Livestock haulers get 90-day waiver on electronic logging
Story Date: 11/21/2017

 

Source: Susan Kelly, MEATINGPLACE, 11/21/17


The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) has granted drivers who haul livestock a 90-day waiver from a regulation requiring installation of Electronic Logging Devices on trucks, a move hailed by the National Pork Producers Council.


NPPC requested on behalf of the U.S. pork industry and other livestock sectors a waiver from the requirement for certain drivers. The organization also asked for an exemption from the regulation, citing the incompatibility between transporting livestock and DOT’s Hours of Service rules. Those rules limit truckers to 11 hours of driving daily, after 10 consecutive hours off duty, and restrict their on-duty time to 14 consecutive hours, which includes non-driving time.


“The ELDs regulation poses some serious challenges for livestock haulers and the animals in their care,” NPPC President Ken Maschhoff, a pork producer from Carlyle, Ill., said in a statement. “This waiver will give the department time to consider our request that truckers transporting hogs, cattle and other livestock be exempt from the ELDs mandate. Drivers transporting livestock have a moral obligation to care for the animals they’re hauling.”


The Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety Enhancement Act, enacted as part of the 2012 Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act, mandated that ELDs be installed by Dec. 18, 2017, in commercial motor vehicles involved in interstate commerce, when operated by drivers who are required to keep records of duty status. ELDs, which can cost from $200 to $1,000, record driving time and monitor engine hours, vehicle movement and speed, miles driven and location information.


DOT recently exempted from the Hours of Service regulations and from any distance-logging requirements truckers hauling livestock within a 150 air-mile radius of the location at which animals were loaded. The department is expected to publish guidance on the air-mile exemption, NPPC said.

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