Title: National Safety Code in
1April 22, 2004
2What is NSC?
- The National Safety Code (NSC) is a set of safety
standards for motor carriers, drivers and
vehicles operating in Canada. - Provides support through regulation for drivers
and carriers to implement management processes to
improve safety.
3How was the NSC established?
- In 1989 the Canadian Council of Motor Transport
Administrators (CCMTA) established the NSC
standards. - All provinces and territories have adopted the
NSC standards and use them to develop their own
regulations.
4NSC Weight Threshold
- Vehicles included in NSC in BC are
- Trucks or truck tractors with GVW exceeding 5000
kg - Buses
- Vehicles licensed under the Motor Carrier
operating authority (taxis and buses)
5Carriers Obligations
- As a carrier, you are responsible for
- educating yourself and all drivers who work under
your Safety Certificate - ensuring that all vehicles that are operated
under your Safety Certificate are properly
maintained
6Carriers Obligations Cont.
- ensuring only competent and qualified drivers
drive your vehicles - establishing policies for monitoring hours of
service, vehicle maintenance, safety programs,
and ensuring your safety policies are followed
7Carrier Profile Elements
- Carrier profile incorporates all of the
information as required by NSC Standard 14 - Points are assigned for
- OOS CVSAs (3)
- At-fault Accidents (2, 4, 6)
- Deemed Guilty Contraventions (1, 2, 3, 5)
- All info. received through CDE on the above
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17Requesting a Carrier Profile
- Fax request to (250) 952-0578
- Include carrier name, NSC number, and specific
date range (if applicable) - Carrier profiles are provided to the carrier free
of charge
18Progressive Intervention Process - Risk Bands
- Carriers are divided into 7 risk bands based on
fleet size
19Progressive Intervention Process - Thresholds
- Within each risk band, the provincial median is
calculated in each of the 4 categories - Contraventions
- Inspections
- Accidents
- Total Points
- Thresholds for warning letter, interview, audit,
and hearing are established based on the median
in each risk band
20Progressive Intervention Process - Carrier
Profile Scores
- Points are calculated using a 12-month moving
window (12 months is established from deemed
convicted date) - Points are based on a per vehicle score
(established by dividing the points by the
12-month average fleet size) Note 1
vehicle365 days of licensing
21Progressive Intervention Process - Warning Letter
- Warning Letters are triggered automatically at
the beginning of each month - 1545 carriers (or 6.9 of active carriers) were
triggered for a warning letter in 2003
22Progressive Intervention Process - Interview
- Carrier interviews are triggered at the beginning
of each month. - 461 carriers (or 2.1 of active carriers)
participated in an interview in 2003 - Other sources of interviews are
- Carrier selected for random audit (not previously
interviewed or audited) - Carrier Requested
- Requested by enforcement or 3rd party
23Progressive Intervention Process - Audit
- Carrier audits are triggered at the beginning of
each month. - 379 audits (or 1.7 of active carriers) were
conducted in 2003 - Other sources of audits are
- Random (Clean, NSC Random, Motor Carrier Random)
- Follow-up (1st or 2nd follow-up)
- Carrier Requested
- Requested by enforcement or 3rd party
24Progressive Intervention Process
- Warning Letter
- Carrier Interview
- Quantifiable Audit
- Show Cause Hearing
25Carrier Audit
- Audit points are assigned on the basis of
non-compliance - Audit statuses are assigned as follows
- 1-10 points - Satisfactory
- 10.1-20 points - Conditional
- 20.1 points - Unsatisfactory
262003 Safety Rating Statistics
27Record-keeping
- Records must be kept for the four areas of your
NSC obligations - drivers
- hours of service
- vehicles
- special safety requirements
28Driver Records
- You must keep records on each of the following
for every driver who works under your Safety
Certificate - driver license
- transportation of dangerous goods training
certificates - driver abstracts
- driver incident records
29Hours of Service
- As a carrier, you are responsible for ensuring
that your drivers obey hours-of-service
regulations - Drivers of almost all NSC vehicles must follow
these rules.
30Hours of Service Cont.
- Your obligations are to
- understand the hours-of-service rules
- ensure your drivers do not drive for longer
periods than they are legally allowed to do
31Hours of Service Cont.
- ensure your drivers get the rest periods they are
required to have - keep accurate records that show your drivers are
working within the legal limits
32Vehicle Maintenance
- You must ensure every vehicle that operates under
your Safety Certificate is properly maintained.
33Vehicle Records
- As a carrier, you must
- Retain all manufacturer recall notices and
evidence of corrective action - Retain all vehicle maintenance, inspection, and
repair records - Maintain, inspect, and repair all vehicles
according to the regulations
34Vehicle Records Cont.
- Ensure trip inspections are properly conducted
- Take appropriate action on all defects found
during trip inspections - Ensure you retain all required trip inspection
reports
35Safety Rating Legislation
- 4-level Safety Rating process implemented
November 2001
- Enacted in BC legislation under the Motor Vehicle
Act Regulations (MVAR 37.061) on April 2, 2001
36Rating Carriers in BC
- Safety ratings are assigned to BC base-plated
carriers only - All BC Carriers receive a Safety rating.
- On December 31, 2003, there were 22,259 active
base plated carriers in BC
37Safety Rating Categories
- BC may assign one of four safety ratings
- to a carrier (MVAR 37.061)
- Satisfactory-Unaudited
- Satisfactory
- Conditional
- Unsatisfactory
- Active in 2003
38Assigning Safety Ratings
39Progressive Intervention Process - Show Cause
Hearing
- 22 NSC certificates were cancelled in 2003
- Audits are conducted prior to a recommendation
for cancellation - CCMTA is notified when a decision is reached to
cancel a certificate in BC
40Hours of Service
41Hours of Service
42Hours of Service
43Hours of Service
44Hours of Service
45Hours of Service
46Hours of Service
47Hours of Service
48Hours of Service
49Hours of Service
- Summary of Changes
- Requirement for 10 hours off within every 24
hours - Limitation to 14 hours of elapsed time between
periods of 8 hours off - 48 hour averaging
- Must identify cycle
- 36/72 hours off to switch cycles or reset cycle
- Only team drivers can split sleeper time
- 2 cycles - 70 hours in 7 days
- - 120 hours in 14 days
- Once in every 14 days a driver must take at
least 24 hours off duty