After five years of challenges to the hours of service rule which allows truckers to drive for up to eleven hours straight per day, the federal rule will be reviewed and reconsidered. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) signed an agreement with trucking and safety groups promising to revise the rule. Other aspects of the rule will also be reviewed including the 34 hour off-duty period. All revisions will be made with an eye toward reducing the number of trucking accidents.
For sixty years prior to the 2003 enactment of the eleven hour rule , truck drivers could not drive more than ten hours at a time. Since the revision, numerous public interest groups have challenged the rule calling for reconsideration and review.
Citing safety concerns, one of the watchdog groups, issued a statement applauding the government's action in taking responsibility to protect truck drivers and the public from unsafe driving conditions. Longer hours behind the wheel lead to driver fatigue and more truck accidents.
Any change in rules that allows for truck drivers to be more rested and therefore able to better concentrate on driving, makes the highways safer for all of us. As Georgia trucking accident lawyers, we will be watching the revisions to this rule closely, with the expectation that it will be revised to its original limits.