USDOT Calls for National Recall of Defective Takata Driver Side Air Bags

USDOT Calls for National Recall of Defective Takata Driver Side Air Bags

NHTSA
November 18, 2014

NHTSA Demands New, Additional Details on Air Bags from Takata and 10 Auto Manufacturers as Part of Ongoing Investigation

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) today announced it is calling for a national recall of vehicles with certain driver’s side frontal air bags made by Takata. This decision is based on the agency’s evaluation of a recent driver’s side air bag failure in a vehicle outside the current regional recall area and its relationship to five previous driver’s side air bag ruptures, all of which are covered by existing regional recalls.

“By demanding this national recall, NHTSA has demonstrated once again that it will follow data and evidence to protect the lives of Americans on the road and to hold manufacturers accountable,” said Secretary Anthony Foxx.

NHTSA contacted Takata and the vehicle manufacturers this week to call for the national recall of these vehicles after evaluating a recent incident that involved a failure in a driver’s side air bag inflator outside an area of high absolute humidity. Based on this new information, unless Takata and the manufacturers quickly agree to this recall, NHTSA will use the full extent of its statutory powers to ensure vehicles that use the same or similar air bag inflator are recalled.

As part of these efforts and its ongoing investigation into both the defect and the scope of the recalls, the agency also issued a General Order to Takata and all ten of the vehicle manufacturers that use Takata air bag inflators – BMW, Chrysler, Ford, General Motors, Honda, Mazda, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Subaru, and Toyota – requiring each manufacturer to file, under oath, a detailed report and produce all related documents about completed, ongoing or planned testing of Takata inflators outside the current regional recall areas. The agency is demanding this information to compel Takata and the affected industry to be frank with not only NHTSA, but the American public, as to what testing and additional steps they have done and plan to do to control and mitigate the risk associated with Takata’s defective inflators.

Additionally, NHTSA issued a Special Order to Takata, the second the agency has issued to the manufacturer regarding this defect, compelling it to provide, under oath, documents and detailed information on the propellant used in Takata’s inflators. In recent days, Takata has publicly conceded that it changed the chemical mix of its air bag inflator propellant in newly designed inflators. As part of its ongoing investigation, the agency will analyze the information received to determine if the chemical composition of Takata’s propellant mix may be a cause and/or contributing factor in the air bag inflator ruptures.

“We now know that millions of vehicles must be recalled to address defective Takata air bags and our aggressive investigation is far from over,” said NHTSA Deputy Administrator David Friedman. “We’re pushing Takata and all affected manufacturers to issue the recall and to ensure the recalls capture the full scope of the problems.”

In addition to the General Order and Special Order, NHTSA is issuing a Recall Acknowledgement Letter, a routine response to all Safety Recall Reports filed with the agency. The letter summarizes the details of the most recent report submitted by Takata regarding its defective passenger side air bag inflators and identifies the information gaps the agency is insisting Takata clarify to ensure it provides the full information required by law.

While NHTSA is not aware of either field incidents or test data suggesting that the problem affecting passenger-side air bags in the areas of persistently high humidity extends beyond those areas, the agency has been pushing the industry to perform testing to ensure that current recalls effectively cover vehicles with air bags that could be potentially affected by this defect.

The information the agency receives from Takata and the auto manufacturers will provide further information and details needed to continue its investigation into this complex issue. Responses to the General Order and Special Order are due to NHTSA by December 5.

Air-Bag Settlements Keep Details From Other Victims

Air-Bag Settlements Keep Details From Other Victims

Bloomberg News
November 17, 2014

[…] The quick, secret deals, a cornerstone of product liability litigation across industries, help explain why years after the first recalls so much remains unknown about defects linked to four U.S. deaths. The few cases filed have generally been resolved before victims’ lawyers acquired evidence. […]

A Fatally Flawed Switch, and a Burdened G.M. Engineer

A Fatally Flawed Switch, and a Burdened G.M. Engineer

New York Times
By BILL VLASIC
NOV. 13, 2014

[…] Asked about the dozens of people who were killed and injured because of a faulty ignition switch that he was responsible for, Mr. DeGiorgio, 61, broke down and cried. […] Over the next several months, he expressed his frustration with the weak switch in several emails to G.M. colleagues and Delphi engineers, even calling it the “switch from hell.” […]

Takata in Criminal Probe on Deadly Air Bag Flaws

Takata in Criminal Probe on Deadly Air Bag Flaws

By Reuters 11/13/14

[…] Separately, Takata disputed a recent New York Times report that it had failed to tell federal regulators that it had found signs of air bag defects in secret tests in 2004 in Michigan.
[…] All five deaths have been in Honda cars. The Japanese carmaker, Takata’s biggest customer, widened its recall for the defective air bags by another 170,000 vehicles globally, taking the total to nearly 10 million. […]

More Than Half Country Bans Controversial Guardrail

More Than Half Country Bans Controversial Guardrail

Oct 30, 2014

More than half the nation, 27 states, have now announced they are suspending further installation of a controversial guardrail system used on roads around the country following what critics said was a cover-up of a dangerous change in the guardrail’s design made nearly a decade ago. […] The ET-Plus System was the subject of an ABC News “20/20” investigation in September that looked into allegations from crash victims that the modified guardrail can malfunction when struck from the front by their vehicles’. […]

Supplier of Defective Airbags Ordered to Turn Over Its Records

Supplier of Defective Airbags Ordered to Turn Over Its Records

New York Times
OCT. 30, 2014

[…] More than 14 million cars have been recalled globally because of the faulty Takata airbags, including 11 million in the United States. At least three deaths and more than 30 injuries have been attributed to the defect, which can cause airbags to rupture, sending metal shards flying into passengers. […]

Sharing the road: Communities try new ways to improve bicyclist safety

Sharing the road: Communities try new ways to improve bicyclist safety

Insurance Institute For Highway Safety
January 24, 2013

[…] Along with pedestrians, bicyclists are known in highway safety parlance as “vulnerable road users” because, unlike vehicle occupants, they have no protective structure around them and are completely outmatched by motor vehicles in terms of mass. […] These lanes vary in their width, and in some cases, parked cars are located to the right of the bike lane, leaving riders vulnerable to “doorings,” when doors of parked cars swing open in their path […]

San Diego County Roads, Bridges Need Billions In Repairs

San Diego County Roads, Bridges Need Billions In Repairs

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

City News Service

[…] The “California Local Streets & Roads Needs Assessment 2014 Update” estimates that $7.2 billion is required for road and bridge repair in San Diego County over the next 10 years. […] The biennial report — a collaboration between the California State Association of Counties, the League of California Cities and the state’s regional transportation planning agencies — found that pavement conditions statewide are declining, and current funding levels are insufficient to properly fix or maintain streets, roads, bridges, sidewalks, storm drains and traffic signs. […]

Study: USA Pro Challenge brings $130M in spending to Colorado

Study: USA Pro Challenge brings $130M in spending to Colorado

Supporting cycling and cycling events does pay for itself and bring economic returns to cities and states like Colorado.

The USA Pro Challenge, a seven-day professional cycling race, brought an estimated $130 million in spending to Colorado this August, according to a study commissioned by the race’s sponsor.
Sponsorship Science, a sports research firm, said spending totals from the 2014 event marked a 12 percent increase in consumer spending over 2013 figures.
[…]
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