Volkswagen Deliberately Designed Diesels To Poison Our Air & Our Lungs, Then Lied, Cheated, and Covered Up the Crime For Years


Volkswagen Deliberately Designed Diesels To Poison Our Air & Our Lungs, Then Lied, Cheated, and Covered Up the Crime For Years

February, 2016

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:
Newsweek reported:“By the end of 2016, VW’s cars, rigged with “defeat devices” to cheat on emissions tests, will have pumped out enough excess toxic pollution to directly contribute to the premature deaths of around 60 people in the U.S. alone, MIT and Harvard University researchers determined in a new study published Monday in Environmental Research Letters .”  Seehttp://www.newsweek.com/60-people-will-die-early-thanks-volkswagen-388117 
And now the NY Times reports on the public relations problem of Volkswagen.

“In the months since it admitted it designed its diesel cars to cheat on tailpipe-emissions tests, the company has struggled with its messaging. A low point came last month when Matthias Müller, the new chief executive, visited the United States and told NPR, “We didn’t lie,” when VW clearly did. The outcry forced Mr. Müller to call NPR back and revise his statement.

The reaction to the scandal has been swift. A recent Harris Poll of Americans’ attitudes toward the 100 most visible companies ranked Volkswagen dead last.”

See http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/28/business/international/vws-crisis-strategy-forward-reverse-u-turn.html?emc=eta1

Consumer Reports’ rating of Which Brands Make The Best Cars? ranks Volkswagen 15th and average for Predicted Reliability.

The Car Book, 2016 gives mostly low safety ratings to Volkswagen models. Only the gasoline powered Jetta earned a “Best Bet” rating. 
What happened to German engineering?

 


Automatic Emergency Braking in UK: Standard vs. Optional

February, 2016

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:
Interesting article from UK.
“While Thatcham says that it approves of the progress carmakers have made in developing crash avoidance technology, in 2015, 41% of cars on sale in the UK had AEB available, only 17% had it as standard fit. Of the remaining 24%, motorists specified less than 2% of cars with AEB as an “extra”…. A recent survey conducted by Thatcham Research and Direct Line Insurance Group found that 82% of drivers think car safety features such as AEB should be fitted as standard, not as an optional extra. Insurance companies are already recognising the effectiveness of AEB: standard fit systems typically result in a car having its insurance rating lowered by 3-5 groups, which can reduce an owner’s premium by around 10%.

Matthew Avery, Thatcham’s director of research, said: “There is no longer any excuse for carmakers to launchnew cars without AEB as standard across the board and, along with dealerships, to promote and explain AEB more effectively to consumers.

“Not only will this reduce insurance premiums, but give peace of mind for motorists by significantly reducing crashes and associated injuries.”  See 

http://www.express.co.uk/life-style/cars/644503/Campaign-launched-to-improve-car-safety-for-just-40

Ignore Prime Minister Cameron’s right wing view of “Emergency Braking” in the video.

Lou

 

Obama Administration’s Cass Sunstein – Money or Lives


Obama Administration’s Cass Sunstein – Money or Lives

February, 2016

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:
Safety leader Janette Fennell alerts us to the following:
Thanks to an article by Public Citizen Amit Narang in The Hill we are alerted to what has been happening:Cass Sunstein’s proposals for improving the regulatory system, laid out in a recent Bloomberg View column, will not solve any of the real problems plaguing the regulatory process….

“Now Congress is trying to make things even worse. A package of regulatory “reforms” — including a few of Sunstein’s proposals — will soon be introduced in the U.S. Senate. As a recent editorial from The New York Times pointed out, these measures would harm our system of public protections by letting Big Business rig the rules in its favor at the expense of working families, consumers and small businesses.

It is not surprising that Sunstein has a blind spot when it comes to delays. Regulatory delays at the U.S. Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) were systemic and reached unprecedented levels while he served as the agency’s administrator, levels even worse than under past administrations that were openly hostile to regulation of any kind.

Cost-benefit analysis is not the panacea for the regulatory system that Sunstein claims it to be. Rather, overreliance on cost-benefit analysis is one of the major problems right now in our regulatory process and is linked to excessive regulatory delay. The examples are legion.

New passenger rail safety technology that would have prevented the Amtrak train derailment in Pennsylvania last year was derided by Sunstein when he was administrator of OIRA as not passing a cost-benefit test. The head of the railroad industry lobby cited Sunstein’s remarks in urging Congress to delay a requirement that the new technology be in place by the end of 2015, seven years after the railroad safety law was passed. Railroad safety officials, on the other hand, have called the railroad safety technology “one of the top ten most wanted transportation safety improvements of 2016.”

Another casualty of cost-benefit analysis was the so-called “backover rule,” which required car manufacturers to include rear-view cameras in their cars. They are a proven and effective way of preventing fatalities when drivers accidentally back over pedestrians, often young children. By law, the rule was supposed to be finalized in 2011, but wasn’t actually finalized until 2014. Sunstein’s OIRA would not clear the rule because it didn’t pass his beloved cost-benefit test.

While the costs to car manufacturers were well-known, the benefits of saving pedestrians from being backed over, particularly young children, and the anguish of parents and drivers who accidentally did so, were impossible to monetize. In Sunstein’s view, this inability to assign monetary values to the lives of innocent children meant it didn’t pass his cost-benefit test.

OIRA eventually cleared the rule, but only after Sunstein left and only after Public Citizen sued the U.S. Department of Transportation to finalize and issue the rule. Hundreds of lives were needlessly lost while the rule was delayed.”  Seehttps://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-blog/the-administration/268005-why-cass-sunstein-is-wrong-on-regulatory-reform

Who is Cass Sunstein?  See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cass_Sunstein

Why did the Obama Administration appoint Cass Sunstein to head the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs? What happens when people who value money over people are elected or appointed to high positions in government?    People suffer and die – needlessly.

Ralph Nader, who founded Public Citizen, continues to warn us about electing big money servants rather than public servants.  See his latest interview athttp://www.pbs.org/wnet/tavissmiley/interviews/consumer-advocate-author-ralph-nader/

 

Senators Blumenthal and Markey Statement on Takata Airbag Recalls


Senators Blumenthal and Markey Statement on Takata Airbag Recalls

February, 2016

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

For Immediate Release:                   

Contact: Josh Zembik (Blumenthal) – 202-224-6452

February 24, 2016

Giselle Barry (Markey) – 202-224-2742

BLUMENTHAL, MARKEY STATEMENT ON RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN TAKATA AIR BAG RECALLS

 According to Recent Reports, Takata Falsified Data to Cover Up Problems with Products and Up to 90 Million Additional Vehicles May Be Recalled

 

(Washington, D.C.) – Today, U.S. Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) and Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) released the following statement in response to recent developments in Takata air bag recalls. According to a report by the Senate Commerce Committee released yesterday, Takata falsified data to cover up problems with its products. There are also reports that up to 90 million additional vehicles may be recalled.

 

“We have no faith in Takata. A company that would manipulate test results is a company that would lie to regulators – and may have for years.  Now we know there may be an additional 70 million to 90 million vehicles with potentially lethal airbags currently on the road. These airbags sit in Americans’ cars like ticking time bombs, and we must take action now to get all Takata airbags off the road. Coming on the heels of a Senate Commerce Committee report exposing Takata falsified data to cover up problems with their products, this is even further evidence that this deceptive company is not to be trusted.”

 

“NHTSA must accelerate the recall of these dangerous airbags. Safety recalls shouldn’t be eventual, they should be immediate. The danger from these exploding airbags isn’t conditional, and neither should be NHTSA’s commitment to get these vehicles off the road. We have a duty to protect the American public, especially when Takata has demonstrated a pernicious disregard for doing so.”

 

The senators first expressed concerns with NHTSA’s limited recalls and testing of Takata airbags in October 2014,  first called on Takata to recall all vehicles with ammonium nitrate-based airbags in August 2015, and subsequently also expressed serious concern about the pace of Takata recalls and repairs.Earlier this month, the senators sent a letter urging President Obama to recall every vehicle with airbags using ammonium nitrate as their propellant, and to use “every tool at his disposal” to accelerate the repair of all vehicles with potentially-lethal Takata airbags.

 

Ralph Nader’s Birthday

Ralph Nader’s Birthday

February, 2016

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

February 27, is Nader’s birthday.

On Friday, February 26, I purchased a copy of “The Car Book, 2016” that became available from the Center for Auto Safety – founded by Nader more than 4 decades ago.

The Center and “The Car Book” are, in a sense, birthday presents from Ralph Nader to humanity – presents that keep on giving — saving lives and preventing injuries.

Clarence Ditlow has written a Foreword to “The Car Book, 2016” that describes the gifts to humanity stemming from Nader’s 1965 Book “Unsafe at Any Speed”.

“The 1966 federal laws, federal agency and general measures they created — have averted 3.5 million auto deaths over the past 50 years.” See attached Foreword.

To this we can add an estimated 4 serious injuries prevented or mitigated for every life saved.  That would be an estimated 14 million additional Americans who were saved from such serious injuries amputations, brain injuries, spinal cord injuries, burn injuries, and numerous broken bones and damaged internal organs.  Using the DOT dollar values would put savings in the trillions.

How big a THANK YOU! to Ralph Nader is that worth?
The Center for Auto Safety has worked tirelessly for safety for decades on a tiny annual budget of less than the cost of one 30 second Super Bowl ad by an auto company.

“The Car Book, 2016” can be purchased online from the Center for Auto Safety at http://www.autosafety.org/books-reports

I am in the process of reviewing “The Car Book, 2016”, but readers can see my review of the 2015 edition at https://www.careforcrashvictims.com/assets/MonthlyReportforJanuary2015.pdf

In the April 2016 issue of Consumer Reports we read something else we can thank Nader for:

A recent Consumer Reports survey shows that safety tops the list of factors buyers value most when they are considering new cars.”

That is a market improvement contributed to by 36 years of publishing “The Car Book”.

Imagine not just the lives saved and the injuries prevented by informed consumers who obtain and act on safety information, but also the regrets, aggravation, time, and money saved.

Thank you to Ralph Nader, and to Clarence Ditlow, Joan Claybrook, Jack Gillis, Mike Lemov and all the many people who have worked to improve safety over the decades.

Happy Birthday Ralph Nader!
Lou

 

Senators Blumenthal and Markey Urge President Obama to Act on Takata Recall


Senators Blumenthal and Markey Urge President Obama to Act on Takata Recall

February, 2016

Dear Care for Crash Victims Community Members:

Powerful message sent to President Obama.

(Washington, D.C.) – U.S. Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) and Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) today urged President Obama to recall every vehicle with airbags using ammonium nitrate as their propellant, and to use “every tool at his disposal” to accelerate the repair of all vehicles with potentially-lethal Takata airbags. The renewed calls for action follow the December death of Joel Knight in South Carolina, who was killed when his truck struck a stray cow. As reported by the New York Times, instead of cushioning the impact from the wreck, the airbag ruptured, firing shrapnel into Mr. Knight’s neck and killing him.

 

The Senators wrote: “It appears that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has consistently deferred to Takata as it set forth its requirements to industry, first by allowing many automakers to take voluntary rather than mandatory actions to alert vehicle-owners to this defect’s existence, then by limiting the recalls to cars registered in ‘high humidity’ states absent evidence that the defect would not manifest itself outside these arbitrary boundaries, and now with its apparent policy of waiting until someone has died in a particular make and model before recalling that make and model.  This, coupled with NHTSA’s willingness to allow Takata to take until the end of 2018 to prove that ammonium nitrate is safe in existing airbags; and until 2019 to show that the latest models of the inflators that use the compound are safe, is an outrageous dereliction of NHTSA’s basic duty to protect consumers.”

The Senators first expressed concerns with NHTSA’s limited recalls and testing of Takata airbags in October 2014,  first called on Takata to recall all vehicles with ammonium nitrate-based airbags in August 2015, and subsequently also expressed serious concern about the pace of Takata recalls and repairs.

 

The full text of the Senators’ letter to President Obama is below, and it is available in pdf format by clicking here.

 

 

The Honorable Barack Obama

President

The White House

1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW

Washington, DC 20500

 

Dear Mr. President:

                   

          As we learn of yet another tragic and completely preventable death related to faulty Takata airbags, we write urging the Administration to recall every car with an airbag containing ammonium nitrate as its propellant, and to use every tool at its disposal to accelerate the repair of all the vehicles that contain them.

 

As reported in the New York Times, Joel Knight was driving on a highway in South Carolina when his truck hit a stray cow. Instead of cushioning Mr. Knight from the impact, the Takata airbag on his Ford Ranger ruptured. Shrapnel from the airbag punctured his neck and he bled to death. At the time of this incident, the number of vehicles affected by Takata recalls had reached 19 million, but did not include his Ford Ranger – or any Ford models, for that matter. Mr. Knight had no idea that his car even contained a Takata airbag. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) did not add Ford as an automaker affected by Takata recalls until after it had learned of Mr. Knight’s death.

 

It has been apparent for some time that the use of ammonium nitrate is the source of the problem with the faulty Takata airbags. Takata is the only major airbag manufacturer to use this compound, which is well known by experts to be unstable when exposed to moisture or humid environments. It is believed that as many as 54 million metal inflators containing this explosive compound are installed in vehicles in the United States. While about 28 million of these inflators have been recalled to date through vehicle recalls, a staggering 26 million remain in vehicles not yet recalled.  Yet NHTSA has resisted our repeated calls to expand its recall.

 

While we have been somewhat encouraged by NHTSA’s recent more aggressive stance on automobile safety enforcement once violations are discovered, we are troubled that it has not shown the same commitment to the Takata crisis or to making permanent changes to auto safety regulations in order to prevent more avoidable deaths in the future.  In fact, it appears that NHTSA has consistently deferred to Takata as it set forth its requirements to industry, first by allowing many automakers to take voluntary rather than mandatory actions to alert vehicle-owners to this defect’s existence, then by limiting the recalls to cars registered in ‘high humidity’ states absent evidence that the defect would not manifest itself outside these arbitrary boundaries, and now with its apparent policy of waiting until someone has died in a particular make and model before recalling that make and model.  This, coupled with NHTSA’s willingness to allow Takata to take until the end of 2018 to prove that ammonium nitrate is safe in existing airbags; and until 2019 to show that the latest models of the inflators that use the compound are safe, is an outrageous dereliction of NHTSA’s basic duty to protect consumers.

 

In light of the evidence thus far, and the 10 deaths and more than 100 injuries we know of related to faulty Takata airbags, we strongly believe consumers have a right to know today, whether they are driving a vehicle with a Takata airbag containing ammonium nitrate.  And we certainly expect a more aggressive effort to ensure that these vehicles are quickly repaired.  Accordingly, we urge the Administration to use its authority to direct NHTSA to expand the current recall so that all consumers driving a vehicle with a Takata airbag are made aware of this fact and can take appropriate action to protect themselves and their families.

 

We do not need to wait for yet another preventable death to happen in order to recall the remaining population of vehicles containing ammonium nitrate-propelled airbags. Thank you for your attention to this letter.

 

Sincerely,