Related: FMCSA Will Reply to Anti-ELD Petition Filed by OOIDA
OOIDA Now Fighting ELD Rule with Coalition Support
A coalition consisting of the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association and 30 other transportation-related associations has been formed to back proposed legislation that would delay implementation of the electronic logging device mandate for two years.

Phtoo: Eroad
A coalition consisting of the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association and 30 other transportation-related associations has been formed to back proposed legislation that would delay implementation of the electronic logging device mandate for two years. As of now, the ELD rule is set to go into effect on Dec. 18-- less than 12 weeks from today.
Industries represented in the coalition include agriculture, pyrotechnics, utility contracting, livestock, and several others that could be negatively impacted by the mandate. OOIDA remains the most vocal group in trucking in its opposition to mandating electronic logging devices.
“The electronic logging device mandate is written so broadly that it has far-reaching implications well beyond the traditional trucking industry,” said Todd Spencer, executive vice president of OOIDA, in a Sept. 27 statement about the coalition.
The group supports H.R. 3282, the ELD Extension Act of 2017, proposed by Rep. Brian Babin (R-TX) that would delay the ELD mandate for two years. Earlier in September, another bill proposed by Babin that included an amendment to defund the ELD mandate (H.R. 3354, the Make America Secure and Prosperous Appropriations Act of 2018) was voted down on the house floor.
The coalition believes the mandate should be delayed until the Federal Motor carrier Safety Administration addresses what it says are numerous unresolved issues identified by impacted stakeholders. The group’s concerns include the certification of electronic loggging devices, connectivity problems in remote areas of the country, cybersecurity vulnerabilities, and the ability of law enforcement to access data.
The coalition also contends that the ELD mandate will impact stakeholders with costs of more than $2 billion while failing to improve safety, productivity, or profitability. OOIDA said that requiring electronic monitoring devices on commercial vehicles does not advance safety since they are no more reliable than paper logbooks for recording compliance with hours-of-service regulations.
In response, David Heller, vice president of government affairs for the Truckload Carriers Association, told HDT that sticking to the Dec. 18 deadline will give the industry time to generate enough data to fix any problems with ELD implementation - including detention time, truck parking, and hours of service compliance.
“TCA members have taken a proactive approach to finding a compliance tool that worked well for their fleet operations. Rather than delaying the inevitable, our members support an approach to ELDs that can and will positively address issues that have plagued this industry for decades,” stated Heller. “Insisting that this rule be delayed any longer only continues to accept these problems as status quo rather than truly taking a step forward in addressing them.”
The Trucking Alliance (Alliance for Driver Safety & Security) also commented on the coalition’s contentions, stating that ELDs would improve driver safety and improve law enforcement’s ability to maintain compliance.
“Electronic logging devices, or ELDs, will unquestionably reduce truck driver fatigue. ELDs will reduce large truck accidents on our nation’s highways. ELDs will make it easier for law enforcement to verify how many hours a driver has been behind the wheel,” stated Lane Kidd, managing director of The Trucking Alliance.
“Congress has voted numerous times and as recently as a few days ago, to require ELDs. The federal courts have upheld their congressional action," he continued. "Yet OOIDA and other groups continue to ignore these facts, suggesting the rule may not happen and are now taking their members perilously close to having their trucks taken out of service for not installing them.”
The American Trucking Associations echoed many of the same opinions of the coalition effort, saying that while there could be kinks to work out with ELD implementation, fleets should assume that the ELD mandate will not be delayed.
"Congress has passed the ELD requirement three times over the last five years," ATA spokesperson Sean McNally told HDT in a statement. "This issue has been legislated, promulgated, and litigated. It has been decided, and those still in denial would be best served complying with federal law than making excuses to exceed their hours of service limits and putting the motoring public at risk."
“As it stands today, no driver or carrier who has been honestly logging their time will need to change anything other than the manner which they record their hours of service – moving from inaccurate paper logs to more precise electronic ones," he added. "Complaints about the underlying hours-of-service rules may have merit, but that is a separate issue from complying with the current rules.”
In addition to OOIDA, these associations make up the anti-mandate coalition:
Agricultural Retailers Association | National Aquaculture Association | National Ready Mixed Concrete Association |
American Pipeline Contractors Association | National Corn Growers Association | National Stone, Sand & Gravel Association |
American Pyrotechnics Association | National Cotton Council | New England Fuel Institute |
Associated Equipment Distributors | National Electrical Contractors Association | North American Wood Pole Council |
Distribution Contractors Association | National Federation of Independent Business | Petroleum Marketers Association of America |
Livestock Exporters Association of the USA | National Grain and Feed Association | Power & Communication Contractors Association |
Lucas Oil Products | National Ground Water Association | Precast/Prestressed Concrete Institute |
Mid-West Truckers Association | National Hay Association | SikhsPAC |
National Association of Chemical Distributors | National Motorists Association | Southern Pressure Treaters’ Association |
National Association of Small Trucking Companies | National Precast Concrete Association | United States Cattlemen’s Association |
More Safety & Compliance

ATRI Wants Motor Carriers for Driver-Facing Camera Study
In this new study, the American Transportation Research Institute will explore how driver-facing cameras can impact safety and operational metrics in trucking fleets.
Read More →
Netradyne Intelligence Uses New AI Agents to Automate Response to In-Cab Camera Data
The company called the next-generation in-cab camera safety platform "a fundamental shift from systems that report on what happened to systems that actively drive what should happen next."
Read More →
Mack, Volvo Issue ‘Do Not Drive’ Recall on Possible Wheel-Offs
Owners will be sent advance notice not to operate their affected vehicles until the remedy is performed.
Read More →
Fleetworthy Integrates Lytx Video Snapshots into Safety+ Platform
A new Fleetworthy-Lytx integration gives fleet managers access to video context alongside safety event data, streamlining driver coaching and incident review.
Read More →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: 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 →
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 →
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 →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 →
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 →
