Crash Death Mapping Tools – States & Congressional Districts

Crash Death Mapping Tools – States & Congressional Districts

July, 2015

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

As a public service you now have available to you 10 years of crash death statistics by Congressional District and by State with current names of Senators and Representatives.

Hopefully this will help citizens communicate the importance of auto safety to their elected representatives.

Safety Advocates need all the help they can get as shown in the letter below:

“Senate Urged to Advance, Not Rollback,

Safety in Safety Title of DRIVE Act

 

Inconsequential changes that have been made not enough to save lives

Washington, D.C. (July 22, 2015) – Leading safety and consumer organizations sent the following letter to each member of the U.S. Senate this afternoon urging them to include lifesaving highway and vehicle safety provisions that are glaringly absent in the “Safety Title” of the six-year highway reauthorization DRIVE Act.  

The groups have identified “The Worst of the Worst” in the DRIVE Act “Safety Title” that is available to the public on the homepage of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety atwww.saferoads.org.

July 22, 2015

Dear Senator:

We are writing to you because of our concerns and objections to the disregard for public safety reflected in the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation safety title in the DRIVE Act.  There is no doubt that if 33,000 people were dying in airplane crashes every year – the equivalent of a major catastrophic plane crash every other day — Congress would not for a moment consider passing legislation that upgraded airport facilities and advanced the agenda of the airline industry but did nothing to improve safety. The Senate would never let that happen, nor should it do so in the face of motor vehicle and truck safety needs that cry out for reasoned and reasonable safety countermeasures. 

The safety title of the DRIVE Act does more to advance auto and trucking interests than to advance public safety.  It includes provisions that puts burdensome and unnecessary roadblocks to safety rulemakings; proposes untested and dangerous programs like interstate teen truck and bus driving when this young age group already is overrepresented in fatal crashes when behind the wheel of a car or an intrastate truck; and, it completely ignores that automakers are selling defective cars to families that are killing and injuring hundreds, covering up their shameful actions and face only paltry fines that have become the cost of doing business.  For example, without enactment of provisions in S. 1743, the safety title proposed by Senators Nelson (D-FL), Blumenthal (D-CT) and Markey (D-MA), a member of your family can walk into a used car dealership today and drive away with a car that has a deadly defect that has not been repaired but could maim or kill. 

The Senate can do better, as it has in past reauthorization bills.  For 25 years the Senate has been a bi-partisan beacon in advancing sound, sensible and cost-saving proposals resulting in safer cars, safer drivers and safer roads in the surface transportation reauthorization bills that have been enacted into law.  These laws have literally saved hundreds of thousands of lives, prevented millions of serious, lifelong injuries and saved our economy billions of dollars. 

·      In 1991, the Senate included provisions in the ISTEA law resulting in airbags as standard equipment in the front seat of all passenger vehicles and a freeze on the spread of double and triple-trailer trucks in every state. 

·      In 1995, the Senate adopted a national zero tolerance BAC law for underage drinking and driving requiring every state to pass this lifesaving law to protect our children. 

·      Again, in 1998, the Senate led the way with safety provisions in the TEA-21 bill requiring advanced airbags, incentive grants for occupant protection and stronger drunk driving laws. 

·      In 2005, the passage of the SAFETEA-LU bill brought about major improvements in vehicle safety because it included the bi-partisan Senate safety title that sought to address the 10,000 annual deaths occurring every year due to vehicle rollover.  This bi-partisan safety title under the leadership of Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK), Sen. Trent Lott (R-MS) and Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-HI) required vehicle safety standards resulting in electronic stability control technology on every vehicle, improved roof strength, ejection mitigation as well as mandatory truck safety improvements. 

·      In 2012, theMAP-21 bill took a major step forward in public safety by advancing motorcoach safety improvements under the leadership of Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) and Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX). The Senate enacted into law critical National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) recommendations for motorcoach safety that had languished for decades and turned them into law. The result will affect the safety of millions of travelers using intercity buses, children on school field trips, college athletes traveling to sporting events and others.  The bill requires that motorcoaches will finally be equipped with basic occupant safety protections such as seatbelts, roof crush prevention, occupant ejection protections and other critical safety features. 

Safety groups will continue to oppose the current safety title of the DRIVE Act until the serious problems are corrected – both by dropping the anti-safety provisions and by including pro-safety measures in the Nelson/Blumenthal/Markey/Booker bills (S. 1743 and S. 1739).  These include but are not limited to — criminal penalty authority, removing the cap on civil penalties, requiring the repair of safety defects in used cars, improvements to Early Warning Reporting (EWR) requirements to identify safety defects earlier, extending the statutory limitation on repairing defects to at least 15 years, addressing children dying in hot cars, pedestrian safety, advancing crash avoidance technology in large trucks and dropping all of the anti-truck safety provisions such as – teen truckers, hiding safety scores of trucking and bus companies, permanent hours of service (HOS) exemptions, unnecessary rulemaking roadblocks, giving FMCSA authority to determine “fault” in truck crashes without a complete and thorough investigation, thawing the LCV freeze and others.  

 

We urge you to think about the consequences of taking a pass on enacting a strong and needed safety title in the 6-year authorization bill.  During the 6-year span of this bill it is expected that every state will suffer significant loss of life and injury, with 200,000 people killed and 12 million injured in motor vehicle crashes if nothing is done to reduce those losses.  Please do not turn your back on these victims because we didn’t do enough. 

 

Sincerely,

Jacqueline Gillan, President                                               

Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety

Joan Claybrook, Chair

Citizens for Reliable and Safe Highways and

Former Administrator, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration

Clarence Ditlow, Executive Director                                   

Center for Auto Safety                                                           

Janette E. Fennell, Founder and President

KidsAndCars.org

Andrew McGuire, Executive Director                       

Trauma Foundation

John Lannen, Executive Director                                   

Truck Safety Coalition

Jack Gillis, Director of Public Affairs

Consumer Federation of America

Daphne Izer

Lisbon, Maine

Founder, Parents Against Tired Truckers (PATT)

Mother of Jeff Izer, killed in a truck crash on October 10, 1993

Jennifer Tierney

Kernersville, North Carolina

Board Member, Citizens for Reliable and Safe Highways

Member, Motor Carrier Safety Advisory Committee

Daughter of James Mooney, killed in a truck crash on September 20, 1983″

I hope this helps.
Lou

 

Made In America NHTSA Loophole in Regulations – Kills Americans in Limos


Made In America NHTSA Loophole in Regulations – Kills Americans in Limos

July, 2015

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

International Business Times reports:

“In 2013, makers of so-called motor coaches — limousines, entertainment buses and shuttle vans — convinced the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to exempt vehicles with “perimeter seating” — seats that point inward — or with fewer than eight forward-facing seats from new rules aimed at bolstering “commercial bus safety.”

The exemption is aimed at allowing makers of airport shuttles and other buses that carry multiple wheelchair positions to forego certain common safety features. But as a result, limousine makers — which purchase vehicles like Lincolns, cut them in half, elongate them, and alter the interiors to accommodate a more luxurious and spacious atmosphere — can avoid the cost of adding extra safety belts and air bags to the vehicles. Larger party buses, essentially rolling nightclubs, are also exempt under the guidelines….

Clarence Ditlow, head of the Center for Auto Safety, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit, says for years his group has tried to ring alarm bells over limousine safety. In 2013, five nurses in California burned to death in a limousine firebecause they were trapped inside, unable to reach the doors at the back-end of the vehicle with only an opening in the partition that separates the driver from the party.

Ditlow says federal regulators aren’t doing enough to ascertain the general safety of limousines.

“It’s been our long-stated position that the National Transportation Safety Board has been absolutely remiss in tracking limousine accidents,” said Ditlow. “There’s a whole issue about what safety standards should apply to these vehicles.”See

http://www.ibtimes.com/long-island-limousine-accident-exposes-dangerous-flaws-party-vehicle-safety-2022650

Let’s not forget who was running NHTSA in 2013.  The President was Barack Obama, the NHTSA Administrator was David L. Strickland – who soon left through the NHTSA Revolving Door to work for auto industry clients.  Seehttp://articles.latimes.com/2014/jan/26/business/la-fi-hiltzik-20140126

No end in sight to crash tragedies.  President Obama still has not adopted a Vision Zero Goal for auto crash deaths in a decade in or by new vehicles.  Volvo has such a goal.  Why not America?

Lou

 

Fwd: Safety Advocates ID “Worst of Worst” in DRIVE Act, Send Letter Urging Senators to Advance, Not Rollback, Safety


Fwd: Safety Advocates ID “Worst of Worst” in DRIVE Act, Send Letter Urging Senators to Advance, Not Rollback, Safety

July, 2015

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:
Please see the Press Release by Safety advocates that I am forwarding.
In addition, to empower citizens to help improve safety legislation, I am providing the following information.

*  Nearly $4 Trillion in losses can be expected in the six years under this proposed legislation.  More than the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. See http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/Pubs/812013.pdf *  More Americans will die and be injured in crashes in Red States than in Blue States.  Seehttps://www.careforcrashvictims.com/assets/MonthlyReportforJuly2015final.pdf

*  State Rankings for crash deaths in 2013 show Blue States to be generally better than Red States which raises the question why Republicans are not doing more for the safety of people in their States and districts.  See attached State rankings.
*  Crash Death statistics for the past decade by State and Congressional district are available at https://www.careforcrashvictims.com/CrashDeathMappingTools.php

Source:  https://www.careforcrashvictims.com/blog-fwdmediaadvoc.php

Lou

———- Forwarded message ———- From: Bill Bronrott <bronrott@gmail.com> Date: Wed, Jul 22, 2015 at 4:00 PM Subject: Safety Advocates ID “Worst of Worst” in DRIVE Act, Send Letter Urging Senators to Advance, Not Rollback, Safety To: Bill Bronrott <bronrott@gmail.com>

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Bill Bronrott, 202-270-4415

 

Senate Urged to Advance, Not Rollback,

Safety in Safety Title of DRIVE Act

 

Inconsequential changes that have been made not enough to save lives

 

Washington, D.C. (July 22, 2015) – Leading safety and consumer organizations sent the following letter to each member of the U.S. Senate this afternoon urging them to include lifesaving highway and vehicle safety provisions that are glaringly absent in the “Safety Title” of the six-year highway reauthorization DRIVE Act.  

 

The groups have identified “The Worst of the Worst” in the DRIVE Act “Safety Title” that is available to the public on the homepage of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety at www.saferoads.org.

 

 

July 22, 2015

 

Dear Senator:

 

We are writing to you because of our concerns and objections to the disregard for public safety reflected in the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation safety title in the DRIVE Act.  There is no doubt that if 33,000 people were dying in airplane crashes every year – the equivalent of a major catastrophic plane crash every other day — Congress would not for a moment consider passing legislation that upgraded airport facilities and advanced the agenda of the airline industry but did nothing to improve safety. The Senate would never let that happen, nor should it do so in the face of motor vehicle and truck safety needs that cry out for reasoned and reasonable safety countermeasures. 

 

The safety title of the DRIVE Act does more to advance auto and trucking interests than to advance public safety.  It includes provisions that puts burdensome and unnecessary roadblocks to safety rulemakings; proposes untested and dangerous programs like interstate teen truck and bus driving when this young age group already is overrepresented in fatal crashes when behind the wheel of a car or an intrastate truck; and, it completely ignores that automakers are selling defective cars to families that are killing and injuring hundreds, covering up their shameful actions and face only paltry fines that have become the cost of doing business.  For example, without enactment of provisions in S. 1743, the safety title proposed by Senators Nelson (D-FL), Blumenthal (D-CT) and Markey (D-MA), a member of your family can walk into a used car dealership today and drive away with a car that has a deadly defect that has not been repaired but could maim or kill. 

 

The Senate can do better, as it has in past reauthorization bills.  For 25 years the Senate has been a bi-partisan beacon in advancing sound, sensible and cost-saving proposals resulting in safer cars, safer drivers and safer roads in the surface transportation reauthorization bills that have been enacted into law.  These laws have literally saved hundreds of thousands of lives, prevented millions of serious, lifelong injuries and saved our economy billions of dollars. 

 

·      In 1991, the Senate included provisions in the ISTEA law resulting in airbags as standard equipment in the front seat of all passenger vehicles and a freeze on the spread of double and triple-trailer trucks in every state. 

 

·      In 1995, the Senate adopted a national zero tolerance BAC law for underage drinking and driving requiring every state to pass this lifesaving law to protect our children. 

 

·      Again, in 1998, the Senate led the way with safety provisions in the TEA-21 bill requiring advanced airbags, incentive grants for occupant protection and stronger drunk driving laws. 

 

·      In 2005, the passage of the SAFETEA-LU bill brought about major improvements in vehicle safety because it included the bi-partisan Senate safety title that sought to address the 10,000 annual deaths occurring every year due to vehicle rollover.  This bi-partisan safety title under the leadership of Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK), Sen. Trent Lott (R-MS) and Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-HI) required vehicle safety standards resulting in electronic stability control technology on every vehicle, improved roof strength, ejection mitigation as well as mandatory truck safety improvements. 

 

·      In 2012, theMAP-21 bill took a major step forward in public safety by advancing motorcoach safety improvements under the leadership of Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) and Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX). The Senate enacted into law critical National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) recommendations for motorcoach safety that had languished for decades and turned them into law. The result will affect the safety of millions of travelers using intercity buses, children on school field trips, college athletes traveling to sporting events and others.  The bill requires that motorcoaches will finally be equipped with basic occupant safety protections such as seatbelts, roof crush prevention, occupant ejection protections and other critical safety features.

 

Safety groups will continue to oppose the current safety title of the DRIVE Act until the serious problems are corrected – both by dropping the anti-safety provisions and by including pro-safety measures in the Nelson/Blumenthal/Markey/Booker bills (S. 1743 and S. 1739).  These include but are not limited to — criminal penalty authority, removing the cap on civil penalties, requiring the repair of safety defects in used cars, improvements to Early Warning Reporting (EWR) requirements to identify safety defects earlier, extending the statutory limitation on repairing defects to at least 15 years, addressing children dying in hot cars, pedestrian safety, advancing crash avoidance technology in large trucks and dropping all of the anti-truck safety provisions such as – teen truckers, hiding safety scores of trucking and bus companies, permanent hours of service (HOS) exemptions, unnecessary rulemaking roadblocks, giving FMCSA authority to determine “fault” in truck crashes without a complete and thorough investigation, thawing the LCV freeze and others. 

 

We urge you to think about the consequences of taking a pass on enacting a strong and needed safety title in the 6-year authorization bill.  During the 6-year span of this bill it is expected that every state will suffer significant loss of life and injury, with 200,000 people killed and 12 million injured in motor vehicle crashes if nothing is done to reduce those losses.  Please do not turn your back on these victims because we didn’t do enough. 

 

Sincerely,

 

Jacqueline Gillan, President                                               

Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety

 

Joan Claybrook, Chair

Citizens for Reliable and Safe Highways and

Former Administrator, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration

 

Clarence Ditlow, Executive Director                                   

Center for Auto Safety                                                           

 

Janette E. Fennell, Founder and President

KidsAndCars.org

 

Andrew McGuire, Executive Director                       

Trauma Foundation

                                                                                   

John Lannen, Executive Director                                   

Truck Safety Coalition

 

Jack Gillis, Director of Public Affairs

Consumer Federation of America

 

Daphne Izer

Lisbon, Maine

Founder, Parents Against Tired Truckers (PATT)

Mother of Jeff Izer, killed in a truck crash on October 10, 1993

 

Jennifer Tierney

Kernersville, North Carolina

Board Member, Citizens for Reliable and Safe Highways

Member, Motor Carrier Safety Advisory Committee

Daughter of James Mooney, killed in a truck crash on September 20, 1983

 

How Americans Lose Their Lives To Lobbyists and Legislators


How Americans Lose Their Lives To Lobbyists and Legislators

July, 2015

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

In a USA Today Op Ed, Joan Claybrook gives Americans a look.“But on highways across the country, large truck crashes continue their mayhem, one crash at a time, community by community. Officials and trucking companies pay little heed — it’s business as usual. Some 330 people are being killed each month and nearly 8,000 are suffering excruciating injuries in accidents involving trucks.”  Seehttp://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2015/07/21/trucks-big-rigs-congress-transportation-highway-safety-joan-claybrook/30431445/

To help citizens improve safety legislation the following information is available.

*  Nearly $4 Trillion in losses can be expected in the six years under this proposed legislation.  More than the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. See http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/Pubs/812013.pdf *  More Americans will die and be injured in crashes in Red States than in Blue States.  Seehttps://www.careforcrashvictims.com/assets/MonthlyReportforJuly2015final.pdf *  Crash Death statistics for the past decade by State and Congressional district are available at https://www.careforcrashvictims.com/CrashDeathMappingTools.php

Source:  https://www.careforcrashvictims.com/blog-fwdmediaadvoc.php

Lou

 

Fwd: Mon., July 20 at 10am ET – Media Conference Call – Senators, Safety Advocates, Crash Victims to Launch Renewed Push for Lifesaving Provisions in Federal Highway Bill

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:
Safety Advocates will again hold a media briefing on Monday July 20, 2015 to elevate safety over money in proposed highway legislation which is mostly about money.  See announcement below.

Some suggestions for fellow safety advocates, media representatives, and members of Congress and staff:

*  Note the nearly $4 Trillion in losses that can be expected under this proposed legislation.  More than the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. See http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/Pubs/812013.pdf

*  Note that more Americans will die and be injured in crashes in Red States than Blue States.  Seehttps://www.careforcrashvictims.com/assets/MonthlyReportforJuly2015final.pdf

*  Note that Crash Death statistics over the past decade by State and Congressional district are available at https://www.careforcrashvictims.com/CrashDeathMappingTools.php

Hoping this helps build a Safer America,

Lou

———- Forwarded message ———- From: Bill Bronrott <bronrott@gmail.com> Date: Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 4:29 PM Subject: Mon., July 20 at 10am ET – Media Conference Call – Senators, Safety Advocates, Crash Victims to Launch Renewed Push for Lifesaving Provisions in Federal Highway Bill To: Bill Bronrott <bronrott@gmail.com>

MEDIA ADVISORY

For Monday, July 20, 2015 – Media Conference Call

Contact:  Bill Bronrott, 202-270-4415

On Eve of Senate Debate on Surface Transportation Bill, Safety Advocates,

Crash Victims’ Families, and Members of Congress to Launch Renewed Push to

Adopt Pro-Safety Provisions and Dump Pro-Industry Rollbacks

 

Partisan Bill Departs from Historical Bipartisan Senate Actions

to Combat Highway Deaths and Injuries

 

Nearly 200,000 People Will Be Killed and 14 Million Injured in Crashes over 6 Years

Unless Commonsense and Cost-Effective Solutions are Enacted

 

Transportation Reauthorization Bill May Come to U.S. Senate Floor as Early as Tuesday

 

WHAT:            MEDIA CONFERENCE CALL

On the day before the multi-year, multi-billion dollar surface transportation reauthorization legislation may come to the U.S. Senate Floor, consumer, public health and safety groups and crash victims’ families will join Members of Congress to launch a renewed push to include lifesaving highway and vehicle safety provisions in the “Safety Title.” On July 15, the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee failed to include significant safety advances and rolled back numerous current safety laws when they voted along party lines to send the Comprehensive Transportation and Consumer Protection Act (S.1732) to the full Senate.  This bill allows 18-year-old truck drivers to traverse across the country, turns a blind eye to the General Motors and Takata recall failures, and sets back truck, bus, car, and motorcycle safety for years to come. 

The group will discuss their plans to press for Senate adoption of provisions in the “Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 2015” (S. 1743) sponsored by Commerce Committee Ranking Member Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) and co-sponsored by Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) and Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA), and the “Truck Safety Act” (S. 1739) sponsored by Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ).  The bills would reduce the growing number of deaths and injuries on the nation’s roadways, correct deficiencies in identifying and investigating vehicle safety defects, increase penalties for automakers that purposely hide defects that lead to deaths and injuries, advance truck safety and consumer information and protections.

WHEN:            Monday, July 20, 2015 at 10:00 am EDT

HOW:                        Toll-Free Tele-Conference Call-In Number: 1-877-366-0711

Participant Code: 49253737#

WHO:

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

·      Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Member, Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, co-sponsor “Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 2015” (S. 1743)

·      Senator Ed Markey (D-MA), Member, Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, co-sponsor “Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 2015” (S. 1743)

·      Dr. Georges Benjamin, Executive Director, American Public Health Association

·      Angelina Sujata, Takata airbag victim who sustained serious injuries when her 2001 Honda Civic was involved in a rear-end collision in Chapin, SC in March 2012. Upon impact, the Takata airbag inflator exploded with alleged excessive force, shooting sharp, metal shrapnel into her chest multiple times. Angelina was hospitalized and has had to undergo two surgeries, the most recent of which was to remove shrapnel that was later discovered in her body and was causing chest pain.

·      Lindsey Rogers-Seitz, Esq., child safety advocate and Colorado mother of Benjamin Seitz who lost his life after being unknowingly left alone in a hot vehicle in Ridgefield, CT by his father on July 7, 2014.

·      Jackie Novak, a Hendersonville, NC mother whose son Chuck and his girlfriend Theresa Seaver were killed in a crash in October 2010 when a speeding tractor-trailer crashed into a line of stopped cars without slowing down. The trucking company had a long history of unsafe operations.  A total of five were killed and several others were seriously injured.

·      Jack Gillis, Director of Public Affairs, Consumer Federation of America

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

# # #

Fiat Chrysler Recall for Hack Vulnerability Defect


Fiat Chrysler Recall for Hack Vulnerability Defect

July, 2015

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

The NY Times reports:

“WASHINGTON — In a first for automobiles in the United States, a safety recall has been issued based on a web security threat: a flaw that could give hackers wireless control of a vehicle, including critical systems such as the engine, brakes and steering.

Fiat Chrysler on Friday issued a sweeping recall of 1.4 million vehicles to fix a software vulnerability revealed this week by two technology researchers who demonstrated how they successfully hacked a Jeep Cherokee through Chrysler’s Uconnect entertainment and connectivity system. The hackers were able to take control of the Jeep’s systems while sitting miles away in a St. Louis basement.

The recall affects more than three times as many vehicles as the researchers, Charlie Miller and Chris Valasek, had estimated could be at risk and includes many Fiat Chrysler vehicles starting with 2013 models.

The men alerted the automaker before making their findings public, and Fiat Chrysler released a software patch last week that customers could download or have installed at a dealer.”  Seearticle and commentsat

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/25/business/fiat-chrysler-recalls-1-4-million-vehicles-to-fix-hacking-issue.html?hpw&rref=technology&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region&region=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well&_r=0

Note the comment by Tom Kowalick:

“Tom Kowalick

Southern Pines, NC 25 minutes ago

The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) created a global standard (IEEE-1616a) towards providing the vehicle owner secure access to electronics-intensive vehicle data. This is a critically important topic. See the IEEE blogs for a better understanding of the problem and the simple solution offered to Congress and the NHTSA. Here is one of many blogs” http://theinstitute.ieee.org/ieee-roundup/opinions/ieee-roundup/hacking-…

Reminds me of Nader’s statement in American Blessings: “The nation has far more problems than it deserves and far more solutions than it applies.”
Lou

 

NHTSA To Fine Fiat Chrysler – Is It Enough?


NHTSA To Fine Fiat Chrysler – Is It Enough?

July, 2015

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

The NY Times reports:

“DETROIT — In their most aggressive crackdown yet on auto safety, federal regulators on Sundaylevied a record penalty of $105 million against Fiat Chrysler Automobiles for failing to complete 23 safety recalls covering more than 11 million vehicles.

The civil penalty is the largest ever imposed by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on an automaker for recall violations, surpassing the $70 million fine imposed last year on Honda for faulty airbags.

It also represents an escalation of the agency’s efforts to investigate and punish automakers that do not adequately recall and fix defective models….

The agency has come under harsh criticism in Congress and by the Transportation Department’s inspector general for lax enforcement of auto safety regulations.

The agency is overhauling its internal operations, as well as stepping up its investigations of individual car companies….

“When you have a horrible tragedy, honestly, that’s what triggers big change,” he (current NHTSA Administrator Dr. Mark R. Rosekind) said.

In Fiat Chrysler’s case, this month the government took the unusual step of holding a public hearing to focus on 23 separate recalls that date back to 2009. At the hearing, federal officials said the company had repeatedly failed to notify consumers of recalls and to complete repairs in a timely fashion….

One auto safety advocate said on Sunday that the financial penalties imposed on Fiat Chrysler should have been higher, given the scope of the automaker’s violations.

“The $105 million fine shows the need for an uncapped penalty,” said Clarence Ditlow, an official of theCenter for Auto Safety who first petitioned the government to investigate the rear-mounted fuel tanks in Jeeps.  See

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/27/business/fiat-chrysler-faces-record-105-million-fine-for-safety-issues.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=first-column-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=0

Enough?

Think fines civil or criminal?  DOT Revolving Door.   

How many Chrysler deaths?  A year ago, the Center for Auto Safety reported there have been at least“370 fatal fire crashes of 1993-2004 Jeep Grand Cherokees”  Seehttps://www.careforcrashvictims.com/blog-jeepburn.php Compare today’s $105 million civil fine as follows:

* Jury awards $150 million for death of a child in a Chrysler.  Seehttps://www.careforcrashvictims.com/blog-verdictfatalfierychild.php
*  Multiply by $9.2 million value in DOT Policy Guidance to the priceless true value of a death and it will exceed the $105 million civil fine which is tax deductible.  See https://www.careforcrashvictims.com/assets/CASMarchionneLetter1-8-15.pdf
*  Will anyone be jailed?  Chrysler executives? Former DOT officials?
*  Will Congress (a) remove caps? (b) add criminal penalties?
*  Will enough consumers learn to avoid Chrysler products? 
*  Will President Obama who has been in Africa talking about corruption, set a national Vision Zero goal to end crash tragedies in or by new vehicles in a decade here in America?
Clearly NHTSA’s civil fine is not enough to end tragedies as far as anyone can see.
Where there is no vision, the people perish.
Lou