CarrierWatch® CSA Industry Report
Transcription
CarrierWatch® CSA Industry Report
Freight Solutions WHITE PAPER CarrierWatch® CSA Industry Report for-hire interstate freight carriers WHITE PAPER | 2 Key Findings CSA adds new data to carriers’ safety records, and nuance to validation processes Interstate freight carriers are almost twice as likely than other fleets to have CSA data Carriers may have alerts under CSA, even when they have no numeric scores Introduction In December 2010, the FMCSA released the initial data on all commercial fleets affected by Comprehensive Safety Analysis 2010, or CSA 2010 as it was then known. Subsequently renamed the Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) program, it will have far-reaching effects on the ways brokers, 3PLs, and shippers ® buy carriers’ services, as well as, the ways carriers sell them. This CarrierWatch CSA Industry Report focuses on the approximately 166,000 for-hire interstate carriers evaluated under the new program. More carriers have alerts under CSA than had “deficient” ratings in SafeStat Carrier safety evaluations: more detail, less clarity CSA BASIC scores and alerts appear to vary significantly by state The new Compliance Safety Accountability (CSA) safety program – introduced by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) nationwide in December – has added a new level of complexity to carrier safety evaluations. SafeStat, CSA’s predecessor, relied on out-of-service violations for the bulk of its data, but CSA adds data from roadside inspections. 758,000 commercial fleets covered by CSA 166,000 (21%) of those fleets are identified as for-hire, interstate freight carriers 76% of interstate freight carriers have CSA data in their records 90% of interstate freight carriers with more than 500 trucks have at least one BASIC score 25% of interstate freight carriers with 5 or fewer trucks have at least one BASIC score 34% of interstate freight carriers have a numeric score for at least one BASIC 0.3% of interstate freight carriers have a numeric score for every BASIC In contrast to the black & white SafeStat/SEA, CSA BASICs bring different shades of grey SafeStat included three Safety Evaluation Areas (SEA) that had the same threshold value, but the CSA’s seven Behavior Analysis and Safety Improvement Categories (BASICs) – five of which are currently published – have different thresholds that cannot be averaged. The BASICs are controlled or influenced by driver behavior, and drivers are also scored. Further, a carrier can receive an alert in one or more BASICs, which is tantamount to a “deficient” SEA score in SafeStat, even when the carrier was not inspected often enough to generate a numeric score for that BASIC in CSA. As a result, CSA offers more nuance, but potentially less clarity, for anyone who buys or sells a freight carrier’s services. Where a broker or shipper might have defined a single, overall score as an automatic cut-off for qualifying carriers in the past, this practice will not provide adequate scrutiny under CSA. This is particularly true for the smallest carriers. While 90% of carriers with 50 or more trucks have a numeric score in at least one BASIC category, the same holds true for only 25% of carriers with 15 or fewer trucks. In addition, enforcement of the Federal safety program varies by state, based on rules set by each state’s own legislature and carried out by its highway authority. CarrierWatch© CSA Industry Report | 3 for-hire interstate freight carriers The net effect of the new safety program is that the size of the carrier and the location of its domicile and routes are among the factors that will affect the carrier’s safety scores more than ever before. Compared to SafeStat, more carriers have alerts But 79% of carriers still have clean records under CSA Under CSA, numeric scores are issued only after the carrier has accumulated enough data to create a weighted average of results. When the SafeStat program was in effect, scores were compiled based on out-of-service violations only. CSA data is available for 76% of interstate freight carriers, while only 50% had SEA scores. More carriers have alerts now, too: 21% have at least one alert under CSA, up from 16% who had deficient scores under the SafeStat program. The trend to more data and greater nuance is not surprising, because CSA now offers potential for carriers to be scored in five categories instead of three, and an alert under CSA can be issued without any score at all. Even so, that leaves 79% of interstate freight carriers – nearly four out of five – with no alerts. Figure 1: SafeStat vs CSA SafeStat vs. CSA 23% 50% No Data No Data 21% 16% Deficient SEA Score(s) Have Alert(s) 56% 34% Data and No Deficient Scores Data and No Alerts BEFORE AFTER More than half (56%) of carriers had “clean” CSA records that included inspection data but no alerts, up from 34% under SEA. However, the number of carriers with alerts also increased, from 16% under SafeStat to 21% with CSA. WHITE PAPER | 4 Look beyond the numbers Alerts, BASIC scores and thresholds Carriers can still receive an alert on one or more BASICs, even if they have low scores or no numeric scores at all. FMCSA considers certain violations to be serious enough to warrant an alert, even when the carrier has not been inspected enough to generate a numeric score, or when the score is below the threshold. An alert can also be triggered by a BASIC score that is over the threshold, with or without a single serious violation. Under the SafeStat program, there were no alerts independent of scores. As a result of the new policies, 21% of carriers have alerts in their CSA records compared to the 16% who had “deficient” ratings in SafeStat, even though 15% fewer carriers have numeric scores for CSA BASICs than had SEA scores under SafeStat. Figure 2: % with Alerts Among For-Hire, Carriers vs. All Fleets For-Hire, Interstate Carriers vs.Interstate Other Fleets Unsafe Driving 4.9% 1.6% 13% Fatigued Driving 3.9% 8.2% Vehicle Maintenance Driver Fitness Controlled Substances 2.9% 3.4% 1.2% 1.1% 0.5% Freight Carriers All DOT Numbers Although freight carriers were more likely than other fleets to have alerts in any of the five publicly available BASICs, almost four out of five carriers (79%) had no alerts at all. Fatigued Driving, representing HOS violations, was the most common failing, with 13% of freight carriers receiving an alert in that category. CarrierWatch© CSA Industry Report | 5 for-hire interstate freight carriers Under the CSA methodology, have different thresholds. Carri25% 64% different BASICs82% 91% Unsafe Driving Fatigued Driving Vehicle ntenance Driver Fitness 90% ers tended to have more serious violations in some BASICs than in others, so it is important to evaluate each BASIC separately. Two examples: Unsafe Unsafe Unsafe 75.0% 50.0% 37.2% 28.9% Driving Driving Driving Fatigued Fatigued carriers received scores Fatigued Controlled Substances: Only 1.1% of freight for 62.0% 55.0% 48.5% Driving Driving Driving this BASIC, but almost half (47%) of the alerts in this category were Serious Vehicle Vehicle Vehicle Violations.Maintenance Even if the carrier has noMaintenance numeric score50.4% – or a goodMaintenance score – in this45.2% 67.0% 59.0% BASIC, it is still important to check for alerts. Driver Driver Driver 70.1% 93.2% Fitness 86.2% Fitness 76.7% Fitness Unsafe Driving 31.6% Fatigued Driving 41.7% Vehicle Maintenance 45.8% Driver Fitness 49.3% Controlled Substances 19.6% 59.7% Fatigued Driving is a trouble spot, as this category includes Hours of SerControlled Controlled Controlled Controlled vice (HOS)Substances regulations that affect long-haul carriers disproportionately. Less 23.5% 67.3% 49.7% 35.7% bstances Substances Substances than 25% of all carriers had scores in this category but more than half of 1-5 Trucks those scores were 6-15above Trucksthe threshold. Many 16-50ofTrucks these carriers are 50-500 likely to Trucks be ordered by FMCSA to install mandatory electronic on-board recording (EOBR) Average score exceeds intervention threshold that BASIC devices that automate driver for logs. Figure 3: BASIC Threshold Values for General Freight Carriers Unsafe Driving 65.0% Fatigued Driving 65.0% Vehicle Maintenance 80.0% Driver Fitness 80.0% Controlled Substances 80.0% Vehicle Maintenance Fatigued Driving Unsafe Driving 65.0% Controlled Substances Driver Fitness 80.0% 500+ Trucks WHITE PAPER | 6 Size matters Smaller carriers have fewer, but higher scores. Big carriers have more, but lower scores Larger carriers are more likely to have scores, and on average, the scores will be lower. Only 25% of the smallest carriers – those with up to five trucks – received a numeric score in one or more BASICs. More than 90% of mid-sized and large carriers had at least one numeric score. When the smaller carriers did have numeric scores, they were usually higher (worse) than the average for larger carriers. That’s because a small carrier is most likely to be inspected when it has previously been cited for a deficiency, or if the carrier’s truck or driver is caught on the road with a violation. A small carrier with no history of on-road inspections or infractions is likely to continue to avoid scrutiny under CSA. It is easier to validate large carriers than small ones in CSA, because 90% of carriers with more than 50 trucks had numeric scores, compared to only 25% of the smallest carriers (with five or fewer trucks.) The average scores for large carriers are also lower (better) than the average for all interstate freight carriers. Average Score by BASIC % with at least 1 BASIC Score No BASIC Scores FigureAverage 4: Average ScoresbybyFleet Fleet Size, Size, Freight Carriers Scores Freight Carriers 25% 64% 91% 82% 90% Unsafe Driving 75.0% Unsafe Driving 50.0% Unsafe Driving 37.2% Unsafe Driving 28.9% Unsafe Driving 31.6% Fatigued Driving 70.1% Fatigued Driving 62.0% Fatigued Driving 55.0% Fatigued Driving 48.5% Fatigued Driving 41.7% Vehicle Maintenance 67.0% Vehicle Maintenance 59.0% Vehicle Maintenance 50.4% Vehicle Maintenance 45.2% Vehicle Maintenance 45.8% Driver Fitness 93.2% Driver Fitness 86.2% Driver Fitness 76.7% Driver Fitness 59.7% Driver Fitness 49.3% Controlled Substances 67.3% Controlled Substances 49.7% Controlled Substances 35.7% Controlled Substances 23.5% Controlled Substances 19.6% 1-5 Trucks 6-15 Trucks Average score exceeds intervention threshold for that BASIC Unsafe 16-50 Trucks 50-500 Trucks 500+ Trucks CarrierWatch© CSA Industry Report | 7 for-hire interstate freight carriers Larger carriers, by comparison, are expected to receive more frequent roadside inspections, because those carriers have dozens or hundreds of trucks on the road. But not all of those inspections will result in negative findings, and in fact, the carriers might get “caught” doing everything right, by FMCSA standards. The statistical result is that large carriers have more data to generate numeric scores, and the scores are lower (better) on average than those of the general population. On average, the two groups of the smallest carriers (with 1-5 trucks and 6-15 trucks) have scores that are significantly higher than those of the larger fleets. For three BASICs in particular – Unsafe Driving, Fatigued Driving (HOS) and Driver Fitness – even the average score for the smallest carriers exceeds the alert threshold. WHITE PAPER | 8 Enforcement varies by state Different states inspect carriers more often or more intensively for some BASICs While CSA is a Federal program, the enforcement is carried out by the 50 states. Each individual state sets the rules for roadside inspections on its own highways. As veteran, long-haul drivers know, different states enforce the rules differently, and this variation is even more apparent with CSA than it was under SafeStat. For example, there was more than a 50% increase in CSA alerts compared to the number found “deficient” under SafeStat, for carriers based in these five states: Indiana, Georgia, South Dakota, Iowa and Nebraska. Under CSA, a 38% to 41% increase in the number of alerts was also found among carriers domiciled in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Arizona, South Carolina and Maine. Figure 5: % Change in CSA SEA Alerts vs vs Deficient % Change deficient CSA bySafeStat State Scores, by State Washington Maine Montana North Dakota Vt. Minesota Oregon N.H. Idaho Wisconsin South Dakota Wyoming Mass. New York Conn. R.I. Michigan Iowa Pennsylvania Nebraska Nevada Illinois Utah Indiana Ohio DC West Virginia Colorado Md. Virginia Kansas California New Jersey Delaware Kentucky Missouri North Carolina Tennessee Oklahoma Arizona Arkansas South Carolina New Mexico Missisippi Alabama 60% Georgia Texas Louisiana 20% Florida -15% CarrierWatch© CSA Industry Report | 9 for-hire interstate freight carriers Other regional differences in enforcement include: Controlled Substances Of the ten states with the highest rate (%) of carrier alerts for Controlled Substances, six are clustered in the South and Southeast: Arkansas, Mississippi, Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia Unsafe Driving Eight of the ten states with the highest percentage of carriers with Unsafe Driving alerts are contiguous: Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Kentucky, West Virginia. New Mexico and Louisiana are the “outliers” Fatigued Driving Seven of the ten states with the lowest percentage of carriers with Fatigued Driving alerts are in the Mid-Atlantic and New England regions: Maryland, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont, Delaware, Massachusetts Vehicle Maintenance Nine states that border each other had the highest percentage of carriers with Vehicle Maintenance alerts: Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, Florida Figure 6: States of Alerts for Unsafe Driving States with highestwith % ofHighest alerts for%unsafe driving Figure 7: States of Alerts for Vehicle Maintenance States with highestwith % ofHighest alerts for%vehicle maintenance WHITE PAPER | 10 Freight carriers are in a class by themselves Freight carriers are twice as likely to have safety data in their records, compared to other fleets Figure 8: Carriers withDATA CSA Data Carriers with CSA Any CSA Data At Least One BASIC Score All Five BASIC Scores All DOT Numbers 43% 12% 0.1% Freight Carriers 76% 34% 0.3% Under CSA, numeric safety scores are not adequate criteria for qualifying freight carriers. Only 34% of carriers had any numeric scores at all, and a mere 0.3% (468 carriers) had a numeric score for each of the five BASIC categories. Conclusion Conclusion is probably not appropriate for an initial report sifting through the data looking for the impact CSA will have on for-hire, interstate carriers and the commercial trucking industry. Our intention in this report is to inform on what patterns the initial CSA BASIC scores reveal. If data defines the territory, then the resulting information becomes the map. At this juncture, it seems a bit premature to claim a new map based on CSA data has emerged, but clearly the data has early definition. This is the first in what we envision as a series of CarrierWatch CSA Industry reports as more data reveals actionable information – maps that brokers, 3PLs, shippers, and carriers can use to help them move commercial freight under contract or on the spot market. We will inform CarrierWatch CSA Industry Report subscribers of subsequent reports, webinars, and related information exchanges. For more information: 1.800.551.8832 TransCoreFreightSolutions.com ©2011 TransCore. All rights reserved. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. 04262011