Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Hyundai, Kia fined for delay in recalls

- By Tom Krisher

They must pay $ 137million in fines and safety improvemen­ts because they moved too slowly to recall over 1million vehicles.

Hyundai and Kia must pay $ 137 million in fines and safety improvemen­ts because they moved too slowly to recall over 1 million vehicles with engines that can fail.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion announced the penalties on Friday. They resolve a three- year government probe into the companies’ behavior involving recalls of multiple models dating to the 2011 model year.

“It’s critical that manufactur­ers appropriat­ely recognize the urgency of their safety recall responsibi­lities and provide timely and candid informatio­n to the agency about all safety issues,” NHTSA Deputy Administra­tor James Owens said in a statement.

Hyundai will pay $ 54 million and invest $ 40 million to improve safety operations under an agreement reached with the agency. The company must build a field test and inspection laboratory in the U. S. and put new computer systems in place to analyze data to identify safety issues. Another $ 46 million in penalties will be deferred as long as the Korean automaker meets safety conditions, NHTSA said in a prepared statement.

Kia, which is affiliated with Hyundai, must pay $ 27 million and invest $ 16 million on safety performanc­e measures. Another $ 27 million payment will be deferred as long as Kia behaves.

Kia will set up a U. S. safety office headed by a chief safety officer. Both companies will have to hire an independen­t third- party auditor to review their safety practices, and they committed to organizati­onal improvemen­ts to identify and investigat­e potential U. S. safety issues.

“We value a collaborat­ive and cooperativ­e relationsh­ip with the U. S. Department of Transporta­tion and NHTSA, and will continue to work closely with the agency to proactivel­y identify and address potential safety issues,” Brian Latouf, Hyundai’s chief safety officer, said in a prepared statement.

Kia denied the allegation­s from the U. S. but said Friday that it wanted to avoid a protracted legal fight.

“We are pleased to be able to direct our attention to improving and enhancing our recall management processes, and our priority remains making things right for our customers,” the company said in a prepared statement.

The U. S. safety agency opened its probe in 2017 after Hyundai recalled about 470,000 vehicles in September 2015 because debris from manufactur­ing could restrict oil flow to connecting rod bearings. That could make the bearings wear out and fail, potentiall­y causing the four- cylinder engines to stall or catch fire. The repair was an expensive engine block replacemen­t.

NHTSA said in investigat­ion documents that Hyundai limited the recall to engines made before April 2012, saying it solved the manufactur­ing problem after that. In addition, Kia didn’t recall its cars and SUVs with the same 2.4- liter and 2- liter “Theta II” engines, contending they were made on a different assembly line at a plant in Alabama.

But 18 months after the 2015 recall, both automakers announced recalls of 1.2 million more vehicles for the same problem, including models the automakers originally said weren’t affected, NHTSA said when it opened the investigat­ion.

Engine failure and fire problems with Hyundais and Kias have plagued the companies for more than five years, affecting the owners of more than 8 million vehicles.

In June 2018, NHTSA opened two more investigat­ions of the automakers that have yet to be resolved. The agency said it had owner complaints of more than 3,100 fires, 103 injuries and one death. It granted a petition seeking the probes filed by the nonprofit Center for Auto Safety, a consumer advocacy group.

Jason Levine, executive director of the center, said they petitioned NHTSA seeking an investigat­ion because no one seemed to be listening to complaints from Hyundai and Kia owners.

“Only time will tell if this sort of deferred penalty and mandated investment­s in safety operations will actually deter similar behavior in the future by these or other manufactur­ers,” Levine said.

The new investigat­ions, one for Hyundai and the other for Kia, covered non- crash fires in almost 3 million vehicles across the model lineups of the affiliated Korean automakers.

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