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If you have been the victim of a serious truck accident, contacting a truck accident attorney that will be able to adequately represent you and your family against all negligent parties maybe the most important thing you do. Often times truck accident attorneys find that the at fault driver was conducting him or herself in a negligent manner when the accident occurred. A good truck accident attorney will work through the discovery phase of litigation and determine whether the at fault driver was speeding or otherwise operating the truck in a reckless fashion. However, often times they also find that the company employing the at fault driver was negligent in hiring the at fault driver. If the at fault driver had a bad driving history when he or she was hired, the hiring corporation may also be named in the complaint.

It is important to realize that a truck accident attorney may have to spend significant monies on trial experts, investigations and exhibits to successfully and thoroughly represent all of the interests of the client. This is especially true if the accident has resulted in the wrongful death of a truck accident victim. Please know that our firm and attorneys have significant resources to ensure that you and your family get the recovery you deserve. You can rest assure that your truck accident attorney will have the experience, skill and resources to maximize your recovery.

 

Court Issues Split Ruling on Drivers’ Hours of Service Rule

A federal court issued a split ruling Tuesday on the government’s rules governing truck driver hours of service, rejecting a petition by a group representing owner-operators but granting a separate request by a public safety advocate group.

American Trucking Associations said it will seek a stay from the court to keep current rules in place until the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration provides the court with explanations for two of the rules provisions, the group said following the ruling.

“ATA believes the existing rules have proven to be a significant improvement over the old rules in terms of reducing driver fatigue and related incidents,” said ATA President Bill Graves.

“Motor carrier experience and FMCSA data dramatically illustrate this. ATA plans to provide additional real-world documentation of the effectiveness of the current rules,” Graves said in a statement.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia’s decision denied a motion by the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association but granted a request by Public Citizen and other groups to overturn portions of the HOS rule.

The court’s ruling ends nearly eight months of speculating about the fate of the rule, which will now go back to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration.

The three-judge panel ruled that FMCSA “failed to give interested parties an opportunity to comment on the methodology of the crash-risk model that the agency used to justify an increase in the maximum number of daily and weekly hours that truck drivers may drive and work.”

“We also find that the agency failed to provide an explanation for critical elements of that methodology,” the court stated.

In a written statement, FMCSA said it was evaluating its next step.

“We are analyzing the decision issued today to understand the court’s findings as well as determine the agency’s next steps to prevent driver fatigue, ensure safe and efficient motor carrier operations and save lives,” FMCSA said. “This decision does not go into effect until Sept. 14, unless the court orders otherwise.”

The court vacated the portions of the rule that extended the maximum allowable driving time to 11 hours from the previous limit of 10, and eliminated the so-called 34-hour restart, which allows drivers to reset their maximum allowable hours in a week.

The ruling maintains the limit for drivers’ work time of 14 consecutive hours. Previously, the agency had allowed drivers to work for 15 hours per day, but had let them clock on and off duty.

The court setback is FMCSA’s second since it first tried to rewrite the hours rules in 2003. The 2003 regulation was entirely vacated by the court in July 2004, but a one-year congressional extension allowed the agency to work on a revision with the struck-down rule in place.

FMCSA issued a new rule in 2005, making almost no changes to the previously voided rule, but making modifications to the provisions governing sleeper berth use.

OOIDA had challenged these rules, saying they were too inflexible and created an unsafe driving environment, but that challenge was rejected by the court.

By Transport Topics

We hail this decision as a move back towards safer roads. This was the first substantive change in the hours of service rules since the 1930's. The change increased the amount of time truckers could drive, a move away from safety and towards more profits for the trucking industry. The industry had backed this increase and has opposed all attempts to increase the amount of rest and sleep truckers receive. This is the first step to REAL changes that will protect not only the motoring public, but the truck divers themselves.

 

 

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