[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 137 (Wednesday, November 12, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5899-S5900]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AIRBAGS
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, there has been quite a bit in the press
about defective exploding airbags. This is a part of a steering wheel
with the airbag deployed. In the steering wheel, the driver would be
like this with their hands on the steering wheel. When the impact
occurs and the airbag is deployed, instantly, if you have seen that
kind of impact on the airbag, because of the chemicals inside of the
steering wheel, it causes an explosion that comes out of already
existing holes in the metal that contains the airbag and it deploys the
airbag like this so that the--in this case, the driver--in the case of
the passenger, the same, but it is not a steering wheel like this. That
protects and has saved countless, thousands and thousands of lives. The
fact is that we now know there are four people in this country who are
dead. There are a hundred who are injured. That is not including the
international office, because of the defective airbag that has been
manufactured by a Japanese manufacturer. What its defect is is that
instead of the chemicals exploding to inflate the airbag, it explodes
with such force for all of this that is contained within the steering
wheel before it explodes. There is metal.
When the chemical explosion occurs, it is supposed to go through the
airholes and fill the bag. Instead, what
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has happened in the explosion, it is with such force that some of the
metal becomes shrapnel and comes through the bag and in effect becomes
lethal projectiles that harm either the driver or the passenger.
For example, on this exploded airbag, I want you to see the size of
the hole that was ripped in this bag here. Here is another one. A hole
that was ripped. There are holes in other parts of the bag. Obviously
this isn't supposed to occur.
As a matter of fact, I visited with a constituent from central
Florida. This is a firefighter with a young wife and a young child. A
piece of shrapnel, in this particular constituent's case, came into his
eye.
Therefore, in his occupation as a firefighter, he will not be able to
fulfill the financial support for his family as a firefighter. Four
people in this country are confirmed dead, and 100 are injured.
We have a Federal agency that is supposed to be protecting us. It is
called the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
Recently, because of the attention brought to this matter, they have
come out and said they want these recalls, but the recalls first
started out at about 4.7 million. It has been doubled to 7.8 million.
It is increasing all the time, and it is expected that it will be in
the range of 11 million in this country and 16 million recalls
worldwide.
Normally, if you could get the recalls done, once it occurs--once the
defect is known--then the public is protected.
But it seems like, similarly to some dragging of the feet of
automobile manufacturers and their parts manufacturers in the past,
that is what is occurring here. What we are also seeing is a Federal
agency that in this Senator's opinion has not been right up front,
forward leaning, and aggressive to protect the public.
Thus, I have requested of the Secretary of the Department of
Transportation to get in this and to do several things: First, to make
sure that all these recalls are happening, and, secondly, if you are a
person who knows of the recall because the automobile manufacturer has
sent you a letter, are you going to be wanting to drive around if they
tell you they can't fix it immediately? Are you going to be wanting to
drive around in an automobile that could suddenly explode and cover you
with metal shrapnel, severely injuring or killing you? Of course not.
So where is the automobile manufacturer with regard to giving a
loaner until that air bag can be replaced with a safe one or where are
they with regard to providing a rental car?
For the automobile company to say we will disable the airbag until we
can get the proper replacement, that is not a solution because often
the seatbelt and the airbag are designed to work in conjunction with
each other to protect the safety of the driver and the passenger. So
driving around in a disabled airbag is not a solution. The solution is
prompt replacement of the defective, lethal airbags or, until they can
be replaced, to give the customer another automobile that is safe.
Along the way, someone came up with the brilliant idea in the Federal
agency that they were going to issue just regional recalls under the
assumption that highway humidity, in fact, is one of the causes. They
don't know that, but that is one of the suspicious causes. But what
does a regional recall do for the protection of the public? Aren't we a
mobile society? If you say we have high humidity in my State of
Florida, in Texas and in other Southern States, aren't we a mobile
society in which people in other parts of the country who own
automobiles come to our States? Of course we are.
Oh, by the way, how about some States in the north that have high
humidity in the summer--if, in fact, that is the cause. So to say that
a solution to the problem is a regional recall is totally ridiculous
and the Federal regulatory agency should not be issuing these kinds of
edicts if we are serious about protecting the public.
I have recommended, in a letter that has been signed by several of
our colleagues to the Secretary of Transportation, Secretary Foxx, that
he start imposing the maximum fine allowed by law per day against the
automobile manufacturers for any days that are missed in replacing the
defective airbags so that people will not have to drive around in cars
with this defect.
While we were home over this recess during the election, I had an
airbag explode and demonstrate its force. It is severe, and it is
quick, as it has to be in order to protect the passenger in an
automobile accident.
But if that airbag is defectively constructed so that the explosive
force becomes like a hand grenade exploding and sending pieces of a
metal into the human body which the very device is supposed to protect,
then it is time for action. I hope the folks who are manufacturing and
installing these defective airbags indeed are hearing these words of
warning.
I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. COBURN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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