CVSA's Brake Safety Week Scheduled for August 20-26
This week's safety bulletin details this year's Brake Safety Week, read to prepare your drivers and trucks! Read the full safety bulletin here and subscribe to receive future bulletins directly to your inbox.
The Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance (CVSA) has scheduled this year's Brake Safety Week for Aug. 20-26, focusing on brake lining/pad violations. Brake SafetyWeek aims to highlight the importance of brake systems by conducting inspections of their components and removing commercial motor vehicles found to have brake-related out-of-service violations from our roadways until those violations are corrected.
Throughout Brake Safety Week, CVSA-certified inspectors will conduct regular inspections; however, they will also report brake-related assessment and violation data to the Alliance. CVSA will compile that data and publish a press release this fall with the results.
"The focus of this year's Brake Safety Week is on the condition of the brake lining and pad," said CVSA President Maj. Chris Nordloh with the Texas Department of Public Safety. "Brake lining and pad issues may result in vehicle violations and could affect a motor carrier's safety rating."
When inspectors conduct the brake portion of a Level I or Level V Inspection, they will:
- Check for missing, non-functioning, loose, or cracked parts.
- Check for contaminated, worn, cracked, and missing linings or pads.
- Check for an S-cam flip-over.
- Listen for audible air leaks around brake components and lines.
- Check that slack adjusters are the same length (from the center of the S-cam to the center of the clevis pin) and the air chambers on each axle are the same sizes.
- Ensure the brake system maintains air pressure between 90-100 psi (620-690 kPa) and measure pushrod travel.
- Inspect for non-manufactured holes (e.g., rust holes, holes created by rubbing or friction, etc.) and broken springs in the spring brake housing section of the parking brake.
- Inspect required brake system warning devices, such as anti-lock braking system (ABS) malfunction lamp(s) and low air-pressure warning devices.
- Inspect the tractor protection system, including the feedback system on the trailer.
- Ensure the breakaway system is operable on the trailer.
Brake safety awareness, education, and outreach are major Brake Safety Week campaign elements. CVSA has outlined the brake-system inspection procedure (noted above) so drivers and motor carriers know what inspectors will check during roadside inspections. This transparency aims to remind drivers and motor carriers to take proactive steps to ensure their commercial motor vehicles are safe and compliant with Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations. Improperly installed or poorly maintained brake systems can reduce the braking capacity and stopping distance of trucks or buses, which poses a serious safety risk.
- Check CVSA's vehicle inspection checklist for details on Level I and Level V inspections' brake portions.
- Download our 2023 Brake Safety Week flyer for ten tips on keeping your brake lining/pad healthy.
- View the inspection procedures.
- View previous brake-safety campaign results.
- Check the latest inspection bulletins. Currently, there are eight in the brakes category. Inspection bulletins provide important information to augment the existing inspection program.
CVSA's Operation Airbrake Program is dedicated to improving commercial vehicle brake safety throughout North America. The goal is to reduce the number of highway crashes caused by faulty braking systems on commercial motor vehicles by conducting roadside inspections and educating drivers, mechanics, owner-operators, and others on the importance of proper brake inspection, maintenance, and operation.
FMCSA Reports to Congress on ELD Costs and Effectiveness
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has issued a report to Congress on the costs and effectiveness of the agency's 2015 final rule on using electronic logging devices to record drivers' service hours.
The report noted that the agency's Regulatory Impact Analysis issued with the final rule estimated the total annualized industry costs to be $1.836 million, with annualized full benefits of $3.010 million, resulting in a net annual benefit of $1,174 million. The report concluded, "To date, FMCSA's knowledge of ELD's costs and benefits align with these estimates."
As to the effectiveness of the ELD regulations, the agency pointed to a reduction in hours-of-service compliance violations since the final rule became effective in 2017. The FMCSA noted, "During the 2-year period from the compliance date, December 18, 2017, to the full compliance phase, which began December 17, 2019, compliance with the HOS categories [the 10/11-hour driving time limits for buses and trucks, respectively; the 14/15-hour driving window or on-duty limits for trucks and buses; and the 60/70-hour "weekly" on-duty limits] improved. In December 2017, 1.19 percent of driver inspections cited at least one HOS violation. In December 2021, that percentage decreased to approximately 0.77 percent."
Yet although the report asserts, "Increased compliance with the HOS rules reduces the risks of fatigue-related crashes attributable, in whole or in part, to patterns of violations of the HOS rules," the FMCSA failed to show any correlation between increased compliance with HOS requirements and improved safety performance due to reduced fatigued-related accidents, injuries or fatalities.
Although the report concluded the ELD rule made motor carriers more efficient in HOS compliance and enforcement personnel more efficient in HOS enforcement, the FMCSA could not say that ELDs made the highways safer. The report noted that generally, "the anti-harassment provisions of the ELD rule, and ELDs themselves, improve safety and help prevent harassment of drivers by making it difficult for drivers and carriers to falsify drivers' duty status, or force drivers to drive while fatigued or over hours, resulting in fewer violations of the HOS rules."
Moreover, the FMCSA stated that "many drivers have anecdotally reported that the use of ELDs has prevented dispatchers from encouraging or forcing them to commit HOS violations, and drivers paid by the mile (the majority of over-the-road drivers) indicate that the improved documentation supported by ELDs helps reduce paycheck errors."
But the report stopped short of concluding that using ELDs had improved safety performance or reduced fatigue-related crashes, citing "multiple events [that] have occurred that have impacted the use of ELDs, safety, and HOS enforcement. Such factors include the September 2020 implementation of new HOS regulations, HOS exemptions issued in response to the COVID-19 pandemic (which suspended HOS rules for carriers transporting specified commodities in support of relief efforts during the pandemic), and the implementation of FMCSA's Drug and Alcohol Clearinghouse." The FMCSA said these factors have made it difficult to show any safety impacts of ELDs alone.
Analysis Reveals the Most Dangerous Times to Drive
The highest number of road accident deaths occur on a Saturday (25,907 fatalities), and October (13,566 road accident fatalities) is the month with the most fatalities combined between 2016 and 2020.
The second most dangerous hour is from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m., during which 8,387 fatalities occurred between 2016 and 2020, while 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. has the third highest total, with 8,241 deaths.
Weekends, in general, were a dangerous time to be on the road. There were 23,147 traffic deaths on Fridays, for the second-highest total, and 23,038 on Sundays, high enough for third place.
July is the second deadliest month, with 13,483 deaths, and September's total of 13,404 is the third highest.
Looking at individual states, the most dangerous time in 13 states was 5 p.m. to 6 p.m., including in New York, Ohio, Massachusetts, Nevada, and Georgia.
In most states, the hour when the most road accident deaths occurred was generally between 3 p.m. and 10 p.m. However, in South Dakota, the highest number of fatalities happened between 11 a.m. and 12 p.m.; in Maryland, the most dangerous hour fell between 11 p.m. and 12 a.m.; and in Rhode Island, it was 12 a.m. to 1 a.m.
Operation Safe Driver Week
Operation Safe Driver Week is a safe-driving awareness and outreach initiative aimed at improving the driving behaviors of passenger vehicle drivers and commercial motor vehicle drivers through educational and traffic enforcement strategies and interactions with law enforcement.
The next Operation Safe Driver Week is July 9-15, 2023
Throughout Operation Safe Driver Week, law enforcement personnel will look for commercial and passenger vehicle drivers engaging in risky driving. Identified unsafe drivers will be pulled over and issued a citation or warning.
Data shows that traffic stops and interactions with law enforcement help reduce problematic driving behaviors. By contacting drivers during Operation Safe Driver Week, law enforcement personnel aim to make our roadways safer by targeting high-risk driving behaviors.
- Speeding has been a factor in over a quarter of crash deaths since 2008. (Source)
- Speeding of any kind was the most frequent driver-related crash factor for drivers of commercial motor vehicles and passenger vehicles. (Source)
- Speeding was a factor in 26% of all traffic fatalities in 2018, killing 9,378 people or an average of more than 25 people daily. (Source)
- Distracted driving claimed 3,142 lives in 2019. (Source)
- Of the 22,215 passenger vehicle occupants killed in 2019, 47% were not wearing seat belts. Seat belts saved an estimated 14,955 lives and could have saved an additional 2,549 people if they had been wearing seat belts in 2017 alone. (Source)
- Every day, about 28 people in the United States die in drunk-driving crashes — that's one person every 52 minutes. In 2019, 10,142 people lost their lives due to drunk driving.
Registration is now open online for the 2023 Idealease/NPTC Safety Seminars!
Data Utilization in Transportation Safety
Idealease and the National Private Truck Council NPTC will again host safety seminars in 2023. This year's one-day seminar will focus on data available from trucks today about safety, basic safety and compliance, regulation changes, and CSA. The seminars will be provided to all Idealease customers, potential customers, and NPTC members at no charge. The seminar provides essential information applicable to both novice and experienced transportation professionals. Seminars currently available for registration have their venues secured. If you cannot register for the seminar in your area, check back, as registration availability will be added as the venues are secured. This information will be updated weekly in this bulletin. To register for an upcoming seminar in 2023, click on the following link:
http://www.idealease.com/safety-seminar-registration
FALL SEMINARS (Sept-Oct)
9/19/23 Reno/Sparks | NV |
9/20/23 San Leandro | CA |
9/21/23 Oxnard | CA |
TBD Flint | MI |
9/28/23 Baltimore | MD |
10/19/23 Green Bay | WI |
TBD Weirton | WV |
TBD Birmingham | AL |
10/12/2023 Atlanta | GA |
10/17/23 Hillsboro/Portland | OR |
TBD Kelowna | BC CN |
TBD Louisville | KY |
10/26/2023 Nashville | TN |
*The Idealease Safety Bulletin is provided for Idealease locations and their customers and is not to be construed as a complete or exhaustive source of compliance or safety information. The Idealease Safety Bulletin is advisory in nature and does not warrant, guarantee, or otherwise certify compliance with laws, regulations, requirements, or guidelines of any local, state, or Federal agency and/or governing body, or industry standard