Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

ATA Wants to Extend Hours of Service Start Date

American Trucking Associations is asking the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration to push back the start date of the new hours of service rule.

by Staff
January 28, 2013
2 min to read


American Trucking Associations is asking the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration to push back the start date of the new hours of service rule.

The rule, which ATA and others are contesting in court, is scheduled to take effect July 1.

In a January 25 letter, ATA President and CEO Bill Graves asked the agency to push that date back until three months after the court issues its decision.

The delay will make it easier to manage any changes that the court may require, and to complete personnel training, Graves said in the letter to Administrator Anne Ferro.

At issue is the timing of the suit against the rule. The court has scheduled oral arguments for March 15. It typically takes the court two to three months to rule following arguments, which means the decision could come as late as a month before the start date.

Much of the training for the rule already is under way, but the industry and the enforcement community still will need three months to finish the job once they know what the final rule says, Graves said.

"We recognize that the parties to the pending litigation will differ on what the likely outcome will be, but the undeniable realty is that there is genuine uncertainty until the D.C. Circuit resolves the challenges," Graves wrote.

FMCSA spokesman Duane DeBruyne said the agency is reviewing the letter.

At issue before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit are petitions by trucking interests to strike four provisions of the rule, and by safety advocates charging that FMCSA erred when it preserved the 34-hour restart and 11-hour driving limit.

ATA and others object to a change in which the 34-hour restart will be limited to once a week, with each restart including two rest periods between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m.

They also object to the requirement that a driver must take a half-hour off if it's been more than eight hours since he took an off-duty or sleeper berth break.

Public Citizen and its allies have told the court that the agency abused its discretion when it preserved the restart and the daily limit. They also say the agency erred in its decision not to eliminate the 11-hour limit on daily driving.

FMCSA, for its part, contends that limits on the 34-hour restart are reasonable, that the productivity savings outweigh the risks of the 11-hour limit, and the 30-minute rest break improves safety.






More Fleet Management

Amazon tractor-trailer at distribution center
Fleet ManagementJune 10, 2026

Amazon Launches Less-Than-Truckload Freight Offering for All Businesses   

This launch is the latest addition to Amazon Supply Chain Services, a portfolio of supply chain capabilities from Amazon, including freight, distribution, fulfillment, and parcel shipping.

Read More →
Stacks of intermodal containers at port with truck driving between them

Import Cargo Volume to See Year-Over-Year Gain Again in June, Then Remain Below 2025 Levels Into Fall

After July, the report predicts a weakening in import volume as consumer uncertainty remains high and the impact of increasing inflation takes its toll.

Read More →
Equity Interest Auction
SponsoredJune 8, 2026

AUCTION OF EQUITY INTEREST IN HEAVY HAUL TRUCKING COMPANY!!

Mark your calendar: June 30, 2026 (10:00 a.m. PDT). A 37.5% ownership interest in MagnaTrans, LLC, a California limited liability company doing business as Magna Transportation Group, will be sold in an in-person and online auction to the highest bidder or bidders under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. The Rancho Cucamonga-based heavy haul and over-dimensional trucking company operates across California, Oregon, and Arizona.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Volvo OTA updates.

Volvo Trucks Adds Unattended Over-the-Air Software Update Capabilities

The latest evolution of Volvo’s over-the-air update technology allows software updates to run while trucks are parked, helping fleets keep vehicles current without disrupting operations.

Read More →
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 →
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...
Illustration of tractor-trailer and cybersecurity
Fleet ManagementJune 3, 2026

NMFTA Launches Free, Anonymous Cybersecurity Threat Report Portal

Organizations are encouraged to anonymously report freight fraud, cargo crime, and cyber threats while gaining visibility into incidents reported across the transportation sector.

Read More →
Cover feature graphic showing AI background

AI Can Optimize a Fleet. Can It Replace Human Judgment?

Fleets fear falling behind if they don’t adopt AI quickly enough. They also fear what happens if the technology makes the wrong decision.

Read More →
Jamie Hagen owner, Hell Bent Xpress.
Fleet Managementby Jack RobertsMay 29, 2026

Jamie Hagen Gets Real About Running a Small Fleet in an Uncertain Economy

Small fleet owner Jamie Hagen says new legal risks, volatile fuel prices, and a changing freight market are forcing small carriers to rethink how they operate — and what they can afford.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Jamie Hagen owner, Hell Bent Xpress.
Fleet ManagementMay 28, 2026

Jamie Hagen Gets Real About Freight, Fuel Prices, Safety, and Small-Fleet Survival

Running a small trucking fleet right now isn’t easy, especially right now. And Jamie Hagen doesn’t sugarcoat it.

Read More →