Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Study: No Correlation Between CSA BASIC Data and Crash Performance

A new study says the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration's safety data under its new Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) program does not accurately predict crashes

by Staff
June 27, 2012
2 min to read


A new study says the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration's safety data under its new Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) program does not accurately predict crashes.

The Alliance for Safe, Efficient, and Competitive Truck Transportation commissioned a study on the correlation between individual carrier percentile rankings and crash frequency based on data obtained from the FMCSA's data bank.

The study shows that, with respect to individual carriers, percentile rankings of carriers both above and below the arbitrary "monitoring thresholds" indicated with the alert symbol (a yellow triangle with an exclamation mark inside) are not valid predictors of crash frequency.

This study comes on the heels of American Trucking Associations calling on FMCSA to release its own study on the links between violations and crash risk used to develop its methodology for assigning carriers' scores under CSA.

The ASECTT study, commissioned by Dr. Inam Iyoob, engineer with Transplace, shows that FMCSA's safety measurement system percentile scores account for less than 1% of the variation in crash frequency for each of these BASICs.

Iyoob says FMCSA's data cannot be used to predict the crash performance of individual carriers, even though the FMCSA says SMS scores are correlated to the average crash frequency of hundreds of carriers at each percentile integral.

But consumers of freight transportation do not select "average" carriers, Iyoob says.

"I can't see any useful purpose in averaging the crash data of hundreds of carriers in each of 100 different percentiles and then calculating a regression of the average values," Iyoob says. "The purpose of regression analysis is to explain variation. Averaging hundreds of carriers at each percentile eliminates most of the variation in the data. It is not statistically accurate to say the SMS methodology and BASIC percentile scores are an accurate predictor of carrier safety predicated upon the crash data the agency uses to justify its conclusions."

The study notes that logically, unsafe driving and driver fatigue do impact crashes. However, the way the SMS BASICs Unsafe Driving and Fatigued Driving are captured, calculated and interpreted by FMCSA does not show any correlation to crashes, according to this study.

You can read Iyoob's report here.

Related stories:

ATA Demands FMCSA Release Study Used to Develop CSA Scoring System

FMCSA Stops Plan to Determine Accountability in CSA Crash Data

ATA: Common Sense Must Govern CSA Crash Accountability Decisions

More Safety & Compliance

Podcast thumbnail illustration
Fleet ManagementJune 4, 2026

How Waste Connections is Using Data, Telematics, and AI

How do you manage and maintain more than 18,000 connected trucks? Data. Lots of it.

Read More →
Fleet Advantage TRUST

Fleet Advantage: Top Logistics Fleets Outperform National Safety Benchmarks

Fleet Advantage's latest TRUST Safety Index found leading logistics fleets maintained significantly lower out-of-service rates and stronger safety scores than national averages, while highlighting persistent challenges related to tires, brakes, and unsafe driving behaviors.

Read More →
YouTube thumbnail showing Chuck Palmer illustration with refuse truck in background

Why Fleet Data Matters More Than Ever at Waste Connections [Watch]

Waste Connections' Chuck Palmer explains how telematics, predictive maintenance, safety analytics, and AI help keep vehicles on the road and drivers safe in this episode of HDT Talks Trucking.

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

Short Takes: How K&B is Using AI

Fleets need to "get on board the train" with AI, says Lance Evans of K&B Transportation in this HDT Talks Trucking Short Takes episode.

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 →
Illustration with caution graphic in background and photos of autonomous trucks
Safety & Complianceby Jack RobertsMay 27, 2026

The Biggest Gap in Driverless Trucking Isn’t Tech. It’s Safety Validation

Nauto’s Stefan Heck says autonomous trucks are advancing quickly but proving they’re safe enough for large-scale deployment may be the industry’s hardest challenge.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Illustration of rising costs with truck in background

Truck Crash Rates Are Down. So Why Do Insurance Costs Keep Rising?

ATRI’s latest research points to litigation, social inflation, and soaring claims costs as key drivers behind record-high liability premiums for trucking fleets. But there are things motor carriers can do.

Read More →
Safety & ComplianceMay 20, 2026

FMCSA Removes More Than a Dozen ELDs from Registered List

The FMCSA continues its efforts to fight electronic logging devices that don't meet federal requirements, removing more than a dozen from the registered ELD list in May.

Read More →
SCOTUS trucking broker verdict.
Safety & Complianceby Jack RobertsMay 19, 2026

How the Supreme Court Broker Liability Ruling Could Reshape Trucking’s Safety Landscape

The Supreme Court’s May 11 broker-liability ruling may not radically rewrite transportation law overnight. But industry experts say it will intensify pressure on brokers, carriers, and shippers to prove they are prioritizing safety.

Read More →
Ad Loading...

Recall of Fontaine Fusion Flatbeds Warns Owners Not to Use the Trailers

Some Fontaine Fusion flatbed trailer manufactured between February 2025, and March 2026 could have mainbeams weakened by hydrogen embrittlement because of a problem in the galvanizing process.

Read More →