§395.2 Questions
#1
§395.2 Definitions.
...On duty time shall include: (4) All time, other than driving time, in or upon any commercial motor vehicle except time spent resting in a sleeper berth;... If all time spent in a CMV other than when RESTING in the sleeper berth is to be considered on-duty, does that mean that time spent engaged in sexual intercourse (obviously not resting, unless you are my ex-wife) in the sleeper must be considered on-duty? What line should the time spent on this activity be logged on? If I am in the sleeper but yet not resting and therefore on-duty, do I log this on Line 4? Does this now mean we have a line 6 to worry about? There are so many possibilities here. Does it depend on the actual acts being performed and how strenuous they are as to whether or not I am considered on-duty or not?
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#2
Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Dark Side of The Moon
Posts: 171
Does it depend on the actual acts being performed and how strenuous they are as to whether or not I am considered on-duty or not?
![]() With the EOBR rule making pending before Mr. Hill departs 01/20/2009, I'm sure activities on Line 5 and 6 will go away. Commercial Vehicle Training Association - FMCSA Sends EOBR Rule to White House for Review Be safe.
#3
§395.2 Definitions.
...On duty time shall include: (4) All time, other than driving time, in or upon any commercial motor vehicle except time spent resting in a sleeper berth;... If all time spent in a CMV other than when RESTING in the sleeper berth is to be considered on-duty, does that mean that time spent engaged in sexual intercourse (obviously not resting, unless you are my ex-wife) in the sleeper must be considered on-duty? What line should the time spent on this activity be logged on? If I am in the sleeper but yet not resting and therefore on-duty, do I log this on Line 4? Does this now mean we have a line 6 to worry about? There are so many possibilities here. Does it depend on the actual acts being performed and how strenuous they are as to whether or not I am considered on-duty or not?
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#4
Careful, one company volunteered to have their drivers wear bio-rythm wrist devices to monitor breathing and pulse to demonstrate they were sleeping. The carrier was volunteering for consideration to be excepted from the HOS for the testing period.
![]() With the EOBR rule making pending before Mr. Hill departs 01/20/2009, I'm sure activities on Line 5 and 6 will go away. Commercial Vehicle Training Association - FMCSA Sends EOBR Rule to White House for Review Be safe.
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#6
Okay, everybody has made their cute comments, which I was hoping would be generated by my initial post; but we really haven’t gotten down to the real implications of this regulation. I used sex in my example because it draws attention and also helps make a point, but what does this say about other activities that commonly take place in the sleeper? I have seen DOT officers descend on rest areas and get drivers out of the sleeper to do a level three inspection. What if your log shows you on line three, but you are cooking in the sleeper? What if you and your co-driver (wife in my case) are playing cribbage? You are clearly not resting even though you are in the sleeper, so can they gig you for showing line three on your log in that case?
__________________
"The Breakfast of Champions isn't cereal, it's the competition!" - "Success is how high you bounce when you hit bottom." - "An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last."
#7
Are you kidding? Fifteen minutes doesn't even cover 1/2 of the foreplay! The real question is whether or not (depending on the specific types of activity being engaged in) I can log line 1 for an hour and a half for a meal break.
__________________
"The Breakfast of Champions isn't cereal, it's the competition!" - "Success is how high you bounce when you hit bottom." - "An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last."
#8
Senior Board Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: jackassville (winnipeg, mb)
Posts: 3,280
Rest <> sleep
Sex and all those other activities are considered rest. The only thing I could "see" being on duty would be work specific things, doing your logbook, paperwork, if you do them in your sleeper. Everything else in your sleeper is rest.
#9
Okay, everybody has made their cute comments, which I was hoping would be generated by my initial post; but we really haven’t gotten down to the real implications of this regulation. I used sex in my example because it draws attention and also helps make a point, but what does this say about other activities that commonly take place in the sleeper? I have seen DOT officers descend on rest areas and get drivers out of the sleeper to do a level three inspection. What if your log shows you on line three, but you are cooking in the sleeper? What if you and your co-driver (wife in my case) are playing cribbage? You are clearly not resting even though you are in the sleeper, so can they gig you for showing line three on your log in that case?
The real question is whether or not (depending on the specific types of activity being engaged in) I can log line 1 for an hour and a half for a meal break.
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