 |
 |
Monday, January 26, 2004
Contact: Andy Beck, 202-366-8810
FMCSA 1-04
U.S. Department of Transportation to Begin
Safety Inspections of Truck Container Chassis
Secretary of Transportation Norman Y. Mineta announced today that the U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT) will launch a safety inspection program for
intermodal container chassis. The inspection program will provide added
oversight to help ensure that the trailer beds used by truckers to haul cargo
containers are safe.
Intermodal container chassis are the flat trailer beds that cargo containers are
loaded onto when being transported by truck. They are used to transport more
than $450 billion in cargo value entering and leaving the United States
annually. Cargo containers being hauled by rail and shipping companies are
regularly transferred to trucks before final delivery.
“Every day millions of dollars worth of cargo are transferred from ships and
rail to trailer beds and hauled away by trucks,” said Secretary Mineta. “It is
essential that we have a full and complete safety program focused on the trailer
beds used to haul cargo containers.”
The new inspection program will be modeled on the compliance review program
already in place for the nation’s trucking community. Chassis providers will be
required to obtain a USDOT number and display it on their chassis so that data
could be captured. The Department’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
(FMCSA) will apply the same penalty structure and enforcement actions for
equipment, including issuing out-of-service orders and revoking USDOT numbers
when needed.
Intermodal container chassis have been subject to routine safety inspections and
review during federal and local enforcement actions. Most chassis are not owned
by trucking companies and are not included as part of the existing compliance
review process for truck operators. Within the coming weeks, DOT will outline
specific details and a timeline for a notice of proposed rulemaking on the
issue.
# # #
Briefing
Room