Random Test Rates Stay the Same
The "violation" rate for random alcohol testing of truck drivers was 0.2% in 1999, down from 0.4% in 1998 and low enough to maintain a reduction in the number of tests required
The "violation" rate for random alcohol testing of truck drivers was 0.2% in 1999, down from 0.4% in 1998 and low enough to maintain a reduction in the number of tests required
A University of Michigan researcher disputes a recent critique of a survey used in drawing up controversial proposed hours of service regulations
The Research and Special Programs Administration has proposed some new definitions to clarify its jurisdiction over hazardous materials transportation
The House Transportation Appropriations Subcommittee approved President Bush’s request for transportation spending, including significant increases for truck safety
Ten Democratic senators want President Bush to reconsider his decision to comply with the North American Free Trade Agreement
Tennessee officials have tabled a resolution seeking to restrict retreads
President Bush has lifted restrictions on Mexican citizens investing in U.S. truck and bus companies
The Department of Transportation’s Inspector General was out of bounds when he conducted criminal investigations of trucking companies accused of violating safety rules, an appeals court has ruled
Owners of intermodal container chassis got a short respite from federal conspicuity rules, but federal and state authorities are enforcing the June 1 retrofit deadline for everyone else
Both chambers of the Oregon legislature have approved a bill making it a crime to falsify drug test results or possess a substance or device designed to falsify drug tests
Are your trailers properly equipped with reflective tape
When Sen. Jim Jeffords of Vermont answered the call of his conscience, he turned politics in Washington, D.C., upside down. By changing his party affiliation from Republican to Independent, he gave the Democrats control of the
A national expert on U.S. transportation data says it "would be a serious mistake" to use the study on which the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration relied heavily to justify its much-maligned hours-of-service reform proposal
The nation’s biggest truck lobby is giving thumbs up to Congressional passage of the Bush tax cut plan hammered out over the Memorial Day weekend
Speaking at the National Private Truck Council’s annual conference in Nashville this week, DOT’s top trucking safety official, said the agency expects to complete its rulemaking on trucking safety issues for Mexican truckers to operate in the U.S
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