(a)
General. The rules in this section, unless otherwise specified, apply to all
intrastate motor carriers and drivers.
(b) Adverse driving conditions.
(1) A driver who encounters adverse driving
conditions, as defined in Section
1201, and cannot, because of those
conditions, safely complete the run within the maximum driving time permitted
by Section
1212.5 may drive and be permitted
or required to drive for not more than 2 additional hours in order to complete
that run or to reach a place offering safety for vehicle occupants and security
for the vehicle and its cargo. However, that driver may not drive or be
permitted to drive:
(A) More than 12 hours in
the aggregate for bus drivers and 14 hours for truck drivers following eight
consecutive hours off duty for bus drivers and ten consecutive hours off duty
for truck drivers; or
(B) After the
driver has been on duty 15 hours following eight consecutive hours off duty for
bus drivers and after the end of the 16th hour after coming on duty, following
ten consecutive hours off duty, for truck drivers.
(2) Emergency conditions. In the event of a
traffic accident, medical emergency, or disaster, a driver may complete his/her
run without being in violation of the provisions of these regulations, if such
run reasonably could have been completed absent the emergency.
(3) Relief Point. Bus drivers (other than
school bus and school pupil activity bus drivers) in urban and suburban service
may exceed their regulated hours in order to reach a regularly scheduled relief
point, providing the additional time does not exceed one
hour.
(c)
Driver-salesperson
. The provisions of Section
1212.5(a)(4)
shall not apply to any driver-salesperson whose total driving time does not
exceed 40 hours in any period of seven consecutive days.
(d) Oilfield operations.
(1) In the instance of drivers of commercial
motor vehicles used exclusively in the transportation of oilfield equipment,
including the stringing and picking up of pipe used in pipelines, and servicing
of the field operations of the natural gas and oil industry, any period of
eight consecutive days may end with the beginning of any off-duty period of 24
or more successive hours.
(2) In
the case of specially trained drivers of motor vehicles which are specially
constructed to service oil wells, on-duty time shall not include waiting time
at a natural gas or oil well site; provided, that all such time shall be fully
and accurately accounted for in records to be maintained by the motor carrier.
Such records shall be made available upon request of any authorized employee of
the department.
(e) 100
air-mile radius driver. A driver is exempt from the requirements of Section
1213 if:
(1) The driver operates within a 100 air-mile
radius of the normal work reporting location;
(2) The driver, except a driver salesperson,
returns to the work reporting location and is released from work within 12
consecutive hours;
(3) The driver
of a school bus, school pupil activity bus, youth bus, or farm labor vehicle
returns to the work reporting location and is released from work before the end
of the 16th hour after coming on duty;
(4) At least eight consecutive hours off duty
for bus drivers and ten consecutive hours off duty for truck drivers, separate
each work period, as defined in Section
1201; and
(5) The motor carrier that employs the driver
maintains and retains for a period of six months accurate and true time records
showing:
(A) The time the driver reports for
duty each day;
(B) The total number
of hours the driver is on duty each day;
(C) The time the driver is released from duty
each day; and
(D) The total time
for the preceding seven days in accordance with Section
1213(k)(2) for
drivers used for the first time or intermittently.
(6) The permanent record produced by a
time-recording device such as a "tachograph" (Figure 1) may be used as a
driver's record for any tour of duty for an intrastate driver that does not
exceed 15 consecutive hours or the 100 air-mile radius, provided the intrastate
bus driver does not exceed ten hours and the intrastate truck driver does not
exceed 12 hours maximum driving time following eight consecutive hours off duty
for bus drivers and ten consecutive hours off duty for truck drivers, and the
driver enters:
(A) The time the driver reports
for duty each day;
(B) The previous
day's time of going off duty; and
(C) The data required by Section
1213(e).
(f) Retail store deliveries. The provisions
of Section
1212.5(a) shall
not apply with respect to drivers of commercial motor vehicles engaged solely
in making local deliveries from retail stores and/or retail catalog businesses
to the ultimate consumer, when driving solely within a 100 air-mile radius of
the driver's work-reporting location, during the period from December 10 to
December 25, both inclusive, of each year.
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(g) Sleeper berths.
(1) Property-carrying motor vehicles. A
driver who is driving a truck or truck tractor that is equipped with a sleeper
berth, as defined in Section
1265,
(A) Must, before driving, accumulate;
(i) At least ten consecutive hours off
duty;
(ii) At least ten consecutive
hours of sleeper-berth time;
(iii)
A combination of consecutive sleeper-berth and off-duty time amounting to at
least ten hours; or
(iv) The
equivalent of at least ten consecutive hours off duty if the driver does not
comply with paragraph (g)(1)(A)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this
section;
(B) May not
drive more than 12 hours following one of the ten-hour off-duty periods
specified in paragraph (g)(1)(A)(i) through (iv) of this section; and
(C) May not drive after the 16th hour after
coming on duty following one of the ten-hour off-duty periods specified in
paragraph (g)(1)(A)(i) through (iv) of this section; and
(D) Must exclude from the calculation of the
16-hour limit any sleeper-berth period of at least eight but less than ten
consecutive hours.
(2)
Specific requirements. The following rules apply in determining compliance with
paragraph (g)(1) of this section:
(A) The term
"equivalent of at least ten consecutive hours off duty" means a period of:
(i) At least eight but less than ten
consecutive hours in a sleeper berth, and
(ii) A separate period of at least two but
less than ten consecutive hours either in the sleeper berth or off duty, or any
combination thereof.
(B)
Calculation of the 12-hour driving limit includes all driving time; compliance
must be recalculated from the end of the first of the two periods used to
comply with paragraph (g)(2)(A) of this section.
(C) Calculation of the 16-hour limit includes
all time except any sleeper-berth period of at least eight but less than ten
consecutive hours; compliance must be re-calculated from the end of the first
of the two periods used to comply with the requirements of paragraph (g)(2)(A)
of this section.
(3)
Specially trained driver of a specially constructed oil well servicing
commercial motor vehicle at a natural gas or oil well location. A specially
trained driver who operates a commercial motor vehicle specially constructed to
service natural gas or oil wells that is equipped with a sleeper berth, as
defined in Section
1265, or who is off duty at a
natural gas or oil well location, may accumulate the equivalent of ten
consecutive hours off-duty time by taking a combination of at least ten
consecutive hours of off-duty time, sleeper-berth time, or time in other
sleeping accommodations at a natural gas or oil well location; or by taking two
periods of rest in a sleeper berth, or other sleeping accommodation at a
natural gas or oil well location, providing:
(A) Neither rest period is shorter than two
hours;
(B) The driving time in the
period immediately before and after each rest period, when added together, does
not exceed 12 hours;
(C) The driver
does not drive after the 16th hour after coming on duty following ten hours off
duty, where the 16th hour is calculated:
(i)
By excluding any sleeper berth or other sleeping accommodation period of at
least two hours which, when added to a subsequent sleeper berth or other
sleeping accommodation period, totals at least ten hours, and
(ii) By including all on-duty time, all
off-duty time not spent in the sleeper berth or other sleeping accommodations,
all such periods of less than two hours, and any period not described in
paragraph (g)(2)(A) of this section; and
(D) The driver may not return to driving
subject to the normal limits under Section
1212.5 without taking at least ten
consecutive hours off duty, at least ten consecutive hours in the sleeper berth
or other sleeping accommodations, or a combination of at least ten consecutive
hours off duty, sleeper-berth time, or time in other sleeping
accommodations.
(4)
Passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicles. A bus driver who is driving a bus
that is equipped with a sleeper berth, as defined in Section
1265, may accumulate the
equivalent of eight consecutive hours of off-duty time by taking a combination
of at least eight consecutive hours off-duty and sleeper berth time; or by
taking two periods of rest in the sleeper berth, providing:
(A) Neither rest period is shorter than two
hours;
(B) The driving time in the
period immediately before and after each rest period, when added together, does
not exceed ten hours;
(C) The
on-duty time in the period immediately before and after each rest period, when
added together, does not include any driving time after the 15th hour;
and
(D) The driver may not return
to driving subject to the normal limits under Section
1212.5 without taking at least
eight consecutive hours off duty, at least eight consecutive hours in the
sleeper berth, or a combination of at least eight consecutive hours off duty
and sleeper berth time.
(h) Travel time. When a driver at the
direction of the motor carrier is traveling, but not driving or assuming any
other responsibility to the carrier, such time shall be counted as on-duty time
unless the driver is afforded at least eight consecutive hours off duty for bus
drivers and ten consecutive hours off duty for truck drivers, when arriving at
destination, in which case the driver shall be considered off duty for the
entire period.
(i) Utility service
vehicles. An intrastate driver employed by an electrical corporation, as
defined in Section
218
of the Public Utilities Code, a local publicly owned electrical utility, as
defined in Section 224.3 of that code, a gas corporation, as defined in Section
222 of that code, a telephone corporation, as defined in Section 234 of that
code, a water corporation, as defined in Section 241 of that code, or a public
water district, as defined in Section
20200 of the
Water Code, is exempt from all hours-of-service regulations while operating a
public utility or public water district vehicle.
(j) Fire fighters. For drivers of vehicles
owned and operated by any forestry or fire department of any public agency or
fire department organized as provided in the Health and Safety Code:
(1) Section
1212.5 does not apply while
involved in emergency and related operations.
(2) Upon termination of the emergency and
release of a driver from duty, the total on-duty hours accumulated by the
driver during the most recent eight consecutive days shall be considered reset
to zero upon the driver's completion of an off-duty period of 24 or more
consecutive hours.
(k)
Farm products.
(1) A driver when transporting
farm products from the field to the first point of processing or packing, shall
not drive;
(A) More than 12 hours following
eight-consecutive hours off duty.
(B) For any period after having been on duty
16 hours or more following eight consecutive hours off duty.
(C) For any period after having been on duty
for 112 hours in any consecutive eight-day period.
(2) A driver transporting special situation
farm products from the field to the first point of processing or packing, or
transporting livestock from pasture to pasture, may be exempted from the
eight-day cumulative limit, specified in Sections
1212(k)(1)(C) and
1212.5(a)(4),
during one period of not more than 28 consecutive days or a combination of two
periods totaling not more than 28 days in a calendar year.
(3) A driver who thereby utilizes the driving
time limits, as provided by this section, shall maintain a driver's record of
duty status pursuant to Section
1213.
(4) Upon the request of the Director of Food
and Agriculture, the Commissioner may, for good cause, temporarily waive the
maximum on-dutytime limits applicable to any eight-day period when an emergency
exists due to inclement weather, natural disaster, or an adverse economic
condition that threatens to disrupt the orderly movement of farm products
during harvest for the duration of the emergency. For purposes of this
paragraph, an emergency does not include a strike or labor dispute.
(5) For purposes of this section, the
following terms have the following meanings:
(A) "Farm Products" means every agricultural,
horticultural, viticultural, or vegetable product of the soil, honey and
beeswax, oilseeds, poultry, livestock, milk, or timber.
(B) "First point of processing or packing"
means a location where farm products are dried, canned, extracted, fermented,
distilled, frozen, ginned, eviscerated, pasteurized, packed, packaged, bottled,
conditioned, or otherwise manufactured, processed, or preserved for
distribution in wholesale or resale markets.
(C) "Special situation farm products" means
fruit, tomatoes, sugar beets, grains, wine grapes, grape concentrate, cotton,
or nuts.
(l)
Law Enforcement. Sections
1212.5 and
1213 do not apply to intrastate
drivers employed by a law enforcement agency during an emergency or when
restoring the public peace.
(m)
Construction Materials and Equipment. In the instance of a driver of a vehicle
who is used primarily in the transportation of construction materials and
equipment, the total on-duty hours accumulated by the driver during the most
recent eight consecutive days shall be considered reset to zero upon the
driver's completion of an off-duty period of 24 or more consecutive hours.
(1) Transportation of "construction materials
and equipment" means the transportation of construction and pavement materials,
construction equipment, and construction maintenance vehicles, by a driver to
or from an active construction site (a construction site between mobilization
of equipment and materials to the site to the final completion of the
construction project), within a 50-mile radius of the normal work reporting
location of the driver.
(2) This
paragraph does not apply to the transportation of materials found by the
Secretary of the United States Department of Transportation to be hazardous
under Title 49, United States Code, Section 5103, in an amount requiring
placarding under regulations issued in order to carry out that
section.
(n) Limited
Applicability. The exceptions provided in subsections (i), (j), (k), and (p)
are not available to the driver of a vehicle transporting hazardous substances
or hazardous waste, as those terms are defined in Section
171.8 of Title 49,
Code of Federal Regulations, as those regulations exist or are hereafter
amended.
(o) Commercial Motor
Vehicle Transportation to or from a Motion Picture Production site. A driver of
a commercial motor vehicle providing transportation of property to or from a
theatrical or television motion picture production site is exempt from the
requirements of Section
1212.5(a)(2) if
the driver operates within a 100 air-mile radius of the location where the
driver reports to and is released from work, i.e., the normal work-reporting
location. With respect to the maximum daily hours of service, such a driver may
not drive:
(1) More than 12 hours following 8
consecutive hours off duty;
(2) For
any period after having been on duty 15 hours following 8 consecutive hours off
duty.
(3) If a driver of a
commercial motor vehicle providing transportation of property to or from a
theatrical or television motion picture production site operates beyond a 100
air-mile radius of the normal work-reporting location, the driver is subject to
Section
1212.5(a)(2), and
paragraphs (o)(1) and (2) of this section do not apply.
(p) Emergency Restoration Exemption.
(1) An intrastate governmental driver
employed by the State of California, a city, a county, a city and county
agency, or any political subdivision thereof may be permitted or required to
drive more than the number of hours specified in Section
1212.5 while operating a
commercial motor vehicle owned and operated by the State of California, a
county, a city, a county and city, or any political subdivision thereof during
the emergency restoration of basic essential public services and related
operations. For purposes of this paragraph, the phrase "and related operations"
includes, but is not limited to, the operation of a commercial motor vehicle
from its original terminal location to the scene of emergency restoration of
essential public services and the return of the commercial motor vehicle to the
original terminal location in order to release the driver from duty.
(2) This exemption applies only to
governmental drivers working within a 100 air-mile radius of the normal work
reporting location and who begin and end work in the normal work reporting
location.
(3) A 72-hour limit for
the emergency restoration exemption period shall begin when the governmental
authority requesting the exemption makes the required notification to the
California Highway Patrol, as described in Section
1212(p)(7).
(4) The 72-hour limit of the emergency
restoration exemption period may be extended by the Commissioner of the
California Highway Patrol upon request through the submission of a letter from
the originating authority indicating the specific reason(s) for the extension,
as described by Section
1202(e)(1).
(5) Upon the expiration of the 72-hour
exemption period or the exemption extension letter period and release of a
driver from duty, the total on-duty hours accumulated by the driver during the
most recent eight consecutive days shall be considered reset to zero upon the
driver's completion of an off-duty period of 24 or more consecutive
hours.
(6) The Governor of the
State of California, designated county authority, or designated city authority
shall document the nature of the incident requiring emergency restoration of
basic essential public services, the duration of the emergency necessitating
excessive driving hours, and the name(s) of governmental employees utilizing
the exemption period. Drivers operating under the exemption shall document
record of duty status using the methods prescribed in Section
1213. Copies of the exemption
documentation required to be prepared by the authority authorizing the use of
this exemption shall accompany the driver(s) hours of service records and shall
be considered supporting documentation as defined by Section
1234. Documentation required by
this section shall be retained at the principal place of business for a period
of not less than two years from the date on which the incident occurred and
made available to any authorized employee of the California Highway
Patrol.
(7) California governmental
entities issuing an emergency restoration declaration and that are requesting
to begin a 72-hour emergency restoration exemption period shall immediately
notify the California Highway Patrol Emergency Notification and Tactical Alert
Center (ENTAC) using the following 24-hour number: (916) 843-4339. The
notification shall include the following information: name(s) of authority
requesting the exemption; reason for utilizing the exemption; name(s) of the
governmental driver(s) to be included; and alternate method(s) of hours of
service compliance.
(8) The
Commissioner of the California Highway Patrol reserves the authority to rescind
a 72-hour emergency restoration exemption order or any extension of a 72-hour
emergency restoration exemption order at discretion for cause.
(9) Emergency Restoration -- Definition. For
purposes of this section, emergency restoration includes, but is not limited
to, mitigation of damage and debris removal to restore basic essential public
services as the result of a fire, flood, earthquake, other soil or geologic
movement, storm, natural disaster, act of terrorism, riots, accidents,
sabotage, or other occurrence, whether natural or man-made, that interrupts the
delivery of essential services, such as electricity, medical care, sewer,
water, main roadway traffic, storm drain operation, telecommunications, and
telecommunication transmissions, or otherwise immediately threatens human life
or public welfare. Emergency restoration does not include regular and scheduled
construction, repair, and maintenance of basic essential public services,
public works infrastructure, or any highway.
(10) Governmental Driver -- Definition. For
purposes of this section, a governmental driver includes any person who is a
directly compensated, authorized, permanent, full time, part time, temporary,
seasonal, or limited term employee of the State of California, a county, a
city, a county and city, or any political subdivision thereof during the
emergency restoration of basic essential public services and related operations
while operating a commercial motor vehicle. A governmental driver does not
include a non-governmental employee, a subcontractor, or a private party acting
on behalf of or indirectly compensated by the State of California, a county, a
city, a county and city, or any political subdivision
thereof.
(q) Tow truck
operators.
(1) The driver of a tow truck, as
defined in Vehicle Code Section
615(a),
equipped with at least one permanently mounted and operational boom, winch,
under-lift device, or other equipment designed, used, or maintained for the
purpose of lifting, carrying, securing, or towing a disabled vehicle may not
drive or be permitted to drive:
(A) More than
12 hours following at least ten consecutive hours off-duty;
(B) For any period after having been on duty
16 hours following at least ten consecutive hours off-duty; or
(C) After having been on-duty for 80 hours in
any consecutive eight days unless any off-duty period of 34 or more consecutive
hours, as described in Section
1212.5, is utilized to end any
consecutive eight-day period which resets the accumulated on-duty hours to
zero.
(2) This exception
is not available to any driver:
(A)
Transporting hazardous materials in a quantity requiring the display of
placards pursuant to Vehicle Code Section
27903, a
Hazardous Materials Transportation License pursuant to Vehicle Code Section
32000.5, or a
Hazardous Waste Transporter Registration pursuant to Health and Safety Code
Section
25163.
(B) Operating a truck-tractor, any motor
truck used to tow any trailer defined in Vehicle Code Section
34500(e),
or any other motor vehicle not equipped as described in subdivision
(1).
(3) Use of this
exception is at the sole discretion of the employing motor carrier.
(A) Drivers using this exception to drive a
commercial motor vehicle in excess of driving limits contained in Section
1212.5 shall complete a driver's
record of duty status pursuant to Section
1213 for each 24-hour period while
using the exception and for the seven 24-hour periods immediately following the
use of the exception.
(4)
(A) The employing motor carrier of any driver
described in subdivision (1) shall report all incidents to the California
Highway Patrol within 15 calendar days. All incidents involving the driver,
occurring during any eight consecutive 24 hour periods described in subdivision
(3)(A), shall be reported pursuant to this subdivision, include legible copies
of any report or description of the incident completed by a law enforcement
agency, any emergency response personnel, or on behalf of any insurance
company, and submitted via electronic mail or United States mail as follows:
cvs@chp.ca.gov
OR
CALIFORNIA HIGHWAY PATROL
COMMERCIAL VEHICLE SECTION
ATTN: TOW REPORTING
P.O. BOX 942898
SACRAMENTO, CA 94298-0001
(B) For the purpose of the subsection the
term "incident" includes:
(i) Any injury to
the driver, any member of the public, any emergency response personnel, or
other party at the scene of the driver's duties, directly attributable to any
action or inaction of the driver, which results in medical treatment beyond
first aid, as defined in Labor Code Section
5401(a).
(ii) Damage to any property caused as a
result of any action or inaction of the driver exceeding a retail restoration
or replacement cost of $500.