violate certain safety regulations are applicable to all
motor carriers, shippers, receivers, and transportation intermediaries;
and
(ii) To violate certain commercial regulations are applicable to
all operators of commercial motor vehicles.
* * * * *
0
7. Amend Sec. 390.5 by adding definitions of ``Coerce or Coercion,''
``Receiver or consignee,'' ``Shipper,'' and ``Transportation
intermediary,'' in alphabetical order, to read as follows:
Sec. 390.5 Definitions.
* * * * *
Coerce or Coercion means either--
(1) A threat by a motor carrier, shipper, receiver, or
transportation intermediary, or their respective agents, officers or
representatives, to withhold business, employment or work opportunities
from, or to take or permit any adverse employment action against, a
driver in order to induce the driver to operate a commercial motor
vehicle under conditions which the driver stated would require him or
her to violate one or more of the regulations, which the driver
identified at least generally, that are codified at 49 CFR parts 171-
173, 177-180, 380-383, or 390-399, or Sec. Sec. 385.415 or 385.421, or
the actual withholding of business, employment, or work opportunities
or the actual taking or permitting of any adverse employment action to
punish a driver for having refused to engage in such operation of a
commercial motor vehicle; or
(2) A threat by a motor carrier, or its agents, officers or
representatives, to withhold business, employment or work opportunities
or to take or permit any adverse employment action against a driver in
order to induce the driver to operate a commercial motor vehicle under
conditions which the driver stated would require a violation of one or
more of the regulations, which the driver identified at least
generally, that are codified at 49 CFR parts 356, 360, or 365-379, or
the actual withholding of business, employment or work opportunities or
the actual taking or permitting of any adverse employment action to
punish a driver for refusing to engage in such operation of a
commercial motor vehicle.
* * * * *
Receiver or consignee means a person who takes delivery from a
motor carrier or driver of a commercial motor vehicle of property
transported in interstate commerce or hazardous materials
[[Page 74710]]
transported in interstate or intrastate commerce.
* * * * *
Shipper means a person who tenders property to a motor carrier or
driver of a commercial motor vehicle for transportation in interstate
commerce, or who tenders hazardous materials to a motor carrier or
driver of a commercial motor vehicle for transportation in interstate
or intrastate commerce.
* * * * *
Transportation intermediary means a person who arranges the
transportation of property or passengers by commercial motor vehicle in
interstate commerce, or who arranges the transportation of hazardous
materials by commercial motor vehicle in interstate or intrastate
commerce, including but not limited to brokers and freight forwarders.
* * * * *
0
8. Add Sec. 390.6 to read as follows:
Sec. 390.6 Coercion prohibited.
(a) Prohibition. (1) A motor carrier, shipper, receiver, or
transportation intermediary, including their respective agents,
officers, or representatives, may not coerce a driver of a commercial
motor vehicle to operate such vehicle in violation of 49 CFR parts 171-
173, 177-180, 380-383 or 390-399, or Sec. Sec. 385.415 or 385.421;
(2) A motor carrier or its agents, officers, or representatives,
may not coerce a driver of a commercial motor vehicle to operate such
vehicle in violation of 49 CFR parts 356, 360, or 365-379.
(b) Complaint process. (1) A driver who believes he or she was
coerced to violate a regulation described in paragraph (a)(1) or (2) of
this section may file a written complaint under Sec. 386.12(e) of this
subchapter.
(2) A complaint under paragraph (b)(1) of this section shall
describe the action that the driver claims constitutes coercion and
identify the regulation the driver was coerced to violate.
(3) A complaint under paragraph (b)(1) of this section may include
any supporting evidence that will assist the Division Administrator in
determining the merits of the complaint.
Issued under the authority of delegation in 49 CFR 1.87 on:
November 23, 2015.
T.F. Scott Darling, III,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2015-30237 Filed 11-27-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-EX-P