Picture this. You’re parked at a truck stop, finally on your 10-hour break, when you pull up your log and notice something’s off. A couple of hours you spent sleeping are now showing as “on duty.” You didn’t touch it. So who did?
For a growing number of American drivers, the answer has been: a dispatcher sitting in an office on the other side of the world, quietly editing the record to squeeze out more driving time. That little problem is what a new bill in Congress is trying to kill. It’s got a clunky name and a catchy nickname, and truckers can’t agree on whether it’s a real fix or just a nice-looking sticker on a broken door.
Let’s break it down.
So what is the GHOSTRUCK Act?
In June 2026, two U.S. Representatives – Greg Steube of Florida and Dave Taylor of Ohio – introduced a bill called the GHOSTRUCK Act. The full name is a mouthful: “Guarding Hours-of-Service Oversight and Stopping Tampering by Remote Unofficial Carrier Keeper.” Say that three times fast. Mercifully, everyone just calls it GHOSTRUCK.
Here’s the thing that surprises people: the actual bill is basically two sentences long. It changes one piece of federal law so that any edit or annotation to your Electronic Logging Device (ELD) record can only be made by someone physically located in North America. And it keeps the rule that already exists – that you, the driver, have to approve any edit.
That’s it. It doesn’t ban editing your logs. Edits happen all the time for normal reasons, you forgot to switch to off-duty, you stopped for fuel, the yard move didn’t get logged right. The bill just says the person doing the editing has to be on this continent.
Quick refresher if you’re newer to all this: your ELD tracks your driving time so you stay inside the federal hours-of-service limits – 11 hours of driving, a 14-hour window, and your 70-hour clock. Those rules exist so nobody’s out there driving 80,000 pounds on no sleep. When someone fakes the log, they’re not just breaking a paperwork rule. They’re putting a tired driver on the road with the rest of us.
Why now? Blame the 60 Minutes episode
This bill didn’t come out of nowhere. In April 2026, CBS’s 60 Minutes aired an investigation into a carrier network called Super Ego Holding. It was rough to watch. A former driver said he was pushed into 18-hour shifts and still ended up with negative settlement checks after predatory lease deals. The segment even played a recording of an ELD company changing a driver’s logs on the fly.
Reporters found the operation was recruiting drivers through Russian-language YouTube videos, and that it was tangled up with “chameleon carriers“, companies that shut down and reopen under a new name to ditch a bad safety record. Those fleets are about four times more likely to be in a crash. Once that hit primetime TV, lawmakers moved fast.
The part that sounds great
On paper, GHOSTRUCK is hard to argue with. And the support behind it is honestly unusual.
Normally the big carrier lobby (the American Trucking Associations) and the owner operator lobby (OOIDA) are on opposite sides of a fight. Not this time. OOIDA called it “commonsense legislation” and said it would “prevent foreign nationals in places like Eastern Europe and Asia from altering the ELD records of American truckers.” When those two groups agree on something, it’s worth a look.
The core argument is simple. If an American dispatcher fakes a log and someone dies, that dispatcher can go to prison. A dispatcher overseas? Good luck. They’re outside the reach of U.S. enforcement, so they’ve been playing by no rules at all. Supporters say GHOSTRUCK finally puts that conduct on the books as illegal and protects drivers from getting coerced into running past their limits.
The part that makes drivers roll their eyes
Here’s where the room splits. Nobody’s defending foreign log tampering. The fight is about whether this bill can actually do anything about it.
Think about it for a second. The whole problem is that these bad actors are outside the country, where U.S. law can’t touch them. So passing a U.S. law that says “don’t do that” runs into an obvious wall: how do you enforce a rule against someone you couldn’t reach in the first place?
It gets thornier. Setting up a fake U.S. presence is easy, a foreign dispatch or ELD outfit can rent a virtual address, file some paperwork, and say they’re based in North America. ELD vendors and dispatchers aren’t watched nearly as closely as carriers are. And even when one of these operations is clearly running from overseas (drivers have spotted carriers using “.ru” email addresses you basically can’t even open from inside the U.S.), proving it at a roadside inspection is a different story.
Here’s the side-by-side a lot of drivers are thinking but not saying:
| What GHOSTRUCK promises | What the skeptics ask |
|---|---|
| Bans ELD edits made from outside North America | How do you enforce a rule on someone U.S. law can't reach? |
| Keeps driver approval as the safeguard | Driver approval already exists — and some drivers ask for a fake log to keep working |
| Holds foreign bad actors accountable | A virtual U.S. address makes "located in North America" easy to fake on paper |
| Makes roads safer | An inspector at the scale can't easily tell who made an edit, or from where |
| Strong industry + bipartisan backing | Two sentences, no new penalties, no detection tools, no funding |
That last row is the big one. The bill adds a rule, but it doesn’t add money, manpower, or technology to catch anybody. To a lot of working drivers, that feels like a sign that says “Wet Floor” with nobody around to mop.
One thing everyone gets wrong: editing isn’t tampering
If you take one fact from this post, make it this one. Editing your log and tampering with your log are not the same thing.
Legitimate edits are part of the job. Your dispatcher fixing a missed duty status while you sign off on it is normal and legal. Tampering is when someone shifts your hours to hide that you drove too long – usually without you really agreeing to it. GHOSTRUCK doesn’t outlaw the first one. It goes after where the second one comes from. If you see a blog or a Facebook post screaming that “they’re banning log edits,” now you know better.
What this actually means for you
Whether or not GHOSTRUCK becomes law, the ground is already shifting under your wheels, and that part is real.
Enforcement got serious this year. The Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance added ELD tampering to its 2026 out-of-service rules. Get caught with a tampered log now and you can be put out of service for 10 hours on the spot. Inspectors are trained on it, and the CVSA Roadcheck blitz made it a focus. This isn’t theoretical – Arizona logged 281 ELD-cheat violations from just 115 inspections, and Oregon put 283 drivers out of service in one push.
So here’s the practical “what to do”:
- Know who can touch your logs. Ask your carrier or dispatch service who edits your ELD and where they’re sitting. If the honest answer is “an office overseas,” that’s a flag.
- Approve edits on purpose, not on autopilot. That driver-approval step is your one real protection. Read what changed before you tap “accept.”
- Keep your own backup. Save your fuel receipts, gate times, and bills of lading. If your log ever gets questioned, those documents are what prove your real day.
- Watch your settlement math. If your hours look fine but your pay keeps coming up short, something upstream may be off. The drivers who got burned in the Super Ego mess ignored that gut feeling for too long.
None of this is about being paranoid. It’s about not letting someone you’ve never met decide how your day gets recorded, especially when trucking costs are already sky-high and every clean, paid mile counts. And if you’re a newer driver or one whose first language isn’t English, the rules are tightening across the board right now, from logs to the English-only CDL tests rolling out in states like Texas. Staying informed is the cheapest insurance you’ve got.
The bottom line
The GHOSTRUCK Act points at a genuine problem: foreign operators have been editing American drivers’ logs and walking away clean. The intent is good, and the support behind it is real and rare. But the bill is short, light on teeth, and aimed at people who are tough to catch by design. It may end up being a meaningful first step, or a headline that looks like action while the real work stays undone.
What do you think – real fix, or just paper? We talk to drivers about this stuff every week, and the room is genuinely split.
Here at Keynnect, we’re a small carrier ourselves, so log integrity isn’t an abstract policy debate to us; it’s our drivers’ safety and paychecks. If you ever want a straight answer about how your hours and pay should line up, come talk to us. No virtual office, no funny business.