A report released Wednesday by the Government Accountability Office found that improvements to drug testing programs could better identify truckers who use illegal drugs and keep them off the road.


In response, the American Trucking Associations is urging Congress to take swift action to authorize and fund a national database of drug and alcohol testing results of commercial drivers, a move it has been lobbying for and one that is among the GAO's recommendations.

Some of the problems the report found included:
* The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration's limited oversight resources
* The ease of subverting the urine test, either because collection sites are not following protocols or because drivers are using products that are widely available to adulterate or substitute urine specimens.
* Drivers not divulging past drug test history
* Carriers' failure to conduct thorough background checks on a driver's past drug testing history
* Self-employed owner-operators' failure to remove themselves from service.

GAO recommended strengthening the enforcement of safety audits for new carriers; additional authority to levy fines when collection sites do not follow federal protocols; banning products that allow drivers to cheat a drug test; and a national database of drug testing information.

"Trucking has worked diligently to eradicate drug and alcohol abuse from its work force. And we've made great progress in recent years," said ATA President and CEO Bill Graves. "But we are requesting additional help from the government since it is a federally required program involving significant federal oversight. Today's release of a Government Accountability Office report confirms the need for what ATA has been recommending for many years -- a national database of drug and alcohol test results."

Also, consistent with GAO's recommendations, ATA is asking Congress to ban the manufacture, sale and distribution of products that help some drivers evade drug tests; provide for penalties for those who use them; and give the U.S. Department of Transportation more authority to improve oversight of specimen collection facilities and practices.

To further improve the drug testing process, ATA also is urging Congress to direct the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and the U.S. DOT to initiate a rulemaking that allows the testing of alternative specimens such as hair. Hair testing allows illegal drug use to be detected for a longer period of time.

ATA is also calling on the U.S. DOT to issue a new regulation creating a tougher audit process and enhanced penalties for new carriers entering the trucking business.
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