The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration was created in 2000 to reduce the number of crashes involving large trucks and tractor trailers. The FMCSA tackles this approach in a number of different ways. Some of those ways involve issuing regulations and enforcing those regulations with civil penalties. But the FMCSA also a mandate to issue educational trainings to carriers and truck drives aimed at improving road safety.
As part of its educational mission, the FMCSA created the Safety management Cycle in January 2013. Following best practices for risk management, the Safety Management Cycle is a series of processes carriers can put themselves through for the sake of improving their safety, compliance and efficiency. The SMS involves four steps in six key operation areas.
The key operations areas are
As you can see from these descriptions, each subsequent operation area builds on the previous ones.
Carriers can then follow a four-step process for reviewing these operation areas, identifying areas of concern, and implementing improvements.
Step 1 is a review of the company's history of violations and crashes through the FMCSA’s CSA system.
Step 2 is an assessment of each of the six operation areas for breakdowns or failures that led to those crashes and violations.
Step 3 involves the identification of practices that can improve areas where the company has experienced breakdowns.
Step 4 involves the implementation of those practices and tracking their progress in order to improve safety statistics and BASIC percentile ranks.
The Safety Management Cycle is a useful framework for companies to follow when they need to improve their safety and accountability record. Improved safety record will yield a number of positive outcomes for trucking companies and can help identify efficiencies and cost savings while lowering insurance premiums. The modern world of trucking requires active risk management practices and continual attempts to improve these numbers.