Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Final HOS Rule Goes to White House for Review

The final hours-of-service rule has gone to the White House Office of Management and Budget for review, according to Jim Mullen, acting administrator of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration.

by James Menzies and HDT Staff
March 3, 2020
Final HOS Rule Goes to White House for Review

A final rule that would give drivers more flexibility under hours-of-service rules is under review at the White House.

Photo: PeopleNet

4 min to read


A final rule adding flexibility to the hours-of-service rules was submitted March 2 to the White House Office of Management and Budget for review.

Jim Mullen, acting administrator of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, made the announcement March 3 at the Truckload Carriers Association’s annual convention in Orlando, Florida.

Ad Loading...

“After carefully reviewing these comments, I am pleased to announce today that FMCSA is moving forward with a final rule on hours-of-service and that the Agency has sent a final rule to the Office of Management and Budget for review," Mullen said. "While I can’t go into the specifics of this final rule, please know that the goal of this process from the beginning has been to improve safety for all motorists and to increase flexibility for commercial drivers."

Mullen said it was his priority to get those modifications finished, although he couldn’t offer a timeline for OMB approval. He also said listening sessions were held across the country to garner input on the proposed rule changes, and more than 8,000 comments were submitted to the docket.

Jim Mullen, acting administrator, FMCSA.

Photo: FMCSA

As recently as Feb. 17 at the Omnitracs Outlook 2020 meeting in Las Vegas, FMCSA's Joe DeLorenzo said he felt the process was moving rather quickly.

In a recap of its 2019 accomplishments, FMCSA said its proposal for fixing HOS is “historic” and that it will “improve safety and increase flexibility for commercial vehicle drivers” through “key updates to hours of service rules that are directly based on the feedback FMCSA has received from drivers across the country.”

The guts of the proposal published last August were contained in these changes:

Ad Loading...
  • Expanding the current 100 air-mile “short-haul” exemption from 12 hours on-duty to 14 hours on-duty, in order to be consistent with the rules for long-haul truck drivers

  • Extending the current 14-hour on-duty limitation by up to 2 hours when a truck driver encounters adverse driving conditions

  • Revising the current mandatory 30-minute break for truck drivers after 8 hours of continuous driving

  • Reinstating the option for splitting up the required 10-hour off-duty rest break for drivers operating trucks equipped with a sleeper-berth compartment

Drug and Alcohol Clearinghouse, ELD Transition

Mullen also commented on the drug and alcohol clearinghouse, acknowledging there were some technical issues in the early days, but assured attendees they’ve been resolved. There have been more than 680,000 registrants since it rolled out in early January, and nearly 9,000 drivers who either failed or refused a drug test have been identified.

“If they don’t go through the return to duty status program, they’re not going to be hired and they’re not going to be driving commercial vehicles,” Mullen said.

The transition from automatic on-board recording devices to electronic logging devices (ELDs) has gone smoothly, Mullen reported, and is having an impact. Mullen said there’s been a 52% reduction in hours-of-service violations since the ELD mandate was implemented, and in roadside inspections, fewer than 1% of drivers are not complying with the ELD mandate. Asked what the FMCSA is doing about non-compliant ELDs, Mullen acknowledged the U.S. differs from Canada by not requiring third-party certification, but he doesn’t think abuse is widespread.

Mullen said money and resources were a consideration when opting for self-certification of devices. “We have a process in which we can decertify ELD vendors,” said Mullen. “We look at that process very closely.”

Ad Loading...

He called on the trucking industry and manufacturers of compliant devices to help the FMCSA identify ELDs that can be manipulated.

“Help us detect how you can circumvent the rules to allow fraud and abuse and what the industry can do on a voluntary basis to assist FCMSA identify these issues,” he urged.

Mullen also said the FMCSA continues to look at the safety of allowing 18- to 20-year-olds with military experience to drive in interstate commerce, and is also considering rolling out a pilot program that will expand that opportunity to young drivers without military backgrounds. Their safety performance will be compared to drivers aged 21-24 to determine if restrictions from operating in interstate commerce should be lifted.

Finally, Mullen thanked the trucking industry for its role in combating human trafficking. He noted human trafficking is the fastest-growing business sector in the world.

“That’s astonishing and it’s horrible,” he said. “We know truck drivers are in the unique position to help combat human trafficking and we know they are doing so on a daily basis, and we thank them for it.”

More Safety & Compliance

Illustration with safety cones, false logbooks, CVSA logo

CVSA Issues New Inspection Guidance on ELD Tampering, False Logs

New guidance for commercial vehicle inspectors distinguishes between more traditional logbook violations and tampered ELD data that can result in mandatory 10-hour out-of-service orders.

Read More →
 Truck with door open and enforcement officer talking to driver about ELD
DriversFebruary 26, 2026

FMCSA Reinstates Field Warrior ELD to Registered Device List

One electronic logging device has been reinstated to the FMCSA's list of registered ELDs.

Read More →
Daimler Truck camera system.
Safety & Complianceby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 25, 2026

Daimler Truck North America Adds 360-Degree Exterior Camera System to Vocational, Medium-Duty Trucks

Daimler’s new factory-installed system integrates side and forward-facing cameras with in-cab touchscreen to improve jobsite visibility and reduce upfit complexity.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Kodiak Autonomous Truck
Safety & Complianceby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 20, 2026

Kodiak Integrates HAAS Alert’s Safety Cloud into Autonomous Trucking Platform

Kodiak has integrated HAAS Alert’s Safety Cloud platform into its autonomous vehicle control system to send real-time digital hazard alerts to nearby motorists.

Read More →
YouTube thumbnail with Scott Cornell, HDT Talks Trucking Logo, and the words, "Is Your Load Next?"
Safety & Complianceby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 20, 2026

The New Cargo Theft Playbook — And How Fleets Can Fight Back

Cargo theft has shifted from parking-lot break-ins to organized international schemes using double brokering, phishing, and even spoofing tracking signals. In this HDT Talks Trucking video podcast episode, cargo-theft investigator Scott Cornell explains what’s changed and what fleets need to do now.

Read More →
Illustration with safety cones in background, Roadcheck logo, cargo tiedowns, and officer checking driver logs
Safety & Complianceby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 18, 2026

International Roadcheck 2026 to Target ELD Tampering and Cargo Securement

What fleets need to know about CVSA’s 72-hour inspection blitz and this year’s enforcement priorities.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Illustration with truck, driver hours of service logs, and the word disaster
Safety & Complianceby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 18, 2026

FMCSA Proposes Extending State Emergency Exemptions to 30 Days

After pushback from states and industry groups, FMCSA is proposing to reverse a 2023 rule change and lengthen the duration of state-issued emergency exemptions for disaster relief.

Read More →
Maintenanceby StaffFebruary 17, 2026

Western Star Expands Recall After Previous Battery Fix Fails to Prevent Fire Risk

After reports of corrosion and thermal events on trucks already repaired under a prior campaign, DTNA is recalling nearly 27,000 Western Star 47X and 49X models to address a battery junction stud defect.

Read More →
Safety & Complianceby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 12, 2026

FMCSA Revokes Another Nine Electronic Logging Devices

Motor carriers using the affected ELDs must switch to paper logs immediately and install compliant devices by April 14 to avoid out-of-service violations.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
 Illustration showing a driver behind the wheel, DOT offices, and examples of problematic non domiciled CDL
Driversby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 12, 2026

FMCSA Locks in Non-Domiciled CDL Restrictions

After a legal pause last fall, FMCSA has finalized its rule limiting non-domiciled commercial driver's licenses. The agency says the change closes a safety gap, and its revised economic analysis suggests workforce effects will be more gradual than first thought.

Read More →