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Hazardous Materials Drivers To Undergo Background Checks
The truck drivers who haul cargo labeled as flammable, combustible, radioactive
or poisonous are now going to be scrutinized as closely as the hazardous materials
that fill their tankers and trailers.
In the coming months, roughly three million drivers across the nation will
begin to be fingerprinted and put through FBI criminal background checks. Their
names
also are cross-referenced with federal databases related to terrorist activity,
a practice the U.S. Transportation Security Administration began last year.
“Some of us are against it and some of us are for it because of safety
since 9/11,” said Michael Johnson, a trucker from Mauldin, SC, during
a recent break at the Molly Pitcher Rest Stop in Middlesex County on the New
Jersey
Turnpike.
“The drivers that drive, they want to be safe,” he said. “Some
of them are against it because they say it’s impeding their privacy.”
The federal Transportation Security Administration and the FBI will conduct
the “security
threat assessments” as drivers renew their credentials allowing them
to haul hazardous materials. Drivers who haul hazardous materials must attach
a
placard to the back of their tankers or trucks.
After a criminal record search, the TSA could either give drivers a green
light to be recertified, or classify them as threats and prevent them from
transporting
hazardous materials. The TSA will notify the state where a driver is licensed
of its findings. Drivers could appeal the decisions.
The truckers - authorized to carry materials such as gasoline, propane, chlorine
and dynamite - will have to pay $94 for the fingerprinting. Some of their companies
will pick up the tab.
“This is the consequence of 9/11,” said Bill MacLeod, spokesman for
the federal Motor Carrier Administration. “The reasoning had to do with
the mitigation of threats against people and property that may come from hazardous
material loads, whether they be hijacked and used for purposes that could create
harm to again, people and properties.
Until now, drivers’ background checks were left for trucking companies
to perform, which most of the bigger ones did, said Gail Toth, executive director
of the New Jersey Motor Truck Association in East Brunswick.
But the searches typically would not be as extensive as the FBI’s,
or cover criminal records in other states, mostly because of the expense.
Toth, who noted that teachers and other professionals undergo similar scrutiny,
said some truckers are upset by the new requirements.
“The biggest thing that’s unfortunate is that they feel singled out.
It’s a very justifiable feeling,” said Toth, whose nonprofit trade
association represents more than 1,000 truckers.
The program is part of the USA Patriot Act, which Congress adopted in October,
2001 to expand the government’s surveillance powers after the Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks.
Dennis O’Leary, a manager for Lorco Petroleum Services in Elizabeth,
NJ, said his company did not perform criminal background checks before the
new regulations.
He said he supports the program.
“If there’s a truck coming through my hometown where my kids are,
I feel more secure if I know who is transporting has been checked out,” he
said.
O’Leary said he would feel better if the government expanded the checks
to cover all drivers, particularly those who may be in the country illegally. “I’d
feel better if everyone was checked out,” he said.
As of Jan. 31, drivers who want to get a first-time hazardous material certification
on their commercial driver’s licenses have to be fingerprinted and take
the usual computer-based test. Those up for renewal after May 31 will have
to do the same.
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