Section 1 of 10

The Trainer's Role & the Part 40 Framework

A qualified trainer is the person the entire DOT testing system depends on. Your job is to make sure collectors and technicians know, understand, and can correctly perform every step of 49 CFR Part 40 — and then to document that they can. This course qualifies you to train others in three disciplines: DOT urine specimen collection (§40.33), breath alcohol testing/BAT (§40.213), and oral fluid collection (§40.35).

What This Qualification Covers

  • The trainer's legal role under 49 CFR Part 40
  • How to become — and stay — a qualified trainer
  • How to use your branded materials starter pack to teach immediately
  • How to deliver training for urine, breath alcohol, and oral fluid
  • How to run and evaluate supervised mock collections
  • How to document training and issue qualification certificates

Where Trainer Requirements Live

Part 40 sets a specific qualification standard for trainers in each discipline. A trainer is an instructor and an evaluator — not simply a collector who happens to be experienced.

  • §40.33 — qualification training for urine specimen collectors
  • §40.213 — qualification for Screening Test Technicians (STTs) and Breath Alcohol Technicians (BATs)
  • §40.35 — qualification training for oral fluid specimen collectors
  • Applies across all six DOT modes: FMCSA, FAA, FRA, FTA, PHMSA, USCG

The Four Things Every Trainer Does

1

Deliver knowledge

Teach the regulation and procedures so the trainee understands the "why," not just the steps.

2

Evaluate competency

Watch the trainee perform error-free mock collections and judge them against the regulation.

3

Document qualification

Record attendance, knowledge results, and each mock — then sign off on the qualification.

4

Keep everyone current

Re-qualify on schedule and provide error-correction training when a flaw is found.

Section 1 of 10
Section 2 of 10

Becoming & Staying a Qualified Trainer

Before you can train others in a discipline, you must be currently qualified in that discipline yourself, and you must keep that qualification current. You cannot train a discipline you are not qualified in — that is the single most important rule in this section.

Prerequisites to Train

  • Current qualification in the discipline you intend to train (collector, BAT/STT, or oral fluid collector)
  • No uncorrected fatal flaws — if you have one, you cannot train until error-correction is complete
  • A complete curriculum — qualification knowledge content plus hands-on mock evaluation
  • A documentation system to track trainee scores, mock results, and your sign-offs

Staying Qualified — Don't Let It Lapse

  • Complete refresher training on the discipline's schedule (e.g., collector refresher every 5 years; sooner if rules change)
  • Stay current on ODAPC guidance and Part 40 amendments
  • Perform collections/tests yourself to stay sharp
  • Re-qualify before, not after, your qualification expires

Error-Correction Training

If a collector you trained — or you yourself — makes a documented error that causes a test to be cancelled, Part 40 requires error-correction training within 30 days covering the subject area of the mistake, plus a number of error-free mocks to re-qualify.

Trainer takeaway: Track every collector you qualify. If one of them generates a cancelled test, you are the person who delivers their correction training and re-qualification.
Section 2 of 10
Section 3 of 10

Your Materials Starter Pack

This qualification includes a materials starter pack so you can begin teaching the day you finish. It contains your own branded slideshows to teach each discipline under your business name, and a set of qualification templates you give your clients after they complete mock collections or other required training.

Branded Slideshows

  • A complete, classroom-ready deck for urine collection (§40.33)
  • A deck for breath alcohol / BAT (§40.213)
  • A deck for oral fluid collection (§40.35)
  • Each deck is yours to brand with your logo and business name and present live or virtually

Qualification Templates

After a trainee completes the knowledge portion and their error-free mocks, you issue them documentation. The starter pack gives you the templates to do it professionally:

  • Certificate of qualification (per discipline)
  • Training record / qualification record
  • Mock-collection evaluation forms (pass/fail per mock)
  • Knowledge-acknowledgment form
  • Attendance sheet

Using the Pack Correctly

Rule of thumb: Brand the materials, but never change the regulatory content. The procedures, knowledge areas, and mock requirements come straight from Part 40 — your branding goes on the cover and footer, not the substance.
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Section 4 of 10

Training DOT Urine Specimen Collection (§40.33)

To qualify a urine collector, you deliver the qualification knowledge, then observe five consecutive error-free mock collections covering specific scenarios. Here is what your trainees must master and what you evaluate.

Knowledge Areas to Teach

  • Steps of a standard collection using the Federal CCF
  • "Problem" collections — insufficient quantity, out-of-range temperature, signs of tampering
  • Shy bladder and the three-hour / 40-ounce protocol
  • When a directly-observed or monitored collection is required
  • Chain of custody, seals, and donor signature steps
  • Fatal flaws vs. correctable flaws

The Five Required Mock Scenarios

§40.33(c) requires the trainee to perform five error-free mock collections, monitored by a qualified trainer (you). They must include:

  • An uneventful collection
  • Insufficient quantity of urine
  • Temperature out of range
  • A refusal / unwillingness scenario
  • A directly-observed or monitored collection
Error-free means error-free. Every mock in the set of five must be performed without error. A single mistake on any mock restarts the count.
Section 4 of 10
Section 5 of 10

Training DOT Breath Alcohol Testing — BAT (§40.213)

Breath alcohol qualification covers both the Screening Test Technician (STT) and Breath Alcohol Technician (BAT) roles. You teach the procedures and the device, then evaluate seven error-free mock tests on the Evidential Breath Testing device the trainee will actually use.

Knowledge Areas to Teach

  • Operating the specific EBT (or ASD) the trainee will use, per its Quick Reference Guide
  • The Alcohol Testing Form (ATF) — every step and signature
  • Screening vs. confirmation tests and the 15-minute wait before confirmation
  • The 0.02 and 0.04 action levels and what each triggers
  • Mouth alcohol, the waiting period, and air blanks
  • Problem tests, refusals, and invalid results

The Seven Required Mock Tests

§40.213(d) requires seven error-free mock BAT tests: at least three on the specific EBT the trainee will use, monitored and evaluated by a qualified trainer. Build the set to include uneventful tests plus problem scenarios (mouth alcohol/invalid, refusal, device problem, screening that requires confirmation).

Device-specific. Mocks must be performed on the same make/model of EBT the trainee will use in the field. Qualification on one device does not automatically transfer to another.
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Section 6 of 10

Training DOT Oral Fluid Collection (§40.35)

Oral fluid collection was added to Part 40 as an alternative to urine. The trainer requirements mirror urine: deliver the knowledge, then observe error-free mock collections on each specific collection device the trainee will use.

Knowledge Areas to Teach

  • Operating the FDA-cleared oral fluid collection device per its instructions
  • The 10-minute pre-collection wait (no food, drink, tobacco, or gum)
  • Direct observation of the donor placing the device, and the volume-adequacy indicator
  • Split-specimen handling, sealing, and chain of custody on the CCF
  • Insufficient oral fluid and the re-collection protocol

Required Mock Collections

§40.35 requires five error-free mock collections per device, monitored by a qualified trainer, including problem scenarios (insufficient quantity, refusal, tampering). As with urine and breath, qualification is device-specific.

Trainer takeaway: If your client wants to collect both urine and oral fluid, they need to complete the mock set for each — they are separate qualifications.
Section 6 of 10
Section 7 of 10

Conducting & Evaluating Supervised Mock Collections

The mock evaluation is where you do your most important work as a trainer. You are deciding whether a person is competent to perform federally-regulated testing. Be thorough, be consistent, and document honestly.

What You're Evaluating

  • Procedure adherence — every step, in the correct order
  • Specimen / device integrity — handling, sealing, temperature where applicable
  • Documentation accuracy — correct, legible CCF/ATF with no omissions
  • Communication — clear instructions to the donor, professional demeanor
  • Problem-solving — handling refusals, insufficient specimens, and equipment failures

How to Run a Mock

1

Brief the scenario

Tell the trainee what situation they're handling (normal, refusal, tampering, etc.).

2

Observe start to finish

Watch from setup through sign-off and documentation. Take detailed notes on any deviation.

3

Debrief

Tell the trainee what went well and what didn't, referencing the regulation.

4

Record pass or fail

Document the mock on the evaluation form. A pass counts toward the required set; a fail restarts the count.

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Section 8 of 10

Handling Problems — Refusals, Errors, Disputes & Fatal Flaws

Trainers have to teach the hard cases, not just the easy ones. Your trainees will face refusals, tampering, and equipment failures in the field — so they need to face them in your mock room first.

When a Trainee Fails a Mock

1

Do not pass it

A failed mock does not count. Integrity here protects every future donor.

2

Give specific feedback

Point to the exact step and the regulation behind it.

3

Let them re-attempt

Document both the failed attempt and the subsequent pass. The error-free count starts over.

Fatal vs. Correctable Flaws

  • Fatal flaws cancel the test and cannot be fixed (e.g., specimen ID number on the bottle and CCF don't match, no printed collector signature on a positive)
  • Correctable flaws can be fixed with a signed memo (e.g., collector forgot to sign the qualification — fixable; missing donor signature — collector provides a statement)
Teach the difference cold. A collector who can't tell a fatal flaw from a correctable one will either cancel valid tests or let invalid ones through. Both are failures of training.

Disputed Evaluations

  • Stay professional and calm
  • Reference the exact section of Part 40, not your opinion
  • Offer review by a supervisor or another qualified trainer
  • Document the dispute and your resolution in the trainee's file
Section 8 of 10
Section 9 of 10

Documentation, Recordkeeping & Issuing Qualification Certificates

If it isn't documented, it didn't happen. Your qualification documentation is what an employer, DER, or auditor relies on to prove a collector is qualified — and it's how you protect your own business.

What Each Trainee File Must Contain

  • Attendance — dates, times, trainee name
  • Knowledge result / acknowledgment
  • Each mock evaluation (pass/fail) for the required set
  • The specific regulation reference (§40.33, §40.213, or §40.35)
  • Your printed name, signature, and date as the qualifying trainer

Issuing the Certificate

Use the qualification templates from your starter pack. The certificate and training record should clearly state the discipline, the regulation, the date qualified, and your identity as the trainer. Give the trainee their copy and keep yours.

Retention: Keep trainee qualification records and your own trainer/refresher records on file and be ready to produce them on request from an employer, DER, MRO, or DOT auditor.
Section 9 of 10
Section 10 of 10

Running Your Training Business & Staying Current

You now have the knowledge to qualify others. This final section is about turning that into a professional, repeatable training operation — and keeping yourself current so your qualifications never lapse.

Delivering Training Professionally

  • Prep before every class: review the regulation, inspect mock equipment, print forms
  • Teach the "why" behind each step — understanding beats memorization
  • Use your branded slideshows live or virtually
  • Keep mocks realistic; build in the problem scenarios every time

Stay Current

  • Read ODAPC guidance and Part 40 updates as they publish
  • Complete your refresher training on schedule and document it
  • Perform real collections/tests yourself to stay proficient
  • Never train a discipline you are not currently qualified in
You've completed the Train the Trainer Qualification course!
Pass the knowledge check in each section to earn your Certificate of Completion. Combine it with the supervised training demonstrations in your discipline(s) to begin qualifying collectors and technicians under your own business name using your branded materials.
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Section 10 of 10