Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

JUDGE APPOVES $15B SETTTLEMEN­T

$14.7B settlement sets high in U.S.

- By James F. Peltz

The biggest auto-scandal settlement in U.S. history was approved. Buybacks begin soon for VW owners.

A federal judge has approved a $14.7 billion settlement in the Volkswagen emissions-cheating case, the largest auto-scandal settlement in U.S. history.

The deal, approved Tuesday, gives about 475,000 owners of Volkswagen­s and Audis with 2-liter diesel engines the opportunit­y to have their cars bought back or modified by Volkswagen and to seek additional cash compensati­on. It also provides billions of dollars to support environmen­tal programs, reduce emissions and promote zero-emissions vehicles.

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer in San Francisco, who has overseen the litigation against the German automaker, approved the settlement that was proposed in July. He called the deal “fair, reasonable and adequate.”

The VW scandal erupted a year ago when Volkswagen admitted that it had installed “cheat devices” on dieselpowe­red cars from 2009 through 2015. The devices enabled the vehicles’ engines to emit less pollutants during emissions tests than during normal road use.

The scandal involved nearly 600,000 cars in the United States and 11 million Volkswagen vehicles worldwide.

Volkswagen said Tuesday that it would start to implement the U.S. settlement immediatel­y and that it was hiring 900 people to help with the buybacks, including one employee to be stationed at each of its 652 U.S. dealership­s.

The automaker also has a website, www.vwcourtset­tlement.com, with details about the settlement and instructio­ns for people who own or lease affected cars. Terms of the settlement and a list of the vehicles involved also are available at on the court’s website.

The settlement “is an important milestone in our journey to make things right in the United States,” Hinrich Woebcken, chief executive of Volkswagen Group of America Inc., said in a statement.

Under the settlement, owners of certain 2-liter diesel cars made by Volkswagen in the model years 2009 through 2015 will receive between $12,500 and $44,000 from the automaker to buy back their cars. Leases of those vehicles may be terminated without penalty, and leaseholde­rs also may seek cash payments.

Instead of having their cars bought back, drivers can choose to have VW modify their vehicles to meet emissions standards — once that method is approved by the California Air Resources Board and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency. Federal officials said such a modificati­on does not yet exist, though the company is working on a fix.

Regardless of whether they choose the buyback or modificati­on option, owners will also receive a cash payment of at least $5,100 and as much as $10,000, depending on the model.

The 475,000 cars affected by the agreement include Volkswagen’s popular Beetles, Golfs, Jettas and Passats. Some Audi A3s also are covered.

The agreement does not cover about 90,000 cars with 3-liter engines that also had the cheating software.

The automaker reached three separate but related settlement­s that were approved Tuesday: the first with the U.S. Department of Justice, the California attorney general’s office, the California Air Resources Board and the EPA; the second with the Federal Trade Commission; and the third with owners. The agreements were developed in parallel.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States