THE AMERICAN PEOPLE v TOYOTA
By Maj. Gen. Jerry R. Curry (ret'd)
CurryforAmerica.com
For months the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration (NHTSA), which is part of the Department of Transportation, had
been receiving complaints from customers and police agencies across the nation
about “sticking accelerators” on Toyota Motor Vehicles. They routinely processed
these complaints and asked Toyota to
investigate and report back on the alleged problems. Indications are that Toyota
was less than responsive.
Finally in November of last year, NHTSA approached
Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood and requested permission for some of its
staff to fly to Japan to meet with
Toyota executives; permission was granted. The purpose of the trip was to
determine whether or not there was really a sticking accelerator problem and, if
there was, to find out when Toyota intended to recall its automobiles and fix
them?
In the history of the agency I know of no other
time when federal regulators went “hat in hand” to an auto manufacturer, at home
or abroad, and begged them to make a safety recall of a defective motor vehicle
system. During the three years when I was the Administrator of NHTSA it was not
unusual to recall nearly a million vehicles a month for repair of safety
defects, and not once did a member of my staff have to travel to
Japan or Europe to do it. Not once did we refuse to
conduct a safety investigation because of the, “need to allocate and prioritize
NHTSA’s limited resources to best accomplish the agency’s safety mission.” In
fact, I would have fired any member of my staff who came up with such a dumb
idea.
The NATIONAL TRAFFIC AND MOTOR VEHICLE SAFETY ACT
OF 1966 charges NHTSA with the responsibility to “protect the American public
against unreasonable risk of accidents occurring as a result of the
design, construction or performance
of motor vehicles and is to also protect against unreasonable risk of death or
injury to persons in the event accidents do occur …
a minimum standard for motor vehicle
performance, or motor vehicle equipment performance, which is practicable, which
meets the need for motor vehicle safety and which provides objective criteria”
to measure against.
It is NHTSA’s job to protect the public by setting
standards and identifying and correcting motor vehicle safety defects --
including sticking accelerators and sudden and uncontrolled acceleration... It
does this by defect identification and correction; by “compiling and analyzing
safety statistics and information; and by conducting supportive safety research
and development.” If a safety defect exists NHTSA identifies it and requires
that the manufacturer recalls the defective vehicles and corrects their faults
at no cost to the customer.
Identifying and correcting mechanical and
technical safety defects is something the military trained me to do. At one time
I commanded the U.S. Army’s Test and Evaluation Command headquartered at
Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland. The
command was responsible for the “Engineer Development Testing” of all military
equipment including – but not limited to -- aircraft, helicopters, jeeps, tanks,
trucks, missiles, artillery and munitions.
When I was leading NHTSA, we assumed that some
auto manufacturers would do all they could to stiff arm us and not cooperate,
but we didn’t care. Our job was to protect the public and we had all the tools
-- or weapons -- we needed to get the job done. We could assess substantial
fines, subpoena correspondence and records, loose the news media on the
manufacturers for their lack of cooperation and, if need be, have the Department
of Justice drag the recalcitrant manufacturer into court. On the average NHTSA
opened between 100 and 125 defect investigations a year.
Even back then
Toyota was a very large and competently run company;
but at times it could be difficult to work with. It had a reputation of not
notifying the agency of its discovery of safety defects as required by the
Safety Act and of not providing completely factual answers concerning the issues
raised by our letters and Special Orders. But this was only an irritant, not a
failure of the system. I made it clear to Toyota that I was not above
knee-capping them and they wisely decided to fully cooperate.
(Maj. Gen. Jerry Ralph Curry, US Army Retired; BA,
MA, D.Min.; author: From Private to General:
An African American Rises Through The Ranks;
PO Box 407, Haymarket, VA 20168; (703) 753-2615.)
Home | Articles | BLOG | Quotes | Photo Gallery | Favorites | Stupid Frogs Game | Store | Feedback | Search | Subscribe | About Us
|