INDUSTRY PERSPECTIVES
Drivewyze Demonstrates New Weigh Station e-Inspection Experience at CVSA Conference Drivewyze demonstrated how automated electronic roadside inspections (e-inspections) can save time and money, while improving highway safety, at the 2021 CVSA Annual Conference and Exhibition in Wilmington, Delaware. Conference attendees included state law enforcement and fleets from throughout the country. Trucks and drivers for the demonstration were provided by Western Express and Schneider. A simulated inspection site showed how time-consuming elements of traditional manual inspections can be automated to save significant time for both inspectors and drivers. Traditional inspections are slowed by the necessity for an officer to collect information after a truck has been stopped. The officer must then search multiple databases to verify motor carrier, vehicle and driver credentials, and then enter the data into each authoritative data system. In contrast, an officer conducting an e-inspection would receive vehicle, carrier and driver-level information electronically while the vehicle was still in motion. The e-inspection system further streamlines the inspection process by screening carrier, vehicle and driver data automatically against
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multiple systems – all at once – for compliance issues, allowing the officer the freedom to use their time to validate data or focus on nonelectronic elements of an inspection. In addition, the officer’s inspection form is automatically pre-filled at the start of the inspection, avoiding time-consuming and error-prone manual data entry. When the officer is satisfied, the inspection may be completed at the touch of a button, saving significant time and improving the accuracy of the inspection. “What the demonstration showed was not the future – it’s showing the here and now,” said Brian Mofford, Drivewyze’s vice president of government experience. “It takes the leadership of our public agency partners and the capabilities of our connected truck technologies to create a new paradigm in delivering highway safety.” Mofford added: “There are too few inspectors for enforcement to operate effectively against an ever-increasing number of trucks on the road. E-inspections are a force multiplier that increase the reach of our agency partners without impacting the movement of our economy’s freight. We’re witnessing a move from a manual data-entry world
at the inspection site to one where data is automatically transmitted for auto population on inspection forms. This can cut a ‘clean inspection’ from 30 minutes or more down to a few minutes without degrading the effectiveness of the inspection itself. It benefits carriers and drivers who can log more drive time, plus it allows inspection officers to screen more vehicles in a timely fashion.” According to Mofford, five states – Maine, Maryland, Michigan, New Hampshire and Virginia – are rolling out e-inspections and additional state partners will be announced soon. “Momentum is building quickly,” said Mofford. “This is a movement toward more efficiency at the inspection site, which translates into making our highways safer and carriers more productive.” Mofford noted that in addition to improving the efficiency of traditional inspections, e-inspections allow more inspections to be conducted, which is welcome news to many carriers. “Agencies do not have enough inspectors to stop every truck, and this has caused a data sufficiency problem with the Federal Motor