Q. What information will ELDs be required to collect?
A. ELDs are required to record the following data elements
A. As part of its Electronic Logging Device (ELD) Mandate, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has established rules covering retention of record of duty status (RODS) data.
Motor carriers must keep ELD RODS data for a period of six months, according to FMCSA guidelines. They must also keep a back-up copy of the data on a separate device for six months. It is the carrier’s responsibility to ensure that records are stored in a secured manner in order to protect driver privacy.
In addition, original records will be kept even after edits and entries have been made. Drivers have a right to see their records for six months. Access to records can be through the ELD itself or via another means the carrier provides.
The FMCSA and other authorized safety officials will not retain any ELD data unless there has been a violation.
In addition, carriers have to keep up to eight supporting documents for every 24-hour period that the driver is on duty. Supporting documents include:
It is the driver’s responsibility to submit his or her RODS and supporting documents to the fleet no later than 13 days after receiving them.
Associate VP, Commercial Vehicle Solutions
A. ELDs are required to record the following data elements
A. Vehicles with an engine model year before 2000
Yes, drivers will be able to present their logs from the seven days...
It is not required for fleets to configure its driver user accounts to authorize...
Yes. The user’s manual, instruction sheet, and malfunction instruction sheet can be in...
A. According to the FMCSA’s technical specifications, an edit is a change to an ELD record that doesn’t overwrite the original record...
A. No the driver will not be ruled out of compliance in this situation...
A. In the context of the ELD mandate, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) defines harassment as an action a fleet takes toward one its drivers that it knew...
A. No, ELD providers are not required to notify its customers their devices have been removed from the ELD registration list due to non-compliance...
A. Yes, it is required that the inspected driver’s profile and the unidentified driver profile be available as separate reports during a roadside inspection...
A. Yes, it is true. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has granted two temporary exemptions to the ELD mandate...
A. This is true at least during the first months after the ELD mandate comes into effect. The federal government recently announced that drivers cited during roadside inspections for not complying with the ELD mandate after the Dec. 18, 2017, deadline will receive a “no points cite” that will not affect the safety measurement system that feeds into the Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) scores. While there will be no points assessed with these initial citations, the fines associated wi
A. Yes, drivers can operate an ELD-equipped truck and still use their exemption...
A. There are a number of ELD recordkeeping exemptions and exceptions that may affect certain fleets...
A. You may be exempt if...
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