Will Congress Fix Auto Safety?


Will Congress Fix Auto Safety?

June, 2015

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

Legislation Being Considered in CongressThe Detroit News reports Senator Thune, Republican from South Dakota, is considering legislation. 

“Washington — The head of the Senate Commerce Committee is considering legislative proposals to reform the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, but said he is still not convinced the auto safety agency needs more funding.

Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., chair of the committee that oversees NHTSA, told The Detroit News on Tuesday the agency needs to make changes in the wake of General Motors’ delayed ignition recall linked to 111 deaths and the recall of 33.8 million vehicles with potentially defective Takata air bags.

“Part of the issue for NHTSA is just reforming and doing some things differently, and they could actually accomplish their mission — and it’s not necessarily an issue of money,” Thune said, adding he would be willing to listen to requests for more money. “We’ve looked at some reforms (for NHTSA),” he said.

He said he could introduce NHTSA reform legislation.”

http://www.detroitnews.com/story/business/autos/2015/06/09/gop-senator-considering-nhtsa-reform-bill/28774117/

How concerned should Senator Thune (and others) be?

*  About two or three times each week people die of crash injuries in SD year after year after year.  See data from 2002 athttp://www.arcgis.com/home/webmap/viewer.html?webmap=71c3bb8008ae4682ab0a36f090a2b443&extent=-161.4739,21.4327,-63.388,54.2524 

* In 2013, the number of States that had lower fatality rates than South Dakota was 41 States.  See table attached.

Bipartisan Legislation Introduced

U.S. Senators Heller and Markey Team with U.S. Reps. Rokita and Blumenauer to Introduce Bill on Both Sides of Hill

 

(Washington, DC) – U.S. Senators Dean Heller (R-NV) and Edward Markey (D-MA) joined with U.S. Representatives Todd Rokita (R-IN) and Earl Blumenauer (D-WA) to introduce the Safety Through Informed Consumers Act (STICRS) Act, S. 1535, legislation that is both bipartisan and bicameral. The legislation requires the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) to integrate active safety technology into its crashworthiness rating system.

 

“The Safety Through Informed Consumers Act is a necessary piece of legislation to ensure American families are well-versed on whether vehicles they are looking to purchase are equipped with the newest, state-of-the-art safety technology. Given recent issues surrounding ignition switch defects, airbag defects, and numerous vehicle recalls, this bipartisan-bicameral legislation will help restore consumers’ confidence in the safety of their vehicles. I look forward to working with Senator Markey and Congressmen Rokita and Blumenauer in order to move this legislation through Congress,” saidSenator Dean Heller.

 

“Consumers trust auto window-sticker safety ratings when they compare vehicles. Today’s 5-star safety rating system only tells them how safe they are in the vehicle once a crash occurs, ignoring any features like collision warning and automatic emergency braking, that can help avoid that crash in the first place. With new safety technology standard in many cars, we need a 21st century 5-star safety rating system that tells consumers how safe their vehicles really are,” stated Senator Edward Markey.

 

Representative Todd Rokita continued, “In a free market, informed consumers are one of the greatest drivers of advancement. The Safety Through Informed Consumers Act ensures that the latest safety technologies are integrated into the 5-star rating system, arming new car buyers with potentially life-saving information. This is a common-sense, bipartisan bill that promotes innovation, empowers consumers, and protects lives. I thank my colleagues for their support and look forward to working with them to advance this important legislation.”

 

Representative Earl Blumenauer added, “Active safety technologies, such as blind spot warning and assisted breaking, improve the safety of cars and save lives. Making consumers aware of such cutting-edge technology is a big step toward safer roadways for all users, regardless of how they choose to travel. People should clearly and easily understand the critical safety features in any vehicle they are considering buying.”

BACKGROUND:

The 5-Star Safety Ratings System was created by the NHTSA to provide consumers with information about the crash protection and rollover safety of new vehicles. The program encourages manufacturers to voluntarily design safer vehicles by giving them safety ratings that can be used by consumers to compare vehicles when shopping for a new car. The safety ratings are posted prominently on the window stickers required to be displayed on all new vehicles.

Innovative and safety technologies, such as lane departure warning, forward collision warning, blind spot detection, and assisted breaking, are rapidly being developed, improved, and deployed on new automobiles. These types of technologies can save lives by preventing accidents altogether. The sponsors of the STICRS legislation believe it is important that consumers are aware of this available vehicle safety technology.

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Will the Fix Be Commensurate With The Need?
Nationally the number of people dying of crash injuries amounts to nearly 100 each day, and nearly 400 serious injuries each day, and nearly $2 Billion each day in losses.  See https://www.careforcrashvictims.com/clock.php

 

Child Safety Still A Problem – How Did NHTSA Fail To Protect American Children?

 

Child Safety Still A Problem – How Did NHTSA Fail To Protect American Children?

June, 2015

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

The NY Times reports on good work by the IIHS:

“Installing a child safety seat in a vehicle has been a confusing, sometimes difficult task for many parents. A new study released on Thursday has backed up many parents’ complaints, finding that only a handful of vehicles deserved the highest rating for ease of installation.

The study, conducted by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, rated 102 vehicles for how easily a child safety seat could be installed. It focused on the vehicles’ so-called Latch system, which consists of three anchors that the seat is secured to.

Only three models received the highest rating of Good: the BMW 5 Series, Mercedes-Benz GL-Class and the Volkswagen Passat.”  See

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/19/business/few-vehicles-equipped-for-easy-child-safety-seat-installation-study-finds.html?emc=edit_tnt_20150618&nlid=37926955&tntemail0=y

NHTSA data on deaths of children in crashes restrained and unrestrained in fatal crashes (413 under age 8 in 2013) is at

http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/Pubs/812154.pdf

For more than a century children have been dying in crashes restrained and unrestrained.

In 1980 NHTSA published a report on Automobile Occupant Crash Protection. (Disclosure: I edited this report that was cited by the Supreme Court in overturning the Reagan Administration’s rescission of the airbag rule.)  That report listed models of cars that had problems with child restraints.  See https://www.careforcrashvictims.com/assets/1980fullreport.pdf

When will NHTSA require all auto companies to design vehicles to better protect children?  Will it happen while the NHTSA Office of Crashworthiness Research and its Human Injury Research Program are both headed by former GM officials?

Lou

The Center for Auto Safety, DOT, and Senators Markey and Blumenthal on NHTSA’s Recall Program


The Center for Auto Safety, DOT, and Senators Markey and Blumenthal on NHTSA’s Recall Program

June, 2015

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

 

Please see the latest releases.

http://www.autosafety.org/sites/default/files/imce_staff_uploads/CASNewsImage.jpg

Statement on NHTSA’s Path Forward for Defect InvestigationsClarence M. Ditlow, Executive Director

June 5, 2015

NHTSA’s critical self-assessment of its defect investigation and recall process is a crucial first step toward restoring the integrity of the agency’s enforcement process and the ability to hold the auto industry accountable for defects that kill and injure. The assessment calls for a new paradigm in funding and resources to match the dramatic increase in the number of vehicles on the road and the increasing sophisticated technology in vehicles. The assessment also sets into motion new internal processes to correct deficiencies in agency procedures that missed defects like GM ignition switch, Jeep fuel tank and Takata airbag inflators.

Whether the Path Forward succeeds depends on two crucial factors.  First, Congress must approve the funding and resources required for NHTSA’s New Paradigm. NHTSA can go only so far on ideals alone.  Second, NHTSA must become transparent for the public to see the new reforms in action.  NHTSA in the 1970’s with a more adequate budget and aggressive enforcement was much like the New Paradigm in the Path Forward. But as funding decreased and secrecy increased in the 1980’s and beyond, the agency became a weak enforcer and mass vehicle defects became common behind closed doors.

#                #                #

 

         Markey, Blumenthal Statement on NHTSA’s “Path Forward”

·      Transportation Sec. Foxx announces formation of new NHTSA safety teams

 

 Clarence Ditlow

Executive Director

Center for Auto Safety

1825 Connecticut Ave NW #330

Washington DC 20009

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 Contact: Giselle Barry (Markey) 202-224-2742

Josh Zembik (Blumenthal) 202-224-6452

 

Markey, Blumenthal Statement on NHTSA’s “Path Forward”

 

In wake of GM recall, Senators introduced legislation to increase transparency and earlier reporting of auto defects

 

Washington (June 5, 2015) – Senator Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), members of the Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, released the following joint statement after the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration today made public reports and initiatives that address failings in its GM ignition switch investigation and other safety efforts. Senators Markey and Blumenthal have been leading the Senate investigation into the GM ignition switch recall that has been linked to at least 100 deaths.  GM has admitted to knowing for at least a decade about the ignition switch defect in Chevy Cobalts and Saturn Ions that led to the massive recall, and NHTSA failed to connect the dots using accident reports and other information it had to more quickly and aggressively investigate the defect.

 

“We are pleased that NHTSA has acknowledged neglecting critical information that should have moved it to take action much earlier on faulty GM ignition switches that were killing drivers and passengers for years. Unfortunately, for more than a decade, NHTSA failed to address the information and evidence it had in its own database linking defective ignition switch to fatal accidents. It is incumbent upon Administrator Rosekind to put in place permanent measures necessary to prevent another tragedy like this from ever happening again.  Those measures must include a requirement that the types of secret documents that NHTSA had access to are made public, and the enactment of our legislation that requires more information to be reported to NHTSA’s Early Warning Reporting database when auto manufacturers first become aware of incidents involving fatalities.”

 

In one of the reports released today, NHTSA acknowledged that it had requested a Death Inquiry (DI) document from GM related to the death of two Wisconsin teenagers. That document, which was received by NHTSA in 2007 but kept secret by both GM and NHTSA, was first made public by Senator Markey on May 7, 2014. It included a report by the Wisconsin State Patrol Academy that highlighted the ignition switch defect as preventing the airbags from deploying. The report also references other reports of similar problems that the Wisconsin investigators uncovered and noted that these investigators had obtained the 2005 GM Technical Service Bulletin that described the ignition switch problem to GM dealers.

 

Last year, GM CEO Mary T. Barra expressed her support for components of legislation introduced by Senators Markey and Blumenthal that would ensure more transparency and earlier reporting of safety issues to prevent auto injuries and fatalities. The legislation, the Early Warning Reporting System Improvement Act, would require NHTSA make the information it receives from auto manufacturers publicly available in a searchable, user-friendly format so that consumers and independent safety experts can evaluate potential safety defects themselves.

 

Senators Blumenthal, Wicker, Safety Advocates & Crash Victims Trying To Stop Big Truck Deaths


Senators Blumenthal, Wicker, Safety Advocates & Crash Victims Trying To Stop Big Truck Deaths

June, 2015

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

Senator Blumenthal is from one of the safer States (CT) and Sen. Wicker is from the State ranked 49th in worst crash fatality rates in 2013.  See attached State rankings.

CONTACT: Bill Bronrott, 202-270-4415 and bronrott@gmail.com

 

MEDIA ADVISORY

 

Truck crash victims, law enforcement, safety advocates to join Senator Blumenthal (D-CT) as Senate is poised to consider dangerous special interest riders including “Double 33 Trailers” and “Tired Truckers” provisions passed by House in FY 2016 transportation spending bill

 

WHAT:            NEWS CONFERENCE to urge the Senate Appropriations Committee to stop theunprecedented assault on truck safety led by large trucking company lobbyists who used backdoor maneuvers to slip several anti-truck safety provisions into the FY 2016 transportation spending bill(HR 2577) narrowly approved by the House on June 9.

 

The Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development (THUD) will mark up the Senate’s FY 2016 transportation appropriations bill on Tuesday, June 23and the full Appropriations Committee on Thursday, June 25.  News conference speakers will call on the Senate committee to reject these stealth riders that made it into the House bill without any hearings, public input or evaluation of the impacts of these rollbacks on safety and the nation’s roads and bridges.

 

WHEN:            Tuesday, June 23, 2015 at 2:30pm

 

WHERE:            U.S. Capitol Visitor Center (CVC) Room 208, Washington, D.C.

 

WHO:             Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Member of the Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee and a leading voice for improved commercial motor vehicle safety. On June 18, Senator Blumenthal and Senator Roger Wicker (R-MS) sent a letter to the Senate Appropriations leadership urging them to reject any effort to legalize double 33-foot trailers on the nation’s highways.

 

Joan Claybrook, Chair, Citizens for Reliable and Safe Highways (CRASH) and former Administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

 

Jackie Gillan, President, Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety.

 

James P. Hoffa, General President, International Brotherhood of Teamsters (INVITED)

 

Andy Matthews, Chairman of the National Troopers Coalition, which represents 42,000 State Troopers from 41 states around the country, and President of the Connecticut State Police Union.

 

Lisa Shrum of Fayette, Missouri, whose mother Virginia Baker and stepfather Randy Baker were killed in a crash on October 10, 2006, involving a FedEx double trailer truck.  Lisa is a victim advocate with the Truck Safety Coalition.

 

Ed Slattery of Lutherville, Maryland.  On August 16, 2010, Ed’s wife Susan was killed and their two sons, Peter and Matthew, were severely injured when a truck driver fell asleep at the wheel of a triple-trailer truck on the Ohio Turnpike, forcing them into the semi-trailer ahead.  Matthew suffered massive head trauma, and is permanently disabled.  Ed is a board member of Parents Against Tired Truckers.

 

Officer Robert MillsFort Worth (TX) Police Department, one of the nation’s leading commercial motor vehicle safety law enforcement experts.

 

BACKGROUND:

The safety rollbacks, repeals and exemptions in the House-passed transportation spending bill (HR 2577) would result in more overweight and oversized trucks driven by overworked and overtired truckers across the nation at the cost of more death and traumatic injury by:

 

* Forcing states to allow FedEx double 33-foot trailers throughout the country, taking away a state’s right to set trailer lengths. 39 states currently prohibit double 33 tractor-trailer combinations, which are at least 84 feet in length – the height of an 8-story building.

* Permanently increasing truck driver working and driving hours up to 82 hours per week and killing the “weekend off” for two nights of restorative rest.

* Defunding a public rulemaking underway at the Department of Transportation that is reviewing and assessing ifminimum insurance requirements for trucks and passenger-carrying buses are adequate. They have not been changed since 1985.

* Giving special interest carve outs to increase the current federal truck weight limits from 80,000 lbs. up to 129,000 lbs. in Idaho, raise truck lengths in Kansas and possibly additional state exemptions that could be offered during Committee mark-up that would further damage already-crumbling roads and bridges and rollback safety.

 

KEY FACTS:

Ø  Every year 4,000 people are killed and nearly 100,000 are injured, on average, in truck crashes.

Ø  Large truck crash fatalities increased 17% from 2009 through 2013 while total traffic fatalities declined by 3%.

Ø  The number of people injured in large truck crashes increased 28% from 2009 through 2013 while the number of people injured in all traffic crashes increased by only 4%.

Ø  In fatal two-vehicle crashes between a large truck and a passenger motor vehicle, 96% of the fatalities were occupants of the passenger vehicle.

Ø  Commercial motor vehicle crashes cost our nation $99 billion annually.

 

 

Who To Blame For Recalls & What To Do


Who To Blame For Recalls & What To Do

June, 2015

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:
Who to Blame

Michael R. Lemov, author of the new book “Car Safety Wars”, has written an article just published in the Detroit News:“The blame for this regulation by recall and for the slowdown in preventive standard setting must be shared by the automobile industry and Congress. The former often lobbies against new safety regulations. The Congress has starved NHTSA for adequate funding and staff for years.”  See http://www.detroitnews.com/story/opinion/2015/06/04/lemov-auto-safety-recalls-flawed-remedy/28425435/

What to Do

Consumer Advocates have written the following:“As representatives of the nation’s leading consumer, public health, and safety organizations, we are writing in support of legislation you have introduced, the Vehicle Safety Improvement Act of 2015, H.R. 1181.”

 

Senators Markey and Blumenthal Call for Transparency, Accountability at NHTSA


Senators Markey and Blumenthal Call for Transparency, Accountability at NHTSA

June, 2015

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

Senator Markey is from MA, the State with the best (lowest) crash fatality rate in 2013.  Senator Blumenthal is from CT a State with one of the 10 lowest crash fatality rates in 2013.  So it is understandable that they would be leaders in auto safety.  See 2013 State rankings attached.   People in all States would benefit if their Senators also added their support.

Their joint release follows:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

Contact: Giselle Barry (Markey) 202-224-2742

Josh Zembik (202-224-6452

 

Sens. Markey, Blumenthal Call for Increased Transparency, Accountability at NHTSA

 

In wake of blistering new report outlining myriad NHTSA failures in safety investigations, lawmakers call for passage of their legislation to increase transparency at auto safety agency

 

Washington (June 22, 2015) – Senators Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), members of the Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, today called for immediate action to increase transparency measures at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). A devastating new report from the Department of Transportation’s Inspector General (IG) enumerates in blistering detail the many lapses in policy, protocol, decisionmaking and judgment on the part of the agency as it investigated the faulty GM ignition switch that has led to at least 114 deaths and many more injuries. In particular, the new report documents how NHTSA had information about the faulty ignition switch as early as 2003 but took no action. The report also highlights that the agency does not ensure compliance from auto manufacturers to submit information to the Early Warning Reporting (EWR) system, nor does it come close to adequately analyzing the information it does have access to. The EWR system is NHTSA’s public and searchable online database that is supposed to house information about incidents involving potential defects associated with auto fatalities, injuries, or property damage.

 

“The Inspector General’s new report further underscores the our assertions that NHTSA has failed to use, disclose and in some cases even understand reports and documents it obtains from automakers and consumers that are supposed to provide early warnings of deadly automobile defects,” said Senators Markey and Blumenthal. “We are encouraged that NHTSA agrees with the recommendations made in this scalding indictment of its past ineptitude and indifference to the lives that were lost as a result. Now, the best way to ensure that this unavoidable tragedy isn’t replayed again in the future is to empower the public and make public the information NHTSA has historically ignored. Our legislation to reform the Early Warning Reporting system that would make the information NHTSA receives from auto manufacturers public and in a user-friendly format so that consumers can evaluate potential safety defects themselves. It is also clear NHTSA needs sharper teeth, which is why we plan to continue fighting for legislation that expands the agency’s civil and criminal penalty authority to compel compliance with the law.”

Senators Markey and Blumenthal have been leading the investigation in the Senate of the defective GM ignition switch recall. Specific findings in the IG’s report that the Senators first investigated and made public include:

1.                   The DOT IG report found that NHTSA had information about GM’s defective ignition switch as early as 2003, including non-public documents submitted to its Early Warning Reporting system, but it did not take action that could have saved people’s lives.

 “ODI received early warning reporting data and consumer complaints related to the GM ignition switch defect19 for more than a decade before GM notified ODI of the recall on February 7, 2014.”

“ODI also missed other opportunities to investigate the ignition switch when new evidence came to light in subsequent years.”

“However, some consumer complaints described the ignition switch defect in detail. For example, in June 2005, a consumer sent NHTSA a copy of a letter that she sent to the GM customer service department describing how her 2005 Chevrolet Cobalt had turned off on three occasions while driving. The letter stated that the service manager tested the vehicle and was able to turn the ignition switch when his knee hit the bottom of the “opener gadget” on the keychain. The letter goes on:

This is a safety/recall issue if there ever was one. Forget the bulletin. I have found the cause of the problem. Not suggested causes as listed in bulletin. The problem is the ignition turn switch is poorly installed. Even with the slightest touch, the car will shut off while in motion. I don’t have to list to you the safety problems that may happen, besides an accident or death…”

2.                   Among the secret documents NHTSA had that could have alerted the public to the defective GM ignition switch was a 2007 report that accurately described the cause of a fatal Wisconsin accident that Senator Markey first obtained and released publicly in 2014.  However, NHTSA neither made the document public nor, apparently, understood it.

“For example, in June 2007, GM provided ODI with a State trooper’s report that identified the 2005 Chevrolet Cobalt’s ignition switch as a possible cause of air bag non-deployment during a fatal accident. However, two ODI staff who reviewed the report in 2007 did not note this potential link when documenting their reviews.”

 “However, ODI staff missed opportunities to connect the ignition switch defect to air bag non-deployments because they did not consider all available information. For example, in 2007, two ODI employees reviewed the underlying documentation for a death and injury report on a fatal accident involving a 2005 Chevrolet Cobalt, which contained evidence that linked the ignition switch defect to the vehicle’s air bag non-deployment. However, neither employee—an early warning reporting analyst and an ODI air bag investigator—made this connection during their analyses of the documentation. The death and injury report documentation specifically included:

• A Wisconsin State Trooper’s report that identified the ignition switch defect as a possible cause of air bag non-deployment during the accident. However, the two ODI staff who reviewed the report did not note this finding when documenting their reviews of the report.

• Event data recorder data showed the vehicle’s power mode status had been in the “accessory” position during the accident—a key indicator of the ignition switch defect. However, the ODI analyst reviewing this report did not include this information in his annotation. The air bag investigator noted this information in his review but ultimately concluded that the air bag non-deployment was caused by the long delay between the first and final impacts.”

 

3.                   The DOT IG found that NHTSA does not verify that automobile manufacturers comply with Early Warning Reporting requirements, and does not take prompt enforcement action when non-compliance is suspected. Senators Markey and Blumenthal have conducted extensive oversight of NHTSA’s EWR compliance and enforcement, including efforts in which the Senators alerted NHTSA to non-compliance by Ferrari and Honda (after which NHTSA issued penalties against both). In response to one letter, NHTSA told the Senators that “it is not possible to verify the accuracy of each piece of information submitted in early warning reporting” and that NHTSA enforces compliance “as appropriate”.

“Moreover, ODI does not verify that manufacturers’ early warning reporting data are complete and accurate. Although ODI has the authority to inspect manufacturers’ records for compliance with early warning reporting requirements, NHTSA officials told us the Agency has never used this authority. In addition, the Agency has no processes in place for systematically assessing the quality of early warning reporting data or internal guidance on using oversight tools to enforce data reporting requirements. The Agency also has not established best practices for providing early warning reporting data and does not periodically review manufacturers’ early warning reporting procedures. Instead, the Director of ODI told us ODI relies on the “honor system.”

“Yet even in cases where ODI suspects noncompliance, it has not taken prompt enforcement action.”

“Further, ODI’s processes for verifying that manufacturers submit complete and accurate early warning reporting data are insufficient. For example, in May 2014, ODI officials told us that one vehicle manufacturer reported less early warning reporting data than comparable manufacturers. However, ODI took no enforcement action until the manufacturer self-reported the omission of 1,700 death and injury claims in October 2014, even though ODI contacted the manufacturer about inconsistencies in its reporting in late 2011 or early 2012.”

4.         The DOT IG identified deficiencies in the way NHTSA requires Early Warning Reporting data to be submitted. 

“Deficiencies in ODI’s vehicle safety data are due in part to the Agency’s lack of detailed guidance on what information manufacturers and consumers should report. For example, ODI regulations specify 24 broad codes for categorizing early warning reporting data for vehicles. However, according to ODI, an average vehicle may have over 15,000 components. Without detailed guidance, decisions regarding key aspects of early warning reporting data are left to the manufacturers’ discretion—resulting in inconsistent reporting and data that ODI investigative chiefs and vehicle safety advocates consider to be of little use.”

 

5.         The DOT IG found that NHTSA does not adequately analyze Early Warning Reporting system data to identify potential defects.

“Weaknesses in ODI’s processes for analyzing vehicle safety data further undermine ODI’s efforts to identify safety defects. Specifically, ODI does not follow standard statistical practices when analyzing early warning reporting data, such as establishing a base case for what statistical test results would look like in the absence of safety defects. Consequently, ODI cannot differentiate trends and outliers that represent random variation from those that are statistically significant.”

Senators Markey and Blumenthal’s Early Warning Reporting System Improvement Act would require automobile and equipment manufacturers to automatically submit the accident report or other document that first alerted them to a fatality involving their vehicle or equipment to NHTSA’s Early Warning Reporting database.  NHTSA would then required to automatically make those documents public unless they are exempted from public disclosure under FOIA. The legislation also would require NHTSA to consider Early Warning Reporting information when it is investigating potential safety defects and when it is evaluating citizen petitions for automobile safety standards or enforcement actions.

 

The Automaker Accountability Actwould eliminate the cap on the maximum allowable civil fine the Department of Transportation (DOT) can levy on automakers for safety violations or failure to report known defects.