Business World

Regulator poised for action on recalls

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WASHINGTON — The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion (NHTSA) expects to be ready to take action within two weeks to accelerate product recalls to reduce the safety risks associated with gas tank fires in older Jeep sport utility vehicles (SUVs) and exploding Takata Corp. air bags, the agency’s top official said on Tuesday.

NHTSA Administra­tor Mark Rosekind told reporters that he expects agency staff to present a plan of options in each case early next month and vowed to be as aggressive as possible to minimize dangers posed by the deadly defects.

Mr. Rosekind, a former member of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, spoke most forcefully about Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s (FCA).

Regulators have considered reopening an investigat­ion into whether the automaker needs to take more action and has examined the most recent data on how fast it is adding hitches to the Jeeps to help protect the fuel tank from low-speed rear-end collisions.

Earlier this month, a jury awarded $150 million to a family that sued FCA for the 2012 death of their four-year-old son in a 1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee with a fuel tank mounted behind the back axle.

The 1999 Grand Cherokee was not included in a June 2013 recall of 1.56 million Jeep SUVs. It would have been had NHTSA not agreed with FCA to limit the recalls. The agency had earlier pushed for a wider recall of 2.7 million Jeeps.

Mr. Rosekind was also critical about Takata’s actions on air bag inflators, which have been linked to at least six deaths and dozens of injuries, adding the Japanese manufactur­er has provided significan­t help to investigat­ors sifting through 2.5 million company documents.

Takata air bags have been found to explode, sending shards of metal into passenger compartmen­ts. An air bag recall has affected about 25 million vehicles from about a dozen automakers globally since 2008.

Mr. Rosekind has raised expectatio­ns for reform of an agency blamed for missteps on auto defects over the past decade. But he expressed concern about flagging enthusiasm in Congress to grant the funding and authority he says NHTSA needs to reduce the annual US toll of highway deaths and injuries.

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