Standards for self-adjusting “smart” car headlights, begun in 2018, are incomplete despite car industry support. Others would require car manufacturers to maintain records of safety defects for at least 10 years and put into place anti-ejection protection measures for larger buses. In July, a group of attorneys general from 17 states and the District of Columbia wrote the Biden administration urging immediate action and calling the delays troubling and unacceptable.
#After effects keeps crashing drivers
President Donald Trump sidetracked at least four major road safety proposals in development, such as medical evaluations of commercial truck drivers for sleep apnea.Īmong the rules awaiting NHTSA’s action is one on side-impact standards for child car seats, originally due in 2014. Other pending rules have been slowed by bureaucracy or taken a back seat to other priorities. In many cases, the delayed rules are opposed by powerful industries as expensive, outdated or restrictive. The ever-growing rules backlog is one of the biggest tests for the federal agency since its founding in 1970, when public pressure led by safety activist Ralph Nader spurred NHTSA’s mission to “save lives, prevent injuries and reduce economic costs due to road traffic crashes.” Advocates worry that its mission risks getting bogged down under President Joe Biden, at a time of increasing road accidents during the COVID-19 pandemic. The agency has repeatedly missed past deadlines, even those promised in federal court. That rear seat belt rule is now scheduled to start moving through the cumbersome regulatory process in January, but could be years away. The foundation keeps a list, known as “Kailee’s Angels,” of teenagers around the country who died in car crashes after failing to buckle up. “Government should not take this long to act on safety,” said David Mills, who started a Houston-area foundation in Kailee’s honor aimed at promoting seat belt safety. Her three friends who remained buckled walked away with minor scrapes.
#After effects keeps crashing driver
Moments later, the driver veered off the road and the car flipped, ejecting her. Kailee Mills was riding in the back seat of a car to a Halloween party in 2017 just a mile from her house in Spring, Texas, when she unfastened her seat belt to slide next to a friend and take a selfie. Washington – As traffic fatalities spike in the COVID-19 pandemic, the federal agency in charge of auto safety is struggling with a growing backlog of safety rules ordered by Congress that are years overdue and estimated to save thousands of lives.Ī governors’ highway safety group says the United States faces a “car crash epidemic” at the same time that safety rules languish.Īn Associated Press review of rule-making by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration under the last three presidents found at least 13 auto safety rules past due, including a rear seat belt reminder requirement passed by Congress in 2012 that was to be implemented by 2015.ĭavid and Wendy Mills wonder whether their 16-year-old daughter would be alive today if the seat belt warning rule had been in place.