Vancouver Sun

Fiat Chrysler buyback shows gap on protection: groups

- AUTO INDUSTRY PETER HENDERSON

TORONTO — A U.S. order requiring Fiat Chrysler to buy back thousands of Dodge Ram pickups and Chrysler SUVs does not apply to Canada, a discrepanc­y that highlights a weakness in consumer protection here, national advocacy groups say.

The $105-million US fine and buyback program for up to a third of 579,000 vehicles was imposed on Fiat Chrysler by the U.S. government on Monday.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion punished the company after an investigat­ion into nearly two dozen recalls found it botched its response by not doing enough to notify customers and get the affected vehicles off the road and repaired.

Ken Whitehurst, the executive director for the Consumers Council of Canada, said Canadians often assume consumer protection­s are stronger here than in the more business-friendly U.S. in many areas, including vehicle safety, but the opposite is true.

“Transport Canada doesn’t have the powers to act forcefully the way we see in the United States,” he said.

“Canada depends quite a lot on companies for reciprocal action when it comes to recalls.”

Whitehurst said in the past, Canadian companies have mostly played by the rules and maintained a culture of responsibi­lity, but the multinatio­nal corporatio­ns that play an increasing­ly important role in the Canadian economy are indifferen­t.

Transport Canada, unlike its American counterpar­t, has limited authority to force automakers to address safety issues and impose punishment­s. It only received the power to compel companies to notify Canadians about safety problems with their vehicles in May.

Previously, Transport Canada could not notify Canadians of safety problems without the cooperatio­n of automakers.

Bruce Cran, president of the Consumers’ Associatio­n of Canada, said while the automotive safety laws were updated this year, the federal government needs to do far more to empower Canada’s consumer protection and safety agencies.

“Successive government­s have neglected consumers in this regard,” he said. “As a nation, I think we’re being left behind.”

Transport Canada spokeswoma­n Linda Licari confirmed in an email the department does not have the power to compel a buyback like the one in the U.S.

She said Transport Canada requires periodic updates from companies once a recall has been announced, but it does not have the power to set a deadline for fixing a safety issue.

She said a bill called the Safer Vehicles for Canadians Act would give the department the authority to add deadlines for recalls and fix many of the other gaps in its powers. But it was introduced in early June and was not passed before the legislativ­e session ended.

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