Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Roof Crush Resistance, 17590-17604 [2010-7907]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 66 / Wednesday, April 7, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
Administrator shall next allocate funds
toward the requests for internal
connections submitted by schools and
libraries eligible for an 80 percent
discount, then for a 70 percent discount,
and shall continue committing funds for
internal connections in the same
manner to the applicants at each
descending discount level until there
are no funds remaining.
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■ 5. Section 54.517 is amended by
revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
49 CFR Part 571
I. Background
A. Final Rule Upgrading FMVSS No. 216
B. Challenge by NTEA
C. Consent Motion To Stay Briefing
Schedule
II. Today’s Document and Related Actions
III. Multi-Stage Vehicles and the Multi-Stage
Certification Scheme
A. Multi-Stage Vehicles
B. Safety Standards and Certification
C. 2005 and 2006 Final Rules on
Certification of Vehicles Built in Two or
More Stages
IV. Multi-Stage Issues in the Rulemaking To
Upgrade FMVSS No. 216
A. FMVSS No. 216 Prior to the Upgrade
B. The Proposed Rule
C. Public Comments
D. May 2009 Final Rule
V. Further Response to Comments Regarding
Multi-Stage Vehicles
A. Introduction
B. The Current Certification Scheme Is Not
an Unlawful Delegation of Agency
Authority
C. Current IVDs Concerning FMVSS No.
216 are Workable
D. Final-Stage Manufacturers Can Certify
Their Vehicles Built on Chassis-Cabs as
Being Compliant With FMVSS No. 216a
E. In General, IVDs Are Workable
F. NHTSA Provided a Testing Alternative,
FMVSS No. 220
G. There Is Little Cost for Multi-Stage
Manufacturers To Comply With FMVSS
No. 216a
H. Conclusion
[Docket No. NHTSA–2009–0093]
I. Background
RIN 2127–AG51
A. Final Rule Upgrading FMVSS No.
216
On May 12, 2009, as part of a
comprehensive plan for reducing the
serious risk of rollover crashes and the
risk of death and serious injury in those
crashes, NHTSA published in the
Federal Register (74 FR 22348) a final
rule substantially upgrading Federal
Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS)
No. 216, Roof Crush Resistance. The
upgraded standard is designated FMVSS
No. 216a.
First, for the vehicles previously
subject to the standard, i.e., passenger
cars and multipurpose passenger
vehicles, trucks and buses with a Gross
Vehicle Weight Rating (GVWR) of 2,722
kilograms (6,000 pounds) or less, the
rule doubled the amount of force the
vehicle’s roof structure must withstand
in the specified test, from 1.5 times the
vehicle’s unloaded weight to 3.0 times
the vehicle’s unloaded weight. We note
that this value is sometimes referred to
as the strength-to-weight ratio (SWR),
e.g., a SWR of 1.5, 2.0, 2.5, and so forth.
Second, the rule extended the
applicability of the standard so that it
will also apply to vehicles with a GVWR
§ 54.517 Services provided by nontelecommunications carriers.
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(b) Supported services. Nontelecommunications carriers shall be
eligible for universal service support
under this subpart for providing
interconnected voice over Internet
protocol (VoIP), voice mail, Internet
access, and installation and
maintenance of internal connections.
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[FR Doc. 2010–7757 Filed 4–6–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety
Standards; Roof Crush Resistance
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AGENCY: National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Final rule; further response to
comments.
SUMMARY: In May 2009, NHTSA
published a final rule that upgraded the
agency’s safety standard on roof crush
resistance. This document provides a
further response to comments submitted
by the National Truck Equipment
Association (NTEA) during that
rulemaking.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
non-legal issues, you may call
Christopher J. Wiacek, NHTSA Office of
Crashworthiness Standards, telephone
202–366–4801. For legal issues, you
may call J. Edward Glancy, NHTSA
Office of Chief Counsel, telephone 202–
366–2992. You may send mail to these
officials at the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., West Building,
Washington, DC 20590.
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greater than 2,722 kilograms (6,000
pounds), but not greater than 4,536
kilograms (10,000 pounds). The rule
established a force requirement of 1.5
times the vehicle’s unloaded weight for
these newly included vehicles.
Third, the rule required all of the
above vehicles to meet the specified
force requirements in a two-sided test,
instead of a single-sided test. For the
two-sided test, the same vehicle must
meet the force requirements when tested
first on one side and then on the other
side of the vehicle.
Fourth, the rule established a new
requirement for maintenance of
headroom, i.e., survival space, during
testing in addition to the existing limit
on the amount of roof crush. The rule
also included a number of special
provisions, including ones related to
leadtime, to address the needs of multistage manufacturers, alterers, and small
volume manufacturers.
B. Challenge by NTEA
NTEA filed a petition for review of
the May 2009 final rule in the United
States Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit. That organization had
submitted comments during the
rulemaking opposing the agency’s
proposed revisions with respect to
multi-stage vehicles.
C. Consent Motion To Stay Briefing
Schedule
NHTSA filed with the Court a motion
for a stay of the briefing schedule. The
agency stated that it believed the Court’s
consideration of the challenge by NTEA
would be facilitated by a fuller response
to the comments that organization had
submitted during the rulemaking, which
would permit both NTEA and the Court
to more fully address the agency’s
rationale. NHTSA also noted that
petitions for reconsideration of the rule
were pending before the agency. NTEA
consented to the motion and the Court
granted a six-month stay of the briefing
schedule on October 2, 2009.
II. Today’s Document and Related
Actions
In this document, we provide a fuller
response to comments submitted by
NTEA on our proposal to upgrade
FMVSS No. 216.
We are also publishing two separate
documents related to the May 2009 final
rule. One is a response to petitions for
reconsideration of that rule. The other is
a correcting rule. The correcting rule
incorporates a provision that was
discussed in the preamble but
inadvertently omitted from the
regulatory text. As explained in the
preamble, the agency decided to
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exclude a narrow category of multi-stage
vehicles from FMVSS No. 216
altogether, multi-stage trucks with a
GVWR greater than 2,722 kilograms
(6,000 pounds) not built on either a
chassis-cab or an incomplete vehicle
with a full exterior van body. The
regulatory text inadvertently omitted the
reference to incomplete vehicles with a
full exterior van body.
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III. Multi-Stage Vehicles and the MultiStage Certification Scheme
A. Multi-Stage Vehicles
Multi-stage vehicles are motor
vehicles that are produced in two or
more stages. These vehicles are not
produced by a single manufacturer on
an assembly line as is the typical
passenger car or sport utility vehicle.
Instead, one manufacturer produces an
‘‘incomplete vehicle’’ which requires
further manufacturing operations to
become a completed vehicle. As defined
in 49 CFR 567.3, an incomplete vehicle
is an assemblage consisting, at a
minimum, of chassis (including the
frame) structure, power train, steering
system, suspension system, and braking
system, in the state that those systems
are to be part of the completed vehicle,
but requires further manufacturing
operations to become a completed
vehicle.1
Most incomplete vehicles are
manufactured by large manufacturers,
such as General Motors, Ford and
Chrysler. Most final-stage manufacturers
are small businesses.2 Multi-stage
vehicles are aimed at a variety of niche
markets, most of which are too small to
be serviced economically by single stage
manufacturers.
In terms of degree of completeness,
the spectrum of incomplete vehicles
ranges from a stripped chassis, i.e., an
incomplete vehicle without an occupant
compartment, to a chassis-cab. As
defined in 49 CFR 567.3, a chassis-cab
is an incomplete vehicle, with a
completed occupant compartment, that
requires only the addition of cargocarrying, work-performing, or loadbearing components to perform its
intended functions. A type of
incomplete vehicle that falls between
stripped chassis and chassis-cabs on
this spectrum is a chassis cutaway,
which is an incomplete vehicle
delivered with a partial occupant
compartment that does not have a rear
wall.
In a typical situation, the incomplete
vehicle is delivered to the final-stage
1 The definition of ‘‘incomplete vehicle’’ also
includes incomplete trailers.
2 As defined by The Regulatory Flexibility Act of
1980, as amended, 5 U.S.C. 601(3).
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manufacturer which adds workperforming or cargo-carrying
components to complete the vehicle.
For example, the incomplete vehicle
may be a chassis-cab, i.e., have a cab,
but nothing built on the frame behind
the cab. As completed, it may be a dry
freight van (box truck), dump truck, tow
truck, or plumber’s truck. In some cases,
there may also be intermediate stage
manufacturers involved in the
production of a multi-stage motor
vehicle.
B. Safety Standards and Certification
NHTSA issues Federal motor vehicle
safety standards applicable to the
manufacture and sale of new motor
vehicles and certain items of motor
vehicle equipment under the authority
of the National Traffic and Motor
Vehicle Safety Act, as amended,
codified as Chapter 301 of Title 49 of
the United States Code, ‘‘Motor Vehicle
Safety’’ (Vehicle Safety Act).3 The
agency does not provide approvals of
motor vehicles or equipment. Instead,
the Vehicle Safety Act establishes a
‘‘self-certification’’ process under which
each manufacturer is responsible for
certifying that its products meet all
applicable safety standards.4
Each of NHTSA’s safety standards
specifies the test conditions and
procedures that the agency will use to
evaluate the performance of the vehicle
or equipment being tested for
compliance with the particular safety
standard. NHTSA follows these
specified test procedures and conditions
when conducting its compliance testing.
However, manufacturers are not
required to test their products in the
manner specified in the relevant safety
standard, or even to test the product at
all, as their basis for certifying that the
product complies with all relevant
standards.
A manufacturer may evaluate its
products in various ways to determine
whether the vehicle or equipment will
comply with the safety standards when
tested by the agency according to the
procedures specified in the standard
and to provide a basis for its
certification of compliance. Depending
on the circumstances, the manufacturer
may be able to base its certification on
actual testing (according to the
procedure specified in the standard or
some other procedure), computer
simulation, engineering analysis,
engineering judgment or other means.5
All motor vehicles, whether single
stage or multi-stage, must be certified to
3 49
U.S.C. 30101 et seq.
U.S.C. 30112(a) and 30115.
5 See 71 FR 28183–28184.
4 49
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meet applicable FMVSSs.6 NHTSA has
developed specific certification
regulations for multi-stage vehicles. The
certification process is governed by 49
CFR part 567 Certification. 49 CFR 567.5
sets forth the certification requirements
for manufacturers of vehicles
manufactured in two or more stages.
Certification responsibilities for the
applicable FMVSSs are communicated
between manufacturers with the use of
an incomplete vehicle document (IVD).
With limited exceptions, 7each
manufacturer of an incomplete vehicle
and each intermediate manufacturer 8
assumes legal responsibility for all
certification-related duties under the
Vehicle Safety Act with respect to:
(i) Components and systems it installs or
supplies for installation on the incomplete
vehicle, unless changed by a subsequent
manufacturer;
(ii) The vehicle as further manufactured or
completed by an intermediate or final-stage
manufacturer, to the extent that the vehicle
is completed in accordance with the IVD; and
(iii) The accuracy of the information
contained in the IVD.9
Final-stage manufacturers have
complementary duties. Pursuant to 49
CFR 567.5(d), final-stage manufacturers
assume
legal responsibility for all certificationrelated duties and liabilities under the
Vehicle Safety Act, except to the extent that
the incomplete vehicle manufacturer or an
intermediate manufacturer has provided
equipment subject to a safety standard or
expressly assumed responsibility for
standards related to systems and components
it supplied and except to the extent that the
final-stage manufacturer completed the
vehicle in accordance with the prior
manufacturers’ IVD or any addendum
furnished pursuant to 49 CFR part 568, as to
the Federal motor vehicle safety standards
fully addressed therein.10
Final-stage manufacturers also have
the duty to affix a certification label to
each vehicle in a manner that does not
obscure labels affixed by previous stage
manufacturers and that, among other
things, contains certification
statements.11 The final-stage
manufacturer may make one of the
following alternative certification
statements: (1) The vehicle conforms to
all applicable FMVSS; (2) the vehicle
was completed in accordance with the
prior manufacturers’ IVD where
applicable and conforms to all
applicable FMVSS; or (3) the vehicle
6 49
U.S.C. 30112(a) and 30115.
70 FR at 7432–33, 49 CFR 567.5(b) and (c).
8 In the remainder of the preamble, NHTSA will
not discuss intermediate manufacturers separately.
9 49 CFR 567.5(b)(1).
10 49 CFR 567.5(d)(1).
11 49 CFR 567.5(d)(2).
7 See
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was completed in accordance with the
prior manufacturers’ IVD where
applicable except for certain listed
exceptions by FMVSS and the vehicle
conforms to all applicable FMVSS.12
As reflected above, the incomplete
vehicle manufacturer furnishes an IVD
for incomplete vehicles pursuant to 49
CFR 568.4. For each applicable FMVSS,
the incomplete vehicle manufacturer
makes one of three affirmative
statements in the IVD: (1) a Type 1
statement that the vehicle when
completed will conform to the standard
if no alterations are made in identified
components (this representation is most
often made with respect to chassis-cabs
since, as indicated earlier, they have a
completed occupant compartment); (2) a
Type 2 statement that sets forth the
specific conditions of final manufacture
under which the incomplete vehicle
manufacturer specifies that the
completed vehicle will conform to the
standard (e.g., the vehicle, when
completed, will meet the brake standard
if it does not exceed gross axle weight
ratings, the center of gravity at a specific
vehicle weight rating is not above a
certain height and no alterations are
made to any brake system component
on the incomplete vehicle); or (3) a Type
3 statement that conformity to the
standard cannot be determined based on
the incomplete vehicle as supplied, and
the incomplete vehicle manufacturer
makes no representation as to
conformity with the standard (e.g.,
when components and systems must be
added by the final-stage manufacturer
and compliance cannot be decided at
the time the incomplete vehicle leaves
the incomplete vehicle manufacturer).
When the IVD makes a Type 1 or
Type 2 statement, there is ‘‘passthrough’’ certification unless obviated by
a subsequent manufacturer. The finalstage manufacturer can rely on the IVD
to certify the vehicle to a particular
standard.
Multi-stage vehicle manufacturers
sometimes ‘‘alter’’ a vehicle to the endusers’ specifications. An altered vehicle
is one that is completed and certified in
accordance with the agency’s
regulations and then altered before the
first retail sale of the vehicle, in such a
manner as may affect the vehicle’s
compliance with one or more FMVSS or
the validity of the vehicle’s stated
weight ratings or vehicle type
classification. This definition does not
include the addition, substitution, or
removal of readily attachable
components, such as mirrors or tire and
rim assemblies, or by minor finishing
operations such as painting. The person
12 49
15:15 Apr 06, 2010
C. 2005 and 2006 Final Rules on
Certification of Vehicles Built in Two or
More Stages
On February 14, 2005, NHTSA
published in the Federal Register (70
FR 7414) a final rule amending four
different parts of Title 49 to address
various certification issues related to
vehicles built in two or more stages and,
to a lesser degree, to altered vehicles.
Among other things, the rule allowed
the use of pass-through certification so
that it can be used not only for multistage vehicles based on chassis-cabs, but
also for those based on other types of
incomplete vehicles.
In the preamble to the February 2005
final rule, and in other documents in
that rulemaking, NHTSA discussed the
history of issues related to the
certification of vehicles built in two or
more stages, which have long been
sources of contention within the
affected industry and before the agency
and the courts.
Since 1977, NHTSA’s regulations for
certification of multi-stage vehicles have
contained provisions for certification
statements by chassis-cab
manufacturers.13 In 1990, the United
States Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit ruled in National Truck and
Equipment Ass’n v. NHTSA, 919 F.2d
1148 (6th Cir. 1990), that the
requirements of a particular FMVSS
were impracticable for final-stage
manufacturers using vehicles other than
chassis-cabs for which the incomplete
vehicle manufacturer was not required
to provide ‘‘pass-through’’ certification.
That decision led to rulemaking that
ultimately resulted in the February 2005
multi-stage certification final rule.
NTEA petitioned for reconsideration
of the February 2005 multi-stage
certification final rule. NHTSA
responded to that organization’s petition
in a final rule; response to petition for
reconsideration published in the
Federal Register (71 FR 28168) on May
15, 2006. While the agency made some
changes in the February 2005 final rule
in response to the petition, it denied the
remainder of the petition for
reconsideration that addressed issues
regarding certification of multi-stage
vehicles and responsibility for recalls of
multi-stage vehicles.
13 49 CFR 567.5 (1977 and 1978). See 42 FR 37814
(July 25, 1977).
CFR 567.5(d)(2)(v)(A).
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which performs such operations on a
completed vehicle is referred to as a
vehicle ‘‘alterer.’’ An alterer must certify
that the vehicle remains in compliance
with all applicable FMVSS affected by
the alteration.
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In its petition for reconsideration of
the February 2005 certification final
rule, NTEA challenged the regulatory
scheme of certifying multi-stage
vehicles.14 It claimed, among other
things, that the provided IVDs are
unworkable, insufficient, and that it is
not possible for a final-stage
manufacturer to comply with the
agency’s multi-stage certification
regulations. Furthermore, NTEA argued
that even if compliance were possible,
it would be economically ruinous to
NTEA’s members.
In denying most aspects of NTEA’s
petition for reconsideration, NHTSA
provided specific and detailed
responses to these and other relevant
arguments. We explained that
certification is important for safety and
that the certification scheme is
‘‘workable.’’
We stated that in recognition of the
fact that incomplete vehicle
manufacturers do not control work
performed by final-stage manufacturers
and can fairly anticipate only some
things, but not everything done by finalstage manufacturers, the regulatory
system of ‘‘pass-through’’ certification is
reasonable. The IVD provides the basis
for the final-stage manufacturer’s
certification with enumerated FMVSS,
on various conditions, including, for
example, that the final-stage
manufacturer does not exceed the
GVWR of the chassis or introduce
modifications to the incomplete vehicle
that interfere with compliance. As we
explained, the IVD is a general
document that accompanies the
incomplete vehicle. IVDs are typically
not limited to one application (one body
or type of equipment), but contain limits
and conditions in light of the nature and
capacity of the chassis and potential
problems resulting from completion of
an incomplete vehicle. Final-stage
manufacturers are informed, by the IVD,
of components and systems that should
not be altered, and, by following those
instructions and other information from
the incomplete vehicle manufacturer,
they are able to certify.
Overall, NTEA sought to remove the
certification responsibility from finalstage manufacturers and impose much
of that responsibility on incomplete
vehicle manufacturers. NTEA’s petition
ignored the fact that incomplete vehicle
14 We note that NTEA submitted its comments on
NHTSA’s notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) to
upgrade the roof crush resistance standard in
November 2005. Those comments, which addressed
a number of multi-stage issues, were thus submitted
after the agency had published its February 2005
final rule on certification of multi-stage vehicles but
before NHTSA responded to NTEA’s petition for
reconsideration of the certification rule.
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manufacturers do not control what finalstage manufacturers do with the
incomplete vehicles.
As we noted, a system of pass-through
certification has existed for more than
25 years, and in that time many multistage vehicles have been built and
certified by final-stage manufacturers.
This fact alone indicates that the system
is workable and operates as intended.
Moreover, as we pointed out, the
availability of multi-stage vehicles
belies NTEA’s position,15 and, contrary
to that petitioner’s position, market
forces create business reasons for
incomplete vehicle manufacturers to
provide workable IVDs. We noted that
NTEA’s argument ignores the fact that
the system is not broken—many types of
multi-stage vehicles are being
manufactured and offered for sale,
including those manufactured by NTEA
members. These include ambulances,
service trucks, small school buses, midsize buses, tow trucks and vans.16 The
fact that vehicles such as these are being
made indicates that the IVDs are
workable. We also noted that NTEA
ignored the cooperative relationships
between incomplete and final-stage
manufacturers.17
In our May 2006 response to petitions,
we explained that certification serves an
important safety function in the multistage vehicle business. Many multi-stage
vehicles carry people and important
cargo—from schoolchildren on school
buses to liquid fuel on propane and
gasoline trucks. The safety need for
certification of compliance with FMVSS
in these types of vehicles is
uncontroverted.18
As part of responding to NTEA’s
claim in its petition to the 2005 Rule
that the existing IVD’s are not workable,
we carefully examined the certification
statements included in an IVD that
NTEA appended to its petition.19 The
IVD was for the General Motors (GM)
CK chassis-cab. We analyzed
certification statements for FMVSS Nos.
105, Hydraulic and Electric Brake
Systems; 135, Light Vehicle Brake
Systems; 204, Steering Control Rearward
Displacement; 201, Occupant Protection
in Interior Impact; 212, Windshield
15 71 FR at 28176 (section titled ‘‘The Availability
of Multi-stage Vehicles Belies NTEA’s Position’’)
and at 28184–85 (section titled ‘‘NHTSA’s Market
Forces Argument Is Justified and Consistent With
the Multi-stage Vehicle Market’’).
16 See, e.g., https://www.ntea.com/mr/
divisions.asp.
17 We cited the example of General Motors’
relationships with final-stage manufacturers it
refers to as Special Vehicle Manufacturers. 71 FR
at 28185.
18 71 FR at 28176; See also 71 FR at 28175.
19 71 FR at 28177–28183 (section titled ‘‘The
Existing IVDs Are Workable).
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Mounting; 219, Windshield Zone
Intrusion; 214, Side Impact Protection;
208, Occupant Crash Protection; 216,
Roof Crush Resistance; and 301, Fuel
System Integrity. In each instance, we
showed why the IVD was workable and
why various limitations were
reasonable.
We also explained that many
resources are available to final-stage
manufacturers.20 As a group, final-stage
manufacturers do not operate in an
informational vacuum. In addition to
the IVDs, these resources include
upfitter 21 guides from incomplete
vehicle manufacturers, incomplete
vehicle manufacturer help lines, the
final-stage manufacturers’ own
experience and judgment, and
commercially available software.
We also explained that issues
regarding impracticability should be
decided in the context of rulemaking for
each FMVSS.22
IV. Multi-Stage Issues in the
Rulemaking To Upgrade FMVSS No.
216
A. FMVSS No. 216 Prior to the Upgrade
FMVSS No. 216 seeks to reduce
deaths and serious injuries resulting
from the roof of a vehicle being crushed
and pushed into the occupant
compartment when the roof strikes the
ground during rollover crashes. Prior to
the upgrade, the standard required that
when a large steel test plate (sometimes
referred to as a platen) is placed in
contact with either side of the forward
edge of the roof of a vehicle and then
pressed downward, simulating contact
of the roof with the ground during a
rollover crash, with steadily increasing
force until a force equivalent to 1.5
times the unloaded weight of the
vehicle is reached, the distance that the
test plate has moved from the point of
contact must not exceed 127 mm (5
inches). The criterion of the test plate
not being permitted to move more than
a specified amount is sometimes
referred to as the ‘‘platen travel’’
criterion. The application of force was
limited to 22,240 Newtons (5,000
pounds) for passenger cars, even if the
unloaded weight of the car times 1.5 is
greater than that amount.
Since 1991, this standard applied to
passenger cars, multipurpose passenger
vehicles (MPVs), trucks, and buses with
a GVWR of 2,722 kilograms (6,000
pounds) or less.23 Compliance with the
20 71
FR 28183–28184 (section titled ‘‘Additional
Resources Available to Final-Stage Manufacturers’’).
21 Final-stage manufacturers are sometimes
referred to as upfitters in the trade.
22 71 FR 28186.
23 56 FR 15510.
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17593
final rule was required on September 1,
1994. Therefore, FMVSS No. 216 has
applied to some multi-stage vehicles,
e.g., certain small trucks and small
recreation vehicles, since 1994.24
B. The Proposed Rule
1. NPRM and SNPRM in General
On August 23, 2005, NHTSA
published in the Federal Register (70
FR 49223) a NPRM to upgrade FMVSS
No. 216, Roof Crush Resistance.25 The
NPRM reflected comments received in
response to a Request for Comments
(‘‘RFC’’) published in the Federal
Register (66 FR 53376) on October 22,
2001, and research and testing
conducted prior to the publication of
the RFC.
To better address fatalities and
injuries occurring in roof-involved
rollover crashes, we proposed to extend
the application of the standard to
vehicles with a GVWR of up to 4,536
kilograms (10,000 pounds), and to
strengthen the requirements of FMVSS
No. 216 by mandating that the vehicle
roof structures withstand a force
equivalent to 2.5 times the unloaded
vehicle weight (‘‘SWR’’), and to
eliminate the 22,240 Newton (5,000
pound) force limit for passenger cars.
We note that shortly before the NPRM
was published, Congress enacted the
Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for
Users (SAFETEA–LU), which included
a specific requirement for us to upgrade
FMVSS No. 216 relating to roof strength
for driver and passenger sides for motor
vehicles with a GVWR of not more than
4,536 kilograms (10,000 pounds).
Further, in recognition of the fact that
the pre-test distance between the
interior surface of the roof and a given
occupant’s head varies from vehicle
model to vehicle model, we proposed to
regulate roof strength by requiring that
the crush not exceed the available
headroom. Under the proposal, this
requirement would replace the current
limit on platen travel.
We also proposed to:
• Allow vehicles manufactured in
two or more stages, other than chassiscabs, to be certified to the roof crush
requirements of FMVSS No. 220, School
Bus Rollover Protection, instead of
FMVSS No. 216.
• Clarify the definition and scope of
exclusion for convertibles.
24 GM has sold an incomplete vehicle chassis-cab,
the GMT–355, that has a GVWR of 2,722 kilograms
(6,000 pounds) or less and is therefore subject to
FMVSS No. 216. This chassis-cab is based on the
Chevrolet Colorado/GMC Canyon. Final-stage
manufacturers can certify completed vehicles by
using the IVD for the GMT 355.
25 Docket No. NHTSA–2005–22143.
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• Revise the vehicle tie-down
procedure to minimize variability in
testing.
On January 30, 2008, NHTSA
published in the Federal Register (73
FR 5484) a supplemental notice of
proposed rulemaking (SNPRM) for our
ongoing roof crush resistance
rulemaking.26 In that document, we
asked for public comment on a number
of issues that might affect the content of
the final rule, including possible
variations in the proposed requirements.
We also announced the release of the
results of various vehicle tests
conducted since the proposal.
2. Multi-Stage Issues
In our August 2005 NPRM to upgrade
FMVSS No. 216, we included a section
titled ‘‘Vehicles Manufactured in Two or
More Stages.’’ 27 For vehicles
manufactured in two or more stages,
other than vehicles incorporating
chassis-cabs, we proposed to give
manufacturers the option of certifying to
either the existing roof crush
requirements of FMVSS No. 220, School
Bus Rollover Protection, or the new roof
crush requirements of FMVSS No. 216.
FMVSS No. 220 uses a horizontal plate,
instead of the angled plate of Standard
No. 216.
In developing our proposal, we
considered whether the proposed
standard would be appropriate for the
type of motor vehicle for which it would
be prescribed. We stated that we
believed it was appropriate to consider
incomplete vehicles, other than those
incorporating chassis-cabs, as a vehicle
type subject to different regulatory
requirements. We anticipated that finalstage manufacturers using chassis-cabs
to produce multi-stage vehicles would
be in position to take advantage of
‘‘pass-through certification’’ of chassiscabs, and therefore did not believe the
option of alternative compliance with
FMVSS No. 220 was appropriate.
We noted that while we believed that
the requirements in FMVSS No. 220
have been effective for school buses, we
were concerned that they may not be as
effective for other vehicle types. The
FMVSS No. 216 test procedure results
in roof deformations that are consistent
with the observed crush patterns in the
real world for light vehicles. Because of
this, we explained that our preference
would be to use the FMVSS No. 216 test
procedure for light vehicles. We
believed, however, that this approach
would fail to consider the practicability
problems and special issues for multistage manufacturers.
26 Docket
No. NHTSA–2008–0015.
27 70 FR 49234–49235.
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We stated that in these circumstances,
we believed that the requirements of
FMVSS No. 220 appeared to offer a
reasonable avenue to balance the desire
to respond to the needs of multi-stage
manufacturers and the need to increase
safety in rollover crashes. We noted that
several states already require ‘‘paratransit’’ vans and other buses, which are
typically manufactured in multiple
stages, to comply with the roof crush
requirements of FMVSS No. 220.28 We
tentatively concluded that these state
requirements show the burden on multistage manufacturers for evaluating roof
strength in accordance with FMVSS No.
220 is not unreasonable, and applying
FMVSS No. 220 to these vehicles would
ensure that there are some requirements
for roof crush protection where none
currently exist.
C. Public Comments
We received comments concerning
requirements for multi-stage and altered
vehicles from Advocates for Highway
Safety (‘‘Advocates’’), NTEA, National
Mobility Equipment Dealers Association
(NMEDA) and Recreational Vehicle
Industry Association (RVIA).
1. Overview of Comments on MultiStage Issues
Advocates stated that it opposed
permitting FMVSS No. 220 as an
alternative for multi-stage vehicles. It
claimed that FMVSS No. 220 is a ‘‘weak’’
standard whose effects on roof strength
in actual rollover crashes are mostly
unknown.
NTEA recommended that all multistage vehicles be excluded from roof
crush resistance requirements. It stated
that manufacturers of non-chassis-cab
vehicles will not be able to conduct the
tests or perform engineering analysis to
ensure conformance to FMVSS No. 220.
NTEA also disagreed with the
assumption that the presence of State
requirements for FMVSS No. 220
compliance demonstrates that finalstage manufacturers can actually
comply.
NTEA also stated it is impractical for
the agency to assume manufacturers of
multi-stage vehicles built on chassiscabs will be able to rely on IVDs to
provide pass-through certification for
compliance as it relates to roof strength.
It argued that the final-stage
manufacturer would therefore be
responsible for conducting costly
analyses and testing to verify
compliance with FMVSS No. 216.
28 These states include Pennsylvania, Minnesota,
Wisconsin, Tennessee, Michigan, Utah, Alabama,
and California.
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NMEDA expressed concern that the
FMVSS No. 220 option would only be
available for multi-stage vehicles. It
asked that the FMVSS No. 220 option be
extended to raised or altered roof
vehicles. To encompass the modifiers in
the proposed upgrade to FMVSS No.
216, NMEDA asked that a vehicle roof
that is altered after first retail sale be
considered in compliance if it meets the
requirements of FMVSS No. 216 or
FMVSS No. 220. NMEDA also stated
that raising a roof increases the available
headroom and that the roof therefore
can crush more before there is any
contact with an occupant’s head.
NMEDA requested the agency account
for the additional headroom beyond the
original vehicle’s headroom in
establishing any requirement.
RVIA supported our proposal to
permit FMVSS No. 220 as an option for
small motor homes as this would allow
manufacturers to address the unique
issues concerning such specialized
vehicles built in two or more stages.
2. Detailed Summary of NTEA
Comments
NTEA stated that NHTSA incorrectly
assumes that final-stage manufacturers
of vehicles built on chassis-cabs will be
able to use pass-through certification as
a means to comply with the rule.
According to NTEA, NHTSA
acknowledged certification problems
faced by final-stage manufacturers with
respect to safety standards that are
based on the performance of a vehicle
in a dynamic test. NTEA stated that in
the preamble to the proposed rule to
upgrade FMVSS No. 216, NHTSA made
several references to the compliance
difficulties and compliance issues faced
by final-stage manufacturers, but
without any explanation of the root
cause of those problems. NTEA said the
proposed standard is a dynamic test
standard. NTEA stated that in the
rulemaking revising certification
regulations for multi-stage vehicles,
NHTSA concluded that the cost of
dynamic vehicle testing is a legitimate
concern when relatively small numbers
of similarly configured vehicles are
produced by a small manufacturer.
NTEA stated that the agency also noted
that alternative means of compliance
such as computer modeling are not
appreciably more affordable for small
volume manufacturing.
According to NTEA, under these
circumstances, no company could incur
the costs of performing the tests
described in the proposed rule (or in
any other dynamic test standard). NTEA
stated that the multi-stage
manufacturers, for the most part, do not
produce any standard models. The
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overwhelming majority of multi-stage
vehicles are produced to end-user
specifications on a custom-order basis
reflecting specifications provided by the
customer.
NTEA argument that an FMVSS is not
practicable if the only means of
compliance offered in the Standard is
the use of pass-through certification.
NTEA argued that an FMVSS is not
practicable if the only means of
compliance offered in the Standard is
the use of pass-through certification. It
noted that the Vehicle Safety Act at 49
U.S.C. 30111(a) states that each FMVSS
must ‘‘be practicable, meet the need for
motor vehicle safety, and be stated in
objective terms.’’ NTEA cited the 1990
NTEA case, and stated that the Sixth
Circuit ruled that ‘‘for a standard to be
practicable, it must offer in the body of
the standard, a means for all subject to
the standard to prove compliance.’’ 29
NTEA stated that NHTSA anticipates
that final-stage manufacturers will be
able to pass-through, and thereby rely
on, the conformity statements provided
by the chassis-cab manufacturers in
IVDs. NTEA stated there is no
requirement in NHTSA’s regulations
that compels an incomplete vehicle
manufacturer to provide the type of
conformity statement as to any safety
standard that would facilitate passthrough opportunities for the final-stage
manufacturer. That organization said
that the chassis-cab manufacturer has
absolute discretion whether to provide a
Type 1, Type 2, or Type 3 statement.
NTEA said that NHTSA apparently
believes market forces will cause
chassis-cab manufacturers to provide
reasonable compliance envelopes when
making conformity statements. NTEA
cited the agency’s multi-stage vehicle
certification rulemaking, and the
petition for reconsideration it submitted
on the May 2005 final rule which, at
that time, had not yet been responded
to by NHTSA. NTEA claimed that it
demonstrated through the submission of
IVDs with its petition that NHTSA’s
market forces theory is not supported by
the IVDs that are provided by major
incomplete vehicle manufacturers.
NTEA stated that those IVDs show that
incomplete vehicle manufacturers
routinely provide Type 1 and Type 2
conformity statements that are so
restrictive that they provide no
opportunity whatsoever for passthrough certification.
NTEA stated that if a chassis-cab
manufacturer provides a Type 3
conformity statement, there is nothing
to pass-through to the final-stage
29 NTEA comment to the NPRM at p. 5, quoting
NTEA decision, 919 F.2d at 1153.
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manufacturer. It stated that if the
chassis-cab manufacturer provides a
Type 1 conformity statement—i.e., one
that states the vehicle will conform to
the standard if no alterations are made
to identified components in the
vehicle—or if the manufacturer provides
a Type 2 conformity statement—i.e., one
that sets out specific conditions of final
manufacture under which the vehicle
would conform to the test—then the
final-stage manufacturer’s ability to rely
on (or ‘‘pass-through’’) the conformity
statement depends entirely on whether
the vehicle can be completed by the
final-stage manufacturer within the
parameters and limitations contained in
the conformity statement. NTEA stated
that if the parameters and limitations
are reasonable, then there is some
chance of pass-through, but if the
parameters and limitations are
unreasonable (or if the stated conditions
of conformity are simply conservative as
an engineering matter), pass-through
will not be possible.
NTEA also argued that incomplete
vehicle manufacturers have strong
incentive to provide very narrow
compliance envelopes, given
responsibilities set forth in the agency’s
certification regulation. NTEA cited 49
CFR 567.5 and stated that the
certification regulations allocate to the
incomplete vehicle manufacturer legal
responsibility for all components
incorporated by a final-stage
manufacturer (other than defective
components and systems) to the extent
the vehicle is completed in accordance
with the instructions contained in the
IVD, while the regulations allocate to
the final-stage manufacturer legal
responsibility for any work done by the
final-stage manufacturer to complete the
vehicle that was not performed in
accordance with instruction contained
in the IVD.
NTEA argued that in the context of
pass-through certification, a conformity
statement in an IVD is a zero-sum game.
It said that if the final-stage
manufacturer can complete the vehicle
within the parameters and conditions of
the incomplete vehicle manufacturer’s
Type 1 or Type 2 conformity statement,
the incomplete vehicle manufacturer
bears legal responsibility for compliance
with the FMVSS in question; if the
final-stage manufacturer cannot
complete the vehicle within the
parameters of the incomplete vehicle
manufacturer’s Type 1 or Type 2
conformity statement, or if the
incomplete vehicle manufacturer
provides a Type 3 conformity statement,
the final-stage manufacturer bears legal
responsibility for compliance with the
subject FMVSS. NTEA stated that the
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17595
incomplete vehicle manufacturer’s
control over the type and text of its
conformity statements essentially gives
it unfettered discretion to allocate to
itself or to the final-stage manufacturer
the legal responsibilities and liability for
compliance with the safety standard,
and its decision is not subject to review
or challenge because the regulations do
not require the incomplete vehicle
manufacturer to be reasonable or to act
in good faith in crafting its conformity
statements. NTEA argued that this
aspect of the certification scheme—the
ability of an interested private party to
determine the legal liability of another
party with respect to a safety standard—
amounts to an impermissible delegation
of NHTSA’s statutory authority to a
private party. It cited several cases.30
NTEA argued that a safety standard
cannot meet the statutory requirement
that it be practicable if the sole,
plausible means of compliance available
to affected manufacturers is the use of
pass-through certification. It said that
this is the case because that means of
compliance depends entirely on the
actions of private parties (i.e.,
incomplete vehicle manufacturers) that
are free to provide Type 3 statements as
to any standard, and that are free to
establish any parameters and conditions
they wish, reasonable or unreasonable,
in any Type 1 or Type 2 conformity
statement. NTEA argued that the
proposed rule thus fails to meet the
requirement of the 1990 NTEA case that
a standard offer in the body of the
standard a means for all subject to the
standard to prove compliance. NTEA
cited its petition for reconsideration of
the multi-stage vehicle certification rule,
and claimed that it had demonstrated
that incomplete vehicle manufacturers
routinely provide Type 1 and Type 2
conformity statements with respect to
dynamic test standards that are so
restrictive as to effectively provide no
pass-through opportunity whatsoever.
NTEA argued that in the real world, i.e.,
the reality defined by the IVDs that
chassis manufacturers provide with
their products, pass-through
certification is not a viable option for
final-stage manufacturers.
NTEA argument that the conformity
statements in existing IVDs make clear
that final-stage manufacturers are not
likely to have pass-through
opportunities for the proposed rule.
NTEA claimed that the inadequacy of
pass-through certification as the sole,
plausible means of demonstrating
compliance to the proposed rule is
plainly reflected in the IVDs that exist
for chassis-cabs rated up to 2,722
30 See
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kilograms (6,000 pounds) GVWR and for
those rated 2,723 and 4,536 kilograms
(6,001—10,000 pounds) GVWR. That
organization provided IVDs with
conformity statements as examples of
the restrictiveness of IVDs.
NTEA stated that there is currently
only one chassis-cab sold today that is
rated 2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds) or
less and is therefore subject to the
existing FMVSS No. 216: the General
Motors GMT–355 chassis-cab.
According to NTEA, all other currently
available chassis-cabs are rated above
2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds) GVWR
and thus fall outside the purview of the
existing standard.
NTEA cited language from the IVD for
the 2006 model year GMT–355, and
attached a copy of the IVD to its
comments. That organization claimed
that the Type I conformity statement to
FMVSS No. 216 included in that IVD
would provide no pass-through
opportunity whatsoever to a final-stage
manufacturer. NTEA argued that it
would be invalidated by any alteration
that affected the function, physical,
chemical, or mechanical properties of
any component, assembly or system in
the chassis-cab. NTEA stated that finalstage manufacturers at a minimum will
install a truck body onto the GMT–355
chassis-cab. NTEA claimed that the
simplest installation of a truck body
likely weighing several hundred
pounds, plus the means used by the
final-stage manufacturer to mount that
body (e.g., by drilling holes in to the
frame of the chassis-cab and bolting the
body to the frame) will affect the
physical properties, for example, of the
chassis frame and numerous other
structural components of the chassiscab.
NTEA stated that GM includes an
identical conformity statement for
FMVSS No. 216 in its C/K fullsize
pickup truck IVD. That organization
stated that this also shows that GM is
inclined to give a highly restrictive Type
I statement. NTEA also stated that the
IVDs provided by Ford for incomplete
vehicles in the 2,723 and 4,536
kilograms (6,001 to 10,000 pound)
GVWR range provide highly restrictive
conformity statements, and cited
conformity statements for FMVSS Nos.
212, 219 and 301.
NTEA argument that it is
impracticable for multi-stage vehicles
built on non-chassis-cabs to be certified
to the proposed rule or to FMVSS No.
220.
NTEA argued that manufacturers of
multi-stage vehicles built on nonchassis-cabs will be unable to confirm
compliance of those vehicles either to
the proposed rule or to FMVSS No. 220.
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It stated that those manufacturers will
be unable to conduct the tests described
in the proposed rule or to perform some
alternative engineering analysis . NTEA
argued that NHTSA’s attempt to provide
manufacturers with a reasonable
certification option is well-intended, but
misses the mark for several reasons.
NTEA stated that, as NHTSA seems to
recognize, pass-through certification is
unlikely to be available to
manufacturers of multi-stage vehicles
built on non-chassis-cabs, either for
FMVSS No. 216 or for FMVSS No. 220,
because those vehicles do not have
completed cab compartments (which
likely will cause the incomplete vehicle
manufacturers to provide Type 3
conformity statements or highly
restrictive Type 1 or 2 conformity
statements). NTEA stated that NHTSA
proposed to permit manufacturers of
multi-stage vehicles built on nonchassis-cabs the option of certifying to
FMVSS No. 220 instead of FMSS No.
216.
First, according to NTEA, the only
vehicles rated 10,000 pounds or less
that are subject to FMVSS No. 220 are
Type A school buses. NTEA stated that
these vehicles are built primarily on the
Ford E series cutaway chassis and the
GM G-Van cutaway chassis. That
organization stated that Ford and GM
provide Type 3 conformity statements
for these vehicle and that, accordingly,
manufacturers of multi-stage vehicles
completed on these non-chassis-cabs
will have no opportunity to passthrough the certification of the
incomplete vehicle manufacturer. NTEA
attached copies of the IVDs for these
vehicles to its comment.
NTEA stated that as to all of the other
models of non-chassis-cabs rated 10,000
pounds or less, there simply is no
conformity statement provided with
respect to FMVSS No. 220. That
organization stated that this reflects the
fact that none of these incomplete
vehicles are used in the manufacturing
of school buses.
NTEA stated that NHTSA indicated in
the preamble of the proposed rule that
certain States require para-transit vans
and other buses to comply with FMVSS
No. 220 and that these State
requirements show that the burden on
multi-stage manufacturers for evaluating
roof strength in accordance with FMVSS
No. 220 is not unreasonable. NTEA
stated that the existence of State
requirements concerning compliance
with a dynamic test standard is not good
evidence that final-stage manufacturers
in fact are able to confirm compliance
of vehicles with that standard.
NTEA also stated that to the extent
school bus manufacturers or para-transit
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bus manufacturers are able to comply
with FMVSS No. 220, that would
merely reflect the particular
circumstances regarding the
manufacture of those vehicles, i.e., the
production of relatively standardized
models in relatively large production
runs. NTEA stated that the fact that
manufacturers in certain niche markets
may be able to comply with FMVSS No.
220 does not change the fact that the
typical final-stage manufacturer, which
produces scores of vehicle
configurations in small production runs,
cannot demonstrate compliance with
that dynamic testing standard through
testing or engineering analysis.
NTEA compliance cost estimates.
NTEA stated that, in connection with
its proposal, NHTSA presented
extensive cost data which explain how
much it would cost to structurally
upgrade a vehicle in order to meet the
new testing requirements, and then
factored in increased vehicle weight and
the effect on fuel costs. That
organization stated that these costs are
applied to populations of vehicle
models each in the hundreds of
thousands of vehicles.
NTEA stated that NHTSA’s cost
estimates do not factor in the costs of
compliance testing for multi-stage
produced vehicles. That organization
stated that its members are faced with
at least 1,085 identifiable vehicle
configurations in the affected weight
category that would require separate
compliance testing. It stated that these
vehicle configurations could be built by
almost any of the 1,000 or more finalstage manufacturers in the U.S. NTEA
stated that as each of these companies
are competitors, there is no reason to
believe that if one company actually
tested one configuration that they would
or could share that testing with another
company. It also stated that no trade
association or consortium could ever
conduct over 1,000 compliance tests for
the affected vehicle designs and then
continue to test each year any of these
configurations that are redesigned.
NTEA cited cost estimates for
conducting the FMVSS No. 216 test and
a test based on FMVSS 220. It also
stated that the test is a destructive test,
and that while the vehicle could be
repaired and sold as used, this would be
unwise for liability reasons and the
vehicle should be destroyed after the
test. NTEA stated that there are few, if
any, final-stage manufacturers that have
the equipment or personnel to conduct
such tests, and that they would need to
outsource the testing. NTEA stated that
to its knowledge there are only three
companies in the country that regularly
perform such tests for third parties, and
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final-stage manufacturers would have to
incur substantial costs to transport their
vehicles long distances to have them
tested. It also said that following the
testing, the vehicles could not be sold as
new and would need to be repaired
even to be sold as used, resulting in
additional costs to be absorbed by the
final-stage manufacturer. NTEA stated
that, given these costs, it would be
impracticable for manufacturers to
demonstrate compliance by performing
tests.
NTEA stated that NHTSA appeared to
recognize that the cost of testing would
be prohibitive for both vehicles built on
chassis-cabs and those built on nonchassis-cabs, and that it would also be
impracticable to demonstrate
compliance by computer simulation or
other engineering analysis. And, despite
that recognition, NTEA stated that
NHTSA proposed to apply the standard.
Based on discussions with one of the
companies that conduct FMVSS
compliance tests, NTEA understands
that the average cost of conducting the
existing test in FMVSS No. 216 is
approximately $3,600 per vehicle
configuration. It stated that NHTSA
estimates that tests to comply with the
proposed regulation will cost
approximately $5,000. NTEA stated that
a total test cost of $5,000 plus a vehicle
value loss of $15,000 for 1,085 vehicle
configurations results in testing costs of
$21,700,000. It stated that this figure
does not include design or structural
costs for compliance or certain other
costs.
NTEA concluded this portion of its
comment by stating that the cost benefit
analysis prepared by NHTSA ignores
more than 20 million dollars in
compliance tests primarily placed on
small businesses.
NTEA conclusion.
NTEA stated that, as demonstrated,
final-stage manufacturers will face
compliance burdens that are not
reasonable under NHTSA’s proposed
rule, and that compliance with the
proposed requirements in FMVSS No.
216 will not be possible for final-stage
manufacturers.
That organization stated that while it
applauded NHTSA’s decision to
propose an alternative to compliance
with FMVSS No. 216, the option to
comply with FMVSS No. 220 would not
provide any relief to manufacturers of
multi-stage vehicles built on nonchassis-cabs. It stated that, due to costs,
those manufacturers will not be able to
perform the dynamic tests set forth in
the proposed rule or in FMSVS No. 220,
nor conduct engineering analyses to
simulate the performance of vehicles in
those tests. It also stated that because
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manufacturers of non-chassis-cabs do
not have a completed occupant
compartment, there will be no passthrough certification opportunities for
multi-stage vehicles built on those
chassis. NTEA argued that the option of
certifying to FMVSS No. 220 is no
option at all.
NTEA stated that as the
demonstration of compliance with
neither FMVSS No. 220 nor the
proposed FMVSS No. 216 requirements
will be possible for most final-stage
manufacturers building on chassis-cabs
or non-chassis-cabs, it urged that all
vehicles manufactured in two or more
stages be excluded from the rule.
D. May 2009 Final Rule
1. The Final Rule in General
As discussed earlier, on May 12, 2009,
as part of a comprehensive plan for
reducing the serious risk of rollover
crashes and the risk of death and serious
injury in those crashes, NHTSA
published in the Federal Register (74
FR 22348) a final rule substantially
upgrading FMVSS No. 216. The
upgraded standard is designated FMVSS
No. 216a.
First, for the vehicles currently
subject to the standard, i.e., passenger
cars and MPVs, trucks and buses with
a GVWR of 2,722 kilograms (6,000
pounds) or less, the rule doubled the
amount of force the vehicle’s roof
structure must withstand in the
specified test, from 1.5 times the
vehicle’s unloaded weight to 3.0 times
the vehicle’s unloaded weight.
Second, the rule extended the
applicability of the standard so that it
will also apply to vehicles with a GVWR
greater than 2,722 kilograms (6,000
pounds), but not greater than 4,536
kilograms (10,000 pounds). The rule
established a force requirement of 1.5
times the vehicle’s unloaded weight for
these newly included vehicles.
Third, the rule required all of the
above vehicles to meet the specified
force requirements in a two-sided test,
instead of a single-sided test, i.e., the
same vehicle must meet the force
requirements when tested first on one
side and then on the other side of the
vehicle.
Fourth, the rule established a new
requirement for maintenance of
headroom, i.e., survival space, during
testing in addition to the existing limit
on the amount of roof crush.
The rule also included a number of
special provisions, including ones
related to leadtime, to address the needs
of multi-stage manufacturers, alterers,
and small volume manufacturers.
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2. The Final Rule and Multi-Stage Issues
In the May 2009 final rule upgrading
FMVSS No. 216, we included a section
in the preamble titled ‘‘Requirements for
Multi-Stage and Altered Vehicles.’’ 31
We included a summary of the
comments concerning requirements for
multi-stage and altered vehicles from
NTEA, NMEDA, Advocates, and RVIA,
and a response to those comments.
In addressing the issues raised by
NTEA, we stated that, as a general
matter, we believe that it is neither
necessary nor would it be appropriate to
exclude all multi-stage vehicles from
roof crush resistance requirements. We
explained that the purpose of FMVSS
No. 216 is to improve occupant safety in
the event of a rollover. If a multi-stage
vehicle is involved in a rollover, the
vehicle’s roof strength will be an
important factor in providing occupant
protection. We stated that, therefore,
while we seek to address the special
needs and circumstances of multi-stage
manufacturers, we declined to provide
any blanket exclusion for all multi-stage
vehicles. However, based on NTEA’s
comments, we did not extend FMVSS
No. 216 to any trucks built on van
cutaways or other types of incomplete
vehicles without a completed roof
structure, a difference from the NPRM.
The upgraded FMVSS No. 216 rule
does not apply to any vehicles with a
GVWR greater than 4,536 kilograms
(10,000 pounds), including multi-stage
vehicles. A good number of multi-stage
vehicles, such as tow-trucks, some
airport shuttles, and customized farm
trucks, have a GVWR greater than 4,536
kilograms (10,000 pounds). Also, as
with the previous version of FMVSS No.
216, the standard does not apply to
school buses, which have been covered
by FMVSS No. 220.
In the final rule, we then addressed
the issues raised by NTEA and other
commenters separately for the different
types of multi-stage vehicles. The
requirements that apply to multi-stage
vehicles with a GVWR of 4,536
kilograms (10,000 pounds) or less are
dependent on the GVWR and type of
vehicle, including whether the vehicle
was built using a chassis-cab.
Multi-stage vehicles built on chassiscab incomplete vehicles.
If a vehicle is built on a chassis-cab,
and it has a GVWR of 4,536 kilograms
(10,000 pounds) or less, it is required to
meet the same FMVSS No. 216
requirements as single stage vehicles.
Therefore, these vehicles must meet the
requirements of FMVSS No. 216a and
31 74 FR at 22372–74. This section was part of a
larger section titled ‘‘Agency Decision and Response
to Comments.’’
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have a SWR of at least 3.0 if they have
a GVWR of 2,722 kilograms (6,000
pounds) or less and a SWR of 1.5 if they
have a GVWR above that level but not
greater than 4,536 kilograms (10,000
pounds).
As background, we explained that a
chassis-cab is an incomplete vehicle,
with a completed occupant
compartment, that requires only the
addition of cargo-carrying, workperforming, or load-bearing components
to perform its intended functions. As
such, chassis-cabs have intact roof
designs. Chassis-cabs are based on
vehicles that are sold as complete
vehicles by larger manufacturers, e.g.,
medium and full size pickup trucks, so
their roof structure will be designed to
meet the upgraded requirements of
FMVSS No. 216. A good example of a
chassis-cab vehicle is a moving truck.
The driver of a chassis-cab vehicle
would need to exit the vehicle to access
the contents in the rear of the vehicle.
We stated that after considering the
comments of NTEA, we believed that
final-stage manufacturers can rely on
the incomplete vehicle documents (IVD)
for pass-through certification of
compliance with FMVSS No. 216 for
vehicles built using chassis-cabs. To do
this, final-stage manufacturers will need
to remain within specifications
contained in the IVD. We stated that
since the stringency of FMVSS No. 216
(SWR requirement) is dependent on a
vehicle’s unloaded vehicle weight, the
final-stage manufacturer would need to
remain within the specification for
unloaded vehicle weight. If they did
not, the roof would not likely have the
strength to comply with FMVSS No.
216. We also explained that final-stage
manufacturers will need to avoid
changes to the vehicle that would affect
roof strength adversely.32
Multi-stage trucks with a GVWR
greater than 2,722 kilograms (6,000
pounds) not built using a chassis-cab
and not built using an incomplete
vehicle with a full exterior van body.
We explained that, based on the
comments received, we had decided to
exclude from FMVSS No. 216 multistage trucks with a GVWR greater than
2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds) not built
using a chassis cab and not built using
an incomplete vehicle with a full
32 We also noted that some changes made by
final-stage manufacturers could affect the ability to
conduct an FMVSS No. 216 test, e.g., for a multistage truck, the addition of a cargo box structure
higher than the occupant compartment could
interfere with the placement of the FMVSS No. 216
test device. To address this concern, we included
a specification in the final rule that such structures
are removed prior to testing. (However, the
structures are still counted as part of a vehicle’s
unloaded weight.)
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exterior van body. This was a change
from the NPRM. First, to be excluded,
these multi-stage vehicles must be a
truck. A truck is defined in 49 CFR
571.3 as being a ‘‘motor vehicle with
motive power * * * designed primarily
for the transportation of property or
special purpose equipment.’’ Second, to
be excluded, these multi-stage trucks
cannot be built using a chassis-cab or
using an incomplete vehicle with a full
exterior van body. Both chassis-cabs and
incomplete vehicles built on a full
exterior van body contain a completed
roof structure, but would need additions
before a final-stage manufacturer could
certify its compliance as a completed
vehicle. Incomplete vehicles with full
exterior van bodies could include a van
that did not have any seats. An
incomplete vehicle such as this could,
for example, be completed as a truck
(cargo van) by adding front seats and
interior shelves and partitions. Such a
vehicle would not be excluded from the
standard.
If a multi-stage truck within this
weight range is not built on a chassiscab or on a full exterior van body, then
the vehicle is excluded from FMVSS
No. 216 and the final-stage
manufacturer would not need to certify
compliance with the standard.
Typically, these vehicles would be built
on cutaways or on a stripped chassis. A
cutaway chassis is a van cab design
whose occupant compartment is not
complete and ends immediately behind
the driver and front passenger seat, i.e.
there is no wall behind the front seats.
A good example of this type of a multistage truck is a parcel delivery vehicle.
These specialized vehicles are typically
built on van cutaways because the
driver or passenger may need access to
the contents in the rear of the vehicle.
A stripped chassis is an incomplete
vehicle that is less complete than a
cutaway, and could be nothing more
than a rolling chassis consisting of only
the engine, transmission, and laddertype frame.
The agency excluded these vehicles in
the final rule because there may be
practicability problems. These
incomplete vehicles will not have an
intact roof. Because the strength of the
roof may be dependent on the structure
to be added by the final-stage
manufacturer, the incomplete vehicle
manufacturer may not provide IVD or
similar information that would permit
pass-through certification. Moreover,
the design of the completed truck may
be such that it is not possible to test the
vehicle to FMVSS No. 216 (due to
interference with the FMVSS test
device) or inappropriate for testing with
FMVSS No. 220.
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4700
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Multi-Stage Buses and MPVS Not Built
on Chassis-Cabs
For other multi-stage vehicles not
built on chassis-cabs, we stated that we
continued to believe, for the reasons
discussed in the NPRM, that permitting
FMVSS No. 220 as an option is a
reasonable way to balance the desire to
respond to the needs of multi-stage
manufacturers and the need to increase
safety in rollover crashes. These
vehicles would be classified as a bus or
MPV. Under 49 CFR 571.3, a bus is a
motor vehicle ‘‘* * * designed for
carrying more than ten persons,’’ and a
MPV is defined as a motor vehicle
‘‘* * * designed to carry ten passengers
or less which is constructed on a truck
chassis or with special features for
occasional off-road operation.’’ These
buses and MPVs are built commonly
using a van cutaway and would include,
e.g., transit shuttle vehicles,
ambulances, mobility vehicles and
recreation vehicles. The FMVSS No. 220
test uses a single, horizontal platen and
requires a SWR of 1.5.
In responding to Advocates’ comment
arguing against permitting FMVSS No.
220 as an alternative for multi-stage
vehicles because it believes that FMVSS
No. 220 is not sufficiently stringent, we
noted that the organization did not
provide analysis or data addressing the
special circumstances faced by multistage manufacturers, or explain why it
believed these manufacturers could
certify compliance of their vehicles to
FMVSS No. 216. We stated, therefore,
that the commenter had not provided a
basis for us to take a different position
than we had taken in the NPRM. We
stated that, as we had discussed in the
NPRM, we believed the requirements in
FMVSS No. 220 have been effective for
school buses, but we are concerned that
they may not be as effective for other
vehicle types. We explained that our
preference would be to use the FMVSS
No. 216 test procedure for light vehicles,
but that this approach would fail to
consider the practicability problems and
special issues for multi-stage
manufacturers.
We noted that RVIA supported our
proposal permitting testing to the
FMVSS No. 220 standard, and that some
of the vehicles in this category are
already required to meet the
requirements of FMVSS No. 220 as a
result of State regulations.
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Multi-Stage Vehicles and Complete
Vehicles With a GVWR Greater Than
2,722 Kilograms (6,000 Pounds) Which
Have Been Changed by Raising Their
Original Roof
In the May 2009 final rule preamble,
we stated that, in response to the
comments of NMEDA, we agreed that
the FMVSS No. 220 option should be
available to multi-stage and complete
vehicles with a GVWR greater than
2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds) which
have been changed by raising their
original roof.
We stated that we believed that
practicability issues arise for vehicles
with a GVWR greater than 2,722
kilograms (6,000 pounds) whose roofs
are raised. We also stated that we
believe that the FMVSS No. 220 option
is appropriate for the ‘‘para-transit’’ vans
and buses. We stated that the FMVSS
No. 220 option will help ensure that
these occupants are afforded a level of
protection that is currently not required.
We stated that we were not providing
this option to vehicles with raised roofs
and a GVWR of less than or equal to
2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds).
We stated that we believed that the
practicability issues for vehicle alterers
which raise roofs on the vehicles at
issue are comparable to those of finalstage manufacturers. An alterer may
raise a roof on a vehicle that was
originally certified to FMVSS No. 216.
We also stated that we believe that
permitting alterers which raise roofs on
these vehicles the option of certifying to
FMVSS No. 220 balances potential
practicability issues with the need to
increase safety in rollovers.
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Multi-Stage Vehicles With a GVWR of
2,722 Kilograms (6,000 Pounds) or Less
If a multi-stage vehicle has a GVWR
of 2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds) or
less, it previously was subject to FMVSS
No. 216. If these vehicles are built using
a chassis-cab, they must comply with
the upgraded roof crush resistance
standard, including the 3.0 SWR
requirement. For these vehicles that are
not built on a chassis-cab, the final-stage
manufacturer has the option of meeting
either the upgraded roof crush
resistance standard in FMVSS No. 216a,
or can meet the standard in FMVSS No.
220 (1.5 SWR). As previously discussed,
that test uses a single, horizontal platen.
V. Further Response to Comments
Regarding Multi-Stage Vehicles
As a general matter, NTEA’s
comments on the agency’s proposal to
upgrade FMVSS No. 216 centered on
two premises: (1) NHTSA’s assumption
that pass-through certification is
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available is invalid as evidenced by
present IVDs; and (2) because NHTSA’s
pass-through certification scheme is
invalid, NHTSA’s analysis of the rule’s
impact and costs are flawed. The end
result, according to NTEA, is that
NHTSA’s regulation on roof crush is
impracticable for multi-stage vehicles,
and, therefore, NHTSA’s roof crush
regulations should not include any
requirements for multi-stage vehicles.
To get to NTEA’s conclusion—FMVSS
No. 216 should not apply to multi-stage
vehicles—one has to believe that the
certification scheme for multi-stage
vehicles, which has been in place for
several decades, is unworkable and
invalid, at least as applied to FMVSS
No. 216. NTEA has been making this
argument in various contexts for over 25
years.33
Generally, NTEA makes the argument
that pass-through certification is an
impermissible delegation of NHTSA’s
statutory authority to a private party.
Specific to FMVSS No. 216, NTEA
believes NHTSA incorrectly assumes
that pass-through certification will be
available. NTEA argues that current
IVDs prepared by incomplete vehicle
manufacturers for FMVSS No. 216 and
other standards are so restrictive that a
final-stage manufacturer would violate
the IVD by making a simple installation.
If that is so, NTEA argues, the finalstage manufacturers would be left to
conduct their own testing to certify
compliance with FMVSS No. 216.
According to that organization, neither
the two-sided platen test in FMVSS No.
216 nor the horizontal platen school bus
test in FMVSS No. 220 is workable.
Testing to either standard is, in NTEA’s
estimation, too burdensome and costly.
According to NTEA, because NHTSA
incorrectly assumes that pass-through
certifications will be available, the
agency’s analysis of the costs of the rule
is incorrect, and the rule is overly
burdensome as to final-stage
manufacturers.
For the reasons discussed below,
NHTSA rejects NTEA’s arguments and
their conclusions.
A. Introduction
While NTEA has repeatedly claimed
that the present certification scheme for
multi-stage vehicles is invalid and
unworkable, the availability of multistage vehicles belies that claim. There
are many multi-stage vehicles on the
road that have been certified to a
number of standards, and the final-stage
manufacturers are still in business.
There are large numbers of multi-stage
vehicles, such as school buses, box
33 See
PO 00000
71 FR 28169–28171.
Frm 00045
Fmt 4700
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17599
trucks, tanker trucks, work trucks,
flatbed and stake trucks, tow trucks,
dump trucks, and gasoline tank trucks
on the road.
Moreover, final-stage manufacturers
have certified multi-stage vehicles with
a GVWR of 2,722 kilograms (6,000
pounds) or less to the current version of
FMVSS No. 216. As noted earlier,
FMVSS No. 216 was extended to trucks,
buses, and MPVs with a GVWR of 2,722
kilograms (6,000 pounds) or less in a
final rule published in 1991. This is a
relatively low gross vehicle weight
rating for commercial vehicles, which
results in limited offerings. But,
significantly, General Motors (GM) has
sold an incomplete vehicle chassis-cab,
the GMT–355, that has a GVWR of 2,722
kilograms (6,000 pounds) or less and is
therefore subject to FMVSS No. 216. GM
would not have offered the vehicle for
years if there was not a market for them,
as completed by final-stage
manufacturers.
We note that under the May 2009
final rule, FMVSS No. 216 will not be
applicable to vehicles with a GVWR
greater than 4,536 kilograms (10,000
pounds). Incomplete vehicle
manufacturers will not need to provide
an IVD regarding FMVSS No. 216 for
these heavier vehicles. In our
estimation, the largest number of multistage vehicles are in this category.
In addition, final-stage manufacturers
are currently certifying the compliance
of their vehicles with a number of
complex safety standards that include
crash testing as part of the agency’s
compliance tests. These include, for
example, FMVSS No. 214, Side Impact
Protection, FMVSS No. 208, Occupant
Crash Protection (frontal air bag
technology), and FMVSS No. 301, Fuel
System Integrity. These manufacturers
ordinarily rely on the IVD in making
these certifications.
NTEA’s comments further
contemplate no assistance from the
incomplete vehicle manufacturer.
However, NHTSA has seen the converse
to be true—there are IVDs, upfitter
guides, best practices manuals and help
lines provided by incomplete vehicle
manufacturers. Final-stage
manufacturers also have their own
technical expertise and engineering
judgment, and commercially available
computer aided engineering software.
Final-stage manufacturers can use
their judgment, including engineering or
technical judgment, to certify vehicles.
Testing, as provided in the FMVSS, is
not required as a matter of law to certify
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a vehicle.34 Instead, sound judgment
may be used. Many final-stage
manufacturers bring considerable
judgment to bear. They have been
building and certifying vehicles for
years. Final-stage manufacturers can
and do use their base of experience in
certifying vehicles as complying with
the FMVSS.
In addition, NHTSA provided
substantial leadtime. The rule becomes
effective for multi-stage vehicles with a
GVWR of 2,722 kilograms (6,000
pounds) or less, i.e., the vehicles already
covered by FMVSS No. 216, on
September 1, 2016, and for the other
multi-stage vehicles with a GVWR of
4,536 kilograms (10,000 pounds) or less
on September 1, 2017. These dates are
one year after the requirements are fully
effective for single stage vehicles.
B. The Current Certification Scheme Is
Not an Unlawful Delegation of Agency
Authority
NTEA argued that under the current
certification scheme the ability of an
interested private party to determine the
legal responsibility of another party
with respect to a safety standard, which
it contends is the result of the
incomplete vehicle manufacturer
creating the IVD, amounts to an
impermissible delegation of NHTSA’s
statutory authority to a private party.
NTEA made the same argument in its
petition for reconsideration of the
certification rule, and the agency
addressed it in its May 2006 response to
that petition.35 As we explained in that
response, NTEA relied on a case
involving an unlawful delegation of an
agency’s authority to a private entity.36
However, NTEA ignored the holding in
that case, that the relevant inquiry on a
private delegation issue is to assess
Congressional intent, based on the
pertinent statute(s) and its legislative
history.
In the Vehicle Safety Act, Congress
imposed the responsibility to certify
compliance on manufacturers and
distributors.37 The Safety Act created a
self-certification scheme. Under this
statutory framework, the agency
promulgates the FMVSSs, and it is then
the manufacturer’s or distributor’s
responsibility to comply with these
standards and to furnish a certification
to the distributor or dealer that the
vehicle or equipment conforms to all
applicable FMVSSs. The statute, as
34 This has been recognized in interpretations by
NHTSA’s Chief Counsel.
35 71 FR at 28186–87.
36 Nat’l Park and Conservation Ass’n v. Stanton,
54 F.Supp. 2d 7 (D.D.C. 1999).
37 See Section 114 of the Act, Public Law 89–563,
80 Stat. 726 (recodified at 49 U.S.C. 30115).
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originally enacted, did not provide for
agency review and approval of the
manufacturer’s certification or for
agency allocation of responsibility of
certification in the multi-stage vehicle
context.
NHTSA’s regulations do not provide
for the agency to allocate certification
responsibility between incomplete
vehicle manufacturers and final-stage
manufacturers.
In 2000, Congress enacted the
Transportation Recall Enhancement,
Accountability, and Documentation
(TREAD) Act.38 Section 9 of the Act
amended 49 U.S.C. 30115 to address
certification labels.39 In general, the
amendments required an intermediate
or final-stage manufacturer to certify
with respect to each FMVSS either that
it has followed the compliance
documents provided by the incomplete
vehicle manufacturer or that it has
chosen to assume responsibility for
compliance with that standard.40 The
amendments further provided that if an
intermediate or final-stage manufacturer
assumes responsibility for compliance
with a standard covered by the
documentation, it must notify the
incomplete vehicle manufacturer within
a reasonable time.41 Significantly, the
TREAD Act amendments did not alter
the regulatory approach in 49 CFR 567.5
and 49 CFR part 568. They did not
require NHTSA to allocate certification
responsibilities between the various
manufacturers in the chain of
production of multi-stage vehicles.
In contrast to this regulatory
approach, Congress has enacted other
regulatory schemes that require agency
review and approval of manufacturers’
certifications. For example, the Clean
Air Act requires the Administrator of
the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) to test or require testing of motor
vehicles or engines to determine
whether they comply with the
emissions requirements and, if they
conform, to issue a certificate of
conformity.42 In that context, EPA has a
significant administrative role. In
contrast, in the Vehicle Safety Act,
Congress did not provide for agency
review or approval of a manufacturer’s
certification before first sale. Moreover,
the TREAD Act amendments
specifically addressed certification in
the multi-stage vehicle context and did
not assign the agency an arbiter role in
the certification process.
38 Public
39 114
Law 106–414.
Stat. 1805.
40 Id.
41 Id.
42 42
PO 00000
U.S.C. 7525(a).
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In view of the foregoing, NHTSA does
not accept NTEA’s argument that the
certification scheme in NHTSA’s
regulations delegates too much power to
a private entity.
C. Current IVDs Concerning FMVSS No.
216 Are Workable
NTEA submitted with its comment
relevant portions of the IVDs with Type
1 conformity statements for the General
Motors 2006 GMT–355 incomplete truck
and also the IVD for the GM 2006 C/K
full size incomplete truck.43 NTEA
attached these documents to
demonstrate that the simplest
installation of a truck body likely
weighing several hundred pounds, plus
the means used by the final-stage
manufacturer to mount that body (e.g.,
by drilling holes into the frame of the
chassis-cab and bolting the body to the
frame) will affect the physical
properties, e.g., of the chassis frame and
numerous other structural components
of the chassis-cab.
GM’s IVD allows for additions to the
chassis-cab. The GMT–355’s IVD states
that the incomplete vehicle will comply
with FMVSS No. 216 ‘‘providing no
alterations are made which affect the
function, physical, chemical, or
mechanical properties, environment,
location, or vital spatial clearances of
the components, assemblies or systems
including but not limited to those listed
below: antennae; body roof structure or
components/reinforcements; body sheet
metal/reinforcements; body structural
components/reinforcements; front rear
and side glazing materials and
mounting; structural components and
door assemblies; windshield wipers;
and windshield wiper motor.’’
NTEA read the IVD and claimed that
adding a box to a chassis-cab frame
would affect the physical, chemical, or
mechanical properties of the body’s
structural components/reinforcements.
Based on this statement, NTEA
concluded that pass-through
certification is not available. NHTSA
disagrees.
Before turning to the specifics, we
note that NTEA characterized the
FMVSS No. 216 test as a dynamic test.
As a technical matter, the test is
considered a quasi-static test rather than
a dynamic test. In a quasi-static test, the
conditions vary slowly enough so that
43 NTEA stated that GM included an identical
conformity statement for FMVSS No. 216 in its IVD
for the GM 2006 C/K full size incomplete truck,
although, to NTEA’s knowledge, GM did not
produce a C/K chassis rated 6,000 pounds GVW or
below. FMVSS No. 216 would have applied to the
vehicle only if it were rated with a GVWR of 2,722
kilograms (6,000 pounds) or less.
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the dynamic effects are negligible.44 In
developing our proposal to upgrade
FMVSS No. 216, we considered
potential dynamic tests, e.g., the Jordan
Rollover System test and the Controlled
Rollover Impact System test, but
decided to focus on the quasi-static test
procedure. This was an issue that was
addressed in detail in the rulemaking.
The quasi-static test in this standard
does, however, have some dynamic
characteristics.45 In any event, potential
compliance difficulties relate to the
specific details of a test and relevant
requirements based on that test rather
than whether the test is called quasistatic or dynamic.
We now turn to the GMT–355
incomplete vehicle. This incomplete
vehicle is classified as a body-on-frame,
as distinguished from unibody
construction used in making passenger
cars, which generally do not have
frames. The cab is attached to the frame.
Roof strength is dependent on structural
members of the vehicle’s largely vertical
pillars, including the A pillar (between
the windshield and the front of the front
door) and the B pillar (behind the front
door), and the roof itself.
In completing an incomplete GMT–
355, the final-stage manufacturer adds a
unit behind the cab. That unit or truck
body is attached to the frame.
44 That is the case with the lowering of the
FMVSS No. 216 test device. In the FMVSS No. 216
test procedure, a test device applies a force, based
on the vehicle’s unloaded weight, to the vehicle’s
roof. The lower surface of the test device must not
move more than the specified distance. The May
2009 final rule maintained the fundamental nature
of the test.
45 We believe the quasi-static test has sufficient
dynamic characteristics that we would consider the
new procedures adopted by the agency in the 2005
and 2006 certification rules for applying for
temporary exemptions to be available for FMVSS
No. 216, although we are not aware of any specific
situations in which they would be needed. In those
rules, NHTSA amended its regulations to establish
a new process under which intermediate and finalstage manufacturers and alterers can obtain
temporary exemptions from dynamic performance
requirements of certain standards. While the 2005
rule limited this process to dynamic crash test
requirements, in response to NTEA’s petition, the
agency expanded the scope of the availability of the
new procedures in the 2006 rule so that
manufacturers of multi-stage vehicles can petition
the agency for a temporary exemption from
requirements that incorporate various dynamic tests
generally, and not exclusively dynamic crash tests.
NHTSA explained that a dynamic test is one that
requires application of forces or energy to the
vehicle and the FMVSS include a variety of
dynamic tests in addition to those involving crash
tests. The agency noted that in some circumstances,
there may be considerable costs associated with
dynamic tests other than dynamic crash tests, and
there may be significant damage to vehicles from
such tests. Given the broad language used in
characterizing dynamic tests, we would consider
the procedures to be available for the quasi-static
test specified by FMVSS No. 216. The test does
require application of forces or energy to the vehicle
and may result in significant damage to the vehicle.
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Commonly, the attached unit is a box of
some form that goods or materials can
be carried in. The attached unit does not
attach to the cab. Pass-through
certification is readily available for this
vehicle. The conformity statement in the
IVD is written to allow modifications to
the incomplete vehicle, but not to the
components that affect the vehicle’s roof
strength.
While pass-through certification is not
provided if vehicle components related
to roof strength are modified, NTEA has
not provided an example where the
addition of a truck body would modify
the structural members of the A- and Bpillars, and NHTSA is unaware of one.
NTEA did not provide other examples
where roof modifications would be
necessary. In the example of mounting
a box to the frame, there would be no
modifications to the roof.
D. Final-Stage Manufacturers Can
Certify Their Vehicles Built on Chassiscabs as Being Compliant With FMVSS
No. 216a
FMVSS No. 216 has applied to multistage vehicles with a GVWR of 2,722
kilograms (6,000 pounds) or less since
the early 1990s. Despite NTEA’s
articulated problems with the GMT–355
IVD, final-stage manufacturers
undoubtedly have made additions to
this incomplete vehicle and certified it
compliant. Otherwise, GM would not
have offered it for sale for years.
There are a number of resources
available for final-stage manufacturers.
Many of these were mentioned in the
2006 response to NTEA’s petition.46
These resources are still available. For
example, General Motors has
relationships with final-stage
manufacturers, which it refers to as
‘‘Special Vehicle Manufacturers,’’ or
SVMs. According to GM Upfitters’ Best
Practices Manual, ‘‘[t]he success of the
Upfitter Integration group depends on
an atmosphere of communication,
cooperation and trust between SVMs
and GM. SVMs would therefore be
expected to use the Upfitter Integration
resources available to them (i.e.,
telephone hotline, quality surveys,
guideline manuals and Upfitter
Integration engineering expertise).
SVMs are expected to have documented
processes which are understood and
accepted by all.’’ (p. 4).47
According to the GM Upfitters’ Best
Practices Manual, NTEA reviews and
recommends Body-Mounting Practices
in the GM Upfitters’ Best Practices
Manual that identifies industry
46 71
FR 28185
47 https://www.gmupfitter.com/publicat/
Best_Practices.pdf.
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17601
recognized processes and procedures.
NTEA has a ‘‘Body Practices
Subcommittee’’ that reviewed the
mounting methods of several chassis
manufacturers. NTEA approved four
general mounting types. All mount to
the frame and are permissible under the
IVD for the GMT–355. None of the
mounting methods involve attachments
to the A- and B-pillars.
A final-stage manufacturer is not
limited to the IVD. If a final-stage
manufacturer wanted to make
modifications beyond the IVD, it could
still use the IVD as a starting point and
then utilize technical judgment. This is
different from a vehicle built on a
stripped chassis where the final-stage
manufacturer would be designing the
complete occupant compartment
structure. The final-stage manufacturer
is beginning with a vehicle with a
completed occupant compartment
structure, including the roof, that it
knows already meets FMVSS No. 216,
and can use judgment to ensure that the
modifications it makes will not weaken
the roof. As such, a final-stage
manufacturer could complete the
vehicle and certify it.
In the case of chassis-cabs, for
example, data are available on the
strength of the roofs. Chassis-cabs have
intact roof designs and for the most part
are the same as vehicles that are sold as
complete vehicles, such as large pickup
trucks. The roof structures of those
trucks will be designed to meet the
upgraded requirements of FMVSS No.
216. NHTSA tests vehicles, including
pickup trucks, to FMVSS No. 216 and
makes the data available.48 Final-stage
manufacturers can readily refer to these
data for certification.
NTEA also argued that Ford provided
guidance for 10 safety standards in its
2006 Pickup Box Removal/Alterations
Design Recommendations for the pickup box removal for the Ford Ranger, but
not for FMVSS No. 216 (p. 8 of NTEA’s
comments, footnote 4). It said that,
therefore, in the alterer context, the
alterer is on its own as to the roof crush
resistance standard. We note that Ford’s
2006 Pickup Box Removal/Alterations
Design Recommendations do not
involve incomplete vehicles. The
Ranger is not sold as an incomplete
vehicle. Ford’s recommendations are for
48 For example, there are data available on
NHTSA’s testing of pickup trucks. NHTSA’s testing
of completed trucks under 6,000 lbs shows the
following: (a) MY 2007 Chevy Colorado, GVWR =
4850 lbs, SWR 2.18 (Test 560), (b) MY 2007 Toyota
Tacoma, GVWR = 5250 lbs, SWR 3.29, (Test 566),
(c) MY 2007 Toyota Tacoma, GVWR = 4550 lbs,
SWR 4.4 (Test 530).
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alterers 49 that remove a pick-up box
from a completed vehicle. Ford has
already certified that vehicle. The
document cited in NTEA’s comment is
guidance and is not required under 49
CFR 567.7 for certification.
Moreover, we have reviewed the Ford
document in question and believe that
NTEA has not shown a real problem for
alterers. For pickup trucks such as the
Ranger, the passenger compartment is
completely separate from the cargo box.
Each is separately secured to a common
frame. For this reason, simply replacing
the pickup box with an aftermarket
body would not affect the strength of the
roof.50
In the FMVSS No. 216a test procedure
adopted in the 2009 final rule, the body
of the vehicle is securely mounted. In
the case of a body-on-frame pickup
truck, the occupant compartment cab
would be rigidly mounted such that
only the roof strength of the occupant
compartment of the vehicle is tested. In
support of the final rule, the agency
tested a number of pickup trucks in oneand two-sided test configurations.51 In
addition, the agency also tested an
incomplete 2008 Ford F–250 (NHTSA
Test No. 571) 52 chassis-cab pickup. The
F–250 was delivered and tested without
a cargo bed. From our testing, the
presence of the cargo box did not have
any impact on the strength of the roof.53
NTEA also stated that for the 2004
model year, Ford produced the Freestar/
Monterey van as an incomplete vehicle
to be used in the manufacturer of
mobility vehicles. It stated that these
vehicles had a GVWR of 2,722 kilograms
(6,000 pounds) or less, and were thus
subject to FMVSS No. 216. NTEA stated
that for reasons that are unclear, Ford
did not provide a conformity statement
for FMVSS No. 216 in the IVD for this
vehicle. NTEA stated that this is a
49 An alterer ‘‘means a person who alters by
addition, substitution, or removal of components
(other than readily attachable components) a
certified vehicle before the first purchase of the
vehicle other than for resale.’’ 49 CFR 567.3.
50 The weight of the aftermarket body could affect
the unloaded weight of the vehicle and, therefore,
the amount of force the vehicle would need to
withstand in a FMVSS No. 216 test. If replacing the
pickup box with an aftermarket body resulted in
greater unloaded vehicle weight, the alterer could
consult with the manufacturer about implications
for FMVSS No. 216 compliance.
51 74 FR 22391, Appendix B and C.
52 Test reports available at https://
www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/database/aspx/comdb/
querytesttable.aspx.
53 The F–250 chassis-cab’s roof resisted a
maximum force of just over 54,000 N when the first
side of the roof was tested. In a test conducted with
a 2003 Ford F–250 with the cargo bed attached, the
roof resisted over 44,000 N on the first side. The
difference in peak strength of the roof is attributed
to the vehicles being different body styles for
different model year vehicles.
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situation where the final-stage
manufacturer would have no passthrough certification opportunity.
NHTSA notes that the Freestar/
Monterey vans have not been produced
for years and NTEA did not demonstrate
that the issue is likely to recur with
newer models. We note, however that
Ford has a mobility vehicle program, for
transporting handicapped people, and
NTEA has not demonstrated that there
are any problems with respect to
availability or certification of mobility
vehicles. We also note that NMEDA did
not cite any such difficulties. In
addition, Ford has programs to assist
mobility manufacturers.54
FMVSS No. 216 is not, of course,
currently applicable to vehicles with a
GVWR greater than 2,722 kilograms
(6,000 pounds). For that reason, the
IVDs for chassis-cabs currently used for
these heavier vehicles do not and
cannot be expected to address FMVSS
No. 216. However, as the upgraded
standard will apply to these vehicles,
manufacturers will address it in the
future.55
E. In General, IVDs Are Workable
NTEA claimed that IVDs containing
conformity statements for standards
other than FMVSS No. 216 are overly
restrictive. It cited the conformity
statements provided by GM for the C/K
fullsize pickup truck IVD. It also cited
the IVD provided by Ford for the Eseries incomplete vehicle with respect
to FMVSS Nos. 212, 219 and 301. NTEA
stated that the conformity statements are
based on the performance of the vehicle
in the dynamic tests in those standards.
As noted earlier, in our May 2006
response to NTEA’s petition for
reconsideration of the certification rule,
we addressed in detail NTEA’s
arguments in connection with the
certification statements in the GM IVD
that NTEA identified as inadequate. In
each case, the agency’s findings
supported the conclusion that the
existing IVDs are workable. Moreover,
we demonstrated that the current multistage certification is workable and
pointed out the errors in NTEA’s
arguments. Among other things, we
noted that NTEA’s petition did not
identify any final-stage manufacturer
that has been unable to certify a vehicle
under the existing framework. Since this
rulemaking is about FMVSS No. 216,
and given the above discussion, there is
no need to address other standards.
The final rule becomes effective for
multi-stage vehicles with a GVWR of
54 See
https://www.fleet.ford.com/truckbbas/
non-html/qpg/2004/mobilityguidelines04.pdf.
55 See 49 CFR 568.4.
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2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds) or less,
i.e., the vehicles already covered by
FMVSS No. 216, on September 1, 2016,
and to the other multi-stage vehicles
with a GVWR of 4,536 kilograms (10,000
pounds) or less on September 1, 2017.
These dates are one year after the
requirements are fully effective for
single stage vehicles. This is a sevenyear leadtime for vehicles currently
subject to the standard, and an eightyear leadtime for the vehicles newly
subject to the standard. NHTSA
anticipates that this leadtime will be
ample for incomplete vehicle
manufacturers and final-stage
manufacturers to work out any issues.
F. NHTSA Provided a Testing
Alternative, FMVSS No. 220
NTEA commented that final-stage
manufacturers of vehicles built on
incomplete vehicles other than chassiscabs (cutaways, chassis cowls,56 or
stripped chassis) cannot rely on passthrough certification or perform the tests
in FMVSS Nos. 216 or 220. It did not
agree with statements in the NPRM that
the existence of State operational
requirements for para-transit vans and
other buses to comply with FMVSS No.
220 is good evidence that final-stage
manufacturers in fact are able to comply
with that standard. It also said that the
fact that final-stage manufacturers are
able to comply with FMVSS No. 220 for
some vehicles merely reflects the
particular manufacturing of that vehicle,
and the fact that certain niche markets
can comply with FMVSS No. 220 does
not translate to final-stage
manufacturers that produce scores of
vehicles in small production runs.
NTEA thus advocated a lowest common
denominator approach.
NHTSA sees no reason to exclude all
multi-stage vehicles from the
requirements of FMVSS No. 216. We do
recognize, unlike vehicles derived from
chassis-cabs, there will not be an
opportunity for a pass-through
certification of FMVSS No. 216 for
vehicles without intact roofs such as
cutaways and stripped chassis. In light
of this, in the 2009 final rule, for multistage trucks, NHTSA decided not to
extend the coverage of the upgraded
FMVSS No. 216 as proposed in the
NPRM. Multi-stage trucks not built on a
chassis-cab or a full exterior van body
with a GVWR greater than 2,722
kilograms (6,000 pounds) are not
covered. This is discussed below.
56 An incomplete vehicle which is similar to a
stripped chassis but includes a portion of the body
bounded by the front fenders, hood and base of the
windshield.
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Multi-stage trucks with a GVWR of
2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds) or less
have already been subject to FMVSS No.
216, and no practicability issues have
been identified. While there are
differences between the existing
requirements and those of the upgraded
standard, the basic nature of the FMVSS
No. 216 test is the same, i.e., a quasistatic test that applies a force to the roof.
Moreover, the FMVSS No. 220 option
will also be available (other than for
trucks built using chassis-cabs). Given
these considerations, we believe that
these vehicles do not raise practicability
concerns. We note that we are not aware
of any incomplete cutaway vehicles
with a GVWR of 2,722 kilograms (6,000
pounds) or less.
We decided not to extend the
standard to multi-stage trucks with a
GVWR above 2,722 kilograms (6,000
pounds) not built on a chassis-cab or a
full exterior van body. The incomplete
vehicles for these excluded multi-stage
trucks will not have an intact roof, and
because the strength of the roof may be
dependent on the structure to be added
by the final-stage manufacturer in
completing the truck, the incomplete
vehicle manufacturer may not provide
for pass-through certification. Moreover,
the FMVSS No. 220 test was designed
for school buses and uses a horizontal
plate over the driver and passenger
compartment instead of the angled plate
of Standard No. 216. This test may not
be appropriate for trucks with certain
roof configurations.
For the remaining multi-stage vehicles
other than trucks, we believe that the
FMVSS No. 220 option is a reasonable
way to balance the need to increase
safety in rollover crashes of multi-stage
vehicles and the capabilities of multistage manufacturers. Examples of
vehicles in this category include Type II
ambulances,57 small recreation vehicles,
and shuttle vans with a GVWR greater
than 2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds) but
not greater than 4,536 kilograms (10,000
pounds). Some of these vehicles involve
vans with raised roofs.
First, NTEA’s argument, which
appears to be largely in the context of
work trucks, on relatively unique
configurations and very limited
production numbers, does not truly
apply. There are companies that make
ambulances, other companies that make
small RVs, and others that make shuttle
vans. These vehicles are generally made
in larger production runs and/or with
57 See
the Federal Specification for the Star-ofLife Ambulance (KKK–A–1822F), as promulgated
by the General Services Administration. https://
www.gsa.gov/gsa/cm_attachments/
GSA_DOCUMENT/ambulanc_1_R2FI5H_0Z5RDZi34K-pR.pdf.
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relatively standardized exterior
structures. Therefore, there are
significantly fewer issues related to
special structural issues potentially
affecting roof configuration and roof
strength for multipurpose vehicles and
buses than for trucks which may have
more specialized and customized
uses.58
Second, these vehicles transport
passengers, not property. While we are
concerned about the safety of occupants
in all kinds of vehicles, there is a greater
safety concern about unnecessarily
excluding passenger vehicles, such as
15-passenger vans and small shuttle
buses from roof strength requirements,
given the number of occupants.
NTEA is correct that current IVDs do
not provide a Type I or Type II
statement regarding FMVSS No. 220,
School Bus Rollover Protection. The
Type 3 statements for Ford and GM
cutaway chassis used for school buses
are reasonable given the fact that these
incomplete vehicles do include
occupant compartment structures.
School bus manufacturers using these
chassis provide their own occupant
compartment structures, and have long
certified their vehicles to FMVSS No.
220.
As we noted in the NPRM, several
states already require ‘‘para-transit’’ vans
and other buses, which are typically
manufactured in multiple stages, to
comply with the roof crush
requirements of FMVSS No. 220.
Moreover, the RVIA endorsed the
agency’s proposal. Recreational
vehicles, including motorhomes, are
used to transport passengers, not
property, and are commonly built on
stripped chassis. The RVIA stated that
several thousand of the smallest motor
homes produced each year would be
subject to the proposed rule and that
virtually all of the affected vehicles are
manufactured in two or more stages.
RVIA stated that NHTSA rightly
acknowledged that the requirements of
FMVSS No. 220 appear to offer a
reasonable avenue to balance the desire
to respond to the needs of multi-stage
manufacturers and the need to increase
safety in rollover crashes.
While NTEA claimed that the cited
State laws are not good evidence that
final-stage manufacturers in fact are able
to confirm compliance of vehicles with
FMVSS No. 220, it did not provide
reasons for us to doubt manufacturer
58 On a related note, as to school buses, NTEA has
recognized that these vehicles are produced in
relatively large production runs of similarly
configured vehicles, and that Ford and GM provide
guidance. NTEA stated that it expressed no view as
to the practicability of FMVSS No. 220 for currently
affected manufacturers.
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17603
claims that their vehicles meet these
requirements. We also note that the
Ambulance Manufacturers Association
of NTEA adopted a standard, AMD
Standard No. 001, with a test based on
FMVSS No. 220. AMD Standard No.
001, Ambulance Body Structure Static
Load Test, is issued by the Ambulance
Manufacturers Association of NTEA.
The purpose of that standard is to
demonstrate the static strength of the
patient compartment of an ambulance
when subjected to a uniform load.
NTEA stated that an ambulance
manufacturer recently had three units
tested at a cost of $40,000, i.e., an
amount slightly over $13,000 each.
NTEA stated that ambulances are unlike
most multi-stage vehicles in that most
manufacturers produce a small number
of models that require only limited
alterations to meet specific customer
needs and that, as a result, these testing
costs, while still significant, can be
allocated over multiple vehicle sales.
A limited internet search reveals that
many manufacturers, including alterers,
advertise that various mobility, paratransit and other vehicles meet the
requirements of FMVSS No. 220.59
For example:
• National Van sells wheelchair vans/
ambulettes with modified roofs that are
said to be FMVSS No. 220 School Bus
Rollover certified.60 These can be built
on the Ford E–150 chassis.
• New England Wheels sells a
Municipal Transporter that has a 30″
raised transporter roof with a FMVSS
No. 220 certified roll cage. New England
Wheels also sells a Ford E–250 Van with
an 18″ Executive Raised Roof w/FMVSS
220 Certified Roll Cage.61
• Accubilt sells a shuttle van with an
8,600 lbs GVWR that has an ‘‘exclusive
tubular steel roll cage (FMVSS
certified).’’ 62
• MobilityWorks of Akron, Ohio
advertises that ‘‘[a]ll MobilityWorks
vehicles meet or exceed the
requirements set forth for vehicles of
gross weight less than 10,000 lbs.’’ for
the FMVSS No. 220 load test.63
59 In some cases, the manufacturer indicates that
a vehicle is ‘‘certified’’ to meet FMVSS No. 220. We
note that unless an FMVSS applies to a vehicle, it
cannot be certified to the FMVSS for purposes of
the Vehicle Safety Act.
60 https://www.nationalvans.com/models/
wheelchair_vans.html (last accessed on January 17,
2010).
61 https://www.newenglandwheels.com/
commercial-vans/municipal-transporter.html (last
accessed on January 17, 2010).
62 https://www.accubuiltmobility.com/
shuttle_specs.html (last accessed on January 17,
2010).
63 https://www.mobilityworks.com/Commercial/
Commercial-Van-AboutUs.php (last accessed on
January 17, 2010).
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• Mid America Coach of Kansas City,
MO, sells full-size wheelchair vans with
a FMVSS No. 220 roll cage.64
• Safety Vans, LLC, of Hagerstown,
MD, sells vans with reinforced roofs for
which ‘‘[r]oof load tests (FMVSS 220
compliant) demonstrate how the
SafetyVan, under the weight of nearly 6
tons, is still capable of allowing access
into and egress from the passenger
area!’’ 65 According to the company,
standard features for these vans include
them being built on GM’s Model CG
33706—Express/Savanna: Pass. Van Ext.
3500, 9,600 GVW.66
Furthermore, the agency conducted a
FMVSS No. 220 roof strength test on a
Roadtrek Class B MPV motorhome (Test
No. 693) with a GVWR of 3,901 kg
(8,600 pounds). The motorhome was
built on a General Motors incomplete
vehicle van body where the multi-stage
manufacturer added a raised fiberglass
roof to the body. The results of the test
showed the vehicle met the 1.5 SWR
required under the standard within 130
mm (5.125 inches) of displacement of
the load application plate. The test
illustrated that it is practicable for
multi-stage vehicles with a raised or
altered roof and with a GVWR greater
than 2,722 kg (6,000 pounds) but less
than 4,536 kilograms (10,000 pounds),
to conform to the requirements of
FMVSS No. 220 as an option.
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G. There Is Little Cost for Multi-Stage
Manufacturers To Comply With FMVSS
No. 216a
NTEA commented that in proposing
to upgrade FMVSS No. 216, the agency
ignored more than 20 million dollars in
compliance tests primarily placed on
small businesses. That organization
stated that there are at least 1,085
identifiable vehicle configurations in
the affected weight category that would
require separate testing. NTEA
multiplied this figure by $5,000 per test
plus a vehicle value loss of $15,000,
resulting in a total of $21,700,000. The
1,085 vehicle configuration number
included 798 that were based on
chassis-cabs.67
These cost projections are grossly
exaggerated. As indicated above, testing,
as provided in a FMVSS, is not required
as a matter of law to certify a vehicle.
64 https://www.midamericacoach.com/category/
full-size-wheelchair-vans (last accessed on January
17, 2010).
65 https://www.safetyvans.com/ (last
accessed on January 17, 2010).
66 https://www.safetyvans.com/specs.html (last
accessed on January 17, 2010).
67 NTEA stated that there are 42 chassis-cab
models in the affected weight category that could
accommodate 19 different body and/or equipment
configurations. Multiplying 42 by 19 results in the
798 number.
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A manufacturer may choose any valid
means of evaluating its products to
determine whether the vehicle or
equipment will comply with the safety
standards when tested by the agency
according to the procedures specified in
the standard and to provide a basis for
its certification of compliance.
NTEA’s projected costs assume,
inaccurately, that pass-through
certification is not available for any of
its member’s vehicles, and, that they, as
final-stage manufacturers, will need to
conduct testing for these vehicles.
However, for the reasons discussed
earlier, final-stage manufacturers will be
able to rely on the IVDs for vehicles
built using chassis-cabs or incomplete
vehicles with a full exterior van body.
They will be able to certify their
vehicles using pass-through and
engineering judgment and will not need
to incur testing costs for these vehicles.
Moreover, the agency did not adopt
the proposal in the NPRM to extend
FMVSS No. 216 to multi-stage trucks
with a GVWR greater than 2,722
kilograms (6,000 pounds) not built on a
chassis-cab and not built on an
incomplete vehicle with a full exterior
van body, e.g., those built using
cutaways and stripped chassis.
Therefore, there will not be any FMVSS
No. 216 compliance costs for these
vehicles.
As to other multi-stage vehicles, finalstage manufacturers will have the
option of certifying with the FMVSS No.
216 test or the FMVSS No. 220 test. The
FMVSS No. 220 test option will
minimize the costs of compliance for
these vehicles. As noted above, these
vehicles are used to transport
passengers. Various mobility, paratransit and other vehicles were also
being designed to meet the FMVSS No.
220 test prior to this rulemaking.
Models are produced in sufficient
quantities and do not vary such that
compliance tests would be required for
each variation. In light of the above, the
requirements are reasonable. Also, RVIA
supported this aspect of the proposal.
We also observe that new procedures
adopted by the agency in the 2005 and
2006 certification rules for applying for
temporary exemptions are available,
although we are not aware of any
specific situations in which they would
be needed.
H. Conclusion
While NTEA commented that the
proposed upgrade of FMVSS No. 216
would be impracticable for its members,
the final rule we adopted is not
impracticable for final-stage
manufacturers.
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Final-stage manufacturers that build
their vehicles using chassis-cabs will be
able to rely on pass-through
certification. A reasonable reading of the
provided IVDs demonstrates this, as
does the fact of the number of multistage vehicles on the road today that are
certified to comply with many FMVSSs.
In extending FVMSS No. 216 to heavier
light vehicles, we did not include trucks
other than those built using a chassiscab or incomplete vehicle with a full
exterior van body—a change from the
NPRM. Also, for multi-stage vehicles
other than those built using chassiscabs, NHTSA provided an alternative
test procedure that is used for school
buses and has also been used by a
number of States for para-transit buses.
Many manufacturers are already
building vehicles to this alternative.
Issued: April 2, 2010.
David L. Strickland,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2010–7907 Filed 4–6–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–59–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
49 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. NHTSA–2009–0093]
RIN 2127–AG51
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety
Standards; Roof Crush Resistance
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Final rule; correcting
amendment.
SUMMARY: In May 2009 we published a
final rule that upgraded the agency’s
safety standard on roof crush resistance.
In this document, we correct two errors
in that rule. We also identify errors in
the preamble to that rule.
DATES: This rule is effective May 7,
2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
non-legal issues, you may call
Christopher J. Wiacek, NHTSA Office of
Crashworthiness Standards, telephone
202–366–4801. For legal issues, you
may call J. Edward Glancy, NHTSA
Office of Chief Counsel, telephone 202–
366–2992. You may send mail to these
officials at the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., West Building,
Washington, DC 20590.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 66 (Wednesday, April 7, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 17590-17604]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-7907]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
49 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. NHTSA-2009-0093]
RIN 2127-AG51
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Roof Crush Resistance
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Final rule; further response to comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In May 2009, NHTSA published a final rule that upgraded the
agency's safety standard on roof crush resistance. This document
provides a further response to comments submitted by the National Truck
Equipment Association (NTEA) during that rulemaking.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For non-legal issues, you may call
Christopher J. Wiacek, NHTSA Office of Crashworthiness Standards,
telephone 202-366-4801. For legal issues, you may call J. Edward
Glancy, NHTSA Office of Chief Counsel, telephone 202-366-2992. You may
send mail to these officials at the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., West Building, Washington,
DC 20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Final Rule Upgrading FMVSS No. 216
B. Challenge by NTEA
C. Consent Motion To Stay Briefing Schedule
II. Today's Document and Related Actions
III. Multi-Stage Vehicles and the Multi-Stage Certification Scheme
A. Multi-Stage Vehicles
B. Safety Standards and Certification
C. 2005 and 2006 Final Rules on Certification of Vehicles Built
in Two or More Stages
IV. Multi-Stage Issues in the Rulemaking To Upgrade FMVSS No. 216
A. FMVSS No. 216 Prior to the Upgrade
B. The Proposed Rule
C. Public Comments
D. May 2009 Final Rule
V. Further Response to Comments Regarding Multi-Stage Vehicles
A. Introduction
B. The Current Certification Scheme Is Not an Unlawful
Delegation of Agency Authority
C. Current IVDs Concerning FMVSS No. 216 are Workable
D. Final-Stage Manufacturers Can Certify Their Vehicles Built on
Chassis-Cabs as Being Compliant With FMVSS No. 216a
E. In General, IVDs Are Workable
F. NHTSA Provided a Testing Alternative, FMVSS No. 220
G. There Is Little Cost for Multi-Stage Manufacturers To Comply
With FMVSS No. 216a
H. Conclusion
I. Background
A. Final Rule Upgrading FMVSS No. 216
On May 12, 2009, as part of a comprehensive plan for reducing the
serious risk of rollover crashes and the risk of death and serious
injury in those crashes, NHTSA published in the Federal Register (74 FR
22348) a final rule substantially upgrading Federal Motor Vehicle
Safety Standard (FMVSS) No. 216, Roof Crush Resistance. The upgraded
standard is designated FMVSS No. 216a.
First, for the vehicles previously subject to the standard, i.e.,
passenger cars and multipurpose passenger vehicles, trucks and buses
with a Gross Vehicle Weight Rating (GVWR) of 2,722 kilograms (6,000
pounds) or less, the rule doubled the amount of force the vehicle's
roof structure must withstand in the specified test, from 1.5 times the
vehicle's unloaded weight to 3.0 times the vehicle's unloaded weight.
We note that this value is sometimes referred to as the strength-to-
weight ratio (SWR), e.g., a SWR of 1.5, 2.0, 2.5, and so forth.
Second, the rule extended the applicability of the standard so that
it will also apply to vehicles with a GVWR greater than 2,722 kilograms
(6,000 pounds), but not greater than 4,536 kilograms (10,000 pounds).
The rule established a force requirement of 1.5 times the vehicle's
unloaded weight for these newly included vehicles.
Third, the rule required all of the above vehicles to meet the
specified force requirements in a two-sided test, instead of a single-
sided test. For the two-sided test, the same vehicle must meet the
force requirements when tested first on one side and then on the other
side of the vehicle.
Fourth, the rule established a new requirement for maintenance of
headroom, i.e., survival space, during testing in addition to the
existing limit on the amount of roof crush. The rule also included a
number of special provisions, including ones related to leadtime, to
address the needs of multi-stage manufacturers, alterers, and small
volume manufacturers.
B. Challenge by NTEA
NTEA filed a petition for review of the May 2009 final rule in the
United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. That organization
had submitted comments during the rulemaking opposing the agency's
proposed revisions with respect to multi-stage vehicles.
C. Consent Motion To Stay Briefing Schedule
NHTSA filed with the Court a motion for a stay of the briefing
schedule. The agency stated that it believed the Court's consideration
of the challenge by NTEA would be facilitated by a fuller response to
the comments that organization had submitted during the rulemaking,
which would permit both NTEA and the Court to more fully address the
agency's rationale. NHTSA also noted that petitions for reconsideration
of the rule were pending before the agency. NTEA consented to the
motion and the Court granted a six-month stay of the briefing schedule
on October 2, 2009.
II. Today's Document and Related Actions
In this document, we provide a fuller response to comments
submitted by NTEA on our proposal to upgrade FMVSS No. 216.
We are also publishing two separate documents related to the May
2009 final rule. One is a response to petitions for reconsideration of
that rule. The other is a correcting rule. The correcting rule
incorporates a provision that was discussed in the preamble but
inadvertently omitted from the regulatory text. As explained in the
preamble, the agency decided to
[[Page 17591]]
exclude a narrow category of multi-stage vehicles from FMVSS No. 216
altogether, multi-stage trucks with a GVWR greater than 2,722 kilograms
(6,000 pounds) not built on either a chassis-cab or an incomplete
vehicle with a full exterior van body. The regulatory text
inadvertently omitted the reference to incomplete vehicles with a full
exterior van body.
III. Multi-Stage Vehicles and the Multi-Stage Certification Scheme
A. Multi-Stage Vehicles
Multi-stage vehicles are motor vehicles that are produced in two or
more stages. These vehicles are not produced by a single manufacturer
on an assembly line as is the typical passenger car or sport utility
vehicle. Instead, one manufacturer produces an ``incomplete vehicle''
which requires further manufacturing operations to become a completed
vehicle. As defined in 49 CFR 567.3, an incomplete vehicle is an
assemblage consisting, at a minimum, of chassis (including the frame)
structure, power train, steering system, suspension system, and braking
system, in the state that those systems are to be part of the completed
vehicle, but requires further manufacturing operations to become a
completed vehicle.\1\
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\1\ The definition of ``incomplete vehicle'' also includes
incomplete trailers.
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Most incomplete vehicles are manufactured by large manufacturers,
such as General Motors, Ford and Chrysler. Most final-stage
manufacturers are small businesses.\2\ Multi-stage vehicles are aimed
at a variety of niche markets, most of which are too small to be
serviced economically by single stage manufacturers.
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\2\ As defined by The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended, 5 U.S.C. 601(3).
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In terms of degree of completeness, the spectrum of incomplete
vehicles ranges from a stripped chassis, i.e., an incomplete vehicle
without an occupant compartment, to a chassis-cab. As defined in 49 CFR
567.3, a chassis-cab is an incomplete vehicle, with a completed
occupant compartment, that requires only the addition of cargo-
carrying, work-performing, or load-bearing components to perform its
intended functions. A type of incomplete vehicle that falls between
stripped chassis and chassis-cabs on this spectrum is a chassis
cutaway, which is an incomplete vehicle delivered with a partial
occupant compartment that does not have a rear wall.
In a typical situation, the incomplete vehicle is delivered to the
final-stage manufacturer which adds work-performing or cargo-carrying
components to complete the vehicle. For example, the incomplete vehicle
may be a chassis-cab, i.e., have a cab, but nothing built on the frame
behind the cab. As completed, it may be a dry freight van (box truck),
dump truck, tow truck, or plumber's truck. In some cases, there may
also be intermediate stage manufacturers involved in the production of
a multi-stage motor vehicle.
B. Safety Standards and Certification
NHTSA issues Federal motor vehicle safety standards applicable to
the manufacture and sale of new motor vehicles and certain items of
motor vehicle equipment under the authority of the National Traffic and
Motor Vehicle Safety Act, as amended, codified as Chapter 301 of Title
49 of the United States Code, ``Motor Vehicle Safety'' (Vehicle Safety
Act).\3\ The agency does not provide approvals of motor vehicles or
equipment. Instead, the Vehicle Safety Act establishes a ``self-
certification'' process under which each manufacturer is responsible
for certifying that its products meet all applicable safety
standards.\4\
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\3\ 49 U.S.C. 30101 et seq.
\4\ 49 U.S.C. 30112(a) and 30115.
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Each of NHTSA's safety standards specifies the test conditions and
procedures that the agency will use to evaluate the performance of the
vehicle or equipment being tested for compliance with the particular
safety standard. NHTSA follows these specified test procedures and
conditions when conducting its compliance testing. However,
manufacturers are not required to test their products in the manner
specified in the relevant safety standard, or even to test the product
at all, as their basis for certifying that the product complies with
all relevant standards.
A manufacturer may evaluate its products in various ways to
determine whether the vehicle or equipment will comply with the safety
standards when tested by the agency according to the procedures
specified in the standard and to provide a basis for its certification
of compliance. Depending on the circumstances, the manufacturer may be
able to base its certification on actual testing (according to the
procedure specified in the standard or some other procedure), computer
simulation, engineering analysis, engineering judgment or other
means.\5\
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\5\ See 71 FR 28183-28184.
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All motor vehicles, whether single stage or multi-stage, must be
certified to meet applicable FMVSSs.\6\ NHTSA has developed specific
certification regulations for multi-stage vehicles. The certification
process is governed by 49 CFR part 567 Certification. 49 CFR 567.5 sets
forth the certification requirements for manufacturers of vehicles
manufactured in two or more stages. Certification responsibilities for
the applicable FMVSSs are communicated between manufacturers with the
use of an incomplete vehicle document (IVD). With limited exceptions,
\7\each manufacturer of an incomplete vehicle and each intermediate
manufacturer \8\ assumes legal responsibility for all certification-
related duties under the Vehicle Safety Act with respect to:
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\6\ 49 U.S.C. 30112(a) and 30115.
\7\ See 70 FR at 7432-33, 49 CFR 567.5(b) and (c).
\8\ In the remainder of the preamble, NHTSA will not discuss
intermediate manufacturers separately.
(i) Components and systems it installs or supplies for
installation on the incomplete vehicle, unless changed by a
subsequent manufacturer;
(ii) The vehicle as further manufactured or completed by an
intermediate or final-stage manufacturer, to the extent that the
vehicle is completed in accordance with the IVD; and
(iii) The accuracy of the information contained in the IVD.\9\
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\9\ 49 CFR 567.5(b)(1).
Final-stage manufacturers have complementary duties. Pursuant to 49
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CFR 567.5(d), final-stage manufacturers assume
legal responsibility for all certification-related duties and
liabilities under the Vehicle Safety Act, except to the extent that
the incomplete vehicle manufacturer or an intermediate manufacturer
has provided equipment subject to a safety standard or expressly
assumed responsibility for standards related to systems and
components it supplied and except to the extent that the final-stage
manufacturer completed the vehicle in accordance with the prior
manufacturers' IVD or any addendum furnished pursuant to 49 CFR part
568, as to the Federal motor vehicle safety standards fully
addressed therein.\10\
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\10\ 49 CFR 567.5(d)(1).
Final-stage manufacturers also have the duty to affix a
certification label to each vehicle in a manner that does not obscure
labels affixed by previous stage manufacturers and that, among other
things, contains certification statements.\11\ The final-stage
manufacturer may make one of the following alternative certification
statements: (1) The vehicle conforms to all applicable FMVSS; (2) the
vehicle was completed in accordance with the prior manufacturers' IVD
where applicable and conforms to all applicable FMVSS; or (3) the
vehicle
[[Page 17592]]
was completed in accordance with the prior manufacturers' IVD where
applicable except for certain listed exceptions by FMVSS and the
vehicle conforms to all applicable FMVSS.\12\
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\11\ 49 CFR 567.5(d)(2).
\12\ 49 CFR 567.5(d)(2)(v)(A).
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As reflected above, the incomplete vehicle manufacturer furnishes
an IVD for incomplete vehicles pursuant to 49 CFR 568.4. For each
applicable FMVSS, the incomplete vehicle manufacturer makes one of
three affirmative statements in the IVD: (1) a Type 1 statement that
the vehicle when completed will conform to the standard if no
alterations are made in identified components (this representation is
most often made with respect to chassis-cabs since, as indicated
earlier, they have a completed occupant compartment); (2) a Type 2
statement that sets forth the specific conditions of final manufacture
under which the incomplete vehicle manufacturer specifies that the
completed vehicle will conform to the standard (e.g., the vehicle, when
completed, will meet the brake standard if it does not exceed gross
axle weight ratings, the center of gravity at a specific vehicle weight
rating is not above a certain height and no alterations are made to any
brake system component on the incomplete vehicle); or (3) a Type 3
statement that conformity to the standard cannot be determined based on
the incomplete vehicle as supplied, and the incomplete vehicle
manufacturer makes no representation as to conformity with the standard
(e.g., when components and systems must be added by the final-stage
manufacturer and compliance cannot be decided at the time the
incomplete vehicle leaves the incomplete vehicle manufacturer).
When the IVD makes a Type 1 or Type 2 statement, there is ``pass-
through'' certification unless obviated by a subsequent manufacturer.
The final-stage manufacturer can rely on the IVD to certify the vehicle
to a particular standard.
Multi-stage vehicle manufacturers sometimes ``alter'' a vehicle to
the end-users' specifications. An altered vehicle is one that is
completed and certified in accordance with the agency's regulations and
then altered before the first retail sale of the vehicle, in such a
manner as may affect the vehicle's compliance with one or more FMVSS or
the validity of the vehicle's stated weight ratings or vehicle type
classification. This definition does not include the addition,
substitution, or removal of readily attachable components, such as
mirrors or tire and rim assemblies, or by minor finishing operations
such as painting. The person which performs such operations on a
completed vehicle is referred to as a vehicle ``alterer.'' An alterer
must certify that the vehicle remains in compliance with all applicable
FMVSS affected by the alteration.
C. 2005 and 2006 Final Rules on Certification of Vehicles Built in Two
or More Stages
On February 14, 2005, NHTSA published in the Federal Register (70
FR 7414) a final rule amending four different parts of Title 49 to
address various certification issues related to vehicles built in two
or more stages and, to a lesser degree, to altered vehicles. Among
other things, the rule allowed the use of pass-through certification so
that it can be used not only for multi-stage vehicles based on chassis-
cabs, but also for those based on other types of incomplete vehicles.
In the preamble to the February 2005 final rule, and in other
documents in that rulemaking, NHTSA discussed the history of issues
related to the certification of vehicles built in two or more stages,
which have long been sources of contention within the affected industry
and before the agency and the courts.
Since 1977, NHTSA's regulations for certification of multi-stage
vehicles have contained provisions for certification statements by
chassis-cab manufacturers.\13\ In 1990, the United States Court of
Appeals for the Sixth Circuit ruled in National Truck and Equipment
Ass'n v. NHTSA, 919 F.2d 1148 (6th Cir. 1990), that the requirements of
a particular FMVSS were impracticable for final-stage manufacturers
using vehicles other than chassis-cabs for which the incomplete vehicle
manufacturer was not required to provide ``pass-through''
certification. That decision led to rulemaking that ultimately resulted
in the February 2005 multi-stage certification final rule.
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\13\ 49 CFR 567.5 (1977 and 1978). See 42 FR 37814 (July 25,
1977).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NTEA petitioned for reconsideration of the February 2005 multi-
stage certification final rule. NHTSA responded to that organization's
petition in a final rule; response to petition for reconsideration
published in the Federal Register (71 FR 28168) on May 15, 2006. While
the agency made some changes in the February 2005 final rule in
response to the petition, it denied the remainder of the petition for
reconsideration that addressed issues regarding certification of multi-
stage vehicles and responsibility for recalls of multi-stage vehicles.
In its petition for reconsideration of the February 2005
certification final rule, NTEA challenged the regulatory scheme of
certifying multi-stage vehicles.\14\ It claimed, among other things,
that the provided IVDs are unworkable, insufficient, and that it is not
possible for a final-stage manufacturer to comply with the agency's
multi-stage certification regulations. Furthermore, NTEA argued that
even if compliance were possible, it would be economically ruinous to
NTEA's members.
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\14\ We note that NTEA submitted its comments on NHTSA's notice
of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) to upgrade the roof crush resistance
standard in November 2005. Those comments, which addressed a number
of multi-stage issues, were thus submitted after the agency had
published its February 2005 final rule on certification of multi-
stage vehicles but before NHTSA responded to NTEA's petition for
reconsideration of the certification rule.
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In denying most aspects of NTEA's petition for reconsideration,
NHTSA provided specific and detailed responses to these and other
relevant arguments. We explained that certification is important for
safety and that the certification scheme is ``workable.''
We stated that in recognition of the fact that incomplete vehicle
manufacturers do not control work performed by final-stage
manufacturers and can fairly anticipate only some things, but not
everything done by final-stage manufacturers, the regulatory system of
``pass-through'' certification is reasonable. The IVD provides the
basis for the final-stage manufacturer's certification with enumerated
FMVSS, on various conditions, including, for example, that the final-
stage manufacturer does not exceed the GVWR of the chassis or introduce
modifications to the incomplete vehicle that interfere with compliance.
As we explained, the IVD is a general document that accompanies the
incomplete vehicle. IVDs are typically not limited to one application
(one body or type of equipment), but contain limits and conditions in
light of the nature and capacity of the chassis and potential problems
resulting from completion of an incomplete vehicle. Final-stage
manufacturers are informed, by the IVD, of components and systems that
should not be altered, and, by following those instructions and other
information from the incomplete vehicle manufacturer, they are able to
certify.
Overall, NTEA sought to remove the certification responsibility
from final-stage manufacturers and impose much of that responsibility
on incomplete vehicle manufacturers. NTEA's petition ignored the fact
that incomplete vehicle
[[Page 17593]]
manufacturers do not control what final-stage manufacturers do with the
incomplete vehicles.
As we noted, a system of pass-through certification has existed for
more than 25 years, and in that time many multi-stage vehicles have
been built and certified by final-stage manufacturers. This fact alone
indicates that the system is workable and operates as intended.
Moreover, as we pointed out, the availability of multi-stage vehicles
belies NTEA's position,\15\ and, contrary to that petitioner's
position, market forces create business reasons for incomplete vehicle
manufacturers to provide workable IVDs. We noted that NTEA's argument
ignores the fact that the system is not broken--many types of multi-
stage vehicles are being manufactured and offered for sale, including
those manufactured by NTEA members. These include ambulances, service
trucks, small school buses, mid-size buses, tow trucks and vans.\16\
The fact that vehicles such as these are being made indicates that the
IVDs are workable. We also noted that NTEA ignored the cooperative
relationships between incomplete and final-stage manufacturers.\17\
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\15\ 71 FR at 28176 (section titled ``The Availability of Multi-
stage Vehicles Belies NTEA's Position'') and at 28184-85 (section
titled ``NHTSA's Market Forces Argument Is Justified and Consistent
With the Multi-stage Vehicle Market'').
\16\ See, e.g., https://www.ntea.com/mr/divisions.asp.
\17\ We cited the example of General Motors' relationships with
final-stage manufacturers it refers to as Special Vehicle
Manufacturers. 71 FR at 28185.
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In our May 2006 response to petitions, we explained that
certification serves an important safety function in the multi-stage
vehicle business. Many multi-stage vehicles carry people and important
cargo--from schoolchildren on school buses to liquid fuel on propane
and gasoline trucks. The safety need for certification of compliance
with FMVSS in these types of vehicles is uncontroverted.\18\
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\18\ 71 FR at 28176; See also 71 FR at 28175.
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As part of responding to NTEA's claim in its petition to the 2005
Rule that the existing IVD's are not workable, we carefully examined
the certification statements included in an IVD that NTEA appended to
its petition.\19\ The IVD was for the General Motors (GM) CK chassis-
cab. We analyzed certification statements for FMVSS Nos. 105, Hydraulic
and Electric Brake Systems; 135, Light Vehicle Brake Systems; 204,
Steering Control Rearward Displacement; 201, Occupant Protection in
Interior Impact; 212, Windshield Mounting; 219, Windshield Zone
Intrusion; 214, Side Impact Protection; 208, Occupant Crash Protection;
216, Roof Crush Resistance; and 301, Fuel System Integrity. In each
instance, we showed why the IVD was workable and why various
limitations were reasonable.
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\19\ 71 FR at 28177-28183 (section titled ``The Existing IVDs
Are Workable).
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We also explained that many resources are available to final-stage
manufacturers.\20\ As a group, final-stage manufacturers do not operate
in an informational vacuum. In addition to the IVDs, these resources
include upfitter \21\ guides from incomplete vehicle manufacturers,
incomplete vehicle manufacturer help lines, the final-stage
manufacturers' own experience and judgment, and commercially available
software.
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\20\ 71 FR 28183-28184 (section titled ``Additional Resources
Available to Final-Stage Manufacturers'').
\21\ Final-stage manufacturers are sometimes referred to as
upfitters in the trade.
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We also explained that issues regarding impracticability should be
decided in the context of rulemaking for each FMVSS.\22\
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\22\ 71 FR 28186.
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IV. Multi-Stage Issues in the Rulemaking To Upgrade FMVSS No. 216
A. FMVSS No. 216 Prior to the Upgrade
FMVSS No. 216 seeks to reduce deaths and serious injuries resulting
from the roof of a vehicle being crushed and pushed into the occupant
compartment when the roof strikes the ground during rollover crashes.
Prior to the upgrade, the standard required that when a large steel
test plate (sometimes referred to as a platen) is placed in contact
with either side of the forward edge of the roof of a vehicle and then
pressed downward, simulating contact of the roof with the ground during
a rollover crash, with steadily increasing force until a force
equivalent to 1.5 times the unloaded weight of the vehicle is reached,
the distance that the test plate has moved from the point of contact
must not exceed 127 mm (5 inches). The criterion of the test plate not
being permitted to move more than a specified amount is sometimes
referred to as the ``platen travel'' criterion. The application of
force was limited to 22,240 Newtons (5,000 pounds) for passenger cars,
even if the unloaded weight of the car times 1.5 is greater than that
amount.
Since 1991, this standard applied to passenger cars, multipurpose
passenger vehicles (MPVs), trucks, and buses with a GVWR of 2,722
kilograms (6,000 pounds) or less.\23\ Compliance with the final rule
was required on September 1, 1994. Therefore, FMVSS No. 216 has applied
to some multi-stage vehicles, e.g., certain small trucks and small
recreation vehicles, since 1994.\24\
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\23\ 56 FR 15510.
\24\ GM has sold an incomplete vehicle chassis-cab, the GMT-355,
that has a GVWR of 2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds) or less and is
therefore subject to FMVSS No. 216. This chassis-cab is based on the
Chevrolet Colorado/GMC Canyon. Final-stage manufacturers can certify
completed vehicles by using the IVD for the GMT 355.
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B. The Proposed Rule
1. NPRM and SNPRM in General
On August 23, 2005, NHTSA published in the Federal Register (70 FR
49223) a NPRM to upgrade FMVSS No. 216, Roof Crush Resistance.\25\ The
NPRM reflected comments received in response to a Request for Comments
(``RFC'') published in the Federal Register (66 FR 53376) on October
22, 2001, and research and testing conducted prior to the publication
of the RFC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Docket No. NHTSA-2005-22143.
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To better address fatalities and injuries occurring in roof-
involved rollover crashes, we proposed to extend the application of the
standard to vehicles with a GVWR of up to 4,536 kilograms (10,000
pounds), and to strengthen the requirements of FMVSS No. 216 by
mandating that the vehicle roof structures withstand a force equivalent
to 2.5 times the unloaded vehicle weight (``SWR''), and to eliminate
the 22,240 Newton (5,000 pound) force limit for passenger cars. We note
that shortly before the NPRM was published, Congress enacted the Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy
for Users (SAFETEA-LU), which included a specific requirement for us to
upgrade FMVSS No. 216 relating to roof strength for driver and
passenger sides for motor vehicles with a GVWR of not more than 4,536
kilograms (10,000 pounds).
Further, in recognition of the fact that the pre-test distance
between the interior surface of the roof and a given occupant's head
varies from vehicle model to vehicle model, we proposed to regulate
roof strength by requiring that the crush not exceed the available
headroom. Under the proposal, this requirement would replace the
current limit on platen travel.
We also proposed to:
Allow vehicles manufactured in two or more stages, other
than chassis-cabs, to be certified to the roof crush requirements of
FMVSS No. 220, School Bus Rollover Protection, instead of FMVSS No.
216.
Clarify the definition and scope of exclusion for
convertibles.
[[Page 17594]]
Revise the vehicle tie-down procedure to minimize
variability in testing.
On January 30, 2008, NHTSA published in the Federal Register (73 FR
5484) a supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking (SNPRM) for our
ongoing roof crush resistance rulemaking.\26\ In that document, we
asked for public comment on a number of issues that might affect the
content of the final rule, including possible variations in the
proposed requirements. We also announced the release of the results of
various vehicle tests conducted since the proposal.
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\26\ Docket No. NHTSA-2008-0015.
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2. Multi-Stage Issues
In our August 2005 NPRM to upgrade FMVSS No. 216, we included a
section titled ``Vehicles Manufactured in Two or More Stages.'' \27\
For vehicles manufactured in two or more stages, other than vehicles
incorporating chassis-cabs, we proposed to give manufacturers the
option of certifying to either the existing roof crush requirements of
FMVSS No. 220, School Bus Rollover Protection, or the new roof crush
requirements of FMVSS No. 216. FMVSS No. 220 uses a horizontal plate,
instead of the angled plate of Standard No. 216.
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\27\ 70 FR 49234-49235.
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In developing our proposal, we considered whether the proposed
standard would be appropriate for the type of motor vehicle for which
it would be prescribed. We stated that we believed it was appropriate
to consider incomplete vehicles, other than those incorporating
chassis-cabs, as a vehicle type subject to different regulatory
requirements. We anticipated that final-stage manufacturers using
chassis-cabs to produce multi-stage vehicles would be in position to
take advantage of ``pass-through certification'' of chassis-cabs, and
therefore did not believe the option of alternative compliance with
FMVSS No. 220 was appropriate.
We noted that while we believed that the requirements in FMVSS No.
220 have been effective for school buses, we were concerned that they
may not be as effective for other vehicle types. The FMVSS No. 216 test
procedure results in roof deformations that are consistent with the
observed crush patterns in the real world for light vehicles. Because
of this, we explained that our preference would be to use the FMVSS No.
216 test procedure for light vehicles. We believed, however, that this
approach would fail to consider the practicability problems and special
issues for multi-stage manufacturers.
We stated that in these circumstances, we believed that the
requirements of FMVSS No. 220 appeared to offer a reasonable avenue to
balance the desire to respond to the needs of multi-stage manufacturers
and the need to increase safety in rollover crashes. We noted that
several states already require ``para-transit'' vans and other buses,
which are typically manufactured in multiple stages, to comply with the
roof crush requirements of FMVSS No. 220.\28\ We tentatively concluded
that these state requirements show the burden on multi-stage
manufacturers for evaluating roof strength in accordance with FMVSS No.
220 is not unreasonable, and applying FMVSS No. 220 to these vehicles
would ensure that there are some requirements for roof crush protection
where none currently exist.
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\28\ These states include Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Wisconsin,
Tennessee, Michigan, Utah, Alabama, and California.
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C. Public Comments
We received comments concerning requirements for multi-stage and
altered vehicles from Advocates for Highway Safety (``Advocates''),
NTEA, National Mobility Equipment Dealers Association (NMEDA) and
Recreational Vehicle Industry Association (RVIA).
1. Overview of Comments on Multi-Stage Issues
Advocates stated that it opposed permitting FMVSS No. 220 as an
alternative for multi-stage vehicles. It claimed that FMVSS No. 220 is
a ``weak'' standard whose effects on roof strength in actual rollover
crashes are mostly unknown.
NTEA recommended that all multi-stage vehicles be excluded from
roof crush resistance requirements. It stated that manufacturers of
non-chassis-cab vehicles will not be able to conduct the tests or
perform engineering analysis to ensure conformance to FMVSS No. 220.
NTEA also disagreed with the assumption that the presence of State
requirements for FMVSS No. 220 compliance demonstrates that final-stage
manufacturers can actually comply.
NTEA also stated it is impractical for the agency to assume
manufacturers of multi-stage vehicles built on chassis-cabs will be
able to rely on IVDs to provide pass-through certification for
compliance as it relates to roof strength. It argued that the final-
stage manufacturer would therefore be responsible for conducting costly
analyses and testing to verify compliance with FMVSS No. 216.
NMEDA expressed concern that the FMVSS No. 220 option would only be
available for multi-stage vehicles. It asked that the FMVSS No. 220
option be extended to raised or altered roof vehicles. To encompass the
modifiers in the proposed upgrade to FMVSS No. 216, NMEDA asked that a
vehicle roof that is altered after first retail sale be considered in
compliance if it meets the requirements of FMVSS No. 216 or FMVSS No.
220. NMEDA also stated that raising a roof increases the available
headroom and that the roof therefore can crush more before there is any
contact with an occupant's head. NMEDA requested the agency account for
the additional headroom beyond the original vehicle's headroom in
establishing any requirement.
RVIA supported our proposal to permit FMVSS No. 220 as an option
for small motor homes as this would allow manufacturers to address the
unique issues concerning such specialized vehicles built in two or more
stages.
2. Detailed Summary of NTEA Comments
NTEA stated that NHTSA incorrectly assumes that final-stage
manufacturers of vehicles built on chassis-cabs will be able to use
pass-through certification as a means to comply with the rule.
According to NTEA, NHTSA acknowledged certification problems faced by
final-stage manufacturers with respect to safety standards that are
based on the performance of a vehicle in a dynamic test. NTEA stated
that in the preamble to the proposed rule to upgrade FMVSS No. 216,
NHTSA made several references to the compliance difficulties and
compliance issues faced by final-stage manufacturers, but without any
explanation of the root cause of those problems. NTEA said the proposed
standard is a dynamic test standard. NTEA stated that in the rulemaking
revising certification regulations for multi-stage vehicles, NHTSA
concluded that the cost of dynamic vehicle testing is a legitimate
concern when relatively small numbers of similarly configured vehicles
are produced by a small manufacturer. NTEA stated that the agency also
noted that alternative means of compliance such as computer modeling
are not appreciably more affordable for small volume manufacturing.
According to NTEA, under these circumstances, no company could
incur the costs of performing the tests described in the proposed rule
(or in any other dynamic test standard). NTEA stated that the multi-
stage manufacturers, for the most part, do not produce any standard
models. The
[[Page 17595]]
overwhelming majority of multi-stage vehicles are produced to end-user
specifications on a custom-order basis reflecting specifications
provided by the customer.
NTEA argument that an FMVSS is not practicable if the only means of
compliance offered in the Standard is the use of pass-through
certification.
NTEA argued that an FMVSS is not practicable if the only means of
compliance offered in the Standard is the use of pass-through
certification. It noted that the Vehicle Safety Act at 49 U.S.C.
30111(a) states that each FMVSS must ``be practicable, meet the need
for motor vehicle safety, and be stated in objective terms.'' NTEA
cited the 1990 NTEA case, and stated that the Sixth Circuit ruled that
``for a standard to be practicable, it must offer in the body of the
standard, a means for all subject to the standard to prove
compliance.'' \29\
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\29\ NTEA comment to the NPRM at p. 5, quoting NTEA decision,
919 F.2d at 1153.
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NTEA stated that NHTSA anticipates that final-stage manufacturers
will be able to pass-through, and thereby rely on, the conformity
statements provided by the chassis-cab manufacturers in IVDs. NTEA
stated there is no requirement in NHTSA's regulations that compels an
incomplete vehicle manufacturer to provide the type of conformity
statement as to any safety standard that would facilitate pass-through
opportunities for the final-stage manufacturer. That organization said
that the chassis-cab manufacturer has absolute discretion whether to
provide a Type 1, Type 2, or Type 3 statement.
NTEA said that NHTSA apparently believes market forces will cause
chassis-cab manufacturers to provide reasonable compliance envelopes
when making conformity statements. NTEA cited the agency's multi-stage
vehicle certification rulemaking, and the petition for reconsideration
it submitted on the May 2005 final rule which, at that time, had not
yet been responded to by NHTSA. NTEA claimed that it demonstrated
through the submission of IVDs with its petition that NHTSA's market
forces theory is not supported by the IVDs that are provided by major
incomplete vehicle manufacturers. NTEA stated that those IVDs show that
incomplete vehicle manufacturers routinely provide Type 1 and Type 2
conformity statements that are so restrictive that they provide no
opportunity whatsoever for pass-through certification.
NTEA stated that if a chassis-cab manufacturer provides a Type 3
conformity statement, there is nothing to pass-through to the final-
stage manufacturer. It stated that if the chassis-cab manufacturer
provides a Type 1 conformity statement--i.e., one that states the
vehicle will conform to the standard if no alterations are made to
identified components in the vehicle--or if the manufacturer provides a
Type 2 conformity statement--i.e., one that sets out specific
conditions of final manufacture under which the vehicle would conform
to the test--then the final-stage manufacturer's ability to rely on (or
``pass-through'') the conformity statement depends entirely on whether
the vehicle can be completed by the final-stage manufacturer within the
parameters and limitations contained in the conformity statement. NTEA
stated that if the parameters and limitations are reasonable, then
there is some chance of pass-through, but if the parameters and
limitations are unreasonable (or if the stated conditions of conformity
are simply conservative as an engineering matter), pass-through will
not be possible.
NTEA also argued that incomplete vehicle manufacturers have strong
incentive to provide very narrow compliance envelopes, given
responsibilities set forth in the agency's certification regulation.
NTEA cited 49 CFR 567.5 and stated that the certification regulations
allocate to the incomplete vehicle manufacturer legal responsibility
for all components incorporated by a final-stage manufacturer (other
than defective components and systems) to the extent the vehicle is
completed in accordance with the instructions contained in the IVD,
while the regulations allocate to the final-stage manufacturer legal
responsibility for any work done by the final-stage manufacturer to
complete the vehicle that was not performed in accordance with
instruction contained in the IVD.
NTEA argued that in the context of pass-through certification, a
conformity statement in an IVD is a zero-sum game. It said that if the
final-stage manufacturer can complete the vehicle within the parameters
and conditions of the incomplete vehicle manufacturer's Type 1 or Type
2 conformity statement, the incomplete vehicle manufacturer bears legal
responsibility for compliance with the FMVSS in question; if the final-
stage manufacturer cannot complete the vehicle within the parameters of
the incomplete vehicle manufacturer's Type 1 or Type 2 conformity
statement, or if the incomplete vehicle manufacturer provides a Type 3
conformity statement, the final-stage manufacturer bears legal
responsibility for compliance with the subject FMVSS. NTEA stated that
the incomplete vehicle manufacturer's control over the type and text of
its conformity statements essentially gives it unfettered discretion to
allocate to itself or to the final-stage manufacturer the legal
responsibilities and liability for compliance with the safety standard,
and its decision is not subject to review or challenge because the
regulations do not require the incomplete vehicle manufacturer to be
reasonable or to act in good faith in crafting its conformity
statements. NTEA argued that this aspect of the certification scheme--
the ability of an interested private party to determine the legal
liability of another party with respect to a safety standard--amounts
to an impermissible delegation of NHTSA's statutory authority to a
private party. It cited several cases.\30\
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\30\ See NTEA comment at p. 8.
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NTEA argued that a safety standard cannot meet the statutory
requirement that it be practicable if the sole, plausible means of
compliance available to affected manufacturers is the use of pass-
through certification. It said that this is the case because that means
of compliance depends entirely on the actions of private parties (i.e.,
incomplete vehicle manufacturers) that are free to provide Type 3
statements as to any standard, and that are free to establish any
parameters and conditions they wish, reasonable or unreasonable, in any
Type 1 or Type 2 conformity statement. NTEA argued that the proposed
rule thus fails to meet the requirement of the 1990 NTEA case that a
standard offer in the body of the standard a means for all subject to
the standard to prove compliance. NTEA cited its petition for
reconsideration of the multi-stage vehicle certification rule, and
claimed that it had demonstrated that incomplete vehicle manufacturers
routinely provide Type 1 and Type 2 conformity statements with respect
to dynamic test standards that are so restrictive as to effectively
provide no pass-through opportunity whatsoever. NTEA argued that in the
real world, i.e., the reality defined by the IVDs that chassis
manufacturers provide with their products, pass-through certification
is not a viable option for final-stage manufacturers.
NTEA argument that the conformity statements in existing IVDs make
clear that final-stage manufacturers are not likely to have pass-
through opportunities for the proposed rule.
NTEA claimed that the inadequacy of pass-through certification as
the sole, plausible means of demonstrating compliance to the proposed
rule is plainly reflected in the IVDs that exist for chassis-cabs rated
up to 2,722
[[Page 17596]]
kilograms (6,000 pounds) GVWR and for those rated 2,723 and 4,536
kilograms (6,001--10,000 pounds) GVWR. That organization provided IVDs
with conformity statements as examples of the restrictiveness of IVDs.
NTEA stated that there is currently only one chassis-cab sold today
that is rated 2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds) or less and is therefore
subject to the existing FMVSS No. 216: the General Motors GMT-355
chassis-cab. According to NTEA, all other currently available chassis-
cabs are rated above 2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds) GVWR and thus fall
outside the purview of the existing standard.
NTEA cited language from the IVD for the 2006 model year GMT-355,
and attached a copy of the IVD to its comments. That organization
claimed that the Type I conformity statement to FMVSS No. 216 included
in that IVD would provide no pass-through opportunity whatsoever to a
final-stage manufacturer. NTEA argued that it would be invalidated by
any alteration that affected the function, physical, chemical, or
mechanical properties of any component, assembly or system in the
chassis-cab. NTEA stated that final-stage manufacturers at a minimum
will install a truck body onto the GMT-355 chassis-cab. NTEA claimed
that the simplest installation of a truck body likely weighing several
hundred pounds, plus the means used by the final-stage manufacturer to
mount that body (e.g., by drilling holes in to the frame of the
chassis-cab and bolting the body to the frame) will affect the physical
properties, for example, of the chassis frame and numerous other
structural components of the chassis-cab.
NTEA stated that GM includes an identical conformity statement for
FMVSS No. 216 in its C/K fullsize pickup truck IVD. That organization
stated that this also shows that GM is inclined to give a highly
restrictive Type I statement. NTEA also stated that the IVDs provided
by Ford for incomplete vehicles in the 2,723 and 4,536 kilograms (6,001
to 10,000 pound) GVWR range provide highly restrictive conformity
statements, and cited conformity statements for FMVSS Nos. 212, 219 and
301.
NTEA argument that it is impracticable for multi-stage vehicles
built on non-chassis-cabs to be certified to the proposed rule or to
FMVSS No. 220.
NTEA argued that manufacturers of multi-stage vehicles built on
non-chassis-cabs will be unable to confirm compliance of those vehicles
either to the proposed rule or to FMVSS No. 220. It stated that those
manufacturers will be unable to conduct the tests described in the
proposed rule or to perform some alternative engineering analysis .
NTEA argued that NHTSA's attempt to provide manufacturers with a
reasonable certification option is well-intended, but misses the mark
for several reasons.
NTEA stated that, as NHTSA seems to recognize, pass-through
certification is unlikely to be available to manufacturers of multi-
stage vehicles built on non-chassis-cabs, either for FMVSS No. 216 or
for FMVSS No. 220, because those vehicles do not have completed cab
compartments (which likely will cause the incomplete vehicle
manufacturers to provide Type 3 conformity statements or highly
restrictive Type 1 or 2 conformity statements). NTEA stated that NHTSA
proposed to permit manufacturers of multi-stage vehicles built on non-
chassis-cabs the option of certifying to FMVSS No. 220 instead of FMSS
No. 216.
First, according to NTEA, the only vehicles rated 10,000 pounds or
less that are subject to FMVSS No. 220 are Type A school buses. NTEA
stated that these vehicles are built primarily on the Ford E series
cutaway chassis and the GM G-Van cutaway chassis. That organization
stated that Ford and GM provide Type 3 conformity statements for these
vehicle and that, accordingly, manufacturers of multi-stage vehicles
completed on these non-chassis-cabs will have no opportunity to pass-
through the certification of the incomplete vehicle manufacturer. NTEA
attached copies of the IVDs for these vehicles to its comment.
NTEA stated that as to all of the other models of non-chassis-cabs
rated 10,000 pounds or less, there simply is no conformity statement
provided with respect to FMVSS No. 220. That organization stated that
this reflects the fact that none of these incomplete vehicles are used
in the manufacturing of school buses.
NTEA stated that NHTSA indicated in the preamble of the proposed
rule that certain States require para-transit vans and other buses to
comply with FMVSS No. 220 and that these State requirements show that
the burden on multi-stage manufacturers for evaluating roof strength in
accordance with FMVSS No. 220 is not unreasonable. NTEA stated that the
existence of State requirements concerning compliance with a dynamic
test standard is not good evidence that final-stage manufacturers in
fact are able to confirm compliance of vehicles with that standard.
NTEA also stated that to the extent school bus manufacturers or
para-transit bus manufacturers are able to comply with FMVSS No. 220,
that would merely reflect the particular circumstances regarding the
manufacture of those vehicles, i.e., the production of relatively
standardized models in relatively large production runs. NTEA stated
that the fact that manufacturers in certain niche markets may be able
to comply with FMVSS No. 220 does not change the fact that the typical
final-stage manufacturer, which produces scores of vehicle
configurations in small production runs, cannot demonstrate compliance
with that dynamic testing standard through testing or engineering
analysis.
NTEA compliance cost estimates.
NTEA stated that, in connection with its proposal, NHTSA presented
extensive cost data which explain how much it would cost to
structurally upgrade a vehicle in order to meet the new testing
requirements, and then factored in increased vehicle weight and the
effect on fuel costs. That organization stated that these costs are
applied to populations of vehicle models each in the hundreds of
thousands of vehicles.
NTEA stated that NHTSA's cost estimates do not factor in the costs
of compliance testing for multi-stage produced vehicles. That
organization stated that its members are faced with at least 1,085
identifiable vehicle configurations in the affected weight category
that would require separate compliance testing. It stated that these
vehicle configurations could be built by almost any of the 1,000 or
more final-stage manufacturers in the U.S. NTEA stated that as each of
these companies are competitors, there is no reason to believe that if
one company actually tested one configuration that they would or could
share that testing with another company. It also stated that no trade
association or consortium could ever conduct over 1,000 compliance
tests for the affected vehicle designs and then continue to test each
year any of these configurations that are redesigned.
NTEA cited cost estimates for conducting the FMVSS No. 216 test and
a test based on FMVSS 220. It also stated that the test is a
destructive test, and that while the vehicle could be repaired and sold
as used, this would be unwise for liability reasons and the vehicle
should be destroyed after the test. NTEA stated that there are few, if
any, final-stage manufacturers that have the equipment or personnel to
conduct such tests, and that they would need to outsource the testing.
NTEA stated that to its knowledge there are only three companies in the
country that regularly perform such tests for third parties, and
[[Page 17597]]
final-stage manufacturers would have to incur substantial costs to
transport their vehicles long distances to have them tested. It also
said that following the testing, the vehicles could not be sold as new
and would need to be repaired even to be sold as used, resulting in
additional costs to be absorbed by the final-stage manufacturer. NTEA
stated that, given these costs, it would be impracticable for
manufacturers to demonstrate compliance by performing tests.
NTEA stated that NHTSA appeared to recognize that the cost of
testing would be prohibitive for both vehicles built on chassis-cabs
and those built on non-chassis-cabs, and that it would also be
impracticable to demonstrate compliance by computer simulation or other
engineering analysis. And, despite that recognition, NTEA stated that
NHTSA proposed to apply the standard.
Based on discussions with one of the companies that conduct FMVSS
compliance tests, NTEA understands that the average cost of conducting
the existing test in FMVSS No. 216 is approximately $3,600 per vehicle
configuration. It stated that NHTSA estimates that tests to comply with
the proposed regulation will cost approximately $5,000. NTEA stated
that a total test cost of $5,000 plus a vehicle value loss of $15,000
for 1,085 vehicle configurations results in testing costs of
$21,700,000. It stated that this figure does not include design or
structural costs for compliance or certain other costs.
NTEA concluded this portion of its comment by stating that the cost
benefit analysis prepared by NHTSA ignores more than 20 million dollars
in compliance tests primarily placed on small businesses.
NTEA conclusion.
NTEA stated that, as demonstrated, final-stage manufacturers will
face compliance burdens that are not reasonable under NHTSA's proposed
rule, and that compliance with the proposed requirements in FMVSS No.
216 will not be possible for final-stage manufacturers.
That organization stated that while it applauded NHTSA's decision
to propose an alternative to compliance with FMVSS No. 216, the option
to comply with FMVSS No. 220 would not provide any relief to
manufacturers of multi-stage vehicles built on non-chassis-cabs. It
stated that, due to costs, those manufacturers will not be able to
perform the dynamic tests set forth in the proposed rule or in FMSVS
No. 220, nor conduct engineering analyses to simulate the performance
of vehicles in those tests. It also stated that because manufacturers
of non-chassis-cabs do not have a completed occupant compartment, there
will be no pass-through certification opportunities for multi-stage
vehicles built on those chassis. NTEA argued that the option of
certifying to FMVSS No. 220 is no option at all.
NTEA stated that as the demonstration of compliance with neither
FMVSS No. 220 nor the proposed FMVSS No. 216 requirements will be
possible for most final-stage manufacturers building on chassis-cabs or
non-chassis-cabs, it urged that all vehicles manufactured in two or
more stages be excluded from the rule.
D. May 2009 Final Rule
1. The Final Rule in General
As discussed earlier, on May 12, 2009, as part of a comprehensive
plan for reducing the serious risk of rollover crashes and the risk of
death and serious injury in those crashes, NHTSA published in the
Federal Register (74 FR 22348) a final rule substantially upgrading
FMVSS No. 216. The upgraded standard is designated FMVSS No. 216a.
First, for the vehicles currently subject to the standard, i.e.,
passenger cars and MPVs, trucks and buses with a GVWR of 2,722
kilograms (6,000 pounds) or less, the rule doubled the amount of force
the vehicle's roof structure must withstand in the specified test, from
1.5 times the vehicle's unloaded weight to 3.0 times the vehicle's
unloaded weight.
Second, the rule extended the applicability of the standard so that
it will also apply to vehicles with a GVWR greater than 2,722 kilograms
(6,000 pounds), but not greater than 4,536 kilograms (10,000 pounds).
The rule established a force requirement of 1.5 times the vehicle's
unloaded weight for these newly included vehicles.
Third, the rule required all of the above vehicles to meet the
specified force requirements in a two-sided test, instead of a single-
sided test, i.e., the same vehicle must meet the force requirements
when tested first on one side and then on the other side of the
vehicle.
Fourth, the rule established a new requirement for maintenance of
headroom, i.e., survival space, during testing in addition to the
existing limit on the amount of roof crush.
The rule also included a number of special provisions, including
ones related to leadtime, to address the needs of multi-stage
manufacturers, alterers, and small volume manufacturers.
2. The Final Rule and Multi-Stage Issues
In the May 2009 final rule upgrading FMVSS No. 216, we included a
section in the preamble titled ``Requirements for Multi-Stage and
Altered Vehicles.'' \31\ We included a summary of the comments
concerning requirements for multi-stage and altered vehicles from NTEA,
NMEDA, Advocates, and RVIA, and a response to those comments.
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\31\ 74 FR at 22372-74. This section was part of a larger
section titled ``Agency Decision and Response to Comments.''
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In addressing the issues raised by NTEA, we stated that, as a
general matter, we believe that it is neither necessary nor would it be
appropriate to exclude all multi-stage vehicles from roof crush
resistance requirements. We explained that the purpose of FMVSS No. 216
is to improve occupant safety in the event of a rollover. If a multi-
stage vehicle is involved in a rollover, the vehicle's roof strength
will be an important factor in providing occupant protection. We stated
that, therefore, while we seek to address the special needs and
circumstances of multi-stage manufacturers, we declined to provide any
blanket exclusion for all multi-stage vehicles. However, based on
NTEA's comments, we did not extend FMVSS No. 216 to any trucks built on
van cutaways or other types of incomplete vehicles without a completed
roof structure, a difference from the NPRM.
The upgraded FMVSS No. 216 rule does not apply to any vehicles with
a GVWR greater than 4,536 kilograms (10,000 pounds), including multi-
stage vehicles. A good number of multi-stage vehicles, such as tow-
trucks, some airport shuttles, and customized farm trucks, have a GVWR
greater than 4,536 kilograms (10,000 pounds). Also, as with the
previous version of FMVSS No. 216, the standard does not apply to
school buses, which have been covered by FMVSS No. 220.
In the final rule, we then addressed the issues raised by NTEA and
other commenters separately for the different types of multi-stage
vehicles. The requirements that apply to multi-stage vehicles with a
GVWR of 4,536 kilograms (10,000 pounds) or less are dependent on the
GVWR and type of vehicle, including whether the vehicle was built using
a chassis-cab.
Multi-stage vehicles built on chassis-cab incomplete vehicles.
If a vehicle is built on a chassis-cab, and it has a GVWR of 4,536
kilograms (10,000 pounds) or less, it is required to meet the same
FMVSS No. 216 requirements as single stage vehicles. Therefore, these
vehicles must meet the requirements of FMVSS No. 216a and
[[Page 17598]]
have a SWR of at least 3.0 if they have a GVWR of 2,722 kilograms
(6,000 pounds) or less and a SWR of 1.5 if they have a GVWR above that
level but not greater than 4,536 kilograms (10,000 pounds).
As background, we explained that a chassis-cab is an incomplete
vehicle, with a completed occupant compartment, that requires only the
addition of cargo-carrying, work-performing, or load-bearing components
to perform its intended functions. As such, chassis-cabs have intact
roof designs. Chassis-cabs are based on vehicles that are sold as
complete vehicles by larger manufacturers, e.g., medium and full size
pickup trucks, so their roof structure will be designed to meet the
upgraded requirements of FMVSS No. 216. A good example of a chassis-cab
vehicle is a moving truck. The driver of a chassis-cab vehicle would
need to exit the vehicle to access the contents in the rear of the
vehicle.
We stated that after considering the comments of NTEA, we believed
that final-stage manufacturers can rely on the incomplete vehicle
documents (IVD) for pass-through certification of compliance with FMVSS
No. 216 for vehicles built using chassis-cabs. To do this, final-stage
manufacturers will need to remain within specifications contained in
the IVD. We stated that since the stringency of FMVSS No. 216 (SWR
requirement) is dependent on a vehicle's unloaded vehicle weight, the
final-stage manufacturer would need to remain within the specification
for unloaded vehicle weight. If they did not, the roof would not likely
have the strength to comply with FMVSS No. 216. We also explained that
final-stage manufacturers will need to avoid changes to the vehicle
that would affect roof strength adversely.\32\
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\32\ We also noted that some changes made by final-stage
manufacturers could affect the ability to conduct an FMVSS No. 216
test, e.g., for a multi-stage truck, the addition of a cargo box
structure higher than the occupant compartment could interfere with
the placement of the FMVSS No. 216 test device. To address this
concern, we included a specification in the final rule that such
structures are removed prior to testing. (However, the structures
are still counted as part of a vehicle's unloaded weight.)
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Multi-stage trucks with a GVWR greater than 2,722 kilograms (6,000
pounds) not built using a chassis-cab and not built using an incomplete
vehicle with a full exterior van body.
We explained that, based on the comments received, we had decided
to exclude from FMVSS No. 216 multi-stage trucks with a GVWR greater
than 2,722 kilograms (6,000 pounds) not built using a chassis cab and
not built using an incomplete vehicle with a full exterior van body.
This was a change from the NPRM. First, to be exclu