newsworthy
Meet the new boss, almost the same
as the old boss
THOSE IN THE TRUCKING SUPPLY CHAIN
thinking they saw the last of Anne S. Ferro are
going to be disappointed.
Ferro, who steps down as the head of the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
(FMCSA) by the end of the month, will become
president and CEO of the American Association
of Motor Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA).
For those unfamiliar with the group’s functions,
its members are responsible for the issuance
of commercial driver’s licenses (CDLs), and it
provides them with best-practice guidelines,
training programs, and operational guidance to
support those efforts. AAMVA also runs the Commercial
Driver’s License Information System (CDLIS) that enables
states to ensure that each commercial driver has only one
license and one complete driver record.
In other words, Ferro remains very much in the game.
The day of her July 17 resignation announcement, sev-
eral major transportation groups took the opportunity
to laud her efforts at FMCSA. That’s because: a) it’s what
you do, and b) she’ll still be working with them. American
Trucking Associations President and CEO Bill Graves
said his group, which represents mostly larger trucking
firms, “look[s] forward to working with her” on CDL-
related issues and called Ferro a “passionate advocate”
for the FMCSA. Owner-Operator Independent Drivers
Association (OOIDA) President Jim Johnston, who six
weeks prior had asked Transportation Secretary Anthony
Foxx to request Ferro’s resignation on grounds of bias
against the industry, lauded her for “having unprecedent-
ed personal outreach and engagement with truckers in all
the years that we have worked with the agency.” Robert
Voltmann, president of the Transportation Intermediaries
Association, which represents brokerage-based third-party
logistics service providers, called her “one of the most fair
and open of FMCSA administrators. While we have not
always seen eye to eye,” he added, “Administrator Ferro has
always been receptive to the opinions of others.”
The announcement ends Ferro’s controversial five-and-
a-half year tenure as the head of the Department of
Transportation’s subagency that regulates the safety of the
nation’s commercial truck and bus fleets. During her time,
FMCSA implemented two of the most controversial rules in
the industry’s history: CSA 2010, a grading system for driv-
ers and carriers, and new policies governing a driver’s hours
of service, which reduced the length of a driver’s workweek
and significantly changed the traditional rules regarding
rest breaks and when a driver could return to the road.
Critics of both rules said they are examples of well-intentioned legislative overreach that have increased liability risk
for the entire supply chain and reduced the productivity of
the country’s truck fleets.
NEW POLICIES
Ferro’s announcement came a day after FMCSA announced
changes in the information displayed on the public Safety
Measurement System (SMS) website. SMS tries to identify
high-risk truckers by gathering performance data from
accident investigations or roadside inspections and then
grading the carriers by calculating their violation rates
and comparing them with similar carriers over a matrix of
seven categories, known by the acronym BASICs.
One of the key changes will be to summarize a carrier’s
BASIC status to better clarify whether its performance in
the individual BASICs causes it to be prioritized for an
FMCSA intervention, FMCSA said. The site changes will
not alter the agency’s methodology or affect a carrier’s safety rating, the agency said. However, it should provide the
industry and safety advocates with performance data that is
more comprehensive, informative, and regularly updated,
the agency added.
At press time, the enhancements were to be implemented
on Aug. 2.
—Mark Solomon