Rear-View Cameras Could Start Rolling in All New Cars in 2014

The U.S. Department of Transportation has proposed new safety regulations that would effectively make rear-view cameras mandatory in all new cars by September,  2014, CBS News reports. The regulation is aimed at eliminating blind spots for drivers who are backing up.

Though the proposal does not specifically mention cameras, it would require that new vehicles provide a 180-degree rear view when they are in reverse, effectively making the cameras standard equipment.

Under the proposed rule, 10 percent of new vehicles would need to comply with the regulations by September, 2012, 40 percent by September, 2013, and 100 percent by September, 2014.

The proposed change was required by Congress as part of the Cameron Gulbransen Kids Transportation Safety Act of 2007, named for a 2-year-old boy killed when his father accidentally backed over him.

According to National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates, an average of 292 people are killed and 18,000 are injured every year because of accidents that occur when drivers put their cars in reverse. The elderly and children are particularly at risk.

“There is no more tragic accident than for a parent or caregiver to back out of a garage or driveway and kill or injure an undetected child playing behind the vehicle,” Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said in a statement.  “The changes we are proposing today will help drivers see into those blind zones directly behind vehicles to make sure it is safe to back up.”

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One comment to “Rear-View Cameras Could Start Rolling in All New Cars in 2014”

  1. New Car

    it will provide more safety

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