FEDERAL MOTOR CARRIER SAFETY ADMINISTRATION (FMCSA) MOTOR CARRIER
REQUIREMENTS AND ENDORSEMENTS
(July 2010)
INTRODUCTION
Individuals and
businesses that operate trucks and buses that transport cargo or passengers are
heavily regulated. Some of these regulations have a direct impact on liability
insurance because of financial responsibility requirements. The Department Of
Transportation (DOT), Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA)
headquartered in Washington, D.C issues these regulations. Liability coverage
or surety bonds may be used to satisfy financial responsibility requirements.
Note: State requirements
apply in addition to federal requirements. This analysis is directed to
only federal requirements.
FEDERAL REGULATIONS
The Motor Carrier Act Of
1980 regulates motor carriers that transport property. The Bus Regulatory
Reform Act Of 1982 regulates motor carriers that transport passengers. Both
have been revised and amended since being introduced and a complete description
of the rules and regulations of each are available on the DOT Website.
Motor carriers subject to
the regulations include the following:
- Individuals and businesses for hire that transport property
across state lines or to foreign countries on trucks having a Gross
Vehicle Weight (GVW) that exceeds 10,000 pounds
- Trucks that transport hazardous material anywhere, regardless
of GVW
- Any motor vehicle for hire that transports passengers across
state lines or to foreign countries. However, the regulations do not apply
to buses used for school transport, taxicabs transporting fewer than seven
passengers, vehicles transporting 16 or fewer passengers on a single daily
route to and from work, or buses used for school extracurricular
activities.
Motor Carrier Act
Insurance Requirements
MCS–90, Endorsement For
Motor Carrier Policies Of Insurance For Public Liability Under Sections 29 And
30 Of The Motor Carrier Act Of 1980 must be attached to the applicable
commercial auto coverage. The federal government developed it and does not
allow it to be modified. Since it is not specific to a particular coverage form
or policy, it can also be added to any commercial auto umbrella coverage form
or policy.
There are four
classifications of financial responsibility depending on the commodity being
transported and the type of carriage.
- Transportation of
non-hazardous property by vehicles for hire with GVW that exceeds
10,000 pounds in interstate or foreign commerce requires a $750,000
minimum limit of insurance.
- All carriers that
transport hazardous substances using cargo tanks or portable tanks,
or hopper-type vehicles with a capacity that exceeds 3,500 water gallons,
Class A or Class B explosives in bulk, poison gas, liquefied compressed
gas or compressed gas, or that transport highway route-controlled quantity
radioactive materials require a $5,000,000 minimum limit of insurance.
- All carriers in
interstate or foreign commerce in any quantity, or in intrastate
commerce in bulk, that transport oil, hazardous waste, hazardous
materials, and hazardous substances not specifically mentioned in class 2
or class 4 in vehicles with GVW that exceeds 10,000 pounds requires a
$1,000,000 minimum limit of insurance.
- All for-hire and
private vehicles with a GVW of less than 10,000 pounds in
interstate or foreign commerce that transport any quantity of Class A or B
explosives, any quantity of poison gas, or highway route-controlled
quantity radioactive materials require a $5,000,000 minimum limit of
insurance.
Bus Regulatory Reform
Act Insurance Requirements
The Bus Reform Act Of
1982 mandates minimum liability limits of insurance for certain vehicles used
for public transportation of people. The limit required depends on the
passenger capacity of the transporting vehicle. MCS–90B, Endorsement For Motor
Carrier Policies Of Insurance For Public Liability Under Section 18 Of The Bus
Regulatory Reform Act Of 1982 must be attached to the applicable commercial
auto coverage form or policy covering vehicles for hire that transport
passengers. In addition to the four classifications of financial responsibility
depending on the commodity being transported and the type of carriage indicated
on MCS–90, the following limits also apply:
- Any vehicle that seats 15 or fewer passengers requires a
$1,500,000 minimum limit of insurance.
- Any vehicle that seats 16 or more passengers requires a
$5,000,000 minimum limit of insurance.
Main Features Of
Endorsements MCS–90 And MCS–90B
Both endorsements amend
the coverage form or policy to comply with the federal regulations that apply.
They are identical except for the section on limits for vehicles that transport
passengers and can be reviewed as one. They are very broad and apply to all of
the named insured's owned vehicles, whether listed or not. They obligate the
insurance company to pay losses that the coverage form normally excludes but
they also obligate the named insured to reimburse the company for such payments
made. The key element is protecting innocent third parties. The injured party
is made financially whole after a loss and the named insured and the insurance
company work out the details.
Both insure against
bodily injury and property damage but injuries to employees and damage to cargo
are excluded. Both may provide coverage on a primary or excess basis. If the
coverage is primary, there is a maximum per-accident limit. If the coverage is
excess, both the maximum limit and the underlying limit that must be exceeded
before coverage is triggered are indicated. The named insured must have a
combination of primary and excess limits that meets or exceeds the required
minimums.
Example: Ernie's Explosives
Express purchases primary coverage from the ABC Insurance Company and excess coverage
from the XYZ Insurance Company. Each company's policy has MCS–90 attached to
it. ABC's coverage form states, "This insurance is primary and the
company shall not be liable for amounts in excess of $1,000,000 for each
accident." XYZ's coverage form states, "This insurance is excess
and the company shall not be liable for amounts in excess of $4,000,000 in
excess of the underlying limit of $1,000,000 for each accident."
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This endorsement can only
be cancelled by providing 35 days notice of cancellation to both the named
insured and the federal government.
Compliance
Notification
An individual or business
subject to either Act must notify the government that it complies with the
financial responsibility requirement that applies to its situation. BMC 91 or
BMC 91X–Certificate Of Insurance must be issued and filed with:
Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Administration (FMCSA)
Commercial Enforcement Division, MC-ECC
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE W63-105
Washington, DC 20590
These certificates are continuous
and do not expire. Cancellation requires using BMC 35–Notice Of Cancellation
Motor Carrier Policies Of Insurance (under 49 U.S.C. 13906) and providing at
least 30 days advance notice.
Important Note: BMC 91 or
BMC 91X are continuous until cancelled. If coverage is not renewed or is
replaced, it must be cancelled or the insurance company that fails to do so may
be unpleasantly surprised by a lawsuit filed many years after it thought
its obligation to provide coverage ended.