The bill also suspends the ELD regulation for commercial motor vehicles hauling livestock, insects or perishable agricultural commodities until the date on which the DOT secretary proposes the regulatory changes.

2 Min Read
Legislation introduced to study trucking regulations reform
National Pork Board

U.S. Sens. John Hoeven (R-ND), and Michael Bennet (D-Colo) introduce legislation to examine trucking regulations. 

The “Modernizing Agricultural Transportation Act” would establish a working group at the Department of Transportation to study the federal Hours of Service rules and the Electronic Logging Device regulations. The HOS rules limit commercial truckers to 11 hours of driving time and 14 consecutive hours of on-duty time in any 24-hour period. Once drivers reach that limit, they must pull over and wait 10 hours before driving again. ELDs record driving time, engine hours, vehicle movement and speed, miles driven and location information, electronically reporting the data to federal and state inspectors to help enforce the HOS rules.

The National Pork Producers Council applauds the effort to revise existing trucking regulations, making it more flexible for drivers hauling livestock. 

“NPPC strongly supports the Hoeven-Bennet bill as a reasonable solution for developing Hours of Service regulations that protect highway safety while allowing livestock haulers to transport animals in a safe and humane way,” says NPPC President Jim Heimerl, a pork producer from Johnstown, Ohio, whose operation also includes a trucking company.

The legislation would require the Secretary of Transportation to establish the working group within 120 days of enactment of the bill. The group would be charged with identifying obstacles to the “safe, humane and market-efficient transport of livestock, insects and other perishable agricultural commodities” and developing guidelines and recommending regulatory or legislative action to improve the transportation of those commodities. One year after it is established, the group must submit its findings to the DOT secretary, who must propose regulatory changes to the HOS and ELD regulations within 120 days.

“Pulling together all stakeholders with an interest in livestock hauling will ensure that DOT has the tools necessary to ensure Hours of Service regulations address the realities of transporting animals in a practical, common sense manner,” Heimerl says. “As we’ve pointed out, a trucker hauling livestock can’t just pull over and go ‘off-duty,’ leaving animals unattended. The incompatibility between the Hours of Service regulations and livestock hauling must be addressed.”

The bill also would suspend the ELD regulation for commercial motor vehicles hauling livestock, insects or perishable agricultural commodities until the date on which the DOT secretary proposes the regulatory changes.

Subscribe to Our Newsletters
National Hog Farmer is the source for hog production, management and market news

You May Also Like