WASHINGTON -- President Bush today signed the first new auto safety law passed by Congress since 2005.
The Cameron Gulbransen Kids Transportation Safety Act, which was approved by the House in December, passed unanimously in the Senate on Feb. 14. President Bush signed it without any public event this afternoon.
The new law requires the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to create a database of deaths and injuries of children in non-traffic but auto-related accidents. It also suggests the agency consider toughening regulations to prevent power windows from injuring children, as well as improved public education.
The bill -- dubbed the "Kids and Cars Act" -- also requires NHTSA to study whether to require that power windows and door panels reverse direction when they detect an obstruction, much as automated garage-door openers do. If NHTSA doesn't complete a study within the next two and a half years, it would have to send a report to Congress explaining why.
Requiring windows to automatically reverse when they hit an obstruction likely would cost automakers about $10 per window, according to the legislation, or nearly $700 million annually.
Although it is rare for power windows to kill children, it has happened. In December 2006, a 3-year-old girl was killed in a Pontiac Vibe in Detroit when she was caught in a window that rolled up and strangled her.
A NHTSA regulation already in effect mandates that automakers, by September 2008, install window switches that users must pull up in order to open a window, but it does not require that windows reverse direction automatically when obstructed.
The bill requires NHTSA to begin a regulatory action within a year to expand the "required field of view to enable the driver to detect the presence of a person or object behind the vehicle in order to prevent death and injury resulting from backing incidents, particularly incidents involving small children and disabled persons." The new rules would be phased in over a four-year period.
Some safety advocates want NHTSA to mandate back-up cameras.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., is named after a 2-year-old New York boy who was accidentally run over and killed in 2002 when his father backed his SUV out of his driveway.
In November, NHTSA estimated back-over accidents result in at least 183 fatalities annually and about 7,000 injuries. It's not clear how many are killed or injured by automatic windows.
In recent years, safety advocates have pressured Congress to force automakers to install safety features, such as glow-in-the-dark emergency trunk releases to help children escape if they get locked inside.
But automakers have also sought to voluntarily adopt safety features -- including side airbags in all vehicles by 2009 -- rather than be subject to government mandates. In 2003, automakers launched a crash compatibility agreement to meet new criteria designed to enhance occupant protection in front- and side-impact crashes.
NHTSA so far has declined to recommend making cameras or sonar mandatory.
The agency has said it is concerned about their effectiveness in poor weather and whether drivers would be able to react quickly enough when using the cameras.
Dave McCurdy, president and CEO of the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, the trade group that represents Detroit's Big Three automakers, Toyota, Daimler AG and five other automakers, praised the passage.
"This industry is 100 percent behind this legislation and we're committed to using these initiatives to further enhance child safety in and around motor vehicles," McCurdy said.
McCurdy noted that automakers voluntarily agreed last August to add brake-shift interlock systems, which require a driver to engage the brake before shifting a vehicle into gear, reducing the risk of a child accidentally putting a car in motion.
By 2010, automakers will install the devices in all vehicles, up from about 80 percent of 2006 models. The passed by the Senate will make those brake-shift interlock systems mandatory
You can reach David Shepardson at (202) 662 - 8735 or dshepardson@detnews.com.