National Post

Lax auto recalls in U.S. put us all in peril

Under Trump, watchdog cuts investigat­ions

- Lorraine SommerfeLd Driving.ca

Will American decisions relating to vehicle safety potentiall­y do harm to Canadians?

If we continue to tag along behind our neighbour to the south when it comes to regulation­s, it just might. Consumer Reports is blowing a whistle on a steady decrease in investigat­ions by that nation’s top industry overseer, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion (NHTSA).

“NHTSA is the auto industry’s top safety regulator, and its investigat­ions hold automakers accountabl­e for safety defects, when they’re detected or reported, routinely spurring the recall of tens of millions of cars a year,” explains the magazine.

NHTSA’s investigat­ions have led to today’s cars being safer than ever. Some changes are implemente­d through tough recall strategies that hold manufactur­ers’ feet to the fire. But perhaps as importantl­y, these changes move the industry forward as a whole, as all manufactur­ers adopt better design and safety features.

Now it appears the U.S. government is ripping the teeth from the automotive industry’s biggest watchdog. And this should be a concern for Canadians.

We adopt nearly all of the standards set forth by the U.S. when it comes to our autos. Their regulation­s become our regulation­s; we have our own layers of consumer protection, and our government now has the power to enact recalls even if a manufactur­er balks. But for the most part, we have simply caught a ride with the person going in the same direction.

From a high of 203 investigat­ions launched in 1989, 2017 saw just 13. The agency hasn’t issued a civil fine since late 2015. The last year of Obama’s administra­tion saw the start of the downward slope, but under Trump, the NHTSA hasn’t even had a chief in place. Deputy administra­tor Heidi King is set to be sworn in, which may be progress. She’s been acting head since Trump took office and the Obama appointee, Mark Rosekind, stepped down.

If it feels like there’s a lot of politics going on, that’s because there is. Trump campaigned on throwing out or minimizing regulation­s affecting nearly every facet of American life. Gutting the car industry’s top safety overseer, however, is not just a U.S. problem. It’s ours, too.

Jason Levine of the Center for Auto Safety, is part of a growing group trying to warn the car-buying public.

“This administra­tion appears to have a preference to not enforce the law,” he says. “This hands-off approach to law enforcemen­t has led to a failure by NHTSA to conduct recall oversight in a way that ensures the success of the recall, and that holds manufactur­ers responsibl­e for their defective vehicles.”

Manufactur­ers don’t set out to make dangerous cars. In fact, while road fatalities in the U.S. (around 40,000 per year) may stay stubbornly high, the cars themselves are safer; it’s the idiots on their phones, driving impaired and/or speeding that contribute more and more.

However, as the Consumer Reports article notes, we’ve also seen some of the largest recalls and most deadly errors in the past decade. The Takata airbag recall remains the largest in the world, and there are still too many people driving around with defective airbags. The GM faulty ignition switches saw that company turned inside out for gambling with people’s lives. With NHTSA finally doing something, part of the “punishment” was an investigat­or brought inhouse in 2014 to oversee an overhaul to ensure the ignition switch horror wouldn’t happen again. The results were a steady increase in the quality of GM’s product, and a public who could again put faith in the brand.

A similar thing was instituted with Fiat Chrysler in 2015 after a safety scandal; they’re called “consent orders,” and while they put NHTSA and manufactur­ers into a more co-operative relationsh­ip to head off trouble, the orders expire after three years and aren’t made with every manufactur­er.

If an industry has been cleaned up, it would stand to reason there would be fewer investigat­ions required. Manufactur­ers have every incentive to make the safest vehicles they can, but history has also borne out that containing a scandal will also make some stuff a massive problem down the road.

According to Levine, there is a need for NHTSA to get more tough, not less. A Department of Transporta­tion report found “sloppy and incomplete documentat­ion of manufactur­er recalls.”

The GM ignition tragedies happened under NHTSA’s watch: it decided against an investigat­ion as early as 2007. It wasn’t until 2014 that GM came forward, though it had knowledge of the fatal flaw since 2001. There were 124 deaths the public would only know about 13 years after they began.

“Even when it came to Takata airbags — the largest recall in history — NHTSA did not adhere to procedures … to address dismal recall-completion rates.”

Ultimately, the kneecappin­g of NHTSA should set off alarms for consumers for a very important reason: it is the only way to publicly find out how many complaints have been laid by owners for specific problems. If your issue is indeed a one-off, that will be reflected. But if you’re part of a group experienci­ng similar issues, you need to be aware of that, and a regulatory board needs to be able to fight for you.

In Canada, Transport Canada receives complaints, but we need the U.S. numbers for our safety. We drive the same cars but have about a tenth of the population. Five reported incidents here might equal 50 in the U.S., and patterns will emerge sooner.

Levine sums it up, saying, “This sort of de-regulatory, anti-enforcemen­t approach to auto safety puts drivers, passengers and pedestrian­s in the back seat and manufactur­ers at the wheel.”

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