Think
Irresponsible
By
Phil Mattera, Dirt
Diggers Digest
The
news that Volkswagen inserted devices in millions of its “clean diesel” cars to
disguise their pollution levels is the latest in a series of major scandals
involving car companies.
It comes on the heels of criminal charges against
General Motors for failing to report a safety defect linked to more than 100
deaths. The Justice Department, unfortunately, deferred prosecution of those
charges in a deal that required GM to pay $900
million.
Last
year, Justice announced a deferred prosecution agreement with
Toyota that required the Japanese company to pay $1.2 billion to settle charges
that it tried to cover up the causes of a sudden acceleration problem. Later
that year, Hyundai and Kia had to pay$100 million to settle DOJ and EPA
allegations that they understated greenhouse gas emissions from more than 1
million cars and trucks.
This
past July, Fiat Chrysler was hit with by the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration with a fine of $105 million — a record for
that agency, which long had a cozy relationship with the industry — for
deficiencies in its recall of defective vehicles.
Even
Honda, which once had a squeaky clean reputation, was fined $70 million earlier this year by NHTSA
for underreporting deaths and injuries relating to defective airbags. Those
airbags were produced by the Japanese company Takata, which resisted making
changes in its production process despite incidents in which the devices
exploded violently, sending shrapnel flying into drivers and passengers.
The
ascendance of the auto industry to the top of the corporate wrongdoing charts
is actually an encore for what was a long-running performance. During the
1960s, GM inadvertently gave rise to the modern public interest movement in its
ham-handed response to the issues raised by a young Ralph Nader about the
safety problems of its Corvair compact.
The 1970s were the era of the Ford
Pinto with its fragile fuel tanks that blew up in even mild rear-end
collisions. The 1990s were marked by the scandal over defective tires produced
by Bridgestone/Firestone.
Although
carmakers were not in the forefront of corporate misbehavior during the past
decade, the industry’s record was far from unblemished. In 2005 VW presaged its
current problems when itpaid $1.1 million to the Justice
Department to settle allegations that it failed to notify regulators and
correct a defective oxygen sensor in more than 300,000 Golfs, Jettas and New
Beetles.
And
to make matters worse, through these decades the auto giants kept up a drumbeat
of criticism of supposed regulatory excesses and, in the cases of GM and
Chrysler, did not hesitate to ask for large bailouts when their markets
collapsed.
The
American love affair with the automobile has also put us in bed with corporate
irresponsibility on a major scale.