Boston Herald

U.S. urges faster fix of air bags

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DETROIT — The U.S. government’s road safety agency is urging automakers to speed up replacemen­t of potentiall­y dangerous Takata air bag inflators.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion said in a statement that Heidi King, its top official, has met with 19 affected companies urging them to accelerate the recalls and to post recall plans on their websites.

Automakers missed a Dec. 31 deadline to replace 100 percent of the oldest and most dangerous inflators, and they have been slow to complete the recalls, which began more than 15 years ago. Automakers say it’s difficult to get people to take their cars in for repairs, especially with older models.

Takata’s inflators can explode with too much force and hurl shrapnel into drivers and passengers. At least 23 people have been killed and about 300 injured worldwide. The inflators have resulted in the largest series of auto recalls in U.S. history, covering 37 million vehicles.

“It’s imperative that manufactur­ers take every available step to reach each and every owner of a vehicle with deadly air bags and take action to ensure that those dangerous air bags are replaced as soon as is safely possible,” King said in the statement.

But Jason Levine, executive director of the nonprofit Center for Auto Safety, said King has placed the burden on consumers rather than using the agency’s authority to make automakers comply.

“Today, we see yet again this administra­tion’s inability to protect consumers as this announceme­nt does nothing to make more readily available the replacemen­t air bags that tens of millions of Americans are waiting on and deserve,” he said Friday in an email.

Toyota said it already has made Takata recalls more prominent on its website and is publishing quarterly compliance reports that include scheduled recalls. Nissan said it already has accelerate­d one recall. A General Motors spokesman was looking into the matter. A Ford spokeswoma­n said the company has posted recall informatio­n on its website but didn’t answer a question about accelerati­ng the recalls. A message was left for Honda.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? GLOBAL RECALL: A Honda technician performs a free replacemen­t of a Takata air bag in Malaysia in 2016.
AP FILE PHOTO GLOBAL RECALL: A Honda technician performs a free replacemen­t of a Takata air bag in Malaysia in 2016.

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