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Too many seatbelts?

Have you ever worried that your new car, van or SUV has too many seatbelts? Fear no more. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration just changed a federal regulation to make sure that only so many passengers can be safely belted in. And along the way, NHTSA is giving a gift to auto manufacturers by trying to protect them from lawsuits brought by accident victims.

 

The too-many-seatbelts notion is buried in the text of a new rule NHTSA published on October 8 (73 Fed. Reg. 58887). The rule defines the term, “designated seating position,” which the agency and automobile manufacturers use to determine where passengers can be expected to sit. Federal safety standards mandating how many seatbelts must be installed in a new vehicle, where airbags are placed, and other performance requirements all hinge on the number and location of designated seating positions.

 

NHTSA’s new rule focused on two main goals: expanding the definition of the term to include auxiliary seats, and making it more “objective.” But it was an ancillary goal of the new rule – an attempt to preempt state tort law – that led to NHTSA’s conclusion about manufacturers installing too many seatbelts.

 

The agency added the following language to 49 C.F.R. § 571.3(c):

Any State requirement, including any determination under State tort law premised on there being more designated seating positions in a motor vehicle than the number contemplated in the definition of ‘‘designated seating position’’ in paragraph (b) of this section would prevent, hinder or frustrate the accomplishment of the purposes of the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards in Part 571 of this title, and is thus preempted by this regulation.

State tort law is fundamentally important in the field of automobile safety, ensuring that people injured in collisions can be compensated for injuries caused by the negligence of others – including manufacturers who fail to provide safe products. Individual tort cases often lead to redesigns or broad recalls. The Firestone tire recall, which likely saved thousands of lives, was prompted by state tort suits against the manufacturer. (Check out CPR’s recent paper, Regulatory Preemption and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, for more about the complementary roles of state tort law and federal regulation.)

 

Given the importance of state tort law, an assertion of preemption like the one in the new rule, ought to be backed up by strong support. NHTSA’s lawyers came up with this:

A tort law judgment premised on there being more designated seating positions in a motor vehicle than the number contemplated in that definition could have a negative safety impact. Such a judgment would tend to induce manufacturers to equip a seating location with an excessive number of safety belts since the Federal motor vehicle safety standards require that each designated seating position be equipped with one or more safety belts. Given that seat belt comfort and convenience continue to be important factors affecting the level of safety belt use, as evidenced by the agency’s adoption of requirements to improve comfort and convenience and by its 2003 report on improving seat belt use, NHTSA believes the installation of an excessive number of safety belts would decrease, not increase, safety. We expect that occupants would be less likely to use safety belts because limited space would make such use difficult or uncomfortable. For example, four safety belts could be installed on a seat that NHTSA believes is appropriate for three occupants. Where the seat is actually occupied by three occupants, in order to use the safety belts in the location where they are installed, some of the occupants may sit uncomfortably close to another occupant and/or the side of the vehicle. If the occupants attempt to sit in locations where there is more space between them, the belts will not be properly aligned with the occupants’ bodies, and they might end up sitting on buckles. This could have the effect of making it less likely that an occupant will use his or her respective belt because the belt would be located in an uncomfortable and/or inconvenient location. The potential for such a scenario would frustrate the efforts of this agency to base the number of designated seating positions, and thus the number of safety belts, on reasonably anticipated occupancy levels. This would hamper our efforts to promote high safety belt use rates.

NHTSA’s new rule is exceptional for two reasons. First, of course, is the absurdity of arguing that tort law is dangerous because it might lead to the installation of too many seatbelts. NHTSA doesn’t provide any evidence to support this claim. In fact, the agency’s primary justifications for altering the definition of designated seating position are crash data and consumer complaints about injuries resulting from passengers sitting in seats that weren’t equipped with belts.

 

Second, rather than writing its preemption assertion into the Preamble to the rule, as it has done in the past, NHTSA has taken the bold stance of writing it right into the rule itself – a Christmas-in-October gift to defense lawyers, if ever there was one. Instead of having to convince a judge to defer to NHTSA’s background materials (which might get only the deference earned by the power of the argument), attorneys for automakers will argue that NHTSA wrote preemption into the regulation as part of its congressionally delegated rulemaking power and, that courts should therefore defer out of respect for institutional competence.

 

This rulemaking is a bold step for an agency that is supposed to write safety standards that protect passengers from injury, not manufacturers from liability.

 

 

Showing 2,821 results

Matt Shudtz | October 22, 2008

Too many seatbelts?

Have you ever worried that your new car, van or SUV has too many seatbelts? Fear no more. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration just changed a federal regulation to make sure that only so many passengers can be safely belted in. And along the way, NHTSA is giving a gift to auto manufacturers by […]

David Adelman | August 25, 2008

Another Reason for Optimism

I share Wendy’s concerns but also believe that there is room for optimism, although on different grounds than Rena and John.  Much of the debate over the use of science to support regulation of public health and the environment has focused on the most challenging contexts.  Toxics regulation, as we all know, rests on relatively […]

| August 25, 2008

If Not Science, Then What?

Wendy asks a fair question: if I may rephrase, “If not science, then what?” Of course, this rephrasing is a little hyperbolic. No one suggests that there is no place for science. Indeed, as I mentioned before, it is the foundation of our concerns and provides essential (if limited and often uncertain) information about the […]

Wendy Wagner | August 23, 2008

Getting from Here to There(s)

As the moderator of this blog, I am the designated devil’s advocate. Read together, Rena’s and John’s entries make my assignment easy. Both write upbeat and insightful entries about their preferred approaches for the future, but they reach diametrically opposite conclusions. John suggests that the best solution for the manipulation of regulatory science is to […]

| August 21, 2008

The Value of Information

Reading Wendy’s rather gloomy assessment of the abuse of science in regulatory decisionmaking – which is to say, in political decisions – and Rena’s more upbeat reply, I find myself asking why we are so tied to science in the first place. If the science is so subject to bias and abuse, why are we relying […]

Rena Steinzor | August 19, 2008

Rays of Sunshine

  I think Wendy paints far too black a picture of the current state of affairs, and that rays of sunshine are beginning to poke through this particularly cloudy sky. I rest my case for more optimism on the increasingly aggressive role that scientific advisory boards are playing when political appointees at the Environmental Protection Agency […]

Wendy Wagner | August 18, 2008

What Can Really be Done about the Perversion of Science by Politics

One can quickly become depressed by the problems afflicting the science used for regulation of public health and the environment, and CPR bears a substantial share of responsibility for painting a grim picture of a world where politics prevails over science. In a Cambridge-published book, Rescuing Science from Politics, and an accompanying white paper that summarizes […]

William Funk | August 7, 2008

Preemption: The Courts, the Executive, and Congress

There are three relevant actors in the preemption play: the courts, the executive, and the Congress. For various reasons, the mood of the Supreme Court at the present time is to limit tort actions generally. “Tort reform,” generally unsuccessful in state legislatures and Congress, is being implemented by the Supreme Court unilaterally. Daubert requirements for […]

Nina Mendelson | July 31, 2008

The Omniscient Agency Myth

There are two issues kicking around in this discussion: (1) Should state tort law be preempted if there is some sort of federal regulation in place?   (2) Which institutions – particularly federal agencies and courts – are legally empowered and/or competent to decide that question? I’d like to chime in on (1), but I hope we’ll […]