5 Things to Know About the Final Hours-of-Service Rule

Lawrence

Founder
Staff member
5 Things to Know About the Final Hours-of-Service Rule


1. Under the final rule, a driver’s work week is now limited to 70 hours. This is 12 fewer hours than the current rule of 82 hours per week.


2. Drivers are not permitted to drive after 8 hours without a break of at least 30 minutes. Drivers can take the 30-minute rest anytime during the 8-hour window.


3. The 34-hour reset can be used only once per week and must include two full consecutive periods of rest between the hours of 1:00 a.m. and 5:00 a.m. This makes the reset time variable, with 34 hours being a minimum.


4. No changes were made to the basic rule of 11 hours of drive time. However, with the requirement of the 30-minute break, the effective use of the 14-hour duty day has been reduced to 13.5 hours.


5. Flexibility has been added to the “Off Duty” requirement of 10 hours to allow 2 hours of off-duty time to be spent in a moving vehicle as a co-driver before or after 8 hours of “Sleeper-Berth” status.
 

BobWolf

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
Were the 100 air mile rules left in for local/regional drivers?

Bob Wolf
 

davekc

Senior Moderator
Staff member
Fleet Owner
I think you just took the air out of the "run more for less" crowd. ;)
 

BobWolf

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
I hope you mean the new regs will force them to price realisticly, and follow the regs or get out of the business.
If thats what youre saying then youre right.

Bob Wolf
 

geo

Veteran Expediter
Charter Member
Retired Expediter
US Navy
this why i drive a sprinter van no logs and no hazmat
anybody need a sprinter van have some great deals on them
 

davekc

Senior Moderator
Staff member
Fleet Owner
Does give pause for thought as E-1 cut the drivers pay knowing this was coming up behind it.
 

ATeam

Senior Member
Retired Expediter
I hope you mean the new regs will force them to price realisticly, and follow the regs or get out of the business.

How would the new regs change anyone's approach? People who were willint to run cheap under the old regs would be willing to run cheap under the new ones too, right?
 

davekc

Senior Moderator
Staff member
Fleet Owner
How would the new regs change anyone's approach? People who were willint to run cheap under the old regs would be willing to run cheap under the new ones too, right?

Won't change any thing if they run for a bottom feeder, but they will make even less when they realize they have less running time.
 

BigCat

Expert Expediter
What are you talking about 82 hours per week? I though it has always been 70 hours????
 

rollincoal

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
What are you talking about 82 hours per week? I though it has always been 70 hours????

Work 70 hours with your 10 hour DOT rest breaks in between as needed then add a 34 hour restart on that. The next 12 hours you work after that restart makes for 82 hours in a week. Or something like that... For a fun exercise if you have nothing better to do figure it up... I always thought it was 80 hours. All the anti-trucking groups have been up at arms about it for years.

That was a fringe benefit to the companies when the 34 hour restart came into being about 10 years ago. Companies loved it because it improved productivity. Drivers loved it because, oddly enough, they could work more hours in a week.
 

Thomkatt

Rookie Expediter
I haven't gone through all the threads on this, yet. So if it is answered elsewhere, sorry. However...

With this new restart rule, what about the re caps? Do we lose the ability to roll off hours as the 'week' progresses?

In theory, frieght doesn't always agrees, a team or solo could run 8 on and 8 off (team, solo 10 off) and not risk the 70 hours. In eight days you'd have 8 hours returning.

I have heard from a few that run 53s for big carriers that the companies are stating they must declare the restart on their logs (EBRO) to be credited for the restart.

In that case then, if you are sitting for 34 hours, not calling it a restart, that would be 2 days of hours coming back, at least. The new rule is only stating that you can only 'declare' one restart every 7 days. It isn't saying you MUST take a restart every 7 days, only by the end of the 70/60 hours.

Am I reading this correctly?
 

zorry

Veteran Expediter
No. The confusion is you log in your home terminal time.
That is good because us easterners get a three hour jump on the west coasters in the am.
There is nothing that says you must do a 34 hour restart.

The new rules make them less desirable.
 

beachbum

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
May I ask who told you that you have to declare the restart, because the rule just says you need two 1 am to 5 am for the reset. It also days that you can start your next reset 168 hour from the start of your last reset, not at the end of the reset as some believe.


I haven't gone through all the threads on this, yet. So if it is answered elsewhere, sorry. However...

With this new restart rule, what about the re caps? Do we lose the ability to roll off hours as the 'week' progresses?

In theory, frieght doesn't always agrees, a team or solo could run 8 on and 8 off (team, solo 10 off) and not risk the 70 hours. In eight days you'd have 8 hours returning.

I have heard from a few that run 53s for big carriers that the companies are stating they must declare the restart on their logs (EBRO) to be credited for the restart.

In that case then, if you are sitting for 34 hours, not calling it a restart, that would be 2 days of hours coming back, at least. The new rule is only stating that you can only 'declare' one restart every 7 days. It isn't saying you MUST take a restart every 7 days, only by the end of the 70/60 hours.

Am I reading this correctly?
 
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