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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
NHTSA 81-96
Friday, November 22, 1996 Contact: Barry McCahill
Tel. No.: (202) 366-9550
NHTSA
Announces Comprehensive Plan
to Improve Air Bag Technology
and Reduce Air Bag Dangers
The National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) today announced a comprehensive
approach to preserve the important safety benefit of air bags while
minimizing their danger to children and at-risk adults.
The agency announced
its approach centers on accelerating the development of "smart
air bag" technology for future vehicles with the intent of having
the systems available in fall 1998 for 1999 models. More immediate measures
include adoption of enhanced warning labels, depowering of air bags
and continuing to allow the use of cut-off switches in vehicles without
a rear seat to protect children.
NHTSA Administrator
Ricardo Martinez, M.D., said, "The safety of the motoring public
is our highest priority. Air bags are working well, but need to be improved
to enhance the safety of children and small stature adults. These comprehensive
measures will maintain the safety benefits of air bags, decrease their
potential hazard to children and at-risk adults, and provide consumers
with important safety information.
Administrator
Martinez added that while these steps will enhance the safety of vehicle
occupants in the interim, the effort can only be fully completed with
the development and use of "smart" air bag technology.
- Smart air
bags. The agency will propose setting a phase-in schedule for
the next generation of air bags to begin in fall 1998 for 1999 models.
With the growth of research and competition in air bag technology,
NHTSA believes that "smart bags" will provide significantly
greater safety in frontal crash protection, and wants to encourage
both their rapid development and design flexibility. Smart bags will
effectively "tailor" the deployment to the size of the occupant
and the crash circumstances.
The other intermediate
safety measures are:
"The
most important and immediate part of our strategy is that children age
12 and under should always ride in the back seat, buckled up. Regulatory
actions will make tomorrow's air bags safer for children, but too many
are at risk in the interim if parents do not insist their children ride
in the back seat," Dr. Martinez said.
"Overall,
air bags are working well and are responsible for an 11 percent reduction
in driver fatalities in passenger cars, including a 30 percent reduction
in fatalities in head-on crashes. They are credited with saving more
than 1,500 lives since 1986 when they began appearing in the U.S. fleet,"
Dr. Martinez said.
Regarding
our proposal to allow air bags to be disconnected, we expect that very
few will need to take this extreme action, and those who do will be
made aware of the risks involved, Dr. Martinez said. You can greatly
reduce the risk of air bag injury by being buckled and back from the
air bag.
NHTSA
has aggressively issued consumer advisories and worked with the news
media, the highway safety community, auto and insurance industries,
and the medical community to increase public awareness of both the problem
and the immediate solution -- placing children in the back seat, buckled
up.
In
August 1996, the agency proposed changes to the federal air bag requirement
to encourage the introduction of "smart" air bag systems and
to provide relief to owners of existing vehicles equipped with air bags.
The
Congress in 1991 directed NHTSA to amend the standard to require air
bags for all new cars manufactured after September 1997 and for light
trucks the following year. Responding to market demand, manufacturers
exceeded that timetable and today virtually all new cars and trucks
offer dual air bags.
Consumers
who have questions or concerns about air bags should contact the agency's
toll-free Auto Safety Hotline at (800) 424-9393. For up-to-date information
on air bag issues, contact NHTSA's World Wide Web site at:
http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov.
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