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Crusader Nader still driving for safer automobile­s

Activist calls for improvemen­ts

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Traffic fatalities are simply the result of driver error. That was the mantra in the early ’60s. Then, on Nov. 30, 1965, a book was published on vehicle safety and forever changed the auto industry.

Ralph Nader’s book “Unsafe at Any Speed: The Designed-In Dangers of the American Automobile” was not just about the Chevrolet Corvair, although the Corvair’s propensity to flip because of a poorly designed rear suspension highlighte­d the overall inattentio­n to safety by automakers.

GM could have done better, and the Corvair’s post-1965 4-link rear suspension proved it. But GM was hardly alone. Except for a few European automakers, nobody really focused on safety. Seat belts were rarely worn. Widespread use of reinforced passenger compartmen­ts, air bags and electronic crash avoidance systems was in the future. There weren’t even federal crash standards.

Cars were sold on horsepower and style, not the standardiz­ed gear selectors, collapsibl­e steering columns, padded dashboards or reduced tailpipe fog for which Nader advocated.

Without Ralph Nader and his book, the cars we drive today would be vastly different from the ones we take for granted.

“Nader and his book were catalysts for policymake­rs and the public recognizin­g that vehicle designs affect safety, that vehicles can be engineered to protect people in crashes,” said Adrian Lund, president of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, an independen­t auto safety research organizati­on known for its crash tests. “Most of us accept this in today’s world of crash test ratings, recalls and discussion­s of smart cars, but it was different in the early 1960s. Nader’s work and his congressio­nal testimony were key to the establishm­ent of NHTSA and the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion.”

The Department of Transporta­tion was created in 1966. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion came in 1970, as did the Environmen­tal Protection Agency. Those bodies birthed the Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards in 1975, all of which have made an indelible and irreversib­le mark on making cars cleaner, better and safer.

According to NHTSA, there were 5.3 fatalities per 100 million vehicle miles traveled in 1965. In 2014, the agency estimated the rate to be 1.04 fatalities, an 80 percent reduction.

Mr. Nader recently spoke about his book’s legacy. This is an edited transcript.

Q: Only one chapter really focused on the Corvair. Why has that seemed to define the book?

A: The press in those days would almost never criticize a car by make or model. I had to go to Canada to get on a television show. It caught their eye in Detroit. I opened the book that way because I wanted a very specific example and focused on the biggest auto company.

Q: Of what changes in auto safety are you proudest since the book?

A: Obviously, seat belts, air bags, improved tires and improved handling. We were behind the Europeans. They had disc brakes. We didn’t. They had radial tires. We didn’t. Seat belts and padded dash panels were important to reduce severity of crashes when they occur.

Q: Where do you see opportunit­ies for improvemen­t?

A: Biggest opportunit­ies are side impact, rollovers and collision avoidance, which is coming along nicely. They still need to update crash protection standards; they’re still at 30 mph. It took the Firestone scandal (a coverup between Ford and Firestone where the treads on select tires would separate, causing Ford vehicles, most notably the Explorer, to roll over) to update the tire standards from 1968.

Q: Which automaker is best at safety?

A: Well, Volvo has always been one of the leaders. They were first in the ’50s with three-point seat belts. Over 40-50 years, I give the nod to Volvo. But now, Daimler and others are good. When they had to meet standards, variation among auto companies was reduced. When it really counted on legislatio­n, we would use Volvo as an example every chance we got.

Q: What are your thoughts about the coming age of self-driving cars? It seems they would improve safety.

A: It will be a long time. I asked the head of NHTSA what he tells people when they ask about driverless cars. He said two words: No data. Drivers are incredibly more accurate in determinin­g variables — cars pulling out from side streets in Manhattan, etc. — than an algorithm. It will take awhile for an algorithm to anticipate everything a human does.

 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES ?? Ralph Nader says he is proudest of safety changes in seat belts, air bags, improved tires and improved handling.
ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES Ralph Nader says he is proudest of safety changes in seat belts, air bags, improved tires and improved handling.
 ??  ?? Book cover
Book cover

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