Used GM and Chrysler Cars Need Warning Labels
by Texas Nate, Mon Jul 13, 2009 at 12:31:51 PM EDT
Disclosure: I'm proud to be working with the The Ad Hoc Committee of Consumer Victims of GM & Chrysler.
I've been covering the rulings in the GM bankruptcy that set the "new GM" free from any liability for harm already caused to consumers by defective GM cars. Chrysler got an even more awful deal that lets them avoid any responsibility caused by defective old Chryslers, even harm that is yet to be caused.
Now consumer groups are fighting back:
A group of five consumer groups is calling for window stickers warning potential buyers of Chrysler vehicles built before the carmaker's May 30th bankruptcy. The sticker would point out that the company will not be liable if passengers are injured or killed in an accident caused by safety or manufacturing defects. Consumer Action, Center for Auto Safety, Center for Justice and Democracy, Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety, and National Consumers League sent a letter to the Federal Trade Commission petitioning for this disclosure.Under the bankruptcy agreement, the new Chrysler was absolved of any responsibility for vehicles built before the government-aided restructuring. An estimated 30 million such vehicles are still on the road. The consumer groups claim thousands of injuries will likely be caused by defective models. Chrysler opposes the stickers.
Also see this petition that the cleverly named CARS (Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety) is sending to the FTC.
This story from today's LA Times hints at the human carnage caused by defective cars and what it means for the automakers to walk away from the consequences of their actions:
Kimberly Young has recurring nightmares. She is rolling over and over and over, helpless, pinned inside a car.Outside Manteca, Calif., last August, the 43-year-old accountant was driving to dinner with her daughter to celebrate a promotion. Her memory of the accident is fuzzy, but she believes she swerved to avoid something, then tried to correct. She remembers hearing a horn.
Her 2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee rolled over three times. The roof caved in, and her neck snapped. The accident left Young a quadriplegic. By the time she got out of the hospital, the home she had owned for 11 years was in foreclosure, and she needed round-the-clock care.
And let's not pretend like the defects were unavoidable accidents that the car companies did everything in their power to prevent. This quote from the movie Fight Club by way of Car Gurus is the best summary of the calculus involved in auto quality control:
A new car built by my company leaves somewhere traveling at 60 mph. The rear differential locks up. The car crashes and burns with everyone trapped inside. Now, should we initiate a recall? Take the number of vehicles in the field, A, multiply by the probable rate of failure, B, multiply by the average out-of-court settlement, C. A times B times C equals X. If X is less than the cost of a recall, we don't do one.






