By Dominick Simone, SVP-Client Services, SCI, LLC.
The courier delivery industry has never been more critical—or more complex. Whether you’re a small regional courier company with 15 drivers or a national delivery network managing hundreds of contractors, compliance responsibilities continue to grow. Courier companies can meet those obligations by having a strong compliance process in place that is supported by automated systems.
For many courier companies, compliance isn’t a single task. It’s a moving target that can include multiple responsibilities such as understanding FMCSA and DOT requirements, ongoing safety monitoring, reliable document management, and visibility into fleet status. Managing these responsibilities manually can be time-consuming, stressful, and increasingly risky given a dynamic legal and regulatory environment.
Recent legal developments have made that risk even more apparent. In Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II, LLC, the U.S. Supreme Court determined that brokers are not immune from liability for selecting carriers. That means an injured plaintiff may pursue intermediaries for carrier accidents.
After Montgomery, when accidents occur, courts may closely examine how carriers and drivers were selected, monitored, and retained. That also means carrier vetting, monitoring, and documentation could become central issues in litigation following a serious accident.
Simply put, companies may need to demonstrate not only that they selected qualified transportation providers, but also that they maintained a reasonable process for monitoring compliance and documenting their decisions. And for courier companies this raises an important question:
Can I confidently demonstrate that every driver operating under my network was compliant on the day they performed a delivery?
Answering that question isn’t as easy as it sounds. Compliance requirements are constantly evolving. FMCSA and DOT regulations change. Driver statuses change. Medical certificates expire. Licenses are suspended. Safety scores fluctuate. New violations appear.
The challenge isn’t simply knowing the rules, it’s knowing when something changes. Relying on periodic reviews, spreadsheets, email reminders, or manual audits to monitor compliance can leave gaps. Without consistent monitoring, the result is increased operational risk and potential exposure when incidents occur. Not to mention the additional administrative burden of maintaining compliance manually. And as a fleet grows, manual processes become more difficult to sustain. Problems are often discovered only after an audit, customer inquiry, insurance review, or worse—a serious accident.
The Supreme Court’s recent decision serves as a reminder that companies will need to demonstrate reasonable processes around driver selection, monitoring, and documentation. In litigation, being able to show what was reviewed, when it was reviewed, and what actions were taken can be just as important as having the documents themselves.
Courier companies that invest in stronger compliance processes gain more than regulatory peace of mind. They create better visibility, improve safety outcomes, and reduce operational risk.
Turning Complexity into Confidence
As you can see, good enough is no longer an option for courier companies. Levering technology and specialized compliance partners can help automate monitoring, centralize driver records, and provide the fleet-wide visibility that manual processes often lack.
Solutions that continuously monitor compliance status, maintain accurate documentation, and provide real-time insights into fleet health allow operators to spend less time tracking down paperwork and more time focused on serving customers and growing their business.