DOT Tightens Rules for Boozy Truckers' Comeback
Published Date: 3/4/2026
Rule
Summary
If you work in transportation and mess up a drug or alcohol test, a Substance Abuse Professional (SAP) decides what help you need before you can get back to work safely. The Department of Transportation is reminding SAPs and employers to follow the rules carefully to keep everyone safe. These updates start March 4, 2026, and help make sure the return-to-duty process is fair and clear for all involved.
Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 3 costs, 0 mixed.
Removed from Safety Work Until RTD Done
If you work in a DOT safety-sensitive job and you test positive, refuse a DOT drug or alcohol test, or otherwise violate DOT testing rules, you must be immediately removed from safety-sensitive duties and cannot return to those duties until you successfully complete the DOT return-to-duty (RTD) process described in 49 CFR part 40.
SAPs Must Be Qualified or Face Exclusion
Substance Abuse Professionals (SAPs) must meet the qualification requirements in 49 CFR 40.281 (including credentials, training, and 12 professional development hours every three years) before performing SAP functions. Providing SAP services while not meeting those qualifications or other serious noncompliance can be grounds for a Public Interest Exclusion (PIE) proceeding.
Face-to-Face SAP Evaluations Required
All SAP assessments and evaluations must be done face-to-face, either in-person or remotely; remote evaluations must include real-time two-way audio and visual communication. This requirement applies to SAP evaluations used in the DOT RTD process.
Follow-up Plan Confidentiality and Recordkeeping
SAPs must provide the written SAP report (including the follow-up testing plan) to employers but must never give the employee a copy of the follow-up testing plan; if an employee requests SAP reports, the SAP must redact the follow-up testing requirements. Employers must maintain copies of the employee's reports for five years (from the date of the 2nd report) in limited-access areas.
No Promised Timelines; Individualized Treatment Required
SAPs must not give employees estimated RTD timelines or 'fast-track' promises before conducting required evaluations; SAPs must perform comprehensive, individualized assessments and recommend education or treatment unique to each employee and must not assign the same treatment to every employee.
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