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US lawmakers, victims pressure GM on recalled vehicles

Reuters Washington
US lawmakers trying to establish who is to blame for at least 13 auto-related deaths over the past decade are expected to harshly question General Motors CEO Mary Barra on Tuesday afternoon over the automaker's slow response to defective ignition switches in its cars.

Despite tougher laws enacted in 2000 and 2010 to encourage automakers and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) to aggressively root out safety concerns, it took GM more than 10 years to publicly acknowledge that it had a potentially fatal problem.

Since February, GM has recalled 2.6 million vehicles due to concerns about ignition switches that unexpectedly turn off engines during operation and leave airbags, power steering and power brakes inoperable.
 

Pressure intensified on GM to advise consumers to take the troubled cars off the road immediately and a growing list of consumer groups urged the automaker to establish a victims' compensation fund that they think should top $1 billion.

At a press conference before Tuesday's hearing by a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee, Representative Diana DeGette said, "If you own one of these recalled vehicles, park it immediately," and make plans to get it fixed by a GM dealer.

DeGette, the senior Democrat on the Oversight and Investigations panel that will hear testimony from Barra at 2 pm EDT (1800 GMT), said she backed efforts to encourage GM to issue such a call. GM has said repeatedly that the cars in question are safe to drive as long as the ignition key and no other items are attached to a key ring.

The company, however, has announced a total of nearly 7 million vehicles recalled so far this year for various safety issues, almost equivalent to the previous four years combined.

Meanwhile, Democrats on the House Energy and Commerce Committee floated a new memo on Tuesday saying its analysis of documents found that GM still has not reported to federal regulators many cases involving ignition-switch concerns registered by consumers and GM technicians.

"At the same time GM was receiving these consumer complaints, the company continued to deny any defect," the House Democrats' memo said. The memo was referring to 133 warranty claims, some dating from June 2003, with the "vast majority" unreported.

The memo noted that while automakers must provide a broad summary of warranty data to NHTSA, there currently is no requirement that they proactively submit such claims to the agency.

Families of victims killed in crashes involving GM cars held an emotional meeting with Barra in the company's Washington offices on Monday night.

Laura Christian, whose daughter Amber Rose was killed in a 2005 Chevy Cobalt in Maryland, told Reuters after the meeting: "I pressed her (Barra) to consider whether she would take these cars off the road and she told me again how these cars were safe as long as you only had the one key (in the ignition with no other keys or fobs attached to a key ring). I debated that."

Christian also said "everybody was crying the entire time" during the meeting. "There were horrific stories."

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First Published: Apr 02 2014 | 12:16 AM IST

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