WASHINGTON, D.C. – The National Transportation Safety Board is pushing for mandatory electronic onboard recorders on commercial trucks to ensure that truck drivers don’t drive more than 11 hours at a time. About 5,000 people die each year from collisions with trucks, said Mark Rosenker, chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board. About 700 of those fatalities are truck drivers. Rosenker is convinced that some of the accidents could have been avoided if the drivers had complied with hours-of-service regulations.

Many in the trucking industry, however, argue that there’s no evidence that use of the recorders would change those statistics and that the mandate would pose an unnecessary expense. The recorders generally cost about $1,200 each.

Rosenker told Gannett News Service that his agency last year inspected 3 million truck driver logbooks. About seven percent of those had violations. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration requires chronic violators to install the recorders.

Rosenker’s agency is preparing new regulations that Congress will consider.
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