[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 49, Volume 5]

[Revised as of October 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 49CFR380.513]



[Page 149-152]

 

                        TITLE 49--TRANSPORTATION

 

                      DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

 

PART 380_SPECIAL TRAINING REQUIREMENTS--Table of Contents

 

           Subpart E_Entry-Level Driver Training Requirements

 

Sec. 380.513  Required information on the training certificate.



    The training provider must provide a training certificate or diploma 

to the entry-level driver. If an employer is the training provider, the 

employer must provide a training certificate or diploma to the entry-

level driver. The certificate or diploma must contain the following 

seven items of information:

    (a) Date of certificate issuance.

    (b) Name of training provider.

    (c) Mailing address of training provider.

    (d) Name of driver.

    (e) A statement that the driver has completed training in driver 

qualification requirements, hours of service of drivers, driver 

wellness, and whistle blower protection requirements substantially in 

accordance with the following sentence:



    I certify ----------has completed training requirements set forth in 

the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations for entry-level driver 

training in accordance with 49 CFR 380.503.



    (f) The printed name of the person attesting that the driver has 

received the required training.

    (g) The signature of the person attesting that the driver has 

received the required training.



 Appendix to Part 380--LCV Driver Training Programs, Required Knowledge 

                               and Skills



    The following table lists topics of instruction required for drivers 

of longer combination vehicles pursuant to 49 CFR part 380, subpart B. 

The training courses for operators of LCV Doubles and LCV Triples must 

be distinct and tailored to address their unique operating and handling 

characteristics. Each course must include the minimum topics of 

instruction, including behind-the-wheel training designed to provide an 

opportunity to develop the skills outlined under the Proficiency 

Development unit of the training



[[Page 150]]



program. Only a skills instructor may administer behind-the-wheel 

training involving the operation of an LCV or one of its components. A 

classroom instructor may administer only instruction that does not 

involve the operation of an LCV or one of its components.



          Table to the Appendix--Course Topics for LCV Drivers

------------------------------------------------------------------------



------------------------------------------------------------------------

                         Section 1: Orientation

------------------------------------------------------------------------

1.1.............................  LCVs in Trucking

1.2.............................  Regulatory Factors

1.3.............................  Driver Qualifications

1.4.............................  Vehicle Configuration Factors

---------------------------------

                       Section 2: Basic Operation

------------------------------------------------------------------------

2.1.............................  Coupling and Uncoupling

2.2.............................  Basic Control and Handling

2.3.............................  Basic Maneuvers

2.4.............................  Turning, Steering and Tracking

2.5.............................  Proficiency Development

---------------------------------

                   Section 3: Safe Operating Practices

------------------------------------------------------------------------

3.1.............................  Interacting with Traffic

3.2.............................  Speed and Space Management

3.3.............................  Night Operations

3.4.............................  Extreme Driving Conditions

3.5.............................  Security Issues

3.6.............................  Proficiency Development

---------------------------------

                     Section 4: Advanced Operations

------------------------------------------------------------------------

4.1.............................  Hazard Perception

4.2.............................  Hazardous Situations

---------------------------------

4.3.............................  Maintenance and Troubleshooting

---------------------------------

                    Section 5: Non-Driving Activities

------------------------------------------------------------------------

5.1.............................  Routes and Trip Planning

5.2.............................  Cargo and Weight Considerations

------------------------------------------------------------------------



                         Section 1--Orientation



    The units in this section must provide an orientation to the 

training curriculum and must cover the role LCVs play within the motor 

carrier industry, the factors that affect their operations, and the role 

that drivers play in the safe operation of LCVs.

    Unit 1.1--LCVs in Trucking. This unit must provide an introduction 

to the emergence of LCVs in trucking and must serve as an orientation to 

the course content. Emphasis must be placed upon the role the driver 

plays in transportation.

    Unit 1.2--Regulatory factors. This unit must provide instruction 

addressing the Federal, State, and local governmental bodies that 

propose, enact, and implement the laws, rules, and regulations that 

affect the trucking industry. Emphasis must be placed on those 

regulatory factors that affect LCVs, including 23 CFR 658.23 and 

Appendix C to part 658.

    Unit 1.3--Driver qualifications. This unit must provide classroom 

instruction addressing the Federal and State laws, rules, and 

regulations that define LCV driver qualifications. It also must include 

a discussion on medical examinations, drug and alcohol tests, 

certification, and basic health and wellness issues. Emphasis must be 

placed upon topics essential to physical and mental health maintenance, 

including (1) diet, (2) exercise, (3) avoidance of alcohol and drug 

abuse, and caution in the use of prescription and nonprescription drugs, 

(4) the adverse effects of driver fatigue, and (5) effective fatigue 

countermeasures. Driver-trainees who have successfully completed the 

Entry-level training segments at Sec. 380.503(a) and (c) are considered 

to have satisfied the requirements of Unit 1.3.

    Unit 1.4--Vehicle configuration factors. This unit must provide 

classroom instruction addressing the key vehicle components used in the 

configuration of longer combination vehicles. It also must familiarize 

the driver-trainee with various vehicle combinations, as well as provide 

instruction about unique characteristics and factors associated with LCV 

configurations.



                       Section 2--Basic Operation



    The units in this section must cover the interaction between the 

driver and the vehicle. They must teach driver-trainees how to couple 

and uncouple LCVs, ensure the vehicles are in proper operating 

condition, and control the motion of LCVs under various road and traffic 

conditions.

    During the driving exercises at off-highway locations required by 

this section, the driver-trainee must first familiarize himself/herself 

with basic operating characteristics of an LCV. Utilizing an LCV, 

students must be able to perform the skills learned in each unit to a 

level of proficiency required to permit safe transition to on-street 

driving.

    Unit 2.1--Coupling and uncoupling. This unit must provide 

instruction addressing the procedures for coupling and uncoupling LCVs. 

While vehicle coupling and uncoupling procedures are common to all 

truck-tractor/semi-trailer operations, some factors are peculiar to 

LCVs. Emphasis must be placed upon preplanning and safe operating 

procedures.

    Unit 2.2--Basic control and handling. This unit must provide an 

introduction to basic vehicular control and handling as it applies



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to LCVs. This must include instruction addressing brake performance, 

handling characteristics and factors affecting LCV stability while 

braking, turning, and cornering. Emphasis must be placed upon safe 

operating procedures.

    Unit 2.3--Basic maneuvers. This unit must provide instruction 

addressing the basic vehicular maneuvers that will be encountered by LCV 

drivers. This must include instruction relative to backing, lane 

positioning and path selection, merging situations, and parking LCVs. 

Emphasis must be placed upon safe operating procedures as they apply to 

brake performance and directional stability while accelerating, braking, 

merging, cornering, turning, and parking.

    Unit 2.4--Turning, steering, and tracking. This unit must provide 

instruction addressing turning situations, steering maneuvers, and the 

tracking of LCV trailers. This must include instruction related to 

trailer sway and off-tracking. Emphasis must be placed on maintaining 

directional stability.

    Unit 2.5--Proficiency development: basic operations. The purpose of 

this unit is to enable driver-students to gain the proficiency in basic 

operation needed to safely undertake on-street instruction in the Safe 

Operations Practices section of the curriculum.

    The activities of this unit must consist of driving exercises that 

provide practice for the development of basic control skills and mastery 

of basic maneuvers. Driver-students practice skills and maneuvers 

learned in the Basic Control and Handling; Basic Maneuvers; and Turning, 

Steering and Tracking units. A series of basic exercises is practiced at 

off-highway locations until students develop sufficient proficiency for 

transition to on-street driving.

    Once the driver-student's skills have been measured and found 

adequate, the driver-student must be allowed to move to on-the-street 

driving.

    Nearly all activity in this unit will take place on the driving 

range or on streets or roads that have low-density traffic conditions.



                   Section 3--Safe Operating Practices



    The units in this section must cover the interaction between student 

drivers, the vehicle, and the traffic environment. They must teach 

driver-students how to apply their basic operating skills in a way that 

ensures their safety and that of other road users under various road, 

weather, and traffic conditions.

    Unit 3.1--Interacting with traffic. This unit must provide 

instruction addressing the principles of visual search, communication, 

and sharing the road with other traffic. Emphasis must be placed upon 

visual search, mirror usage, signaling and/or positioning the vehicle to 

communicate, and understanding the special situations encountered by LCV 

drivers in various traffic situations.

    Unit 3.2--Speed and space management. This unit must provide 

instruction addressing the principles of speed and space management. 

Emphasis must be placed upon maintaining safe vehicular speed and 

appropriate space surrounding the vehicle under various traffic and road 

conditions. Particular attention must be placed upon understanding the 

special situations encountered by LCVs in various traffic situations.

    Unit 3.3--Night operations. This unit must provide instruction 

addressing the principles of Night Operations. Emphasis must be placed 

upon the factors affecting operation of LCVs at night. Night driving 

presents specific factors that require special attention on the part of 

the driver. Changes in vehicle safety inspection, vision, 

communications, speed management, and space management are needed to 

deal with the special problems night driving presents.

    Unit 3.4--Extreme driving conditions. This unit must provide 

instruction addressing the driving of LCVs under extreme driving 

conditions. Emphasis must be placed upon the factors affecting the 

operation of LCVs in cold, hot, and inclement weather and in the 

mountains and desert. Changes in basic driving habits are needed to deal 

with the specific problems presented by these extreme driving 

conditions.

    Unit 3.5--Security issues. This unit must include a discussion of 

security requirements imposed by the Department of Homeland Security, 

Transportation Security Administration; the U.S. Department of 

Transportation, Research and Special Programs Administration; and any 

other State or Federal agency with responsibility for highway or motor 

carrier security.

    Unit 3.6--Proficiency development. This unit must provide driver-

students an opportunity to refine, within the on-street traffic 

environment, their vehicle handling skills learned in the first three 

sections. Driver-student performance progress must be closely monitored 

to determine when the level of proficiency required for carrying out the 

basic traffic maneuvers of stopping, turning, merging, straight driving, 

curves, lane changing, passing, driving on hills, driving through 

traffic restrictions, and parking has been attained. The driver-student 

must also be assessed for regulatory compliance with all traffic laws.

    Nearly all activity in this unit will take place on public roadways 

in a full range of traffic environments applicable to this vehicle 

configuration. This must include urban and rural uncontrolled roadways, 

expressways or freeways, under light, moderate, and heavy traffic 

conditions. There must be a brief classroom session to familiarize 

driver-



[[Page 152]]



students with the type of on-street maneuvers they will perform and how 

their performance will be rated.

    The instructor must assess the level of skill development of the 

driver-student and must increase in difficulty, based upon the level of 

skill attained, the types of maneuvers, roadways and traffic conditions 

to which the driver-student is exposed.



                     Section 4--Advanced Operations



    The units in this section must introduce higher level skills that 

can be acquired only after the more fundamental skills and knowledge 

taught in sections two and three have been mastered. They must teach the 

perceptual skills necessary to recognize potential hazards, and must 

demonstrate the procedures needed to handle an LCV when faced with a 

hazard.

    The Maintenance and Trouble-shooting Unit must provide instruction 

that addresses how to keep the vehicle in safe and efficient operating 

condition. The purpose of this unit is to teach the correct way to 

perform simple maintenance tasks, and how to troubleshoot and report 

those vehicle discrepancies or deficiencies that must be repaired by a 

qualified mechanic.

    Unit 4.1--Hazard perception. This unit must provide instruction 

addressing the principles of recognizing hazards in sufficient time to 

reduce the severity of the hazard and neutralize a possible emergency 

situation. While hazards are present in all motor vehicle traffic 

operations, some are peculiar to LCV operations. Emphasis must be placed 

upon hazard recognition, visual search, and response to possible 

emergency-producing situations encountered by LCV drivers in various 

traffic situations.

    Unit 4.2--Hazardous situations. This unit must address dealing with 

specific procedures appropriate for LCV emergencies. These must include 

evasive steering, emergency braking, off-road recovery, brake failures, 

tire blowouts, rearward amplification, hydroplaning, skidding, 

jackknifing and the rollover phenomenon. The discussion must include a 

review of unsafe acts and the role they play in producing hazardous 

situations.

    Unit 4.3--Maintenance and trouble-shooting. This unit must introduce 

driver-students to the basic servicing and checking procedures for the 

various vehicle components and provide knowledge of conducting 

preventive maintenance functions, making simple emergency repairs, and 

diagnosing and reporting vehicle malfunctions.



                    Section 5--Non-Driving Activities



    The units in this section must cover activities that are not 

directly related to the vehicle itself but must be performed by an LCV 

driver. The units in this section must ensure these activities are 

performed in a manner that ensures the safety of the driver, vehicle, 

cargo, and other road users.

    Unit 5.1--Routes and trip planning. This unit must address the 

importance of and requirements for planning routes and trips. This must 

include classroom discussion of Federal and State requirements for a 

number of topics including permits, vehicle size and weight limitations, 

designated highways, local access, the reasonable access rule, staging 

areas, and access zones.

    Unit 5.2--Cargo and weight considerations. This unit must address 

the importance of proper cargo documentation, loading, securing and 

unloading cargo, weight distribution, load sequencing and trailer 

placement. Emphasis must be placed on the importance of axle weight 

distribution, as well as on trailer placement and its effect on vehicle 

handling.