NOW is your time to comment on the failed DATAQ process. FMCSA is trying to remove itself from a process it began. There must be an appropriate appeal procedure motor carriers and drivers for due process

DataQs reform: FMCSA pivots to new state requirements for funding
Matt Cole

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration on Tuesday published
responses to comments it received during a 2023 comment period
<https://www.overdriveonline.com/regulations/article/15634205/fmcsa-wants-co
ntrol-of-thirdstage-dataqs-appeals
>  on the proposed development and
implementation of a federal appeals process for Requests for Data Review
(RDRs) submitted to the agency through its DataQs system.
Additionally, as reported in part Friday, June 27, with the Department of
Transportation’s announcement of a raft of actions
<https://www.overdriveonline.com/regulations/article/15749575/dot-sets-forth
-regs-plan-for-parking-eldshours-flexibility-more
>  in the trucking
regulatory sphere, the agency is pivoting from that federal appeals system
to focus on the DataQs requirements for Motor Carrier Safety Assistance
Program (MCSAP) Grant funding.

The move comes in response to the comments filed, FMCSA said, many
recommending a more impartial review process than is currently the practice
in states. The agency “is proposing an approach to improve the fundamental
fairness” of the DataQs system by “implementing sufficient process
guardrails for States.”

If prior survey results are any indication, fundamental DataQs improvement
for timeliness and impartiality will be welcomed by many in trucking.
Overdrive readers earmarked DataQs process issues among several areas it
hoped the Trump administration and its DOGE effort could impact
<https://www.overdriveonline.com/voices/article/15738207/what-truckers-want-
doge-to-target-in-gov-relative-to-industry
> . At once, delayed removal of
violations associated with court-adjudicated citations
<https://www.overdriveonline.com/partners-in-business/safety-compliance/arti
cle/15737200/how-to-challenge-erroneous-violation-crash-data-fmcsa-dataqs
>
through DataQs may remain a problem, given local courts’ role in contesting
tickets.

As owner-operator Adam Mackey noted as part of prior reporting, “Fighting
tickets is now almost impossible” within the system. “Instead of having my
day in court, I have to submit multiple letters and get denied multiple
times until six to eight months later I finally might get my day in court.
Lawyers don’t understand it, and drivers don’t have the time or money to
jump through all the hoops.”

Nonetheless, the agency hoped the new changes it’s proposing will at least
“benefit users by ensuring appeals are reviewed in an independent,
impartial, uniform, and transparent manner, as well as providing timelines
for the initial request and appeals process.”

The agency’s previous idea first saw light in 2023
FMCSA’s 2023 notice proposed an appeal process for third-stage DataQs
reviews — or requests for change to a violation, crash or other information
<https://www.overdriveonline.com/partners-in-business/safety-compliance/arti
cle/15737200/how-to-challenge-erroneous-violation-crash-data-fmcsa-dataqs
>
that have been rejected at least twice already, whether by state or federal
officials, with some limitations.

Currently, states are responsible for reviewing and resolving all “requests
for data review” (RDRs) within the DataQs system that pertain to the safety
data collected and reported in the Motor Carrier Management Information
System (MCMIS) by the state. The current system allows carriers to use the
DataQs system to request an RDR
<https://www.overdriveonline.com/regulations/article/15063812/how-to-dataq-t
o-challenge-a-violation
> within the FMCSA system and, if applicable, provide
supporting documentation.

Depending on the nature of the request, the review is routed to the
appropriate DataQs program office. That office can vary considerably — it
can be a state agency, an FMCSA field office, or FMCSA headquarters — yet
most DataQs reviews are assigned to the appropriate state agency for review,
since states are most often uploading carrier data to MCMIS.
After a decision is made on the initial review, that decision can be
appealed — known as an “RDR Reconsideration” — which could be routed to
the same program office as the initial review or follow a different process
in some instances, FMCSA noted, depending on the review type. (Some states,
like Minnesota
<https://www.overdriveonline.com/overdrive-radio/podcast/15063931/dataqs-cra
sh-and-violation-appeals-process-in-minnesota
> , put such
reconsiderations/appeals to a dedicated review team with at least some
industry representation.)

In its 2023 notice, FMCSA proposed that DataQs users would be able to
initiate a request for an FMCSA appeal, but only after both the initial
review and the RDR Reconsideration reviews have been denied. The agency
collected 54 comments in response to that notice, 42 of which were specific
to the changes proposed, FMCSA said. The “majority of the comments were
balanced in tone and supportive of FMCSA’s proposal to develop and implement
a federal appeals process for RDRs.”

Many comments “provided suggestions on improving the proposed appeals
process and DataQs program more broadly,” the agency added. In its responses
published July 1, FMCSA split the comments into three categories:
*       Calls to improve the impartiality of the RDR process
*       Suggested approaches for the federal appeals process and the DataQs
program
*       Requests to enhance the timeliness of RDRs

Challenge-process impartiality
Thirty commenters asked that FMCSA improve impartiality in processing RDRs.
Of those, 13 commenters — including the National Association of Small
Trucking Companies, Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association, Trucker
Nation and others — took issue with RDRs being reviewed by the officer,
inspector, or agency that performed the inspection or issued the violation.
The National Tank Truck Carriers (NTTC) group pointed out that “there are
many times that an inspector refuses to make a correction despite evidence
that they made a mistake,” FMCSA noted, while NASTC and Trucker Nation
offered recommendations to improve impartiality. NASTC suggested FMCSA
require states to “establish adjudication by independent third parties and
to disallow involvement in adjudication by any state or local body or other
party with [an] actual or appearance of conflict of interest, such as review
by the issuing officer or his or her supervisor.”

Trucker Nation added that the “issuing officer [should] serve only as an
information source for the analyst/adjudicator who is assigned to the RDR”
to enhance the objectivity of the RDR process.

Regarding requests asking that the RDR be reviewed again after the initial
decision, several commenters recommended FMCSA’s proposed state guidelines
include a requirement that such “RDR Reconsiderations” be addressed by a
reviewer different from the initial reviewer.
Several voices called for a standard, nationwide process for RDRs. Some
commenters also claimed to have their DataQs reviews closed without
explanation, “which led to assumptions of bias in the review process,” FMCSA
said.

FMCSA’s response
After analyzing comments, as noted at the top, FMCSA determined that “its
initial proposal for a federal-level appeals process would not sufficiently
address the due process issues that currently exist with State-reviewed
RDRs.”

Instead, the agency now proposed to improve fairness with new state
requirements, including changes to the MCSAP Grant requirements that “would
provide necessary guardrails for the RDR process, accountability for States,
and empower States to take more complete ownership of their DataQs
programs.”

Eligible RDRs, other process recommendations
Ten commenters called for FMCSA to expand the scope of RDRs eligible for
the federal appeals process. The Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance said “it
is [not] practical to go through the effort that will be involved in
establishing and maintaining this federal appeals process if it will not
address the majority of the RDRs that would be submitted.” Other commenters
offered specifics on what specifically should be eligible, and Trucker
Nation suggested that all violation types should be eligible.
The American Trucking Associations supported a more limited scope for the
federal appeals process that was proposed in the 2023 notice
<https://www.overdriveonline.com/regulations/article/15634205/fmcsa-wants-co
ntrol-of-thirdstage-dataqs-appeals
> , noting that “members raised concerns
that allowing all RDRs could create a myriad of submissions that lead to an
ineffective independent review process.”

The agency acknowledged that the proposed appeals process “was narrow in
scope by only reviewing requests pertaining to interpretation of regulations
and policies, leaving many RDRs to be reviewed under processes that exist
today.” FMCSA is now proposing “defined processes at each stage of review
that will apply to all RDRs submitted for State-collected data in DataQs.”
Six commenters recommended using review panels in the federal appeals
process and suggested criteria for those panels. FMCSA agreed and proposed
for its MCSAP Grant requirements that states use a panel of subject matter
experts in the decision-making process for RDR Reconsideration and final
review requests.

Four commenters said FMCSA should share federal appeals decisions publicly,
and four also recommended that FMCSA remove all data related to an active
RDR from public websites until an outcome is decided. The agency noted that
because the new proposal is state-centered and doesn’t include centralized
federal review, decisions from RDRs would not be posted publicly on FMCSA’s
website, but would be available to the parties involved with the RDR.
FMCSA didn’t agree with the suggestion to remove all data related to
pending RDRs from public view. “Removing this data creates opportunities for
requestors to ‘improve’ their safety records in the short term by submitting
frivolous RDRs, which would impact the efficacy of the DataQs program and
other FMCSA safety programs,” FMCSA said.
Timeliness of the DataQs process

Ten stakeholders voiced concerns around timeliness of current DataQs
processes. Establishing deadlines generally would improve the effectiveness
of the RDR process, some said, and others suggested specific timelines.
OOIDA recommended all RDRs be decided within 60 days of the initial request,
the initial review and RDR Reconsideration be completed within 30 days, and
the federal appeal review then in consideration within 30 days.
ATA recommended FMCSA provide “an outline of the expected review-time once
the RDR is received at the federal level, the steps the agency is taking to
address the backlog of current RDRs, and how the program implementation will
be handled.”

FMCSA agreed that timeliness is important. Proposed DataQs requirements for
MCSAP funding include timeline standards for each stage of review. Proposed
standards would require states to “open, review, and communicate a decision
within 21 days of the requestor’s submission of an RDR and RDR
Reconsideration requests, and within 30 days of the requestor’s submission
for Final Review requests,” the agency said.

FMCSA’s proposal for MCSAP Grant funding
The agency’s new proposal here would revise DataQs requirements for MCSAP
funding states receive to “ensure proper due process for users of the DataQs
system,” FMCSA said. “These requirements aim to improve the impartiality,
timeliness, transparency, and fundamental fairness of the RDR process,
thereby strengthening FMCSA’s ability to make data-driven decisions that
inform resource allocation, policy changes, and new initiatives to prevent
large truck and motorcoach-involved crashes and enhance safety on the
nation’s roads.”

The agency noted that the requirements would only apply to DataQs requests
on state-owned data and would not apply to federally-owned data, such as
requests submitted to the Crash Preventability Determination Program
<https://www.overdriveonline.com/partners-in-business/safety-compliance/arti
cle/15737291/preventable-or-not-when-to-use-dataqs-to-request-crash-reviews
>
, petitions submitted to the Drug and Alcohol Clearinghouse Program, or
other FMCSA offices.

FMCSA’s proposal would require states to incorporate a multi-level review
process for RDRs, escalating the review from the DataQs analyst in the
state’s MCSAP Lead Agency to a responsible decision-maker or panel of
subject matter experts. Each RDR would be evaluated based on the
documentation and evidence provided by the submitter of the RDR, along with
any state documents or evidence.

“States would be encouraged to adopt a multi-level review process
appropriate for their agency(s) structure to support independent evaluation
of the request,” the agency said. “This multi-level review process would
benefit the ability for requestors to get a fair and thorough response with
assessment from multiple evaluators within a state.”

States would also be required to submit a DataQs Implementation Plan to
FMCSA that details how their agency will meet the requirements for each
stage of the RDR review process.

The proposed requirements for states’ RDR review process can be seen in the
Federal Register docket here
<https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2025/07/01/2025-12059/proposed-re
visions-to-dataqs-requirements-for-mcsap-grant-funding
> .

FMCSA is accepting comments on the proposed requirements for states,
including to specific questions mostly directed at states
<https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2025-12059/p-86> , through Sept. 2.

Comments can be filed here.
<https://www.regulations.gov/commenton/FMCSA-2023-0190-0059>

The agency said following the comment period, a follow-up Federal Register
notice will respond to any comments received and announce the revised MCSAP
Grant requirements “with ample time prior to implementation.”

FMCSA Aims to Improve DataQs Process

Goal Is to Help Carriers Gain Visibility Into Safety Reports Stored in
Records
Eric Miller

Federal trucking regulators have issued a public notice reopening a
lingering 2023 proposal seeking additional comments on how to improve the
DataQs process <https://www.ttnews.com/articles/fmcsa-dataqs-appeal-process>
that allows motor carriers to challenge the accuracy of data stored in state
and federal records.

DataQs is an online system for carriers, commercial motor vehicle drivers
and other interested parties to request and track a review of federal and
state crash and inspection data submitted to and stored by the Federal Motor
Carrier Safety Administration <https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/mission/about-us> .

“This system is critical to allowing users to ensure the data FMCSA
maintains on them is accurate and complete,” the June 30 agency notice said.
“Users can review their own data and request corrections to erroneous or
incomplete data records.”

FMCSA received 54 docket comments in response to the 2023 FR notice before
it closed in November 2023. The commenters included motor carriers, drivers,
owner-operators, industry associations, safety consultants and members of
the enforcement community.

Among the goals for the DataQs review is to transfer more responsibility to
the states, according to the notice.

The agency’s response to the first round of stakeholder comments outlined
some of its notions of what can and can’t be changed in the system. The
review of the appeals process has been intended to benefit users by ensuring
their appeals are reviewed in an independent and thorough manner, as well as
providing timelines for when the initial request and appeals process should
be completed.

“The majority of the [public] comments were balanced in tone and supportive
of FMCSA’s proposal to develop and implement a federal appeals process for
requests for data reviews,” FMCSA said. “Many of the commenters provided
suggestions on improving the proposed appeals process and DataQs program
more broadly.”

FMCSA said it also is proposing revisions to the Motor Carrier Safety
Assistance Program Grant requirements. “These revised requirements would
provide necessary guardrails for the request for data review process,
accountability for states and empower states to take more complete ownership
of their DataQs programs,” the agency said.

FMCSA said commenters have requested more impartiality, uniformity and
transparency in the request for data review (RDR) process. However, after
review and consideration of these comments, FMCSA has determined its initial
proposal for a federal-level appeals process would insufficiently address
the due process issues that exist with state-reviewed RDRs.

“Instead, FMCSA is proposing an approach to improve the fundamental
fairness of the RDR process by implementing sufficient process guardrails
for states,” the agency said. “Changes would benefit users by ensuring
appeals are reviewed in an independent, impartial, uniform and transparent
manner, as well as providing timelines for the initial request and appeals
process.”

FMCSA said it does not agree with the suggestion to remove all data related
to pending RDRs from public view. “Removing this data creates opportunities
for requesters to improve their safety records in the short term by
submitting frivolous RDRs, which would impact the efficacy of the DataQs
program and other FMCSA safety programs.”

The agency said it will continue to display all motor carrier safety data
(i.e., crashes, inspections and investigations) on its websites. It also
said it concurs with comments calling for the use of a review panel to
monitor the DataQs process.

Werner Verdict Reversed-Win for Trucking…and Common Sense

Doug Marcello

Trucking and Commercial Transportation Attorney at Saxton & Stump

June 29, 2025

 

The big picture: The Texas Supreme Court overturned a massive jury verdict against Werner Enterprises, ruling that a truck driver staying in his lane below the legal speed limit cannot be held liable when another vehicle crosses a 42-foot median in icy conditions.

What happened

A pickup truck lost control on icy I-20 near Odessa, crossed the wide median, and collided head-on with a Werner semi-truck traveling under the speed limit in its proper lane.

The scene: Dangerous icy conditions had already caused multiple accidents that the Werner truck had passed, with other trucks parked off the roadway for safety.

The devastation: One person died, another became quadriplegic, and two others suffered severe brain and physical injuries.

The verdict: A jury initially awarded nearly $90 million, finding Werner 84% at fault (14% driver, 70% corporate negligence) versus 16% for the pickup driver.

The weather factor

What plaintiffs argued: Werner’s driver and trainer failed to check weather conditions before departure and had no knowledge of freezing rain advisories.

The context: Multiple vehicles had already been involved in weather-related incidents on the same stretch of highway, with trucks pulling over due to dangerous conditions.

The legal reversal

Why it matters: The state’s highest court applied the “substantial factor” test for proximate cause—a practical, common-sense standard that asks whether a defendant was actually responsible for the harm, not just present when it occurred.

The lengthy appeal: This decision culminated a protracted appeals process, with the Texas Supreme Court ultimately ruling that any Werner driver negligence was not the proximate cause.

Deep dive: Proximate cause doctrine

The legal standard: Proximate cause isn’t just about “but for” causation (would the injury have happened without defendant’s conduct). Instead, it requires proof that defendant’s negligence was a “substantial factor” in causing injury.

What “substantial factor” means:

  • Incorporates “the idea of responsibility” into causation analysis
  • Requires practical perspective using common sense experience
  • Must show defendant is “actually responsible for the ultimate harm”
  • Being part of the chain of events isn’t enough if involvement was mere “happenstance of time and place”

The court’s reasoning: If defendant’s conduct merely creates conditions that make harm possible, it’s not a substantial factor as a matter of law.

Court’s hypothetical scenarios

Speed argument demolished: Plaintiffs claimed slower speed would have prevented collision. The court noted that if Werner’s driver had been going 100 mph, the pickup also wouldn’t have collided with him.

The analogy: Court compared this to head-on collisions—courts must assign fault to the driver whose negligence made the accident happen, not to a driver whose negligence merely brought him to the time and place where accident occurred.

Alternative scenarios the court considered:

  • If no vehicles were in pickup’s path, occupants wouldn’t have been injured
  • If Werner truck had been a small car, F-350 could have killed or severely injured those occupants
  • Werner driver’s speed only put him at the place and time where accident occurred

Corporate liability implications

Werner’s corporate negligence claims: Even allegations of inadequate training and supervision failed because the underlying driver conduct wasn’t a proximate cause.

The derivative rule: If individual driver’s actions don’t proximately cause an accident, there can be no derivative corporate negligence for failure to train or supervise that driver.

Court’s finding: Claims against Werner corporation fail for the same reason as claims against the driver—the pickup’s loss of control was the sole cause.

The bottom line

Key legal principle: “Substantial factor” means only parties whose substantial role in bringing about injury makes them “actually responsible for the ultimate harm.”

For trucking companies: Being part of the chain of events leading to an accident doesn’t automatically equal liability—courts will examine whether your role was truly substantial or merely “happenstance of time and place.”

The precedent: Even corporate negligence claims (inadequate training, supervision) fail when the underlying driver conduct wasn’t a proximate cause of the accident.

Practical impact: This decision reinforces the requirement that courts apply practical, real-world standards when determining fault in complex accident cases, potentially protecting defendants who are simply in the wrong place at the wrong time through no fault of their own.

The court emphasized that proximate cause is “a practical test, the test of common experience” when determining legal rights and liability.

“RULES OF THE ROAD”-PLAINTIFFS’ MANUAL ATTACK

Doug Marcello
WHY IT MATTERS:  Plaintiffs target your driver manuals and policies to create standards against which your held and to then inflame the jury.

THE ATTACK:  You’ve heard of the “Reptile Theory”.  You can’t have trucking seminar unless you have a Reptile session.  Kinda like a band in Texas requiring a fiddle player,

But there is another plaintiff attack that has gotten little attention and can be no less lethal.  It’s called “The Rules of the Road.”

Like the “Reptile Theory”, it is spelled out in a book by the same title-“Rules of the Road”.  Its purpose is to create a black-and-white definition of negligence for the jury.

It seeks to create rules against which your driver and your company are measured.  To make it automatically negligence if you don’t follow “your rule.”

To make it like a traffic violation.  If you run a stop sign, it’s a violation of a rule of the road.  You see where the title comes from?

The “rules” are parsed from your manual, policies, newsletter, webpages,…  Anything you write or say.  This becomes the standard against which you and your driver are measured.

Moreover, these are the potential detonator of a nuclear verdict.  Remember—nuclear verdicts rarely, if ever, come from the facts of the accident.

They are denotated by plaintiff’s “proof” of systemic failures.  Systemic failures, they argue, by failing to live up to what is in your manual or policies. 

 “The trucking company doesn’t even follow its own rules.  Only a big old verdict will get them to do so.”

If Trucking Stops…

NMFTA

  • We’d face catastrophic food shortages in just 3 days.
  • Gas stations would run dry in the same time.
  • Water supplies, hospitals, manufacturing, banking, and waste collection would all stop.
  • If trucking stops, America stops.

Almost every sector is truck dependent. And if we aren’t careful, bad actors might just succeed.

Watch the video now to discover how NMFTA can help prepare you and your teams against cyberthreats.

Why Cybersecurity Is
Important to Us

NMFTA represents over 500 carriers who collectively operate over 200,000 power units generating approximately $100 billion in freight revenue.  Our members perform a vital service to our nation’s economy by delivering the goods necessary to keep commerce flowing. Protecting both the digital networks and the physical assets that support the delivery of goods throughout our supply chain is essential to all.

Why Are We Vulnerable?

In addition to the cybersecurity risks faced across all industry verticals, the transportation industry faces some unique cybersecurity challenges:

Commercial transportation carriers operate a diverse fleet of vehicles.  These vehicles are designed and built with both OEM factory equipment, as well as aftermarket telematics units.

Using common communication interoperability standard SAE J1939, OEMs can offer vehicles in different configurations using parts such as brakes, transmissions and engines outsourced from 3rd parties, which increases supply chain cybersecurity risks.

Additionally, the extensive impact of transportation disruptions creates particular concern regarding potential outages. These characteristics make the commercial transportation security risk profile substantially different than passenger automobiles.

https://youtu.be/Y-V0zEWomQ4