State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > California > Veh > 34500-34520.5

VEHICLE CODE
SECTION 34500-34520.5



34500.  The department shall regulate the safe operation of the
following vehicles:
   (a) Motortrucks of three or more axles that are more than 10,000
pounds gross vehicle weight rating.
   (b) Truck tractors.
   (c) Buses, schoolbuses, school pupil activity buses, youth buses,
farm labor vehicles, and general public paratransit vehicles.
   (d) Trailers and semitrailers designed or used for the
transportation of more than 10 persons, and the towing motor vehicle.
   (e) Trailers and semitrailers, pole or pipe dollies, auxiliary
dollies, and logging dollies used in combination with vehicles listed
in subdivision (a), (b), (c), or (d). This subdivision does not
include camp trailers, trailer coaches, and utility trailers.
   (f) A combination of a motortruck and a vehicle or vehicles set
forth in subdivision (e) that exceeds 40 feet in length when coupled
together.
   (g) A truck, or a combination of a truck and any other vehicle,
transporting hazardous materials.
   (h) Manufactured homes that, when moved upon the highway, are
required to be moved pursuant to a permit as specified in Section
35780 or 35790.
   (i) A park trailer, as described in Section 18009.3 of the Health
and Safety Code, that, when moved upon a highway, is required to be
moved pursuant to a permit pursuant to Section 35780.
   (j) Any other motortruck not specified in subdivisions (a) to (h),
inclusive, or subdivision (k), that is regulated by the Department
of Motor Vehicles, Public Utilities Commission, or United States
Secretary of the Department of Transportation, but only for matters
relating to hours of service and logbooks of drivers.
   (k) A commercial motor vehicle with a gross vehicle weight rating
of 26,001 or more pounds or a commercial motor vehicle of any gross
vehicle weight rating towing a vehicle described in subdivision (e)
with a gross vehicle weight rating of more than 10,000 pounds, except
combinations including camp trailers, trailer coaches, or utility
trailers. For purposes of this subdivision, the term "commercial
motor vehicle" has the meaning defined in subdivision (b) of Section
15210.


34500.1.  In addition to the duties imposed by Section 34500, the
department shall regulate the safe operation of tour buses.



34500.2.  No additional inspection shall be required under this
division on any vehicle which is owned and operated by a public
agency and is used for responding to and returning from an emergency,
as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 35002, during the duration
of the emergency, as determined by the public agency, if an
inspection pursuant to Section 1215 of Title 13 of the California
Code of Regulations has been completed on the vehicle within the past
24 hours. Any vehicle used in responding to an emergency shall be
inspected immediately upon the termination of the emergency.



34500.3.  (a) The department shall adopt rules and regulations that
are designed to promote the safe operation of vehicles, regarding
cargo securement standards. The regulations adopted pursuant to this
section shall be consistent with the securement regulations adopted
by the United States Department of Transportation in Part 393
(commencing with Section 393.1) of Title 49 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, as those regulations now exist or are amended in the
future.
   (b) Regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) do not apply
to the transportation of a pole on a pole dolly by a public utility
company or a local public agency engaged in the business of supplying
electricity or telephone service, by the Department of
Transportation, or by a licensed contractor in the performance of
work for a public utility company, a local agency, or the Department
of Transportation, when the transportation is between storage yards
or between a storage yard and job location where the pole is to be
used. However, no more than nine poles shall be transported on a
dolly if any of those poles exceeds a length of 30 feet. If poles 30
feet or less are transported by a pole or pipe dolly, no more than 18
poles shall be transported. A pole shall be adequately secured when
being transported on a dolly, to prevent shifting or spilling of a
load.
   (c) Regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) do not apply
to a farmer transporting his or her own hay or straw, incidental to
his or her farming operation, if that transportation requires that
the farmer use a highway, except that this subdivision does not
relieve the farmer from loading and securing the hay or straw in a
safe manner.



34500.5.  For purposes of this division, the term "commercial motor
vehicle" has the same meaning as defined in subdivision (b) of
Section 15210.


34501.  (a) (1) The department shall adopt reasonable rules and
regulations that, in the judgment of the department, are designed to
promote the safe operation of vehicles described in Section 34500,
regarding, but not limited to, controlled substances and alcohol
testing of drivers by motor carriers, hours of service of drivers,
equipment, fuel containers, fueling operations, inspection,
maintenance, recordkeeping, accident reports, and drawbridges. The
rules and regulations shall not, however, be applicable to
schoolbuses, which shall be subject to rules and regulations adopted
pursuant to Section 34501.5.
   The rules and regulations shall exempt local law enforcement
agencies, within a single county, engaged in the transportation of
inmates or prisoners when those agencies maintain other motor vehicle
operations records which furnish hours of service information on
drivers which are in substantial compliance with the rules and
regulations. This exemption does not apply to any local law
enforcement agency engaged in the transportation of inmates or
prisoners outside the county in which the agency is located, if that
agency would otherwise be required, by existing law, to maintain
driving logs.
   (2) The department may adopt rules and regulations relating to
commercial vehicle safety inspection and out-of-service criteria. In
adopting the rules and regulations, the commissioner may consider the
commercial vehicle safety inspection and out-of-service criteria
adopted by organizations such as the Commercial Vehicle Safety
Alliance , other intergovernmental safety group, or the United States
Department of Transportation. The commissioner may provide
departmental representatives to that alliance or other organization
for the purpose of promoting the continued improvement and refinement
of compatible nationwide commercial vehicle safety inspection and
out-of-service criteria.
   (3) The commissioner shall appoint a committee of 15 members,
consisting of representatives of industry subject to the regulations
to be adopted pursuant to this section, to act in an advisory
capacity to the department, and the department shall cooperate and
confer with the advisory committee so appointed. The commissioner
shall appoint a separate committee to advise the department on rules
and regulations concerning wheelchair lifts for installation and use
on buses, consisting of persons who use the wheelchair lifts,
representatives of transit districts, representatives of designers or
manufacturers of wheelchairs and wheelchair lifts, and
representatives of the Department of Transportation.
   (4) The department may inspect any vehicles in maintenance
facilities or terminals, as well as any records relating to the
dispatch of vehicles or drivers, and the pay of drivers, to assure
compliance with this code and regulations adopted pursuant to this
section.
   (b) The department, using the definitions adopted pursuant to
Section 2402.7, shall adopt regulations for the transportation of
hazardous materials in this state, except the transportation of
materials which are subject to other provisions of this code, that
the department determines are reasonably necessary to ensure the
safety of persons and property using the highways. The regulations
may include provisions governing the filling, marking, packing,
labeling, and assembly of, and containers that may be used for,
hazardous materials shipments, and the manner by which the shipper
attests that the shipments are correctly identified and in proper
condition for transport.
   (c) At least once every 13 months, the department shall inspect
every maintenance facility or terminal of any person who at any time
operates any bus. If the bus operation includes more than 100 buses,
the inspection shall be without prior notice.
   (d) The commissioner shall adopt and enforce regulations which
will make the public or private users of any bus aware of the
operator's last safety rating.
   (e) It is unlawful and constitutes a misdemeanor for any person to
operate any bus without the inspection specified in subdivision (c)
having been conducted.
   (f) The department may adopt regulations restricting or
prohibiting the movement of any vehicle from a maintenance facility
or terminal if the vehicle is found in violation of this code or
regulations adopted pursuant to this section.



34501.1.  A manufacturer or distributor of wheelchair lifts for
buses, schoolbuses, youth buses, and general public transit vehicles,
regardless of capacity, shall, prior to the distribution of the
wheelchair lift model in California, provide to the Department of the
California Highway Patrol proof of certification from an independent
laboratory or registered mechanical engineer of this state that the
wheelchair lift model complies with the California and any federal
law and the regulations adopted pursuant thereto.



34501.2.  (a) The regulations adopted under Section 34501 for
vehicles engaged in interstate or intrastate commerce shall establish
hours-of-service regulations for drivers of those vehicles that are
consistent with the hours-of-service regulations adopted by the
United States Department of Transportation in Part 395 of Title 49 of
the Code of Federal Regulations, as those regulations now exist or
are hereafter amended.
   (b) The regulations adopted under Section 34501 for vehicles
engaged in intrastate commerce that are not transporting hazardous
substances or hazardous waste, as those terms are defined by
regulations in Section 171.8 of Title 49 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, as those regulations now exist or are hereafter amended,
shall have the following exceptions:
   (1) The maximum driving time within a work period shall be 12
hours for a driver of a truck or truck tractor, except for a driver
of a tank vehicle with a capacity of more than 500 gallons
transporting flammable liquid, who shall not drive for more than 10
hours within a work period.
   (2) A motor carrier shall not permit or require a driver to drive,
nor shall any driver drive, for any period after having been on duty
for 80 hours in any consecutive eight days.
   (3) A driver employed by an electrical corporation, as defined in
Section 218 of the Public Utilities Code, a gas corporation, as
defined in Section 222 of that code, a telephone corporation, as
defined in Section 234 of that code, a water corporation, as defined
in Section 241 of that code, or a public water district as defined in
Section 20200 of the Water Code, is exempt from all hours-of-service
regulations while operating a public utility or public water
district vehicle.
   (4) Any other exceptions applicable to drivers assigned to
governmental fire suppression and prevention, as determined by the
department.
   (5) A driver employed by a law enforcement agency, as defined in
Section 390.3(f)(2) of Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations,
as that section now exists or is hereafter amended, during an
emergency or to restore the public peace.
   (c) The regulations adopted under Section 34501 for vehicles
engaged in the transportation of farm products in intrastate commerce
shall include all of the following provisions:
   (1) A driver employed by an agricultural carrier, including a
carrier holding a seasonal permit, or by a private carrier, when
transporting farm products from the field to the first point of
processing or packing, shall not drive for any period after having
been on duty 16 hours or more following eight consecutive hours off
duty and shall not drive for any period after having been on duty for
112 hours in any consecutive eight-day period, except that a driver
transporting special situation farm products from the field to the
first point of processing or packing, or transporting livestock from
pasture to pasture, may be permitted, during one period of not more
than 28 consecutive days or a combination of two periods totaling not
more than 28 days in a calendar year, to drive for not more than 12
hours during any workday of not more than 16 hours. A driver who
thereby exceeds the driving time limits specified in paragraph (2) of
subdivision (b) shall maintain a driver's record of duty status, and
shall keep a duplicate copy in his or her possession when driving a
vehicle subject to this chapter. These records shall be presented
immediately upon request by any authorized employee of the
department, or any police officer or deputy sheriff.
   (2) Upon the request of the Director of Food and Agriculture, the
commissioner may, for good cause, temporarily waive the maximum
on-duty time limits applicable to any eight-day period when an
emergency exists due to inclement weather, natural disaster, or an
adverse economic condition that threatens to disrupt the orderly
movement of farm products during harvest for the duration of the
emergency. For purposes of this paragraph, an emergency does not
include a strike or labor dispute.
   (3) For purposes of this subdivision, the following terms have the
following meanings:
   (A) "Farm products" means every agricultural, horticultural,
viticultural, or vegetable product of the soil, honey and beeswax,
oilseeds, poultry, livestock, milk, or timber.
   (B) "First point of processing or packing" means a location where
farm products are dried, canned, extracted, fermented, distilled,
frozen, ginned, eviscerated, pasteurized, packed, packaged, bottled,
conditioned, or otherwise manufactured, processed, or preserved for
distribution in wholesale or retail markets.
   (C) "Special situation farm products" means fruit, tomatoes, sugar
beets, grains, wine grapes, grape concentrate, cotton, or nuts.



34501.3.  (a) No motor carrier shall schedule a run or permit or
require the operation of any motor vehicle subject to this division
between points within a period of time which would do either of the
following:
   (1) Necessitate the vehicle being operated at speeds greater than
those prescribed by this code.
   (2) Require the driver of the vehicle to exceed the applicable
maximum hours of service.
   (b) A logbook of a driver, which reflects a trip or trips between
points within a period of time which would have necessitated
excessive speed to complete, shall give rise to a rebuttable
presumption that the driver exceeded the lawful speed limit.
   (c) For a violation of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), a first
offense is punishable by a fine of not more than one thousand dollars
($1,000), a second offense by a fine of not more than two thousand
five hundred dollars ($2,500), and a third or subsequent offense by a
fine of not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000).



34501.4.  Any driver subject to the hours of service limitations and
logbook requirements of this division, who is unable to produce upon
request of a representative of the department any driver's logbook
or is only able to produce an incomplete driver's log book for the
prior 24-hour period, is rebuttably presumed to be in violation of
the hours of service limitations in Sections 34501 and 34501.2.




34501.5.  (a) The Department of the California Highway Patrol shall
adopt reasonable rules and regulations which, in the judgment of the
department, are designed to promote the safe operation of vehicles
described in Sections 39830 and 82321 of the Education Code and
Sections 545 and 34500 of this code. The Commissioner of the
California Highway Patrol shall appoint a committee of 11 members to
act in an advisory capacity when developing and adopting regulations
affecting school pupil transportation buses and school pupil
transportation operations. The advisory committee shall consist of 11
members appointed as follows:
   (1) One member of the State Department of Education.
   (2) One member of the Department of Motor Vehicles.
   (3) One member of the Department of the California Highway Patrol.
   (4) One member who is employed as a schoolbus driver.
   (5) One member of the Office of Traffic Safety in the Business,
Transportation and Housing Agency.
   (6) Two members who are schoolbus contractors, one of whom shall
be from an urban area of the state and one of whom shall be from a
rural area of the state, as determined by the department.
   (7) Two members who are representatives of school districts, one
of whom shall be from an urban area of the state and one of whom
shall be from a rural area of the state, as determined by the
department.
   (8) One professionally licensed member of the American Academy of
Pediatrics.
   (9) One member representing school pupil transportation operations
other than schoolbus operations.
   (b) The department shall cooperate and confer with the advisory
committee appointed pursuant to this section prior to adopting rules
or regulations affecting school pupil transportation buses and school
pupil transportation operations.



34501.6.  The governing board of a local educational agency that
provides for the transportation of pupils shall adopt procedures that
limit the operation of schoolbuses when atmospheric conditions
reduce visibility on the roadway to 200 feet or less during regular
home-to-school transportation service. Operational policies for
school activity trips shall give schoolbus drivers discretionary
authority to discontinue schoolbus operation if the driver determines
that it is unsafe to continue operation because of reduced
visibility.


34501.7.  (a) Any rules or regulations adopted pursuant to Section
34501 for the construction, testing, or certification of wheelchair
lifts for installation and use on buses shall take into consideration
the costs of implementing the regulations and shall be reviewed and
brought up to date by the department annually.
   (b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 1987.



34501.8.  (a) The Department of the California Highway Patrol shall
inspect every general public paratransit vehicle, as defined in
Section 336, at least once each year to certify that its condition
complies with all provisions of law, including being equipped with a
fire extinguisher, first-aid kit, and three-point tie downs for
transporting wheelchair passengers.
   (b) On or after July 1, 1989, no person shall drive any general
public paratransit vehicle unless there is displayed therein a
certificate issued by the Department of the California Highway Patrol
stating that on a certain date, which shall be within 13 months of
the date of operation, an authorized employee of the Department of
the California Highway Patrol inspected the general public
paratransit vehicle and found that on the date of inspection the
general public paratransit vehicle complied with the applicable
provisions of state law. The Commissioner of the California Highway
Patrol shall provide, by rule or regulation, for the issuance and
display of distinctive inspection certificates.
   (c) The Commissioner of the California Highway Patrol shall
determine a fee and method of collection for the annual inspection of
general public paratransit vehicles. The fee, established by
regulation, shall be sufficient to cover the cost to the department
for general public paratransit vehicle inspections. All fees received
shall be deposited in the Motor Vehicle Account in the State
Transportation Fund.
   This section shall become operative January 1, 1989.



34501.9.  (a) Nothing in this division or the regulations adopted
under this division is intended to, or shall, affect the rate of
payment of wages, including, but not limited to, regular, premium, or
overtime rates, paid to any person whether for on-duty hours or
driving hours or otherwise.
   (b) Nothing in this division or the regulations adopted under this
division is intended to, or shall, affect the regulations adopted
pursuant to other provisions of law concerning the rate or rates of
payment of wages by any other public agency, including, but not
limited to, the Industrial Welfare Commission or the Division of
Labor Standards Enforcement of the Department of Industrial
Relations.


34501.10.  The employer of any person required to keep log books,
records of physical examination, and other driver records as may be
required by the Department of the California Highway Patrol, the
Department of Motor Vehicles, or the State Department of Health
Services, shall register with the Department of the California
Highway Patrol the address where the log books and other records are
available for inspection.



34501.12.  (a) Notwithstanding Section 408, as used in this section
and Sections 34505.5 and 34505.6, "motor carrier" means the
registered owner of a vehicle described in subdivision (a), (b), (e),
(f), or (g) of Section 34500, except in the following circumstances:
   (1) The registered owner leases the vehicle to another person for
a term of more than four months. If the lease is for more than four
months, the lessee is the motor carrier.
   (2) The registered owner operates the vehicle exclusively under
the authority and direction of another person. If the operation is
exclusively under the authority and direction of another person, that
other person may assume the responsibilities as the motor carrier.
If not so assumed, the registered owner is the motor carrier. A
person who assumes the motor carrier responsibilities of another
pursuant to subdivision (b) shall provide to that other person whose
motor carrier responsibility is so assumed, a completed copy of a
departmental form documenting that assumption, stating the period for
which responsibility is assumed, and signed by an agent of the
assuming person. A legible copy shall be carried in each vehicle or
combination of vehicles operated on the highway during the period for
which responsibility is assumed. That copy shall be presented upon
request by an authorized employee of the department. The original
completed departmental form documenting the assumption shall be
provided to the department within 30 days of the assumption. If the
assumption of responsibility is terminated, the person who had
assumed responsibility shall so notify the department in writing
within 30 days of the termination.
   (b) (1) A motor carrier may combine two or more terminals that are
not subject to an unsatisfactory compliance rating within the last
36 months for purposes of the inspection required by subdivision (d),
subject to all of the following conditions:
   (A) The carrier identifies to the department, in writing, each
terminal proposed to be included in the combination of terminals for
purposes of this subdivision prior to an inspection of the designated
terminal pursuant to subdivision (d).
   (B) The carrier provides the department, prior to the inspection
of the designated terminal pursuant to subdivision (d), a written
listing of all its vehicles of a type subject to subdivision (a),
(b), (e), (f), or (g) of Section 34500 that are based at each of the
terminals combined for purposes of this subdivision. The listing
shall specify the number of vehicles of each type at each terminal.
   (C) The carrier provides to the department at the designated
terminal during the inspection all maintenance records and driver
records and a representative sample of vehicles based at each of the
terminals included within the combination of terminals.
   (2) If the carrier fails to provide the maintenance records,
driver records, and representative sample of vehicles pursuant to
subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1), the department shall assign the
carrier an unsatisfactory terminal rating and require a reinspection
to be conducted pursuant to subdivision (h).
   (3) For purposes of this subdivision, the following terms have the
following meanings:
   (A) "Driver records" includes pull notice system records, driver
proficiency records, and driver timekeeping records.
   (B) "Maintenance records" includes all required maintenance,
lubrication, and repair records and drivers' daily vehicle condition
reports.
   (C) "Representative sample" means the following, applied
separately to the carrier's fleet of motortrucks and truck tractors
and its fleet of trailers:

               Representative
  Fleet Size       Sample
  1 or 2             All
  3 to 8              3
  9 to 15             4
  16 to 25            6
  26 to 50            9
  51 to 90           14
  91 or more         20

   (c) Each motor carrier who, in this state, directs the operation
of, or maintains, a vehicle of a type described in subdivision (a)
shall designate one or more terminals, as defined in Section 34515,
in this state where vehicles can be inspected by the department
pursuant to paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 34501 and
where vehicle inspection and maintenance records and driver records
will be made available for inspection.
   (d) (1) The department shall inspect, at least every 25 months,
every terminal, as defined in Section 34515, of a motor carrier who,
at any time, operates a vehicle described in subdivision (a).
   (2) The department shall place an inspection priority on those
terminals operating vehicles listed in subdivision (g) of Section
34500.
   (3) As used in this section and in Sections 34505.5 and 34505.6,
subdivision (f) of Section 34500 includes only those combinations
where the gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of the towing vehicle
exceeds 10,000 pounds, but does not include a pickup truck, and
subdivision (g) of Section 34500 includes only those vehicles
transporting hazardous material for which the display of placards is
required pursuant to Section 27903, a license is required pursuant to
Section 32000.5, or for which hazardous waste transporter
registration is required pursuant to Section 25163 of the Health and
Safety Code. Historical vehicles, as described in Section 5004,
vehicles that display special identification plates in accordance
with Section 5011, implements of husbandry and farm vehicles, as
defined in Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 36000) of Division 16,
and vehicles owned or operated by an agency of the federal government
are not subject to this section or to Sections 34505.5 and 34505.6.
   (e) (1) It is the responsibility of the motor carrier to schedule
with the department the inspection required by subdivision (d). The
motor carrier shall submit an application form supplied by the
department, accompanied by the required fee contained in paragraph
(2), for each terminal the motor carrier operates. This fee shall be
submitted within 30 days of establishing a terminal. All fees
submitted under paragraph (2) are nonrefundable.
   (2) (A) The fee for each terminal is set forth in the following
table:


  Terminal      Required fee per terminal
  fleet size
  1                       $ 270
  2                       $ 375
  3 to 8                  $ 510
  9 to 15                 $ 615
  16 to 25                $ 800
  26 to 50                $1,040
  51 to 90                $1,165
  91 or more              $1,870

   (B) In addition to the fee specified in subparagraph (A), the
motor carrier shall submit an additional fee of three hundred fifty
dollars ($350) for each of its terminals not previously inspected
under the section.
   (3) Except as provided in paragraph (5), the inspection term for
each inspected terminal of a motor carrier shall expire 25 months
from the date the terminal receives a satisfactory compliance rating,
as specified in subdivision (h). Applications and fees for
subsequent inspections shall be submitted not earlier than nine
months and not later than seven months before the expiration of the
motor carrier's then current inspection term. If the motor carrier
has submitted the inspection application and the required
accompanying fees, but the department is unable to complete the
inspection within the 25-month inspection period, then no additional
fee shall be required for the inspection requested in the original
application.
   (4) All fees collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be
deposited in the Motor Vehicle Account in the State Transportation
Fund. An amount equal to the fees collected shall be available for
appropriation by the Legislature from the Motor Vehicle Account to
the department for the purpose of conducting truck terminal
inspections and for the additional roadside safety inspections
required by Section 34514.
   (5) To avoid the scheduling of a renewal terminal inspection
pursuant to this section during a carrier's seasonal peak business
periods, the current inspection term of a terminal that has paid all
required fees and has been rated satisfactory in its last inspection
may be reduced by not more than nine months if a written request is
submitted by the carrier to the department at least four months prior
to the desired inspection month, or at the time of payment of
renewal inspection fees in compliance with paragraph (3), whichever
date is earlier. A motor carrier may request this adjustment of the
inspection term during any inspection cycle. A request made pursuant
to this paragraph shall not result in a fee proration and does not
relieve the carrier from the requirements of paragraph (3).
   (6) Failure to pay a fee required by this section, within the
appropriate timeframe, shall result in additional delinquent fees as
follows:
   (A) For a delinquency period of more than 30 days, the penalty is
60 percent of the required fee.
   (B) For a delinquency period of one to two years, the penalty is
80 percent of the required fee.
   (C) For a delinquency period of more than two years, the penalty
is 160 percent of the required fee.
   (7) Federal, state, and local public entities are exempt from the
fee requirement of this section.
   (f) It is unlawful for a motor carrier to operate a vehicle
subject to this section without having submitted an inspection
application and the required fees to the department as required by
subdivision (e) or (h).
   (g) (1) It is unlawful for a motor carrier to operate a vehicle
subject to this section after submitting an inspection application to
the department, without the inspection described in subdivision (d)
having been performed and a safety compliance report having been
issued to the motor carrier within the 25-month inspection period or
within 60 days immediately preceding the inspection period.
   (2) It is unlawful for a motor carrier to contract or subcontract
with, or otherwise engage the services of, another motor carrier,
subject to this section, unless the contracted motor carrier has
complied with this section. A motor carrier shall not contract or
subcontract with, or otherwise engage the services of, another motor
carrier until the contracted motor carrier provides certification of
compliance with this section. This certification shall be completed
in writing by the contracted motor carrier. The certification, or a
copy thereof, shall be maintained by each involved party for the
duration of the contract or the period of service plus two years, and
shall be presented for inspection immediately upon the request of an
authorized employee of the department.
   (h) (1) An inspected terminal that receives an unsatisfactory
compliance rating shall be reinspected within 120 days after the
issuance of the unsatisfactory compliance rating.
   (2) A terminal's first required reinspection under this
subdivision shall be without charge unless one or more of the
following is established:
   (A) The motor carrier's operation presented an imminent danger to
public safety.
   (B) The motor carrier was not in compliance with the requirement
to enroll all drivers in the pull notice program pursuant to Section
1808.1.
   (C) The motor carrier failed to provide all required records and
vehicles for a consolidated inspection pursuant to subdivision (b).
   (3) If the unsatisfactory rating was assigned for any of the
reasons set forth in paragraph (2), the carrier shall submit the
required fee as provided in paragraph (4).
   (4) Applications for reinspection pursuant to paragraph (3) or for
second and subsequent consecutive reinspections under this
subdivision shall be accompanied by the fee specified in paragraph
(2) of subdivision (e) and shall be filed within 60 days of issuance
of the unsatisfactory compliance rating. The reinspection fee is
nonrefundable.
   (5) When a motor carrier's Motor Carrier of Property Permit or
Public Utilities Commission operating authority is suspended as a
result of an unsatisfactory compliance rating, the department shall
not conduct a reinspection for permit or authority reinstatement
until requested to do so by the Department of Motor Vehicles or the
Public Utilities Commission, as appropriate.
   (i) It is the intent of the Legislature that the department make
its best efforts to inspect terminals within the resources provided.
In the interest of the state, the Commissioner of the California
Highway Patrol may extend for a period, not to exceed six months, the
inspection terms beginning prior to July 1, 1990.
   (j) Except as provided in paragraph (5), to encourage motor
carriers to attain continuous satisfactory compliance ratings, the
department may establish and implement an incentive program
consisting of the following:
   (1) After the second consecutive satisfactory compliance rating
assigned to a motor carrier terminal as a result of an inspection
conducted pursuant to subdivision (d), and after each consecutive
satisfactory compliance rating thereafter, an appropriate
certificate, denoting the number of consecutive satisfactory ratings,
shall be awarded to the terminal, unless the terminal has received
an unsatisfactory compliance rating as a result of an inspection
conducted in the interim between the consecutive inspections
conducted under subdivision (d), or the motor carrier is rated
unsatisfactory by the department following a controlled substances
and alcohol testing program inspection. The certificate authorized
under this paragraph shall not be awarded for performance in the
administrative review authorized under paragraph (2). However, the
certificate shall include a reference to any administrative reviews
conducted during the period of consecutive satisfactory compliance
ratings.
   (2) Unless the department's evaluation of the motor carrier's
safety record indicates a declining level of compliance, a terminal
that has attained two consecutive satisfactory compliance ratings
assigned following inspections conducted pursuant to subdivision (d)
is eligible for an administrative review in lieu of the next required
inspection, unless the terminal has received an unsatisfactory
compliance rating as a result of an inspection conducted in the
interim between the consecutive inspections conducted under
subdivision (d). An administrative review shall consist of all of the
following:
   (A) A signed request by a terminal management representative
requesting the administrative review in lieu of the required
inspection containing a promise to continue to maintain a
satisfactory level of compliance for the next 25-month inspection
term.
   (B) A review with a terminal management representative of the
carrier's record as contained in the department's files. If a
terminal has been authorized a second consecutive administrative
review, the review required under this subparagraph is optional, and
may be omitted at the carrier's request.
   (C) Absent any cogent reasons to the contrary, upon completion of
the requirements of subparagraphs (A) and (B), the safety compliance
rating assigned during the last required inspection shall be extended
for 25 months.
   (3) Not more than two administrative reviews may be conducted
consecutively. At the completion of the 25-month inspection term
following a second administrative review, a terminal inspection shall
be conducted pursuant to subdivision (d). If this inspection results
in a satisfactory compliance rating, the terminal shall again be
eligible for an administrative review in lieu of the next required
inspection. If the succession of satisfactory ratings is interrupted
by a rating of other than satisfactory, irrespective of the reason
for the inspection, the terminal shall again attain two consecutive
satisfactory ratings to become eligible for an administrative review.
   (4) As a condition for receiving the administrative reviews
authorized under this subdivision in lieu of inspections, and in
order to ensure that compliance levels remain satisfactory, the motor
carrier shall agree to accept random, unannounced inspections by the
department.
   (5) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) to (4), inclusive, a motor
carrier of hazardous materials shall not be granted administrative
review pursuant to this subdivision in lieu of a terminal inspection
pursuant to subdivision (d) at any terminal from which hazardous
materials carrying vehicles identified by paragraph (3) of
subdivision (d) are operated.
   (k) This section shall be known and may be cited as the Biennial
Inspection of Terminals Program or BIT.



34501.14.  (a) Notwithstanding Section 34501.12, for purposes of
this division, safety inspections of grape gondolas are governed by
this section.
   (b) Every registered owner of a grape gondola shall submit an
application and the fee specified in subdivision (g) to the
department for the initial inspection required by this section. The
initial application shall be submitted on or before July 1, 1993. The
inspection term for a grape gondola shall expire 25 months from the
date the department conducts the inspection, and issues a certificate
indicating the gondola has passed the inspection, and every 25
months thereafter. Applications and fees for subsequent inspections
and certificates shall be submitted not later than seven months
before the expiration of the then current inspection term. If the
registered owner has submitted the inspection application and the
required accompanying fees, but the department is unable to complete
the inspection within the 25-month inspection period, then no
additional fee shall be required for the inspection requested in the
original application.
   (c) On and after July 1, 1993, no person may operate any grape
gondola without having submitted an inspection application and the
required fees to the department as required by this section.
   (d) On and after January 1, 1995, no person may operate any grape
gondola, without the inspection described in subdivision (e) having
been performed and a certificate having been issued to the owner.
   (e) The safety inspection undertaken pursuant to this section
shall be limited to an inspection of the brake system, steering,
lights, connections, wheels and tires, frame, and suspension.
   (f) For purposes of undertaking the inspection of grape gondolas
under this section, the department shall schedule all inspections at
one central location during a continuous eight-week period every
odd-numbered year with at least two days of each week during that
eight-week period devoted to the actual inspection. If the gondola
does not pass its first inspection, it may be reinspected during the
eight-week period at no additional cost.
   (g) Fees shall be established by the department in an amount equal
to the actual costs incurred by the department in carrying out this
section, but not to exceed twenty-five dollars ($25) for each
inspection or reinspection.
   (h) As used in this section, "grape gondola" means a motor vehicle
which has been permanently altered and is attached to a grape tank
by two means. The first mean is by use of a kingpin on the trunk
which is centered through a turntable assembly on the tank. The
second means of attachment is through the use of a pair of horizontal
crossarms between the drive axle and the rear tank axle. The tank is
designed to pivot off of the chassis on two support arms during
dumping, and is further designed to be specifically compatible with
dumping facilities of the wineries.
   (i) This section only applies to a grape gondola that is used
under all of the following conditions:
   (1) For 60 days or less during any calendar year.
   (2) For not more than 500 miles in any calendar year.
   (3) Only for the transportation of grapes.



34501.13.  If the inspection of a carrier facility, maintenance
facility, or terminal of any person who operates a schoolbus results
in an unsatisfactory terminal rating by the department, the
department shall notify the school board of the district that is
responsible for the terminal.



34501.15.  (a) The regulations adopted pursuant to Section 34501
shall require that any driver of a commercial motor vehicle, as
defined in Section 15210, be ordered out of service for 24 hours if
the driver is found to have 0.01 percent or more, by weight, of
alcohol in his or her blood.
   (b) This section shall become operative on January 1, 1992, and
shall remain operative until the director determines that federal
regulations adopted pursuant to the Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety
Act of 1986 (49 U.S.C. Sec. 2701 et seq.) contained in that act and
Section 391.15 of Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations do not
require the state to order the operator of a commercial vehicle out
of service for 24 hours when the operator has a measurable
concentration of alcohol in his or her blood.
   (c) The director shall submit a notice of the determination under
subdivision (b) to the Secretary of State, and this section shall be
repealed upon the receipt of that notice.



34501.16.  (a) Every employer of a commercial driver shall provide
information to that employee at the time of hiring and to all
employed commercial drivers annually, concerning all of the
following:
   (1) The prohibition against driving a commercial motor vehicle
with over 0.04 percent or more, by weight, alcohol in his or her
blood on and after January 1, 1992.
   (2) The requirement to be placed out of service for 24 hours if
the person's blood-alcohol concentration is tested to be 0.01 percent
or more, by weight, on and after January 1, 1992.
   (b) The Department of Motor Vehicles shall include the information
prescribed in subdivision (a), together with information concerning
the alcohol concentration in a person's blood resulting from
consumption of alcoholic beverages, in each publication of the
commercial driver's handbook published after January 1, 1990.
   (c) This section shall remain operative until the director
determines that federal regulations adopted pursuant to the
Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1986 (49 U.S.C. Sec. 2701 et
seq.) do not require the state to implement the prohibitions and
requirements in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a).
   (d) The director shall submit a notice of the determination under
subdivision (c) to the Secretary of State, and this section shall be
repealed upon the receipt of that notice.



34501.17.  (a) All paratransit vehicles shall be regularly and
systematically inspected, maintained, and lubricated by the owner or
operator in accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations, or
more often if necessary to ensure the safe operating condition of the
vehicle. The maintenance shall include, at a minimum, in-depth
inspection of the vehicle's brake system, steering components,
lighting system, and wheels and tires, to be performed at intervals
in accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations.
   (b) All owners or operators of paratransit vehicles shall document
each systematic inspection, maintenance, and lubrication and repair
performed for each vehicle subject to this section. Required records
shall include service performed, the name of the person performing
the service, the date that the service was performed, and the
odometer reading of the vehicle at the time of the service. The
records shall be maintained for the period that the vehicle is in
service at the place of business in this state of the owner or
operator of the vehicle, and shall be presented upon demand to any
authorized representative of the department. The odometer of a
paratransit vehicle shall be maintained in proper working order.



34501.18.  (a) Every motor carrier regularly employing more than 20
full-time drivers shall report to the department whenever it replaces
more than half of its drivers within a 30-day period. Within 21 days
of receipt of that report, the department shall inspect the motor
carrier to ensure that the motor carrier is complying with all safety
of operations requirements, including, but not limited to,
controlled substances testing and hours-of-service regulations. The
reporting requirement of this subdivision does not apply to a motor
carrier who, through normal seasonal fluctuations in the business
operations of the carrier, or through termination of a contract for
transportation services, other than a collective bargaining
agreement, replaces drivers in one geographical location with drivers
in another geographical location.
   (b) For the purposes of subdivision (a), "employing" means having
an employer-employee relationship with a driver or contracting with
an owner-operator, as described in Section 34624, to provide
transportation services for more than 30 days within the previous
year.
   (c) For the purposes of subdivision (a), "full-time" means that
the driver is on-duty with the motor carrier for an average of 30
hours or more per week during the course of his or her employment or
contract with the motor carrier.



34502.  In adopting rules and regulations, the Department of the
California Highway Patrol shall consider as evidence of generally
accepted safety standards the rules and regulations which have been
adopted by the Public Utilities Commission.




34503.  It is the legislative intention in enacting this division
that the rules and regulations adopted by the Department of the
California Highway Patrol pursuant to this division shall apply
uniformly throughout the State of California, and no state agency,
city, city and county, county, or other political subdivision of this
State, including, but not limited to, a chartered city, city and
county, or county, shall adopt or enforce any ordinance or regulation
which is inconsistent with the rules and regulations adopted by the
department pursuant to this division.



34504.  The Department of the California Highway Patrol shall
enforce the rules and regulations adopted pursuant to Section 34501.
Rules and regulations adopted pursuant to Section 34501 shall become
effective on March 1, 1965.


34505.  (a) Tour bus operators shall, in addition to the systematic
inspection, maintenance, and lubrication services required of all
motor carriers, require each tour bus to be inspected at least every
45 days, or more often if necessary to ensure safe operation. This
inspection shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
   (1) Brake adjustment.
   (2) Brake system components and leaks.
   (3) Steering and suspension systems.
   (4) Tires and wheels.
   (b) A tour bus shall not be used to transport passengers until all
defects listed during the inspection conducted pursuant to
subdivision (a) have been corrected and attested to by the signature
of the operator's authorized representative.
   (c) Records of inspections conducted pursuant to subdivision (a)
shall be kept at the operator's maintenance facility or terminal
where the tour bus is regularly garaged. The records shall be
retained by the operator for one year, and shall be made available
for inspection upon request by any authorized employee of the
department. Each record shall include, but not be limited to, all of
the following:
   (1) Identification of the vehicle, including make, model, license
number, or other means of positive identification.
   (2) Date and nature of each inspection and any repair performed.
   (3) Signature of operator's authorized representative attesting to
the inspection and to the completion of all required repairs.
   (4) Company vehicle number.



34505.1.  (a) Upon determining that a tour bus operator has either
(1) failed to maintain any vehicle used in transportation for
compensation in a safe operating condition or to comply with the
Vehicle Code or with regulations contained in Title 13 of the
California Code of Regulations relative to motor carrier safety, and,
in the department's opinion, that failure presents an imminent
danger to public safety or constitutes such a consistent failure as
to justify a recommendation to the Public Utilities Commission or the
Interstate Commerce Commission or (2) failed to enroll all drivers
in the pull notice system as required by Section 1808.1, the
department shall recommend to the Public Utilities Commission that
the carrier's operating authority be suspended, denied, or revoked,
or to the federal Highway Administration Office of Motor Carriers,
that appropriate administrative action be taken against the carrier's
Interstate Commerce Commission operating authority, whichever is
appropriate. For purposes of this subdivision, two consecutive
unsatisfactory compliance ratings for an inspected terminal assigned
because the tour bus operator failed to comply with the periodic
report requirements of Section 1808.1 or the cancellation of the
operator's enrollment by the Department of Motor Vehicles for
nonpayment of required fees is a consistent failure. However, when
recommending denial of an application for new or renewal authority,
the department need not conclude that the carrier's failure presents
an imminent danger to public safety or that it constitutes a
consistent failure. The department need only conclude that the
carrier's compliance with the safety-related matters described in
paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) is sufficiently unsatisfactory to
justify a recommendation for denial. The department shall retain a
record, by operator, of every recommendation made pursuant to this
section.
   (b) Before transmitting a recommendation pursuant to subdivision
(a), the department shall notify the carrier in writing of all of the
following:
   (1) That the department has determined that the carrier's safety
record is unsatisfactory, furnishing a copy of any documentation or
summary of any other evidence supporting the determination.
   (2) That the determination may result in a suspension, revocation,
or denial of the carrier's operating authority by the California
Public Utilities Commission or the Interstate Commerce Commission.
   (3) That the carrier may request a review of the determination by
the department within five days of its receipt of the notice required
under this subdivision. If a review is requested by the carrier, the
department shall conduct and evaluate that review prior to
transmitting any notification pursuant to subdivision (a).



34505.5.  (a) Every motor carrier operating any vehicle described in
subdivision (a), (b), (e), (f), or (g) of Section 34500, except
those vehicles exempted under Section 34501.12, shall, as a part of
the systematic inspection, maintenance, and lubrication services
required of all motor carriers, require the vehicle or vehicles for
which it is responsible pursuant to Section 34501.12 to be inspected
at least every 90 days, or more often if necessary to ensure safe
operation. Vehicles which are out of service for periods greater than
90 calendar days are not required to be inspected at 90-day
intervals if they are inspected before operation on the highway. This
inspection shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
   (1) Brake adjustment.
   (2) Brake system components and leaks.
   (3) Steering and suspension systems.
   (4) Tires and wheels.
   (5) Vehicle connecting devices.
   (b) No vehicle subject to this section shall be operated on the
highway other than to a place of repair until all defects listed
during the inspection conducted pursuant to subdivision (a) have been
corrected and attested to by the signature of the motor carrier's
authorized representative.
   (c) Records of inspections conducted pursuant to subdivision (a)
shall be kept at the motor carrier's terminals, as designated in
accordance with Section 34501.12. The records shall be retained by
the motor carrier for two years, and shall be made available for
inspection upon request by any authorized employee of the department.
Each record shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
   (1) Identification of the vehicle, including make, model, license
number, company vehicle number, or other means of positive
identification.
   (2) Date and nature of each inspection and any repair performed.
   (3) Signature of the motor carrier's authorized representative
attesting to the inspection and to the completion of all required
repairs.
   (d) Printouts of inspection and maintenance records maintained in
computer systems shall be accepted in lieu of signed inspection or
repair records if the printouts include the information required in
paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (c).
   (e) Notwithstanding subdivisions (a) to (d), inclusive, records of
90-day inspections need not be retained in California for interstate
vehicles which are not physically based in California. However, when
these vehicles are present in California, they are subject to
inspection by the department. If the inspection results indicate
maintenance program deficiencies, the department may require the
motor carrier to produce the maintenance records or copies of those
records for inspection within 10 working days.




34505.6.  (a) Upon determining that a motor carrier of property who
is operating any vehicle described in subdivision (a), (b), (e), (f),
(g), or (k) of Section 34500, or any motortruck of two or more axles
that is more than 10,000 pounds gross vehicle weight rating, on a
public highway, has done any of the following, the department shall
recommend that the Department of Motor Vehicles suspend or revoke the
carrier's motor carrier permit, or for interstate operators, the
department shall recommend to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration that appropriate administrative action be taken
against the carrier:
   (1) Failed to maintain any vehicle of a type described above in a
safe operating condition or to comply with the Vehicle Code or with
applicable regulations contained in Title 13 of the California Code
of Regulations, and, in the department's opinion, that failure
presents an imminent danger to public safety or constitutes a
consistent failure so as to justify a suspension or revocation of the
motor carrier's motor carrier permit.
   (2) Failed to enroll all drivers in the pull-notice system as
required by Section 1808.1.
   (3) Failed to submit any application or pay any fee required by
subdivision (e) or (h) of Section 34501.12 within the timeframes set
forth in that section.
   (b) Upon determining that a household goods carrier, or a
household goods carrier transporting used office, store, or
institution furniture and fixtures under its household goods carrier
permit issued under Section 5137 of the Public Utilities Code,
operating any vehicle described in subdivision (a), (b), (e), (f),
(g), or (k) of Section 34500 on a public highway has done any of the
following, the department shall recommend that the Public Utilities
Commission deny, suspend, or revoke the carrier's operating
authority, or for interstate operators, the department shall
recommend to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration that
appropriate administrative action be taken against the carrier:
   (1) Failed to maintain any vehicle used in transportation for
compensation in a safe operating condition or to comply with the
Vehicle Code or with applicable regulations contained in Title 13 of
the California Code of Regulations, and, in the department's opinion,
that failure presents an imminent danger to public safety or
constitutes a consistent failure so as to justify a suspension,
revocation, or denial of the motor carrier's operating authority.
   (2) Failed to enroll all drivers in the pull-notice system as
required by Section 1808.1.
   (3) Failed to submit any application or pay any fee required by
subdivision (e) or (h) of Section 34501.12 within the timeframes set
forth in that section.
   (c) For purposes of this section, two consecutive unsatisfactory
compliance ratings for an inspected terminal assigned because the
motor carrier failed to comply with the periodic report requirements
of Section 1808.1 or the cancellation of the carrier's enrollment by
the Department of Motor Vehicles for the nonpayment of required fees
is a consistent failure. The department shall retain a record, by
operator, of every recommendation made pursuant to this section.
   (d) Before transmitting a recommendation pursuant to subdivision
(a), the department shall notify the carrier in writing of all of the
following:
   (1) That the department has determined that the carrier's safety
record or compliance with Section 1808.1 or subdivision (e) or (h) of
Section 34501.12 is unsatisfactory, furnishing a copy of any
documentation or summary of any other evidence supporting the
determination.
   (2) That the determination may result in a suspension, revocation,
or denial of the carrier's motor carrier permit by the Department of
Motor Vehicles, suspension, revocation, of the motor carrier's
operating authority by the California Public Utilities Commission, or
administrative action by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration.
   (3) That the carrier may request a review of the determination by
the department within five days of its receipt of the notice required
under this subdivision. If a review pursuant to this paragraph is
requested by the carrier, the department shall conduct and evaluate
that review prior to transmitting any notification pursuant to
subdivision (a) or (b).
   (e) Upon receipt of a written recommendation from the department
that a motor carrier permit or operating authority be suspended,
revoked, or denied, the Department of Motor Vehicles or Public
Utilities Commission, as appropriate, shall, pending a hearing in the
matter pursuant to Section 34623 or appropriate Public Utilities
Commission authority, suspend the motor carrier permit or operating
authority. The written recommendation shall specifically indicate
compliance with subdivision (d).



34505.7.  (a) Upon determining that a private carrier of passengers,
as defined in Section 4001 of the Public Utilities Code, has either
(1) failed to maintain any vehicle of the carrier in a safe operating
condition or to comply with the Vehicle Code or with regulations
contained in Title 13 of the California Code of Regulations relative
to motor carrier safety, and, in the department's opinion, the
failure presents an imminent danger to public safety or constitutes
such a consistent failure as to justify a recommendation to the
Public Utilities Commission, or (2) failed to enroll all drivers in
the pull notice system as required by Section 1808.1, the department
shall make a written recommendation to the Public Utilities
Commission that the carrier's registration be suspended. Two
consecutive unsatisfactory terminal ratings assigned for failure to
comply with the periodic report requirements in Section 1808.1, or
cancellation of an employer's enrollment by the Department of Motor
Vehicles for nonpayment of fees, constitutes a consistent failure.
The department shall retain a record, by operator, of every
recommendation made pursuant to this section.
   (b) Before transmitting a recommendation pursuant to subdivision
(a), the department shall give written notice to the carrier of all
of the following:
   (1) That the department has determined that the carrier's safety
record is unsatisfactory, furnishing a copy of any documentation or
summary of any other evidence supporting the determination.
   (2) That the determination may result in a suspension or
revocation of the carrier's registration by the California Public
Utilities Commission.
   (3) That the carrier may request a review of the determination by
the department within five days of its receipt of the notice required
by this subdivision. If a review pursuant to this paragraph is
requested by the carrier, the department shall conduct and evaluate
that review prior to transmitting any notification pursuant to
subdivision (a).
   (c) Commercial vehicle inspection facilities along the border of
Mexico, including those in Calexico and Otay Mesa, shall be staffed
at all times by a California Highway Patrol inspector whenever those
facilities are open to the public. The California Highway Patrol
shall also assign, as staffing permits, a commercial inspector to
control truck traffic entering the United States at the Tecate border
crossing.



34505.9.  (a) An ocean marine terminal that receives and dispatches
intermodal chassis may conduct the intermodal roadability inspection
program, as described in this section, in lieu of the inspection
required by Section 34505.5, if the terminal meets all of the
following conditions:
   (1) More than 1,000 chassis are based at the ocean marine
terminal.
   (2) The ocean marine terminal, following the two most recent
consecutive inspections required by Section 34501.12, has received
satisfactory compliance ratings, and the terminal has received no
unsatisfactory compliance ratings as a result of any inspection
conducted in the interim between the consecutive inspections
conducted under Section 34501.12.
   (3) Each intermodal chassis exiting the ocean marine terminal
shall have a current decal and supporting documentation in accordance
with Section 396.17 of Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
   (4) The ocean marine terminal's intermodal roadability inspection
program shall consist of all of the following:
   (A) Each time an intermodal chassis is released from the ocean
marine terminal, the chassis shall be inspected. The inspection shall
include, but not be limited to, brake adjustment, brake system
components and leaks, suspension systems, tires and wheels, vehicle
connecting devices, and lights and electrical system, and shall
include a visual inspection of the chassis to determine that it has
not been tampered with.
   (B) Each inspection shall be recorded on a daily roadability
inspection report that shall include, but not be limited to, all of
the following:
   (i) Positive identification of the intermodal chassis, including
company identification number and vehicle license plate number.
   (ii) Date and nature of each inspection.
   (iii) Signature, under penalty of perjury, of the ocean marine
terminal operator or an authorized representative that the inspection
has been performed.
   (iv) The inspector shall affix a green tag to a chassis that has
passed inspection and a red tag to a chassis that has failed
inspection. The tag shall contain the name of the inspector and the
date and time that the inspection was completed and shall be placed
in a conspicuous location so that it may be viewed from the rear of
the vehicle. The tag shall be provided by the marine terminal
operator and shall meet specifications determined by the Department
of the California Highway Patrol. The provisions of this subparagraph
shall also be applicable to an intermodal chassis inspected by a
marine terminal operator pursuant to Section 34505.5.
   (C) Records of each inspection conducted pursuant to subparagraph
(A) shall be retained for 90 days at the ocean marine terminal at
which each chassis is based and shall be made available upon request
by any authorized employee of the department.
   (D) Defects noted on any intermodal chassis shall be repaired, and
the repairs shall be recorded on the intermodal chassis maintenance
file, before the intermodal chassis is released from the control of
the ocean marine terminal. No vehicle subject to this section shall
be released to a motor carrier or operated on the highway other than
to a place of repair until all defects listed during the inspection
conducted pursuant to subparagraph (A) have been corrected and
attested to by the signature of the operator's authorized
representative.
   (E) Records of maintenance or repairs performed pursuant to the
inspection in subparagraph (A) shall be maintained at the ocean
marine terminal for two years and shall be made available upon
request of the department. Repair records may be retained in a
computer system if printouts of those records are provided to the
department upon request.
   (F)	
	
	
	
	

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > California > Veh > 34500-34520.5

VEHICLE CODE
SECTION 34500-34520.5



34500.  The department shall regulate the safe operation of the
following vehicles:
   (a) Motortrucks of three or more axles that are more than 10,000
pounds gross vehicle weight rating.
   (b) Truck tractors.
   (c) Buses, schoolbuses, school pupil activity buses, youth buses,
farm labor vehicles, and general public paratransit vehicles.
   (d) Trailers and semitrailers designed or used for the
transportation of more than 10 persons, and the towing motor vehicle.
   (e) Trailers and semitrailers, pole or pipe dollies, auxiliary
dollies, and logging dollies used in combination with vehicles listed
in subdivision (a), (b), (c), or (d). This subdivision does not
include camp trailers, trailer coaches, and utility trailers.
   (f) A combination of a motortruck and a vehicle or vehicles set
forth in subdivision (e) that exceeds 40 feet in length when coupled
together.
   (g) A truck, or a combination of a truck and any other vehicle,
transporting hazardous materials.
   (h) Manufactured homes that, when moved upon the highway, are
required to be moved pursuant to a permit as specified in Section
35780 or 35790.
   (i) A park trailer, as described in Section 18009.3 of the Health
and Safety Code, that, when moved upon a highway, is required to be
moved pursuant to a permit pursuant to Section 35780.
   (j) Any other motortruck not specified in subdivisions (a) to (h),
inclusive, or subdivision (k), that is regulated by the Department
of Motor Vehicles, Public Utilities Commission, or United States
Secretary of the Department of Transportation, but only for matters
relating to hours of service and logbooks of drivers.
   (k) A commercial motor vehicle with a gross vehicle weight rating
of 26,001 or more pounds or a commercial motor vehicle of any gross
vehicle weight rating towing a vehicle described in subdivision (e)
with a gross vehicle weight rating of more than 10,000 pounds, except
combinations including camp trailers, trailer coaches, or utility
trailers. For purposes of this subdivision, the term "commercial
motor vehicle" has the meaning defined in subdivision (b) of Section
15210.


34500.1.  In addition to the duties imposed by Section 34500, the
department shall regulate the safe operation of tour buses.



34500.2.  No additional inspection shall be required under this
division on any vehicle which is owned and operated by a public
agency and is used for responding to and returning from an emergency,
as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 35002, during the duration
of the emergency, as determined by the public agency, if an
inspection pursuant to Section 1215 of Title 13 of the California
Code of Regulations has been completed on the vehicle within the past
24 hours. Any vehicle used in responding to an emergency shall be
inspected immediately upon the termination of the emergency.



34500.3.  (a) The department shall adopt rules and regulations that
are designed to promote the safe operation of vehicles, regarding
cargo securement standards. The regulations adopted pursuant to this
section shall be consistent with the securement regulations adopted
by the United States Department of Transportation in Part 393
(commencing with Section 393.1) of Title 49 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, as those regulations now exist or are amended in the
future.
   (b) Regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) do not apply
to the transportation of a pole on a pole dolly by a public utility
company or a local public agency engaged in the business of supplying
electricity or telephone service, by the Department of
Transportation, or by a licensed contractor in the performance of
work for a public utility company, a local agency, or the Department
of Transportation, when the transportation is between storage yards
or between a storage yard and job location where the pole is to be
used. However, no more than nine poles shall be transported on a
dolly if any of those poles exceeds a length of 30 feet. If poles 30
feet or less are transported by a pole or pipe dolly, no more than 18
poles shall be transported. A pole shall be adequately secured when
being transported on a dolly, to prevent shifting or spilling of a
load.
   (c) Regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) do not apply
to a farmer transporting his or her own hay or straw, incidental to
his or her farming operation, if that transportation requires that
the farmer use a highway, except that this subdivision does not
relieve the farmer from loading and securing the hay or straw in a
safe manner.



34500.5.  For purposes of this division, the term "commercial motor
vehicle" has the same meaning as defined in subdivision (b) of
Section 15210.


34501.  (a) (1) The department shall adopt reasonable rules and
regulations that, in the judgment of the department, are designed to
promote the safe operation of vehicles described in Section 34500,
regarding, but not limited to, controlled substances and alcohol
testing of drivers by motor carriers, hours of service of drivers,
equipment, fuel containers, fueling operations, inspection,
maintenance, recordkeeping, accident reports, and drawbridges. The
rules and regulations shall not, however, be applicable to
schoolbuses, which shall be subject to rules and regulations adopted
pursuant to Section 34501.5.
   The rules and regulations shall exempt local law enforcement
agencies, within a single county, engaged in the transportation of
inmates or prisoners when those agencies maintain other motor vehicle
operations records which furnish hours of service information on
drivers which are in substantial compliance with the rules and
regulations. This exemption does not apply to any local law
enforcement agency engaged in the transportation of inmates or
prisoners outside the county in which the agency is located, if that
agency would otherwise be required, by existing law, to maintain
driving logs.
   (2) The department may adopt rules and regulations relating to
commercial vehicle safety inspection and out-of-service criteria. In
adopting the rules and regulations, the commissioner may consider the
commercial vehicle safety inspection and out-of-service criteria
adopted by organizations such as the Commercial Vehicle Safety
Alliance , other intergovernmental safety group, or the United States
Department of Transportation. The commissioner may provide
departmental representatives to that alliance or other organization
for the purpose of promoting the continued improvement and refinement
of compatible nationwide commercial vehicle safety inspection and
out-of-service criteria.
   (3) The commissioner shall appoint a committee of 15 members,
consisting of representatives of industry subject to the regulations
to be adopted pursuant to this section, to act in an advisory
capacity to the department, and the department shall cooperate and
confer with the advisory committee so appointed. The commissioner
shall appoint a separate committee to advise the department on rules
and regulations concerning wheelchair lifts for installation and use
on buses, consisting of persons who use the wheelchair lifts,
representatives of transit districts, representatives of designers or
manufacturers of wheelchairs and wheelchair lifts, and
representatives of the Department of Transportation.
   (4) The department may inspect any vehicles in maintenance
facilities or terminals, as well as any records relating to the
dispatch of vehicles or drivers, and the pay of drivers, to assure
compliance with this code and regulations adopted pursuant to this
section.
   (b) The department, using the definitions adopted pursuant to
Section 2402.7, shall adopt regulations for the transportation of
hazardous materials in this state, except the transportation of
materials which are subject to other provisions of this code, that
the department determines are reasonably necessary to ensure the
safety of persons and property using the highways. The regulations
may include provisions governing the filling, marking, packing,
labeling, and assembly of, and containers that may be used for,
hazardous materials shipments, and the manner by which the shipper
attests that the shipments are correctly identified and in proper
condition for transport.
   (c) At least once every 13 months, the department shall inspect
every maintenance facility or terminal of any person who at any time
operates any bus. If the bus operation includes more than 100 buses,
the inspection shall be without prior notice.
   (d) The commissioner shall adopt and enforce regulations which
will make the public or private users of any bus aware of the
operator's last safety rating.
   (e) It is unlawful and constitutes a misdemeanor for any person to
operate any bus without the inspection specified in subdivision (c)
having been conducted.
   (f) The department may adopt regulations restricting or
prohibiting the movement of any vehicle from a maintenance facility
or terminal if the vehicle is found in violation of this code or
regulations adopted pursuant to this section.



34501.1.  A manufacturer or distributor of wheelchair lifts for
buses, schoolbuses, youth buses, and general public transit vehicles,
regardless of capacity, shall, prior to the distribution of the
wheelchair lift model in California, provide to the Department of the
California Highway Patrol proof of certification from an independent
laboratory or registered mechanical engineer of this state that the
wheelchair lift model complies with the California and any federal
law and the regulations adopted pursuant thereto.



34501.2.  (a) The regulations adopted under Section 34501 for
vehicles engaged in interstate or intrastate commerce shall establish
hours-of-service regulations for drivers of those vehicles that are
consistent with the hours-of-service regulations adopted by the
United States Department of Transportation in Part 395 of Title 49 of
the Code of Federal Regulations, as those regulations now exist or
are hereafter amended.
   (b) The regulations adopted under Section 34501 for vehicles
engaged in intrastate commerce that are not transporting hazardous
substances or hazardous waste, as those terms are defined by
regulations in Section 171.8 of Title 49 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, as those regulations now exist or are hereafter amended,
shall have the following exceptions:
   (1) The maximum driving time within a work period shall be 12
hours for a driver of a truck or truck tractor, except for a driver
of a tank vehicle with a capacity of more than 500 gallons
transporting flammable liquid, who shall not drive for more than 10
hours within a work period.
   (2) A motor carrier shall not permit or require a driver to drive,
nor shall any driver drive, for any period after having been on duty
for 80 hours in any consecutive eight days.
   (3) A driver employed by an electrical corporation, as defined in
Section 218 of the Public Utilities Code, a gas corporation, as
defined in Section 222 of that code, a telephone corporation, as
defined in Section 234 of that code, a water corporation, as defined
in Section 241 of that code, or a public water district as defined in
Section 20200 of the Water Code, is exempt from all hours-of-service
regulations while operating a public utility or public water
district vehicle.
   (4) Any other exceptions applicable to drivers assigned to
governmental fire suppression and prevention, as determined by the
department.
   (5) A driver employed by a law enforcement agency, as defined in
Section 390.3(f)(2) of Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations,
as that section now exists or is hereafter amended, during an
emergency or to restore the public peace.
   (c) The regulations adopted under Section 34501 for vehicles
engaged in the transportation of farm products in intrastate commerce
shall include all of the following provisions:
   (1) A driver employed by an agricultural carrier, including a
carrier holding a seasonal permit, or by a private carrier, when
transporting farm products from the field to the first point of
processing or packing, shall not drive for any period after having
been on duty 16 hours or more following eight consecutive hours off
duty and shall not drive for any period after having been on duty for
112 hours in any consecutive eight-day period, except that a driver
transporting special situation farm products from the field to the
first point of processing or packing, or transporting livestock from
pasture to pasture, may be permitted, during one period of not more
than 28 consecutive days or a combination of two periods totaling not
more than 28 days in a calendar year, to drive for not more than 12
hours during any workday of not more than 16 hours. A driver who
thereby exceeds the driving time limits specified in paragraph (2) of
subdivision (b) shall maintain a driver's record of duty status, and
shall keep a duplicate copy in his or her possession when driving a
vehicle subject to this chapter. These records shall be presented
immediately upon request by any authorized employee of the
department, or any police officer or deputy sheriff.
   (2) Upon the request of the Director of Food and Agriculture, the
commissioner may, for good cause, temporarily waive the maximum
on-duty time limits applicable to any eight-day period when an
emergency exists due to inclement weather, natural disaster, or an
adverse economic condition that threatens to disrupt the orderly
movement of farm products during harvest for the duration of the
emergency. For purposes of this paragraph, an emergency does not
include a strike or labor dispute.
   (3) For purposes of this subdivision, the following terms have the
following meanings:
   (A) "Farm products" means every agricultural, horticultural,
viticultural, or vegetable product of the soil, honey and beeswax,
oilseeds, poultry, livestock, milk, or timber.
   (B) "First point of processing or packing" means a location where
farm products are dried, canned, extracted, fermented, distilled,
frozen, ginned, eviscerated, pasteurized, packed, packaged, bottled,
conditioned, or otherwise manufactured, processed, or preserved for
distribution in wholesale or retail markets.
   (C) "Special situation farm products" means fruit, tomatoes, sugar
beets, grains, wine grapes, grape concentrate, cotton, or nuts.



34501.3.  (a) No motor carrier shall schedule a run or permit or
require the operation of any motor vehicle subject to this division
between points within a period of time which would do either of the
following:
   (1) Necessitate the vehicle being operated at speeds greater than
those prescribed by this code.
   (2) Require the driver of the vehicle to exceed the applicable
maximum hours of service.
   (b) A logbook of a driver, which reflects a trip or trips between
points within a period of time which would have necessitated
excessive speed to complete, shall give rise to a rebuttable
presumption that the driver exceeded the lawful speed limit.
   (c) For a violation of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), a first
offense is punishable by a fine of not more than one thousand dollars
($1,000), a second offense by a fine of not more than two thousand
five hundred dollars ($2,500), and a third or subsequent offense by a
fine of not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000).



34501.4.  Any driver subject to the hours of service limitations and
logbook requirements of this division, who is unable to produce upon
request of a representative of the department any driver's logbook
or is only able to produce an incomplete driver's log book for the
prior 24-hour period, is rebuttably presumed to be in violation of
the hours of service limitations in Sections 34501 and 34501.2.




34501.5.  (a) The Department of the California Highway Patrol shall
adopt reasonable rules and regulations which, in the judgment of the
department, are designed to promote the safe operation of vehicles
described in Sections 39830 and 82321 of the Education Code and
Sections 545 and 34500 of this code. The Commissioner of the
California Highway Patrol shall appoint a committee of 11 members to
act in an advisory capacity when developing and adopting regulations
affecting school pupil transportation buses and school pupil
transportation operations. The advisory committee shall consist of 11
members appointed as follows:
   (1) One member of the State Department of Education.
   (2) One member of the Department of Motor Vehicles.
   (3) One member of the Department of the California Highway Patrol.
   (4) One member who is employed as a schoolbus driver.
   (5) One member of the Office of Traffic Safety in the Business,
Transportation and Housing Agency.
   (6) Two members who are schoolbus contractors, one of whom shall
be from an urban area of the state and one of whom shall be from a
rural area of the state, as determined by the department.
   (7) Two members who are representatives of school districts, one
of whom shall be from an urban area of the state and one of whom
shall be from a rural area of the state, as determined by the
department.
   (8) One professionally licensed member of the American Academy of
Pediatrics.
   (9) One member representing school pupil transportation operations
other than schoolbus operations.
   (b) The department shall cooperate and confer with the advisory
committee appointed pursuant to this section prior to adopting rules
or regulations affecting school pupil transportation buses and school
pupil transportation operations.



34501.6.  The governing board of a local educational agency that
provides for the transportation of pupils shall adopt procedures that
limit the operation of schoolbuses when atmospheric conditions
reduce visibility on the roadway to 200 feet or less during regular
home-to-school transportation service. Operational policies for
school activity trips shall give schoolbus drivers discretionary
authority to discontinue schoolbus operation if the driver determines
that it is unsafe to continue operation because of reduced
visibility.


34501.7.  (a) Any rules or regulations adopted pursuant to Section
34501 for the construction, testing, or certification of wheelchair
lifts for installation and use on buses shall take into consideration
the costs of implementing the regulations and shall be reviewed and
brought up to date by the department annually.
   (b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 1987.



34501.8.  (a) The Department of the California Highway Patrol shall
inspect every general public paratransit vehicle, as defined in
Section 336, at least once each year to certify that its condition
complies with all provisions of law, including being equipped with a
fire extinguisher, first-aid kit, and three-point tie downs for
transporting wheelchair passengers.
   (b) On or after July 1, 1989, no person shall drive any general
public paratransit vehicle unless there is displayed therein a
certificate issued by the Department of the California Highway Patrol
stating that on a certain date, which shall be within 13 months of
the date of operation, an authorized employee of the Department of
the California Highway Patrol inspected the general public
paratransit vehicle and found that on the date of inspection the
general public paratransit vehicle complied with the applicable
provisions of state law. The Commissioner of the California Highway
Patrol shall provide, by rule or regulation, for the issuance and
display of distinctive inspection certificates.
   (c) The Commissioner of the California Highway Patrol shall
determine a fee and method of collection for the annual inspection of
general public paratransit vehicles. The fee, established by
regulation, shall be sufficient to cover the cost to the department
for general public paratransit vehicle inspections. All fees received
shall be deposited in the Motor Vehicle Account in the State
Transportation Fund.
   This section shall become operative January 1, 1989.



34501.9.  (a) Nothing in this division or the regulations adopted
under this division is intended to, or shall, affect the rate of
payment of wages, including, but not limited to, regular, premium, or
overtime rates, paid to any person whether for on-duty hours or
driving hours or otherwise.
   (b) Nothing in this division or the regulations adopted under this
division is intended to, or shall, affect the regulations adopted
pursuant to other provisions of law concerning the rate or rates of
payment of wages by any other public agency, including, but not
limited to, the Industrial Welfare Commission or the Division of
Labor Standards Enforcement of the Department of Industrial
Relations.


34501.10.  The employer of any person required to keep log books,
records of physical examination, and other driver records as may be
required by the Department of the California Highway Patrol, the
Department of Motor Vehicles, or the State Department of Health
Services, shall register with the Department of the California
Highway Patrol the address where the log books and other records are
available for inspection.



34501.12.  (a) Notwithstanding Section 408, as used in this section
and Sections 34505.5 and 34505.6, "motor carrier" means the
registered owner of a vehicle described in subdivision (a), (b), (e),
(f), or (g) of Section 34500, except in the following circumstances:
   (1) The registered owner leases the vehicle to another person for
a term of more than four months. If the lease is for more than four
months, the lessee is the motor carrier.
   (2) The registered owner operates the vehicle exclusively under
the authority and direction of another person. If the operation is
exclusively under the authority and direction of another person, that
other person may assume the responsibilities as the motor carrier.
If not so assumed, the registered owner is the motor carrier. A
person who assumes the motor carrier responsibilities of another
pursuant to subdivision (b) shall provide to that other person whose
motor carrier responsibility is so assumed, a completed copy of a
departmental form documenting that assumption, stating the period for
which responsibility is assumed, and signed by an agent of the
assuming person. A legible copy shall be carried in each vehicle or
combination of vehicles operated on the highway during the period for
which responsibility is assumed. That copy shall be presented upon
request by an authorized employee of the department. The original
completed departmental form documenting the assumption shall be
provided to the department within 30 days of the assumption. If the
assumption of responsibility is terminated, the person who had
assumed responsibility shall so notify the department in writing
within 30 days of the termination.
   (b) (1) A motor carrier may combine two or more terminals that are
not subject to an unsatisfactory compliance rating within the last
36 months for purposes of the inspection required by subdivision (d),
subject to all of the following conditions:
   (A) The carrier identifies to the department, in writing, each
terminal proposed to be included in the combination of terminals for
purposes of this subdivision prior to an inspection of the designated
terminal pursuant to subdivision (d).
   (B) The carrier provides the department, prior to the inspection
of the designated terminal pursuant to subdivision (d), a written
listing of all its vehicles of a type subject to subdivision (a),
(b), (e), (f), or (g) of Section 34500 that are based at each of the
terminals combined for purposes of this subdivision. The listing
shall specify the number of vehicles of each type at each terminal.
   (C) The carrier provides to the department at the designated
terminal during the inspection all maintenance records and driver
records and a representative sample of vehicles based at each of the
terminals included within the combination of terminals.
   (2) If the carrier fails to provide the maintenance records,
driver records, and representative sample of vehicles pursuant to
subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1), the department shall assign the
carrier an unsatisfactory terminal rating and require a reinspection
to be conducted pursuant to subdivision (h).
   (3) For purposes of this subdivision, the following terms have the
following meanings:
   (A) "Driver records" includes pull notice system records, driver
proficiency records, and driver timekeeping records.
   (B) "Maintenance records" includes all required maintenance,
lubrication, and repair records and drivers' daily vehicle condition
reports.
   (C) "Representative sample" means the following, applied
separately to the carrier's fleet of motortrucks and truck tractors
and its fleet of trailers:

               Representative
  Fleet Size       Sample
  1 or 2             All
  3 to 8              3
  9 to 15             4
  16 to 25            6
  26 to 50            9
  51 to 90           14
  91 or more         20

   (c) Each motor carrier who, in this state, directs the operation
of, or maintains, a vehicle of a type described in subdivision (a)
shall designate one or more terminals, as defined in Section 34515,
in this state where vehicles can be inspected by the department
pursuant to paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 34501 and
where vehicle inspection and maintenance records and driver records
will be made available for inspection.
   (d) (1) The department shall inspect, at least every 25 months,
every terminal, as defined in Section 34515, of a motor carrier who,
at any time, operates a vehicle described in subdivision (a).
   (2) The department shall place an inspection priority on those
terminals operating vehicles listed in subdivision (g) of Section
34500.
   (3) As used in this section and in Sections 34505.5 and 34505.6,
subdivision (f) of Section 34500 includes only those combinations
where the gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of the towing vehicle
exceeds 10,000 pounds, but does not include a pickup truck, and
subdivision (g) of Section 34500 includes only those vehicles
transporting hazardous material for which the display of placards is
required pursuant to Section 27903, a license is required pursuant to
Section 32000.5, or for which hazardous waste transporter
registration is required pursuant to Section 25163 of the Health and
Safety Code. Historical vehicles, as described in Section 5004,
vehicles that display special identification plates in accordance
with Section 5011, implements of husbandry and farm vehicles, as
defined in Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 36000) of Division 16,
and vehicles owned or operated by an agency of the federal government
are not subject to this section or to Sections 34505.5 and 34505.6.
   (e) (1) It is the responsibility of the motor carrier to schedule
with the department the inspection required by subdivision (d). The
motor carrier shall submit an application form supplied by the
department, accompanied by the required fee contained in paragraph
(2), for each terminal the motor carrier operates. This fee shall be
submitted within 30 days of establishing a terminal. All fees
submitted under paragraph (2) are nonrefundable.
   (2) (A) The fee for each terminal is set forth in the following
table:


  Terminal      Required fee per terminal
  fleet size
  1                       $ 270
  2                       $ 375
  3 to 8                  $ 510
  9 to 15                 $ 615
  16 to 25                $ 800
  26 to 50                $1,040
  51 to 90                $1,165
  91 or more              $1,870

   (B) In addition to the fee specified in subparagraph (A), the
motor carrier shall submit an additional fee of three hundred fifty
dollars ($350) for each of its terminals not previously inspected
under the section.
   (3) Except as provided in paragraph (5), the inspection term for
each inspected terminal of a motor carrier shall expire 25 months
from the date the terminal receives a satisfactory compliance rating,
as specified in subdivision (h). Applications and fees for
subsequent inspections shall be submitted not earlier than nine
months and not later than seven months before the expiration of the
motor carrier's then current inspection term. If the motor carrier
has submitted the inspection application and the required
accompanying fees, but the department is unable to complete the
inspection within the 25-month inspection period, then no additional
fee shall be required for the inspection requested in the original
application.
   (4) All fees collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be
deposited in the Motor Vehicle Account in the State Transportation
Fund. An amount equal to the fees collected shall be available for
appropriation by the Legislature from the Motor Vehicle Account to
the department for the purpose of conducting truck terminal
inspections and for the additional roadside safety inspections
required by Section 34514.
   (5) To avoid the scheduling of a renewal terminal inspection
pursuant to this section during a carrier's seasonal peak business
periods, the current inspection term of a terminal that has paid all
required fees and has been rated satisfactory in its last inspection
may be reduced by not more than nine months if a written request is
submitted by the carrier to the department at least four months prior
to the desired inspection month, or at the time of payment of
renewal inspection fees in compliance with paragraph (3), whichever
date is earlier. A motor carrier may request this adjustment of the
inspection term during any inspection cycle. A request made pursuant
to this paragraph shall not result in a fee proration and does not
relieve the carrier from the requirements of paragraph (3).
   (6) Failure to pay a fee required by this section, within the
appropriate timeframe, shall result in additional delinquent fees as
follows:
   (A) For a delinquency period of more than 30 days, the penalty is
60 percent of the required fee.
   (B) For a delinquency period of one to two years, the penalty is
80 percent of the required fee.
   (C) For a delinquency period of more than two years, the penalty
is 160 percent of the required fee.
   (7) Federal, state, and local public entities are exempt from the
fee requirement of this section.
   (f) It is unlawful for a motor carrier to operate a vehicle
subject to this section without having submitted an inspection
application and the required fees to the department as required by
subdivision (e) or (h).
   (g) (1) It is unlawful for a motor carrier to operate a vehicle
subject to this section after submitting an inspection application to
the department, without the inspection described in subdivision (d)
having been performed and a safety compliance report having been
issued to the motor carrier within the 25-month inspection period or
within 60 days immediately preceding the inspection period.
   (2) It is unlawful for a motor carrier to contract or subcontract
with, or otherwise engage the services of, another motor carrier,
subject to this section, unless the contracted motor carrier has
complied with this section. A motor carrier shall not contract or
subcontract with, or otherwise engage the services of, another motor
carrier until the contracted motor carrier provides certification of
compliance with this section. This certification shall be completed
in writing by the contracted motor carrier. The certification, or a
copy thereof, shall be maintained by each involved party for the
duration of the contract or the period of service plus two years, and
shall be presented for inspection immediately upon the request of an
authorized employee of the department.
   (h) (1) An inspected terminal that receives an unsatisfactory
compliance rating shall be reinspected within 120 days after the
issuance of the unsatisfactory compliance rating.
   (2) A terminal's first required reinspection under this
subdivision shall be without charge unless one or more of the
following is established:
   (A) The motor carrier's operation presented an imminent danger to
public safety.
   (B) The motor carrier was not in compliance with the requirement
to enroll all drivers in the pull notice program pursuant to Section
1808.1.
   (C) The motor carrier failed to provide all required records and
vehicles for a consolidated inspection pursuant to subdivision (b).
   (3) If the unsatisfactory rating was assigned for any of the
reasons set forth in paragraph (2), the carrier shall submit the
required fee as provided in paragraph (4).
   (4) Applications for reinspection pursuant to paragraph (3) or for
second and subsequent consecutive reinspections under this
subdivision shall be accompanied by the fee specified in paragraph
(2) of subdivision (e) and shall be filed within 60 days of issuance
of the unsatisfactory compliance rating. The reinspection fee is
nonrefundable.
   (5) When a motor carrier's Motor Carrier of Property Permit or
Public Utilities Commission operating authority is suspended as a
result of an unsatisfactory compliance rating, the department shall
not conduct a reinspection for permit or authority reinstatement
until requested to do so by the Department of Motor Vehicles or the
Public Utilities Commission, as appropriate.
   (i) It is the intent of the Legislature that the department make
its best efforts to inspect terminals within the resources provided.
In the interest of the state, the Commissioner of the California
Highway Patrol may extend for a period, not to exceed six months, the
inspection terms beginning prior to July 1, 1990.
   (j) Except as provided in paragraph (5), to encourage motor
carriers to attain continuous satisfactory compliance ratings, the
department may establish and implement an incentive program
consisting of the following:
   (1) After the second consecutive satisfactory compliance rating
assigned to a motor carrier terminal as a result of an inspection
conducted pursuant to subdivision (d), and after each consecutive
satisfactory compliance rating thereafter, an appropriate
certificate, denoting the number of consecutive satisfactory ratings,
shall be awarded to the terminal, unless the terminal has received
an unsatisfactory compliance rating as a result of an inspection
conducted in the interim between the consecutive inspections
conducted under subdivision (d), or the motor carrier is rated
unsatisfactory by the department following a controlled substances
and alcohol testing program inspection. The certificate authorized
under this paragraph shall not be awarded for performance in the
administrative review authorized under paragraph (2). However, the
certificate shall include a reference to any administrative reviews
conducted during the period of consecutive satisfactory compliance
ratings.
   (2) Unless the department's evaluation of the motor carrier's
safety record indicates a declining level of compliance, a terminal
that has attained two consecutive satisfactory compliance ratings
assigned following inspections conducted pursuant to subdivision (d)
is eligible for an administrative review in lieu of the next required
inspection, unless the terminal has received an unsatisfactory
compliance rating as a result of an inspection conducted in the
interim between the consecutive inspections conducted under
subdivision (d). An administrative review shall consist of all of the
following:
   (A) A signed request by a terminal management representative
requesting the administrative review in lieu of the required
inspection containing a promise to continue to maintain a
satisfactory level of compliance for the next 25-month inspection
term.
   (B) A review with a terminal management representative of the
carrier's record as contained in the department's files. If a
terminal has been authorized a second consecutive administrative
review, the review required under this subparagraph is optional, and
may be omitted at the carrier's request.
   (C) Absent any cogent reasons to the contrary, upon completion of
the requirements of subparagraphs (A) and (B), the safety compliance
rating assigned during the last required inspection shall be extended
for 25 months.
   (3) Not more than two administrative reviews may be conducted
consecutively. At the completion of the 25-month inspection term
following a second administrative review, a terminal inspection shall
be conducted pursuant to subdivision (d). If this inspection results
in a satisfactory compliance rating, the terminal shall again be
eligible for an administrative review in lieu of the next required
inspection. If the succession of satisfactory ratings is interrupted
by a rating of other than satisfactory, irrespective of the reason
for the inspection, the terminal shall again attain two consecutive
satisfactory ratings to become eligible for an administrative review.
   (4) As a condition for receiving the administrative reviews
authorized under this subdivision in lieu of inspections, and in
order to ensure that compliance levels remain satisfactory, the motor
carrier shall agree to accept random, unannounced inspections by the
department.
   (5) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) to (4), inclusive, a motor
carrier of hazardous materials shall not be granted administrative
review pursuant to this subdivision in lieu of a terminal inspection
pursuant to subdivision (d) at any terminal from which hazardous
materials carrying vehicles identified by paragraph (3) of
subdivision (d) are operated.
   (k) This section shall be known and may be cited as the Biennial
Inspection of Terminals Program or BIT.



34501.14.  (a) Notwithstanding Section 34501.12, for purposes of
this division, safety inspections of grape gondolas are governed by
this section.
   (b) Every registered owner of a grape gondola shall submit an
application and the fee specified in subdivision (g) to the
department for the initial inspection required by this section. The
initial application shall be submitted on or before July 1, 1993. The
inspection term for a grape gondola shall expire 25 months from the
date the department conducts the inspection, and issues a certificate
indicating the gondola has passed the inspection, and every 25
months thereafter. Applications and fees for subsequent inspections
and certificates shall be submitted not later than seven months
before the expiration of the then current inspection term. If the
registered owner has submitted the inspection application and the
required accompanying fees, but the department is unable to complete
the inspection within the 25-month inspection period, then no
additional fee shall be required for the inspection requested in the
original application.
   (c) On and after July 1, 1993, no person may operate any grape
gondola without having submitted an inspection application and the
required fees to the department as required by this section.
   (d) On and after January 1, 1995, no person may operate any grape
gondola, without the inspection described in subdivision (e) having
been performed and a certificate having been issued to the owner.
   (e) The safety inspection undertaken pursuant to this section
shall be limited to an inspection of the brake system, steering,
lights, connections, wheels and tires, frame, and suspension.
   (f) For purposes of undertaking the inspection of grape gondolas
under this section, the department shall schedule all inspections at
one central location during a continuous eight-week period every
odd-numbered year with at least two days of each week during that
eight-week period devoted to the actual inspection. If the gondola
does not pass its first inspection, it may be reinspected during the
eight-week period at no additional cost.
   (g) Fees shall be established by the department in an amount equal
to the actual costs incurred by the department in carrying out this
section, but not to exceed twenty-five dollars ($25) for each
inspection or reinspection.
   (h) As used in this section, "grape gondola" means a motor vehicle
which has been permanently altered and is attached to a grape tank
by two means. The first mean is by use of a kingpin on the trunk
which is centered through a turntable assembly on the tank. The
second means of attachment is through the use of a pair of horizontal
crossarms between the drive axle and the rear tank axle. The tank is
designed to pivot off of the chassis on two support arms during
dumping, and is further designed to be specifically compatible with
dumping facilities of the wineries.
   (i) This section only applies to a grape gondola that is used
under all of the following conditions:
   (1) For 60 days or less during any calendar year.
   (2) For not more than 500 miles in any calendar year.
   (3) Only for the transportation of grapes.



34501.13.  If the inspection of a carrier facility, maintenance
facility, or terminal of any person who operates a schoolbus results
in an unsatisfactory terminal rating by the department, the
department shall notify the school board of the district that is
responsible for the terminal.



34501.15.  (a) The regulations adopted pursuant to Section 34501
shall require that any driver of a commercial motor vehicle, as
defined in Section 15210, be ordered out of service for 24 hours if
the driver is found to have 0.01 percent or more, by weight, of
alcohol in his or her blood.
   (b) This section shall become operative on January 1, 1992, and
shall remain operative until the director determines that federal
regulations adopted pursuant to the Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety
Act of 1986 (49 U.S.C. Sec. 2701 et seq.) contained in that act and
Section 391.15 of Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations do not
require the state to order the operator of a commercial vehicle out
of service for 24 hours when the operator has a measurable
concentration of alcohol in his or her blood.
   (c) The director shall submit a notice of the determination under
subdivision (b) to the Secretary of State, and this section shall be
repealed upon the receipt of that notice.



34501.16.  (a) Every employer of a commercial driver shall provide
information to that employee at the time of hiring and to all
employed commercial drivers annually, concerning all of the
following:
   (1) The prohibition against driving a commercial motor vehicle
with over 0.04 percent or more, by weight, alcohol in his or her
blood on and after January 1, 1992.
   (2) The requirement to be placed out of service for 24 hours if
the person's blood-alcohol concentration is tested to be 0.01 percent
or more, by weight, on and after January 1, 1992.
   (b) The Department of Motor Vehicles shall include the information
prescribed in subdivision (a), together with information concerning
the alcohol concentration in a person's blood resulting from
consumption of alcoholic beverages, in each publication of the
commercial driver's handbook published after January 1, 1990.
   (c) This section shall remain operative until the director
determines that federal regulations adopted pursuant to the
Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1986 (49 U.S.C. Sec. 2701 et
seq.) do not require the state to implement the prohibitions and
requirements in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a).
   (d) The director shall submit a notice of the determination under
subdivision (c) to the Secretary of State, and this section shall be
repealed upon the receipt of that notice.



34501.17.  (a) All paratransit vehicles shall be regularly and
systematically inspected, maintained, and lubricated by the owner or
operator in accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations, or
more often if necessary to ensure the safe operating condition of the
vehicle. The maintenance shall include, at a minimum, in-depth
inspection of the vehicle's brake system, steering components,
lighting system, and wheels and tires, to be performed at intervals
in accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations.
   (b) All owners or operators of paratransit vehicles shall document
each systematic inspection, maintenance, and lubrication and repair
performed for each vehicle subject to this section. Required records
shall include service performed, the name of the person performing
the service, the date that the service was performed, and the
odometer reading of the vehicle at the time of the service. The
records shall be maintained for the period that the vehicle is in
service at the place of business in this state of the owner or
operator of the vehicle, and shall be presented upon demand to any
authorized representative of the department. The odometer of a
paratransit vehicle shall be maintained in proper working order.



34501.18.  (a) Every motor carrier regularly employing more than 20
full-time drivers shall report to the department whenever it replaces
more than half of its drivers within a 30-day period. Within 21 days
of receipt of that report, the department shall inspect the motor
carrier to ensure that the motor carrier is complying with all safety
of operations requirements, including, but not limited to,
controlled substances testing and hours-of-service regulations. The
reporting requirement of this subdivision does not apply to a motor
carrier who, through normal seasonal fluctuations in the business
operations of the carrier, or through termination of a contract for
transportation services, other than a collective bargaining
agreement, replaces drivers in one geographical location with drivers
in another geographical location.
   (b) For the purposes of subdivision (a), "employing" means having
an employer-employee relationship with a driver or contracting with
an owner-operator, as described in Section 34624, to provide
transportation services for more than 30 days within the previous
year.
   (c) For the purposes of subdivision (a), "full-time" means that
the driver is on-duty with the motor carrier for an average of 30
hours or more per week during the course of his or her employment or
contract with the motor carrier.



34502.  In adopting rules and regulations, the Department of the
California Highway Patrol shall consider as evidence of generally
accepted safety standards the rules and regulations which have been
adopted by the Public Utilities Commission.




34503.  It is the legislative intention in enacting this division
that the rules and regulations adopted by the Department of the
California Highway Patrol pursuant to this division shall apply
uniformly throughout the State of California, and no state agency,
city, city and county, county, or other political subdivision of this
State, including, but not limited to, a chartered city, city and
county, or county, shall adopt or enforce any ordinance or regulation
which is inconsistent with the rules and regulations adopted by the
department pursuant to this division.



34504.  The Department of the California Highway Patrol shall
enforce the rules and regulations adopted pursuant to Section 34501.
Rules and regulations adopted pursuant to Section 34501 shall become
effective on March 1, 1965.


34505.  (a) Tour bus operators shall, in addition to the systematic
inspection, maintenance, and lubrication services required of all
motor carriers, require each tour bus to be inspected at least every
45 days, or more often if necessary to ensure safe operation. This
inspection shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
   (1) Brake adjustment.
   (2) Brake system components and leaks.
   (3) Steering and suspension systems.
   (4) Tires and wheels.
   (b) A tour bus shall not be used to transport passengers until all
defects listed during the inspection conducted pursuant to
subdivision (a) have been corrected and attested to by the signature
of the operator's authorized representative.
   (c) Records of inspections conducted pursuant to subdivision (a)
shall be kept at the operator's maintenance facility or terminal
where the tour bus is regularly garaged. The records shall be
retained by the operator for one year, and shall be made available
for inspection upon request by any authorized employee of the
department. Each record shall include, but not be limited to, all of
the following:
   (1) Identification of the vehicle, including make, model, license
number, or other means of positive identification.
   (2) Date and nature of each inspection and any repair performed.
   (3) Signature of operator's authorized representative attesting to
the inspection and to the completion of all required repairs.
   (4) Company vehicle number.



34505.1.  (a) Upon determining that a tour bus operator has either
(1) failed to maintain any vehicle used in transportation for
compensation in a safe operating condition or to comply with the
Vehicle Code or with regulations contained in Title 13 of the
California Code of Regulations relative to motor carrier safety, and,
in the department's opinion, that failure presents an imminent
danger to public safety or constitutes such a consistent failure as
to justify a recommendation to the Public Utilities Commission or the
Interstate Commerce Commission or (2) failed to enroll all drivers
in the pull notice system as required by Section 1808.1, the
department shall recommend to the Public Utilities Commission that
the carrier's operating authority be suspended, denied, or revoked,
or to the federal Highway Administration Office of Motor Carriers,
that appropriate administrative action be taken against the carrier's
Interstate Commerce Commission operating authority, whichever is
appropriate. For purposes of this subdivision, two consecutive
unsatisfactory compliance ratings for an inspected terminal assigned
because the tour bus operator failed to comply with the periodic
report requirements of Section 1808.1 or the cancellation of the
operator's enrollment by the Department of Motor Vehicles for
nonpayment of required fees is a consistent failure. However, when
recommending denial of an application for new or renewal authority,
the department need not conclude that the carrier's failure presents
an imminent danger to public safety or that it constitutes a
consistent failure. The department need only conclude that the
carrier's compliance with the safety-related matters described in
paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) is sufficiently unsatisfactory to
justify a recommendation for denial. The department shall retain a
record, by operator, of every recommendation made pursuant to this
section.
   (b) Before transmitting a recommendation pursuant to subdivision
(a), the department shall notify the carrier in writing of all of the
following:
   (1) That the department has determined that the carrier's safety
record is unsatisfactory, furnishing a copy of any documentation or
summary of any other evidence supporting the determination.
   (2) That the determination may result in a suspension, revocation,
or denial of the carrier's operating authority by the California
Public Utilities Commission or the Interstate Commerce Commission.
   (3) That the carrier may request a review of the determination by
the department within five days of its receipt of the notice required
under this subdivision. If a review is requested by the carrier, the
department shall conduct and evaluate that review prior to
transmitting any notification pursuant to subdivision (a).



34505.5.  (a) Every motor carrier operating any vehicle described in
subdivision (a), (b), (e), (f), or (g) of Section 34500, except
those vehicles exempted under Section 34501.12, shall, as a part of
the systematic inspection, maintenance, and lubrication services
required of all motor carriers, require the vehicle or vehicles for
which it is responsible pursuant to Section 34501.12 to be inspected
at least every 90 days, or more often if necessary to ensure safe
operation. Vehicles which are out of service for periods greater than
90 calendar days are not required to be inspected at 90-day
intervals if they are inspected before operation on the highway. This
inspection shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
   (1) Brake adjustment.
   (2) Brake system components and leaks.
   (3) Steering and suspension systems.
   (4) Tires and wheels.
   (5) Vehicle connecting devices.
   (b) No vehicle subject to this section shall be operated on the
highway other than to a place of repair until all defects listed
during the inspection conducted pursuant to subdivision (a) have been
corrected and attested to by the signature of the motor carrier's
authorized representative.
   (c) Records of inspections conducted pursuant to subdivision (a)
shall be kept at the motor carrier's terminals, as designated in
accordance with Section 34501.12. The records shall be retained by
the motor carrier for two years, and shall be made available for
inspection upon request by any authorized employee of the department.
Each record shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
   (1) Identification of the vehicle, including make, model, license
number, company vehicle number, or other means of positive
identification.
   (2) Date and nature of each inspection and any repair performed.
   (3) Signature of the motor carrier's authorized representative
attesting to the inspection and to the completion of all required
repairs.
   (d) Printouts of inspection and maintenance records maintained in
computer systems shall be accepted in lieu of signed inspection or
repair records if the printouts include the information required in
paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (c).
   (e) Notwithstanding subdivisions (a) to (d), inclusive, records of
90-day inspections need not be retained in California for interstate
vehicles which are not physically based in California. However, when
these vehicles are present in California, they are subject to
inspection by the department. If the inspection results indicate
maintenance program deficiencies, the department may require the
motor carrier to produce the maintenance records or copies of those
records for inspection within 10 working days.




34505.6.  (a) Upon determining that a motor carrier of property who
is operating any vehicle described in subdivision (a), (b), (e), (f),
(g), or (k) of Section 34500, or any motortruck of two or more axles
that is more than 10,000 pounds gross vehicle weight rating, on a
public highway, has done any of the following, the department shall
recommend that the Department of Motor Vehicles suspend or revoke the
carrier's motor carrier permit, or for interstate operators, the
department shall recommend to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration that appropriate administrative action be taken
against the carrier:
   (1) Failed to maintain any vehicle of a type described above in a
safe operating condition or to comply with the Vehicle Code or with
applicable regulations contained in Title 13 of the California Code
of Regulations, and, in the department's opinion, that failure
presents an imminent danger to public safety or constitutes a
consistent failure so as to justify a suspension or revocation of the
motor carrier's motor carrier permit.
   (2) Failed to enroll all drivers in the pull-notice system as
required by Section 1808.1.
   (3) Failed to submit any application or pay any fee required by
subdivision (e) or (h) of Section 34501.12 within the timeframes set
forth in that section.
   (b) Upon determining that a household goods carrier, or a
household goods carrier transporting used office, store, or
institution furniture and fixtures under its household goods carrier
permit issued under Section 5137 of the Public Utilities Code,
operating any vehicle described in subdivision (a), (b), (e), (f),
(g), or (k) of Section 34500 on a public highway has done any of the
following, the department shall recommend that the Public Utilities
Commission deny, suspend, or revoke the carrier's operating
authority, or for interstate operators, the department shall
recommend to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration that
appropriate administrative action be taken against the carrier:
   (1) Failed to maintain any vehicle used in transportation for
compensation in a safe operating condition or to comply with the
Vehicle Code or with applicable regulations contained in Title 13 of
the California Code of Regulations, and, in the department's opinion,
that failure presents an imminent danger to public safety or
constitutes a consistent failure so as to justify a suspension,
revocation, or denial of the motor carrier's operating authority.
   (2) Failed to enroll all drivers in the pull-notice system as
required by Section 1808.1.
   (3) Failed to submit any application or pay any fee required by
subdivision (e) or (h) of Section 34501.12 within the timeframes set
forth in that section.
   (c) For purposes of this section, two consecutive unsatisfactory
compliance ratings for an inspected terminal assigned because the
motor carrier failed to comply with the periodic report requirements
of Section 1808.1 or the cancellation of the carrier's enrollment by
the Department of Motor Vehicles for the nonpayment of required fees
is a consistent failure. The department shall retain a record, by
operator, of every recommendation made pursuant to this section.
   (d) Before transmitting a recommendation pursuant to subdivision
(a), the department shall notify the carrier in writing of all of the
following:
   (1) That the department has determined that the carrier's safety
record or compliance with Section 1808.1 or subdivision (e) or (h) of
Section 34501.12 is unsatisfactory, furnishing a copy of any
documentation or summary of any other evidence supporting the
determination.
   (2) That the determination may result in a suspension, revocation,
or denial of the carrier's motor carrier permit by the Department of
Motor Vehicles, suspension, revocation, of the motor carrier's
operating authority by the California Public Utilities Commission, or
administrative action by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration.
   (3) That the carrier may request a review of the determination by
the department within five days of its receipt of the notice required
under this subdivision. If a review pursuant to this paragraph is
requested by the carrier, the department shall conduct and evaluate
that review prior to transmitting any notification pursuant to
subdivision (a) or (b).
   (e) Upon receipt of a written recommendation from the department
that a motor carrier permit or operating authority be suspended,
revoked, or denied, the Department of Motor Vehicles or Public
Utilities Commission, as appropriate, shall, pending a hearing in the
matter pursuant to Section 34623 or appropriate Public Utilities
Commission authority, suspend the motor carrier permit or operating
authority. The written recommendation shall specifically indicate
compliance with subdivision (d).



34505.7.  (a) Upon determining that a private carrier of passengers,
as defined in Section 4001 of the Public Utilities Code, has either
(1) failed to maintain any vehicle of the carrier in a safe operating
condition or to comply with the Vehicle Code or with regulations
contained in Title 13 of the California Code of Regulations relative
to motor carrier safety, and, in the department's opinion, the
failure presents an imminent danger to public safety or constitutes
such a consistent failure as to justify a recommendation to the
Public Utilities Commission, or (2) failed to enroll all drivers in
the pull notice system as required by Section 1808.1, the department
shall make a written recommendation to the Public Utilities
Commission that the carrier's registration be suspended. Two
consecutive unsatisfactory terminal ratings assigned for failure to
comply with the periodic report requirements in Section 1808.1, or
cancellation of an employer's enrollment by the Department of Motor
Vehicles for nonpayment of fees, constitutes a consistent failure.
The department shall retain a record, by operator, of every
recommendation made pursuant to this section.
   (b) Before transmitting a recommendation pursuant to subdivision
(a), the department shall give written notice to the carrier of all
of the following:
   (1) That the department has determined that the carrier's safety
record is unsatisfactory, furnishing a copy of any documentation or
summary of any other evidence supporting the determination.
   (2) That the determination may result in a suspension or
revocation of the carrier's registration by the California Public
Utilities Commission.
   (3) That the carrier may request a review of the determination by
the department within five days of its receipt of the notice required
by this subdivision. If a review pursuant to this paragraph is
requested by the carrier, the department shall conduct and evaluate
that review prior to transmitting any notification pursuant to
subdivision (a).
   (c) Commercial vehicle inspection facilities along the border of
Mexico, including those in Calexico and Otay Mesa, shall be staffed
at all times by a California Highway Patrol inspector whenever those
facilities are open to the public. The California Highway Patrol
shall also assign, as staffing permits, a commercial inspector to
control truck traffic entering the United States at the Tecate border
crossing.



34505.9.  (a) An ocean marine terminal that receives and dispatches
intermodal chassis may conduct the intermodal roadability inspection
program, as described in this section, in lieu of the inspection
required by Section 34505.5, if the terminal meets all of the
following conditions:
   (1) More than 1,000 chassis are based at the ocean marine
terminal.
   (2) The ocean marine terminal, following the two most recent
consecutive inspections required by Section 34501.12, has received
satisfactory compliance ratings, and the terminal has received no
unsatisfactory compliance ratings as a result of any inspection
conducted in the interim between the consecutive inspections
conducted under Section 34501.12.
   (3) Each intermodal chassis exiting the ocean marine terminal
shall have a current decal and supporting documentation in accordance
with Section 396.17 of Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
   (4) The ocean marine terminal's intermodal roadability inspection
program shall consist of all of the following:
   (A) Each time an intermodal chassis is released from the ocean
marine terminal, the chassis shall be inspected. The inspection shall
include, but not be limited to, brake adjustment, brake system
components and leaks, suspension systems, tires and wheels, vehicle
connecting devices, and lights and electrical system, and shall
include a visual inspection of the chassis to determine that it has
not been tampered with.
   (B) Each inspection shall be recorded on a daily roadability
inspection report that shall include, but not be limited to, all of
the following:
   (i) Positive identification of the intermodal chassis, including
company identification number and vehicle license plate number.
   (ii) Date and nature of each inspection.
   (iii) Signature, under penalty of perjury, of the ocean marine
terminal operator or an authorized representative that the inspection
has been performed.
   (iv) The inspector shall affix a green tag to a chassis that has
passed inspection and a red tag to a chassis that has failed
inspection. The tag shall contain the name of the inspector and the
date and time that the inspection was completed and shall be placed
in a conspicuous location so that it may be viewed from the rear of
the vehicle. The tag shall be provided by the marine terminal
operator and shall meet specifications determined by the Department
of the California Highway Patrol. The provisions of this subparagraph
shall also be applicable to an intermodal chassis inspected by a
marine terminal operator pursuant to Section 34505.5.
   (C) Records of each inspection conducted pursuant to subparagraph
(A) shall be retained for 90 days at the ocean marine terminal at
which each chassis is based and shall be made available upon request
by any authorized employee of the department.
   (D) Defects noted on any intermodal chassis shall be repaired, and
the repairs shall be recorded on the intermodal chassis maintenance
file, before the intermodal chassis is released from the control of
the ocean marine terminal. No vehicle subject to this section shall
be released to a motor carrier or operated on the highway other than
to a place of repair until all defects listed during the inspection
conducted pursuant to subparagraph (A) have been corrected and
attested to by the signature of the operator's authorized
representative.
   (E) Records of maintenance or repairs performed pursuant to the
inspection in subparagraph (A) shall be maintained at the ocean
marine terminal for two years and shall be made available upon
request of the department. Repair records may be retained in a
computer system if printouts of those records are provided to the
department upon request.
   (F)	
	











































		
		
	

	
	
	

			

			
		

		

State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > California > Veh > 34500-34520.5

VEHICLE CODE
SECTION 34500-34520.5



34500.  The department shall regulate the safe operation of the
following vehicles:
   (a) Motortrucks of three or more axles that are more than 10,000
pounds gross vehicle weight rating.
   (b) Truck tractors.
   (c) Buses, schoolbuses, school pupil activity buses, youth buses,
farm labor vehicles, and general public paratransit vehicles.
   (d) Trailers and semitrailers designed or used for the
transportation of more than 10 persons, and the towing motor vehicle.
   (e) Trailers and semitrailers, pole or pipe dollies, auxiliary
dollies, and logging dollies used in combination with vehicles listed
in subdivision (a), (b), (c), or (d). This subdivision does not
include camp trailers, trailer coaches, and utility trailers.
   (f) A combination of a motortruck and a vehicle or vehicles set
forth in subdivision (e) that exceeds 40 feet in length when coupled
together.
   (g) A truck, or a combination of a truck and any other vehicle,
transporting hazardous materials.
   (h) Manufactured homes that, when moved upon the highway, are
required to be moved pursuant to a permit as specified in Section
35780 or 35790.
   (i) A park trailer, as described in Section 18009.3 of the Health
and Safety Code, that, when moved upon a highway, is required to be
moved pursuant to a permit pursuant to Section 35780.
   (j) Any other motortruck not specified in subdivisions (a) to (h),
inclusive, or subdivision (k), that is regulated by the Department
of Motor Vehicles, Public Utilities Commission, or United States
Secretary of the Department of Transportation, but only for matters
relating to hours of service and logbooks of drivers.
   (k) A commercial motor vehicle with a gross vehicle weight rating
of 26,001 or more pounds or a commercial motor vehicle of any gross
vehicle weight rating towing a vehicle described in subdivision (e)
with a gross vehicle weight rating of more than 10,000 pounds, except
combinations including camp trailers, trailer coaches, or utility
trailers. For purposes of this subdivision, the term "commercial
motor vehicle" has the meaning defined in subdivision (b) of Section
15210.


34500.1.  In addition to the duties imposed by Section 34500, the
department shall regulate the safe operation of tour buses.



34500.2.  No additional inspection shall be required under this
division on any vehicle which is owned and operated by a public
agency and is used for responding to and returning from an emergency,
as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 35002, during the duration
of the emergency, as determined by the public agency, if an
inspection pursuant to Section 1215 of Title 13 of the California
Code of Regulations has been completed on the vehicle within the past
24 hours. Any vehicle used in responding to an emergency shall be
inspected immediately upon the termination of the emergency.



34500.3.  (a) The department shall adopt rules and regulations that
are designed to promote the safe operation of vehicles, regarding
cargo securement standards. The regulations adopted pursuant to this
section shall be consistent with the securement regulations adopted
by the United States Department of Transportation in Part 393
(commencing with Section 393.1) of Title 49 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, as those regulations now exist or are amended in the
future.
   (b) Regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) do not apply
to the transportation of a pole on a pole dolly by a public utility
company or a local public agency engaged in the business of supplying
electricity or telephone service, by the Department of
Transportation, or by a licensed contractor in the performance of
work for a public utility company, a local agency, or the Department
of Transportation, when the transportation is between storage yards
or between a storage yard and job location where the pole is to be
used. However, no more than nine poles shall be transported on a
dolly if any of those poles exceeds a length of 30 feet. If poles 30
feet or less are transported by a pole or pipe dolly, no more than 18
poles shall be transported. A pole shall be adequately secured when
being transported on a dolly, to prevent shifting or spilling of a
load.
   (c) Regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) do not apply
to a farmer transporting his or her own hay or straw, incidental to
his or her farming operation, if that transportation requires that
the farmer use a highway, except that this subdivision does not
relieve the farmer from loading and securing the hay or straw in a
safe manner.



34500.5.  For purposes of this division, the term "commercial motor
vehicle" has the same meaning as defined in subdivision (b) of
Section 15210.


34501.  (a) (1) The department shall adopt reasonable rules and
regulations that, in the judgment of the department, are designed to
promote the safe operation of vehicles described in Section 34500,
regarding, but not limited to, controlled substances and alcohol
testing of drivers by motor carriers, hours of service of drivers,
equipment, fuel containers, fueling operations, inspection,
maintenance, recordkeeping, accident reports, and drawbridges. The
rules and regulations shall not, however, be applicable to
schoolbuses, which shall be subject to rules and regulations adopted
pursuant to Section 34501.5.
   The rules and regulations shall exempt local law enforcement
agencies, within a single county, engaged in the transportation of
inmates or prisoners when those agencies maintain other motor vehicle
operations records which furnish hours of service information on
drivers which are in substantial compliance with the rules and
regulations. This exemption does not apply to any local law
enforcement agency engaged in the transportation of inmates or
prisoners outside the county in which the agency is located, if that
agency would otherwise be required, by existing law, to maintain
driving logs.
   (2) The department may adopt rules and regulations relating to
commercial vehicle safety inspection and out-of-service criteria. In
adopting the rules and regulations, the commissioner may consider the
commercial vehicle safety inspection and out-of-service criteria
adopted by organizations such as the Commercial Vehicle Safety
Alliance , other intergovernmental safety group, or the United States
Department of Transportation. The commissioner may provide
departmental representatives to that alliance or other organization
for the purpose of promoting the continued improvement and refinement
of compatible nationwide commercial vehicle safety inspection and
out-of-service criteria.
   (3) The commissioner shall appoint a committee of 15 members,
consisting of representatives of industry subject to the regulations
to be adopted pursuant to this section, to act in an advisory
capacity to the department, and the department shall cooperate and
confer with the advisory committee so appointed. The commissioner
shall appoint a separate committee to advise the department on rules
and regulations concerning wheelchair lifts for installation and use
on buses, consisting of persons who use the wheelchair lifts,
representatives of transit districts, representatives of designers or
manufacturers of wheelchairs and wheelchair lifts, and
representatives of the Department of Transportation.
   (4) The department may inspect any vehicles in maintenance
facilities or terminals, as well as any records relating to the
dispatch of vehicles or drivers, and the pay of drivers, to assure
compliance with this code and regulations adopted pursuant to this
section.
   (b) The department, using the definitions adopted pursuant to
Section 2402.7, shall adopt regulations for the transportation of
hazardous materials in this state, except the transportation of
materials which are subject to other provisions of this code, that
the department determines are reasonably necessary to ensure the
safety of persons and property using the highways. The regulations
may include provisions governing the filling, marking, packing,
labeling, and assembly of, and containers that may be used for,
hazardous materials shipments, and the manner by which the shipper
attests that the shipments are correctly identified and in proper
condition for transport.
   (c) At least once every 13 months, the department shall inspect
every maintenance facility or terminal of any person who at any time
operates any bus. If the bus operation includes more than 100 buses,
the inspection shall be without prior notice.
   (d) The commissioner shall adopt and enforce regulations which
will make the public or private users of any bus aware of the
operator's last safety rating.
   (e) It is unlawful and constitutes a misdemeanor for any person to
operate any bus without the inspection specified in subdivision (c)
having been conducted.
   (f) The department may adopt regulations restricting or
prohibiting the movement of any vehicle from a maintenance facility
or terminal if the vehicle is found in violation of this code or
regulations adopted pursuant to this section.



34501.1.  A manufacturer or distributor of wheelchair lifts for
buses, schoolbuses, youth buses, and general public transit vehicles,
regardless of capacity, shall, prior to the distribution of the
wheelchair lift model in California, provide to the Department of the
California Highway Patrol proof of certification from an independent
laboratory or registered mechanical engineer of this state that the
wheelchair lift model complies with the California and any federal
law and the regulations adopted pursuant thereto.



34501.2.  (a) The regulations adopted under Section 34501 for
vehicles engaged in interstate or intrastate commerce shall establish
hours-of-service regulations for drivers of those vehicles that are
consistent with the hours-of-service regulations adopted by the
United States Department of Transportation in Part 395 of Title 49 of
the Code of Federal Regulations, as those regulations now exist or
are hereafter amended.
   (b) The regulations adopted under Section 34501 for vehicles
engaged in intrastate commerce that are not transporting hazardous
substances or hazardous waste, as those terms are defined by
regulations in Section 171.8 of Title 49 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, as those regulations now exist or are hereafter amended,
shall have the following exceptions:
   (1) The maximum driving time within a work period shall be 12
hours for a driver of a truck or truck tractor, except for a driver
of a tank vehicle with a capacity of more than 500 gallons
transporting flammable liquid, who shall not drive for more than 10
hours within a work period.
   (2) A motor carrier shall not permit or require a driver to drive,
nor shall any driver drive, for any period after having been on duty
for 80 hours in any consecutive eight days.
   (3) A driver employed by an electrical corporation, as defined in
Section 218 of the Public Utilities Code, a gas corporation, as
defined in Section 222 of that code, a telephone corporation, as
defined in Section 234 of that code, a water corporation, as defined
in Section 241 of that code, or a public water district as defined in
Section 20200 of the Water Code, is exempt from all hours-of-service
regulations while operating a public utility or public water
district vehicle.
   (4) Any other exceptions applicable to drivers assigned to
governmental fire suppression and prevention, as determined by the
department.
   (5) A driver employed by a law enforcement agency, as defined in
Section 390.3(f)(2) of Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations,
as that section now exists or is hereafter amended, during an
emergency or to restore the public peace.
   (c) The regulations adopted under Section 34501 for vehicles
engaged in the transportation of farm products in intrastate commerce
shall include all of the following provisions:
   (1) A driver employed by an agricultural carrier, including a
carrier holding a seasonal permit, or by a private carrier, when
transporting farm products from the field to the first point of
processing or packing, shall not drive for any period after having
been on duty 16 hours or more following eight consecutive hours off
duty and shall not drive for any period after having been on duty for
112 hours in any consecutive eight-day period, except that a driver
transporting special situation farm products from the field to the
first point of processing or packing, or transporting livestock from
pasture to pasture, may be permitted, during one period of not more
than 28 consecutive days or a combination of two periods totaling not
more than 28 days in a calendar year, to drive for not more than 12
hours during any workday of not more than 16 hours. A driver who
thereby exceeds the driving time limits specified in paragraph (2) of
subdivision (b) shall maintain a driver's record of duty status, and
shall keep a duplicate copy in his or her possession when driving a
vehicle subject to this chapter. These records shall be presented
immediately upon request by any authorized employee of the
department, or any police officer or deputy sheriff.
   (2) Upon the request of the Director of Food and Agriculture, the
commissioner may, for good cause, temporarily waive the maximum
on-duty time limits applicable to any eight-day period when an
emergency exists due to inclement weather, natural disaster, or an
adverse economic condition that threatens to disrupt the orderly
movement of farm products during harvest for the duration of the
emergency. For purposes of this paragraph, an emergency does not
include a strike or labor dispute.
   (3) For purposes of this subdivision, the following terms have the
following meanings:
   (A) "Farm products" means every agricultural, horticultural,
viticultural, or vegetable product of the soil, honey and beeswax,
oilseeds, poultry, livestock, milk, or timber.
   (B) "First point of processing or packing" means a location where
farm products are dried, canned, extracted, fermented, distilled,
frozen, ginned, eviscerated, pasteurized, packed, packaged, bottled,
conditioned, or otherwise manufactured, processed, or preserved for
distribution in wholesale or retail markets.
   (C) "Special situation farm products" means fruit, tomatoes, sugar
beets, grains, wine grapes, grape concentrate, cotton, or nuts.



34501.3.  (a) No motor carrier shall schedule a run or permit or
require the operation of any motor vehicle subject to this division
between points within a period of time which would do either of the
following:
   (1) Necessitate the vehicle being operated at speeds greater than
those prescribed by this code.
   (2) Require the driver of the vehicle to exceed the applicable
maximum hours of service.
   (b) A logbook of a driver, which reflects a trip or trips between
points within a period of time which would have necessitated
excessive speed to complete, shall give rise to a rebuttable
presumption that the driver exceeded the lawful speed limit.
   (c) For a violation of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), a first
offense is punishable by a fine of not more than one thousand dollars
($1,000), a second offense by a fine of not more than two thousand
five hundred dollars ($2,500), and a third or subsequent offense by a
fine of not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000).



34501.4.  Any driver subject to the hours of service limitations and
logbook requirements of this division, who is unable to produce upon
request of a representative of the department any driver's logbook
or is only able to produce an incomplete driver's log book for the
prior 24-hour period, is rebuttably presumed to be in violation of
the hours of service limitations in Sections 34501 and 34501.2.




34501.5.  (a) The Department of the California Highway Patrol shall
adopt reasonable rules and regulations which, in the judgment of the
department, are designed to promote the safe operation of vehicles
described in Sections 39830 and 82321 of the Education Code and
Sections 545 and 34500 of this code. The Commissioner of the
California Highway Patrol shall appoint a committee of 11 members to
act in an advisory capacity when developing and adopting regulations
affecting school pupil transportation buses and school pupil
transportation operations. The advisory committee shall consist of 11
members appointed as follows:
   (1) One member of the State Department of Education.
   (2) One member of the Department of Motor Vehicles.
   (3) One member of the Department of the California Highway Patrol.
   (4) One member who is employed as a schoolbus driver.
   (5) One member of the Office of Traffic Safety in the Business,
Transportation and Housing Agency.
   (6) Two members who are schoolbus contractors, one of whom shall
be from an urban area of the state and one of whom shall be from a
rural area of the state, as determined by the department.
   (7) Two members who are representatives of school districts, one
of whom shall be from an urban area of the state and one of whom
shall be from a rural area of the state, as determined by the
department.
   (8) One professionally licensed member of the American Academy of
Pediatrics.
   (9) One member representing school pupil transportation operations
other than schoolbus operations.
   (b) The department shall cooperate and confer with the advisory
committee appointed pursuant to this section prior to adopting rules
or regulations affecting school pupil transportation buses and school
pupil transportation operations.



34501.6.  The governing board of a local educational agency that
provides for the transportation of pupils shall adopt procedures that
limit the operation of schoolbuses when atmospheric conditions
reduce visibility on the roadway to 200 feet or less during regular
home-to-school transportation service. Operational policies for
school activity trips shall give schoolbus drivers discretionary
authority to discontinue schoolbus operation if the driver determines
that it is unsafe to continue operation because of reduced
visibility.


34501.7.  (a) Any rules or regulations adopted pursuant to Section
34501 for the construction, testing, or certification of wheelchair
lifts for installation and use on buses shall take into consideration
the costs of implementing the regulations and shall be reviewed and
brought up to date by the department annually.
   (b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 1987.



34501.8.  (a) The Department of the California Highway Patrol shall
inspect every general public paratransit vehicle, as defined in
Section 336, at least once each year to certify that its condition
complies with all provisions of law, including being equipped with a
fire extinguisher, first-aid kit, and three-point tie downs for
transporting wheelchair passengers.
   (b) On or after July 1, 1989, no person shall drive any general
public paratransit vehicle unless there is displayed therein a
certificate issued by the Department of the California Highway Patrol
stating that on a certain date, which shall be within 13 months of
the date of operation, an authorized employee of the Department of
the California Highway Patrol inspected the general public
paratransit vehicle and found that on the date of inspection the
general public paratransit vehicle complied with the applicable
provisions of state law. The Commissioner of the California Highway
Patrol shall provide, by rule or regulation, for the issuance and
display of distinctive inspection certificates.
   (c) The Commissioner of the California Highway Patrol shall
determine a fee and method of collection for the annual inspection of
general public paratransit vehicles. The fee, established by
regulation, shall be sufficient to cover the cost to the department
for general public paratransit vehicle inspections. All fees received
shall be deposited in the Motor Vehicle Account in the State
Transportation Fund.
   This section shall become operative January 1, 1989.



34501.9.  (a) Nothing in this division or the regulations adopted
under this division is intended to, or shall, affect the rate of
payment of wages, including, but not limited to, regular, premium, or
overtime rates, paid to any person whether for on-duty hours or
driving hours or otherwise.
   (b) Nothing in this division or the regulations adopted under this
division is intended to, or shall, affect the regulations adopted
pursuant to other provisions of law concerning the rate or rates of
payment of wages by any other public agency, including, but not
limited to, the Industrial Welfare Commission or the Division of
Labor Standards Enforcement of the Department of Industrial
Relations.


34501.10.  The employer of any person required to keep log books,
records of physical examination, and other driver records as may be
required by the Department of the California Highway Patrol, the
Department of Motor Vehicles, or the State Department of Health
Services, shall register with the Department of the California
Highway Patrol the address where the log books and other records are
available for inspection.



34501.12.  (a) Notwithstanding Section 408, as used in this section
and Sections 34505.5 and 34505.6, "motor carrier" means the
registered owner of a vehicle described in subdivision (a), (b), (e),
(f), or (g) of Section 34500, except in the following circumstances:
   (1) The registered owner leases the vehicle to another person for
a term of more than four months. If the lease is for more than four
months, the lessee is the motor carrier.
   (2) The registered owner operates the vehicle exclusively under
the authority and direction of another person. If the operation is
exclusively under the authority and direction of another person, that
other person may assume the responsibilities as the motor carrier.
If not so assumed, the registered owner is the motor carrier. A
person who assumes the motor carrier responsibilities of another
pursuant to subdivision (b) shall provide to that other person whose
motor carrier responsibility is so assumed, a completed copy of a
departmental form documenting that assumption, stating the period for
which responsibility is assumed, and signed by an agent of the
assuming person. A legible copy shall be carried in each vehicle or
combination of vehicles operated on the highway during the period for
which responsibility is assumed. That copy shall be presented upon
request by an authorized employee of the department. The original
completed departmental form documenting the assumption shall be
provided to the department within 30 days of the assumption. If the
assumption of responsibility is terminated, the person who had
assumed responsibility shall so notify the department in writing
within 30 days of the termination.
   (b) (1) A motor carrier may combine two or more terminals that are
not subject to an unsatisfactory compliance rating within the last
36 months for purposes of the inspection required by subdivision (d),
subject to all of the following conditions:
   (A) The carrier identifies to the department, in writing, each
terminal proposed to be included in the combination of terminals for
purposes of this subdivision prior to an inspection of the designated
terminal pursuant to subdivision (d).
   (B) The carrier provides the department, prior to the inspection
of the designated terminal pursuant to subdivision (d), a written
listing of all its vehicles of a type subject to subdivision (a),
(b), (e), (f), or (g) of Section 34500 that are based at each of the
terminals combined for purposes of this subdivision. The listing
shall specify the number of vehicles of each type at each terminal.
   (C) The carrier provides to the department at the designated
terminal during the inspection all maintenance records and driver
records and a representative sample of vehicles based at each of the
terminals included within the combination of terminals.
   (2) If the carrier fails to provide the maintenance records,
driver records, and representative sample of vehicles pursuant to
subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1), the department shall assign the
carrier an unsatisfactory terminal rating and require a reinspection
to be conducted pursuant to subdivision (h).
   (3) For purposes of this subdivision, the following terms have the
following meanings:
   (A) "Driver records" includes pull notice system records, driver
proficiency records, and driver timekeeping records.
   (B) "Maintenance records" includes all required maintenance,
lubrication, and repair records and drivers' daily vehicle condition
reports.
   (C) "Representative sample" means the following, applied
separately to the carrier's fleet of motortrucks and truck tractors
and its fleet of trailers:

               Representative
  Fleet Size       Sample
  1 or 2             All
  3 to 8              3
  9 to 15             4
  16 to 25            6
  26 to 50            9
  51 to 90           14
  91 or more         20

   (c) Each motor carrier who, in this state, directs the operation
of, or maintains, a vehicle of a type described in subdivision (a)
shall designate one or more terminals, as defined in Section 34515,
in this state where vehicles can be inspected by the department
pursuant to paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 34501 and
where vehicle inspection and maintenance records and driver records
will be made available for inspection.
   (d) (1) The department shall inspect, at least every 25 months,
every terminal, as defined in Section 34515, of a motor carrier who,
at any time, operates a vehicle described in subdivision (a).
   (2) The department shall place an inspection priority on those
terminals operating vehicles listed in subdivision (g) of Section
34500.
   (3) As used in this section and in Sections 34505.5 and 34505.6,
subdivision (f) of Section 34500 includes only those combinations
where the gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of the towing vehicle
exceeds 10,000 pounds, but does not include a pickup truck, and
subdivision (g) of Section 34500 includes only those vehicles
transporting hazardous material for which the display of placards is
required pursuant to Section 27903, a license is required pursuant to
Section 32000.5, or for which hazardous waste transporter
registration is required pursuant to Section 25163 of the Health and
Safety Code. Historical vehicles, as described in Section 5004,
vehicles that display special identification plates in accordance
with Section 5011, implements of husbandry and farm vehicles, as
defined in Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 36000) of Division 16,
and vehicles owned or operated by an agency of the federal government
are not subject to this section or to Sections 34505.5 and 34505.6.
   (e) (1) It is the responsibility of the motor carrier to schedule
with the department the inspection required by subdivision (d). The
motor carrier shall submit an application form supplied by the
department, accompanied by the required fee contained in paragraph
(2), for each terminal the motor carrier operates. This fee shall be
submitted within 30 days of establishing a terminal. All fees
submitted under paragraph (2) are nonrefundable.
   (2) (A) The fee for each terminal is set forth in the following
table:


  Terminal      Required fee per terminal
  fleet size
  1                       $ 270
  2                       $ 375
  3 to 8                  $ 510
  9 to 15                 $ 615
  16 to 25                $ 800
  26 to 50                $1,040
  51 to 90                $1,165
  91 or more              $1,870

   (B) In addition to the fee specified in subparagraph (A), the
motor carrier shall submit an additional fee of three hundred fifty
dollars ($350) for each of its terminals not previously inspected
under the section.
   (3) Except as provided in paragraph (5), the inspection term for
each inspected terminal of a motor carrier shall expire 25 months
from the date the terminal receives a satisfactory compliance rating,
as specified in subdivision (h). Applications and fees for
subsequent inspections shall be submitted not earlier than nine
months and not later than seven months before the expiration of the
motor carrier's then current inspection term. If the motor carrier
has submitted the inspection application and the required
accompanying fees, but the department is unable to complete the
inspection within the 25-month inspection period, then no additional
fee shall be required for the inspection requested in the original
application.
   (4) All fees collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be
deposited in the Motor Vehicle Account in the State Transportation
Fund. An amount equal to the fees collected shall be available for
appropriation by the Legislature from the Motor Vehicle Account to
the department for the purpose of conducting truck terminal
inspections and for the additional roadside safety inspections
required by Section 34514.
   (5) To avoid the scheduling of a renewal terminal inspection
pursuant to this section during a carrier's seasonal peak business
periods, the current inspection term of a terminal that has paid all
required fees and has been rated satisfactory in its last inspection
may be reduced by not more than nine months if a written request is
submitted by the carrier to the department at least four months prior
to the desired inspection month, or at the time of payment of
renewal inspection fees in compliance with paragraph (3), whichever
date is earlier. A motor carrier may request this adjustment of the
inspection term during any inspection cycle. A request made pursuant
to this paragraph shall not result in a fee proration and does not
relieve the carrier from the requirements of paragraph (3).
   (6) Failure to pay a fee required by this section, within the
appropriate timeframe, shall result in additional delinquent fees as
follows:
   (A) For a delinquency period of more than 30 days, the penalty is
60 percent of the required fee.
   (B) For a delinquency period of one to two years, the penalty is
80 percent of the required fee.
   (C) For a delinquency period of more than two years, the penalty
is 160 percent of the required fee.
   (7) Federal, state, and local public entities are exempt from the
fee requirement of this section.
   (f) It is unlawful for a motor carrier to operate a vehicle
subject to this section without having submitted an inspection
application and the required fees to the department as required by
subdivision (e) or (h).
   (g) (1) It is unlawful for a motor carrier to operate a vehicle
subject to this section after submitting an inspection application to
the department, without the inspection described in subdivision (d)
having been performed and a safety compliance report having been
issued to the motor carrier within the 25-month inspection period or
within 60 days immediately preceding the inspection period.
   (2) It is unlawful for a motor carrier to contract or subcontract
with, or otherwise engage the services of, another motor carrier,
subject to this section, unless the contracted motor carrier has
complied with this section. A motor carrier shall not contract or
subcontract with, or otherwise engage the services of, another motor
carrier until the contracted motor carrier provides certification of
compliance with this section. This certification shall be completed
in writing by the contracted motor carrier. The certification, or a
copy thereof, shall be maintained by each involved party for the
duration of the contract or the period of service plus two years, and
shall be presented for inspection immediately upon the request of an
authorized employee of the department.
   (h) (1) An inspected terminal that receives an unsatisfactory
compliance rating shall be reinspected within 120 days after the
issuance of the unsatisfactory compliance rating.
   (2) A terminal's first required reinspection under this
subdivision shall be without charge unless one or more of the
following is established:
   (A) The motor carrier's operation presented an imminent danger to
public safety.
   (B) The motor carrier was not in compliance with the requirement
to enroll all drivers in the pull notice program pursuant to Section
1808.1.
   (C) The motor carrier failed to provide all required records and
vehicles for a consolidated inspection pursuant to subdivision (b).
   (3) If the unsatisfactory rating was assigned for any of the
reasons set forth in paragraph (2), the carrier shall submit the
required fee as provided in paragraph (4).
   (4) Applications for reinspection pursuant to paragraph (3) or for
second and subsequent consecutive reinspections under this
subdivision shall be accompanied by the fee specified in paragraph
(2) of subdivision (e) and shall be filed within 60 days of issuance
of the unsatisfactory compliance rating. The reinspection fee is
nonrefundable.
   (5) When a motor carrier's Motor Carrier of Property Permit or
Public Utilities Commission operating authority is suspended as a
result of an unsatisfactory compliance rating, the department shall
not conduct a reinspection for permit or authority reinstatement
until requested to do so by the Department of Motor Vehicles or the
Public Utilities Commission, as appropriate.
   (i) It is the intent of the Legislature that the department make
its best efforts to inspect terminals within the resources provided.
In the interest of the state, the Commissioner of the California
Highway Patrol may extend for a period, not to exceed six months, the
inspection terms beginning prior to July 1, 1990.
   (j) Except as provided in paragraph (5), to encourage motor
carriers to attain continuous satisfactory compliance ratings, the
department may establish and implement an incentive program
consisting of the following:
   (1) After the second consecutive satisfactory compliance rating
assigned to a motor carrier terminal as a result of an inspection
conducted pursuant to subdivision (d), and after each consecutive
satisfactory compliance rating thereafter, an appropriate
certificate, denoting the number of consecutive satisfactory ratings,
shall be awarded to the terminal, unless the terminal has received
an unsatisfactory compliance rating as a result of an inspection
conducted in the interim between the consecutive inspections
conducted under subdivision (d), or the motor carrier is rated
unsatisfactory by the department following a controlled substances
and alcohol testing program inspection. The certificate authorized
under this paragraph shall not be awarded for performance in the
administrative review authorized under paragraph (2). However, the
certificate shall include a reference to any administrative reviews
conducted during the period of consecutive satisfactory compliance
ratings.
   (2) Unless the department's evaluation of the motor carrier's
safety record indicates a declining level of compliance, a terminal
that has attained two consecutive satisfactory compliance ratings
assigned following inspections conducted pursuant to subdivision (d)
is eligible for an administrative review in lieu of the next required
inspection, unless the terminal has received an unsatisfactory
compliance rating as a result of an inspection conducted in the
interim between the consecutive inspections conducted under
subdivision (d). An administrative review shall consist of all of the
following:
   (A) A signed request by a terminal management representative
requesting the administrative review in lieu of the required
inspection containing a promise to continue to maintain a
satisfactory level of compliance for the next 25-month inspection
term.
   (B) A review with a terminal management representative of the
carrier's record as contained in the department's files. If a
terminal has been authorized a second consecutive administrative
review, the review required under this subparagraph is optional, and
may be omitted at the carrier's request.
   (C) Absent any cogent reasons to the contrary, upon completion of
the requirements of subparagraphs (A) and (B), the safety compliance
rating assigned during the last required inspection shall be extended
for 25 months.
   (3) Not more than two administrative reviews may be conducted
consecutively. At the completion of the 25-month inspection term
following a second administrative review, a terminal inspection shall
be conducted pursuant to subdivision (d). If this inspection results
in a satisfactory compliance rating, the terminal shall again be
eligible for an administrative review in lieu of the next required
inspection. If the succession of satisfactory ratings is interrupted
by a rating of other than satisfactory, irrespective of the reason
for the inspection, the terminal shall again attain two consecutive
satisfactory ratings to become eligible for an administrative review.
   (4) As a condition for receiving the administrative reviews
authorized under this subdivision in lieu of inspections, and in
order to ensure that compliance levels remain satisfactory, the motor
carrier shall agree to accept random, unannounced inspections by the
department.
   (5) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) to (4), inclusive, a motor
carrier of hazardous materials shall not be granted administrative
review pursuant to this subdivision in lieu of a terminal inspection
pursuant to subdivision (d) at any terminal from which hazardous
materials carrying vehicles identified by paragraph (3) of
subdivision (d) are operated.
   (k) This section shall be known and may be cited as the Biennial
Inspection of Terminals Program or BIT.



34501.14.  (a) Notwithstanding Section 34501.12, for purposes of
this division, safety inspections of grape gondolas are governed by
this section.
   (b) Every registered owner of a grape gondola shall submit an
application and the fee specified in subdivision (g) to the
department for the initial inspection required by this section. The
initial application shall be submitted on or before July 1, 1993. The
inspection term for a grape gondola shall expire 25 months from the
date the department conducts the inspection, and issues a certificate
indicating the gondola has passed the inspection, and every 25
months thereafter. Applications and fees for subsequent inspections
and certificates shall be submitted not later than seven months
before the expiration of the then current inspection term. If the
registered owner has submitted the inspection application and the
required accompanying fees, but the department is unable to complete
the inspection within the 25-month inspection period, then no
additional fee shall be required for the inspection requested in the
original application.
   (c) On and after July 1, 1993, no person may operate any grape
gondola without having submitted an inspection application and the
required fees to the department as required by this section.
   (d) On and after January 1, 1995, no person may operate any grape
gondola, without the inspection described in subdivision (e) having
been performed and a certificate having been issued to the owner.
   (e) The safety inspection undertaken pursuant to this section
shall be limited to an inspection of the brake system, steering,
lights, connections, wheels and tires, frame, and suspension.
   (f) For purposes of undertaking the inspection of grape gondolas
under this section, the department shall schedule all inspections at
one central location during a continuous eight-week period every
odd-numbered year with at least two days of each week during that
eight-week period devoted to the actual inspection. If the gondola
does not pass its first inspection, it may be reinspected during the
eight-week period at no additional cost.
   (g) Fees shall be established by the department in an amount equal
to the actual costs incurred by the department in carrying out this
section, but not to exceed twenty-five dollars ($25) for each
inspection or reinspection.
   (h) As used in this section, "grape gondola" means a motor vehicle
which has been permanently altered and is attached to a grape tank
by two means. The first mean is by use of a kingpin on the trunk
which is centered through a turntable assembly on the tank. The
second means of attachment is through the use of a pair of horizontal
crossarms between the drive axle and the rear tank axle. The tank is
designed to pivot off of the chassis on two support arms during
dumping, and is further designed to be specifically compatible with
dumping facilities of the wineries.
   (i) This section only applies to a grape gondola that is used
under all of the following conditions:
   (1) For 60 days or less during any calendar year.
   (2) For not more than 500 miles in any calendar year.
   (3) Only for the transportation of grapes.



34501.13.  If the inspection of a carrier facility, maintenance
facility, or terminal of any person who operates a schoolbus results
in an unsatisfactory terminal rating by the department, the
department shall notify the school board of the district that is
responsible for the terminal.



34501.15.  (a) The regulations adopted pursuant to Section 34501
shall require that any driver of a commercial motor vehicle, as
defined in Section 15210, be ordered out of service for 24 hours if
the driver is found to have 0.01 percent or more, by weight, of
alcohol in his or her blood.
   (b) This section shall become operative on January 1, 1992, and
shall remain operative until the director determines that federal
regulations adopted pursuant to the Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety
Act of 1986 (49 U.S.C. Sec. 2701 et seq.) contained in that act and
Section 391.15 of Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations do not
require the state to order the operator of a commercial vehicle out
of service for 24 hours when the operator has a measurable
concentration of alcohol in his or her blood.
   (c) The director shall submit a notice of the determination under
subdivision (b) to the Secretary of State, and this section shall be
repealed upon the receipt of that notice.



34501.16.  (a) Every employer of a commercial driver shall provide
information to that employee at the time of hiring and to all
employed commercial drivers annually, concerning all of the
following:
   (1) The prohibition against driving a commercial motor vehicle
with over 0.04 percent or more, by weight, alcohol in his or her
blood on and after January 1, 1992.
   (2) The requirement to be placed out of service for 24 hours if
the person's blood-alcohol concentration is tested to be 0.01 percent
or more, by weight, on and after January 1, 1992.
   (b) The Department of Motor Vehicles shall include the information
prescribed in subdivision (a), together with information concerning
the alcohol concentration in a person's blood resulting from
consumption of alcoholic beverages, in each publication of the
commercial driver's handbook published after January 1, 1990.
   (c) This section shall remain operative until the director
determines that federal regulations adopted pursuant to the
Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1986 (49 U.S.C. Sec. 2701 et
seq.) do not require the state to implement the prohibitions and
requirements in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a).
   (d) The director shall submit a notice of the determination under
subdivision (c) to the Secretary of State, and this section shall be
repealed upon the receipt of that notice.



34501.17.  (a) All paratransit vehicles shall be regularly and
systematically inspected, maintained, and lubricated by the owner or
operator in accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations, or
more often if necessary to ensure the safe operating condition of the
vehicle. The maintenance shall include, at a minimum, in-depth
inspection of the vehicle's brake system, steering components,
lighting system, and wheels and tires, to be performed at intervals
in accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations.
   (b) All owners or operators of paratransit vehicles shall document
each systematic inspection, maintenance, and lubrication and repair
performed for each vehicle subject to this section. Required records
shall include service performed, the name of the person performing
the service, the date that the service was performed, and the
odometer reading of the vehicle at the time of the service. The
records shall be maintained for the period that the vehicle is in
service at the place of business in this state of the owner or
operator of the vehicle, and shall be presented upon demand to any
authorized representative of the department. The odometer of a
paratransit vehicle shall be maintained in proper working order.



34501.18.  (a) Every motor carrier regularly employing more than 20
full-time drivers shall report to the department whenever it replaces
more than half of its drivers within a 30-day period. Within 21 days
of receipt of that report, the department shall inspect the motor
carrier to ensure that the motor carrier is complying with all safety
of operations requirements, including, but not limited to,
controlled substances testing and hours-of-service regulations. The
reporting requirement of this subdivision does not apply to a motor
carrier who, through normal seasonal fluctuations in the business
operations of the carrier, or through termination of a contract for
transportation services, other than a collective bargaining
agreement, replaces drivers in one geographical location with drivers
in another geographical location.
   (b) For the purposes of subdivision (a), "employing" means having
an employer-employee relationship with a driver or contracting with
an owner-operator, as described in Section 34624, to provide
transportation services for more than 30 days within the previous
year.
   (c) For the purposes of subdivision (a), "full-time" means that
the driver is on-duty with the motor carrier for an average of 30
hours or more per week during the course of his or her employment or
contract with the motor carrier.



34502.  In adopting rules and regulations, the Department of the
California Highway Patrol shall consider as evidence of generally
accepted safety standards the rules and regulations which have been
adopted by the Public Utilities Commission.




34503.  It is the legislative intention in enacting this division
that the rules and regulations adopted by the Department of the
California Highway Patrol pursuant to this division shall apply
uniformly throughout the State of California, and no state agency,
city, city and county, county, or other political subdivision of this
State, including, but not limited to, a chartered city, city and
county, or county, shall adopt or enforce any ordinance or regulation
which is inconsistent with the rules and regulations adopted by the
department pursuant to this division.



34504.  The Department of the California Highway Patrol shall
enforce the rules and regulations adopted pursuant to Section 34501.
Rules and regulations adopted pursuant to Section 34501 shall become
effective on March 1, 1965.


34505.  (a) Tour bus operators shall, in addition to the systematic
inspection, maintenance, and lubrication services required of all
motor carriers, require each tour bus to be inspected at least every
45 days, or more often if necessary to ensure safe operation. This
inspection shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
   (1) Brake adjustment.
   (2) Brake system components and leaks.
   (3) Steering and suspension systems.
   (4) Tires and wheels.
   (b) A tour bus shall not be used to transport passengers until all
defects listed during the inspection conducted pursuant to
subdivision (a) have been corrected and attested to by the signature
of the operator's authorized representative.
   (c) Records of inspections conducted pursuant to subdivision (a)
shall be kept at the operator's maintenance facility or terminal
where the tour bus is regularly garaged. The records shall be
retained by the operator for one year, and shall be made available
for inspection upon request by any authorized employee of the
department. Each record shall include, but not be limited to, all of
the following:
   (1) Identification of the vehicle, including make, model, license
number, or other means of positive identification.
   (2) Date and nature of each inspection and any repair performed.
   (3) Signature of operator's authorized representative attesting to
the inspection and to the completion of all required repairs.
   (4) Company vehicle number.



34505.1.  (a) Upon determining that a tour bus operator has either
(1) failed to maintain any vehicle used in transportation for
compensation in a safe operating condition or to comply with the
Vehicle Code or with regulations contained in Title 13 of the
California Code of Regulations relative to motor carrier safety, and,
in the department's opinion, that failure presents an imminent
danger to public safety or constitutes such a consistent failure as
to justify a recommendation to the Public Utilities Commission or the
Interstate Commerce Commission or (2) failed to enroll all drivers
in the pull notice system as required by Section 1808.1, the
department shall recommend to the Public Utilities Commission that
the carrier's operating authority be suspended, denied, or revoked,
or to the federal Highway Administration Office of Motor Carriers,
that appropriate administrative action be taken against the carrier's
Interstate Commerce Commission operating authority, whichever is
appropriate. For purposes of this subdivision, two consecutive
unsatisfactory compliance ratings for an inspected terminal assigned
because the tour bus operator failed to comply with the periodic
report requirements of Section 1808.1 or the cancellation of the
operator's enrollment by the Department of Motor Vehicles for
nonpayment of required fees is a consistent failure. However, when
recommending denial of an application for new or renewal authority,
the department need not conclude that the carrier's failure presents
an imminent danger to public safety or that it constitutes a
consistent failure. The department need only conclude that the
carrier's compliance with the safety-related matters described in
paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) is sufficiently unsatisfactory to
justify a recommendation for denial. The department shall retain a
record, by operator, of every recommendation made pursuant to this
section.
   (b) Before transmitting a recommendation pursuant to subdivision
(a), the department shall notify the carrier in writing of all of the
following:
   (1) That the department has determined that the carrier's safety
record is unsatisfactory, furnishing a copy of any documentation or
summary of any other evidence supporting the determination.
   (2) That the determination may result in a suspension, revocation,
or denial of the carrier's operating authority by the California
Public Utilities Commission or the Interstate Commerce Commission.
   (3) That the carrier may request a review of the determination by
the department within five days of its receipt of the notice required
under this subdivision. If a review is requested by the carrier, the
department shall conduct and evaluate that review prior to
transmitting any notification pursuant to subdivision (a).



34505.5.  (a) Every motor carrier operating any vehicle described in
subdivision (a), (b), (e), (f), or (g) of Section 34500, except
those vehicles exempted under Section 34501.12, shall, as a part of
the systematic inspection, maintenance, and lubrication services
required of all motor carriers, require the vehicle or vehicles for
which it is responsible pursuant to Section 34501.12 to be inspected
at least every 90 days, or more often if necessary to ensure safe
operation. Vehicles which are out of service for periods greater than
90 calendar days are not required to be inspected at 90-day
intervals if they are inspected before operation on the highway. This
inspection shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
   (1) Brake adjustment.
   (2) Brake system components and leaks.
   (3) Steering and suspension systems.
   (4) Tires and wheels.
   (5) Vehicle connecting devices.
   (b) No vehicle subject to this section shall be operated on the
highway other than to a place of repair until all defects listed
during the inspection conducted pursuant to subdivision (a) have been
corrected and attested to by the signature of the motor carrier's
authorized representative.
   (c) Records of inspections conducted pursuant to subdivision (a)
shall be kept at the motor carrier's terminals, as designated in
accordance with Section 34501.12. The records shall be retained by
the motor carrier for two years, and shall be made available for
inspection upon request by any authorized employee of the department.
Each record shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
   (1) Identification of the vehicle, including make, model, license
number, company vehicle number, or other means of positive
identification.
   (2) Date and nature of each inspection and any repair performed.
   (3) Signature of the motor carrier's authorized representative
attesting to the inspection and to the completion of all required
repairs.
   (d) Printouts of inspection and maintenance records maintained in
computer systems shall be accepted in lieu of signed inspection or
repair records if the printouts include the information required in
paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (c).
   (e) Notwithstanding subdivisions (a) to (d), inclusive, records of
90-day inspections need not be retained in California for interstate
vehicles which are not physically based in California. However, when
these vehicles are present in California, they are subject to
inspection by the department. If the inspection results indicate
maintenance program deficiencies, the department may require the
motor carrier to produce the maintenance records or copies of those
records for inspection within 10 working days.




34505.6.  (a) Upon determining that a motor carrier of property who
is operating any vehicle described in subdivision (a), (b), (e), (f),
(g), or (k) of Section 34500, or any motortruck of two or more axles
that is more than 10,000 pounds gross vehicle weight rating, on a
public highway, has done any of the following, the department shall
recommend that the Department of Motor Vehicles suspend or revoke the
carrier's motor carrier permit, or for interstate operators, the
department shall recommend to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration that appropriate administrative action be taken
against the carrier:
   (1) Failed to maintain any vehicle of a type described above in a
safe operating condition or to comply with the Vehicle Code or with
applicable regulations contained in Title 13 of the California Code
of Regulations, and, in the department's opinion, that failure
presents an imminent danger to public safety or constitutes a
consistent failure so as to justify a suspension or revocation of the
motor carrier's motor carrier permit.
   (2) Failed to enroll all drivers in the pull-notice system as
required by Section 1808.1.
   (3) Failed to submit any application or pay any fee required by
subdivision (e) or (h) of Section 34501.12 within the timeframes set
forth in that section.
   (b) Upon determining that a household goods carrier, or a
household goods carrier transporting used office, store, or
institution furniture and fixtures under its household goods carrier
permit issued under Section 5137 of the Public Utilities Code,
operating any vehicle described in subdivision (a), (b), (e), (f),
(g), or (k) of Section 34500 on a public highway has done any of the
following, the department shall recommend that the Public Utilities
Commission deny, suspend, or revoke the carrier's operating
authority, or for interstate operators, the department shall
recommend to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration that
appropriate administrative action be taken against the carrier:
   (1) Failed to maintain any vehicle used in transportation for
compensation in a safe operating condition or to comply with the
Vehicle Code or with applicable regulations contained in Title 13 of
the California Code of Regulations, and, in the department's opinion,
that failure presents an imminent danger to public safety or
constitutes a consistent failure so as to justify a suspension,
revocation, or denial of the motor carrier's operating authority.
   (2) Failed to enroll all drivers in the pull-notice system as
required by Section 1808.1.
   (3) Failed to submit any application or pay any fee required by
subdivision (e) or (h) of Section 34501.12 within the timeframes set
forth in that section.
   (c) For purposes of this section, two consecutive unsatisfactory
compliance ratings for an inspected terminal assigned because the
motor carrier failed to comply with the periodic report requirements
of Section 1808.1 or the cancellation of the carrier's enrollment by
the Department of Motor Vehicles for the nonpayment of required fees
is a consistent failure. The department shall retain a record, by
operator, of every recommendation made pursuant to this section.
   (d) Before transmitting a recommendation pursuant to subdivision
(a), the department shall notify the carrier in writing of all of the
following:
   (1) That the department has determined that the carrier's safety
record or compliance with Section 1808.1 or subdivision (e) or (h) of
Section 34501.12 is unsatisfactory, furnishing a copy of any
documentation or summary of any other evidence supporting the
determination.
   (2) That the determination may result in a suspension, revocation,
or denial of the carrier's motor carrier permit by the Department of
Motor Vehicles, suspension, revocation, of the motor carrier's
operating authority by the California Public Utilities Commission, or
administrative action by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration.
   (3) That the carrier may request a review of the determination by
the department within five days of its receipt of the notice required
under this subdivision. If a review pursuant to this paragraph is
requested by the carrier, the department shall conduct and evaluate
that review prior to transmitting any notification pursuant to
subdivision (a) or (b).
   (e) Upon receipt of a written recommendation from the department
that a motor carrier permit or operating authority be suspended,
revoked, or denied, the Department of Motor Vehicles or Public
Utilities Commission, as appropriate, shall, pending a hearing in the
matter pursuant to Section 34623 or appropriate Public Utilities
Commission authority, suspend the motor carrier permit or operating
authority. The written recommendation shall specifically indicate
compliance with subdivision (d).



34505.7.  (a) Upon determining that a private carrier of passengers,
as defined in Section 4001 of the Public Utilities Code, has either
(1) failed to maintain any vehicle of the carrier in a safe operating
condition or to comply with the Vehicle Code or with regulations
contained in Title 13 of the California Code of Regulations relative
to motor carrier safety, and, in the department's opinion, the
failure presents an imminent danger to public safety or constitutes
such a consistent failure as to justify a recommendation to the
Public Utilities Commission, or (2) failed to enroll all drivers in
the pull notice system as required by Section 1808.1, the department
shall make a written recommendation to the Public Utilities
Commission that the carrier's registration be suspended. Two
consecutive unsatisfactory terminal ratings assigned for failure to
comply with the periodic report requirements in Section 1808.1, or
cancellation of an employer's enrollment by the Department of Motor
Vehicles for nonpayment of fees, constitutes a consistent failure.
The department shall retain a record, by operator, of every
recommendation made pursuant to this section.
   (b) Before transmitting a recommendation pursuant to subdivision
(a), the department shall give written notice to the carrier of all
of the following:
   (1) That the department has determined that the carrier's safety
record is unsatisfactory, furnishing a copy of any documentation or
summary of any other evidence supporting the determination.
   (2) That the determination may result in a suspension or
revocation of the carrier's registration by the California Public
Utilities Commission.
   (3) That the carrier may request a review of the determination by
the department within five days of its receipt of the notice required
by this subdivision. If a review pursuant to this paragraph is
requested by the carrier, the department shall conduct and evaluate
that review prior to transmitting any notification pursuant to
subdivision (a).
   (c) Commercial vehicle inspection facilities along the border of
Mexico, including those in Calexico and Otay Mesa, shall be staffed
at all times by a California Highway Patrol inspector whenever those
facilities are open to the public. The California Highway Patrol
shall also assign, as staffing permits, a commercial inspector to
control truck traffic entering the United States at the Tecate border
crossing.



34505.9.  (a) An ocean marine terminal that receives and dispatches
intermodal chassis may conduct the intermodal roadability inspection
program, as described in this section, in lieu of the inspection
required by Section 34505.5, if the terminal meets all of the
following conditions:
   (1) More than 1,000 chassis are based at the ocean marine
terminal.
   (2) The ocean marine terminal, following the two most recent
consecutive inspections required by Section 34501.12, has received
satisfactory compliance ratings, and the terminal has received no
unsatisfactory compliance ratings as a result of any inspection
conducted in the interim between the consecutive inspections
conducted under Section 34501.12.
   (3) Each intermodal chassis exiting the ocean marine terminal
shall have a current decal and supporting documentation in accordance
with Section 396.17 of Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
   (4) The ocean marine terminal's intermodal roadability inspection
program shall consist of all of the following:
   (A) Each time an intermodal chassis is released from the ocean
marine terminal, the chassis shall be inspected. The inspection shall
include, but not be limited to, brake adjustment, brake system
components and leaks, suspension systems, tires and wheels, vehicle
connecting devices, and lights and electrical system, and shall
include a visual inspection of the chassis to determine that it has
not been tampered with.
   (B) Each inspection shall be recorded on a daily roadability
inspection report that shall include, but not be limited to, all of
the following:
   (i) Positive identification of the intermodal chassis, including
company identification number and vehicle license plate number.
   (ii) Date and nature of each inspection.
   (iii) Signature, under penalty of perjury, of the ocean marine
terminal operator or an authorized representative that the inspection
has been performed.
   (iv) The inspector shall affix a green tag to a chassis that has
passed inspection and a red tag to a chassis that has failed
inspection. The tag shall contain the name of the inspector and the
date and time that the inspection was completed and shall be placed
in a conspicuous location so that it may be viewed from the rear of
the vehicle. The tag shall be provided by the marine terminal
operator and shall meet specifications determined by the Department
of the California Highway Patrol. The provisions of this subparagraph
shall also be applicable to an intermodal chassis inspected by a
marine terminal operator pursuant to Section 34505.5.
   (C) Records of each inspection conducted pursuant to subparagraph
(A) shall be retained for 90 days at the ocean marine terminal at
which each chassis is based and shall be made available upon request
by any authorized employee of the department.
   (D) Defects noted on any intermodal chassis shall be repaired, and
the repairs shall be recorded on the intermodal chassis maintenance
file, before the intermodal chassis is released from the control of
the ocean marine terminal. No vehicle subject to this section shall
be released to a motor carrier or operated on the highway other than
to a place of repair until all defects listed during the inspection
conducted pursuant to subparagraph (A) have been corrected and
attested to by the signature of the operator's authorized
representative.
   (E) Records of maintenance or repairs performed pursuant to the
inspection in subparagraph (A) shall be maintained at the ocean
marine terminal for two years and shall be made available upon
request of the department. Repair records may be retained in a
computer system if printouts of those records are provided to the
department upon request.
   (F)