WASHINGTON (Dec. 28, 2015) — From 2010 to 2012, Honda Motor Co. said it made multiple attempts to notify the owner of a 2001 Accord that the car's air bag was faulty and needed replacing.
Last July, with the car sold to another person and repairs still uncompleted, the vehicle was in an accident in Pennsylvania and the Takata Corp. airbag shattered, fatally injuring the driver, according to a U.S. auto-safety agency and Honda. The day before the accident, Honda had mailed the new owner yet another recall notice.
The latest fatality linked to a Takata airbag — eight have occurred in the U.S. and one outside the country, with about 100 people injured — highlights a flawed recall system that all-too-often fails to lead to critical repairs and can take years to complete, according to lawmakers and auto-safety advocates. Meanwhile, cars can be legally sold and registered without recall fixes having to be performed.
“The identification of yet another preventable death — this time a young boy and well after when this safety defect was first made known — reiterates the urgent need for swift recall of all cars with these potentially defective airbags,” said a joint statement issued Wednesday by U.S. Sens. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., and Edward Markey, D-Mass.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) announced on Dec. 23 the latest death suspected of resulting from airbags that can spray drivers and passengers with shrapnel. The agency also said the pace of recalls had picked up to about 2 million per month.
Seven months
With almost three-quarters of the 19 million vehicles under the recall still unrepaired, the fixes could still take seven more months to complete at that pace. And that may be optimistic, based on the rate of repairs in previous recalls.
On average, only about 70 percent of vehicles covered under recalls are repaired, said Clarence Ditlow, executive director of the Center for Auto Safety, a Washington-based advocacy group. The rate for older vehicles such as those involved in the Takata recall is much lower, about 50 to 60 percent, Mr. Ditlow said.
“Not every single owner shows up the first day to get it fixed,” he said. “Some people will fit it in with their next trip for service or when they have time in their schedule. You have to get a sense of urgency in the consumer.”
Expanded recall
NHTSA has expanded its recall to include additional models made by Subaru, Mazda Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co., and appointed an independent monitor to oversee Takata's response, spokesman Gordon Trowbridge said Wednesday.
“This young person's death is tragic and it underscores why we are continuing to work so hard to get these defective deflators off the road,” Mr. Trowbridge said. “Despite the unprecedented publicity surrounding these recalls, there are still vehicles under recall with parts available for repairs that have not been fixed.”
Honda, in a statement, said it was investigating the crash in Pennsylvania and urged car owners to get their recalled vehicles repaired as soon as possible. “Our thoughts and sincere sympathies are with the family,” the company said. Neither NHTSA nor Honda identified the victim.
Consent decree
Takata reached a consent decree spanning five years with NHTSA on Nov. 3, agreeing to pay fines of $70 million, fire some employees and phase out the chemical explosive linked to the failures. If the company doesn't meet its terms, it will be subject to additional fines of as much as $130 million.
The consent decree included installing an independent monitor, to be paid for by Takata. John D. Buretta, a partner with the law firm Cravath, Swaine & Moore and former principal deputy assistant attorney general in the Department of Justice Criminal Division, has been selected for the job, Trowbridge said.
Mr. Burretta previously served as the chief of the organized crime and racketeering section of the U.S. Attorney's office for the Eastern District of New York, and on its national security unit. In 10 years with the Department of Justice he held a number of roles, including chief of staff and director of the agency's Deepwater Horizon Task Force, which handled BP's 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
“The independent monitor has a steep uphill climb to figure this out,” Mr. Ditlow said. “People are dying.”
The senators said the pace of the Takata recall “is completely unacceptable and a massive disappointment.”
Auto makers dragged their feet and didn't report the extent of the risks swiftly enough, and NHTSA moved too slowly after it began receiving reports, they said.
A ‘mess'
NHTSA agrees that movement on the Takata case took too long and that's why it included deadlines for action in its consent order with the company, Mr. Trowbridge said. For example, manufacturers in states with high humidity, which has been linked to the airbag failures, must have enough parts on hand by March to complete all repairs, he said.
“We've got kind of a mess on our hands here and everybody acknowledges this,” he said. “This is not going to get done fast enough to satisfy us or, frankly, we think the manufactures that are involved.”
Law changes that would make recall completion rates higher have consistently been fought by the industry, Mr. Ditlow said.
A measure contained in transportation legislation earlier this year would have required used car dealers to perform all outstanding recalls before selling vehicles. It was taken out of the bill before it passed.
NHTSA also could push suppliers harder to make replacement parts available, Mr. Ditlow said. Some auto manufacturers have told customers they won't be able to repair airbags on some vehicles until the middle of next year, he added.
“Are parts available for every single Takata recall? The answer to that clearly is no,” he said.
Motorists can check to see if their vehicles are on the recall list at a NHTSA-run website, safercar.gov. Repairs under the recall are free.
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This Bloomberg News report appeared on the website of Automotive News, a Detroit-based sister publication of Tire Business.