2000

You are browsing the archive for 2000.

Ford Passed Up Chance to Boost Explorer’s Stability

Autos: Documents indicate the step was not taken in 1995 redesign, partly to hold down costs Ford Motor Co., whose Explorer sport-utility vehicles have suffered a rash of rollover crashes linked to tire failures, spurned a chance to significantly improve the stability of the vehicles during a major redesign in the mid-1990s, internal company documents ... Read more »

NHTSA Inaction on Rollover Issue Seen as Typical

Autos: Safety agency has managed only to get a warning label placed on SUVs, a move it rejected as inadequate years ago. Nearly 30 years ago, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration put the brakes on an Army plan to sell off thousands of surplus jeeps. The M151 jeeps, which had been involved in scores ... Read more »

Upgrades on Auto Safety Standards Languish

Regulation: With most of its rules decades old, federal highway agency admits some are weak or out of date. Measures also fail to keep pace with technology and market trends. Efforts to strengthen vehicle safety standards have languished year after year because of lengthy delays, extremes of caution and shifting priorities within the nation’s traffic ... Read more »

Corrupt Dealers Expose Weakness in Gun Laws

Crime: Thousands of weapons reach criminals through licensed sellers. Lenient sentencing hampers prosecution. Riverside police officer Mike Pelissero survived his close call with a weapon sold illegally by B and E Guns. A drug suspect fired at him and missed–then the gun jammed. At least two homicide victims were less fortunate, killed by guns that ... Read more »

Who’s Watching Out for Safety?

Does an Agency ‘Revolving Door’ Sacrifice Auto Standards? The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has contributed during its 30-year life to a declining rate of carnage on America’s highways. But the agency’s record on vehicle rollovers will not make the highlight reel. Every year, about 9,000 deaths and 60,000 serious injuries result from “first event” ... Read more »