Q1. Question 1 of 100
A commercial truck driver operating under FMCSA authority is selected for a random drug test
but refuses to provide a specimen. The employer must record this refusal and treat it
equivalently to what other outcome under 49 CFR Part 40?
A. A verified positive test result
B. A cancelled test requiring immediate re-collection
C. A negative test result with a follow-up evaluation
D. A dilute specimen result requiring recollection under direct observation
Correct Answer: A
Rationale:
Under 49 CFR Part 40, a refusal to test carries the same consequences as a verified positive result,
meaning the employee is immediately removed from safety-sensitive duties. A cancelled test simply requires
recollection, not removal, and a dilute result has different procedural requirements.
Q2. Question 2 of 100
An employer operating a pipeline facility subject to PHMSA regulations wants to reduce their
random drug testing rate below the annual minimum. The employer asks the MRO for
guidance on this matter. Under DOT regulations, the minimum random testing rate is
established by whom?
A. The employer's consortium/third-party administrator
B. The DOT agency with jurisdiction over the employer's industry
C. The Substance Abuse Professional assigned to the consortium
D. The HHS-certified laboratory performing the testing
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Each DOT agency (FMCSA, FRA, FTA, FAA, USCG, PHMSA) sets its own minimum random testing rate for
the industries it regulates. The C/TPA manages the testing pool but does not set the rate, and the SAP and
laboratory have no authority over testing rates.
MRO COMPLETE SOLUTIONS -- 2026/2027 | Passing Score: 75% | Page 2 of 53
,Q3. Question 3 of 100
A transit authority subject to FTA regulations has an employee who tested positive on a
random drug test. The employee has completed the SAP evaluation and return-to-duty
process. Before returning to safety-sensitive duty, the employee must undergo a specific type
of test. This return-to-duty test must meet what requirement?
A. It must be a hair follicle test conducted by an HHS-certified laboratory
B. It must be an unannounced random test within 30 days of SAP clearance
C. It must be a directly observed urine drug test with negative results
D. It must be a blood test ordered by the MRO to confirm abstinence
Correct Answer: C
Rationale:
Under 49 CFR Part 40, return-to-duty testing must be a directly observed urine collection, and the result
must be negative before the employee can resume safety-sensitive functions. Hair testing is not authorized
for DOT return-to-duty tests, and blood tests are not part of the DOT testing protocol.
Q4. Question 4 of 100
The Omnibus Transportation Employee Testing Act of 1991 established the legislative
foundation for drug and alcohol testing in the transportation industry. This Act specifically
mandated testing for employees in safety-sensitive positions across how many DOT
agencies?
A. Three agencies covering aviation, maritime, and rail only
B. Four agencies covering highway, transit, pipeline, and aviation only
C. Two agencies covering motor carriers and railroads only
D. Six agencies covering aviation, motor carriers, rail, transit, pipeline, and maritime
Correct Answer: D
Rationale:
The Omnibus Transportation Employee Testing Act of 1991 covers all six DOT agencies: FAA, FMCSA,
FRA, FTA, PHMSA, and USCG. The earlier options listing fewer agencies reflect incomplete understanding
of the Act's broad scope across all transportation modes.
MRO COMPLETE SOLUTIONS -- 2026/2027 | Passing Score: 75% | Page 3 of 53
,Q5. Question 5 of 100
A newly hired bus driver for a city transit authority subject to FTA regulations is about to begin
safety-sensitive duties. The employer has not yet conducted a pre-employment drug test.
Under DOT regulations, the employer must complete this test at what point?
A. Before the employee performs any safety-sensitive function for the first time
B. Within the first 90 days of employment in a safety-sensitive position
C. After the employee completes a probationary period of 30 days
D. At the next scheduled random testing cycle after hiring
Correct Answer: A
Rationale:
DOT regulations require that a pre-employment drug test must be conducted and have a verified negative
result before an employee performs any safety-sensitive function. Waiting until a random cycle or
probationary period would violate the requirement for pre-duty testing.
Q6. Question 6 of 100
A railroad conductor is involved in a qualifying accident under FRA regulations. The
supervisor on scene determines that a post-accident drug test is required. The supervisor
must ensure the employee is transported for testing as soon as possible, but the regulations
specify that the specimen must be collected within how many hours of the accident?
A. Within 8 hours of the accident
B. Within 32 hours of the accident
C. Within 24 hours of the accident
D. Within 48 hours of the accident
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Under FRA regulations, post-accident testing specimens must be collected within 32 hours of the accident.
While testing should be conducted as soon as practicable, the 32-hour window is the regulatory maximum.
The 8-hour window applies to alcohol testing, not drug testing.
MRO COMPLETE SOLUTIONS -- 2026/2027 | Passing Score: 75% | Page 4 of 53
, Q7. Question 7 of 100
An employer covered under FMCSA regulations has 250 drivers in its random testing pool.
The current minimum annual random testing rate for FMCSA is 50 percent. The employer
must ensure that at a minimum, how many random drug tests are conducted over the
calendar year?
A. 100 random drug tests annually
B. 200 random drug tests annually
C. 125 random drug tests annually
D. 75 random drug tests annually
Correct Answer: C
Rationale:
At a 50 percent minimum random rate for FMCSA, the employer must conduct at least 125 random drug
tests per year from the pool of 250 drivers. The 50 percent rate means each position in the pool has a 50
percent chance, not that 50 percent of total employees must be tested as a flat count of all employees.
Q8. Question 8 of 100
A small trucking company with only 4 drivers wants to comply with FMCSA random drug
testing requirements. The company does not have enough drivers to maintain a statistically
valid random pool on its own. The most appropriate method for this company to comply is to
join what type of organization?
A. An HHS-certified laboratory consortium for small carriers
B. A state-regulated drug testing cooperative program
C. A driver association that manages compliance records
D. A consortium/third-party administrator (C/TPA) pool
Correct Answer: D
Rationale:
Small employers typically join a consortium/third-party administrator (C/TPA) to meet random testing
requirements by pooling their employees with those of other companies, creating a statistically valid
selection pool. Laboratories do not manage random pools, and state cooperatives and driver associations
are not recognized DOT mechanisms.
MRO COMPLETE SOLUTIONS -- 2026/2027 | Passing Score: 75% | Page 5 of 53