posted December 27,
2005 - updated April 3, 2006
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Background |
Traffic World
As a
government agency, the Postal Service is exempt from HOS rules, but
its contractors are not. The agency has more than 5,000 contracts
with motor carriers for moving mail. Without the change, Anderson
said the Postal Service would be forced to redo some of its contracts,
which are built around the old rules. "Existing contract awards were
based on internal operating costs and rate structures determined by
existing regulations, not the new rules," Anderson said. "Given the
rigid time schedules of Postal Service mail processing operations,
the revised rules would require more drivers and, in some cases, unique
highway transportation operations in order for the mail to arrive/depart
on time." One driver who said he drove for three years for a USPS
contract carrier told the FMCSA that allowing the exemption would
jeopardize highway safety. "We were paid only for the trips we ran,
not for the down-time unloading, etc.,"
Steve Reeves
wrote. "As a result, it was common to spend 12 hours (or more) of
my day and be paid for only five or six. This encourages some mail
drivers to hold down second jobs, and seldom do they (or their employer)
faithfully track the hours as required." Reeves urged the FMCSA to
make USPS operate like any other shipper
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Federal Register Notice
:
USPS Submits Application for Hours- of -Service Exemption from DOT
for Contract Drivers --SUMMARY:
FMCSA announces that it has received an application for exemption
from the hours-of-service
(HOS) requirements
from the United States Postal Service (USPS) on behalf of motor carriers
that transport mail under contract for USPS. USPS requests that some
of its contract motor carriers be allowed to operate under the HOS
rules in effect prior to January 4, 2004. USPS believes the exemption
would likely achieve a level of safety equivalent to, or greater than,
the level achieved under the HOS rules applicable to operators of
property- carrying vehicles rules after January 4, 2004. FMCSA requests
public comment on the USPS application for exemption.
DATES: Comments must
be received on or before December 16, 2005.
(11/21/05)
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Below are samples of (1078) submissions to the
Dept. of Transportation's (DOT)
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
USPS' Request for exemption to the new hours of service
regulations
Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety (Advocates)
Public Citizen
Texas
Association of Star Route Mail Contractors
Robert C. Pritchard, APWU Director, Motor Vehicle Service
Michael
Foster, APWU
Assistant Director, Motor Vehicle Service
Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance
The International Brotherhood of Teamsters
The
Ohio State Highway Patrol
Thomas
M. LaFauci
Royster
Enterprises Inc. and RaCo Services
Gary
W. Walcutt - Maine Citizen
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Contractor: USPS Request for Hours of Service Change May Be
Economic
In comments submitted
to DOT regarding USPS’ request for Hours of Service change for
contract drivers,
Roger D. Bullard wrote:
“As a USPS contractor
of 12 years, I am writing belatedly to express my opinion
concerning the USPS HOS exemption request. It appears that the
reason the USPS wants this exemption for its contractors, is due
to mostly economic reasons. Under the old rules, when a
contractor bid a USPS mail hauling contract as an
owner/operator, he was able to bid it without adding in the cost
of an additional driver
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USPS'
Request for exemption to the new hours of service regulations
We understand that
the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals has vacated the
new hours of service regulations and remanded the matter back to the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration. Nonetheless, in accordance
with 49 CFR 381.210, the United States Postal Service (USPS) is requesting
an exemption to the new hours of service regulations (49 CFR 395).
We are requesting this exemption to apply to what we will characterize
as “short haul” contracted carriers. Note that the regulations provide
the USPS an exemption applicable to drivers employed by the federal
government. We are also seeking the exemption for contracted carriers
and drivers. While it is not practical for us to provide the names,
addresses, and United States Department of Transportation (DOT) identification
numbers of all the operators covered under the request, we will provide
you information showing that the exemption is necessary, prudent,
and will provide appropriate coverage consistent with the underlying
safety goals of the regulations.
As we mentioned in our correspondence dated December 17,2003, the
USPS has over 17,000 highway transportation contracts for the movement
of mail between postal facilities and, in some instances, providing
in-home mailbox delivery services to rural America. Our request applies
to a small segment of those 17,000 contracts. Our data suggests that
we will require the exemption for a maximum of 5,096 contracts. We
arrive at this number by first eliminating the 7,214 “box delivery”
contracts we have, which would not require the exemption due to the
nature of their vehicles and hours. Further, we are not seeking the
exemption for our “long haul” contracts, which eliminates another
3,097 contracts. Another 1,617 contracts use equipment that is beneath
the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration threshold of 10,000
pounds GVW. The bottom line is that the USPS is only seeking an exemption
for an estimated 30 percent of our 17,000 contracted routes.
It is also important to note that a sampling of the routes for which
we are seeking the exemption shows that the average round trip mileage
per trip is only 61 miles (30.4 miles one-way). Even based on conservative
driving speeds, this represents less than two hours of driving.
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Advocates
for Highway and Auto Safety (Advocates) submits the following
comments in response to the notice filed with the Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Administration (FMCSA, the agency) by the United States Postal
Service (USPS) for an exemption (USPS Request) from the current hours
of service (HOS) requirements set forth at 39 CFR Pt. 395. Specifically,
the USPS asks the agency to exempt its short-haul, contracted carriers
of the U.S. mails from the regulation adopted on April 28, 2005 at
68 FR 22456 et seq., and to allow it to operate under the regulation
in effect prior to the effective date of the final rule, June 27,
2003. Advocates strongly opposes this exemption request because the
petition as filed has several procedural and substantive defects that
require that it be denied.
The petition from the USPS
does not specifically demonstrate exactly how contracted commercial
drivers transporting the U.S. mails operating under the regulations
in effect prior to the new requirements in 49 CFR Pt. 395 would achieve
hours of work, driving, and rest whose safety would be equivalent
to or greater than achievable under the current HOS regulation. No
detailed showing of how driver work and rest schedules under the “old”
regulation are equal to or superior to the current HOS regulation
can be found anywhere in the letter sent to FMCSA. Further, since
the proposed return by these drivers to the “old” HOS regulation means
that they no longer would have all work and rest time “on the clock,”
but could have their work days extended indefinitely, including their
daily shifts extended beyond either the 14 hours or 16 hours limits,
as explained earlier, these drivers could in fact accrue daily on
the job hours that are even longer than those provided for in the
current HOS regulation.
more in
PDF File
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Public
Citizen submits the following comments concerning the United States
Postal Service’s (USPS) application to exempt contract drivers from
the hours-of-service (HOS) regulations. We note first that both the
previous and current hours of service rules fall badly short of what
would be needed to assure safe highways. The USPS application for
exemption contains a serious flaw, which renders it procedurally defective,
and is plagued by a misunderstanding of HOS rules for short-haul drivers.
In addition, USPS does not demonstrate that the exemption would achieve
a level of safety equivalent to or greater than compliance the HOS
rules from which it seeks exemption, as it must. For these reasons,
the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) must deny
the application. Public Citizen endorses comments submitted to the
docket by Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety (Advocates).
Application
for Exemption is Procedurally Defective
The USPS application
to exempt certain short-haul contract drivers from the hours-of-service
regulations contains a serious flaw that renders it procedurally defective.
The USPS application is dated August 11, 2004, 1
and requests
that certain USPS contract drivers be exempted from the HOS rules
in effect at the time, and instead be allowed to adhere to the previous
HOS rules. However, the HOS rules in effect at the time of the USPS
application were replaced by FMCSA’s HOS final rule issued in August
2005, and thus the USPS application requests exemption from HOS rules
no longer in effect. This flaw renders the USPS application procedurally
defective.
Application
for Exemption is Plagued by a Misunderstanding of HOS Rules
As Advocates notes in
comments to the docket, though it is unclear, USPS appears to believe
that the 100-air-mile-radius short-haul exemption was eliminated in
the 2003 HOS final rule. Yet the 100-air-mile-radius exemption was
expanded in the 2003 rule and further expanded in the 2005 rule. 2
USPS
Fails to Demonstrate that the Requested Exemption Would Provide an
Equivalent or Greater Level of Safety than Current HOS Rules
It is the duty of the
party seeking an exemption to demonstrate that the requested exemption
would provide a level of safety equivalent to or greater than the
level provided by compliance with the regulation. 3
USPS, however,
does not meet this burden.
USPS asserts that the
exemption would allow drivers to spend the night in their own beds,
which it argues would offset increases in allowed driving and on-duty
time under the old HOS rules. USPS provides no evidence that drivers
being able to sleep in their own beds would offset increased allowable
on-duty hours under the old rule. USPS does not provide evidence that
drivers are not able to sleep in their own beds under the current
HOS rules, nor that the old HOS rules would provide them with this
benefit. In fact, USPS provides practically no data concerning the
work/driving routines of the drivers for which it seeks the exemption.
Also conspicuously missing are the critical data showing that driver
work and rest schedules under the old HOS rules provide greater safety
than those under the new HOS rules.
Additionally, USPS touts
its driver screening process as more stringent than those employed
by many private carriers. However, this is irrelevant, as it does
not address whether the exemption would provide a level of safety
equivalent to or greater than that offered under the current HOS rules.
USPS also argues that its contract suppliers are provided with schedules
to which they are contractually bound, and that this provides no incentive
for drivers to arrive early. The point that USPS is apparently making
is that its contract drivers likely will not drive long hours or speed
because they are not motivated by by-the-mile pay. However, a schedule-based
system, especially one that is contractually binding, might result
in these same practices. If a driver is stuck in unforeseen traffic,
he or she will have to drive faster and longer than normal in an attempt
to adhere to the schedule.
In comments to the docket,
Advocates notes that the requested exemption would allow drivers to
spend more time on the clock than under the current regulations. 4
The HOS rules in place prior to the 2003 rules permitted drivers to
be placed off-the-clock for indefinite periods of time, allowing work
days to be extended beyond the number of allowable on-the-clock hours
and contributing to irregular work days. The requested exemption,
thus, would reduce driver rest time, and, further, would reduce pay
for those drivers compensated only for on-the-clock time, potentially
leading to low morale and drivers taking second jobs, both of which
would affect driver performance. In addition, increased weekly work
is associated with greater fatigue. For example, a 1999 peer-reviewed,
case-controlled study prepared for the AAA Foundation for Traffic
Safety, found that working more than 60 hours a week increased the
odds of a sleep-related crash by 40 percent.5
The new rules, however,
put a cap on the maximum number of duty hours for drivers by limiting,
as a whole, both driving and non-driving time.
Another major difference
between the current HOS regulations and the regulations prior to April
2003 is that the new rules provide drivers with a minimum of 10 hours
off-duty rest time – two hours more than the rest time provided under
the old rules. A return to the old rules would deprive the drivers
of these extra two hours of off-duty time, restricting the amount
of time they are given to sleep. FMCSA is well aware of the dangers
of sleep deprivation. In its 2005 HOS NPRM, the agency admits that
“[s]erious adverse health conditions appear to be associated with
chronic sleep deprivation.” 6
The agency cites a 1991 review of sleep loss research, which noted
problems such as an increased incidence of myocardial infarcts and
cardiovascular disease.7 In addition, a 1999 study found that sleep
deprivation over numerous days seemed to result in prominent alterations
in metabolic and endocrine function.8 And another study done in 1999
indicated that sleep deprivation may worsen age-related chronic disorders
like diabetes and hypertension.9
USPS fails to address
any of the detrimental consequences that would come with a grant of
its application for exemption. Both the new and old HOS rules are
deficient, yet there remain serious safety issues raised by the USPS
application for exemption that the applicant does not address. USPS
must address these issues, which pertain to the specific provisions
affecting the drivers for which it requests the exemption.
Requested
Exemption May Hamper Effective Enforcement of HOS Rules
Public Citizen agrees
with Advocates’s concern that the requested exemption will complicate
enforcement of HOS rules. As Advocates notes, FMCSA provided an exemption
to short-haul drivers in the August 2005 regulation, which would bring
the number of exemptions for short-haul drivers three if FMCSA approves
the USPS application for exemption. 10
Three different
HOS rules would impact the efficacy of enforcement activities. Given
the already crippled enforcement environment that FMCSA grapples with,
see Government Accountability Office, Truck Safety Federal Enforcement
Efforts Have Been Stronger Since 2000, but Oversight of State Grants
Needs Improvement, GAO-06-156, it is imperative that FMCSA not further
complicate these efforts.
Conclusion
FMCSA must deny the USPS
application. It contains a serious error that renders it procedurally
defective. In addition, USPS has not demonstrated that its requested
exemption would provide a level of safety equivalent to or greater
than compliance with the current HOS regulations. Both the old and
new HOS regulations are deficient, yet USPS fails to address any of
the safety issues pertaining to its request to exempt certain short-haul
carriers from the current HOS rules, providing the agency with no
legal or factual basis for an exemption.
more
in PDF File
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I am writing on behalf of the Texas
Association of Star Route Mail Contractors regarding the DOT’s
new hours of service requirement. Our association represents many
individuals and companies within the state of Texas who contract with
the United States Postal Service. This new requirement presents a
number of issues and hardships for Texas highway mail contractors,
as well as the Postal Service. Some of the facets involved are scheduling,
personnel hardships, financial burdens, and safety issues.
USPS and
public safety issue
From the Postal
Service standpoint on these types of contracts, they must clear twice
the number of drivers for postal badges. This forces the Postal service
to give access to the mail and Postal facilities to twice the number
of individuals. This is a much bigger threat to public safety than
having one driver work a split-shift.
Mail contractors have a proven track record as being
one of the safest in the transportation industry. Allowing the USPS
an exemption on the hours of service would greatly benefit all parties
involved. I believe you can clearly see that these type operators
don’t fit into the same category that applies to the long-haul transportation
industry.
more in
PDF File
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Robert C. Pritchard, Director,
APWU Motor Vehicle Service
This action by the USPS should be rejected for many reasons. First,
this is the same basic exemption that the Star Route Association made
previously that was denied. In the letter to the National Star Route
Contractor Association the FMCSA stated: “FMCSA compared the relief
sought by the Association to the core goals in the hours-of-service
rulemaking: improved safety, more opportunity for rest, movement toward
schedules closer to the body’s 24-hour clock, practicality, uniformity
and enforceability. After careful consideration of all available factual
Information, including the issues raised by the Association, we have
concluded the relief sought in the petition is not consistent those
goals and must be denied.” This is backed up by the DOT report Short-Haul
Trucks and Driver Fatigue (FHWA-MC98-O 16 dated September 1997) which
clearly states that most TIFA (trucks involved in Fatal Accidents)
occurs between 4 and 6 am with a second spike in fatalities between
4 and 5:30 pm. These are the very hours that the Postal Contractors
would be operating their vehicles. They would be operating these trucks
in residential neighborhoods and placing the safety of our children
at jeopardy.
more in
PDF File
APWU : USPS Seeks Waiver of Driving Safety
Rule
(12/02/05
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Michael Foster,
Assistant . Director,
APWU Motor Vehicle Service,
I am opposed to the Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Administration
(FMCSA) granting an
Hours-of-Service (HOS) waiver
to the United
States Postal
Service acting as a surrogate
for the National
Star Route Contractors Association
who previously had
this request
rejected. The United States
Postal Service is requesting
the FMCSA to allow various Star Route Contractors to operate under
HOS and safety conditions
far inferior to the conditions
that they impose
on their own
employees and equipment. Under normal
operating
conditions (excluding
December), Postal Vehicle Operators are precluded from operating
in excess
of 12 % hours per day including breaks and split shifts. It is without
additional liability and for operation reasons that this request is
made on behalf of highway
contractors.
As a postal truck
driver for
20 plus years, I have first hand
knowledge that highway contractor’s equipment
and safety
standards pare in comparison to the United States Postal Service.
I have witnessed Star Route equipment
so defective that drivers have had to substitute
plastic buckets for broken seats in order
to operate the trucks.
I have witnessed Star
Route drivers who work for small companies that are not mandated for
Drug and Alcohol Testing to have drivers arrive at Postal facilities
so drunk that Postal Officials have refused to load their trucks with
mail.
more
in PDF File
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The
Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance believes
it would be inappropriate to grant the USPS its request to exempt
a large portion of its contractors from the entire hours of service
regulations. Not only has the USPS failed to demonstrate an equivalent
level of safety, but they also have failed to meet the basic requirements
of the exemption application.
Under 49 CFR 381.305(a), it states “You may apply for an exemption
if one or more FMCSR prevents you from implementing more efficient
or effective operations that would maintain a level of safety equivalent
to, or greater than, the level achieved without the exemption.” In
the USPS’ exemption application, there is no mention (based on the
new regulations) of the USPS exploring alternative operational changes
and their resulting impacts on safety and efficiency. In its application,
USPS stipulates that one of the contractual requirements is to adhere
to basic DOT regulations. Certainly, their contractual arrangements
are not so rigid as to be non-negotiable based on regulatory changes?
This likely is especially the case for driver hours of service. Based
on their application, it seems as if they have made no efforts to
look into this issue further. Therefore, how can they make any argument
to fulfill the basic requirements of the application -- achieving
an equivalent level of safety?
Their application also fails to address most of the exemption application
requirements in 49 CFR §381.310, including: 49 CFR §§381.310(b)(2),(3)
and (4); and 381(c)(3),(4),(5) and (6). If the USPS cannot identify
specifically which carriers and drivers the exemption would apply
to, how do they expect to manage compliance? How then would enforcement
be able to be accomplished effectively?
The entire industry has had to change and adjust to the new regulations,
why should the USPS be any different? The motorcoach operators are
under the “old” rules because the FMCSA did not have a significant
amount of safety or other operational data under which to base any
substantiated decisions. As a result, FMCSA conducted a study on these
operators because they are a unique segment of the industry. The USPS
cannot be compared with the motorcoach industry as they are totally
different operational types.
We urge the FMCSA not to further erode the effectiveness of the new
hours of service regulations by providing yet another segment of industry
relief from the most fundamental regulations regarding commercial
vehicle safety. The Large Truck Crash Causation Study results and
other recent studies indicate that drivers are an area that needs
more focus, therefore we need to enhance the compliance and enforcement
regime for drivers, not minimize it.
more in PDF File
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The International
Brotherhood of Teamsters
The United States Postal
Service (USPS) has requested an exemption from the new hours of service
rules for the carriers that it contracts with to perform short haul
transportation. The IBT opposes this request for several reasons.
First of all, the USPS is requesting exemptions for carriers that
it does not control; Second, the USPS has not provided nearly enough
information regarding the carriers or why the exemption is necessary;
Third, the exemption would hinder enforcement of the hours of service
rules, and; Fourth and most importantly, the exemption will adversely
affect the safety of our highways.
This situation is unusual because the United States Postal Service
is not requesting an exemption for employees and carriers under its
control. Rather, the USPS has requested exemptions for an undisclosed
number of carriers that it contracts with to perform a service. In
its exemption request, the USPS states that it “does not control these
suppliers and their drivers other than they must adhere to a schedule
with basic DOT regulations.” USPS admits that it does not know anything
about the operating activities of the carrier companies and nor is
it in a position to ensure compliance with safety measures. Furthermore,
all of the companies that would be affected have been operating under
the “new” hours of service regulations for more than two years and
to our knowledge, none of them have found it necessary
to request such an exemption in their own names.
more n
PDF File
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The Ohio State Highway
Patrol is strongly opposed to the granting
go any hours of service exemption including the exemption requested
by the United States Postal Service (USPS. The Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Adminitration has worked diligently to create workable and,
the Highway Patrol believes, fair hours of service regulations. The
granting of exemptions to the hours of service regulations, or for
that matter any federal motor carrier safety regulation, is counterproductive
to FMCSA's primary mission to reduce crashes, injuries and fatalities
involving large trucks and buses.
In their August 11, 2004, letter to Administrator Sandberg, the USPS
states that they will provide "information showing that the exemption
is necessary, prudent and will provide appropriate coverage consistent
with the underlying safety goals of the regulations." The Highway
Patrol was unable to find anything in the remainder of the letter
that would support the opinion that the exemption is "necessary, prudent,
and provides the appropriate coverage" to any highway user other than
the USPS.
more in PDF File
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Thomas M. LaFauci
As a holder of a CDL and a 38 year veteran of the
U. S. Postal Service, you are making a grave error if you entertain
the Postal Service's attempt to misrepresent themselves as the Employers
for the Highway Contract Route (or HCR) drivers who do NOT work for
the Postal Service but work for themselves.
The Postal Service does not employ HCR drivers but
instead have a contract awarded through a federal bidding process
to the companies that employ these HCR drivers.
HCR drivers are forced by their employers to work
longer hours than allowed while driving sub-standard equipment. Postal
employees regularly see this equipment each time they pull up to a
postal dock to load/unload containerized mail.
Many of these HCR drivers are utilized on multiple
contracts held by their employers that effectively beat the current
driving regulations since their time is split up between two or more
contracts.
The Postal Service does not track the number of hours
an HCR driver currently drive in a given time frame. They claim it
is not their problem not their responsibility to do so.
Local police authorities generally do not stop an
HCR driver because of the placard stating "U. S. Mail" that is imprinted
on the side of the HCR's truck.
The Postal Service has a pool of postal drivers that
are utilized to transport mail between and among postal facilities
using their self-obtained CDL's issued from the State of Residence.
These are the true postal drivers that are directly
employed by the Postal Service and who have Union representation at
all levels of postal authority.
The Postal Service also has a full network of Vehicle
Maintenance Facilities that ensure all postal vehicles are road-worthy
and safe to operate on public roads. These Postal Truck Technicians
are required to sign off on all work orders to ensure a postal vehicle
is safe to operate. That makes postal employees accountable for the
truck repairs
By contrast, HCR drivers work for outside companies,
like the many companies controlled by Clifford, B. Finkle, Jr. or
Meyers Transport whose only link to the Postal Service is the award
of a two or four year contract to transport mail.
That contract award is always influenced by the political
process meaning lobbyists in Washington, D. C. and other personal
influence to a lesser degree on the Area/District/Local level of the
Postal Service.
There is no policing of the bidding/awarding process
on the Area/District/Local level by any postal Union official as the
Postal Service awards these contracts without scrutiny from an impartial
authority.
more in
PDF File
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My name is Randall H.
Royster and I represent 2 companies that contract
mail transportation for the U. S. Postal Service. These companies
are named Royster Enterprises Inc. and RaCo Services, both
located in Ashland, Alabama. They transport U.S. Mail out of Atlanta,
GA, Birmingham, AL, Montgomery, AL. and Pensacola FL to various locations.
Both companies have out-standing safety records. We began hauling
mail in 1973 and operated under the old rules with excellent safety
records.
Under the new rules; we were forced to hire approximately 12 part-time
drivers. We had to reduce the hours worked on the full-time employees,
in order to comply with the rules that went into effect on January
4, 2004.
Our company has been forced to purchase autos and mini-vans in order
to relay drivers to different points along our mail routes, in order
to maintain compliance. This has cost numerous dollars with no change
in our safety ratings.
more in
PDF File
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Gary W. Walcutt - Maine Citizen
I am speaking on this issue as a Maine citizen as
I feel I can best express the impact this rule exemption would have
at the local and state level.
Granting the US Postal Service an exemption to the
Hours of Service rule would not provide any benefit to the community
and would subject the citizens of Maine to unsafe conditions on our
roadways. Maine enacted a Tired-Trucker law due to the unnecessary
loss of life and economic devestation caused to victims of inexperienced
and over-tired truckers on Maine Interstate highways and town roads.
The Postal Service has every ability at this point
in time to deliver mail to processing plants in an efficient and safe
manner. The Postal Service has a responsibility to be a good corporate
citizen in every state that it operates and Maine should not be an
exception. The lives of Postal Service employees and its customers
should be the deciding factor rather than an attempt to minimize costs
on the backs of those citizens.
I also question why the Postal Service would seek
an exception for independent companies that contract with the Postal
Service for Highway Contract Routes. That responsibility rests with
each individual company. The Postal Service has no jurisdiction in
such matters and would better served to minimize costs by elimnating
unnecessary management positions and utilizing best business practices
that transcend television screens during 60 second commercials.
The Postal Service feels it has a win-win situation
here as the Service will reap the benefits of extending hours for
fewer employees during the day and letting small to medium sized trucking
companies absorb the liability when their employees cause death and/or
injury. This exception is bad for Maine and it deserves to be rejected.
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