The CDL Drug and Alcohol Clearinghouse is on track to launch Jan. 6, 2020. Despite the three-year lead time of the final rule, common questions continue to surface on how it will all play out. The ...
The random drug and alcohol testing rate for FMCSA-regulated workers hasn't been changed since 2020. Plus, FMCSA proposes ...
Fleets and drivers can now register for user accounts in the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s CDL Drug and Alcohol Clearinghouse, which creates a database of drivers who’ve failed or ...
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s Drug and Alcohol Clearinghouse has been in place for almost 5 years now, with nearly 300,000 drug and alcohol violations reported to it since it took ...
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration appears to be making progress in meeting the January 2020 deadline for implementation of its CDL Drug and Alcohol Clearinghouse for commercial driver’s ...
The second year of the Clearinghouse saw 58,215 drug violations in the system, compared to 52,810 in the program’s first year in effect. The Clearinghouse took effect on Jan. 6, 2020. The majority of ...
The screening process just got a little more in-depth for more than a million truck drivers in the U.S. Thanks to a national rule change, drivers will have to join a drug and alcohol clearing house.
While this year may be a close copy of 2023 in terms of supply chain execution as it relates to e-commerce moves, forecasting is more precarious. The instability and conflict have no upside,… As the ...
This year the Trump administration overhauled the trucking industry by rolling out aggressive deregulation, canceling speed limiter mandates, and tightening driver English-language standards.
OKLAHOMA CITY (KFOR) – Oklahoma CDL drivers with reported drug or alcohol violations will now face an automatic license downgrade under a new Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration rule (FMCSA).