Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Ferro Announces Crash Accountability Research Plans

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration is going to take on three central questions in its analysis of the hot-button issue of crash accountability. Are police accident reports reliable enough to determine accountability? Are the benefits of determining accountability worth the costs - as much as $3 million a year? And how should the agency manage the process, giving the public a chance to participate

by Staff
July 23, 2012
Ferro Announces Crash Accountability Research Plans

 

4 min to read


The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration is going to take on three central questions in its analysis of the hot-button issue of crash accountability.

Are police accident reports reliable enough to determine accountability? Are the benefits of determining accountability worth the costs - as much as $3 million a year? And how should the agency manage the process, giving the public a chance to participate?



Agency Administrator Anne Ferro outlined these details, and a schedule for the year-long process, in remarks Monday to the Trucking Association Executives Council in Park City, Utah.

Ad Loading...
The At-Fault Question



The agency's handling of crash accountability has been a sore point for trucking interests. The concern is that the Safety Measurement System that the agency uses to rate carriers under its CSA enforcement program does not distinguish fault when it reports on crashes.

It rates a carrier's crash history in comparison to other carriers' history, presuming a certain degree of fault throughout the data. This has led to the conclusion that past crashes are a predictor of future crashes no matter who is at fault.

Trucking interests have long held that this melding of at-fault and not at-fault crashes is a flaw in the system, and the agency agrees.

At one point last spring the agency was close to proposing a method for distinguishing fault, but drew back out of concern that its approach was not going to be adequate.

Ferro Monday fulfilled an agency promise to announce a research schedule this month.

She said the research will include a broad study of police accident reports to see if they give reliable information, and if there should be other reporting to supplement them.

In addition, the agency will determine if an accountability determination will yield a better indicator of risk than the current system.

Ferro's Take



In an interview, Ferro said she does not expect that the agency will have to go through a rulemaking process to change the current system. "We expect to handle it administratively," she said.

She said she had "a good conversation" with the TAEC members on this issue. The organization represents the executive officers of the state trucking associations, which collectively form one branch of the national American Trucking Associations.

"(They are) a great bunch of seasoned professionals and subject matter experts in their own right, so that's a pretty sophisticated audience," she said. "I found their questions quite good."

Ferro herself is a former member of TAEC. She was president and CEO of the Maryland Motor Truck Association before President Obama nominated her to run the agency.

An ATA spokesman, Dave Osiecki, senior vice president for policy and regulatory affairs, said the association appreciates the agency's response to its request to post a timeline on the crash accountability analysis.

He added: "In the near term, FMCSA can and should weight crashes for which little or no analysis is needed. These crash types are well known and well understood by all involved."

Industry Criticism



An ATA spokesman, Dave Osiecki, senior vice president for policy and regulatory affairs, said the association appreciates the agency's response to its request to post a timeline on the crash accountability analysis.

He added: "In the near term, FMCSA can and should weight crashes for which little or no analysis is needed. These crash types are well known and well understood by all involved."

In her comments, Ferro addressed industry complaints about the agency's handling of crash accountability and other CSA matters.

"My biggest disappointment from the past few months has been the criticism of FMCSA for not being responsive and transparent," she said.

The agency takes the criticism seriously, she said. "I want the CSA program to be characterized as valuing feedback from all interested parties."

Ad Loading...
So what went wrong?



"A couple of things came into play," she said in the interview. "First, clearly, my decision to pursue additional analysis on crash weighting before we rolled out a proposed approach struck many in the community of industry representatives as a change that they did not see coming."

That created great frustration, she said.

Also frustrating is the agency's deliberate - some would say slow - pace of making fixes to CSA, she said.

In order to be sure everyone understands what's going on, the agency decided to make CSA adjustments only once or twice a year.

"I think that measured process doesn't move fast enough for all of us who want to see the changes that make sense (but) preserve the system's stability."

"What we thought was open and measured and appropriate probably also was perceived as a slowing down of program tweaks."

Ferro said the agency will bring the Motor Carrier Safety Advisory Committee into the CSA planning process. The committee, a panel of 19 officials from industry, the enforcement community and labor and safety advocacy groups, will be tasked with forming a CSA Subcommittee next month, she said.

This will provide a way for truck safety interests to have a voice in how the crash accountability research is conducted, she said.

Ferro also noted in her remarks to TAEC that the agency has decided to give lower SMS weights for suspended-license violations that are not safety-related, such as failure to pay parking tickets.

More Drivers

Artist rendering of dealership with trucks and trailers parked outside
Equipmentby News/Media ReleaseJune 2, 2026

Prime Inc. to Open $7.9M Flagship Used-Truck Dealership

A new driver-focused facility to sell Prime Inc's used trucks and trailers will be the first purpose-built location in the company's history.

Read More →
Thumbnail for podcast episode
Safety & ComplianceMay 28, 2026

Short Takes: Inside K&B’s Truck Safety Tech

Listen to learn how K&B Transportation uses cellphone-blocking technology, speed management systems, weather geofencing, bridge avoidance tools, and more to improve driver safety.

Read More →
Nussbaum driver pay.
Driversby News/Media ReleaseMay 27, 2026

Nussbaum Expands Driver Compensation with Pay Raises, Profit Sharing

Nussbaum Transportation said its latest compensation package could push first-year driver earnings above $90,000 in key hiring markets.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Lance Evans, Director of Safety at K&B Transportation.
Safety & ComplianceMay 13, 2026

Listen: Inside Modern Fleet Safety: AI, Cameras & Speed Control at K&B Transportation

Fleet safety is evolving fast—and technology is at the center of it. Learn how a former commercial vehicle enforcement officer turned director of safety at K&B Transportation is embracing real-world safety technology.

Read More →
Maverick Transportation Freightliner Cascadia.
Driversby News/Media ReleaseMay 12, 2026

Maverick Announces 2026 Driver Pay Raises

New raises for Maverick Transportation drivers will take effect on May 31, 2026.

Read More →
Alleged Ohio toll evasion truck.
Driversby News/Media ReleaseMay 5, 2026

Illinois Trucker Indicted for Nearly $22,000 in Ohio Turnpike Toll Evasion

Authorities say an Illinois trucker avoided paying tolls for two years, and now faces felony charges, possible prison time, and forfeiture of his Freightliner tractor.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Illustration with trojan horse and lock with inside of cargo container in background
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseApril 23, 2026

New Trojan Driver Cargo Theft Scam Bypasses Carrier Vetting Systems

Cargo theft rings plant operatives as drivers inside legitimate, fully vetted carriers, then execute coordinated thefts that look like a traditional straight theft from the outside.

Read More →
Female truck driver.
Driversby News/Media ReleaseApril 21, 2026

WIM, Trucker Path Name Top 3 Women-Friendly Truck Stops

ATA’s Women In Motion Council and Trucker Path highlight three truck stops that meet all seven safety-focused criteria and rank highest among female drivers.

Read More →
Illustration of driver medical exam paperwork over duotone background of a blood pressure check

FMCSA Extends Paper Medical Card Exemption … Again

Five states still aren't ready to accept commercial driver medical exam information directly from the medical examiner's registry.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Mack Pioneer tractor.
Driversby Jack RobertsApril 10, 2026

Mack Launches Digital Driver Guide for Chassis-Specific Truck Info

Mack’s new, virtual owner’s manual delivers VIN-based, on-demand guidance for vehicle systems via web, app, and soon in-cab displays.

Read More →