Still
Unsafe At Any Speed
By
Phil Mattera, Dirt Diggers Digest
See all of this Ted Rall cartoon by clicking here. |
“The
company admits that it misled U.S. consumers by concealing and making deceptive
statements,” the release states, adding that the company “gave inaccurate facts
to Members of Congress.” Later it says that Toyota “was hiding” critical
information from federal regulators and that it made public a “false timeline.”
U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara alleges that the company “cared more about savings
than safety and more about its own brand and bottom line than the truth.”
Such
strong talk is gratifying, but Toyota, like so many other corporate miscreants,
was offered a deferred prosecution agreement in place of an outright
conviction. This was made somewhat more palatable by the provision in the agreement that
bars the company from deducting the penalty amount from its taxes.
Car safety has been a problem for a long time |
GM’s announcement several
weeks ago that it was recalling hundreds of thousands of its small cars because
of an ignition switch problem mushroomed into a major scandal as information
came to light suggesting that the company had dragged its feet in dealing with
the issue, even though it was linked to 13 deaths. Federal regulators, which
had received several hundred complaints relating to the problem, were
also criticized for
being slow to act. Both Congress and the Justice Department have launched
investigations of the matter.
In
recent days, GM has tried to spin the situation to its advantage, with CEO Mary
Barra putting herself out front and making extravagant promises that such a
safety lapse would never happen again. Living up to such a commitment will be
even more difficult for GM than it was for Toyota, which used similar p.r. stratagems
during earlier phases of its controversy and ultimately failed.
After
all, the history of GM is filled with examples
of irresponsibility on safety issues. It is now 50 years since Ralph Nader
exposed the defects of GM’s Corvair, prompting the company to spy on him and
thus inadvertently give a boost to the nascent corporate accountability
movement.
Later,
GM failed to act when presented with reports that poorly sealed panels on some
of its cars could cause dangerous levels of carbon monoxide to leak into the
passenger compartment. After some deaths were attributed to the problem in the
late 1960s, the company finally recalled 2.5 million cars to repair the defect.
During
the 1970s and 1980s the company was frequently criticized by environmentalists
and consumer advocates for its efforts to weaken federal rules on emissions and
for its resistance to regulations requiring passive restraints such as airbags
in all automobiles. In 1990 GM finally agreed to put air bags in all of its
U.S. cars starting in 1995.
In
1992 the New York Times published an investigation concluding
that GM had recognized as early as 1983 that its pickup trucks with
side-mounted gas tanks were highly dangerous but took no action until 1988,
even then saying the change was for design rather than safety reasons. During
that period, more than 300 people were killed in collisions in which the tanks
exploded.
GM
resisted recalling trucks with the side-mounted tanks even after the federal
government asked it to do so. Instead, it launched a campaign against safety
advocates and plaintiffs’ lawyers.
In 1994 the company reached a settlement with the U.S.
Transportation Department under which the federal government gave up on its
effort to get GM to recall the trucks in exchange for which the company agreed
to contribute $51 million to auto safety programs.
GM still faced a series of
personal injury lawsuits in connection with the exploding gas tanks, including
one in which a Los Angeles jury awarded victims $4.9 billion in damages. GM
appealed, and the case was later settled out of court for an undisclosed
amount.
It
remains to be seen how much GM has to pay in fines and settlements for its
current ignition switch scandal, but it will take a lot of punishment to get a
company with such a long history of safety lapses to change its ways for good.