Motor vehicle safety standards: Occupant crash protection— Advanced air bag rule; reconsideration petitions denied,

[Federal Register: February 9, 2005 (Volume 70, Number 26)]

[Rules and Regulations]

[Page 6777-6779]

From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]

[DOCID:fr09fe05-8]

DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration

49 CFR Part 571

[Docket No. NHTSA 2004-18905; Notice 2]

Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Occupant Crash Protection

AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), DOT.

ACTION: Response to petitions for reconsideration.

SUMMARY: This notice denies petitions for reconsideration submitted by the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers (Alliance) of the August 20, 2004, final rule on advanced air bag provisions in the occupant crash protection standard. We are denying the first petition because it references a test procedure that the agency has not yet proposed, for which an effective date will be proposed when a Lower Anchors and Tethers for Children (LATCH) seat installation procedure is published. We are denying the second petition because we have previously responded to the same issue and no new data have been presented.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For non-legal issues: Louis Molino, Office of Crashworthiness Standards, at (202) 366-2264. Fax: (202) 493- 2739. For legal issues: Christopher Calamita, Office of Chief Counsel, at (202) 366-2992. Fax: (202) 366-3820. You may send mail to these officials at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 400 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Table of Contents

  1. Background II. Petitions for Reconsideration

    1. Effective Date Revision--Appendix A

    2. Future Appendix A Revisions III. Response to Petitions

    3. Effective Date Revision--Appendix A

    4. Future Appendix A Revisions IV. Conclusion

  2. Background

    Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) No. 208, Occupant crash protection, specifies performance requirements for the protection of vehicle occupants in crashes (49 CFR 571.208). On May 12, 2000, we published an interim final rule that amended FMVSS No. 208 to require advanced air bags (65 FR 30680; Docket No. NHTSA 00-7013; Notice 1) (Advanced Air Bag Rule). Among other things, the rule addressed the risk of serious air bag-induced injuries, particularly for small women and young children, and amended FMVSS No. 208 to require that future air bags be designed to minimize such risk. The Advanced Air Bag Rule established a rigid barrier crash test with a 5th percentile adult female test dummy, as well as several low risk deployment and out-of- position (OOP) tests using a range of dummy sizes and a number of specified child restraint systems (CRSs).

    The agency received multiple petitions for reconsideration to the Advanced Air Bag Rule. Petitioners raised a large number of concerns about the various test procedures in their written submissions. To address these issues adequately, the agency held a technical workshop so that we could better understand the specific concerns and better determine if the test procedures needed refinement.\1\ The

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    agency then addressed each petition in a Federal Register notice published on December 18, 2001, and made several changes to the Advanced Air Bag Rule (66 FR 65376; Docket No. NHTSA 01-11110). These changes included a number of refinements to the test dummy positioning procedures in the barrier tests and the low risk deployment tests. The December 2001 final rule also amended the list of CRSs contained in Appendix A by removing from the list CRSs no longer in production, and adding other CRSs.

    \1\ The workshop was held on December 6, 2000, at NHTSA's Vehicle Research and Test Center in East Liberty, Ohio. Representatives of 18 vehicle manufacturers and 13 seat, sensor, and dummy manufacturers attended the workshop. Five different vehicles were used as test vehicles. Some of the five had been provided by manufacturers because they were experiencing particular problems with the existing test procedures in those vehicles.

    On November 19, 2003, the agency published a final rule that responded, in part, to petitions for reconsideration of the amendments made in the December 2001 final rule (68 FR 65179; Docket No. NHTSA 03- 16476, Notice 1). Various seat and dummy positioning procedures were amended. The November 19, 2003, final rule also amended the list of CRSs in Appendix A. Specifically, effective September 1, 2004, we removed three rear-facing CRSs from Subpart B of the appendix and added two LATCH compliant CRSs to Subpart C. The preamble to the final rule also addressed the issue of lead time for changes to Appendix A.

    On August 20, 2004, the agency published a final rule that responded to petitions for reconsideration of the amendments made in the November 19, 2003, final rule (69 FR 51598; Docket No. NHTSA 04- 18905). The majority of the petitions were denied. However, we clarified two detailed points related to dummy positioning in OOP tests and extended the effective date for the LATCH seats added to Appendix A to September 1, 2006.

  3. Petitions for Reconsideration

    1. Effective Date Revision--Appendix A

      The Alliance petitioned ``NHTSA to provide at least 1-year of lead time between the issuance of a compliance test procedure and the effective date of changes to Appendix A that would add child restraints equipped with LATCH lower attachments.'' While the Alliance strongly supports the development of a procedure for the installation of LATCH seats, as stated in the Alliance petition on the November 19, 2003, final rule, it contended that ``artificially tight installations of LATCH equipped child restraints in a compliance test could cause some occupant classification systems to misclassify the child restraint (but not in typical real-world usage).'' The petition stated that ``vehicle manufacturers and their suppliers need substantial lead-time to evaluate their systems and potentially redesign and incorporate into production suppression systems that can meet the test procedures that are to be developed.''

    2. Future Appendix A Revisions

      In addition, the Alliance petitioned NHTSA to provide at least two years of lead time for any future revisions to Appendix A. The Alliance expects that there will be a major update of the Appendix to add many LATCH-equipped CRSs. The Alliance stated that ``at least 2-years of lead time would help vehicle manufacturers and their suppliers to design and develop suppression systems that will meet the LATCH compliance test procedures that are to be developed.''

  4. Response to Petitions

    1. Effective Date Revision--Appendix A

      We are denying the Alliance petition for one year of lead time between the issuance of a LATCH CRS installation compliance test procedure and the effective date of changes to Appendix A that would add CRSs equipped with LATCH lower attachments. In the August 20, 2004, final rule (69 FR 51598) the agency stated:

      To ensure the robustness of automatic suppression systems, a manufacturer must be able to certify that the system operates under conditions representative of real world use. This includes operation when used with CRS designs that have been sold for almost two years. However, as the Alliance noted, the agency does not yet have a compliance test procedure in place for testing seats installed by means of the LATCH anchorages. Therefore, the effective date for the LATCH equipped CRSs in Appendix A is extended until September 1, 2006. By that time, the agency will have developed a compliance test procedure for securing a LATCH-equipped CRS to a vehicle using the lower anchor attachments.

      We are denying the petition because it presupposes that the agency will not publish a test procedure in a time sufficient to allow ample notice and lead time. When the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) for the LATCH procedure is issued, the agency will have an opportunity to propose an effective date of the procedure or of the CRSs to which the procedure would apply. To do this in advance of the NPRM publication is premature.

    2. Future Appendix A Revisions

      We are also denying the Alliance petition to provide at least two years of lead time for any future proposed revisions to Appendix A. In the December 18, 2001, final rule we noted that, generally, a 1-year lead time will be provided for amendments to Appendix A, but stressed the importance of establishing a list that is representative of real world usage (66 FR 65390). In response to the December 18, 2001, final rule, Mitsubishi petitioned the agency for a 2-year lead time for additions to Appendix A. In the preamble to the November 19, 2003, final rule the agency provided an extensive discussion of the lead time for additions to Appendix A (68 FR 65188).

      Additionally, the one year lead time is consistent with the agency's intent that occupant detection systems be robust and able to detect any CRS, including those that are relatively new to the market. However, in recognition that manufacturers need to know what CRSs will be included as they design their new models, we have decided to slightly change our position on lead time by making any changes to Appendix A effective for the next model year introduced one year after publication of the final rule modifying Appendix A. (Consistent with our past practice, for this purpose, the model year begins on September 1 of the prior calendar year.) This will result in a one to two year lead time. For example, if Appendix A were updated March 1, 2004, the revised appendix would become effective September 1, 2005, a period of eighteen months after publication. We believe this approach will allow manufacturers to tie their certification to the automatic suppression requirements with the introduction of a new model year.

      Therefore, the agency has committed to providing at least one year of lead time, plus any additional time up to the next September 1st, so as to have the requirements to assure compliance using the new CRSs become effective at the beginning of a model year. The current petition for reconsideration for two years of lead time provides no new information that would cause the agency to reconsider our position on this issue.

  5. Conclusion

    NHTSA received two petitions for reconsideration to the August 20, 2004, FMVSS No. 208 final rule from the Alliance. The Alliance requested that any lead time between the issuance of a compliance test procedure to install LATCH seats and the effective date of changes to Appendix A be at least one year. They further requested a two year lead time for any future revision to Appendix A. We are denying these petitions.

    The first petition is denied as premature, since the agency can and will propose an appropriate lead time when the LATCH test procedure is published. The second petition is denied because NHTSA addressed the exact same issue in the preamble to the November 19, 2003, final rule, and no new data have been presented that

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    would lead us to change our previous determination.

    Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30162; delegations of authority at 49 CFR 1.50 and 49 CFR 501.8.

    Issued on: February 3, 2005. Stephen R. Kratzke, Associate Administrator for Rulemaking.

    [FR Doc. 05-2469 Filed 2-8-05; 8:45 am]

    BILLING CODE 4910-59-P

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