1 / 13

International Border Crossing Program Electronic Screening

International Border Crossing Program Electronic Screening. Transportation Border Working Group April 19, 2011. FMCSA Priorities, and Goals. Priorities Raise the bar Maintain high safety standards Remove high-risk carriers Strategic Plan 2006-2011

ailis
Download Presentation

International Border Crossing Program Electronic Screening

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. International Border Crossing Program Electronic Screening Transportation Border Working Group April 19, 2011

  2. FMCSA Priorities, and Goals • Priorities • Raise the bar • Maintain high safety standards • Remove high-risk carriers • Strategic Plan 2006-2011 • Advance Electronic Safety and Credential Monitoring to Facilitate International Traffic Flow at our Nation's Borders

  3. Border Crossing Enforcement • 11 million Mexican and Canadian commercial CMV trips into the United States annually • State and FMCSA border inspectors are responsible for ensuring that CMVs are compliant with State and Federal safety and regulatory standards • Primarily accomplished through safety inspections

  4. Safety and Compliance Requirements • FMCSA • Driver Credentials • Equipment fitness • Federal operating authority status • Proof of insurance/appropriate coverage • Border State • Vehicle registration status • Size and weight limitations • Other State-specific requirements

  5. Determining Which Vehicles to Inspect • Current screening is manual • Limits coverage • Time consuming • Based on: • Inspectors’ knowledge of specific carriers • Visual check of obvious physical defects • Limited conversation with driver • Random selection

  6. International Border Screening Program • Phase I – Demonstration of Concept – Completed 2007 • Phase II – Analysis of Demonstration – Completed 2009 • Phase III – Field Operational Test – Starting in 2011

  7. Enhancing the Screening Process • International Border Crossing (IBC) e-Screening concept • Use of radio frequency identification device (RFID) transponders to identify drivers and vehicles • RFID technology selected because 90% of trucks entering the U.S. are equipped

  8. Phase I – IBC E-Screening Demonstration • Demonstrated at Santa Teresa, NM port of entry • - Low volume (120-140 trips per day) • - Staffed 80% of time • - Ideal environment for testing and evaluation • 14 carriers participated • Vehicles screened to validate: • - Currency of CVSA decal and truck registration • - Federal operating authority status of carrier • - Current insurance • - Driver tags/commercial drivers license status • Over 5,500 transponder reads in demo

  9. Major Findings • Technology performed reliably (99% accurate) • Reduced processing time for selection for inspection (1 sec vs. 15 min.) • Increased number of vehicles subject to inspection (237/month baseline vs. 965/month during demo) • Focused limited enforcement resources • Reduces processing for compliant vehicles

  10. Limitations of Concept • Currency of CVSA decal • On-site enrollment is time consuming and limiting • No way to identify trailer electronically verify compliance • All drivers did not have ID cards • Screening decision displayed only inside facility

  11. Phase II – Analyses of Demonstration • Utilizing International Trade Data System (ITDS) shared by Customs and Border Protection (CBP) with FMCSA • Identify carrier, truck, trailer, and driver • Eliminate need for on site enrollment • Tied to other data sources • Screen on more than 20 factors of interest • Requirements analysis in seven border States • Analysis of 20 ports of entry • Developed system requirements

  12. Phase III – Field Operational Test • Deployment and testing of IBC e-Screening system at 4 border locations • Development of partnerships with States and CBP • Conduct outreach with stakeholders to deploy system nationally • Ensure user needs are met • Currently in acquisitions process

  13. Questions? Chris Flanigan Office of Analysis, Research, and Technology (202) 385-2384 Chris.Flanigan@dot.gov

More Related