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Motor Carrier Safety: Preliminary Information on Challenges to Ensuring the Integrity of Drug Testing Programs

GAO-08-220T Published: Nov 01, 2007. Publicly Released: Nov 01, 2007.
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Highlights

Crashes involving commercial motor carriers, including trucks and buses, account for 13 percent of all highway deaths each year. While illegal drug use is not among the most frequently cited factors associated with large truck crashes; studies show that the use of illegal drugs, such as marijuana, heroin, or cocaine, can severely impair driving ability. Since 1988, federal regulations have required commercial drivers to submit urine samples to be tested for drugs. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) is responsible for ensuring compliance with these regulations. News reports and other investigations have raised concerns that drivers may be escaping detection by avoiding the test or somehow altering the results. This testimony provides preliminary information on the challenges confronting FMCSA in (1) overseeing and enforcing compliance with drug testing regulations and (2) ensuring the integrity of the drug tests and the processes for keeping drivers with identified drug problems off the roads. It is based on work currently in process, which includes examining options to address these challenges. GAO's work thus far has included interviews with officials from the Department of Transportation (DOT) and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), along with a wide variety of stakeholders, including motor carriers, unions, and industry associations. GAO discussed this testimony with DOT officials and incorporated their comments as appropriate.

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Substance abuseSubstance abuseDrug testingFederal regulationsInternal controlsLaboratoriesMotor carriersMotor vehicle safetyNoncomplianceProtocolsReporting requirementsSafety regulationTransportation safetyUrinalysisGovernment agency oversightProgram implementation