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VEHICLE
ROLLOVER CHRONOLOGY
30
YEARS, THOUSANDS OF DEATHS AND INJURIES,
AND STILL NO SAFETY PERFORMANCE STANDARD
Deaths
in rollover crashes are on an upward trend and increased to
a record 10,553 in 2004, 259 more rollover deaths in Sport
Utility Vehicles (SUVs) than occurred in 2003
Apr
1973: ANPRM on proposed standard for rollover resistance.
Sept
1986: Rep. Tim Wirth petitions for rollover standard based on
Static Stability Factor.
Dec
1987: Rep. Tim Wirth petition denied by NHTSA.
June
1988: Consumers Union petition on rollover filed.
Oct
1991: Congress requests report regarding rollover and roof crush
standards
(FY'92 DOT Appropriations Act, Pub. L. 102-143, S. Rept. 102-148).
Dec
1991: Congress requires NHTSA rulemaking to protect against unreasonable
risk of rollover
(ISTEA, Title II, Part B, Sec. 2503(1), Pub. L. 102-240).
Jan 1992: ANPRM on rollover standard issued.
Apr
1992: NHTSA issues Report to Congress, Rollover Prevention and
Roof Crush.
June
1994: Rollover standard rulemaking terminated; rollover information
proposed instead.
July
1994: NHTSA issues notice on vehicle safety consumer information.
July
1994: Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety(Advocates) and Insurance
Institute for Highway
Safety (IIHS) petition NHTSA to reconsider decision to terminate
rulemaking on rollover standard.
Sept
1994: Congress requires National Academy of Sciences (NAS) study
of vehicle safety information (FY'95 DOT Appropriations Act, Pub.
L. 103-331, see H. Rept. 103-543, Part 1); NHTSA suspends rulemaking
on vehicle safety consumer information until study completed.
May 1996: NAS study of vehicle safety information, Shopping for
Safety, issued.
May
1996: NHTSA issues rollover status report.
June
1996: NHTSA reopens 1994 docket on vehicle safety consumer information.
June
1996: NHTSA denies Advocates/IIHS July 1994 petition for reconsideration
of decision to terminate rulemaking on rollover standard.
Aug
1996: Consumers Union (supported by Advocates) petitions NHTSA
for rollover standard.
Apr
1998: NHTSA proposes revised SUV rollover warning label.
Mar
1999: NHTSA issues final rule on revised SUV rollover warning
label.
June
2000: NHTSA proposes rollover consumer information based on Static
Stability Factor (SSF)
as part of New Car Assessment Program (NCAP).
Oct 2000: Congress funds NAS study of NHTSA proposed rollover
information rating based on SSF
(FY=01 DOT Appropriations Act, Pub. L. 106-346, see H.Rept. 106-940).
Nov 2000: Congress requires dynamic testing for rollover consumer
information rating program
(TREAD Act, Sec. 12, Pub.L. 106-414).
Jan
2001: NHTSA begins publishing rollover ratings based on SSF.
July
2001: NHTSA issues request for comments on developing dynamic
test as basis for rollover
Rating consumer information program beginning in 2003.
Feb
2002: NAS study, Rating System for Rollover Resistance, An Assessment,
issued.
Oct
2002: NHTSA issues NPRM on dynamic test procedure for rollover
consumer information.
Feb
2003: Senate Commerce Committee holds public hearing on SUV safety.
Apr
2003: NHTSA releases statistics revealing that 10,666 people died
in rollover crashes in 2002, continuing the trend of increasing
deaths in rollover crashes.
Oct.
2003: NHTSA Final Policy Statement adopts "fishhook"
maneuver as dynamic test procedure to be combined with SSF in
rollover consumer information ratings.
Feb.
2004: NHTSA releases rollover ratings based on combined SSF and
dynamic test performance of vehicles. Every vehicle tested receives
at least one star no matter how rollover prone the vehicle and
how poorly it performs. No SUV received a 5-star rating for rollover
stability.
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