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CARB Truck and Bus Regulation Compliance Declined in 2015
Senior Reporter
The rate of compliance for heavy trucks with the California Air Resources Board鈥檚 truck and bus regulation has decreased to 70%-75% from 85% over the past two years, according to estimates in a new CARB enforcement report.
鈥淭his decrease in estimated compliance could be partly due to the continued phasing in of the regulatory requirements,鈥 according to the agency鈥檚 report of 2015 enforcement activities. 鈥淭o address this increase in noncompliance, enforcement division staff is taking several actions in 2016.鈥
Among those actions has been expanding use of the agency鈥檚 鈥淪mart Audit鈥 system, an approach for truck enforcement听that shifts the workload from a complaint- and referral-driven process to a data-driven process that helps to focus enforcement efforts on noncompliant fleets.
The smart audit approach involves merging听many data sources into one database.
鈥淭hese sources include California and [the] 49 [other] state department of motor vehicles registration data, CARB compliance databases, citations and complaints, safety inspection databases, motor carrier permits, and any available data on high emitters,鈥 the report said. 鈥淰ehicles are then grouped by fleet, and each fleet is evaluated using multiple audit indicators, given an audit score, and are prioritized for investigation.鈥
The report said that before 2015, diesel truck investigations were identified primarily through field inspections, tips and complaints, an inefficient process that led to identifying some cases as compliant after investigation.
This summer, the agency also plans to begin its enforcement of the tractor-trailer greenhouse-gas regulation, which听requires equipping听trucks and the trailers they pull with devices designed to increase aerodynamics and reduce drag while driving at highway speeds.
CARB, which has implemented the most rigorous state heavy-truck regulatory regime in the nation, said that in addition to enforcing rules related to traditional air quality and toxics emissions, the enforcement division is听expanding its role in enforcing the agency鈥檚 greenhouse-gas rules, including landfill methane gas, refrigerant management, sulfur hexafluoride and the low-carbon fuel standard.
Last year, the division鈥檚 178 employees conducted more than 32,000 inspections of vehicles, fuel tanks and equipment and wrote more than 4,400 citations ,resulting in more than $3.3 million in fines for noncompliance. About 64% of the diesel inspections conducted in 2015 focused on sources in or adjacent to disadvantaged communities.
The number of citations issued has increased substantially each year听from 3,256 citations in 2014.
鈥淭he division closed more than 400 investigations and negotiated more than $10 million in assessed penalties,鈥 the report said. CARB also collected nearly $21 million in three judgments from enforcement-related litigation.鈥
In addition, last year the enforcement division investigated 9,643 smoking commercial motor vehicle and 290 idling complaints, the report said.
CARB鈥檚 truck and bus regulation requires diesel trucks and buses that operate in California to be upgraded to reduce emissions requirements that the agency has been phasing in since 2012.
The ultimate goal of the regulation is to ensure that, by January 2023, nearly all trucks and buses have 2010 model year engines or equivalent.
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