The Detroit News reports General Motors CEO Mary Barra boarded a commercial flight from Detroit to Washington, D.C. Sunday in order to prepare for two separate hearings before Congress regarding her company's handling of the ongoing 2014 recall crisis. While in the nation's capital, she also met with 25 family members whose relatives were killed in crashes linked to the ignition switch behind the recall.
CNN Money adds GM is about to reveal the names of the 13 people who lost their lives due to catastrophic failure linked to the defective part. The information will be made available to the public, with sensitive information — corporate secrets and personal data — redacted prior to publication. The information is part of a request by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration due April 3.
As for what Barra and NHTSA acting administrator David Friedman plan to say before the House and Senate hearings, Automotive News reports Friedman is standing firm on his agency's effort to "properly carry out its safety mission based on the data available to it and the process it followed" in prepared remarks to the House Energy and Commerce Committee, while Barra reiterates her position on the events leading up to the recall and subsequent actions moving forward:
When we have answers, we will be fully transparent with you, with our regulators and with our customers.
Automotive News also put forth four key issues Barra and Friedman will have to explain before Congress and the general public:
- How GM's multiple internal investigations failed to lead to a recall sooner
- Why NHTSA failed to launch an investigation, despite signs that a faulty switch might be causing airbags not to deploy
- Whether and how GM's vehicle-safety protocols have changed
- Whether GM's internal processes were violated or laws were broken
Tying into the fourth issue, House Democrats have found and named the engineer behind the 2006 ignition redesign as Ray DeGiorgio, who denied in a 2013 court deposition having knowledge that the part was changed. They also penned a letter to Barra stating the redesigned switch still didn't meet spec, based on information provided by supplier Delphi confirming the switches meant for 2008 – 2011 models tested poorly alongside the switch approved in 2002 now linked to 13 fatalities and 33 crashes.
Automotive News also posits the reason behind the NHTSA not pushing forward on a recall sooner was due to a heavy focus on child deaths linked to airbags. When GM introduced a smart airbag system in their vehicles in the 2000s, the agency focused on whether or not the airbags were doing their job to protect children placed in the front seat, with the goal of assessing "real world" performance while spotting "unusual circumstances" — such as the flawed ignition switch behind the recall — that would allow for "early identification of potential problems," according to a 2004 statement by former agency boss Chip Chidester.
In new recall news, GM recalled 1.3 million vehicles made between 2004 and 2010 whose power steering could suddenly lose electric power, with the automaker aware of "some crashes and injuries" tied to the steering. Vehicles affected include: Chevrolet Malibu, Malibu Maxx, non-turbo HHR and Cobalt; Saturn Aura and Ion; and Pontiac G6.
As for reporting issues that could lead to a recall, GM leads the way in filing early-warning reports to the NHTSA with 6,493 reports between 2005 and 2007; Chrysler and Toyota filed around 1,300 in the same period, while Honda filed 290. However, the cause behind the numbers is in how each automaker follows the 2000 TREAD Act, with GM setting an extremely low threshold for reporting in comparison to other automakers.
Finally, a number of lawsuits are being aimed directly at dismantling the liability protection GM's 2009 bankruptcy provided to "New GM." The tactics range from securities fraud and loss of resale value, to wrongful death.
from The Truth About Cars http://ift.tt/Jh8LjA
Put the internet to work for you.
Recommended for you |
No comments:
Post a Comment