Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Safety Fitness Determination Changes: FMCSA to Hold Listening Sessions

Should the way motor carrier safety fitness determinations are made be updated? The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration is continuing to gather input on ideas for improvement.

Deborah Lockridge
Deborah LockridgeEditor and Associate Publisher
Read Deborah's Posts
June 7, 2024
Safety Fitness Determination Changes: FMCSA to Hold Listening Sessions

The FMCSA is considering changes to its Safety Fitness Determination program, including using SMS data.

Image: HDT Graphic

3 min to read


The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has scheduled an in-person listening session as it continues to gather information about possible changes to the way the agency rates motor carrier safety fitness.

FMCSA is contemplating changes to its Safety Fitness Determination process. Last year, the agency published an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking asking for public input on changes to the system, including using SMS (Safety Measurement System) data.

Ad Loading...

Why Change Motor Carrier Safety Fitness Determinations?

Motor carrier safety fitness ratings of Satisfactory, Unsatisfactory, and Conditional currently are determined by a compliance review, also called a DOT audit.

These look at existing motor carrier data plus data collected during the investigation and analyses it based on six factors:

  • General

  • Driver

  • Operational

  • Vehicle

  • Hazmat

  • Accident factor (recordable accident rate per million miles)

Ad Loading...

The process has been criticized because it’s resource-intensive and reaches only a small percentage of motor carriers.

In Fiscal Year 2019, FMCSA and its state partners conducted 11,671 compliance reviews out of a population of more than 567,000 active interstate motor carriers. Of those, 306 received a safety rating of Unsatisfactory, 1,842 were rated Conditional, and 2,701 were Satisfactory. (A small percentage of carriers with safety management control deficiencies are required to submit corrective action to continue operating and avoid a final unfit determination based on an unsatisfactory rating.)

Ditching the Three-Tier SFD Rating System?

One of the changes the agency is contemplating is moving to a single rating, only when a carrier is found to be Unfit, instead of the current three-tiered rating system.

The agency has said that a carrier getting a Satisfactory safety rating may be misconstrued as an FMCSA approval of the current operations of a motor carrier. But what it actually reflects is FMCSA’s evaluation of a motor carrier’s operations at the time of the investigation.

And under the current SFD process, a motor carrier with a Conditional rating is not prohibited from operating, even if a review reveals breakdowns in safety management controls in multiple areas.

Ad Loading...

The agency has long hoped to link its Compliance, Safety, Accountability program and its Safety Measurement System to fitness reviews. The SMS is FMCSA’s prioritization system to identify motor carriers for investigation, which went into effect in 2010.

But trucking companies have opposed the use of SMS to determine safety fitness, saying the SMS data has problems that need to be fixed first.

FMCSA's SMS currently is not used in any way to generate SFDs. SMS is FMCSA's prioritization system to identify motor carriers for investigation. SMS organizes inspection and crash data into seven categories of violations known as Behavior Analysis and Safety Improvement Categories (BASICs). These are commonly referred to as CSA scores, for the Compliance, Safety, Accountability program.

The Texas Listening Session

The June 29 public listening session will be held from 1-2:30 pm CDT in conjunction with the Texas Trucking Show in Houston. All comments will be transcribed and placed in the public docket for the regulatory action.

The agency wants to hear from members of the public on issues of concern relating to the current Safety Fitness Determination, including:

Ad Loading...
  • The three-tiered rating system (Satisfactory, Unsatisfactory, Conditional) versus changing to a proposed single rating only when a carrier is found to be Unfit.

  • Using inspection data and FMCSA’s Safety Measurement System (SMS).

  • Incorporating driver behavior into SFD ratings.

  • Revising the list of safety violations used to calculate the rating.

  • Adjusting the weights allocated to particular violations, including increasing the weight for unsafe driving violations.

The meeting will be held at the NRG Center, 1 NRG Parkway, Houston, TX 77054, in the Seminar Area next to the Trucking Exhibition. Attendees do not need to preregister for the listening session but are required to register for the Texas Trucking Show at https://texastruckingshow.com/​register.

FMCSA also said it is planning two virtual listening sessions on the same topics to be held in June and July.

The agency is accepting written comments to the docket through August 7, 2024.

More Safety & Compliance

Graphic with light bulbs, HDT Truck Fleet Innovators logo, and the word Nominations
Fleet ManagementMay 15, 2026

Deadline Extended for HDT Truck Fleet Innovators Nominations

Heavy Duty Trucking has extended the deadline for nominations for its Truck Fleet Innovators awards. The deadline has been extended to May 22.

Read More →
Illustration of U.S. Supreme Court building and a truck crash

Supreme Court Ruling Puts Freight Broker Vetting Practices in Spotlight

The unanimous SCOTUS ruling in the closely watched Montgomery v. Caribe case allows state negligence claims against freight brokers that hire unsafe motor carriers, raising new liability and vetting concerns among brokers.

Read More →
YouTube thumbnail illustration

The Truck Safety Tech K&B Transportation Says Is Making a Difference [Watch]

Can technology help prevent truck crashes? In this HDT Talks Trucking Short Takes episode, K&B Transportation explains how it’s using cameras, speed management tools, cellphone-blocking technology, and other systems to improve safety and reduce risk across its fleet.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Lance Evans, Director of Safety at K&B Transportation.
Safety & ComplianceMay 13, 2026

Listen: Inside Modern Fleet Safety: AI, Cameras & Speed Control at K&B Transportation

Fleet safety is evolving fast—and technology is at the center of it. Learn how a former commercial vehicle enforcement officer turned director of safety at K&B Transportation is embracing real-world safety technology.

Read More →
Mobile tablet showing Motus screen against highway background with Motus logo

FMCSA’s Motus System Is Coming. What Fleets Need to Know Now

FMCSA's long-awaited registration system promises a single portal — and tighter fraud controls. And there are steps you need to take by May 14.

Read More →
Winter pileup accidents.
Disaster Responseby Jack RobertsApril 30, 2026

Avoiding Winter Pileups: Don’t Become the Next Link in the Crash-Chain

Winter roadway “pileups” aren’t one crash — they’re a chain reaction. Here’s what triggers them, how truck drivers can spot the danger early, and what to do if you're suddenly trapped in the mess.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Detroit ABA6 safety system.

Freightliner Expands Detroit Assurance with New Intersection and Turning Safety Tech

Detroit’s next-generation ABA6 safety system adds cross-traffic detection and enhanced side guard assist with left-turn protection, targeting high-risk urban scenarios.

Read More →
Illustration with ATRI logo and square blocks spelling out "research"
Fleet Managementby Deborah LockridgeApril 20, 2026

'Beyond Compliance,' Regulations, Driver Coaching on ATRI’s 2026 Research List

The American Transportation Research Institute will examine driver coaching, regulatory impacts — including the "Beyond Compliance" concept —and weather disruptions that shape trucking operations.

Read More →
Illustration of colorful map of United States with DataQs website screen superimposed

FMCSA Revamps DataQs to Improve Fairness, Speed of Reviews

New requirements add firm deadlines and independent review steps, addressing long-standing complaints about inconsistent rulings and slow response times.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Illustration of driver medical exam paperwork over duotone background of a blood pressure check

FMCSA Extends Paper Medical Card Exemption … Again

Five states still aren't ready to accept commercial driver medical exam information directly from the medical examiner's registry.

Read More →