Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Event Data Recorders, 74144-74159 [2012-30082]
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74144
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 240 / Thursday, December 13, 2012 / Proposed Rules
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Send comments to Luis Rodriguez, Chief, Engineering Management Branch, Federal Insurance and Mitigation Administration, Federal Emergency Management Agency, 500 C Street SW., Washington, DC 20472.
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(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance No.
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Dated: September 3, 2012.
Sandra K. Knight,
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[FR Doc. 2012–29953 Filed 12–12–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–12–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
49 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. NHTSA–2012–0177]
RIN 2127–AK86
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety
Standards; Event Data Recorders
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).
AGENCY:
In August 2006, NHTSA
established a regulation that sets forth
requirements for data elements, data
capture and format, data retrieval, and
data crash survivability for event data
recorders (EDRs) installed in light
vehicles. The requirements apply to
light vehicles that are manufactured on
or after September 1, 2012, and are
equipped with EDRs. However, the
regulation does not mandate the
installation of EDRs in those vehicles.
This notice of proposed rulemaking
would establish a new safety standard
mandating the installation of EDRs in
most light vehicles manufactured on or
after September 1, 2014. The EDRs in
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SUMMARY:
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those vehicles would be required by the
new standard to meet the data elements,
data capture and format, data retrieval,
and data crash survivability
requirements of the existing regulation.
This proposal would not modify any of
the requirements or specifications in the
regulation for EDRs voluntarily installed
between September 1, 2012 and
September 1, 2014.
DATES: You should submit your
comments early enough to be received
not later than February 11, 2013. In
compliance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act, NHTSA is also seeking
comment on a new information
collection. See the Paperwork Reduction
Act section under Rulemaking Analyses
and Notices below. Please submit all
comments relating to new information
collection requirements to NHTSA and
to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) at the address listed in the
ADDRESSES section on or before
February 11, 2013. Comments to OMB
are most useful if submitted within 30
days of publication.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The
following persons at the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration:
For technical and policy issues:
Christopher J. Wiacek, Office of
Crashworthiness Standards, NHTSA,
1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., West
Building, W43–320, Washington, DC
20590. Telephone: (202) 366–4801.
For legal issues: William Shakely,
Office of the Chief Counsel, NHTSA,
1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., West
Building, W41–227, Washington, DC
20590. Telephone: (202) 366–2992. Fax:
(202) 366–3820.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by the docket number at the
heading of this notice, by any of the
following methods:
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Online: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments
on the electronic docket site by clicking
on ‘‘Help’’ or ‘‘FAQs.’’
Fax: 1–202–493–2251.
Mail: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, Room W12–140, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590.
Hand Delivery: 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., West Building Ground
Floor, Room W12–140, Washington, DC,
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Comments regarding the proposed
information collection should be
submitted to NHTSA through one of the
preceding methods and a copy should
also be sent to the Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, Office of
Management and Budget, 725 17th
Street NW., Washington, DC 20503,
Attention: NHTSA Desk Officer.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the agency name and docket
number. Note that all comments
received will be posted without change
to https://www.regulations.gov, including
any personal information provided.
Please see the Privacy Act discussion
below. We will consider all comments
received before the close of business on
the comment closing date indicated
above. To the extent possible, we will
also consider comments filed after the
closing date.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov at any time or to
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., West
Building Ground Floor, Room W12–140,
Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. Telephone:
(202) 366–9826.
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Privacy Act: Anyone is able to search
the electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the
comment (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review DOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement in the Federal Register
published on April 11, 2000 (65 FR
19477–78) or you may visit https://
www.dot.gov/privacy.html.
Confidential Business Information: If
you wish to submit any information
under a claim of confidentiality, you
should submit three copies of your
complete submission, including the
information you claim to be confidential
business information, to the Chief
Counsel, NHTSA, at the address given
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT. In addition, you should
submit two copies, from which you
have deleted the claimed confidential
business information, to Docket
Operations at the address given above.
When you send a comment containing
information claimed to be confidential
business information, you should
include a cover letter setting forth the
information specified in our
confidential business information
regulation (49 CFR part 512).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Overview of Event Data Recorder (EDR)
Technology
B. EDR Regulatory History—The
Establishment of Part 563
C. Summary of Part 563
1. Data Elements Recorded
2. Data Retrieval
3. Data Survivability and Crash Test
Performance Requirements
D. NHTSA’s Validation of and Reliance on
EDR Data in Its Crash Investigations
Relating to Unintended Acceleration
III. Proposal
A. Overview
1. Overall Plan for Reviewing and
Upgrading EDR Requirements
2. This Proposal
B. Reasons To Mandate the Installation of
EDRs
C. Reasons To Place Mandate in a Safety
Standard
D. Privacy Issues
1. Agency Tailored EDR Performance
Requirements To Minimize Data
Gathering
2. Agency Seeks Vehicle Owner Permission
To Access EDR Data
3. Necessity of VIN Collection
4. Agency Protects VIN Information
Needed To Download EDR Data
5. Agency Uses and Stores EDR Data in
Ways To Preserve Privacy
E. Lead Time
F. Benefits and Costs of This Proposal
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IV. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
V. Request for Comments
Appendix A Part 563 Tables
Regulatory Text
I. Executive Summary
An event data recorder (EDR) is a
function or device installed in a motor
vehicle to record technical information
about the status and operation of vehicle
systems for a very brief period of time
(i.e., a few seconds) and in very limited
circumstances (immediately before and
during a crash), primarily for the
purpose of post-crash assessment of
vehicle safety system performance.1
EDR data are used to improve crash and
defect investigation and crash data
collection quality to assist safety
researchers, vehicle manufacturers, and
the agency to understand vehicle
crashes better and more precisely.
Additionally, vehicle manufacturers are
able to utilize EDR data in improving
vehicle designs and developing more
effective vehicle safety
countermeasures. EDR data can also be
used by Advanced Automatic Crash
Notification (AACN) systems to aid
emergency response teams in assessing
the severity of a crash and estimating
the probability of serious injury before
they reach the site of the crash.
The installation of EDR technology
has increased considerably within the
light vehicle fleet, as most
manufacturers have voluntarily chosen
to install some type of EDR capability in
their vehicles. The light vehicles most
likely to be equipped with EDRs are
those that are required to be equipped
with frontal air bags, i.e., passenger cars,
multipurpose passenger vehicles
(MPVs), trucks, and buses with a gross
vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of 3,855
kilograms (kg) (8,500 pounds) or less
and an unloaded vehicle weight of 2,495
kg (5,500 pounds) or less. We estimate
that about 92 percent of model year
(MY) 2010 passenger cars and other
vehicles with a GVWR of 3,855 kg or
less have some EDR capability.
In August 2006, NHTSA established
49 CFR Part 563 (Part 563), which sets
forth requirements for data elements,
data capture and format, data retrieval,
and data crash survivability for EDRs.
The requirements apply to light vehicles
required to have frontal air bags (those
with a GVWR of 3,855 kg or less and an
unloaded vehicle weight of 2,595 kg or
less) 2 that are manufactured on or after
September 1, 2012, and are equipped
1 An EDR does not make an audio or video
recording, nor does it log data such as hours of
service for commercial operators.
2 Walk-in van-type trucks or vehicles designed to
be sold exclusively to the U.S. Postal Service are
excluded from air bag and EDR requirements.
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with EDRs. Thus, the regulation applies
to only those vehicles that are
voluntarily equipped with EDRs.
This notice of proposed rulemaking
would establish a new safety standard
mandating the installation of EDRs for
all light vehicles that are required to
have frontal air bags and are
manufactured on or after September 1,
2014. The EDRs in those vehicles would
be required by the new standard to meet
the data elements, data capture and
format, data retrieval, and data crash
survivability requirements contained in
Part 563. The agency is issuing this
proposal because we believe that,
without a regulation, EDRs will remain
absent from the estimated 8 percent of
the current light vehicle fleet that lacks
an EDR. We believe that requiring all
light vehicles required to have frontal
air bags to be equipped with EDRs
would help improve vehicle safety for
consumers, while imposing relatively
limited costs on the automobile
industry.
NHTSA is proposing today’s NPRM
under the National Traffic and Motor
Vehicle Safety Act (‘‘Motor Vehicle
Safety Act’’). Under 49 U.S.C. Chapter
301, Motor Vehicle Safety (49 U.S.C.
30101 et seq.), the Secretary of
Transportation is responsible for
prescribing motor vehicle safety
standards that are practicable, meet the
need for motor vehicle safety, and are
stated in objective terms.3 ‘‘Motor
vehicle safety standard’’ means a
minimum performance standard for
motor vehicles or motor vehicle
equipment. When prescribing such
standards, the Secretary must consider
all relevant, available motor vehicle
safety information.4 The Secretary must
also consider whether a proposed
standard is reasonable, practicable, and
appropriate for the types of motor
vehicles or motor vehicle equipment for
which it is prescribed and the extent to
which the standard will further the
statutory purpose of reducing traffic
accidents and associated deaths.5 The
responsibility for promulgation of
Federal motor vehicle safety standards
is delegated to NHTSA. In proposing to
require the installation of EDRs in most
light vehicles manufactured on or after
September 1, 2014, the agency carefully
considered these statutory requirements.
Placing the mandate in a FMVSS,
instead of Part 563, would expand its
ability to avail itself of the enforcement
authority of the Motor Vehicle Safety
Act, making it possible to seek civil
penalties for failure to provide an EDR
3 49
4 49
U.S.C. 30111(a).
U.S.C. 30111(b).
5 Id.
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or for failure to provide one that
performs properly. We believe that this
step is necessary to ensure that all
manufacturers install EDRs and that the
agency has full and accurate EDR
information for all light vehicles
required to have frontal air bags.
The benefits of this proposal would be
to expand and, therefore, enhance the
utilization of the recorded information
and lead to further improvements in the
safety of current vehicles as well as
future ones. A disproportionately high
percentage of the light vehicles that
would be affected by this proposal are
relatively expensive vehicles and thus
are significantly more likely than the
typical light vehicle to be equipped with
advanced safety features and systems,
including advanced collision avoidance
technologies. Thus, the light vehicles
that would be affected by this proposal
are the ones on which data regarding
real world performance will most likely
first be generated. It is important to have
EDR data relating to the crash
experiences of vehicles with these
advanced safety systems so that the
agency can, at the earliest possible time,
gather enough information about
emerging advanced technologies to
conduct reliable analyses and make
policy judgments. Additionally, the
agency’s experience in handling
unintended acceleration and pedal
entrapment allegations has
demonstrated that EDR data from a
particular vehicle model can have
significant value to both the agency and
the vehicle’s manufacturer to identify
and address safety concerns associated
with possible defects in the design or
performance of the vehicle. To serve
this purpose for all light vehicles
required to have frontal air bags, EDR
data must be available for all such
vehicles.
This proposal would not change any
of the substantive requirements of Part
563. The agency recognizes that there
have been advances in vehicle safety
systems and the implementation of new
FMVSSs since the publication of the
EDR final rule in 2006.6 However, the
issue of whether there should be any
changes to the amount and type of
information that EDRs must collect is
not being considered in this rulemaking.
This proposal would also not modify
any of the requirements or
specifications for EDRs voluntarily
installed between September 1, 2012
and September 1, 2014.
6 FMVSS No. 214, ‘‘Side impact protection,’’
FMVSS No. 126, ‘‘Electronic stability control,’’ and
FMVSS No. 226, ‘‘Ejection mitigation,’’ all have
been updated since the publication in 2006 of the
EDR final rule.
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We believe that the costs of installing
EDRs are minimal because the devices
involve the capture into memory of data
that are already being processed by the
vehicle, and not the much higher costs
of providing sensors to obtain much of
that data in the first place. The cost for
an EDR is estimated to be $20 per
vehicle. The estimated total incremental
costs associated with this proposal
would be $26.4 million (2010 dollars),
which reflects the need for technology
improvements, as well as assembly
costs, compliance costs, and paperwork
maintenance costs for those 1.32 million
vehicles that have a GVWR of 3,855 kg
or less, but do not currently have EDRs.
Technological improvements account
for the majority of these costs.
The agency acknowledges that
consumer privacy concerns persist
regarding EDR data: Who owns it, who
has access to it and under what
circumstances, and what are the
purposes for which it may be used.
Approximately one dozen states have
enacted laws addressing these issues.
While these issues are of continued
importance in the public discussion on
the use of EDR technology, as an agency,
we do not have the statutory authority
to address many of these privacy issues
because they are generally matters of
State and Federal law that we do not
administer. Within the limits of its
authority, NHTSA has consistently
sought to promote the recording of vital
crash event information and to access
and use that information in ways that
safeguard privacy. For example, the
agency seeks to access EDR data only
with the vehicle owner’s permission.
II. Background
A. Overview of Event Data Recorder
(EDR) Technology
An EDR is a function or device
installed in a motor vehicle to record
technical information about the status
and operation of vehicle systems for a
very brief period of time (i.e., a few
seconds immediately before and during
a crash), primarily for the purpose of
post-crash assessment of vehicle safety
system performance.7 In most cases, the
type of crash that leads to the capturing
of data is a frontal or side collision that
is sufficiently severe to cause the air
bags to deploy. Data collected from the
EDR of a crash-involved vehicle can
provide valuable information on the
severity of the crash, operation of its air
bags, and what air bag deployment
decision strategies were used during the
event. Additionally, the data can be
7 An EDR does not make an audio or video
recording, nor does it log data such as hours of
service for commercial operators.
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used to assess whether the vehicle was
operating properly at the time of the
event, or to help detect undesirable
operations that may lead to a recall of
the vehicle to remedy the problem. The
information obtained by manufacturers
from EDRs aids them in improving
vehicle performance in crash events.
In recent years, the installation of EDR
technology has increased considerably
within the light vehicle fleet, as most
manufacturers have voluntarily chosen
to install some type of EDR capability in
their vehicles. The light vehicles most
likely to be equipped with EDRs are
those that are required to be equipped
with frontal air bags, i.e., passenger cars,
multipurpose passenger vehicles
(MPVs), trucks, and buses with a GVWR
of 3,855 kilograms (kg) (8,500 pounds)
or less and an unloaded vehicle weight
of 2,495 kg (5,500 pounds) or less. These
vehicles compose the vast majority of
light vehicles. We estimate that about 92
percent of model year (MY) 2010
passenger cars and other vehicles with
a GVWR 3,855 kg (8,500 pounds) or less
have some EDR capability. This estimate
is based on information that was taken
from manufacturer-reporting to the
agency regarding their 2010 vehicles
and then weighting using 2010
corporate-level vehicle projected sales
figures to estimate an overall industrywide fleet figure.
For manufacturers that install EDRs in
most light vehicles on or after
September 1, 2012, the current
regulation, 49 CFR Part 563 (Part 563),
requires that their EDRs record 15 data
elements at a minimum, and sets
requirements for the range and accuracy
of the EDR data collected under the
regulation. The discussion below
explains in detail the requirements of
Part 563.
For more background information on
NHTSA’s rulemaking actions regarding
EDR technologies, please see the Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) at 69
FR 32932 (June 14, 2004),8 the final rule
at 71 FR 50998 (August 28, 2006),9 and
amendments to the final rule and
responses to petitions for
reconsideration at 73 FR 2168 (January
14, 2008),10 76 FR 47478 (August 5,
2011), and 77 FR 47552 (August 9,
2012).
B. EDR Regulatory History—The
Establishment of Part 563
For more than a decade, the agency
has been assessing the potential value of
real-world EDR crash data for improving
our understanding of vehicle safety
8 Docket
No. NHTSA–2004–18029.
No. NHTSA–2006–25666.
10 Docket No. NHTSA–2008–0004.
9 Docket
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system performance and our analysis of
vehicle crashes. Several years ago,
NHTSA working groups 11 examined
data elements for the purpose of
identifying the most useful set of crash
data to aid the agency in achieving its
goal of reducing highway deaths.
On August 28, 2006, following public
notice and comment, the agency’s early
research efforts culminated in the
publication of a final rule that
established Part 563.12 Part 563
establishes uniform performance
requirements for the accuracy,
collection, storage, survivability, and
retrievability of that set of onboard
motor vehicle crash event data in
passenger cars and other light vehicles
equipped with EDRs.
In response to petitions for
reconsideration, the agency amended
Part 563 in January 2008 to make several
technical changes to the regulatory text
and to set a later compliance date of
September 1, 2012.13 The new
compliance date helped manufacturers
to avoid incurring significant redesign
costs for EDR system architectures
outside of the normal product cycle.
Again in response to petitions for
reconsideration, the agency amended
Part 563 on August 5, 2011, to revise the
acceleration data elements, clarify the
event storage definition and make other
minor technical modifications.14
Finally, in response to further petitions
for reconsideration, the agency amended
Part 563 on August 9, 2012, to revise the
steering input data element and delay
the compliance date for the data
clipping flag requirement.15
C. Summary of Part 563
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Part 563 regulates EDR-equipped
vehicles by specifying a minimum core
set of required data elements and
accompanying range, accuracy, and
resolution requirements for those
elements. The regulation also specifies
requirements for vehicle manufacturers
11 See reports numbered DOT–HS–043334, Event
Data Recorders: Summary of Findings by the
NHTSA EDR Working Group, August 2001, Docket
No. NHTSA–1999–5218–9; DOT–HS–809432, Event
Data Recorders: Summary of Findings by the
NHTSA EDR Working Group Volume II,
Supplemental Findings for Trucks, Motorcoaches,
and School Buses, May 2002, Docket No. NHTSA–
2000–7699–6.
12 71 FR 50998, 51043 (Aug. 28, 2006), amended
73 FR 2168, 2179 (Jan. 14, 2008), corrected 73 FR
8408 (Feb. 13, 2008), amended 76 FR 47478 (August
5, 2011), amended 77 FR 47552 (August 9, 2012).
13 73 FR 2168 (Jan. 14, 2008), corrected 73 FR
8408 (Feb. 13, 2008). Vehicles that are
manufactured in two or more stages, or that are
altered after having been previously certified to the
Federal motor vehicle safety standards (FMVSS),
have a compliance date of September 1, 2013.
14 76 FR 47478.
15 77 FR 47552.
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to make data retrieval tools and/or
methods commercially available so that
crash investigators and researchers are
able to retrieve data from EDRs. Part 563
is technology-neutral, permitting the use
of any available EDR technology that
complies with the specified
performance requirements.
Part 563 applies to passenger cars,
MPVs, trucks, and buses with a GVWR
of 3,855 kg (8,500 pounds) or less and
an unloaded vehicle weight of 2,595 kg
(5,500 pounds) or less,16 that are
voluntarily equipped with an event data
recorder. It also applies to
manufacturers of these vehicles, who
must ensure the commercial availability
of data retrieval tools. The regulation
became effective on September 1,
2012.17
1. Data Elements Recorded
Part 563 specifies minimum
requirements for the types of data that
EDR-equipped vehicles are required to
record. In all, there are 15 data elements
that must be recorded during the
interval/time and at the sample rate
specified in Table I of Part 563.18 Some
of the required pre-crash data are
vehicle speed, engine throttle position,
brake use, driver safety belt status, and
air bag warning lamp status. Some of the
required crash data are measured
changes in forward velocity (delta-V)
and air bag deployment times.
In addition, a vehicle equipped with
an EDR that records any of the 28 data
elements listed in Table II of Part 563,
identified as ‘‘if recorded,’’ must capture
and record information according to the
minimum interval/time and at the
sample rate specified in that table.19
There are two data elements listed in
Table II, identified as ‘‘if equipped.’’ If
a vehicle carries this equipment, it must
record the specified information (i.e.,
‘‘frontal air bag deployment, time to nth
stage, driver’’ and ‘‘front air bag
deployment, time to nth stage, right
front passenger’’).20
When retrieved, the data elements
collected by the EDR pursuant to Tables
I and II must be reported in accordance
16 Walk-in van-type trucks or vehicles designed to
be sold exclusively to the U.S. Postal Service are
excluded from air bag and EDR requirements.
17 73 FR 2168 (Jan. 14, 2008).
18 See 49 CFR 563.7, Table I.
19 See 49 CFR 563.7, Table II. Examples of the ‘‘if
recorded’’ data elements include lateral
acceleration, longitudinal acceleration, stability
control status, and frontal air bag suppression
switch status.
20 See 49 CFR 563.7, Table II. The ‘‘frontal air bag
deployment, time to nth stage’’ data elements
provide critical timing data for vehicles equipped
with multi-stage air bags, which will help in
assessing whether an air bag is deploying correctly
during a crash (i.e., whether the sensors are
functioning properly).
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with the range, accuracy, and resolution
requirements specified in Table III.
Reported Data Element Format.21 All
three tables have been included in
Appendix A to this preamble.22
2. Data Retrieval
Part 563 requires that each vehicle
manufacturer ensure, by licensing
agreement or other means, the
commercial availability of retrieval
tool(s) for downloading or imaging the
required EDR data.23 The data-imaging
tool must be commercially available no
later than 90 days after the first sale of
the vehicle for purposes other than
resale.24
3. Data Survivability and Crash Test
Performance Requirements
To ensure that data are recorded in a
crash and that the data survive the
crash, EDRs must record and retain in
retrievable condition certain data when
the vehicles in which they are installed
are tested in accordance with crash test
procedures specified in Federal Motor
Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) Nos.
208, ‘‘Occupant crash protection,’’ and
214, ‘‘Side impact protection.’’ 25 These
crash tests represent the modes of a
majority of real-world crashes and
severities observed. For example,
several FMVSS No. 208 crash tests are
performed at speeds of up to 56 km/h
(35 mph), which represent the
cumulative delta-V for 99 percent of
frontal crashes.26 The EDR data must be
retrievable for no less than 10 days after
the crash test.
D. NHTSA’s Validation of and Reliance
on EDR Data in Its Crash Investigations
Relating to Unintended Acceleration
Based on the agency’s experience
with EDRs over the past decade, as well
as with recent investigations of alleged
unintended acceleration and pedal
entrapment, the agency has found EDR
data to be an important tool that
provides valuable insight. EDR data
provides vehicle-recorded pre-crash
information, supplementing information
obtained from the driver and physical
evidence from the scene.
21 See
49 CFR 563.8, Table III.
I and Table II were most recently
amended by the August 5, 2011 final rule
responding to petitions for reconsideration. 76 FR
47478. Table III was most recently amended by the
August 9, 2012 final rule responding to petitions for
reconsideration 77 FR 47552.
23 The term ‘‘imaging’’ refers to the process by
which the agency retrieves data from an EDR. When
imaging the data on an EDR, the original data set
remains intact and unchanged in the memory banks
of the EDR.
24 See 49 CFR 563.12.
25 See 49 CFR 563.10.
26 See 49 CFR 571.208; Docket No. NHTSA–2006–
26555–1, at 60.
22 Table
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A number of technical papers have
been published on EDR accuracy in the
crash test environment. Early studies
focused on the full frontal barrier crash
test environment where the reported
EDR data was compared to
instrumentation grade accelerometers
mounted on the vehicle. Due to the
limited availability of EDRs at that time,
these studies were exclusively based on
EDRs produced by General Motors. The
studies reported a small amount of
underestimation in the EDR delta-V
reporting.27
More recent technical papers 28 have
incorporated EDRs from other vehicle
manufacturers, such as Ford and
Toyota. They have also looked at a
variety of impact scenarios including
full frontal, offset frontal, side impact,
and vehicle-to-vehicle angled tests.
Better correlation between EDR and
crash test delta-V were reported,
particularly at higher impact speeds
where more serious injuries occur.
Accurate reporting of seat belt use and
pre-crash data was also observed. The
findings from these studies are generally
consistent with the agency’s experience
to date; however, monitoring of EDR
performance will continue as more
vehicle manufacturers incorporate EDRs
into the fleet. Furthermore, the agency
continues to emphasize that EDRs
provide one valuable piece of
information, along with on-site
27 Chidester A.B., Hinch J., & Roston, T.A., ‘‘Real
World Experience with Event Data Recorders,’’ 17th
International Technical Conference on the
Enhanced Safety of Vehicles, 2001.
Lawrence, J.M., Wilkinson, C.C., King, D.J.,
Heinrichs, B.E., & Siegmund, G.P., ‘‘The Accuracy
and Sensitivity of Event Data Recorders in LowSpeed Collisions,’’ Society of Automotive
Engineers, 2003.
Comeau, J.L., German, A., & Floyd, D.,
‘‘Comparison of Crash Pulse Data from Motor
Vehicle Event Data Recorders and Laboratory
Instrumentation,’’ Canadian Multidisciplinary Road
Safety Conference XIV, 2004.
28 Niehoff, P., Gabler, H.C., Brophy, J., Chidester,
C., Hinch, J., & Ragland C., ‘‘Evaluation of Event
Data Recorders in Full Systems Crash Tests,’’ 19th
International Technical Conference on the
Enhanced Safety of Vehicles, 2005.
Gabler, H.C. & Hinch, J., ‘‘Characterization of
Advanced Air Bag Field Performance Using Event
Data Recorders,’’ 20th International Technical
Conference on the Enhanced Safety of Vehicles,
Paper 07–0349, 2007.
DaSilva, M., ‘‘Engineering Analysis of EDR Data
in NHTSA’s NASS CDS Database,’’ Presentation at
the Society of Automotive Engineers Government/
Industry Meeting, Washington, DC, 2007.
Gabler, H.C. & Hinch, J., ‘‘Preliminary Evaluation
of Advanced Air Bag Field Performance Using
Event Data Recorders,’’ DOT HS 811 015, August
2008.
Bare, C., Everest, B., Floyd, D., & Nunan, D.,
‘‘Analysis of Pre-Crash Data Transferred over the
Serial Data Bus and Utilized by the SDM–DS
Module,’’ Society of Automotive Engineers, 2011.
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evidence, needed to reconstruct crash
events.
In March 2010, the agency began to
obtain data from Toyota EDRs as part of
its inquiry into allegations of
unintended acceleration (UA), and as
follow-up to the recalls of some Toyota
models for sticking and entrapped
accelerator pedals.29 The agency
conducted a thorough process of
validating the accuracy of Toyota’s EDR
data and has high confidence in the
accuracy of the data recovered.30 In the
NHTSA report 31 on the analysis and
findings concerning UA in vehicles
manufactured by Toyota, the validation
efforts were described. The validation
work was extensive and ultimately
NHTSA established a high level of
confidence in the veracity of pre-crash
data recovered from Toyota’s EDRs.
Those data were found to be very
valuable when considered in concert
with the physical facts of a given
incident.
When the agency received an
allegation of UA or pedal entrapment, it
interviewed the complainant and
obtained permission for agency
investigators to inspect the vehicle and,
if it was EDR-equipped, attempted to
download any data on the EDR.32
NHTSA investigators also visited the
location of the alleged incident to
evaluate the complaint fully.33
Complainants might state that while
coming to an intersection, the vehicle
suddenly accelerated without warning,
resulting in a crash, or while driving on
the highway, the vehicle continued to
accelerate without the complainant’s
having stepped on the accelerator pedal
and the brakes would not stop the
vehicle.
Typically, EDRs store data specific to
the dynamic state of the vehicle just
prior to a crash, the performance of the
air bag system in a crash, and a
deceleration trace. The EDRs in Toyota
vehicles examined by NHTSA captured
vehicle speed, accelerator pedal voltage,
brake light switch status, and engine
29 See for Pedal Entrapment: NHTSA Recall Nos.
06V–253, 07E–082, 09V–388, and 10V–023. See for
Sticking Pedals: NHTSA Recall No. 10V–017.
30 Event Data Recorder-Pre Crash Data Validation
of Toyota Products. February 2011 (NHTSA–NVS–
2011–ETC–SR07). https://www.nhtsa.gov/staticfiles/
nvs/pdf/NHTSA-Toyota_EDR_precrash_validation.pdf.
31 Technical Assessment of Toyota Electronic
Throttle Control (ETC) Systems, February 2011,
page 43 (footnotes omitted). https://www.nhtsa.gov/
staticfiles/nvs/pdf/NHTSA–UA_report.pdf.
32 Not all of the vehicles for which the agency
received consumer complaints were equipped with
EDRs or had EDRs capable of capturing pre-crash
data.
33 The agency does not limit its follow-up
investigations to consumers whose vehicles are
equipped with EDRs.
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revolutions per minute (rpm) at five,
one-second intervals prior to a crash. A
sixth and final interval of data was
recorded at algorithm enable or when
the EDR sensed an impact. While noncrash impacts such as curb and pothole
strikes might enable an EDR algorithm
and cause it to store data, aggressive
throttle application or braking (without
impact) would not enable the EDR.
For further information on the
agency’s field inspections of recent
crashes alleging one or more forms of
UA and the contribution of EDR data to
the agency’s investigations, please see
Technical Assessment of Toyota
Electronic Throttle Control (ETC)
Systems, February 2011.34
III. Proposal
A. Overview
1. Overall Plan for Reviewing and
Upgrading EDR Requirements
Based on its experience with EDR
data in the unintended acceleration
studies and on the potential role of EDR
data in investigations of future vehicles
and technologies, the agency has been
reviewing the requirements of Part 563
and assessing whether the applicability
of the requirements should be expanded
or the capabilities of EDRs should be
increased. NHTSA plans on publishing
an advance notice of proposed
rulemaking in the near future to explore
the potential for, and future utility of,
capturing additional EDR data in light
vehicles.
2. This Proposal
The agency proposes a new FMVSS,
FMVSS No. 405, ‘‘Event data recorders,’’
which would mandate the installation
of EDRs in most light vehicles
manufactured on or after September 1,
2014. This proposal would also require
that the vehicles meet the requirements
for data elements, data format, and data
capture contained in Part 563.
Additionally, this proposal would
require compliance with the crash test
performance and survivability
requirements in Part 563. This would
mean that the data elements required by
the regulation, with certain exceptions,
must be recorded in the format specified
by the regulation, exist at the
completion of the crash test, and be
retrievable by the methodology
specified by the vehicle manufacturer.
This proposal would also require
manufacturers to comply with the
requirements for such data retrieval
tools listed in § 563.12. Finally, this
34 See https://www.nhtsa.gov/UA for the reports
related to the agency’s investigation into Toyota’s
electronic throttle system and unintended
acceleration.
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proposal would require that the owner’s
manual in each vehicle contain the
statement regarding EDRs required by
§ 563.11.
A key priority of this NPRM is for the
agency to require EDRs in light vehicles
with a GVWR of 3,855 kg or less and an
unloaded vehicle weight of 2,595 kg or
less, without disrupting the initiative
and efforts of those manufacturers who
already have voluntarily installed Part
563 compliant EDRs. Accordingly, we
are not now proposing any
modifications to Part 563 itself, e.g., not
to any EDR data elements, data capture
and format requirements, data retrieval
specifications, or data survivability and
crash test requirements. Likewise, we
are not proposing revisions to the
definitions section of Part 563.
The agency recognizes that that there
have been advances in vehicle safety
systems and the phase-in of new
FMVSSs since the publication of the
EDR final rule in 2006.35 However, the
issue of whether there should be any
changes to the amount and type of
information that EDRs must collect is
not being considered in this rulemaking.
Any significant revision to the
substantive components of Part 563 is
outside the scope of this NPRM.
B. Reasons To Mandate the Installation
of EDRs
In the 2006 EDR final rule, the agency
chose not to mandate installation of
EDRs at that time for purposes of
encouraging the voluntary development
and installation of EDRs and alleviating
costs on automobile manufacturers and
consumers. Although we did not
mandate EDRs in 2006, we stated that it
was our intention that their use
continue to expand.36
The agency explained further that the
‘‘marketplace appears to be adopting
EDRs and we do not currently see a
need to mandate their installation.’’37
The agency gave the following reasons
for reaching this conclusion:
The challenge for NHTSA has been to
devise an approach that would encourage
broad application of EDR technologies in
motor vehicles and maximize the usefulness
of EDR data for the medical community,
researchers, and regulators, without imposing
unnecessary burdens or hampering future
improvements to EDRs.
*
*
*
*
*
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* * * We believe that the industry’s
voluntary development and installation of
35 FMVSS No. 214, ‘‘Side impact protection,’’
FMVSS No. 126, ‘‘Electronic stability control,’’ and
FMVSS No. 226, ‘‘Ejection mitigation,’’ all have
been updated since the publication in 2006 of the
EDR final rule.
36 71 FR 50998 at 51010 (Aug. 28, 2006).
37 Ibid at 51011 (Aug. 28, 2006).
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EDRs, combined with the standardization
requirements in this rule, will be sufficient
to meet the agency’s and public’s near term
needs. * * *
* * * [A]dopting a rule mandating EDR
installation would result in an unnecessary
cost for automobile manufacturers and
consumers. Since less expensive vehicles are
not equipped with a databus, a rule
mandating EDR installation would require
manufacturers to install a databus in those
vehicles. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
* * * [W]e expect the extent of installation
in new vehicles to continue increasing and
to reach approximately 85 percent by model
year 2010. * * * [T]he new vehicles lacking
an EDR in that model year will be primarily
those manufactured either in Germany or
Korea. As Korea has expressed interest in the
development of an EDR standard under the
International Standards Organization, it
appears that Korean built vehicles also might
eventually be voluntarily equipped with
EDRs.
* * * We believe that the current level of
EDR installation, combined with our
standardization requirement, will yield data
of statistical significance. * * *
We will monitor future increases in the
extent of installation of EDRs and revisit this
issue if appropriate.38
Thus, the agency did not deem it
necessary to propose to require the
installation of EDRs, but remained open
to considering this in the future. We are
now revisiting that decision and the
reasons given to support it. The agency
has tentatively reached different
conclusions about the issues it
discussed in its 2004 and 2006
explanations of its decision not to seek
to mandate EDRs.
Our first line of reasoning for an EDR
mandate is driven by a need to fully
cover light vehicles required to have
frontal air bags (those with a GVWR of
3,855 kg or less and an unloaded vehicle
weight of 2,595 kg or less) in order to
improve vehicle safety and aid the
agency in investigating potential safety
defects. Although the percentage of light
vehicles voluntarily equipped with
EDRs has steadily increased as
anticipated, EDRs remain absent from
about 8 percent of the current
production of all light vehicles
regulated by Part 563. We believe that
EDRs will remain absent from these
vehicles without a regulation.
While it remains true that the current
and expected levels of voluntary
installation of EDRs may be sufficient to
generate data for assessing performance
of the general vehicle population to
support future rulemaking, the agency
notes that many of the vehicles without
EDRs are high end vehicles and that
advanced safety technologies, including
38 Ibid
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advanced collision avoidance
technologies, are typically first
introduced on high end vehicles. Thus,
it is particularly important to be able to
obtain EDR data generated by the crash
experience of these particular vehicles
so that the agency has as much
information about emerging advanced
technologies as possible.
In its 2006 determination, the agency
did not take into consideration the
significant value that EDR data from a
particular vehicle model can have, as
subsequently shown in the recent
Toyota unintended acceleration study,
in aiding the agency in assessing the
performance of that vehicle model in
the course of a safety defect
investigation. To serve this purpose,
EDR data must be available for all
applicable light vehicles.
Finally, the agency does not believe
that a mandate whose practical effect
would be to require the installation of
EDRs would impose unnecessary
burdens on less expensive vehicles or
hamper future improvements to EDRs
given that vehicle electronics on even
the least expensive vehicles are much
more sophisticated today than they were
in 2004 and 2006.
C. Reasons To Place the Mandate in a
Safety Standard
As noted above, we are proposing to
establish a new FMVSS that requires
each light vehicle having a GVWR of
3,855 kg or less and an unloaded weight
of 2,495 kg or less to be equipped with
an EDR capable of recording, at a
minimum, the data elements specified
in Table I of section 563.7. These
vehicles would also need to meet the
data capture and data format
requirements for these elements.
FMVSS No. 405 would further require
that these vehicles meet the crash test
performance and survivability
requirements in section 563.10 with
respect to the required data elements.
This would have the effect of requiring
that all required data elements in Part
563, except engine throttle, engine RPM,
and service brake status, be retrievable
for 10 days after the specified crash test.
Section 563.10(c) also specifies the use
of the data retrieval tool in section
563.12, and FMVSS No. 405 would
make such a tool mandatory by
incorporating the requirements of
section 563.12. Finally, FMVSS No. 405
would require that the owner’s manual
in each vehicle contain the statement
regarding EDRs required by section
563.11. Although by virtue of being
equipped with an EDR, the vehicles
affected by this rule would still need to
meet all other applicable requirements
of Part 563, the expanded enforcement
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authority available for a FMVSS,
described below, would only apply to
requirements listed in FMVSS No. 405.
NHTSA recognizes that it previously
expressed the view that the
requirements for voluntarily-installed
EDRs should be placed in a regulation
instead of in a standard:
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Similar to our approach in the area of
vehicle identification numbers, we decided
to develop a general regulation for EDRs
rather than a Federal motor vehicle safety
standard. We did not believe it was
appropriate to issue an FMVSS that would
trigger the statute’s recall and remedy
provisions, because the benefits of EDRs are
expected to be derivative from better crashrelated information, rather than having a
direct impact on the safety of the individual
vehicle equipped with an EDR. A failure to
meet the EDR requirements would, however,
be subject to an enforcement action.39
We have reconsidered that position in
light of subsequent experience and in
the different context of this rulemaking,
which seeks to mandate the installation
of EDRs. Our experience in addressing
unintended acceleration and pedal
entrapment allegations demonstrated
the value that EDR data can have for the
safety of current as well as future motor
vehicles. EDR data from a particular
vehicle model already on the road can
aid NHTSA and the model’s
manufacturer in their efforts to identify
and address safety concerns associated
with possible defects in the design or
performance of those vehicles.
As to our 2006 statement about a
failure to meet EDR requirements being
subject to an enforcement action, we
note that there is more than one form of
enforcement action. Collecting penalties
is one. Seeking an injunction is another.
We had the latter type of enforcement
action in mind when making that
statement.
Placing the mandate in a FMVSS,
instead of Part 563, would expand our
access to the Safety Act’s enforcement
authority, enabling us to assess civil
penalties for failure to provide an EDR
or for failure to provide one that
performs properly. We believe that
being able to avail ourselves of this
authority is necessary to ensure that all
manufacturers install EDRs and that the
agency has full and accurate EDR
information. Such information can be
vital to an agency investigation seeking
to determine whether there is a safety
defect in vehicles that are being driven
by consumers on the road and to agency
efforts to assess the performance of
advanced safety technologies for
possible future regulatory action. Not
having an EDR or not recording such
39 71
FR 50998, 51040 (August 28, 2006).
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safety information has assumed even
greater importance in the last several
years and is far more consequential than
a minor informational error, such as
those involving the regulation on
Vehicle Identification Numbers, for
example.40
Failure to comply with a FMVSS
would violate the prohibition in 49
U.S.C. 30112 against manufacturing for
sale, selling, offering for sale,
introducing or delivering for
introduction in interstate commerce, or
importing into the United States any
motor vehicle that does not comply with
any applicable FMVSS. It would also
subject them to the recall and remedy
provisions of 49 U.S.C. 30118 and
30120. In turn, violations of that
prohibition or the recall and remedy
provisions would be subject the violator
to civil penalties under 49 U.S.C.
30165(a)(1).
For the reasons stated above, we
tentatively conclude that placing the
requirements, including the EDR
requirement itself, in a FMVSS is better
than placing the requirements in Part
563. We acknowledge, however, that
placing all of the requirements in Part
563 is an alternative to placing them in
a FMVSS. We seek comment on the
relative merits of placing the
requirements in a FMVSS versus in Part
563. The agency requests comments on
(1) which, if any, portions of Part 563
should be moved to the new FMVSS
and which portions should remain in
Part 563, and (2) whether some
provisions should be set out in full in
both or at least be set out in full in one
and be incorporated by reference in the
other. Should FMVSS No. 405 require
that only some of the Table I elements
be recorded? Should the requirements
for the optional data elements listed in
Table II not be incorporated into FMVSS
No. 405? Would it be preferable to
simply rebadge Part 563 in its entirety
as FMVSS No. 405? What would be the
potential problems with such an
approach? How do manufacturers verify
or plan to verify EDRs meet the
recording requirements of Table I and II
elements in Part 563?
Because EDRs, unlike other safety
equipment, do not directly mitigate the
risk or severity of a crash, the agency is
considering how the recall and remedy
provisions of the Safety Act would
apply to noncompliance with the
proposed FMVSS. The agency notes that
49 U.S.C. § 30118(d) authorizes the
Secretary to exempt individual
40 49 CFR Part 565. The requirements of that
regulation were originally placed in a FMVSS, but
subsequently moved in stages into their current
location.
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manufacturers from the recall and
remedy provisions if the Secretary
decides that a defect or noncompliance
is inconsequential to motor vehicle
safety.41 The Secretary has delegated
this exemption authority to NHTSA.
NHTSA established 49 CFR Part 556,
Exemption for Inconsequential Defect or
Noncompliance, to implement the
statutory provisions concerning these
exemptions. The agency requests
comment on what factors the agency
should consider, if the proposed FMVSS
is adopted, in determining whether an
identified noncompliance is
inconsequential. Should any
noncompliance with the proposed
FMVSS be subject to remedy and recall?
Should recall and remedy be limited to
noncompliance with certain
requirements, such as noncompliance
with the Table I data element
requirements or the crash survivability
requirements? Should noncompliance
with the optional data element
requirements be considered
inconsequential?
D. Privacy Issues
The agency acknowledges that
consumer privacy concerns persist
regarding EDR data: Who owns it, who
has access to it and under what
circumstances, and what are the
purposes for which it may be used.
While these issues are of continued
importance in the public discussion on
the use of EDR technology, as an agency,
we do not have the statutory authority
to address many of these privacy issues
because they are generally matters of
State and Federal law that we do not
administer. Currently, 13 states 42 have
EDR laws to address vehicle owners’
privacy and consumer concerns. Since
2006, more than a dozen other states
have considered enacting similar
legislation.
Within the limits of its authority,
NHTSA has consistently sought to
promote the recording of vital crash
event information and to access and use
that information in ways that safeguard
privacy.
1. Agency Tailored EDR Performance
Requirements To Minimize Data
Gathering
Many of the public’s concerns about
EDRs appear to arise from
41 The agency notes that the granting of an
inconsequentiality petition exempts a manufacturer
from the remedy and recall provisions, but provides
no exemption from civil penalties under 49 U.S.C.
30165 for violations of § 30112.
42 The states include: Arkansas, California,
Colorado, Connecticut, Maine, Nevada, New
Hampshire, New York, North Dakota, Oregon,
Texas, Virginia, and Washington.
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wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with
misconceptions about how long and
under what circumstances EDRs capture
and permanently store data. Concerns
raised in the past about EDRs and
privacy arose from the misconceptions
that EDRs record data for prolonged
intervals and that they record personal
information. We have sought, in
developing and establishing the EDR
requirements, to minimize the types of
data recorded and the duration of any
recording. We do not require the
recording of data for prolonged intervals
(i.e., several minutes) or audio/visual
data that the public may associate with
event data recorders in other modes of
transportation. We believe that our
objectives can be met by using a very
brief snapshot of EDR data in the time
period immediately surrounding a
crash.
The EDR requirements we adopted
standardize EDR data recording for an
extremely short duration (i.e., a few
seconds immediately before and during
a crash). EDRs compliant with Part 563
requirements continuously record and
seconds later erase data unless and until
a frontal air bag or in some cases, a side
air bag deploys. If no frontal or side air
bag ever deploys, no data are ever
permanently captured and stored.43
Other types of events can result in
storage of data that can be overwritten
by subsequent events. Data are only
required to be locked and cannot be
overwritten when an air bag deploys in
a crash event. When recordable events
do occur, EDRs only capture data for a
few seconds. EDRs do not record any
personal information. They do not
record either location identification
information or any audio or video data.
2. Agency Seeks Vehicle Owner
Permission To Access EDR data
NHTSA does not have any authority
to establish legally binding rules
regarding the ownership or use of a
vehicle’s EDR data.44 Its authority to
regulate safety performance of new
vehicles, prohibit commercial entities
from rendering federally required safety
performance features inoperative and
require the recalling and remedying of
noncompliant vehicles and vehicles
containing a safety related defect does
not enable NHTSA to control who has
access to the data, specify the
circumstances in which access can be
obtained, or regulate how those who
obtain access to the data use it.
Nevertheless, the agency strives in its
own actions relating to EDR
43 Side air bag deployments may result in
permanent data capture under certain conditions.
44 NHTSA did require a statement in owner’s
manuals disclosing the existence and discussing the
purpose of an EDR.
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requirements and data to avoid or at
least minimize any impacts on privacy.
NHTSA’s longstanding policy has been
to treat EDR data as the property of the
vehicle owner. (Note, however, that
complications may arise when
ownership of the vehicle or EDR is
transferred after a crash.) For this
reason, before we attempt to obtain EDR
data in a crash investigation, our first
step is always to obtain the vehicle
owner’s consent. Once we obtain EDR
data, we take measures to protect all
personally identifiable information (e.g.,
the vehicle identification number (VIN)
may be associated with the identity of
the vehicle owner), and we assure the
vehicle owner that all such information
will be held confidential. In handling
EDR and related personal information,
the agency carefully complies with
applicable provisions of the Privacy Act
of 1974, the Freedom of Information
Act, and other statutory requirements
that limit the disclosure of personal
information by Federal agencies.
3. Necessity of VIN Collection
Part 563 does not require the EDR in
a motor vehicle to record that vehicle’s
VIN. However, for the reasons set forth
in the next paragraph, when NHTSA
collects the EDR data from a vehicle, the
agency also separately collects the VIN
of that vehicle. The following
discussion explains why it is necessary
for the agency to collect VIN in
connection with EDRs, how the VIN is
used by the agency, and the safeguards
the agency takes related to avoid the
release of the VIN.
Collecting the VIN is necessary to
download and process the EDR data
correctly. The commercial EDR
download tools require a vehicle’s VIN
be inputted into the program in order to
link the EDR data from that vehicle with
parameters that ensure proper
conversion of the data to a usable
format. A partial VIN will not suffice for
this purpose. The full VIN of a vehicle
must be inputted into current EDR
extraction tools as a key to ensure
proper output and to account for
running changes that may occur during
a particular model year, thereby
rendering it infeasible to use a
shortened VIN.
4. Agency Protects VINs Needed To
Download EDR Data
NHTSA takes care to protect the VINs
that are collected along with EDR data.
The VIN data identify the vehicle itself
and do not provide name, address, or
other personal identifier information
regarding an individual. Further, EDR
data alone cannot establish who was
driving the vehicle at any given time
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74151
(e.g., vehicle owner or other individuals
(either with or without permission)).
Nevertheless, NHTSA has taken steps
to prevent the release of any VIN
because it can be used in various
commercially-available programs to
determine the identity of the current
owner of a vehicle. As a practical
matter, information contained in these
records that has the potential of
indirectly identifying individuals is not
made public by the agency, except as
specifically required by law. Further,
prior to the release of information from
databases containing EDR data (usually
aggregated reports), the agency strips
out the last six characters of the VIN
(i.e., the portion that would allow
identification of a specific vehicle and,
potentially by indirect means, the
identity of the vehicle’s current owner).
5. Agency Uses and Stores EDR Data in
Ways To Preserve Privacy
In using EDR data, the agency takes
the EDR-generated information that it
collects and incorporates the
information into large crash-related
databases in order to gain a more
comprehensive understanding of certain
crash events. The information contained
in these databases is not retrieved or
retrievable by name or other individual
identifier.
In light of the above, we believe that
the agency has taken adequate steps to
´
ensure individual privacy vis-a-vis its
use of EDR data. Additional information
on EDRs may be found on the agency’s
Web site where we address a range of
EDR issues. The Web site is accessible
at https://www.nhtsa.gov/EDR. For more
background information on privacy
issues related to EDRs, please see the
NPRM at 69 FR 32932 (June 14, 2004),
the final rule at 71 FR 50998 (August 28,
2006), and amendments to the final rule
and response to petitions for
reconsideration at 73 FR 2168 (January
14, 2008) and 76 FR 47478 (August 5,
2011).
E. Lead Time
We are proposing an effective date of
September 1, 2014. The agency
estimates that approximately 92 percent
of the light vehicle fleet is equipped
with Part 563 compliant EDRs. The lead
time we are proposing is sufficient to
ensure that manufacturers of the
remaining portion of the fleet that are
not equipped with an EDR can redesign
the data bus architecture, air bag control
module, other electronic hardware and
software calibration, conduct the
requisite validation testing, and ensure
that a tool that can retrieve the EDR data
is commercially available. The proposed
lead time should address the practical
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concerns of small volume manufacturers
and many new electric and hybrid
electric manufacturers who are entering
the market and who may not have been
planning to install EDRs.
F. Benefits and Costs of This Proposal
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Mandating the installation of EDRs in
light vehicles required to have frontal
air bags would provide for a
standardized set of EDR data elements
and formats throughout most of the light
vehicle fleet rather than on just those
manufacturers who chose to voluntarily
install EDRs. This would expand and,
therefore, potentially enhance the
utilization of the recorded information
and lead to further improvements in the
safety of current and future motor
vehicles.
Although the benefits of this NPRM
derive from expansion of EDR coverage,
we will briefly review the general
benefits related to EDRs. EDR data
improve crash investigation and crash
data collection quality to assist safety
researchers, vehicle manufacturers, and
the agency to understand vehicle
crashes better and more precisely.45
While crash investigators gather
insightful information about the
dynamics of crashes, some of these
parameters cannot be determined (such
as anti-lock braking system or electronic
stability control functioning status) or
cannot be as accurately measured (such
as the change in velocity) by traditional
post-crash investigation procedures
such as visually examining and
evaluating physical evidence, e.g., the
crash-involved vehicles and skid marks.
Further, some vehicle crash dynamics
related to rollover (such as roll angle,
roll rate and normal acceleration)
cannot be effectively estimated by crash
investigators post-crash. Data collected
by the EDR can provide a direct means
for measuring these needed crash
parameters.
Similarly, vehicle manufacturers are
able to utilize EDRs in improving
vehicle designs and developing more
effective vehicle safety
countermeasures. Additionally, many
vehicle manufacturers are developing
active safety systems (or crash
avoidance systems) that assist drivers in
reducing the likelihood of crash
occurrence. EDR recorded pre-crash
data (e.g., vehicle speed and engine
45 Since the beginning of EDR data collection at
NHTSA (late 1999 through January 2010), over
7,600 EDRs have been imaged through our various
programs. The programs include: the National
Automotive Sampling System Crashworthiness Data
System (NASS–CDS), the National Motor Vehicle
Crash Causation Study (NMVCCS), Special Crash
Investigations (SCI) and Crash Injury Research and
Engineering Network (CIREN).
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throttle) could be used to further
improve active safety systems and
reduce crash involvement rates.
Additionally, the data can be used to
assess whether the vehicle was
operating properly at the time of the
event, or to help detect undesirable
operations.
Currently, Advanced Automatic Crash
Notification (AACN) systems may make
use of some of the Part 563 required
data elements such as change in
velocity, air bag deployments, and
safety belt status to aid emergency
response teams in assessing the severity
of a crash and estimating the probability
of serious injury before they arrive at the
scene of the crash.46 Overall, we believe
there are many safety-related benefits
that would derive from requiring light
vehicles to be equipped with EDRs.
In addition to the general benefits
derived from EDR installation, there are
benefits specific to this NPRM to
mandate EDRs. As shown in the recent
Toyota unintended acceleration studies,
EDR data from a particular vehicle
model can have significant value in
aiding the agency in assessing the
performance of that vehicle model and
in determining the need for, or
conducting, a safety defect investigation
that may lead to a recall of the vehicle
model for repair or replacement of
problem parts or systems. To serve this
purpose for all light vehicles required to
have frontal air bags, EDR data must be
available for those vehicles.
EDR data can also aid in the
improvement in existing safety
standards and the development of new
ones. Many of the vehicles anticipated
to continue to lack EDRs, absent a
mandate, are high end vehicles that
have advanced safety technologies,
including advanced collision avoidance
technologies. Such technologies are
typically first introduced on high end
vehicles. Thus, it is particularly
important to be able to obtain EDR data
generated by the crash experience of
these particular vehicles.
The cost for an EDR is estimated to be
$20 per vehicle. The estimated total
incremental costs associated with this
proposal would be $26.4 million (2010
dollars), which is measured from a
baseline of 91.6 percent EDR installation
to 100 percent installation, assuming the
sale of 16.5 million light vehicles per
year with a GVWR up to 4,536 kg. This
cost reflects the need for technology
improvements, as well as assembly
costs, compliance costs, and paperwork
maintenance costs for those 1.32 million
vehicles with a GVWR of 3,855 kg or
46 We note, however, that AACN systems do not
require a vehicle to be equipped with an EDR.
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less that do not have EDRs.
Technological improvements account
for the majority of these costs.
IV. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
and DOT Regulatory Policies and
Procedures
NHTSA has considered the potential
impacts of this proposed rule under
Executive Order 12866, ‘‘Regulatory
Planning and Review,’’ and Executive
Order 13563, ‘‘Improving Regulation
and Regulatory Review,’’ and the
Department of Transportation’s
regulatory policies and procedures. This
document was reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget under those
orders. This document has been
determined to be significant under the
Department’s regulatory policies and
procedures. While the potential cost
impacts of the proposed rule are far
below the level that would make this an
economically significant rulemaking,
the rulemaking addresses a topic of
substantial public interest.
The agency has prepared a separate
document addressing the benefits and
costs for the proposed rule. A copy is
being placed in the docket.
As discussed in that document and in
the preceding sections of this NPRM,
the crash data that would be collected
by EDRs under the proposed rule would
be extremely valuable for the
advancement of vehicle safety by
enhancing and facilitating crash
investigations, the evaluation of safety
countermeasures, advanced restraint
and safety countermeasure research and
development, certain safety defect
investigations, and AACN. The
improvements in vehicle safety will
occur indirectly from the collection of
crash data by EDRs. Since the
establishment of Part 563 in 2006, the
agency has observed an increasing
percentage of light vehicles utilizing
EDR technology, and researchers,
vehicle manufacturers, AACN and
emergency medical service (EMS)
providers, government agencies, and
other members of the safety community
are using the EDR data in ways that
contribute to overall vehicle safety. EDR
data can also have significant value in
aiding the agency in assessing the
performance of particular vehicle
models in determining the need for, or
conducting, a safety defect investigation
that may lead to a recall of the vehicle
for repair or replacement of problem
parts or systems, as was made evident
in the recent UA investigations
involving Toyota vehicles, discussed
earlier in this NPRM.
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We estimate that about 92 percent of
new light vehicles are already equipped
with EDRs. As discussed earlier, vehicle
manufacturers have provided EDRs in
their vehicles by adding EDR capability
to their vehicles’ air bag control
systems. The costs of EDRs have been
minimized, because they involve the
capture into memory of data that is
already being processed by the vehicle,
and not the much higher costs of
sensing much of that data in the first
place.
The costs of the proposed rule would
be the incremental costs for vehicles
currently not equipped with EDRs to
comply with the proposed EDR mandate
and Part 563’s requirements. We
estimate the total annual costs of the
proposed rule to be $26.4 million. While
the potential costs include technology
costs, paperwork maintenance costs,47
and compliance costs, the paperwork
maintenance and compliance costs are
estimated to be negligible. The proposal
would not require additional sensors to
be installed in vehicles, and the major
technology cost would result from a
need to upgrade memory chips and
hardware for housing the recorded data.
The total cost for the estimated 1.2
million vehicles that do not have an
EDR to comply with the proposed
mandate and Part 563 requirements is
estimated to be $26.4 million (2010
dollars). A complete discussion of how
NHTSA arrived at these costs may be
found in the separate document on
benefits and costs.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
NHTSA has considered the impacts of
this rulemaking action under the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601
et seq.). We certify that the proposed
amendment would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The following is the agency’s
statement providing the factual basis for
the certification (5 U.S.C. 605(b)). If
adopted, the proposal would directly
affect motor vehicle manufacturers,
second stage or final manufacturers, and
alterers. SIC code number 3711, Motor
Vehicles and Passenger Car Bodies,
prescribes a small business size
standard of 1,000 or fewer employees.
SIC code No. 3714, Motor Vehicle Part
and Accessories, prescribes a small
business size standard of 750 or fewer
employees.
Nine motor vehicle manufacturers
affected by this proposal would qualify
as a small business, as identified in the
47 These paperwork maintenance costs consist of
the costs to modify the owner’s manual with the
required statement specified in 49 CFR 563.11.
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Preliminary Regulatory Evaluation.48
Most of the intermediate and final stage
manufacturers of vehicles built in two
or more stages and alterers have 1,000
or fewer employees. However, these
small businesses adhere to original
equipment manufacturers’ instructions
in manufacturing modified and altered
vehicles. Based on our knowledge,
original equipment manufacturers do
not permit a final stage manufacturer or
alterer to modify or alter sophisticated
devices such as air bags or EDRs.
Therefore, multistage manufacturers and
alterers would be able to rely on the
certification and information provided
by the original equipment manufacturer.
Accordingly, there would be no
significant impact on small businesses,
small organizations, or small
governmental units by these
amendments. For these reasons, the
agency has not prepared a preliminary
regulatory flexibility analysis.
C. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
NHTSA has examined today’s
proposal pursuant to Executive Order
13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999).
Because multiple States have enacted
laws related to EDRs and may thus have
a particular interest in this rulemaking,
NHTSA has initiated efforts to consult
with associations representing officials
of those States 49 to obtain their views of
the impact, if any, of this proposed
rulemaking.
NHTSA rules can preempt in two
ways. First, the National Traffic and
Motor Vehicle Safety Act contains an
express preemption provision: When a
motor vehicle safety standard is in effect
under this chapter, a State or a political
subdivision of a State may prescribe or
continue in effect a standard applicable
to the same aspect of performance of a
motor vehicle or motor vehicle
equipment only if the standard is
identical to the standard prescribed
under this chapter.50 It is this statutory
command by Congress that preempts
any non-identical State legislative and
administrative law addressing the same
aspect of performance. Thus, to the
extent that aspects of EDR performance
would be addressed by a safety
standard, States would be expressly
preempted by section 30103(b)(1) from
adopting or maintaining any nonidentical statute or regulation
addressing those aspects of
48 The docket for this NPRM contains the
Preliminary Regulatory Evaluation for FMVSS No.
405, Event Data Recorders (EDRs).
49 The states include: Arkansas, California,
Colorado, Connecticut, Maine, Nevada, New
Hampshire, New York, North Dakota, Oregon,
Texas, Virginia, and Washington.
50 49 U.S.C. 30103(b)(1).
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performance. With respect to this
proposal, such aspects would include
State EDR technical requirements
requiring that EDRs record specific data
elements, and/or requiring EDRs to meet
specific technical performance or
survivability requirements. Further, it is
our view that any State laws or
regulations that imposed, for the types
of EDRs addressed by this proposal,
additional disclosure requirements on
vehicle manufacturers or dealers would
likewise create a conflict and therefore
be preempted. The disclosure
requirements in Part 563, which we are
proposing to incorporate into FMVSS
No. 405, require a statement in the
owner’s manual to make the operator
aware of the presence, function, and
capabilities of the EDR. We believe that
inconsistent or additional State
disclosure requirements would frustrate
the purposes of our regulation by
potentially creating confusion or
information overload, thereby reducing
the benefit of the required statement.
In promulgating Part 563, the agency
stated that it was our intent to provide
one consistent set of requirements,
including a specified statement in the
owner’s manual, for vehicles equipped
with EDRs. In proposing to establish
FMVSS No. 405, we continue to believe
that this approach will enhance the
quality of EDR data by standardizing the
content, format, and accuracy of such
data, thereby increasing its
comparability and overall usefulness.
We further believe that the standardized
data will be of greater benefit for safety
equipment analysis and crash
reconstruction.
This proposed rule does not address
certain other issues generally within the
realm of State law, such as whether the
vehicle owner owns the EDR data, how
EDR data can be used/discovered in
civil litigation, how EDR data may be
used in criminal proceedings, whether
EDR data may be obtained by the police
without a warrant, whether EDR data
may be developed into a drivermonitoring tool, and the nature and
extent that private parties (including
insurance companies, car rental
companies, and automobile
manufacturers) will have or may
contract for access to EDR data.
The express preemption provision
described above is subject to a savings
clause under which ‘‘[c]ompliance with
a motor vehicle safety standard
prescribed under this chapter does not
exempt a person from liability at
common law.’’ 51 Pursuant to this
provision, State common law tort causes
of action against motor vehicle
51 49
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manufacturers that might otherwise be
preempted by the express preemption
provision are generally preserved.
However, the Supreme Court has
recognized the possibility, in some
instances, of implied preemption of
such State common law tort causes of
action by virtue of NHTSA’s rules, even
if not expressly preempted. This second
way that NHTSA rules can preempt is
dependent upon there being an actual
conflict between an FMVSS and the
higher standard that would effectively
be imposed on motor vehicle
manufacturers if someone obtained a
State common law tort judgment against
the manufacturer, notwithstanding the
manufacturer’s compliance with the
NHTSA standard. Because most NHTSA
standards established by an FMVSS are
minimum standards, a State common
law tort cause of action that seeks to
impose a higher standard on motor
vehicle manufacturers will generally not
be preempted. However, if and when
such a conflict does exist—for example,
when the standard at issue is both a
minimum and a maximum standard—
the State common law tort cause of
action is impliedly preempted. See
Geier v. American Honda Motor Co.,
529 U.S. 861 (2000).
Pursuant to Executive Order 13132
and 12988, NHTSA has considered
whether this rule could or should
preempt State common law causes of
action. The agency’s ability to announce
its conclusion regarding the preemptive
effect of one of its rules reduces the
likelihood that preemption will be an
issue in any subsequent tort litigation.
To this end, the agency has examined
the nature (e.g., the language and
structure of the regulatory text) and
objectives of today’s rule and finds that
this rule, like many NHTSA rules,
prescribes only a minimum safety
standard. The agency does not
anticipate any State common law tort
judgments concerning EDRs that could
create any actual conflict. Without any
conflict, there could not be any implied
preemption of a State common law tort
cause of action.
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12988 52
D. Executive Order
(Civil
Justice Reform)
This proposed rule would not have
any retroactive effect. Under section 49
U.S.C. 30103, whenever a Federal motor
vehicle safety standard is in effect, a
state may not adopt or maintain a safety
standard applicable to the same aspect
of performance which is not identical to
the Federal standard, except to the
extent that the state requirement
imposes a higher level of performance
52 Executive
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and applies only to vehicles procured
for the state’s use. General principles of
preemption law would apply, however,
to displace any conflicting state law or
regulations. If the proposed rule were
made final, there would be no
requirement for submission of a petition
for reconsideration or other
administrative proceedings before
parties could file suit in court.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq.),
Federal agencies must obtain approval
from the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) for each collection of
information they conduct, sponsor, or
require through regulations. This
proposal would mandate the installation
of EDR devices in most light vehicles
manufactured after September 1, 2014,
and would require such vehicles to meet
the EDR requirements contained in Part
563.
In compliance with the PRA, we
announce that NHTSA is seeking
comment on a new information
collection.53
Agency: National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA).
Title: Event Data Recorders.
Type of Request: New collection.
OMB Control Number: Not assigned.
Form Number: The collection of this
information uses no standard form.
Requested Expiration Date of
Approval: Three years from the date of
approval.
Summary of the Collection of
Information:
NHTSA is proposing to create a new
FMVSS in Part 571 that would require
vehicle manufacturers to install EDRs in
most light vehicles manufactured on or
after September 1, 2014. The EDRs in
those vehicles would be required by the
new standard to meet the data elements,
data capture and format, data retrieval,
and data crash survivability
requirements of Part 563, the existing
regulation setting forth requirements for
voluntarily-installed EDRs. This
proposal would also require
manufacturers to comply with the Part
563 requirements for ensuring the
availability of EDR data retrieval tools
and the requirement that the owner’s
manual in each vehicle contain a
specified statement regarding EDRs.
53 As noted earlier in the preamble, most
manufacturers are already voluntarily installing
compliant EDRs and are already voluntarily
collecting the specified information. Nevertheless,
because voluntary compliance with a paperwork
requirement is regarded under the Paperwork
Reduction Act as proposing to require a new
collection of information, NHTSA must comply
with the Act.
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Description of the Need for the
Information and Use of the Information
The agency believes that requiring all
light vehicles to be equipped with EDRs
would help improve vehicle safety for
consumers, while imposing relatively
few costs on the automobile industry.
EDR data are used to improve crash
investigation and crash data collection
quality to assist safety researchers,
vehicle manufacturers, and the agency
to understand vehicle crashes better and
more precisely. Similarly, vehicle
manufacturers are able to utilize EDRs
in improving vehicle designs and
developing more effective vehicle safety
countermeasures, and EDR data may be
used by AACN systems to aid
emergency response teams in assessing
the severity of a crash and estimating
the probability of serious injury.
Additionally, the agency’s experience
in handling unintended acceleration
and pedal entrapment allegations over
the past year has demonstrated that if a
vehicle is equipped with an EDR, the
data from that EDR can improve the
ability of both the agency and the
vehicle’s manufacturer to identify and
address safety concerns associated with
possible defects in the design or
performance of the vehicle. Moreover,
this proposal to mandate EDRs across
the entire light vehicle fleet would
contribute to advancements in the
designs, particularly with respect to
occupant restraints and other safety
systems, of future vehicles.
Description of the Likely Respondents
The respondents are manufacturers of
passenger cars, multipurpose passenger
vehicles, trucks, and buses having a
GVWR of 3,855 kg (8,500 pounds) or
less and an unloaded vehicle weight of
2,495 kg (5,500 pounds). The agency
estimates that there are approximately
30 such manufacturers.
Estimate of the Total Annual Reporting
and Recordkeeping Burden Resulting
From the Collection of Information
There are no annual reporting or
recordkeeping burdens associated with
this proposed rule. Vehicle
manufacturers are not required to retain
or report information gathered by EDRs
because the devices themselves
continuously monitor vehicle systems
and determine when to record, retain,
and/or overwrite information. The
information is collected automatically
by electronic means. Data are only
required to be locked and cannot be
overwritten when an air bag deploys in
a crash event. When recordable events
do occur, EDRs only capture data for a
few seconds.
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The costs to respondents are the costs
of designing and equipping each
covered vehicle with a compliant EDR.
These costs include technology
improvements, assembly costs, and
paperwork maintenance costs.54
Technology improvements account for
the majority of these costs. Because the
costs of EDRs under the PRA are those
associated with the capture of data that
is already being processed by the
vehicle, the additional burden hours
necessary to equip vehicles with EDR
capability are minimal.
In determining the costs of this
proposed rule under the PRA, we
estimate that there are approximately
15.71 million applicable vehicles
produced annually, 14.39 million of
which are already voluntarily equipped
with EDRs. The cost to install an EDR
meeting the requirements of this
proposed rule is $20 per vehicle if a
vehicle does not have an EDR. The costs
of this proposed rule under the PRA
include the costs of installing compliant
EDRs on all applicable vehicles, even
those that are currently equipped with
EDRs. Accordingly, the annual total
costs of this proposed rule under the
PRA would be $314.20 million.
We emphasize that the regulatory
costs of the proposed rule would only
be the incremental costs for the 1.32
million vehicles not currently equipped
with EDRs to be equipped with an EDR
meeting Part 563’s requirements. As
discussed above, we estimate the total
annual regulatory costs of the proposed
rule to be $26.4 million.
Comments are invited on:
• Whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
Department, including whether the
information will have practical utility.
• Whether the Department’s estimate
for the burden of the information
collection is accurate.
• Ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information on
respondents, including the use of
automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
Please submit any comments,
identified by the docket number in the
heading of this document, by any of the
methods described in the ADDRESSES
section of this document. Comments are
due by February 11, 2013.
54 These paperwork maintenance costs consist of
the costs to modify the owner’s manual with the
required statement specified in 49 CFR 563.11.
Because this statement is supplied by the agency to
manufacturers for the purpose of public disclosure,
it is not considered a collection of information for
purposes of the Paperwork Reduction Act.
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F. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (NTTAA), Public Law 104–
113, section 12(d) (15 U.S.C. 272)
directs us to use voluntary consensus
standards in regulatory activities unless
doing so would be inconsistent with
applicable law or otherwise impractical.
Voluntary consensus standards are
technical standards (e.g., materials
specifications, test methods, sampling
procedures, and business practices) that
are developed or adopted by voluntary
consensus standards bodies, such as the
Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE)
and the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers (IEEE). The
NTTAA directs us to provide Congress,
through OMB, explanations when we
decide not to use available and
applicable voluntary consensus
standards.
There are several consensus standards
related to EDRs, most notably those
standards published by SAE and IEEE.
NHTSA carefully considered the
consensus standards applicable to EDR
data elements in establishing Part 563.
Consensus standards for recording time/
intervals, data sample rates, data
retrieval, data reliability, data range,
accuracy and precision, and EDR crash
survivability were evaluated by NHTSA
and adopted when practicable. This
particular rulemaking, however, does
not involve such matters. It is limited to
establishing a mandate for certain light
vehicles to be equipped with an EDR.
G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
requires Federal agencies to prepare a
written assessment of the costs, benefits,
and other effects of proposed or final
rules that include a Federal mandate
likely to result in the expenditure by
State, local, or tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of
more than $100 million in any one year
(adjusted for inflation with base year of
1995). In 2010 dollars, this threshold is
$136 million.55 Before promulgating a
rule for which a written statement is
needed, section 205 of the UMRA
generally requires NHTSA to identify
and consider a reasonable number of
regulatory alternatives and to adopt the
least costly, most cost-effective, or least
burdensome alternative that achieves
the objectives of the rule. The
provisions of section 205 do not apply
when they are inconsistent with
55 Adjusting this amount by the implicit gross
domestic product price deflator for the year 2010
results in $136 million (110.644/81.533 = 1.36).
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applicable law. Moreover, section 205
allows NHTSA to adopt an alternative
other than the least costly, most costeffective, or least burdensome
alternative if the agency publishes with
the final rule an explanation why that
alternative was not adopted.
If adopted, this proposed rule would
not impose any unfunded mandates
under the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995. This proposed rule would
not result in costs in excess of $136
million (2010 dollars) annually to either
State, local, or tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or to the private sector. Thus,
this proposed rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of
the UMRA.
H. National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA)
NHTSA has analyzed this rulemaking
action for the purposes of the National
Environmental Policy Act. The agency
has determined that implementation of
this action would not have any
significant impact on the quality of the
human environment.
I. Executive Order 13609 (Promoting
International Regulatory Cooperation)
The policy statement in section 1 of
Executive Order 13609 provides, in part:
The regulatory approaches taken by foreign
governments may differ from those taken by
U.S. regulatory agencies to address similar
issues. In some cases, the differences
between the regulatory approaches of U.S.
agencies and those of their foreign
counterparts might not be necessary and
might impair the ability of American
businesses to export and compete
internationally. In meeting shared challenges
involving health, safety, labor, security,
environmental, and other issues,
international regulatory cooperation can
identify approaches that are at least as
protective as those that are or would be
adopted in the absence of such cooperation.
International regulatory cooperation can also
reduce, eliminate, or prevent unnecessary
differences in regulatory requirements.
NHTSA requests public comment on
whether (a) the ‘‘regulatory approaches
taken by foreign governments’’
concerning the subject matter of this
rulemaking and (b) the above policy
statement have any implications for this
rulemaking.
J. Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
The Department of Transportation
assigns a regulation identifier number
(RIN) to each regulatory action listed in
the Unified Agenda of Federal
Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions
(the Unified Agenda). The Regulatory
Information Service Center publishes
the Unified Agenda in April and
October of each year. You may use the
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RIN contained in the heading at the
beginning of this document to find this
action in the Unified Agenda.
V. Request for Comments
How do I prepare and submit
comments?
Your comments must be written and
in English. To ensure that your
comments are filed correctly in the
docket, please include the docket
number of this document in your
comments.
Your comments must not be more
than 15 pages long. (49 CFR 553.21)
NHTSA established this limit to
encourage you to write your primary
comments in a concise fashion.
However, you may attach necessary
additional documents to your
comments. There is no limit on the
length of the attachments.
Please submit one copy (two copies if
submitting by mail or hand delivery) of
your comments, including the
attachments, to the docket following the
instructions given above under
ADDRESSES. Please note, if you are
submitting comments electronically as a
PDF (Adobe) file, we ask that the
documents submitted be scanned using
Optical Character Recognition (OCR)
process, thus allowing the agency to
search and copy certain portions of your
submissions.56
How do I submit confidential business
information?
If you wish to submit any information
under a claim of confidentiality, you
should submit three copies of your
complete submission, including the
information you claim to be confidential
business information, to the Office of
the Chief Counsel, NHTSA, at the
address given above under FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT. In addition, you
should submit a copy (two copies if
submitting by mail or hand delivery),
from which you have deleted the
claimed confidential business
information, to the docket by one of the
methods given above under ADDRESSES.
When you send a comment containing
information claimed to be confidential
business information, you should
include a cover letter setting forth the
information specified in NHTSA’s
confidential business information
regulation (49 CFR Part 512).
Will the agency consider late
comments?
NHTSA will consider all comments
received before the close of business on
the comment closing date indicated
above under DATES. To the extent
possible, the agency will also consider
comments received after that date. If a
comment is received too late for the
agency to consider it in developing a
final rule (assuming that one is issued),
the agency will consider that comment
as an informal suggestion for future
rulemaking action.
How can I read the comments submitted
by other people?
You may read the comments received
at the address given above under
COMMENTS. The hours of the docket
are indicated above in the same
location. You may also see the
comments on the Internet, identified by
the docket number at the heading of this
notice, at https://www.regulations.gov.
Please note that, even after the
comment closing date, NHTSA will
continue to file relevant information in
the docket as it becomes available.
Further, some people may submit late
comments. Accordingly, the agency
recommends that you periodically
check the docket for new material.
Anyone is able to search the
electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the
comment (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review DOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement in the Federal Register
published on April 11, 2000 (65 FR
19477–78) or you may visit https://
www.dot.gov/privacy.html.
Appendix A Part 563 Tables
TABLE I—DATA ELEMENTS REQUIRED FOR ALL VEHICLES EQUIPPED WITH AN EDR
Data sample rate
(samples per
second)
Data element
Recording interval/time 1
(relative to time zero)
Delta-V, longitudinal ...............................................................
0 to 250 ms or 0 to End of Event Time plus 30 ms, whichever is shorter.
0–300 ms or 0 to End of Event Time plus 30 ms, whichever
is shorter.
0–300 ms or 0 to End of Event Time plus 30 ms, whichever
is shorter.
¥5.0 to 0 sec .........................................................................
¥5.0 to 0 sec .........................................................................
¥5.0 to 0 sec .........................................................................
¥1.0 sec ................................................................................
At time of download 3 .............................................................
¥1.0 sec ................................................................................
¥1.0 sec ................................................................................
Event ......................................................................................
2
2
2
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
Event ......................................................................................
N/A
Event ......................................................................................
As needed ..............................................................................
Following other data ...............................................................
N/A
N/A
N/A
Maximum delta-V, longitudinal ...............................................
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with
Time, maximum delta-V .........................................................
Speed, vehicle indicated ........................................................
Engine throttle, % full (or accelerator pedal, % full) ..............
Service brake, on/off ..............................................................
Ignition cycle, crash ................................................................
Ignition cycle, download .........................................................
Safety belt status, driver .........................................................
Frontal air bag warning lamp, on/off 2 ....................................
Frontal air bag deployment, time to deploy, in the case of a
single stage air bag, or time to first stage deployment, in
the case of a multi-stage air bag, driver.
Frontal air bag deployment, time to deploy, in the case of a
single stage air bag, or time to first stage deployment, in
the case of a multi-stage air bag, right front passenger.
Multi-event, number of event ..................................................
Time from event 1 to 2 ...........................................................
Complete file recorded (yes, no) ............................................
100
N/A
N/A
1 Pre-crash data and crash data are asynchronous. The sample time accuracy requirement for pre-crash time is ¥0.1 to 1.0 sec (e.g., T = ¥1
would need to occur between ¥1.1 and 0 seconds.)
56 Optical character recognition (OCR) is the
process of converting an image of text, such as a
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2 The frontal air bag warning lamp is the readiness indicator specified in S4.5.2 of FMVSS No. 208, and may also illuminate to indicate a malfunction in another part of the deployable restraint system.
3 The ignition cycle at the time of download is not required to be recorded at the time of the crash, but shall be reported during the download
process.
TABLE II—DATA ELEMENTS REQUIRED FOR VEHICLES UNDER SPECIFIED MINIMUM CONDITIONS
Recording interval/time 1
(relative to time zero)
Condition for
requirement
Data element name
recorded 2 ..........................................
recorded .............................................
recorded .............................................
recorded .............................................
If
If
If
If
Maximum delta-V, lateral ......................
If recorded .............................................
Time maximum delta-V, lateral .............
If recorded .............................................
Time for maximum delta-V, resultant ...
If recorded .............................................
Engine rpm ............................................
Vehicle roll angle ..................................
ABS activity (engaged, non-engaged) ..
Stability control (on, off, or engaged) ...
Steering input ........................................
Safety belt status, right front passenger
(buckled, not buckled).
Frontal air bag suppression switch status, right front passenger (on, off, or
auto).
Frontal air bag deployment, time to nth
stage, driver 4.
Frontal air bag deployment, time to nth
stage, right front passenger 4.
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with
Lateral acceleration ...............................
Longitudinal acceleration ......................
Normal acceleration ..............................
Delta-V, lateral ......................................
If
If
If
If
If
If
Frontal air bag deployment, nth stage
disposal, driver, Y/N (whether the nth
stage deployment was for occupant
restraint or propellant disposal purposes).
Frontal air bag deployment, nth stage
disposal, right front passenger, Y/N
(whether the nth stage deployment
was for occupant restraint or propellant disposal purposes).
Side air bag deployment, time to deploy, driver.
Side air bag deployment, time to deploy, right front passenger.
Side curtain/tube air bag deployment,
time to deploy, driver side.
Side curtain/tube air bag deployment,
time to deploy, right side.
Pretensioner deployment, time to fire,
driver.
Pretensioner deployment, time to fire,
right front passenger.
Seat track position switch, foremost,
status, driver.
Seat track position switch, foremost,
status, right front passenger.
Occupant size classification, driver ......
Occupant size classification, right front
passenger.
Occupant position classification, driver
Occupant position classification, right
front passenger.
Data sample rate
(per second)
N/A
N/A
N/A
100
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
N/A ........................................................
N/A ........................................................
N/A ........................................................
0–250 ms or 0 to End of Event Time
plus 30 ms, whichever is shorter.
0–300 ms or 0 to End of Event Time
plus 30 ms, whichever is shorter.
0–300 ms or 0 to End of Event Time
plus 30 ms, whichever is shorter.
0–300 ms or 0 to End of Event Time
plus 30 ms, whichever is shorter.
¥5.0 to 0 sec .......................................
¥1.0 up to 5.0 sec 3 .............................
¥5.0 to 0 sec .......................................
¥5.0 to 0 sec .......................................
¥5.0 to 0 sec .......................................
¥1.0 sec ...............................................
If recorded .............................................
¥1.0 sec ...............................................
N/A
If equipped with a driver’s frontal air
bag with a multi-stage inflator.
If equipped with a right front passenger’s frontal air bag with a multistage inflator.
If recorded .............................................
Event .....................................................
N/A
Event .....................................................
N/A
Event .....................................................
N/A
If recorded .............................................
Event .....................................................
N/A
If recorded .............................................
Event .....................................................
N/A
If recorded .............................................
Event .....................................................
N/A
If recorded .............................................
Event .....................................................
N/A
If recorded .............................................
Event .....................................................
N/A
If recorded .............................................
Event .....................................................
N/A
If recorded .............................................
Event .....................................................
N/A
If recorded .............................................
¥1.0 sec ...............................................
N/A
If recorded .............................................
¥1.0 sec ...............................................
N/A
If recorded .............................................
If recorded .............................................
¥1.0 sec ...............................................
¥1.0 sec ...............................................
N/A
N/A
If recorded .............................................
If recorded .............................................
¥1.0 sec ...............................................
¥1.0 sec ...............................................
N/A
N/A
recorded
recorded
recorded
recorded
recorded
recorded
N/A
N/A
N/A
2
10
2
2
2
N/A
1 Pre-crash data and crash data are asynchronous. The sample time accuracy requirement for pre-crash time is ¥0.1 to 1.0 sec (e.g. T = ¥1
would need to occur between ¥1.1 and 0 seconds.)
2 ‘‘If recorded’’ means if the data is recorded in non-volatile memory for the purpose of subsequent downloading.
3 ‘‘vehicle roll angle’’ may be recorded in any time duration; ¥1.0 sec to 5.0 sec is suggested.
4 List this element n ¥ 1 times, once for each stage of a multi-stage air bag system.
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TABLE III—REPORTED DATA ELEMENT FORMAT
Data element
Minimum range
Accuracy 1
Resolution
Lateral acceleration ..........................................
At option of manufacturer ...............................
Longitudinal acceleration ..................................
At option of manufacturer ...............................
Normal Acceleration .........................................
At option of manufacturer ...............................
Longitudinal delta-V ..........................................
Lateral delta-V ..................................................
Maximum delta-V, longitudinal .........................
Maximum delta-V, lateral .................................
Time, maximum delta-V, longitudinal ...............
¥100 km/h to + 100 km/h ..............................
¥100 km/h to + 100 km/h ..............................
¥100 km/h to + 100 km/h ..............................
¥100 km/h to + 100 km/h ..............................
0–300 ms, or 0—End of Event Time plus 30
ms, whichever is shorter.
0–300 ms, or 0—End of Event Time plus 30
ms, whichever is shorter.
0–300 ms, or 0—End of Event Time plus 30
ms, whichever is shorter.
¥1080 deg to + 1080 deg ..............................
0 km/h to 200 km/h .........................................
0 to 100% ........................................................
At option of manufacturer.
At option of manufacturer.
At option of manufacturer.
+/¥ 10% ....................
+/¥ 10% ....................
+/¥ 10% ....................
+/¥ 10% ....................
+/¥ 3 ms ...................
At option of manufacturer.
At option of manufacturer.
At option of manufacturer.
1 km/h.
1 km/h.
1 km/h.
1 km/h.
2.5 ms.
+/¥ 3 ms ...................
2.5 ms.
+/¥ 3 ms ...................
2.5 ms.
+/¥ 10% ....................
+/¥ 1 km/h ................
+/¥ 5% ......................
10 deg.
1 km/h.
1%.
0 to 10,000 rpm ..............................................
On or Off .........................................................
On or Off .........................................................
On, Off, or Engaged .......................................
¥250 deg CW to + 250 deg CCW .................
0 to 60,000 ......................................................
0 to 60,000 ......................................................
On or Off .........................................................
On or Off .........................................................
On or Off .........................................................
On, Off, or Auto ..............................................
+/¥
N/A
N/A
N/A
+/¥
+/¥
+/¥
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
100 rpm.
On or Off.
On or Off.
On, Off, or Engaged.
+/¥ 1%
1 cycle.
1 cycle.
On or Off.
On or Off.
On or Off.
On, Off, or Auto.
0 to 250 ms .....................................................
+/¥ 2 ms ...................
1 ms.
0 to 250 ms .....................................................
+/¥ 2 ms ...................
1 ms.
0 to 250 ms .....................................................
+/¥ 2 ms ...................
1 ms.
0 to 250 ms .....................................................
+/¥ 2 ms ...................
1 ms.
Yes or No ........................................................
N/A .............................
Yes or No.
Yes or No ........................................................
N/A .............................
Yes or No.
0 to 250 ms .....................................................
+/¥ 2 ms ...................
1 ms.
0 to 250 ms .....................................................
+/¥ 2 ms ...................
1 ms.
0 to 250 ms .....................................................
+/¥ 2 ms ....................
1 ms.
0 to 250 ms .....................................................
+/¥ 2 ms ....................
1 ms.
0 to 250 ms .....................................................
0 to 250 ms .....................................................
+/¥ 2 ms ...................
+/¥ 2 ms ...................
1 ms.
1 ms.
Yes or No ........................................................
N/A .............................
Yes or No.
Yes or No ........................................................
N/A .............................
Yes or No.
5th percentile female or larger ........................
Child ................................................................
N/A .............................
N/A .............................
Yes or No.
Yes or No.
Out of position .................................................
Out of position .................................................
N/A .............................
N/A .............................
Yes or No.
Yes or No.
1 or 2 ...............................................................
0 to 5.0 sec .....................................................
Yes or No ........................................................
N/A .............................
0.1 sec ........................
N/A .............................
1 or 2.
0.1 sec.
Yes or No.
Time, maximum delta-V, lateral .......................
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with
Time, maximum delta-V, resultant ...................
Vehicle Roll Angle ............................................
Speed, vehicle indicated ..................................
Engine throttle, percent full (accelerator pedal
percent full).
Engine rpm .......................................................
Service brake ...................................................
ABS activity ......................................................
Stability control .................................................
Steering input ...................................................
Ignition cycle, crash ..........................................
Ignition cycle, download ...................................
Safety belt status, driver ..................................
Safety belt status, right front passenger ..........
Frontal air bag warning lamp ...........................
Frontal air bag suppression switch status,
right front passenger.
Frontal air bag deployment, time to deploy/first
stage, driver.
Frontal air bag deployment, time to deploy/first
stage, right front passenger.
Frontal air bag deployment, time to nth stage,
driver.
Frontal air bag deployment, time to nth stage,
right front passenger.
Frontal air bag deployment, nth stage disposal, driver.
Frontal air bag deployment, nth stage disposal, right front passenger.
Side air bag deployment, time to deploy, driver.
Side air bag deployment, time to deploy, right
front passenger.
Side curtain/tube air bag deployment, time to
deploy, driver side.
Side curtain/tube air bag deployment, time to
deploy, right side.
Pretensioner deployment, time to fire, driver ...
Pretensioner deployment, time to fire, right
front passenger.
Seat track position switch, foremost, status,
driver.
Seat track position switch, foremost, status,
right front passenger.
Occupant size classification, driver ..................
Occupant size classification, right front passenger.
Occupant position classification, driver ............
Occupant position classification, right front
passenger.
Multi-event, number of event ...........................
Time from event 1 to 2 .....................................
Complete file recorded .....................................
100 rpm ..............
.............................
.............................
.............................
5% ......................
1 cycle ................
1 cycle ................
.............................
.............................
.............................
.............................
1 Accuracy requirement only applies within the range of the physical sensor. For vehicles manufactured after September 1, 2014, if measurements captured by a sensor exceed the design range of the sensor, the reported element must indicate when the measurement first exceeded
the design range of the sensor.
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 240 / Thursday, December 13, 2012 / Proposed Rules
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 571
Motor vehicle safety, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Tires.
Regulatory Text
In consideration of the foregoing,
NHTSA proposes to amend 49 CFR part
571 as follows:
PART 571—FEDERAL MOTOR
VEHICLE SAFETY STANDARDS
this chapter for data capture, § 563.10 of
this chapter for crash test performance
and survivability, and § 563.11 of this
chapter for information in owner’s
manual. Each manufacturer of a motor
vehicle equipped with an EDR shall
comply with the requirements of
§ 563.12 of this chapter for data retrieval
tools.
Issued on: December 7, 2012.
Christopher J. Bonanti,
Associate Administrator for Rulemaking.
1. The authority citation of part 571
continues to read as follows:
[FR Doc. 2012–30082 Filed 12–10–12; 4:15 pm]
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115,
30117, and 30166; delegation of authority at
49 CFR 1.95.
BILLING CODE 4910–59–P
2. Add § 571.405 to subpart B to read
as follows:
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with
§ 571.405 Standard No. 405; Event data
recorders.
S1. Purpose and scope. This standard
specifies requirements for equipping
motor vehicles with event data
recorders (EDRs) and for the post-crash
survivability and retrievability of
onboard motor vehicle crash event data
to help ensure that EDRs record, in a
readily usable manner, data valuable for
effective crash investigations and for
analysis of safety equipment
performance (e.g., advanced restraint
systems). These data will help provide
a better understanding of the
circumstances in which crashes and
injuries occur. That understanding will
aid efforts to assess and address safety
problems in motor vehicles currently on
the road and to develop requirements
for safer motor vehicles in the future.
S2. Application. This standard
applies to passenger cars, multipurpose
passenger vehicles, trucks, and buses
that have a GVWR of 3,855 kg (8,500
pounds) or less and an unloaded vehicle
weight of 2,495 kg (5,500 pounds) or
less, and that are manufactured on or
after September 1, 2014, except for
walk-in van-type trucks or vehicles
designed to be sold exclusively to the
U.S. Postal Service.
S3. Definitions.
Event data recorder (EDR) means a
device or function in a vehicle that
records the vehicle’s dynamic timeseries data during the time period just
prior to a crash event (e.g., vehicle
speed vs. time) or during a crash event
(e.g., delta-V vs. time), intended for
retrieval after the crash event. For the
purposes of this definition, the event
data do not include audio and video
data.
S4. Requirements. Each vehicle shall
be equipped with an event data recorder
and meet the requirements of § 563.7 of
this chapter for data elements, § 563.8 of
this chapter for data format, § 563.9 of
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National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 121128658–2658–01]
RIN 0648–BC72
Fisheries of the Northeastern United
States; Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and
Butterfish Fisheries; Framework
Adjustment 7
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule, request for
comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS proposes changing the
butterfish mortality cap on the longfin
squid fishery from a catch cap to a
discard cap in Framework Adjustment 7
to the Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and
Butterfish Fishery Management Plan,.
This action also proposes reducing the
butterfish mortality cap for the 2013
fishing year by 13 percent (from 4,500
mt to 3,915 mt) to exclude butterfish
landings that were previously included
in the butterfish mortality cap
allocation. The adjustment will
maintain the intended function of the
butterfish mortality cap by continuing to
limit butterfish discards in the longfin
squid fishery while accommodating a
potential directed butterfish fishery
during the 2013 fishing year.
DATES: Public comments must be
received on January 14, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Copies of supporting
documents used by the Mid-Atlantic
Fishery Management Council, including
the Framework Document, the
Regulatory Impact Review (RIR)/Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA)
for Framework Adjustment 7, are
available from: Dr. Christopher M.
Moore, Executive Director, Mid-Atlantic
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
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74159
Fishery Management Council, Suite 201,
800 N. State Street, Dover, DE 19901.
The Framework Document is also
accessible via the Internet at https://
www.nero.noaa.gov.
You may submit comments on this
document, identified by NOAA–NMFS–
2012–0239, by any of the following
methods:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=
NOAA-NMFS-2012-0239, click the
‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon, complete the
required fields, and enter or attach your
comments.
• Mail: Submit written comments to
the Northeast Regional Office, 55 Great
Republic Dr, Gloucester, MA 01930.
Mark the outside of the envelope
‘‘Comments on MSB Framework
Adjustment 7.’’
• Fax: (978) 281–9135, Attn: Aja
Szumylo.
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
considered by NMFS. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted for public
viewing on www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.),
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information
submitted voluntarily by the sender will
be publicly accessible. NMFS will
accept anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/
A’’ in the required fields if you wish to
remain anonymous). Attachments to
electronic comments will be accepted in
Microsoft Word, Excel, or Adobe PDF
file formats only.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Aja
Szumylo, Fishery Policy Analyst, 978–
281–9195, fax 978–281–9135.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The butterfish mortality cap on the
longfin squid fishery was implemented
on January 1, 2011, as part of
Amendment 10 to the Atlantic
Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish (MSB)
Fishery Management Plan (FMP) (75 FR
11441, March 11, 2010) as a means of
reducing fishing mortality to the
butterfish stock. Butterfish discards in
the longfin squid fishery account for the
largest source of butterfish fishing
mortality. The cap currently limits
butterfish catch (both landings and
discards) on directed longfin squid
trips. The mortality cap accounts for
fishery behavior in which most
butterfish caught on a longfin squid trip
E:\FR\FM\13DEP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 240 (Thursday, December 13, 2012)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 74144-74159]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-30082]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
49 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. NHTSA-2012-0177]
RIN 2127-AK86
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Event Data Recorders
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In August 2006, NHTSA established a regulation that sets forth
requirements for data elements, data capture and format, data
retrieval, and data crash survivability for event data recorders (EDRs)
installed in light vehicles. The requirements apply to light vehicles
that are manufactured on or after September 1, 2012, and are equipped
with EDRs. However, the regulation does not mandate the installation of
EDRs in those vehicles. This notice of proposed rulemaking would
establish a new safety standard mandating the installation of EDRs in
most light vehicles manufactured on or after September 1, 2014. The
EDRs in those vehicles would be required by the new standard to meet
the data elements, data capture and format, data retrieval, and data
crash survivability requirements of the existing regulation. This
proposal would not modify any of the requirements or specifications in
the regulation for EDRs voluntarily installed between September 1, 2012
and September 1, 2014.
DATES: You should submit your comments early enough to be received not
later than February 11, 2013. In compliance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act, NHTSA is also seeking comment on a new information
collection. See the Paperwork Reduction Act section under Rulemaking
Analyses and Notices below. Please submit all comments relating to new
information collection requirements to NHTSA and to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) at the address listed in the ADDRESSES
section on or before February 11, 2013. Comments to OMB are most useful
if submitted within 30 days of publication.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The following persons at the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration:
For technical and policy issues: Christopher J. Wiacek, Office of
Crashworthiness Standards, NHTSA, 1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., West
Building, W43-320, Washington, DC 20590. Telephone: (202) 366-4801.
For legal issues: William Shakely, Office of the Chief Counsel,
NHTSA, 1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., West Building, W41-227, Washington, DC
20590. Telephone: (202) 366-2992. Fax: (202) 366-3820.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by the docket number at
the heading of this notice, by any of the following methods:
Online: Go to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the instructions
for submitting comments on the electronic docket site by clicking on
``Help'' or ``FAQs.''
Fax: 1-202-493-2251.
Mail: U.S. Department of Transportation, Docket Operations, M-30,
Room W12-140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590.
Hand Delivery: 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., West Building Ground
Floor, Room W12-140, Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Comments regarding the proposed information collection should be
submitted to NHTSA through one of the preceding methods and a copy
should also be sent to the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20503, Attention: NHTSA Desk Officer.
Instructions: All submissions must include the agency name and
docket number. Note that all comments received will be posted without
change to https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal
information provided. Please see the Privacy Act discussion below. We
will consider all comments received before the close of business on the
comment closing date indicated above. To the extent possible, we will
also consider comments filed after the closing date.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov at any time or to
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., West Building Ground Floor, Room W12-140,
Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. Telephone: (202) 366-9826.
[[Page 74145]]
Privacy Act: Anyone is able to search the electronic form of all
comments received into any of our dockets by the name of the individual
submitting the comment (or signing the comment, if submitted on behalf
of an association, business, labor union, etc.). You may review DOT's
complete Privacy Act Statement in the Federal Register published on
April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19477-78) or you may visit https://www.dot.gov/privacy.html.
Confidential Business Information: If you wish to submit any
information under a claim of confidentiality, you should submit three
copies of your complete submission, including the information you claim
to be confidential business information, to the Chief Counsel, NHTSA,
at the address given under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. In
addition, you should submit two copies, from which you have deleted the
claimed confidential business information, to Docket Operations at the
address given above. When you send a comment containing information
claimed to be confidential business information, you should include a
cover letter setting forth the information specified in our
confidential business information regulation (49 CFR part 512).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Overview of Event Data Recorder (EDR) Technology
B. EDR Regulatory History--The Establishment of Part 563
C. Summary of Part 563
1. Data Elements Recorded
2. Data Retrieval
3. Data Survivability and Crash Test Performance Requirements
D. NHTSA's Validation of and Reliance on EDR Data in Its Crash
Investigations Relating to Unintended Acceleration
III. Proposal
A. Overview
1. Overall Plan for Reviewing and Upgrading EDR Requirements
2. This Proposal
B. Reasons To Mandate the Installation of EDRs
C. Reasons To Place Mandate in a Safety Standard
D. Privacy Issues
1. Agency Tailored EDR Performance Requirements To Minimize Data
Gathering
2. Agency Seeks Vehicle Owner Permission To Access EDR Data
3. Necessity of VIN Collection
4. Agency Protects VIN Information Needed To Download EDR Data
5. Agency Uses and Stores EDR Data in Ways To Preserve Privacy
E. Lead Time
F. Benefits and Costs of This Proposal
IV. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
V. Request for Comments
Appendix A Part 563 Tables
Regulatory Text
I. Executive Summary
An event data recorder (EDR) is a function or device installed in a
motor vehicle to record technical information about the status and
operation of vehicle systems for a very brief period of time (i.e., a
few seconds) and in very limited circumstances (immediately before and
during a crash), primarily for the purpose of post-crash assessment of
vehicle safety system performance.\1\ EDR data are used to improve
crash and defect investigation and crash data collection quality to
assist safety researchers, vehicle manufacturers, and the agency to
understand vehicle crashes better and more precisely. Additionally,
vehicle manufacturers are able to utilize EDR data in improving vehicle
designs and developing more effective vehicle safety countermeasures.
EDR data can also be used by Advanced Automatic Crash Notification
(AACN) systems to aid emergency response teams in assessing the
severity of a crash and estimating the probability of serious injury
before they reach the site of the crash.
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\1\ An EDR does not make an audio or video recording, nor does
it log data such as hours of service for commercial operators.
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The installation of EDR technology has increased considerably
within the light vehicle fleet, as most manufacturers have voluntarily
chosen to install some type of EDR capability in their vehicles. The
light vehicles most likely to be equipped with EDRs are those that are
required to be equipped with frontal air bags, i.e., passenger cars,
multipurpose passenger vehicles (MPVs), trucks, and buses with a gross
vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of 3,855 kilograms (kg) (8,500 pounds) or
less and an unloaded vehicle weight of 2,495 kg (5,500 pounds) or less.
We estimate that about 92 percent of model year (MY) 2010 passenger
cars and other vehicles with a GVWR of 3,855 kg or less have some EDR
capability.
In August 2006, NHTSA established 49 CFR Part 563 (Part 563), which
sets forth requirements for data elements, data capture and format,
data retrieval, and data crash survivability for EDRs. The requirements
apply to light vehicles required to have frontal air bags (those with a
GVWR of 3,855 kg or less and an unloaded vehicle weight of 2,595 kg or
less) \2\ that are manufactured on or after September 1, 2012, and are
equipped with EDRs. Thus, the regulation applies to only those vehicles
that are voluntarily equipped with EDRs.
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\2\ Walk-in van-type trucks or vehicles designed to be sold
exclusively to the U.S. Postal Service are excluded from air bag and
EDR requirements.
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This notice of proposed rulemaking would establish a new safety
standard mandating the installation of EDRs for all light vehicles that
are required to have frontal air bags and are manufactured on or after
September 1, 2014. The EDRs in those vehicles would be required by the
new standard to meet the data elements, data capture and format, data
retrieval, and data crash survivability requirements contained in Part
563. The agency is issuing this proposal because we believe that,
without a regulation, EDRs will remain absent from the estimated 8
percent of the current light vehicle fleet that lacks an EDR. We
believe that requiring all light vehicles required to have frontal air
bags to be equipped with EDRs would help improve vehicle safety for
consumers, while imposing relatively limited costs on the automobile
industry.
NHTSA is proposing today's NPRM under the National Traffic and
Motor Vehicle Safety Act (``Motor Vehicle Safety Act''). Under 49
U.S.C. Chapter 301, Motor Vehicle Safety (49 U.S.C. 30101 et seq.), the
Secretary of Transportation is responsible for prescribing motor
vehicle safety standards that are practicable, meet the need for motor
vehicle safety, and are stated in objective terms.\3\ ``Motor vehicle
safety standard'' means a minimum performance standard for motor
vehicles or motor vehicle equipment. When prescribing such standards,
the Secretary must consider all relevant, available motor vehicle
safety information.\4\ The Secretary must also consider whether a
proposed standard is reasonable, practicable, and appropriate for the
types of motor vehicles or motor vehicle equipment for which it is
prescribed and the extent to which the standard will further the
statutory purpose of reducing traffic accidents and associated
deaths.\5\ The responsibility for promulgation of Federal motor vehicle
safety standards is delegated to NHTSA. In proposing to require the
installation of EDRs in most light vehicles manufactured on or after
September 1, 2014, the agency carefully considered these statutory
requirements.
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\3\ 49 U.S.C. 30111(a).
\4\ 49 U.S.C. 30111(b).
\5\ Id.
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Placing the mandate in a FMVSS, instead of Part 563, would expand
its ability to avail itself of the enforcement authority of the Motor
Vehicle Safety Act, making it possible to seek civil penalties for
failure to provide an EDR
[[Page 74146]]
or for failure to provide one that performs properly. We believe that
this step is necessary to ensure that all manufacturers install EDRs
and that the agency has full and accurate EDR information for all light
vehicles required to have frontal air bags.
The benefits of this proposal would be to expand and, therefore,
enhance the utilization of the recorded information and lead to further
improvements in the safety of current vehicles as well as future ones.
A disproportionately high percentage of the light vehicles that would
be affected by this proposal are relatively expensive vehicles and thus
are significantly more likely than the typical light vehicle to be
equipped with advanced safety features and systems, including advanced
collision avoidance technologies. Thus, the light vehicles that would
be affected by this proposal are the ones on which data regarding real
world performance will most likely first be generated. It is important
to have EDR data relating to the crash experiences of vehicles with
these advanced safety systems so that the agency can, at the earliest
possible time, gather enough information about emerging advanced
technologies to conduct reliable analyses and make policy judgments.
Additionally, the agency's experience in handling unintended
acceleration and pedal entrapment allegations has demonstrated that EDR
data from a particular vehicle model can have significant value to both
the agency and the vehicle's manufacturer to identify and address
safety concerns associated with possible defects in the design or
performance of the vehicle. To serve this purpose for all light
vehicles required to have frontal air bags, EDR data must be available
for all such vehicles.
This proposal would not change any of the substantive requirements
of Part 563. The agency recognizes that there have been advances in
vehicle safety systems and the implementation of new FMVSSs since the
publication of the EDR final rule in 2006.\6\ However, the issue of
whether there should be any changes to the amount and type of
information that EDRs must collect is not being considered in this
rulemaking. This proposal would also not modify any of the requirements
or specifications for EDRs voluntarily installed between September 1,
2012 and September 1, 2014.
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\6\ FMVSS No. 214, ``Side impact protection,'' FMVSS No. 126,
``Electronic stability control,'' and FMVSS No. 226, ``Ejection
mitigation,'' all have been updated since the publication in 2006 of
the EDR final rule.
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We believe that the costs of installing EDRs are minimal because
the devices involve the capture into memory of data that are already
being processed by the vehicle, and not the much higher costs of
providing sensors to obtain much of that data in the first place. The
cost for an EDR is estimated to be $20 per vehicle. The estimated total
incremental costs associated with this proposal would be $26.4 million
(2010 dollars), which reflects the need for technology improvements, as
well as assembly costs, compliance costs, and paperwork maintenance
costs for those 1.32 million vehicles that have a GVWR of 3,855 kg or
less, but do not currently have EDRs. Technological improvements
account for the majority of these costs.
The agency acknowledges that consumer privacy concerns persist
regarding EDR data: Who owns it, who has access to it and under what
circumstances, and what are the purposes for which it may be used.
Approximately one dozen states have enacted laws addressing these
issues. While these issues are of continued importance in the public
discussion on the use of EDR technology, as an agency, we do not have
the statutory authority to address many of these privacy issues because
they are generally matters of State and Federal law that we do not
administer. Within the limits of its authority, NHTSA has consistently
sought to promote the recording of vital crash event information and to
access and use that information in ways that safeguard privacy. For
example, the agency seeks to access EDR data only with the vehicle
owner's permission.
II. Background
A. Overview of Event Data Recorder (EDR) Technology
An EDR is a function or device installed in a motor vehicle to
record technical information about the status and operation of vehicle
systems for a very brief period of time (i.e., a few seconds
immediately before and during a crash), primarily for the purpose of
post-crash assessment of vehicle safety system performance.\7\ In most
cases, the type of crash that leads to the capturing of data is a
frontal or side collision that is sufficiently severe to cause the air
bags to deploy. Data collected from the EDR of a crash-involved vehicle
can provide valuable information on the severity of the crash,
operation of its air bags, and what air bag deployment decision
strategies were used during the event. Additionally, the data can be
used to assess whether the vehicle was operating properly at the time
of the event, or to help detect undesirable operations that may lead to
a recall of the vehicle to remedy the problem. The information obtained
by manufacturers from EDRs aids them in improving vehicle performance
in crash events.
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\7\ An EDR does not make an audio or video recording, nor does
it log data such as hours of service for commercial operators.
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In recent years, the installation of EDR technology has increased
considerably within the light vehicle fleet, as most manufacturers have
voluntarily chosen to install some type of EDR capability in their
vehicles. The light vehicles most likely to be equipped with EDRs are
those that are required to be equipped with frontal air bags, i.e.,
passenger cars, multipurpose passenger vehicles (MPVs), trucks, and
buses with a GVWR of 3,855 kilograms (kg) (8,500 pounds) or less and an
unloaded vehicle weight of 2,495 kg (5,500 pounds) or less. These
vehicles compose the vast majority of light vehicles. We estimate that
about 92 percent of model year (MY) 2010 passenger cars and other
vehicles with a GVWR 3,855 kg (8,500 pounds) or less have some EDR
capability. This estimate is based on information that was taken from
manufacturer-reporting to the agency regarding their 2010 vehicles and
then weighting using 2010 corporate-level vehicle projected sales
figures to estimate an overall industry-wide fleet figure.
For manufacturers that install EDRs in most light vehicles on or
after September 1, 2012, the current regulation, 49 CFR Part 563 (Part
563), requires that their EDRs record 15 data elements at a minimum,
and sets requirements for the range and accuracy of the EDR data
collected under the regulation. The discussion below explains in detail
the requirements of Part 563.
For more background information on NHTSA's rulemaking actions
regarding EDR technologies, please see the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM) at 69 FR 32932 (June 14, 2004),\8\ the final rule at
71 FR 50998 (August 28, 2006),\9\ and amendments to the final rule and
responses to petitions for reconsideration at 73 FR 2168 (January 14,
2008),\10\ 76 FR 47478 (August 5, 2011), and 77 FR 47552 (August 9,
2012).
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\8\ Docket No. NHTSA-2004-18029.
\9\ Docket No. NHTSA-2006-25666.
\10\ Docket No. NHTSA-2008-0004.
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B. EDR Regulatory History--The Establishment of Part 563
For more than a decade, the agency has been assessing the potential
value of real-world EDR crash data for improving our understanding of
vehicle safety
[[Page 74147]]
system performance and our analysis of vehicle crashes. Several years
ago, NHTSA working groups \11\ examined data elements for the purpose
of identifying the most useful set of crash data to aid the agency in
achieving its goal of reducing highway deaths.
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\11\ See reports numbered DOT-HS-043334, Event Data Recorders:
Summary of Findings by the NHTSA EDR Working Group, August 2001,
Docket No. NHTSA-1999-5218-9; DOT-HS-809432, Event Data Recorders:
Summary of Findings by the NHTSA EDR Working Group Volume II,
Supplemental Findings for Trucks, Motorcoaches, and School Buses,
May 2002, Docket No. NHTSA-2000-7699-6.
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On August 28, 2006, following public notice and comment, the
agency's early research efforts culminated in the publication of a
final rule that established Part 563.\12\ Part 563 establishes uniform
performance requirements for the accuracy, collection, storage,
survivability, and retrievability of that set of onboard motor vehicle
crash event data in passenger cars and other light vehicles equipped
with EDRs.
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\12\ 71 FR 50998, 51043 (Aug. 28, 2006), amended 73 FR 2168,
2179 (Jan. 14, 2008), corrected 73 FR 8408 (Feb. 13, 2008), amended
76 FR 47478 (August 5, 2011), amended 77 FR 47552 (August 9, 2012).
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In response to petitions for reconsideration, the agency amended
Part 563 in January 2008 to make several technical changes to the
regulatory text and to set a later compliance date of September 1,
2012.\13\ The new compliance date helped manufacturers to avoid
incurring significant redesign costs for EDR system architectures
outside of the normal product cycle. Again in response to petitions for
reconsideration, the agency amended Part 563 on August 5, 2011, to
revise the acceleration data elements, clarify the event storage
definition and make other minor technical modifications.\14\ Finally,
in response to further petitions for reconsideration, the agency
amended Part 563 on August 9, 2012, to revise the steering input data
element and delay the compliance date for the data clipping flag
requirement.\15\
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\13\ 73 FR 2168 (Jan. 14, 2008), corrected 73 FR 8408 (Feb. 13,
2008). Vehicles that are manufactured in two or more stages, or that
are altered after having been previously certified to the Federal
motor vehicle safety standards (FMVSS), have a compliance date of
September 1, 2013.
\14\ 76 FR 47478.
\15\ 77 FR 47552.
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C. Summary of Part 563
Part 563 regulates EDR-equipped vehicles by specifying a minimum
core set of required data elements and accompanying range, accuracy,
and resolution requirements for those elements. The regulation also
specifies requirements for vehicle manufacturers to make data retrieval
tools and/or methods commercially available so that crash investigators
and researchers are able to retrieve data from EDRs. Part 563 is
technology-neutral, permitting the use of any available EDR technology
that complies with the specified performance requirements.
Part 563 applies to passenger cars, MPVs, trucks, and buses with a
GVWR of 3,855 kg (8,500 pounds) or less and an unloaded vehicle weight
of 2,595 kg (5,500 pounds) or less,\16\ that are voluntarily equipped
with an event data recorder. It also applies to manufacturers of these
vehicles, who must ensure the commercial availability of data retrieval
tools. The regulation became effective on September 1, 2012.\17\
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\16\ Walk-in van-type trucks or vehicles designed to be sold
exclusively to the U.S. Postal Service are excluded from air bag and
EDR requirements.
\17\ 73 FR 2168 (Jan. 14, 2008).
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1. Data Elements Recorded
Part 563 specifies minimum requirements for the types of data that
EDR-equipped vehicles are required to record. In all, there are 15 data
elements that must be recorded during the interval/time and at the
sample rate specified in Table I of Part 563.\18\ Some of the required
pre-crash data are vehicle speed, engine throttle position, brake use,
driver safety belt status, and air bag warning lamp status. Some of the
required crash data are measured changes in forward velocity (delta-V)
and air bag deployment times.
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\18\ See 49 CFR 563.7, Table I.
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In addition, a vehicle equipped with an EDR that records any of the
28 data elements listed in Table II of Part 563, identified as ``if
recorded,'' must capture and record information according to the
minimum interval/time and at the sample rate specified in that
table.\19\ There are two data elements listed in Table II, identified
as ``if equipped.'' If a vehicle carries this equipment, it must record
the specified information (i.e., ``frontal air bag deployment, time to
nth stage, driver'' and ``front air bag deployment, time to nth stage,
right front passenger'').\20\
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\19\ See 49 CFR 563.7, Table II. Examples of the ``if recorded''
data elements include lateral acceleration, longitudinal
acceleration, stability control status, and frontal air bag
suppression switch status.
\20\ See 49 CFR 563.7, Table II. The ``frontal air bag
deployment, time to nth stage'' data elements provide critical
timing data for vehicles equipped with multi-stage air bags, which
will help in assessing whether an air bag is deploying correctly
during a crash (i.e., whether the sensors are functioning properly).
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When retrieved, the data elements collected by the EDR pursuant to
Tables I and II must be reported in accordance with the range,
accuracy, and resolution requirements specified in Table III. Reported
Data Element Format.\21\ All three tables have been included in
Appendix A to this preamble.\22\
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\21\ See 49 CFR 563.8, Table III.
\22\ Table I and Table II were most recently amended by the
August 5, 2011 final rule responding to petitions for
reconsideration. 76 FR 47478. Table III was most recently amended by
the August 9, 2012 final rule responding to petitions for
reconsideration 77 FR 47552.
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2. Data Retrieval
Part 563 requires that each vehicle manufacturer ensure, by
licensing agreement or other means, the commercial availability of
retrieval tool(s) for downloading or imaging the required EDR data.\23\
The data-imaging tool must be commercially available no later than 90
days after the first sale of the vehicle for purposes other than
resale.\24\
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\23\ The term ``imaging'' refers to the process by which the
agency retrieves data from an EDR. When imaging the data on an EDR,
the original data set remains intact and unchanged in the memory
banks of the EDR.
\24\ See 49 CFR 563.12.
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3. Data Survivability and Crash Test Performance Requirements
To ensure that data are recorded in a crash and that the data
survive the crash, EDRs must record and retain in retrievable condition
certain data when the vehicles in which they are installed are tested
in accordance with crash test procedures specified in Federal Motor
Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) Nos. 208, ``Occupant crash
protection,'' and 214, ``Side impact protection.'' \25\ These crash
tests represent the modes of a majority of real-world crashes and
severities observed. For example, several FMVSS No. 208 crash tests are
performed at speeds of up to 56 km/h (35 mph), which represent the
cumulative delta-V for 99 percent of frontal crashes.\26\ The EDR data
must be retrievable for no less than 10 days after the crash test.
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\25\ See 49 CFR 563.10.
\26\ See 49 CFR 571.208; Docket No. NHTSA-2006-26555-1, at 60.
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D. NHTSA's Validation of and Reliance on EDR Data in Its Crash
Investigations Relating to Unintended Acceleration
Based on the agency's experience with EDRs over the past decade, as
well as with recent investigations of alleged unintended acceleration
and pedal entrapment, the agency has found EDR data to be an important
tool that provides valuable insight. EDR data provides vehicle-recorded
pre-crash information, supplementing information obtained from the
driver and physical evidence from the scene.
[[Page 74148]]
A number of technical papers have been published on EDR accuracy in
the crash test environment. Early studies focused on the full frontal
barrier crash test environment where the reported EDR data was compared
to instrumentation grade accelerometers mounted on the vehicle. Due to
the limited availability of EDRs at that time, these studies were
exclusively based on EDRs produced by General Motors. The studies
reported a small amount of underestimation in the EDR delta-V
reporting.\27\
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\27\ Chidester A.B., Hinch J., & Roston, T.A., ``Real World
Experience with Event Data Recorders,'' 17th International Technical
Conference on the Enhanced Safety of Vehicles, 2001.
Lawrence, J.M., Wilkinson, C.C., King, D.J., Heinrichs, B.E., &
Siegmund, G.P., ``The Accuracy and Sensitivity of Event Data
Recorders in Low-Speed Collisions,'' Society of Automotive
Engineers, 2003.
Comeau, J.L., German, A., & Floyd, D., ``Comparison of Crash
Pulse Data from Motor Vehicle Event Data Recorders and Laboratory
Instrumentation,'' Canadian Multidisciplinary Road Safety Conference
XIV, 2004.
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More recent technical papers \28\ have incorporated EDRs from other
vehicle manufacturers, such as Ford and Toyota. They have also looked
at a variety of impact scenarios including full frontal, offset
frontal, side impact, and vehicle-to-vehicle angled tests. Better
correlation between EDR and crash test delta-V were reported,
particularly at higher impact speeds where more serious injuries occur.
Accurate reporting of seat belt use and pre-crash data was also
observed. The findings from these studies are generally consistent with
the agency's experience to date; however, monitoring of EDR performance
will continue as more vehicle manufacturers incorporate EDRs into the
fleet. Furthermore, the agency continues to emphasize that EDRs provide
one valuable piece of information, along with on-site evidence, needed
to reconstruct crash events.
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\28\ Niehoff, P., Gabler, H.C., Brophy, J., Chidester, C.,
Hinch, J., & Ragland C., ``Evaluation of Event Data Recorders in
Full Systems Crash Tests,'' 19th International Technical Conference
on the Enhanced Safety of Vehicles, 2005.
Gabler, H.C. & Hinch, J., ``Characterization of Advanced Air Bag
Field Performance Using Event Data Recorders,'' 20th International
Technical Conference on the Enhanced Safety of Vehicles, Paper 07-
0349, 2007.
DaSilva, M., ``Engineering Analysis of EDR Data in NHTSA's NASS
CDS Database,'' Presentation at the Society of Automotive Engineers
Government/Industry Meeting, Washington, DC, 2007.
Gabler, H.C. & Hinch, J., ``Preliminary Evaluation of Advanced
Air Bag Field Performance Using Event Data Recorders,'' DOT HS 811
015, August 2008.
Bare, C., Everest, B., Floyd, D., & Nunan, D., ``Analysis of
Pre-Crash Data Transferred over the Serial Data Bus and Utilized by
the SDM-DS Module,'' Society of Automotive Engineers, 2011.
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In March 2010, the agency began to obtain data from Toyota EDRs as
part of its inquiry into allegations of unintended acceleration (UA),
and as follow-up to the recalls of some Toyota models for sticking and
entrapped accelerator pedals.\29\ The agency conducted a thorough
process of validating the accuracy of Toyota's EDR data and has high
confidence in the accuracy of the data recovered.\30\ In the NHTSA
report \31\ on the analysis and findings concerning UA in vehicles
manufactured by Toyota, the validation efforts were described. The
validation work was extensive and ultimately NHTSA established a high
level of confidence in the veracity of pre-crash data recovered from
Toyota's EDRs. Those data were found to be very valuable when
considered in concert with the physical facts of a given incident.
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\29\ See for Pedal Entrapment: NHTSA Recall Nos. 06V-253, 07E-
082, 09V-388, and 10V-023. See for Sticking Pedals: NHTSA Recall No.
10V-017.
\30\ Event Data Recorder-Pre Crash Data Validation of Toyota
Products. February 2011 (NHTSA-NVS-2011-ETC-SR07). https://www.nhtsa.gov/staticfiles/nvs/pdf/NHTSA-Toyota_EDR_pre-crash_validation.pdf.
\31\ Technical Assessment of Toyota Electronic Throttle Control
(ETC) Systems, February 2011, page 43 (footnotes omitted). https://www.nhtsa.gov/staticfiles/nvs/pdf/NHTSA-UA_report.pdf.
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When the agency received an allegation of UA or pedal entrapment,
it interviewed the complainant and obtained permission for agency
investigators to inspect the vehicle and, if it was EDR-equipped,
attempted to download any data on the EDR.\32\ NHTSA investigators also
visited the location of the alleged incident to evaluate the complaint
fully.\33\ Complainants might state that while coming to an
intersection, the vehicle suddenly accelerated without warning,
resulting in a crash, or while driving on the highway, the vehicle
continued to accelerate without the complainant's having stepped on the
accelerator pedal and the brakes would not stop the vehicle.
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\32\ Not all of the vehicles for which the agency received
consumer complaints were equipped with EDRs or had EDRs capable of
capturing pre-crash data.
\33\ The agency does not limit its follow-up investigations to
consumers whose vehicles are equipped with EDRs.
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Typically, EDRs store data specific to the dynamic state of the
vehicle just prior to a crash, the performance of the air bag system in
a crash, and a deceleration trace. The EDRs in Toyota vehicles examined
by NHTSA captured vehicle speed, accelerator pedal voltage, brake light
switch status, and engine revolutions per minute (rpm) at five, one-
second intervals prior to a crash. A sixth and final interval of data
was recorded at algorithm enable or when the EDR sensed an impact.
While non-crash impacts such as curb and pothole strikes might enable
an EDR algorithm and cause it to store data, aggressive throttle
application or braking (without impact) would not enable the EDR.
For further information on the agency's field inspections of recent
crashes alleging one or more forms of UA and the contribution of EDR
data to the agency's investigations, please see Technical Assessment of
Toyota Electronic Throttle Control (ETC) Systems, February 2011.\34\
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\34\ See https://www.nhtsa.gov/UA for the reports related to the
agency's investigation into Toyota's electronic throttle system and
unintended acceleration.
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III. Proposal
A. Overview
1. Overall Plan for Reviewing and Upgrading EDR Requirements
Based on its experience with EDR data in the unintended
acceleration studies and on the potential role of EDR data in
investigations of future vehicles and technologies, the agency has been
reviewing the requirements of Part 563 and assessing whether the
applicability of the requirements should be expanded or the
capabilities of EDRs should be increased. NHTSA plans on publishing an
advance notice of proposed rulemaking in the near future to explore the
potential for, and future utility of, capturing additional EDR data in
light vehicles.
2. This Proposal
The agency proposes a new FMVSS, FMVSS No. 405, ``Event data
recorders,'' which would mandate the installation of EDRs in most light
vehicles manufactured on or after September 1, 2014. This proposal
would also require that the vehicles meet the requirements for data
elements, data format, and data capture contained in Part 563.
Additionally, this proposal would require compliance with the crash
test performance and survivability requirements in Part 563. This would
mean that the data elements required by the regulation, with certain
exceptions, must be recorded in the format specified by the regulation,
exist at the completion of the crash test, and be retrievable by the
methodology specified by the vehicle manufacturer. This proposal would
also require manufacturers to comply with the requirements for such
data retrieval tools listed in Sec. 563.12. Finally, this
[[Page 74149]]
proposal would require that the owner's manual in each vehicle contain
the statement regarding EDRs required by Sec. 563.11.
A key priority of this NPRM is for the agency to require EDRs in
light vehicles with a GVWR of 3,855 kg or less and an unloaded vehicle
weight of 2,595 kg or less, without disrupting the initiative and
efforts of those manufacturers who already have voluntarily installed
Part 563 compliant EDRs. Accordingly, we are not now proposing any
modifications to Part 563 itself, e.g., not to any EDR data elements,
data capture and format requirements, data retrieval specifications, or
data survivability and crash test requirements. Likewise, we are not
proposing revisions to the definitions section of Part 563.
The agency recognizes that that there have been advances in vehicle
safety systems and the phase-in of new FMVSSs since the publication of
the EDR final rule in 2006.\35\ However, the issue of whether there
should be any changes to the amount and type of information that EDRs
must collect is not being considered in this rulemaking. Any
significant revision to the substantive components of Part 563 is
outside the scope of this NPRM.
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\35\ FMVSS No. 214, ``Side impact protection,'' FMVSS No. 126,
``Electronic stability control,'' and FMVSS No. 226, ``Ejection
mitigation,'' all have been updated since the publication in 2006 of
the EDR final rule.
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B. Reasons To Mandate the Installation of EDRs
In the 2006 EDR final rule, the agency chose not to mandate
installation of EDRs at that time for purposes of encouraging the
voluntary development and installation of EDRs and alleviating costs on
automobile manufacturers and consumers. Although we did not mandate
EDRs in 2006, we stated that it was our intention that their use
continue to expand.\36\
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\36\ 71 FR 50998 at 51010 (Aug. 28, 2006).
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The agency explained further that the ``marketplace appears to be
adopting EDRs and we do not currently see a need to mandate their
installation.''\37\ The agency gave the following reasons for reaching
this conclusion:
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\37\ Ibid at 51011 (Aug. 28, 2006).
The challenge for NHTSA has been to devise an approach that
would encourage broad application of EDR technologies in motor
vehicles and maximize the usefulness of EDR data for the medical
community, researchers, and regulators, without imposing unnecessary
burdens or hampering future improvements to EDRs.
* * * * *
* * * We believe that the industry's voluntary development and
installation of EDRs, combined with the standardization requirements
in this rule, will be sufficient to meet the agency's and public's
near term needs. * * *
* * * [A]dopting a rule mandating EDR installation would result
in an unnecessary cost for automobile manufacturers and consumers.
Since less expensive vehicles are not equipped with a databus, a
rule mandating EDR installation would require manufacturers to
install a databus in those vehicles. * * *
* * * * *
* * * [W]e expect the extent of installation in new vehicles to
continue increasing and to reach approximately 85 percent by model
year 2010. * * * [T]he new vehicles lacking an EDR in that model
year will be primarily those manufactured either in Germany or
Korea. As Korea has expressed interest in the development of an EDR
standard under the International Standards Organization, it appears
that Korean built vehicles also might eventually be voluntarily
equipped with EDRs.
* * * We believe that the current level of EDR installation,
combined with our standardization requirement, will yield data of
statistical significance. * * *
We will monitor future increases in the extent of installation
of EDRs and revisit this issue if appropriate.\38\
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\38\ Ibid at 50999, 51010-11 (Aug. 28, 2006).
Thus, the agency did not deem it necessary to propose to require
the installation of EDRs, but remained open to considering this in the
future. We are now revisiting that decision and the reasons given to
support it. The agency has tentatively reached different conclusions
about the issues it discussed in its 2004 and 2006 explanations of its
decision not to seek to mandate EDRs.
Our first line of reasoning for an EDR mandate is driven by a need
to fully cover light vehicles required to have frontal air bags (those
with a GVWR of 3,855 kg or less and an unloaded vehicle weight of 2,595
kg or less) in order to improve vehicle safety and aid the agency in
investigating potential safety defects. Although the percentage of
light vehicles voluntarily equipped with EDRs has steadily increased as
anticipated, EDRs remain absent from about 8 percent of the current
production of all light vehicles regulated by Part 563. We believe that
EDRs will remain absent from these vehicles without a regulation.
While it remains true that the current and expected levels of
voluntary installation of EDRs may be sufficient to generate data for
assessing performance of the general vehicle population to support
future rulemaking, the agency notes that many of the vehicles without
EDRs are high end vehicles and that advanced safety technologies,
including advanced collision avoidance technologies, are typically
first introduced on high end vehicles. Thus, it is particularly
important to be able to obtain EDR data generated by the crash
experience of these particular vehicles so that the agency has as much
information about emerging advanced technologies as possible.
In its 2006 determination, the agency did not take into
consideration the significant value that EDR data from a particular
vehicle model can have, as subsequently shown in the recent Toyota
unintended acceleration study, in aiding the agency in assessing the
performance of that vehicle model in the course of a safety defect
investigation. To serve this purpose, EDR data must be available for
all applicable light vehicles.
Finally, the agency does not believe that a mandate whose practical
effect would be to require the installation of EDRs would impose
unnecessary burdens on less expensive vehicles or hamper future
improvements to EDRs given that vehicle electronics on even the least
expensive vehicles are much more sophisticated today than they were in
2004 and 2006.
C. Reasons To Place the Mandate in a Safety Standard
As noted above, we are proposing to establish a new FMVSS that
requires each light vehicle having a GVWR of 3,855 kg or less and an
unloaded weight of 2,495 kg or less to be equipped with an EDR capable
of recording, at a minimum, the data elements specified in Table I of
section 563.7. These vehicles would also need to meet the data capture
and data format requirements for these elements. FMVSS No. 405 would
further require that these vehicles meet the crash test performance and
survivability requirements in section 563.10 with respect to the
required data elements. This would have the effect of requiring that
all required data elements in Part 563, except engine throttle, engine
RPM, and service brake status, be retrievable for 10 days after the
specified crash test. Section 563.10(c) also specifies the use of the
data retrieval tool in section 563.12, and FMVSS No. 405 would make
such a tool mandatory by incorporating the requirements of section
563.12. Finally, FMVSS No. 405 would require that the owner's manual in
each vehicle contain the statement regarding EDRs required by section
563.11. Although by virtue of being equipped with an EDR, the vehicles
affected by this rule would still need to meet all other applicable
requirements of Part 563, the expanded enforcement
[[Page 74150]]
authority available for a FMVSS, described below, would only apply to
requirements listed in FMVSS No. 405.
NHTSA recognizes that it previously expressed the view that the
requirements for voluntarily-installed EDRs should be placed in a
regulation instead of in a standard:
Similar to our approach in the area of vehicle identification
numbers, we decided to develop a general regulation for EDRs rather
than a Federal motor vehicle safety standard. We did not believe it
was appropriate to issue an FMVSS that would trigger the statute's
recall and remedy provisions, because the benefits of EDRs are
expected to be derivative from better crash-related information,
rather than having a direct impact on the safety of the individual
vehicle equipped with an EDR. A failure to meet the EDR requirements
would, however, be subject to an enforcement action.\39\
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\39\ 71 FR 50998, 51040 (August 28, 2006).
We have reconsidered that position in light of subsequent
experience and in the different context of this rulemaking, which seeks
to mandate the installation of EDRs. Our experience in addressing
unintended acceleration and pedal entrapment allegations demonstrated
the value that EDR data can have for the safety of current as well as
future motor vehicles. EDR data from a particular vehicle model already
on the road can aid NHTSA and the model's manufacturer in their efforts
to identify and address safety concerns associated with possible
defects in the design or performance of those vehicles.
As to our 2006 statement about a failure to meet EDR requirements
being subject to an enforcement action, we note that there is more than
one form of enforcement action. Collecting penalties is one. Seeking an
injunction is another. We had the latter type of enforcement action in
mind when making that statement.
Placing the mandate in a FMVSS, instead of Part 563, would expand
our access to the Safety Act's enforcement authority, enabling us to
assess civil penalties for failure to provide an EDR or for failure to
provide one that performs properly. We believe that being able to avail
ourselves of this authority is necessary to ensure that all
manufacturers install EDRs and that the agency has full and accurate
EDR information. Such information can be vital to an agency
investigation seeking to determine whether there is a safety defect in
vehicles that are being driven by consumers on the road and to agency
efforts to assess the performance of advanced safety technologies for
possible future regulatory action. Not having an EDR or not recording
such safety information has assumed even greater importance in the last
several years and is far more consequential than a minor informational
error, such as those involving the regulation on Vehicle Identification
Numbers, for example.\40\
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\40\ 49 CFR Part 565. The requirements of that regulation were
originally placed in a FMVSS, but subsequently moved in stages into
their current location.
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Failure to comply with a FMVSS would violate the prohibition in 49
U.S.C. 30112 against manufacturing for sale, selling, offering for
sale, introducing or delivering for introduction in interstate
commerce, or importing into the United States any motor vehicle that
does not comply with any applicable FMVSS. It would also subject them
to the recall and remedy provisions of 49 U.S.C. 30118 and 30120. In
turn, violations of that prohibition or the recall and remedy
provisions would be subject the violator to civil penalties under 49
U.S.C. 30165(a)(1).
For the reasons stated above, we tentatively conclude that placing
the requirements, including the EDR requirement itself, in a FMVSS is
better than placing the requirements in Part 563. We acknowledge,
however, that placing all of the requirements in Part 563 is an
alternative to placing them in a FMVSS. We seek comment on the relative
merits of placing the requirements in a FMVSS versus in Part 563. The
agency requests comments on (1) which, if any, portions of Part 563
should be moved to the new FMVSS and which portions should remain in
Part 563, and (2) whether some provisions should be set out in full in
both or at least be set out in full in one and be incorporated by
reference in the other. Should FMVSS No. 405 require that only some of
the Table I elements be recorded? Should the requirements for the
optional data elements listed in Table II not be incorporated into
FMVSS No. 405? Would it be preferable to simply rebadge Part 563 in its
entirety as FMVSS No. 405? What would be the potential problems with
such an approach? How do manufacturers verify or plan to verify EDRs
meet the recording requirements of Table I and II elements in Part 563?
Because EDRs, unlike other safety equipment, do not directly
mitigate the risk or severity of a crash, the agency is considering how
the recall and remedy provisions of the Safety Act would apply to
noncompliance with the proposed FMVSS. The agency notes that 49 U.S.C.
Sec. 30118(d) authorizes the Secretary to exempt individual
manufacturers from the recall and remedy provisions if the Secretary
decides that a defect or noncompliance is inconsequential to motor
vehicle safety.\41\ The Secretary has delegated this exemption
authority to NHTSA. NHTSA established 49 CFR Part 556, Exemption for
Inconsequential Defect or Noncompliance, to implement the statutory
provisions concerning these exemptions. The agency requests comment on
what factors the agency should consider, if the proposed FMVSS is
adopted, in determining whether an identified noncompliance is
inconsequential. Should any noncompliance with the proposed FMVSS be
subject to remedy and recall? Should recall and remedy be limited to
noncompliance with certain requirements, such as noncompliance with the
Table I data element requirements or the crash survivability
requirements? Should noncompliance with the optional data element
requirements be considered inconsequential?
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\41\ The agency notes that the granting of an inconsequentiality
petition exempts a manufacturer from the remedy and recall
provisions, but provides no exemption from civil penalties under 49
U.S.C. 30165 for violations of Sec. 30112.
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D. Privacy Issues
The agency acknowledges that consumer privacy concerns persist
regarding EDR data: Who owns it, who has access to it and under what
circumstances, and what are the purposes for which it may be used.
While these issues are of continued importance in the public discussion
on the use of EDR technology, as an agency, we do not have the
statutory authority to address many of these privacy issues because
they are generally matters of State and Federal law that we do not
administer. Currently, 13 states \42\ have EDR laws to address vehicle
owners' privacy and consumer concerns. Since 2006, more than a dozen
other states have considered enacting similar legislation.
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\42\ The states include: Arkansas, California, Colorado,
Connecticut, Maine, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, North Dakota,
Oregon, Texas, Virginia, and Washington.
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Within the limits of its authority, NHTSA has consistently sought
to promote the recording of vital crash event information and to access
and use that information in ways that safeguard privacy.
1. Agency Tailored EDR Performance Requirements To Minimize Data
Gathering
Many of the public's concerns about EDRs appear to arise from
[[Page 74151]]
misconceptions about how long and under what circumstances EDRs capture
and permanently store data. Concerns raised in the past about EDRs and
privacy arose from the misconceptions that EDRs record data for
prolonged intervals and that they record personal information. We have
sought, in developing and establishing the EDR requirements, to
minimize the types of data recorded and the duration of any recording.
We do not require the recording of data for prolonged intervals (i.e.,
several minutes) or audio/visual data that the public may associate
with event data recorders in other modes of transportation. We believe
that our objectives can be met by using a very brief snapshot of EDR
data in the time period immediately surrounding a crash.
The EDR requirements we adopted standardize EDR data recording for
an extremely short duration (i.e., a few seconds immediately before and
during a crash). EDRs compliant with Part 563 requirements continuously
record and seconds later erase data unless and until a frontal air bag
or in some cases, a side air bag deploys. If no frontal or side air bag
ever deploys, no data are ever permanently captured and stored.\43\
Other types of events can result in storage of data that can be
overwritten by subsequent events. Data are only required to be locked
and cannot be overwritten when an air bag deploys in a crash event.
When recordable events do occur, EDRs only capture data for a few
seconds. EDRs do not record any personal information. They do not
record either location identification information or any audio or video
data.
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\43\ Side air bag deployments may result in permanent data
capture under certain conditions.
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2. Agency Seeks Vehicle Owner Permission To Access EDR data
NHTSA does not have any authority to establish legally binding
rules regarding the ownership or use of a vehicle's EDR data.\44\ Its
authority to regulate safety performance of new vehicles, prohibit
commercial entities from rendering federally required safety
performance features inoperative and require the recalling and
remedying of noncompliant vehicles and vehicles containing a safety
related defect does not enable NHTSA to control who has access to the
data, specify the circumstances in which access can be obtained, or
regulate how those who obtain access to the data use it.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ NHTSA did require a statement in owner's manuals disclosing
the existence and discussing the purpose of an EDR.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nevertheless, the agency strives in its own actions relating to EDR
requirements and data to avoid or at least minimize any impacts on
privacy. NHTSA's longstanding policy has been to treat EDR data as the
property of the vehicle owner. (Note, however, that complications may
arise when ownership of the vehicle or EDR is transferred after a
crash.) For this reason, before we attempt to obtain EDR data in a
crash investigation, our first step is always to obtain the vehicle
owner's consent. Once we obtain EDR data, we take measures to protect
all personally identifiable information (e.g., the vehicle
identification number (VIN) may be associated with the identity of the
vehicle owner), and we assure the vehicle owner that all such
information will be held confidential. In handling EDR and related
personal information, the agency carefully complies with applicable
provisions of the Privacy Act of 1974, the Freedom of Information Act,
and other statutory requirements that limit the disclosure of personal
information by Federal agencies.
3. Necessity of VIN Collection
Part 563 does not require the EDR in a motor vehicle to record that
vehicle's VIN. However, for the reasons set forth in the next
paragraph, when NHTSA collects the EDR data from a vehicle, the agency
also separately collects the VIN of that vehicle. The following
discussion explains why it is necessary for the agency to collect VIN
in connection with EDRs, how the VIN is used by the agency, and the
safeguards the agency takes related to avoid the release of the VIN.
Collecting the VIN is necessary to download and process the EDR
data correctly. The commercial EDR download tools require a vehicle's
VIN be inputted into the program in order to link the EDR data from
that vehicle with parameters that ensure proper conversion of the data
to a usable format. A partial VIN will not suffice for this purpose.
The full VIN of a vehicle must be inputted into current EDR extraction
tools as a key to ensure proper output and to account for running
changes that may occur during a particular model year, thereby
rendering it infeasible to use a shortened VIN.
4. Agency Protects VINs Needed To Download EDR Data
NHTSA takes care to protect the VINs that are collected along with
EDR data. The VIN data identify the vehicle itself and do not provide
name, address, or other personal identifier information regarding an
individual. Further, EDR data alone cannot establish who was driving
the vehicle at any given time (e.g., vehicle owner or other individuals
(either with or without permission)).
Nevertheless, NHTSA has taken steps to prevent the release of any
VIN because it can be used in various commercially-available programs
to determine the identity of the current owner of a vehicle. As a
practical matter, information contained in these records that has the
potential of indirectly identifying individuals is not made public by
the agency, except as specifically required by law. Further, prior to
the release of information from databases containing EDR data (usually
aggregated reports), the agency strips out the last six characters of
the VIN (i.e., the portion that would allow identification of a
specific vehicle and, potentially by indirect means, the identity of
the vehicle's current owner).
5. Agency Uses and Stores EDR Data in Ways To Preserve Privacy
In using EDR data, the agency takes the EDR-generated information
that it collects and incorporates the information into large crash-
related databases in order to gain a more comprehensive understanding
of certain crash events. The information contained in these databases
is not retrieved or retrievable by name or other individual identifier.
In light of the above, we believe that the agency has taken
adequate steps to ensure individual privacy vis-[aacute]-vis its use of
EDR data. Additional information on EDRs may be found on the agency's
Web site where we address a range of EDR issues. The Web site is
accessible at https://www.nhtsa.gov/EDR. For more background information
on privacy issues related to EDRs, please see the NPRM at 69 FR 32932
(June 14, 2004), the final rule at 71 FR 50998 (August 28, 2006), and
amendments to the final rule and response to petitions for
reconsideration at 73 FR 2168 (January 14, 2008) and 76 FR 47478
(August 5, 2011).
E. Lead Time
We are proposing an effective date of September 1, 2014. The agency
estimates that approximately 92 percent of the light vehicle fleet is
equipped with Part 563 compliant EDRs. The lead time we are proposing
is sufficient to ensure that manufacturers of the remaining portion of
the fleet that are not equipped with an EDR can redesign the data bus
architecture, air bag control module, other electronic hardware and
software calibration, conduct the requisite validation testing, and
ensure that a tool that can retrieve the EDR data is commercially
available. The proposed lead time should address the practical
[[Page 74152]]
concerns of small volume manufacturers and many new electric and hybrid
electric manufacturers who are entering the market and who may not have
been planning to install EDRs.
F. Benefits and Costs of This Proposal
Mandating the installation of EDRs in light vehicles required to
have frontal air bags would provide for a standardized set of EDR data
elements and formats throughout most of the light vehicle fleet rather
than on just those manufacturers who chose to voluntarily install EDRs.
This would expand and, therefore, potentially enhance the utilization
of the recorded information and lead to further improvements in the
safety of current and future motor vehicles.
Although the benefits of this NPRM derive from expansion of EDR
coverage, we will briefly review the general benefits related to EDRs.
EDR data improve crash investigation and crash data collection quality
to assist safety researchers, vehicle manufacturers, and the agency to
understand vehicle crashes better and more precisely.\45\ While crash
investigators gather insightful information about the dynamics of
crashes, some of these parameters cannot be determined (such as anti-
lock braking system or electronic stability control functioning status)
or cannot be as accurately measured (such as the change in velocity) by
traditional post-crash investigation procedures such as visually
examining and evaluating physical evidence, e.g., the crash-involved
vehicles and skid marks. Further, some vehicle crash dynamics related
to rollover (such as roll angle, roll rate and normal acceleration)
cannot be effectively estimated by crash investigators post-crash. Data
collected by the EDR can provide a direct means for measuring these
needed crash parameters.
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\45\ Since the beginning of EDR data collection at NHTSA (late
1999 through January 2010), over 7,600 EDRs have been imaged through
our various programs. The programs include: the National Automotive
Sampling System Crashworthiness Data System (NASS-CDS), the National
Motor Vehicle Crash Causation Study (NMVCCS), Special Crash
Investigations (SCI) and Crash Injury Research and Engineering
Network (CIREN).
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Similarly, vehicle manufacturers are able to utilize EDRs in
improving vehicle designs and developing more effective vehicle safety
countermeasures. Additionally, many vehicle manufacturers are
developing active safety systems (or crash avoidance systems) that
assist drivers in reducing the likelihood of crash occurrence. EDR
recorded pre-crash data (e.g., vehicle speed and engine throttle) could
be used to further improve active safety systems and reduce crash
involvement rates. Additionally, the data can be used to assess whether
the vehicle was operating properly at the time of the event, or to help
detect undesirable operations.
Currently, Advanced Automatic Crash Notification (AACN) systems may
make use of some of the Part 563 required data elements such as change
in velocity, air bag deployments, and safety belt status to aid
emergency response teams in assessing the severity of a crash and
estimating the probability of serious injury before they arrive at the
scene of the crash.\46\ Overall, we believe there are many safety-
related benefits that would derive from requiring light vehicles to be
equipped with EDRs.
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\46\ We note, however, that AACN systems do not require a
vehicle to be equipped with an EDR.
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In addition to the general benefits derived from EDR installation,
there are benefits specific to this NPRM to mandate EDRs. As shown in
the recent Toyota unintended acceleration studies, EDR data from a
particular vehicle model can have significant value in aiding the
agency in assessing the performance of that vehicle model and in
determining the need for, or conducting, a safety defect investigation
that may lead to a recall of the vehicle model for repair or
replacement of problem parts or systems. To serve this purpose for all
light vehicles required to have frontal air bags, EDR data must be
available for those vehicles.
EDR data can also aid in the improvement in existing safety
standards and the development of new ones. Many of the vehicles
anticipated to continue to lack EDRs, absent a mandate, are high end
vehicles that have advanced safety technologies, including advanced
collision avoidance technologies. Such technologies are typically first
introduced on high end vehicles. Thus, it is particularly important to
be able to obtain EDR data generated by the crash experience of these
particular vehicles.
The cost for an EDR is estimated to be $20 per vehicle. The
estimated total incremental costs associated with this proposal would
be $26.4 million (2010 dollars), which is measured from a baseline of
91.6 percent EDR installation to 100 percent installation, assuming the
sale of 16.5 million light vehicles per year with a GVWR up to 4,536
kg. This cost reflects the need for technology improvements, as well as
assembly costs, compliance costs, and paperwork maintenance costs for
those 1.32 million vehicles with a GVWR of 3,855 kg or less that do not
have EDRs. Technological improvements account for the majority of these
costs.
IV. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 and DOT Regulatory Policies and
Procedures
NHTSA has considered the potential impacts of this proposed rule
under Executive Order 12866, ``Regulatory Planning and Review,'' and
Executive Order 13563, ``Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,''
and the Department of Transportation's regulatory policies and
procedures. This document was reviewed by the Office of Management and
Budget under those orders. This document has been determined to be
significant under the Department's regulatory policies and procedures.
While the potential cost impacts of the proposed rule are far below the
level that would make this an economically significant rulemaking, the
rulemaking addresses a topic of substantial public interest.
The agency has prepared a separate document addressing the benefits
and costs for the proposed rule. A copy is being placed in the docket.
As discussed in that document and in the preceding sections of this
NPRM, the crash data that would be collected by EDRs under the proposed
rule would be extremely valuable for the advancement of vehicle safety
by enhancing and facilitating crash investigations, the evaluation of
safety countermeasures, advanced restraint and safety countermeasure
research and development, certain safety defect investigations, and
AACN. The improvements in vehicle safety will occur indirectly from the
collection of crash data by EDRs. Since the establishment of Part 563
in 2006, the agency has observed an increasing percentage of light
vehicles utilizing EDR technology, and researchers, vehicle
manufacturers, AACN and emergency medical service (EMS) providers,
government agencies, and other members of the safety community are
using the EDR data in ways that contribute to overall vehicle safety.
EDR data can also have significant value in aiding the agency in
assessing the performance of particular vehicle models in determining
the need for, or conducting, a safety defect investigation that may
lead to a recall of the vehicle for repair or replacement of problem
parts or systems, as was made evident in the recent UA investigations
involving Toyota vehicles, discussed earlier in this NPRM.
[[Page 74153]]
We estimate that about 92 percent of new light vehicles are already
equipped with EDRs. As discussed earlier, vehicle manufacturers have
provided EDRs in their vehicles by adding EDR capability to their
vehicles' air bag control systems. The costs of EDRs have been
minimized, because they involve the capture into memory of data that is
already being processed by the vehicle, and not the much higher costs
of sensing much of that data in the first place.
The costs of the proposed rule would be the incremental costs for
vehicles currently not equipped with EDRs to comply with the proposed
EDR mandate and Part 563's requirements. We estimate the total annual
costs of the proposed rule to be $26.4 million. While the potential
costs include technology costs, paperwork maintenance costs,\47\ and
compliance costs, the paperwork maintenance and compliance costs are
estimated to be negligible. The proposal would not require additional
sensors to be installed in vehicles, and the major technology cost
would result from a need to upgrade memory chips and hardware for
housing the recorded data. The total cost for the estimated 1.2 million
vehicles that do not have an EDR to comply with the proposed mandate
and Part 563 requirements is estimated to be $26.4 million (2010
dollars). A complete discussion of how NHTSA arrived at these costs may
be found in the separate document on benefits and costs.
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\47\ These paperwork maintenance costs consist of the costs to
modify the owner's manual with the required statement specified in
49 CFR 563.11.
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B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
NHTSA has considered the impacts of this rulemaking action under
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.). We certify that
the proposed amendment would not have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The following is the agency's statement providing the factual basis
for the certification (5 U.S.C. 605(b)). If adopted, the proposal would
directly affect motor vehicle manufacturers, second stage or final
manufacturers, and alterers. SIC code number 3711, Motor Vehicles and
Passenger Car Bodies, prescribes a small business size standard of
1,000 or fewer employees. SIC code No. 3714, Motor Vehicle Part and
Accessories, prescribes a small business size standard of 750 or fewer
employees.
Nine motor vehicle manufacturers affected by this proposal would
qualify as a small business, as identified in the Preliminary
Regulatory Evaluation.\48\ Most of the intermediate and final stage
manufacturers of vehicles built in two or more stages and alterers have
1,000 or fewer employees. However, these small businesses adhere to
original equipment manufacturers' instructions in manufacturing
modified and altered vehicles. Based on our knowledge, original
equipment manufacturers do not permit a final stage manufacturer or
alterer to modify or alter sophisticated devices such as air bags or
EDRs. Therefore, multistage manufacturers and alterers would be able to
rely on the certification and information provided by the original
equipment manufacturer. Accordingly, there would be no significant
impact on small businesses, small organizations, or small governmental
units by these amendments. For these reasons, the agency has not
prepared a preliminary regulatory flexibility analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ The docket for this NPRM contains the Preliminary
Regulatory Evaluation for FMVSS No. 405, Event Data Recorders
(EDRs).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
NHTSA has examined today's proposal pursuant to Executive Order
13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999). Because multiple States have
enacted laws related to EDRs and may thus have a particular interest in
this rulemaking, NHTSA has initiated efforts to consult with
associations representing officials of those States \49\ to obtain
their views of the impact, if any, of this proposed rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ The states include: Arkansas, California, Colorado,
Connecticut, Maine, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, North Dakota,
Oregon, Texas, Virginia, and Washington.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NHTSA rules can preempt in two ways. First, the National Traffic
and Motor Vehicle Safety Act contains an express preemption provision:
When a motor vehicle safety standard is in effect under this chapter, a
State or a political subdivision of a State may prescribe or continue
in effect a standard applicable to the same aspect of performance of a
motor vehicle or motor vehicle equipment only if the standard is
identical to the standard prescribed under this chapter.\50\ It is this
statutory command by Congress that preempts any non-identical State
legislative and administrative law addressing the same aspect of
performance. Thus, to the extent that aspects of EDR performance would
be addressed by a safety standard, States would be expressly preempted
by section 30103(b)(1) from adopting or maintaining any non-identical
statute or regulation addressing those aspects of performance. With
respect to this proposal, such aspects would include State EDR
technical requirements requiring that EDRs record specific data
elements, and/or requiring EDRs to meet specific technical performance
or survivability requirements. Further, it is our view that any State
laws or regulations that imposed, for the types of EDRs addressed by
this proposal, additional disclosure requirements on vehicle
manufacturers or dealers would likewise create a conflict and therefore
be preempted. The disclosure requirements in Part 563, which we are
proposing to incorporate into FMVSS No. 405, require a statement in the
owner's manual to make the operator aware of the presence, function,
and capabilities of the EDR. We believe that inconsistent or additional
State disclosure requirements would frustrate the purposes of our
regulation by potentially creating confusion or information overload,
thereby reducing the benefit of the required statement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ 49 U.S.C. 30103(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In promulgating Part 563, the agency stated that it was our intent
to provide one consistent set of requirements, including a specified
statement in the owner's manual, for vehicles equipped with EDRs. In
proposing to establish FMVSS No. 405, we continue to believe that this
approach will enhance the quality of EDR data by standardizing the
content, format, and accuracy of such data, thereby increasing its
comparability and overall usefulness. We further believe that the
standardized data will be of greater benefit for safety equipment
analysis and crash reconstruction.
This proposed rule does not address certain other issues generally
within the realm of State law, such as whether the vehicle owner owns
the EDR data, how EDR data can be used/discovered in civil litigation,
how EDR data may be used in criminal proceedings, whether EDR data may
be obtained by the police without a warrant, whether EDR data may be
developed into a driver-monitoring tool, and the nature and extent that
private parties (including insurance companies, car rental companies,
and automobile manufacturers) will have or may contract for access to
EDR data.
The express preemption provision described above is subject to a
savings clause under which ``[c]ompliance with a motor vehicle safety
standard prescribed under this chapter does not exempt a person from
liability at common law.'' \51\ Pursuant to this provision, State
common law tort causes of action against motor vehicle
[[Page 74154]]
manufacturers that might otherwise be preempted by the express
preemption provision are generally preserved. However, the Supreme
Court has recognized the possibility, in some instances, of implied
preemption of such State common law tort causes of action by virtue of
NHTSA's rules, even if not expressly preempted. This second way that
NHTSA rules can preempt is dependent upon there being an actual
conflict between an FMVSS and the higher standard that would
effectively be imposed on motor vehicle manufacturers if someone
obtained a State common law tort judgment against the manufacturer,
notwithstanding the manufacturer's compliance with the NHTSA standard.
Because most NHTSA standards established by an FMVSS are minimum
standards, a State common law tort cause of action that seeks to impose
a higher standard on motor vehicle manufacturers will generally not be
preempted. However, if and when such a conflict does exist--for
example, when the standard at issue is both a minimum and a maximum
standard--the State common law tort cause of action is impliedly
preempted. See Geier v. American Honda Motor Co., 529 U.S. 861 (2000).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ 49 U.S.C. 30103(e).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pursuant to Executive Order 13132 and 12988, NHTSA has considered
whether this rule could or should preempt State common law causes of
action. The agency's ability to announce its conclusion regarding the
preemptive effect of one of its rules reduces the likelihood that
preemption will be an issue in any subsequent tort litigation.
To this end, the agency has examined the nature (e.g., the language
and structure of the regulatory text) and objectives of today's rule
and finds that this rule, like many NHTSA rules, prescribes only a
minimum safety standard. The agency does not anticipate any State
common law tort judgments concerning EDRs that could create any actual
conflict. Without any conflict, there could not be any implied
preemption of a State common law tort cause of action.
D. Executive Order 12988 \52\ (Civil Justice Reform)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ Executive Order 12988 (February 5, 1996).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This proposed rule would not have any retroactive effect. Under
section 49 U.S.C. 30103, whenever a Federal motor vehicle safety
standard is in effect, a state may not adopt or maintain a safety
standard applicable to the same aspect of performance which is not
identical to the Federal standard, except to the extent that the state
requirement imposes a higher level of performance and applies only to
vehicles procured for the state's use. General principles of preemption
law would apply, however, to displace any conflicting state law or
regulations. If the proposed rule were made final, there would be no
requirement for submission of a petition for reconsideration or other
administrative proceedings before parties could file suit in court.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501, et
seq.), Federal agencies must obtain approval from the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for each collection of information they
conduct, sponsor, or require through regulations. This proposal would
mandate the installation of EDR devices in most light vehicles
manufactured after September 1, 2014, and would require such vehicles
to meet the EDR requirements contained in Part 563.
In compliance with the PRA, we announce that NHTSA is seeking
comment on a new information collection.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ As noted earlier in the preamble, most manufacturers are
already voluntarily installing compliant EDRs and are already
voluntarily collecting the specified information. Nevertheless,
because voluntary compliance with a paperwork requirement is
regarded under the Paperwork Reduction Act as proposing to require a
new collection of information, NHTSA must comply with the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Agency: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).
Title: Event Data Recorders.
Type of Request: New collection.
OMB Control Number: Not assigned.
Form Number: The collection of this information uses no standard
form.
Requested Expiration Date of Approval: Three years from the date of
approval.
Summary of the Collection of Information:
NHTSA is proposing to create a new FMVSS in Part 571 that would
require vehicle manufacturers to install EDRs in most light vehicles
manufactured on or after September 1, 2014. The EDRs in those vehicles
would be required by the new standard to meet the data elements, data
capture and format, data retrieval, and data crash survivability
requirements of Part 563, the existing regulation setting forth
requirements for voluntarily-installed EDRs. This proposal would also
require manufacturers to comply with the Part 563 requirements for
ensuring the availability of EDR data retrieval tools and the
requirement that the owner's manual in each vehicle contain a specified
statement regarding EDRs.
Description of the Need for the Information and Use of the Information
The agency believes that requiring all light vehicles to be
equipped with EDRs would help improve vehicle safety for consumers,
while imposing relatively few costs on the automobile industry. EDR
data are used to improve crash investigation and crash data collection
quality to assist safety researchers, vehicle manufacturers, and the
agency to understand vehicle crashes better and more precisely.
Similarly, vehicle manufacturers are able to utilize EDRs in improving
vehicle designs and developing more effective vehicle safety
countermeasures, and EDR data may be used by AACN systems to aid
emergency response teams in assessing the severity of a crash and
estimating the probability of serious injury.
Additionally, the agency's experience in handling unintended
acceleration and pedal entrapment allegations over the past year has
demonstrated that if a vehicle is equipped with an EDR, the data from
that EDR can improve the ability of both the agency and the vehicle's
manufacturer to identify and address safety concerns associated with
possible defects in the design or performance of the vehicle. Moreover,
this proposal to mandate EDRs across the entire light vehicle fleet
would contribute to advancements in the designs, particularly with
respect to occupant restraints and other safety systems, of future
vehicles.
Description of the Likely Respondents
The respondents are manufacturers of passenger cars, multipurpose
passenger vehicles, trucks, and buses having a GVWR of 3,855 kg (8,500
pounds) or less and an unloaded vehicle weight of 2,495 kg (5,500
pounds). The agency estimates that there are approximately 30 such
manufacturers.
Estimate of the Total Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Burden
Resulting From the Collection of Information
There are no annual reporting or recordkeeping burdens associated
with this proposed rule. Vehicle manufacturers are not required to
retain or report information gathered by EDRs because the devices
themselves continuously monitor vehicle systems and determine when to
record, retain, and/or overwrite information. The information is
collected automatically by electronic means. Data are only required to
be locked and cannot be overwritten when an air bag deploys in a crash
event. When recordable events do occur, EDRs only capture data for a
few seconds.
[[Page 74155]]
The costs to respondents are the costs of designing and equipping
each covered vehicle with a compliant EDR. These costs include
technology improvements, assembly costs, and paperwork maintenance
costs.\54\ Technology improvements account for the majority of these
costs. Because the costs of EDRs under the PRA are those associated
with the capture of data that is already being processed by the
vehicle, the additional burden hours necessary to equip vehicles with
EDR capability are minimal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ These paperwork maintenance costs consist of the costs to
modify the owner's manual with the required statement specified in
49 CFR 563.11. Because this statement is supplied by the agency to
manufacturers for the purpose of public disclosure, it is not
considered a collection of information for purposes of the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In determining the costs of this proposed rule under the PRA, we
estimate that there are approximately 15.71 million applicable vehicles
produced annually, 14.39 million of which are already voluntarily
equipped with EDRs. The cost to install an EDR meeting the requirements
of this proposed rule is $20 per vehicle if a vehicle does not have an
EDR. The costs of this proposed rule under the PRA include the costs of
installing compliant EDRs on all applicable vehicles, even those that
are currently equipped with EDRs. Accordingly, the annual total costs
of this proposed rule under the PRA would be $314.20 million.
We emphasize that the regulatory costs of the proposed rule would
only be the incremental costs for the 1.32 million vehicles not
currently equipped with EDRs to be equipped with an EDR meeting Part
563's requirements. As discussed above, we estimate the total annual
regulatory costs of the proposed rule to be $26.4 million.
Comments are invited on:
Whether the collection of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the functions of the Department, including
whether the information will have practical utility.
Whether the Department's estimate for the burden of the
information collection is accurate.
Ways to minimize the burden of the collection of
information on respondents, including the use of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information technology.
Please submit any comments, identified by the docket number in the
heading of this document, by any of the methods described in the
ADDRESSES section of this document. Comments are due by February 11,
2013.
F. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
Section 12(d) of the National Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (NTTAA), Public Law 104-113, section 12(d) (15 U.S.C. 272)
directs us to use voluntary consensus standards in regulatory
activities unless doing so would be inconsistent with applicable law or
otherwise impractical. Voluntary consensus standards are technical
standards (e.g., materials specifications, test methods, sampling
procedures, and business practices) that are developed or adopted by
voluntary consensus standards bodies, such as the Society of Automotive
Engineers (SAE) and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers (IEEE). The NTTAA directs us to provide Congress, through
OMB, explanations when we decide not to use available and applicable
voluntary consensus standards.
There are several consensus standards related to EDRs, most notably
those standards published by SAE and IEEE. NHTSA carefully considered
the consensus standards applicable to EDR data elements in establishing
Part 563. Consensus standards for recording time/intervals, data sample
rates, data retrieval, data reliability, data range, accuracy and
precision, and EDR crash survivability were evaluated by NHTSA and
adopted when practicable. This particular rulemaking, however, does not
involve such matters. It is limited to establishing a mandate for
certain light vehicles to be equipped with an EDR.
G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
requires Federal agencies to prepare a written assessment of the costs,
benefits, and other effects of proposed or final rules that include a
Federal mandate likely to result in the expenditure by State, local, or
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of more
than $100 million in any one year (adjusted for inflation with base
year of 1995). In 2010 dollars, this threshold is $136 million.\55\
Before promulgating a rule for which a written statement is needed,
section 205 of the UMRA generally requires NHTSA to identify and
consider a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives and to adopt
the least costly, most cost-effective, or least burdensome alternative
that achieves the objectives of the rule. The provisions of section 205
do not apply when they are inconsistent with applicable law. Moreover,
section 205 allows NHTSA to adopt an alternative other than the least
costly, most cost-effective, or least burdensome alternative if the
agency publishes with the final rule an explanation why that
alternative was not adopted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ Adjusting this amount by the implicit gross domestic
product price deflator for the year 2010 results in $136 million
(110.644/81.533 = 1.36).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If adopted, this proposed rule would not impose any unfunded
mandates under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995. This proposed
rule would not result in costs in excess of $136 million (2010 dollars)
annually to either State, local, or tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or to the private sector. Thus, this proposed rule is not
subject to the requirements of sections 202 and 205 of the UMRA.
H. National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
NHTSA has analyzed this rulemaking action for the purposes of the
National Environmental Policy Act. The agency has determined that
implementation of this action would not have any significant impact on
the quality of the human environment.
I. Executive Order 13609 (Promoting International Regulatory
Cooperation)
The policy statement in section 1 of Executive Order 13609
provides, in part:
The regulatory approaches taken by foreign governments may
differ from those taken by U.S. regulatory agencies to address
similar issues. In some cases, the differences between the
regulatory approaches of U.S. agencies and those of their foreign
counterparts might not be necessary and might impair the ability of
American businesses to export and compete internationally. In
meeting shared challenges involving health, safety, labor, security,
environmental, and other issues, international regulatory
cooperation can identify approaches that are at least as protective
as those that are or would be adopted in the absence of such
cooperation. International regulatory cooperation can also reduce,
eliminate, or prevent unnecessary differences in regulatory
requirements.
NHTSA requests public comment on whether (a) the ``regulatory
approaches taken by foreign governments'' concerning the subject matter
of this rulemaking and (b) the above policy statement have any
implications for this rulemaking.
J. Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
The Department of Transportation assigns a regulation identifier
number (RIN) to each regulatory action listed in the Unified Agenda of
Federal Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions (the Unified Agenda). The
Regulatory Information Service Center publishes the Unified Agenda in
April and October of each year. You may use the
[[Page 74156]]
RIN contained in the heading at the beginning of this document to find
this action in the Unified Agenda.
V. Request for Comments
How do I prepare and submit comments?
Your comments must be written and in English. To ensure that your
comments are filed correctly in the docket, please include the docket
number of this document in your comments.
Your comments must not be more than 15 pages long. (49 CFR 553.21)
NHTSA established this limit to encourage you to write your primary
comments in a concise fashion. However, you may attach necessary
additional documents to your comments. There is no limit on the length
of the attachments.
Please submit one copy (two copies if submitting by mail or hand
delivery) of your comments, including the attachments, to the docket
following the instructions given above under ADDRESSES. Please note, if
you are submitting comments electronically as a PDF (Adobe) file, we
ask that the documents submitted be scanned using Optical Character
Recognition (OCR) process, thus allowing the agency to search and copy
certain portions of your submissions.\56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ Optical character recognition (OCR) is the process of
converting an image of text, such as a scanned paper document or
electronic fax file, into computer-editable text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
How do I submit confidential business information?
If you wish to submit any information under a claim of
confidentiality, you should submit three copies of your complete
submission, including the information you claim to be confidential
business information, to the Office of the Chief Counsel, NHTSA, at the
address given above under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. In addition,
you should submit a copy (two copies if submitting by mail or hand
delivery), from which you have deleted the claimed confidential
business information, to the docket by one of the methods given above
under ADDRESSES. When you send a comment containing information claimed
to be confidential business information, you should include a cover
letter setting forth the information specified in NHTSA's confidential
business information regulation (49 CFR Part 512).
Will the agency consider late comments?
NHTSA will consider all comments received before the close of
business on the comment closing date indicated above under DATES. To
the extent possible, the agency will also consider comments received
after that date. If a comment is received too late for the agency to
consider it in developing a final rule (assuming that one is issued),
the agency will consider that comment as an informal suggestion for
future rulemaking action.
How can I read the comments submitted by other people?
You may read the comments received at the address given above under
COMMENTS. The hours of the docket are indicated above in the same
location. You may also see the comments on the Internet, identified by
the docket number at the heading of this notice, at https://www.regulations.gov.
Please note that, even after the comment closing date, NHTSA will
continue to file relevant information in the docket as it becomes
available. Further, some people may submit late comments. Accordingly,
the agency recommends that you periodically check the docket for new
material.
Anyone is able to search the electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the name of the individual
submitting the comment (or signing the comment, if submitted on behalf
of an association, business, labor union, etc.). You may review DOT's
complete Privacy Act Statement in the Federal Register published on
April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19477-78) or you may visit https://www.dot.gov/privacy.html.
Appendix A Part 563 Tables
Table I--Data Elements Required for All Vehicles Equipped With an EDR
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recording interval/ Data sample rate
Data element time \1\ (relative to (samples per
time zero) second)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Delta-V, longitudinal........ 0 to 250 ms or 0 to 100
End of Event Time
plus 30 ms,
whichever is shorter.
Maximum delta-V, longitudinal 0-300 ms or 0 to End N/A
of Event Time plus
30 ms, whichever is
shorter.
Time, maximum delta-V........ 0-300 ms or 0 to End N/A
of Event Time plus
30 ms, whichever is
shorter.
Speed, vehicle indicated..... -5.0 to 0 sec........ 2
Engine throttle, % full (or -5.0 to 0 sec........ 2
accelerator pedal, % full).
Service brake, on/off........ -5.0 to 0 sec........ 2
Ignition cycle, crash........ -1.0 sec............. N/A
Ignition cycle, download..... At time of download N/A
\3\.
Safety belt status, driver... -1.0 sec............. N/A
Frontal air bag warning lamp, -1.0 sec............. N/A
on/off \2\.
Frontal air bag deployment, Event................ N/A
time to deploy, in the case
of a single stage air bag,
or time to first stage
deployment, in the case of a
multi-stage air bag, driver.
Frontal air bag deployment, Event................ N/A
time to deploy, in the case
of a single stage air bag,
or time to first stage
deployment, in the case of a
multi-stage air bag, right
front passenger.
Multi-event, number of event. Event................ N/A
Time from event 1 to 2....... As needed............ N/A
Complete file recorded (yes, Following other data. N/A
no).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Pre-crash data and crash data are asynchronous. The sample time
accuracy requirement for pre-crash time is -0.1 to 1.0 sec (e.g., T =
1 would need to occur between -1.1 and 0 seconds.)
[[Page 74157]]
\2\ The frontal air bag warning lamp is the readiness indicator
specified in S4.5.2 of FMVSS No. 208, and may also illuminate to
indicate a malfunction in another part of the deployable restraint
system.
\3\ The ignition cycle at the time of download is not required to be
recorded at the time of the crash, but shall be reported during the
download process.
Table II--Data Elements Required for Vehicles Under Specified Minimum Conditions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recording interval/time
Data element name Condition for requirement \1\ (relative to time Data sample rate
zero) (per second)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lateral acceleration.................. If recorded \2\.......... N/A...................... N/A
Longitudinal acceleration............. If recorded.............. N/A...................... N/A
Normal acceleration................... If recorded.............. N/A...................... N/A
Delta-V, lateral...................... If recorded.............. 0-250 ms or 0 to End of 100
Event Time plus 30 ms,
whichever is shorter.
Maximum delta-V, lateral.............. If recorded.............. 0-300 ms or 0 to End of N/A
Event Time plus 30 ms,
whichever is shorter.
Time maximum delta-V, lateral......... If recorded.............. 0-300 ms or 0 to End of N/A
Event Time plus 30 ms,
whichever is shorter.
Time for maximum delta-V, resultant... If recorded.............. 0-300 ms or 0 to End of N/A
Event Time plus 30 ms,
whichever is shorter.
Engine rpm............................ If recorded.............. -5.0 to 0 sec............ 2
Vehicle roll angle.................... If recorded.............. -1.0 up to 5.0 sec \3\... 10
ABS activity (engaged, non-engaged)... If recorded.............. -5.0 to 0 sec............ 2
Stability control (on, off, or If recorded.............. -5.0 to 0 sec............ 2
engaged).
Steering input........................ If recorded.............. -5.0 to 0 sec............ 2
Safety belt status, right front If recorded.............. -1.0 sec................. N/A
passenger (buckled, not buckled).
Frontal air bag suppression switch If recorded.............. -1.0 sec................. N/A
status, right front passenger (on,
off, or auto).
Frontal air bag deployment, time to If equipped with a Event.................... N/A
nth stage, driver \4\. driver's frontal air bag
with a multi-stage
inflator.
Frontal air bag deployment, time to If equipped with a right Event.................... N/A
nth stage, right front passenger \4\. front passenger's
frontal air bag with a
multi-stage inflator.
Frontal air bag deployment, nth stage If recorded.............. Event.................... N/A
disposal, driver, Y/N (whether the
nth stage deployment was for occupant
restraint or propellant disposal
purposes).
Frontal air bag deployment, nth stage If recorded.............. Event.................... N/A
disposal, right front passenger, Y/N
(whether the nth stage deployment was
for occupant restraint or propellant
disposal purposes).
Side air bag deployment, time to If recorded.............. Event.................... N/A
deploy, driver.
Side air bag deployment, time to If recorded.............. Event.................... N/A
deploy, right front passenger.
Side curtain/tube air bag deployment, If recorded.............. Event.................... N/A
time to deploy, driver side.
Side curtain/tube air bag deployment, If recorded.............. Event.................... N/A
time to deploy, right side.
Pretensioner deployment, time to fire, If recorded.............. Event.................... N/A
driver.
Pretensioner deployment, time to fire, If recorded.............. Event.................... N/A
right front passenger.
Seat track position switch, foremost, If recorded.............. -1.0 sec................. N/A
status, driver.
Seat track position switch, foremost, If recorded.............. -1.0 sec................. N/A
status, right front passenger.
Occupant size classification, driver.. If recorded.............. -1.0 sec................. N/A
Occupant size classification, right If recorded.............. -1.0 sec................. N/A
front passenger.
Occupant position classification, If recorded.............. -1.0 sec................. N/A
driver.
Occupant position classification, If recorded.............. -1.0 sec................. N/A
right front passenger.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Pre-crash data and crash data are asynchronous. The sample time accuracy requirement for pre-crash time is -
0.1 to 1.0 sec (e.g. T = -1 would need to occur between -1.1 and 0 seconds.)
\2\ ``If recorded'' means if the data is recorded in non-volatile memory for the purpose of subsequent
downloading.
\3\ ``vehicle roll angle'' may be recorded in any time duration; -1.0 sec to 5.0 sec is suggested.
\4\ List this element n - 1 times, once for each stage of a multi-stage air bag system.
[[Page 74158]]
Table III--Reported Data Element Format
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Data element Minimum range Accuracy \1\ Resolution
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lateral acceleration............... At option of manufacturer.. At option of At option of
manufacturer. manufacturer.
Longitudinal acceleration.......... At option of manufacturer.. At option of At option of
manufacturer. manufacturer.
Normal Acceleration................ At option of manufacturer.. At option of At option of
manufacturer. manufacturer.
Longitudinal delta-V............... -100 km/h to + 100 km/h.... +/- 10%............... 1 km/h.
Lateral delta-V.................... -100 km/h to + 100 km/h.... +/- 10%............... 1 km/h.
Maximum delta-V, longitudinal...... -100 km/h to + 100 km/h.... +/- 10%............... 1 km/h.
Maximum delta-V, lateral........... -100 km/h to + 100 km/h.... +/- 10%............... 1 km/h.
Time, maximum delta-V, longitudinal 0-300 ms, or 0--End of +/- 3 ms.............. 2.5 ms.
Event Time plus 30 ms,
whichever is shorter.
Time, maximum delta-V, lateral..... 0-300 ms, or 0--End of +/- 3 ms.............. 2.5 ms.
Event Time plus 30 ms,
whichever is shorter.
Time, maximum delta-V, resultant... 0-300 ms, or 0--End of +/- 3 ms.............. 2.5 ms.
Event Time plus 30 ms,
whichever is shorter.
Vehicle Roll Angle................. -1080 deg to + 1080 deg.... +/- 10%............... 10 deg.
Speed, vehicle indicated........... 0 km/h to 200 km/h......... +/- 1 km/h............ 1 km/h.
Engine throttle, percent full 0 to 100%.................. +/- 5%................ 1%.
(accelerator pedal percent full).
Engine rpm......................... 0 to 10,000 rpm............ +/- 100 rpm........... 100 rpm.
Service brake...................... On or Off.................. N/A................... On or Off.
ABS activity....................... On or Off.................. N/A................... On or Off.
Stability control.................. On, Off, or Engaged........ N/A................... On, Off, or Engaged.
Steering input..................... -250 deg CW to + 250 deg +/- 5%................ +/- 1%
CCW.
Ignition cycle, crash.............. 0 to 60,000................ +/- 1 cycle........... 1 cycle.
Ignition cycle, download........... 0 to 60,000................ +/- 1 cycle........... 1 cycle.
Safety belt status, driver......... On or Off.................. N/A................... On or Off.
Safety belt status, right front On or Off.................. N/A................... On or Off.
passenger.
Frontal air bag warning lamp....... On or Off.................. N/A................... On or Off.
Frontal air bag suppression switch On, Off, or Auto........... N/A................... On, Off, or Auto.
status, right front passenger.
Frontal air bag deployment, time to 0 to 250 ms................ +/- 2 ms.............. 1 ms.
deploy/first stage, driver.
Frontal air bag deployment, time to 0 to 250 ms................ +/- 2 ms.............. 1 ms.
deploy/first stage, right front
passenger.
Frontal air bag deployment, time to 0 to 250 ms................ +/- 2 ms.............. 1 ms.
nth stage, driver.
Frontal air bag deployment, time to 0 to 250 ms................ +/- 2 ms.............. 1 ms.
nth stage, right front passenger.
Frontal air bag deployment, nth Yes or No.................. N/A................... Yes or No.
stage disposal, driver.
Frontal air bag deployment, nth Yes or No.................. N/A................... Yes or No.
stage disposal, right front
passenger.
Side air bag deployment, time to 0 to 250 ms................ +/- 2 ms.............. 1 ms.
deploy, driver.
Side air bag deployment, time to 0 to 250 ms................ +/- 2 ms.............. 1 ms.
deploy, right front passenger.
Side curtain/tube air bag 0 to 250 ms................ +/- 2 ms.............. 1 ms.
deployment, time to deploy, driver
side.
Side curtain/tube air bag 0 to 250 ms................ +/- 2 ms.............. 1 ms.
deployment, time to deploy, right
side.
Pretensioner deployment, time to 0 to 250 ms................ +/- 2 ms.............. 1 ms.
fire, driver.
Pretensioner deployment, time to 0 to 250 ms................ +/- 2 ms.............. 1 ms.
fire, right front passenger.
Seat track position switch, Yes or No.................. N/A................... Yes or No.
foremost, status, driver.
Seat track position switch, Yes or No.................. N/A................... Yes or No.
foremost, status, right front
passenger.
Occupant size classification, 5th percentile female or N/A................... Yes or No.
driver. larger.
Occupant size classification, right Child...................... N/A................... Yes or No.
front passenger.
Occupant position classification, Out of position............ N/A................... Yes or No.
driver.
Occupant position classification, Out of position............ N/A................... Yes or No.
right front passenger.
Multi-event, number of event....... 1 or 2..................... N/A................... 1 or 2.
Time from event 1 to 2............. 0 to 5.0 sec............... 0.1 sec............... 0.1 sec.
Complete file recorded............. Yes or No.................. N/A................... Yes or No.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Accuracy requirement only applies within the range of the physical sensor. For vehicles manufactured after
September 1, 2014, if measurements captured by a sensor exceed the design range of the sensor, the reported
element must indicate when the measurement first exceeded the design range of the sensor.
[[Page 74159]]
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 571
Motor vehicle safety, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Tires.
Regulatory Text
In consideration of the foregoing, NHTSA proposes to amend 49 CFR
part 571 as follows:
PART 571--FEDERAL MOTOR VEHICLE SAFETY STANDARDS
1. The authority citation of part 571 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115, 30117, and 30166;
delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.95.
2. Add Sec. 571.405 to subpart B to read as follows:
Sec. 571.405 Standard No. 405; Event data recorders.
S1. Purpose and scope. This standard specifies requirements for
equipping motor vehicles with event data recorders (EDRs) and for the
post-crash survivability and retrievability of onboard motor vehicle
crash event data to help ensure that EDRs record, in a readily usable
manner, data valuable for effective crash investigations and for
analysis of safety equipment performance (e.g., advanced restraint
systems). These data will help provide a better understanding of the
circumstances in which crashes and injuries occur. That understanding
will aid efforts to assess and address safety problems in motor
vehicles currently on the road and to develop requirements for safer
motor vehicles in the future.
S2. Application. This standard applies to passenger cars,
multipurpose passenger vehicles, trucks, and buses that have a GVWR of
3,855 kg (8,500 pounds) or less and an unloaded vehicle weight of 2,495
kg (5,500 pounds) or less, and that are manufactured on or after
September 1, 2014, except for walk-in van-type trucks or vehicles
designed to be sold exclusively to the U.S. Postal Service.
S3. Definitions.
Event data recorder (EDR) means a device or function in a vehicle
that records the vehicle's dynamic time-series data during the time
period just prior to a crash event (e.g., vehicle speed vs. time) or
during a crash event (e.g., delta-V vs. time), intended for retrieval
after the crash event. For the purposes of this definition, the event
data do not include audio and video data.
S4. Requirements. Each vehicle shall be equipped with an event data
recorder and meet the requirements of Sec. 563.7 of this chapter for
data elements, Sec. 563.8 of this chapter for data format, Sec. 563.9
of this chapter for data capture, Sec. 563.10 of this chapter for
crash test performance and survivability, and Sec. 563.11 of this
chapter for information in owner's manual. Each manufacturer of a motor
vehicle equipped with an EDR shall comply with the requirements of
Sec. 563.12 of this chapter for data retrieval tools.
Issued on: December 7, 2012.
Christopher J. Bonanti,
Associate Administrator for Rulemaking.
[FR Doc. 2012-30082 Filed 12-10-12; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4910-59-P