General Motors, LLC, Receipt of Petition for Decision of Inconsequential Noncompliance, 1282-1284 [2018-00221]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 7 / Wednesday, January 10, 2018 / Notices
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[FR Doc. 2018–00245 Filed 1–9–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
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Limitation on Claims Against Proposed
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Project name and location: Madison Street
Bus Rapid Transit Project, Seattle,
Washington. Project Sponsor: Seattle
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Project description: The project establishes a
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with 10 BRT station areas with 20 directional
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conformity, and a determination of the
applicability of a Documented Categorical
Exclusion pursuant to 23 CFR 771.118(d)
dated December 27, 2017. Supporting
documentation: Documented Categorical
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Lucy Garliauskas,
Associate Administrator Planning and
Environment.
[FR Doc. 2018–00243 Filed 1–9–18; 8:45 am]
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
[Docket No. NHTSA–2017–0097; Notice 1]
General Motors, LLC, Receipt of
Petition for Decision of
Inconsequential Noncompliance
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA), U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Receipt of petition.
AGENCY:
General Motors, LLC (GM),
has determined that the seat belt
assemblies in certain model year (MY)
2017–2018 Chevrolet Silverado and
GMC Sierra heavy duty motor vehicles
do not fully comply with Federal Motor
Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) No.
209, Seat Belt Assemblies. GM filed a
noncompliance report dated September
14, 2017, and amended it on September
22, 2017. GM also petitioned NHTSA on
October 6, 2017, for a decision that the
subject noncompliance is
inconsequential as it relates to motor
vehicle safety.
DATES: The closing date for comments
on the petition is February 9, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit written data, views,
and arguments on this petition.
Comments must refer to the docket and
notice number cited in the title of this
notice and submitted by any of the
following methods:
• Mail: Send comments by mail
addressed to U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,
Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery: Deliver comments
by hand to U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,
Washington, DC 20590. The Docket
Section is open on weekdays from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. except Federal Holidays.
• Electronically: Submit comments
electronically by logging onto the
Federal Docket Management System
(FDMS) website at https://
www.regulations.gov/. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\10JAN1.SGM
10JAN1
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 7 / Wednesday, January 10, 2018 / Notices
• Comments may also be faxed to
(202) 493–2251.
Comments must be written in the
English language, and be no greater than
15 pages in length, although there is no
limit to the length of necessary
attachments to the comments. If
comments are submitted in hard copy
form, please ensure that two copies are
provided. If you wish to receive
confirmation that comments you have
submitted by mail were received, please
enclose a stamped, self-addressed
postcard with the comments. Note that
all comments received will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided.
All comments and supporting
materials received before the close of
business on the closing date indicated
above will be filed in the docket and
will be considered. All comments and
supporting materials received after the
closing date will also be filed and will
be considered to the fullest extent
possible.
When the petition is granted or
denied, notice of the decision will also
be published in the Federal Register
pursuant to the authority indicated at
the end of this notice.
All comments, background
documentation, and supporting
materials submitted to the docket may
be viewed by anyone at the address and
times given above. The documents may
also be viewed on the internet at https://
www.regulations.gov by following the
online instructions for accessing the
dockets. The docket ID number for this
petition is shown in the heading of this
notice.
DOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement is available for review in a
Federal Register notice published on
April 11, 2000, (65 FR 19477–78).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Overview: GM has determined that
the seat belt assemblies in certain MY
2017–2018 Chevrolet Silverado and
GMC Sierra heavy duty motor vehicles
do not fully comply with paragraphs
S4.4(b)(5) of FMVSS No. 209, Seat Belt
Assemblies. GM filed a noncompliance
report dated September 14, 2017, and
amended it on September 22, 2017,
pursuant to 49 CFR part 573, Defect and
Noncompliance Responsibility and
Reports. GM also petitioned NHTSA on
October 6, 2017, pursuant to 49 U.S.C.
30118(d) and 30120(h) and 49 CFR part
556, for an exemption from the
notification and remedy requirements of
49 U.S.C. Chapter 301 on the basis that
this noncompliance is inconsequential
as it relates to motor vehicle safety.
This notice of receipt of GM petition
is published under 49 U.S.C. 30118 and
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18:23 Jan 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
30120 and does not represent any
agency decision or other exercise of
judgment concerning the merits of the
petition.
II. Vehicles Involved: Approximately
38,048 MY 2017–2018 Chevrolet
Silverado and GMC Sierra heavy duty
motor vehicles, manufactured between
July 18, 2016, and August 7, 2017, are
potentially involved.
The double cab versions of the subject
vehicles are not included in this
petition.
III. Noncompliance: GM explains that
the noncompliance is that the subject
vehicles were equipped with seat belt
assemblies that do not conform to the
upper-torso seat belt elongation
requirements specified in paragraph
S4.4(b)(5) of FMVSS No. 209.
Specifically, the seat belt assemblies
were built with load-limiting torsion
bars measuring 9.5 mm on the driver
side and 8.0 mm in diameter on the
passenger side, instead of 12 mm as
specified by GM.
IV. Rule Text: Paragraph S4.4(b)(5) of
FMVSS No. 209 states, in pertinent part:
S4.4 Requirements for assembly
performance.
. . .
(b) Type 2 seat belt assembly. Except as
provided in S4.5, the components of a Type
2 seat belt assembly including webbing,
straps, buckles, adjustment and attachment
hardware, and retractors shall comply with
the following requirements when tested by
the procedure specified in S5.3(b): . . .
(5) The length of the upper torso restraint
between anchorages shall not increase more
than 508 mm when subjected to a force of
11,120N. . . .
V. Summary of GM’s Petition: As
background, GM stated that smaller
diameter torsion bars are regularly used
in retractor assemblies in full size
trucks—including variants of the subject
vehicles—that are subject to S5.1 of
FMVSS No. 208, and thus exempt from
S4.4(b)(5) of FMVSS No. 209. GM says
this is because, when combined with a
deploying frontal airbag, the seat belt
retractors equipped with lower diameter
torsion bars provide at least the same
level of occupant protection in frontal
crashes while optimizing belt force
deflection characteristics. However, the
subject vehicles were not certified to
S5.1 of FMVSS No. 208 and,
accordingly, were not intended to be
equipped with these smaller diameter
torsion bars because they were required
to meet the elongation requirements of
S4.4(b)(5) of FMVSS No. 209
GM described the subject
noncompliance and stated its belief that
the noncompliance is inconsequential
as it relates to motor vehicle safety.
In support of its petition, GM
submitted the following reasoning:
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1283
A. Testing data indicates that the
Subject Vehicles Meet the Belted
Frontal Crash Performance Testing
Requirements of S5.1 of FMVSS No.
208: GM has conducted dynamic frontal
crash testing on 2500 series vehicles
that were substantially similar to the
subject vehicles and were equipped
with the same load-limiting seat belt
retractors with the lower-diameter
torsion bars (the ‘‘Tested Vehicles’’).1
The tested vehicles comply with the
belted frontal crash performance testing
requirements under S5.1.1(a) of FMVSS
No. 208.2 In fact, the tested vehicles
performed below the injury assessment
reference limits specified in S5.1.1(a)
even when tested at 35 mph, which
subjects the vehicle to 36% more energy
than at the 30 mph testing standard
provided in the regulation. The tested
vehicles were also rated by NHTSA with
an overall 4-Star NCAP score.
GM expects that the subject vehicles
will perform nearly the same as the
tested vehicles in dynamic frontal crash
testing, and would therefore also meet
all of the belted barrier test
requirements specified by S5.1.1(a) of
FMVSS No. 208.
GM believes, consistent with
NHTSA’s past guidance,3 that the
dynamic belted frontal barrier crash
testing of S5.1.1(a) of FMVSS No. 208 is
a more appropriate means to evaluate
occupant protection than the static seat
belt elongation testing requirements of
S4.4(B)(5) of FMVSS No. 209 for
1 The subject vehicles and tested vehicles share
the same frame, body structure, powertrains and
under-hood crush space; instrument panel, steering
column and wheel, seats, seat-belt anchorages, and
general interior vehicle layout/spatial relationships;
and driver and passenger frontal airbags. In similar
configurations, the subject vehicles and test
vehicles have similar mass.
2 S5.1.1(a) of FMVSS No. 208 specifies the belted
barrier test requirements for certain vehicles not
certified to S14 of FMVSS No. 208 (i.e. those with
a GVW >8,500 lbs. or an unloaded weight >5,500
lbs).
3 In its 1991 rulemaking modifying FMVSS No.
209 to exclude certain dynamically tested seat belts
from some of the static seat-belt testing
requirements, NHTSA acknowledged that it ‘‘has
long believed it more appropriate to evaluate the
occupant protection afforded by vehicles by
conducting dynamic testing . . .’’ versus static tests
such as the elongation requirements in S4.4(b)(5) of
FMVSS No. 209. Final Rule, 56 FR 15295, 15295
(April 16, 1991). Further, ‘‘[s]ince the dynamic test
measures the actual occupant protection which the
belt provides during a crash, there is no apparent
need to subject that belt to static testing procedures
that are surrogate and less direct measures of the
protection which the belt would provide to its
occupant during a crash.’’ Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, 55 FR 1681 (January 18, 1990)
(emphasis added). NHTSA’s rationale for creating
these exemptions applies to the subject vehicles
even though they may not all technically be
‘‘subject to’’ S5.1 of FMVSS No. 208 and therefore
exempt from FMVSS No. 209’s elongation
requirements.
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 7 / Wednesday, January 10, 2018 / Notices
vehicles with seat belts equipped with
load limiters.
B. GM believes the subject vehicles
will provide no less protection to
occupants in a frontal crash than
vehicles equipped with seat belt
retractors utilizing the 12 mm torsion
bars: GM believes that replacing the
retractors installed in the subject
vehicles with retractors that have the
larger torsion bars would not result in
an added safety benefit to the occupants
of these vehicles in frontal crashes. That
is, the subject vehicles will provide no
less occupant protection than vehicles
built with the larger 12 mm diameter
torsion bars that meet the elongation
requirements of S4.4(b)(5) of FMVSS
No. 209. Further, seat belt retractors
equipped with the lower-diameter
torsion bars may reduce upper torso
injury potential in frontal crashes as
compared to retractors with the largerdiameter torsion bars.
C. NHTSA precedent supports
granting this petition: NHTSA has
previously ruled that failure to comply
with certain of FMVSS No. 209’s static
testing requirements can be
inconsequential to motor vehicle safety
where the manufacturer demonstrates
by dynamic testing that the
noncompliant seat belt assembly
preforms similarly to a compliant
assembly. On May 3, 2002, GM
submitted an inconsequentiality
petition to NHTSA relating to certain
trucks and SUV’s that were built with
damaged and inoperative ‘‘vehiclesensitive’’ emergency-locking retractors
(ELRs), which lock the seat belts under
rapid deceleration. Notwithstanding the
noncompliance with FMVSS No. 209
caused by this condition, GM asserted
that the failure was inconsequential to
vehicle safety because the ELRs in these
vehicles also had a redundant
‘‘webbing-sensitive’’ mechanism, which
locks the belts when the webbing is
rapidly extracted. GM presented
dynamic testing data (including some
data developed using the test
procedures set forth in FMVSS No. 208)
demonstrating that the webbingsensitive system ‘‘offered a level of
protection nearly equivalent to that
provided by a compliant ELR.’’
NHTSA granted GM’s petition, in
part, and ruled the noncompliance in
certain of the vehicles subject to the
petition was inconsequential to motor
vehicle safety:
[O]n the basis of the sled test and
simulation data provided by GM, the agency
has concluded that GM has adequately
demonstrated that the potential safety
consequences of the failure of the vehiclesensitive locking mechanisms in the ELRs in
the C/K vehicles to function properly are
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18:23 Jan 09, 2018
Jkt 244001
inconsequential. While the webbing-sensitive
systems in these vehicles do allow slightly
increased belt payout compared to a
functional vehicle-sensitive system, and lock
slightly later in crash event, these differences
do not appear to expose a vehicle occupant
to a significantly greater risk of injury.
General Motors Corporation, Ruling
on Petition for Determination of
Inconsequential Noncompliance, 69 FR
19897, 19900 (April 14, 2004). In its
decision, NHTSA also noted specifically
that ‘‘the dummy injury measurements
did not increase significantly and were
well below the maximum values
permitted under FMVSS No. 208.’’
Here, GM expects that the subject
vehicles will provide no less protection
to occupants in the designated seating
positions in frontal crashes than
vehicles equipped with seat belt
retractors conforming to S4.4(b) of
FMVSS No. 209.
D. GM is not aware of any injuries or
customer complaints associated with
this condition: After searching VOQ,
TREAD and internal GM databases, GM
is not aware of any crashes, injuries, or
customer complaints associated with
this condition.
E. GM has corrected the
noncompliance in vehicle production
and in service parts inventory: GM has
corrected the noncompliance in
production. Vehicles produced after
August 7, 2017, have seat belt
assemblies containing retractor torsion
bars that meet GM’s original
specifications and comply with S4.4(b)
of FMVSS No. 209. Retractor assemblies
with this condition that were
manufactured as service parts are no
longer available for sale and all affected
inventory has been purged. Any such
seat belt assembly previously sold as
service parts could only have been
installed on a subject vehicle because
these seat belt assemblies are not
compatible with prior model year (i.e.
2015 or 2016) versions of the Silverado
or Sierra HD due to a different type of
wiring connector used.
GM concluded by expressing the
belief that the subject noncompliance is
inconsequential as it relates to motor
vehicle safety, and that its petition to be
exempted from providing notification of
the noncompliance, as required by 49
U.S.C. 30118, and a remedy for the
noncompliance, as required by 49
U.S.C. 30120, should be granted.
To view GM’s petition, analyses, and
test data in their entirety, you can visit
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
online instructions for accessing the
dockets and search for the docket ID
number for this petition shown in the
heading of this notice.
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NHTSA notes that the statutory
provisions (49 U.S.C. 30118(d) and
30120(h)) that permit manufacturers to
file petitions for a determination of
inconsequentiality allow NHTSA to
exempt manufacturers only from the
duties found in sections 30118 and
30120, respectively, to notify owners,
purchasers, and dealers of a defect or
noncompliance and to remedy the
defect or noncompliance. Therefore, any
decision on this petition only applies to
the subject vehicles that GM no longer
controlled at the time it determined that
the noncompliance existed. However,
any decision on this petition does not
relieve vehicle distributors and dealers
of the prohibitions on the sale, offer for
sale, or introduction or delivery for
introduction into interstate commerce of
the noncompliant vehicles under their
control after GM notified them that the
subject noncompliance existed.
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30118, 30120:
delegations of authority at 49 CFR 1.95 and
501.8.
Jeffrey M. Giuseppe,
Associate Administrator for Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2018–00221 Filed 1–9–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–59–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Foreign Assets Control
Notice of OFAC Sanctions Action
Office of Foreign Assets
Control, Treasury.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Department of the
Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets
Control (OFAC) is removing the name of
one individual whose property and
interests in property have been blocked
pursuant to an executive order issued
on January 23, 1995, titled ‘‘Prohibiting
Transactions with Terrorists Who
Threaten to Disrupt the Middle East
Peace Process,’’ from the list of
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DATES: See SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Assistant Director for Licensing, tel.:
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or the Department of the Treasury’s
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SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 7 (Wednesday, January 10, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 1282-1284]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-00221]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
[Docket No. NHTSA-2017-0097; Notice 1]
General Motors, LLC, Receipt of Petition for Decision of
Inconsequential Noncompliance
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Receipt of petition.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: General Motors, LLC (GM), has determined that the seat belt
assemblies in certain model year (MY) 2017-2018 Chevrolet Silverado and
GMC Sierra heavy duty motor vehicles do not fully comply with Federal
Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) No. 209, Seat Belt Assemblies. GM
filed a noncompliance report dated September 14, 2017, and amended it
on September 22, 2017. GM also petitioned NHTSA on October 6, 2017, for
a decision that the subject noncompliance is inconsequential as it
relates to motor vehicle safety.
DATES: The closing date for comments on the petition is February 9,
2018.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are invited to submit written data,
views, and arguments on this petition. Comments must refer to the
docket and notice number cited in the title of this notice and
submitted by any of the following methods:
Mail: Send comments by mail addressed to U.S. Department
of Transportation, Docket Operations, M-30, West Building Ground Floor,
Room W12-140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590.
Hand Delivery: Deliver comments by hand to U.S. Department
of Transportation, Docket Operations, M-30, West Building Ground Floor,
Room W12-140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590. The
Docket Section is open on weekdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. except
Federal Holidays.
Electronically: Submit comments electronically by logging
onto the Federal Docket Management System (FDMS) website at https://www.regulations.gov/. Follow the online instructions for submitting
comments.
[[Page 1283]]
Comments may also be faxed to (202) 493-2251.
Comments must be written in the English language, and be no greater
than 15 pages in length, although there is no limit to the length of
necessary attachments to the comments. If comments are submitted in
hard copy form, please ensure that two copies are provided. If you wish
to receive confirmation that comments you have submitted by mail were
received, please enclose a stamped, self-addressed postcard with the
comments. Note that all comments received will be posted without change
to https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information
provided.
All comments and supporting materials received before the close of
business on the closing date indicated above will be filed in the
docket and will be considered. All comments and supporting materials
received after the closing date will also be filed and will be
considered to the fullest extent possible.
When the petition is granted or denied, notice of the decision will
also be published in the Federal Register pursuant to the authority
indicated at the end of this notice.
All comments, background documentation, and supporting materials
submitted to the docket may be viewed by anyone at the address and
times given above. The documents may also be viewed on the internet at
https://www.regulations.gov by following the online instructions for
accessing the dockets. The docket ID number for this petition is shown
in the heading of this notice.
DOT's complete Privacy Act Statement is available for review in a
Federal Register notice published on April 11, 2000, (65 FR 19477-78).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Overview: GM has determined that the seat belt assemblies in
certain MY 2017-2018 Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra heavy duty
motor vehicles do not fully comply with paragraphs S4.4(b)(5) of FMVSS
No. 209, Seat Belt Assemblies. GM filed a noncompliance report dated
September 14, 2017, and amended it on September 22, 2017, pursuant to
49 CFR part 573, Defect and Noncompliance Responsibility and Reports.
GM also petitioned NHTSA on October 6, 2017, pursuant to 49 U.S.C.
30118(d) and 30120(h) and 49 CFR part 556, for an exemption from the
notification and remedy requirements of 49 U.S.C. Chapter 301 on the
basis that this noncompliance is inconsequential as it relates to motor
vehicle safety.
This notice of receipt of GM petition is published under 49 U.S.C.
30118 and 30120 and does not represent any agency decision or other
exercise of judgment concerning the merits of the petition.
II. Vehicles Involved: Approximately 38,048 MY 2017-2018 Chevrolet
Silverado and GMC Sierra heavy duty motor vehicles, manufactured
between July 18, 2016, and August 7, 2017, are potentially involved.
The double cab versions of the subject vehicles are not included in
this petition.
III. Noncompliance: GM explains that the noncompliance is that the
subject vehicles were equipped with seat belt assemblies that do not
conform to the upper-torso seat belt elongation requirements specified
in paragraph S4.4(b)(5) of FMVSS No. 209. Specifically, the seat belt
assemblies were built with load-limiting torsion bars measuring 9.5 mm
on the driver side and 8.0 mm in diameter on the passenger side,
instead of 12 mm as specified by GM.
IV. Rule Text: Paragraph S4.4(b)(5) of FMVSS No. 209 states, in
pertinent part:
S4.4 Requirements for assembly performance.
. . .
(b) Type 2 seat belt assembly. Except as provided in S4.5, the
components of a Type 2 seat belt assembly including webbing, straps,
buckles, adjustment and attachment hardware, and retractors shall
comply with the following requirements when tested by the procedure
specified in S5.3(b): . . .
(5) The length of the upper torso restraint between anchorages
shall not increase more than 508 mm when subjected to a force of
11,120N. . . .
V. Summary of GM's Petition: As background, GM stated that smaller
diameter torsion bars are regularly used in retractor assemblies in
full size trucks--including variants of the subject vehicles--that are
subject to S5.1 of FMVSS No. 208, and thus exempt from S4.4(b)(5) of
FMVSS No. 209. GM says this is because, when combined with a deploying
frontal airbag, the seat belt retractors equipped with lower diameter
torsion bars provide at least the same level of occupant protection in
frontal crashes while optimizing belt force deflection characteristics.
However, the subject vehicles were not certified to S5.1 of FMVSS No.
208 and, accordingly, were not intended to be equipped with these
smaller diameter torsion bars because they were required to meet the
elongation requirements of S4.4(b)(5) of FMVSS No. 209
GM described the subject noncompliance and stated its belief that
the noncompliance is inconsequential as it relates to motor vehicle
safety.
In support of its petition, GM submitted the following reasoning:
A. Testing data indicates that the Subject Vehicles Meet the Belted
Frontal Crash Performance Testing Requirements of S5.1 of FMVSS No.
208: GM has conducted dynamic frontal crash testing on 2500 series
vehicles that were substantially similar to the subject vehicles and
were equipped with the same load-limiting seat belt retractors with the
lower-diameter torsion bars (the ``Tested Vehicles'').\1\ The tested
vehicles comply with the belted frontal crash performance testing
requirements under S5.1.1(a) of FMVSS No. 208.\2\ In fact, the tested
vehicles performed below the injury assessment reference limits
specified in S5.1.1(a) even when tested at 35 mph, which subjects the
vehicle to 36% more energy than at the 30 mph testing standard provided
in the regulation. The tested vehicles were also rated by NHTSA with an
overall 4-Star NCAP score.
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\1\ The subject vehicles and tested vehicles share the same
frame, body structure, powertrains and under-hood crush space;
instrument panel, steering column and wheel, seats, seat-belt
anchorages, and general interior vehicle layout/spatial
relationships; and driver and passenger frontal airbags. In similar
configurations, the subject vehicles and test vehicles have similar
mass.
\2\ S5.1.1(a) of FMVSS No. 208 specifies the belted barrier test
requirements for certain vehicles not certified to S14 of FMVSS No.
208 (i.e. those with a GVW >8,500 lbs. or an unloaded weight >5,500
lbs).
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GM expects that the subject vehicles will perform nearly the same
as the tested vehicles in dynamic frontal crash testing, and would
therefore also meet all of the belted barrier test requirements
specified by S5.1.1(a) of FMVSS No. 208.
GM believes, consistent with NHTSA's past guidance,\3\ that the
dynamic belted frontal barrier crash testing of S5.1.1(a) of FMVSS No.
208 is a more appropriate means to evaluate occupant protection than
the static seat belt elongation testing requirements of S4.4(B)(5) of
FMVSS No. 209 for
[[Page 1284]]
vehicles with seat belts equipped with load limiters.
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\3\ In its 1991 rulemaking modifying FMVSS No. 209 to exclude
certain dynamically tested seat belts from some of the static seat-
belt testing requirements, NHTSA acknowledged that it ``has long
believed it more appropriate to evaluate the occupant protection
afforded by vehicles by conducting dynamic testing . . .'' versus
static tests such as the elongation requirements in S4.4(b)(5) of
FMVSS No. 209. Final Rule, 56 FR 15295, 15295 (April 16, 1991).
Further, ``[s]ince the dynamic test measures the actual occupant
protection which the belt provides during a crash, there is no
apparent need to subject that belt to static testing procedures that
are surrogate and less direct measures of the protection which the
belt would provide to its occupant during a crash.'' Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, 55 FR 1681 (January 18, 1990) (emphasis added).
NHTSA's rationale for creating these exemptions applies to the
subject vehicles even though they may not all technically be
``subject to'' S5.1 of FMVSS No. 208 and therefore exempt from FMVSS
No. 209's elongation requirements.
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B. GM believes the subject vehicles will provide no less protection
to occupants in a frontal crash than vehicles equipped with seat belt
retractors utilizing the 12 mm torsion bars: GM believes that replacing
the retractors installed in the subject vehicles with retractors that
have the larger torsion bars would not result in an added safety
benefit to the occupants of these vehicles in frontal crashes. That is,
the subject vehicles will provide no less occupant protection than
vehicles built with the larger 12 mm diameter torsion bars that meet
the elongation requirements of S4.4(b)(5) of FMVSS No. 209. Further,
seat belt retractors equipped with the lower-diameter torsion bars may
reduce upper torso injury potential in frontal crashes as compared to
retractors with the larger-diameter torsion bars.
C. NHTSA precedent supports granting this petition: NHTSA has
previously ruled that failure to comply with certain of FMVSS No. 209's
static testing requirements can be inconsequential to motor vehicle
safety where the manufacturer demonstrates by dynamic testing that the
noncompliant seat belt assembly preforms similarly to a compliant
assembly. On May 3, 2002, GM submitted an inconsequentiality petition
to NHTSA relating to certain trucks and SUV's that were built with
damaged and inoperative ``vehicle-sensitive'' emergency-locking
retractors (ELRs), which lock the seat belts under rapid deceleration.
Notwithstanding the noncompliance with FMVSS No. 209 caused by this
condition, GM asserted that the failure was inconsequential to vehicle
safety because the ELRs in these vehicles also had a redundant
``webbing-sensitive'' mechanism, which locks the belts when the webbing
is rapidly extracted. GM presented dynamic testing data (including some
data developed using the test procedures set forth in FMVSS No. 208)
demonstrating that the webbing-sensitive system ``offered a level of
protection nearly equivalent to that provided by a compliant ELR.''
NHTSA granted GM's petition, in part, and ruled the noncompliance
in certain of the vehicles subject to the petition was inconsequential
to motor vehicle safety:
[O]n the basis of the sled test and simulation data provided by
GM, the agency has concluded that GM has adequately demonstrated
that the potential safety consequences of the failure of the
vehicle-sensitive locking mechanisms in the ELRs in the C/K vehicles
to function properly are inconsequential. While the webbing-
sensitive systems in these vehicles do allow slightly increased belt
payout compared to a functional vehicle-sensitive system, and lock
slightly later in crash event, these differences do not appear to
expose a vehicle occupant to a significantly greater risk of injury.
General Motors Corporation, Ruling on Petition for Determination of
Inconsequential Noncompliance, 69 FR 19897, 19900 (April 14, 2004). In
its decision, NHTSA also noted specifically that ``the dummy injury
measurements did not increase significantly and were well below the
maximum values permitted under FMVSS No. 208.''
Here, GM expects that the subject vehicles will provide no less
protection to occupants in the designated seating positions in frontal
crashes than vehicles equipped with seat belt retractors conforming to
S4.4(b) of FMVSS No. 209.
D. GM is not aware of any injuries or customer complaints
associated with this condition: After searching VOQ, TREAD and internal
GM databases, GM is not aware of any crashes, injuries, or customer
complaints associated with this condition.
E. GM has corrected the noncompliance in vehicle production and in
service parts inventory: GM has corrected the noncompliance in
production. Vehicles produced after August 7, 2017, have seat belt
assemblies containing retractor torsion bars that meet GM's original
specifications and comply with S4.4(b) of FMVSS No. 209. Retractor
assemblies with this condition that were manufactured as service parts
are no longer available for sale and all affected inventory has been
purged. Any such seat belt assembly previously sold as service parts
could only have been installed on a subject vehicle because these seat
belt assemblies are not compatible with prior model year (i.e. 2015 or
2016) versions of the Silverado or Sierra HD due to a different type of
wiring connector used.
GM concluded by expressing the belief that the subject
noncompliance is inconsequential as it relates to motor vehicle safety,
and that its petition to be exempted from providing notification of the
noncompliance, as required by 49 U.S.C. 30118, and a remedy for the
noncompliance, as required by 49 U.S.C. 30120, should be granted.
To view GM's petition, analyses, and test data in their entirety,
you can visit https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for accessing the dockets and search for the docket ID
number for this petition shown in the heading of this notice.
NHTSA notes that the statutory provisions (49 U.S.C. 30118(d) and
30120(h)) that permit manufacturers to file petitions for a
determination of inconsequentiality allow NHTSA to exempt manufacturers
only from the duties found in sections 30118 and 30120, respectively,
to notify owners, purchasers, and dealers of a defect or noncompliance
and to remedy the defect or noncompliance. Therefore, any decision on
this petition only applies to the subject vehicles that GM no longer
controlled at the time it determined that the noncompliance existed.
However, any decision on this petition does not relieve vehicle
distributors and dealers of the prohibitions on the sale, offer for
sale, or introduction or delivery for introduction into interstate
commerce of the noncompliant vehicles under their control after GM
notified them that the subject noncompliance existed.
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30118, 30120: delegations of authority at
49 CFR 1.95 and 501.8.
Jeffrey M. Giuseppe,
Associate Administrator for Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2018-00221 Filed 1-9-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-59-P