Daimler Trucks North America, LLC, Denial of Petition for Decision of Inconsequential Noncompliance, 58876-58880 [2024-15903]
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58876
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2024 / Notices
The company is aware of the risks inherent
with the extended hours of operations and
will ensure the driver is not operating the
CMV while fatigued. This will be
accomplished by the managers and on-site
project supervisors attending ‘‘Distracted
Driving and Fatigue Awareness’’ training, as
well as through face-to-face interactions with
the driver(s), the intent being increased
awareness of the drivers mental and physical
state.
IV. Public Comments
On November 16, 2023, FMCSA
published Reiman’s application and
requested public comment (88 FR
11504). The Agency received one
response, a joint comment filed by
Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety
and the Truck Safety Coalition in
opposition to the requested exemption.
These organizations commented that,
‘‘The basis for seeking the exemption is
no more than the normal daily logistical
issues presented by the Petitioner’s
daily operations.’’ The commenters also
stated that ‘‘Permitting an exemption for
any industry or group of drivers that
face waiting times would render the
HOS limitations meaningless at a time
when driver fatigue remains a serious
safety issue.’’
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V. FMCSA Safety Analysis and
Decision
FMCSA has evaluated Reiman’s
application and the public comment
and denies the exemption request. The
Agency continues to rely on the
substantial body of HOS research that
supported the adoption of the 14-hour
rule (68 FR 22473, April 28, 2003).
Fatigue during the workday represents a
significant safety risk if this exemption
were granted because drivers would
operate their CMVs after the 14th hour
of coming on duty. The risk of fatigue
increases significantly after the 14th
hour of coming on duty, despite
miscellaneous off-duty periods during
the work shift.
The applicant did not include
alternatives to compliance with the 14hour rule, such as some other fixed
driving window within which all
driving must be completed. The
proposed relief from the 14-hour rule
would enable miscellaneous off-duty
periods at the construction sites to be
excluded when determining whether
the drivers may operate the CMV during
the latter part of the workday. This
would create the potential for fatigued
drivers, subject to long workdays and
without consideration of whether the
driver had accumulated 14 hours of onduty time before completing their
driving tasks for the day. The applicant
has not demonstrated that granting the
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exemption would achieve an equivalent
level of safety to the existing regulation.
For the above reasons, FMCSA denies
Reiman’s exemption application.
DTNA filed an original
noncompliance report dated February 9,
2022, and amended the report on April
13, 2022, pursuant to 49 CFR part 573,
Defect and Noncompliance
Sue Lawless,
Responsibility and Reports. DTNA
Acting Deputy Administrator.
petitioned NHTSA on March 1, 2022,
[FR Doc. 2024–15879 Filed 7–18–24; 8:45 am]
and amended the petition on April 13,
BILLING CODE 4910–EX–P
2022, for an exemption from the
notification and remedy requirements of
49 U.S.C. Chapter 301 on the basis that
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION this noncompliance is inconsequential
as it relates to motor vehicle safety,
National Highway Traffic Safety
pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 30118(d) and
Administration
30120(h) and 49 CFR part 556,
Exemption for Inconsequential Defect or
[Docket No. NHTSA–2022–0025; Notice 2]
Noncompliance.
Notice of receipt of DTNA’s petition
Daimler Trucks North America, LLC,
was published with a 30-day public
Denial of Petition for Decision of
comment period on August 30, 2022, in
Inconsequential Noncompliance
the Federal Register (87 FR 53044). No
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic
comments were received. To view the
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
petition and all supporting documents
Department of Transportation (DOT).
log onto the Federal Docket
Management System (FDMS) website at
ACTION: Denial of petition.
https://www.regulations.gov/. Then
SUMMARY: Daimler Trucks North
follow the online search instructions to
America LLC (DTNA) has determined
locate docket number ‘‘NHTSA–2022–
that certain model year (MY) 2019–2022 0025.’’
II. Vehicles Involved: Approximately
Thomas Built Bus school buses do not
28,814 MY 2019–2022 Thomas Built
fully comply with Federal Motor
Saf-T-Liner HDX, EFX, C2, and
Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) No.
Minotour school buses, manufactured
217, Bus Emergency Exits and Window
between September 28, 2018, and
Retention and Release. DTNA filed an
February 23, 2021, are potentially
original noncompliance report dated
involved.
February 9, 2022, and amended the
III. Noncompliance: DTNA explains
report on April 13, 2022. DTNA
that the subject school buses are
petitioned NHTSA (the ‘‘Agency’’) on
equipped with ‘‘Emergency Exit’’ and
March 1, 2022, and later amended the
‘‘Emergency Door’’ labels that do not
petition on April 13, 2022, for a
decision that the subject noncompliance meet the letter height requirements, as
required by paragraph S5.5.3(a) of
is inconsequential as it relates to motor
FMVSS No. 217. Specifically, some of
vehicle safety. This document
the letters are 4.9 cm instead of the
announces the denial of DTNA’s
required minimum 5 cm letter height.
petition.
IV. Rule Requirements: Paragraph
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
S5.5.3(a) of FMVSS No. 217 includes
Daniel Lind, Safety Compliance
the requirements relevant to this
Engineer, NHTSA, Office of Vehicle
petition. Each school bus emergency
Safety Compliance, (202) 366–7235.
exit provided in accordance with
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
S5.2.3.1 of FMVSS No. 217 is required
I. Overview: On November 20, 2020,
to have the designation ‘‘Emergency
NHTSA requested information from
Door’’ or ‘‘Emergency Exit,’’ as
DTNA regarding a test failure with
appropriate, in letters that are at least 5
S5.5.3(a) of FMVSS No. 217, Emergency centimeters high and in a color that
Exit Identification and Labeling, in a
contrasts with the background of the
2019 Thomas Saf-T-Liner school bus.
letters.
V. Background: In March 2020,
NHTSA received DTNA’s response on
NHTSA notified DTNA of a potential
December 18, 2020, and on January 26,
noncompliance regarding the emergency
2022, NHTSA requested that DTNA
exit identification labeling in its subject
provide additional information or file a
school buses. In April 2020, DTNA
noncompliance report, if it determines
responded to NHTSA and stated its
that there is a noncompliance.
belief that the label ‘‘should be
As a result, DTNA determined that
considered compliant’’ because ‘‘with
certain MY 2019–2022 Thomas Built
standard rounding, the label-letters met
Bus school buses do not fully comply
the requirements.’’ In its response,
with paragraph S5.5.3(a) of FMVSS No.
DTNA also contended that NHTSA had
217, Bus Emergency Exits and Window
Retention and Release (49 CFR 571.217). previously audited the labels in 2014
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and found them to be compliant. Then
in November 2020, DTNA stated that it
received an information request from
the Agency, to which DTNA responded
by explaining that ‘‘1) the labels meet
the requirements of FMVSS [No.] 217
following the agency’s rules of rounding
and precision and 2) were the exact
same labels had previously been
reviewed by the OVSC and found to be
compliant during OVSC compliance
testing.’’ On January 31, 2022, DTNA
received another letter from the Agency
requesting that DTNA submit additional
information or file a supporting
noncompliance report. DTNA stated
that it decided to file the
noncompliance report ‘‘in order to avoid
a protracted dispute with the agency.’’
VI. Summary of DTNA’s Petition: The
following views and arguments
presented in this section, ‘‘VI. Summary
of DTNA’s Petition,’’ are the views and
arguments provided by DTNA. They do
not reflect the views of the Agency.
DTNA describes the subject
noncompliance and contends that the
noncompliance is inconsequential as it
relates to motor vehicle safety.
DTNA says ‘‘[t]he relevant labels were
designed with letters at least 5 cm and
reasonably believed at all relevant times
that they complied with FMVSS [No.]
217 under applicable law, including
NHTSA’s public statements regarding
numerical rounding.’’
DTNA contends that NHTSA has
granted the following petitions in which
the letters did not meet the minimum
letter height requirement:
• Kia Motors America, Inc., Grant of
Petition for Decision of Inconsequential
Noncompliance, 69 FR 41332 (July 8,
2004);
• General Motors, LLC, Grant of
Petition for Decision of Inconsequential
Noncompliance, 81 FR 92963 (July 9,
2004); and
• Hyundai Motor Co., Grant of
Petition for Decision of Inconsequential
Noncompliance, 69 FR 41568 (July 9,
2004).
DTNA also states that NHTSA has
previously granted two
inconsequentiality petitions that ‘‘could
lead to crowding of passengers trying to
flee an exit.’’ In the first case,1 ‘‘buses
were manufactured with only one
emergency exit instead of two,’’ and in
the second case,2 ‘‘emergency exits were
mounted under the same post and roof
bow panel space.’’
1 See New Flyer of America, Inc., Grant of
Petition for Decision of Inconsequential
Noncompliance, 63 FR 32694 (June 15, 1998).
2 See IC Corporation, Grant of Petition for
Decision of Inconsequential Noncompliance, 70 FR
24464 (May 9, 2005).
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DTNA states its belief that although
the letter height is 0.1 cm less than the
FMVSS requirement, the letters ‘‘are
sufficiently large as to aid passengers
fleeing an emergency’’ and that the
labels meet all other applicable
FMVSSs. DTNA believes that because
some of the letters exceed the 5 cm
minimum requirement, ‘‘the reasonable
aggregate perception of a viewer is that
the letters are 5 cm or more.’’ DTNA
further states its belief that the 0.1 cm
difference does not obscure the labels or
the purpose of the label since the labels
are in bold letters that contrast against
the background of the labels.
DTNA claims that it is not aware of
any complaint, accident, injury, or
death resulting from the subject
noncompliance.
DTNA contends that ‘‘there is a
substantial question whether or not
there is fair notice as to how a
manufacturer is to comply with FMVSS
[No.] 217 (and potential scores of other
FMVSSs) given the agency’s past
statements on numerical rounding.’’
DTNA believes that NHTSA’s
statements with respect to the rounding
method it uses 3 and the rounding
method provided in the FMVSS No. 111
test procedure are contradicted by a
1990 NHTSA interpretation,4 which
states that an FMVSS will specify when
rounding is appropriate. DTNA claims
that NHTSA’s ‘‘procedures for
comparing numbers to a standard is
ambiguous,’’ therefore, DTNA states that
it lacked ‘‘fair notice as to which of the
above procedures, rounding or not,
apply.’’
DTNA concludes by stating its belief
that the subject noncompliance is
inconsequential as it relates to motor
vehicle safety and 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.
VII. NHTSA’s Analysis: In
determining inconsequentiality of a
noncompliance, NHTSA focuses on the
safety risk to individuals who
experience the type of event against
which a recall would otherwise
protect.5 In general, NHTSA does not
Consumer Information; New Car
Assessment Program, 79 FR 28594 (May 16, 2014).
4 See Paul Jackson Rice, Chief Counsel, NHTSA,
to David G. Dick Acts Testing Labs, Inc. (September
10, 1990).
5 See Gen. Motors, LLC; Grant of Petition for
Decision of Inconsequential Noncompliance, 78 FR
35355 (June 12, 2013) (finding noncompliance had
no effect on occupant safety because it had no effect
on the proper operation of the occupant
classification system and the correct deployment of
an air bag); Osram Sylvania Prods. Inc.; Grant of
Petition for Decision of Inconsequential
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3 See
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58877
consider the absence of complaints or
injuries when determining if a
noncompliance is inconsequential to
safety. The absence of complaints does
not mean vehicle occupants have not
experienced a safety issue, nor does it
mean that there will not be safety issues
in the future.6
A. General Principles
Congress passed the National Traffic
and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966
(the Safety Act) with the express
purpose of reducing motor vehicle
accidents, deaths, injuries, and property
damage. See 49 U.S.C. 30101. To this
end, the Safety Act empowers the
Secretary of Transportation to establish
and enforce mandatory Federal Motor
Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS). See
49 U.S.C. 30111. The Secretary has
delegated this authority to NHTSA. See
49 CFR 1.95.
NHTSA adopts a FMVSS only after
the Agency has determined that the
requirements are objective and
practicable and meet the need for motor
vehicle safety. See 49 U.S.C. 30111(a).
Thus, there is a general presumption
that the failure of a motor vehicle or
item of motor vehicle equipment to
comply with a FMVSS increases the risk
to motor vehicle safety beyond the level
deemed appropriate by NHTSA through
the rulemaking process. To protect the
public from such risks, manufacturers
whose products fail to comply with a
FMVSS are normally required to
conduct a safety recall under which
they must notify owners, purchasers,
and dealers of the noncompliance and
provide a free remedy. See 49 U.S.C.
30118–30120. However, Congress has
recognized that, under some limited
circumstances, a noncompliance could
be ‘‘inconsequential’’ to motor vehicle
safety. It therefore established a
procedure under which NHTSA may
consider whether it is appropriate to
exempt a manufacturer from its
notification and remedy (i.e., recall)
obligations. See 49 U.S.C. 30118(d),
30120(h). The Agency’s regulations
governing the filing and consideration
of petitions for inconsequentiality
Noncompliance, 78 FR 46000 (July 30, 2013)
(finding occupant using noncompliant light source
would not be exposed to significantly greater risk
than occupant using similar compliant light
source).
6 See Morgan 3 Wheeler Limited; Denial of
Petition for Decision of Inconsequential
Noncompliance, 81 FR 21663, 21666 (Apr. 12,
2016); see also United States v. Gen. Motors Corp.,
565 F.2d 754, 759 (D.C. Cir. 1977) (finding defect
poses an unreasonable risk when it ‘‘results in
hazards as potentially dangerous as sudden engine
fire, and where there is no dispute that at least some
such hazards, in this case fires, can definitely be
expected to occur in the future’’).
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exemptions are set forth at 49 CFR part
556.
Under the Safety Act and Part 556,
inconsequentiality exemptions may be
granted only in response to a petition
from a manufacturer, and then only after
notice in the Federal Register and an
opportunity for interested members of
the public to present information,
views, and arguments on the petition. In
addition to considering public
comments, the Agency will draw upon
its own understanding of safety-related
systems and its experience in deciding
the merits of a petition. An absence of
opposing argument and data from the
public does not require NHTSA to grant
a manufacturer’s petition.
Neither the Safety Act nor part 556
define the term ‘‘inconsequential.’’
Rather, the Agency determines whether
a particular noncompliance is
inconsequential to motor vehicle safety
based upon the specific facts before it in
a particular petition. An important issue
to consider in determining
inconsequentiality based upon
NHTSA’s prior decisions on
noncompliance issues was the safety
risk to individuals who experience the
type of event against which the recall
would otherwise protect.7 NHTSA also
does not consider the absence of
complaints or injuries when
determining whether a noncompliance
is inconsequential to safety. The Safety
Act is preventive, and manufacturers
cannot and should not wait for deaths
or injuries to occur in their vehicles
before they carry out a recall. See, e.g.,
United States v. Gen. Motors Corp., 565
F.2d 754, 759 (D.C. Cir. 1977). Indeed,
the very purpose of a recall is to protect
individuals from risk. See id. ‘‘Most
importantly, the absence of a complaint
does not mean there have not been any
safety issues, nor does it mean that there
will not be safety issues in the future.’’ 8
‘‘[T]he fact that in past reported cases
good luck and swift reaction have
prevented many serious injuries does
not mean that good luck will continue
to work.’’ 9 Rather, the issue to consider
7 See Gen. Motors, LLC; Grant of Petition for
Decision of Inconsequential Noncompliance, 78 FR
35355 (June 12, 2013) (finding noncompliance had
no effect on occupant safety because it had no effect
on the proper operation of the occupant
classification system and the correct deployment of
an air bag); Osram Sylvania Prods. Inc.; Grant of
Petition for Decision of Inconsequential
Noncompliance, 78 FR 46000 (July 30, 2013)
(finding occupant using noncompliant light source
would not be exposed to significantly greater risk
than occupant using similar compliant light
source).
8 Morgan 3 Wheeler Limited; Denial of Petition for
Decision of Inconsequential Noncompliance, 81 FR
21663, 21666 (Apr. 12, 2016).
9 United States v. Gen. Motors Corp., 565 F.2d
754, 759 (D.C. Cir. 1977) (finding defect poses an
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is the consequence to an occupant who
is exposed to the consequence of that
noncompliance.10
B. Response to DTNA’s Arguments
NHTSA reviewed DTNA’s arguments
that the subject noncompliance is
inconsequential to motor vehicle safety.
DTNA contends that the noncompliance
with the letter height requirements that
are set forth in paragraph S5.5.3(a) of
FMVSS No. 217, poses little, if any, risk
to motor vehicle safety. NHTSA does
not agree.
DTNA’s first argument is that the
‘‘relevant labels were designed with
letters at least 5 cm and reasonably
believed at all relevant times that they
complied with FMVSS [No.] 217 under
applicable law.’’ DTNA’s belief that the
labels were compliant, which might be
relevant if the issue here was its basis
for certification, has no bearing on
whether this noncompliance is
inconsequential. DTNA may have
designed the labels with letters that
were supposed to have at least 5 cm of
letter height, however, the letter heights
when measured by both NHTSA and
DTNA, were less than 5 cm. This could
be due to a variety of reasons. For
example, the noncompliance could be
caused by a variation in DTNA’s
production and quality processes,
which allowed for smaller letter heights
to be printed on labels. It could also be
caused by insufficient tolerancing
applied to the design of the labels (a
process that is meant to ensure that even
with the highest degree of variation, the
minimum letter height of 5 cm would
still be attained on the labels). With a
robust surveillance program, this type of
anomaly may have been discovered
early in the production process, but no
such surveillance data was provided by
DTNA. DTNA did not provide any
additional details regarding the design
of the labels in its petition, therefore no
additional context or evidence was
provided by DTNA in support of this
claim. Consequently, NHTSA is not
persuaded by DTNA’s argument that the
design of the labels mitigates the
noncompliance for the letter height
requirement, as no evidence was
provided in support of this claim. In any
event, NHTSA disagrees with DTNA’s
argument that a noncompliant label can
unreasonable risk when it ‘‘results in hazards as
potentially dangerous as sudden engine fire, and
where there is no dispute that at least some such
hazards, in this case fires, can definitely be
expected to occur in the future’’).
10 See Gen. Motors Corp.; Ruling on Petition for
Determination of Inconsequential Noncompliance,
69 FR 19897, 19900 (Apr. 14, 2004); Cosco, Inc.;
Denial of Application for Decision of
Inconsequential Noncompliance, 64 FR 29408,
29409 (June 1, 1999).
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be considered compliant or
inconsequential if the design of the label
meets the applicable FMVSS—but the
actual manufactured label does not.
Regarding the readability of the labels,
NHTSA does not agree with DTNA that
the readability of the labels is unaffected
by the noncompliance with the letter
height requirement. DTNA did not
provide any additional context,
evidence or data to support its claims
that (1) the labels ‘‘are sufficiently large
as to aid passengers fleeing an
emergency,’’ (2) ‘‘the reasonable
aggregate perception of a viewer is that
the letters are 5 cm or more,’’ or (3) the
letter height difference does not obscure
the labels or the purpose of the labels.
As such, NHTSA is not persuaded by
DTNA’s argument that the readability of
the labels is unaffected by the
noncompliance with the letter height
requirement, as no evidence or data was
provided in support of this claim.
Insofar as conspicuity of the operating
instructions is concerned, NHTSA
agrees with DTNA that the letters on the
labels ‘‘are in bold letters that contrast
against the background of the labels,’’
but NHTSA does not agree with DTNA
that compliance with the conspicuity
requirements negates a failure to comply
with school bus emergency exit label
letter minimum height requirements. As
such, NHTSA rejects DTNA’s argument
that meeting the conspicuity
requirements for the labels mitigates the
noncompliance with the letter
minimum height requirement,
particularly in the absence of data or
evidence supporting this claim.
DTNA further submits that numerical
rounding employed by NHTSA in other
contexts establishes that DTNA’s
noncompliance is inconsequential to
safety. DTNA’s argument is not
compelling. One of the numerical
rounding methods referenced by
DTNA 11 is not part of the Federal Motor
Vehicle Safety Standards, but is instead
part of the voluntary consumer
information New Car Assessment
Program (NCAP). That rounding
methodology is not applicable to the
requirements of FMVSS No. 217 and
cannot be used to determine whether a
label is compliant.
DTNA also quotes a 1990 NHTSA
interpretation letter but subsequently
disagrees with the conclusion in
NHTSA’s interpretation letter. NHTSA
reaffirms the statement in the 1990
interpretation letter that: ‘‘Rounding is
generally not used in the safety
standards. The standards expressly
specify when rounding is
11 See
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appropriate.’’ 12 DTNA has not
identified anything in FMVSS No. 217
or specific to that standard that allow
for rounding. NHTSA does not agree
with DTNA that rounding is permitted
in the present case or that FMVSS No.
217 presents an ambiguity regarding
rounding. In fact, the 1990
interpretation goes on to state that ‘‘. . .
any value less than the minimum
required value is a noncompliance.’’
Finally, DTNA’s reference to the
rounding methodology in the FMVSS
No. 111 test procedure is also not
applicable, since the rounding
methodology refers to the conversion
from English to metric units when direct
measurement in metric units is not
available—which is not the case with
DTNA’s subject noncompliance.
DTNA asserted that five
inconsequential noncompliance
petitions that NHTSA had previously
granted support DTNA’s subject
petition. However, NHTSA disagrees
because all of the five cited petitions are
unrelated to school bus emergency exit
identification. Furthermore, NHTSA
emphasizes that the Agency examines
every inconsequential noncompliance
petition on its own merits. The Agency’s
decisions are necessarily highly fact
dependent and limited to a particular
and often narrow context. NHTSA
therefore believes that prior
determinations—that are not specific to
the identification of school bus
emergency exit labels—do not warrant
granting this petition.
The first petition,13 from Kia Motors
America, Inc., and Kia Motors Corp.
(collectively, ‘‘Kia’’), involved passenger
vehicles which did not meet the letter
height requirements for brake system
warning lights, specifically for the
abbreviation ‘‘ABS’’ and in some cases
the word ‘‘brake,’’ as required by
FMVSS No. 101, 105, and 135. In this
case, these passenger vehicles did not
meet the minimum letter height
requirement of 3.2 mm. The Agency
decided that ‘‘due to the positioning,
color, use of the ISO symbol, and
combined size of both the lettering and
symbols, it is very unlikely that a
vehicle user would either fail to see or
fail to understand the meaning of the
brake or ABS warning light in the
affected vehicles’’ and granted the
petition. NHTSA does not agree that
granting this prior petition supports
granting DTNA’s petition here for the
following reasons: (1) compliance with
FMVSS No. 217 was not at issue; (2)
12 See Paul Jackson Rice, Chief Counsel, NHTSA,
to David G. Dick Acts Testing Labs, Inc. (September
10, 1990).
13 See 69 FR 41332.
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emergency exit identification within the
vehicle was not at issue; (3) the warning
lights in Kia’s petition both
‘‘illuminated in red (brake warning
light) or yellow (ABS light)’’ and also
‘‘include[d] an International Standards
Organization (ISO) symbol combined
with the word ‘brake’ or the
abbreviation ‘ABS,’’’ which are two
features distinctly different from the
emergency exit labels at issue here
(which do not illuminate or contain any
symbol); and (4) the warning lights in
Kia’s petition were related to the
driver’s attention, whereas the
emergency exit labels in DTNA’s
petition are for school bus children to
use in the event of an emergency.
The second petition,14 from General
Motors, LLC (GM), involved passenger
vehicles which did not meet the letter
height requirements for the park brake
telltale (identified by the word
‘‘PARK’’), as required by FMVSS No.
101 and 135. In this case, these
passenger vehicles did not meet the
minimum letter height requirement of
3.2 mm for the word ‘‘PARK.’’ The
Agency decided that ‘‘[i]llumination of
both the ‘PARK’ indicator combined
with the information center statement
‘Park Brake Set’ provides ample
communication to the driver that the
parking brake has been applied,’’ and
granted the petition. NHTSA does not
agree that granting this prior petition
supports granting DTNA’s petition here
for the following reasons: (1)
compliance with FMVSS No. 217 was
not at issue; (2) emergency exit
identification within the vehicle was
not at issue; (3) the park brake telltale
lights in GM’s petition ‘‘illuminated,’’
which is a feature distinctly different
from the emergency exit labels at issue
here (which do not illuminate); (4)
activation of the park brake telltale light
in GM’s petition would simultaneously
activate a second illuminated message,
which is a feature distinctly different
from the emergency exit labels at issue
here (which do not activate a second
message); and (5) the park brake telltale
lights in GM’s petition were related to
the driver’s attention, whereas the
emergency exit labels in DTNA’s
petition are for school bus children to
use in the event of an emergency.
The third petition,15 from Hyundai
Motor Company (Hyundai), involved
passenger vehicles which did not meet
the letter height requirements for the
abbreviation ‘‘ABS’’ and in other cases
the word ‘‘brake,’’ as required by
FMVSS No. 105 and 135. In this case,
the passenger vehicles did not meet the
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14 See
15 See
81 FR 92963.
69 FR 41568.
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Fmt 4703
minimum letter height requirement of
3.2 mm. The Agency decided that
‘‘[d]ue to the positioning, color, use of
the ISO symbol, and combined size of
both the lettering and symbols, it is very
unlikely that a vehicle user would either
fail to see or fail to understand the
meaning of the brake or ABS warning
light in the affected vehicles,’’ and
granted the petition. However, NHTSA
does not agree that granting this prior
petition supports granting DTNA’s
petition here for the following reasons:
(1) compliance with FMVSS No. 217
was not at issue; (2) emergency exit
identification within the vehicle was
not at issue; (3) the warning lights in
Hyundai’s petition both ‘‘illuminated’’
and also included an ‘‘International
Standards Organization (ISO) symbol for
the ABS,’’ which are two features
distinctly different from the emergency
exit labels at issue here (which do not
illuminate or contain any symbol); and
(4) the warning lights in Hyundai’s
petition were related to the driver’s
attention, whereas the emergency exit
labels in DTNA’s petition are for school
bus children to use in the event of an
emergency.
The fourth petition,16 from New Flyer
of America, Inc., involved transit buses
that had only one emergency exit on the
right side of the bus instead of two, as
required by FMVSS No. 217. In this
case, these buses had 3.28 times the
required exit area, with two emergency
exit windows on the left side, one
emergency exit window on the right
side and two roof exits. Thus, the buses
had the minimum number of emergency
exits required by FMVSS No. 217.
However, these exits were not
distributed properly. Instead of a second
emergency exit on the right side, these
buses had an additional roof exit. The
Agency decided that the additional roof
exit provided for an additional level of
safety during a rollover event and
granted the petition. However, NHTSA
does not agree that the granting of this
prior petition supports granting DTNA’s
subject petition because emergency exit
identification within the vehicle was
not at issue.
The fifth petition,17 from IC
Corporation (IC), involved school buses
where two side emergency exit doors
were located opposite each other within
the same post and roof bow panel space.
IC argued that the requirement
prohibiting two exit doors from being
located in this manner appeared to be
related to the structural integrity of a
bus body with this configuration. IC
indicated that it had no reports of any
16 See
17 See
Sfmt 4703
58879
E:\FR\FM\19JYN1.SGM
63 FR 32694.
70 FR 24464.
19JYN1
58880
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2024 / Notices
structural failures in the area around the
emergency doors but stated that it
would extend to owners of the
noncompliant vehicles a 15-year
warranty for any structural or panel
failures related to the location of the
doors. NHTSA agreed with IC that, in
this case, the noncompliance did not
compromise safety in terms of
emergency exit capability in proportion
to maximum occupant capacity, access
to side emergency doors, visibility of the
exits, or the ability of bus occupants to
exit after an accident. However, NHTSA
does not agree that the granting of this
prior petition supports granting DTNA’s
petition here because emergency exit
identification within the vehicle was
not at issue.
None of the above-discussed five
petitions that DTNA provided in
support of its subject petition are related
to labeling for emergency egress of
school buses. Emergency egress occurs
under states of emergency, which may
include fire, smoke, panicked children,
etc. As such, the dilution of these
emergency egress marking requirements
in school buses is consequential to
motor vehicle safety.
VIII. NHTSA’s Decision: In
consideration of the foregoing, NHTSA
has decided that DTNA has not met its
burden of persuasion that the subject
FMVSS No. 217 noncompliance is
inconsequential to motor vehicle safety.
Accordingly, DTNA’s petition is hereby
denied and DTNA is consequently
obligated to provide notification of and
free remedy for that noncompliance
under 49 U.S.C. 30118 and 30120.
(Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30118, 30120; 49 CFR
part 556; delegations of authority at 49 CFR
1.95 and 501.8).
Eileen Sullivan,
Associate Administrator for Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2024–15903 Filed 7–18–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–59–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
[Docket No. NHTSA–2024–0037]
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
Minimum Performance Measures for
the State Highway Safety Grant
Program
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notification of public meeting;
request for comments (RFC).
AGENCY:
NHTSA is initiating a process
to update minimum performance
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:53 Jul 18, 2024
Jkt 262001
measures for the State Highway Safety
Grant Program. In order to ensure that
the broadest possible cross-section of
stakeholders is engaged from the onset
of this process, NHTSA is publishing
this RFC and announcing a public
meeting to be held prior to issuing the
updated highway safety performance
measurement framework.
DATES: The public meeting will be held
virtually on Wednesday, August 21,
2024. The meeting will convene at 2:00
p.m. Eastern time and will conclude
when the last pre-registered speaker has
provided oral comments but no later
than 5:30 p.m. Eastern time. All
attendees, including those who do not
intend to provide oral remarks, should
preregister by August 16, 2024. The link
to register will be available at
NHTSA.gov/Events.
Upon registration, participants will
identify whether they choose to provide
oral comments at the meeting (see
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION below for
additional details). The public will also
have the opportunity to submit written
comments to the Docket concerning
matters addressed in this notification.
Written comments should be submitted
no later than August 26, 2024.
ADDRESSES: The public meeting will be
held virtually via Zoom for Government.
The meeting’s online link and a detailed
agenda will be provided upon
registration. You may send written
comments, identified by the docket
number listed at the beginning of this
document by any of the following
methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for sending comments.
Mail: Docket Management Facility,
U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE, West Building
Ground Floor, Room W12–140,
Washington, DC 20590–0001.
Hand Delivery/Courier: 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE, West Building
Ground Floor, Room W12–140,
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m. ET, Monday through Friday, except
Federal Holidays. To be sure someone is
there to help you, please call 202–366–
9826 before coming.
Instructions: All written submissions
must include the agency name and
docket number NHTSA–2024–0037. All
comments received will be posted
without change at https://
www.regulations.gov/ including any
personal information provided. For
detailed instructions on sending
comments and additional information
on the rulemaking process, see the
‘‘Public Participation’’ heading of the
PO 00000
Frm 00178
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
Docket: For access to the docket, 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. If
coming in person, please call 202–366–
9826 to be sure someone is there to help
you.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Amy Schick, Acting Director, Office of
Grants Management and Operations,
Regional Operations and Program
Delivery, National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration; Telephone
number: (202) 366–2121; email:
nhtsaropdprogramquestions@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Performance management is a strategic
and outcome-based approach that
provides a framework to support
improved policy and investment
decisions. Performance management
accentuates objective data and evidencebased project selection. It enhances
communication and transparency
between decision-makers, stakeholders,
and the traveling public. Furthermore,
performance measures are a valuable
planning tool that emphasizes
integrating data, planning, and action.
The performance measures currently
required for NHTSA’s State Highway
Safety Grant Program were first
developed for voluntary use in 2008.1
The MAP–21 surface transportation
authorization, enacted in 2012, codified
into law a requirement for a
standardized set of performance
measures that guide investments in
programs to achieve State performance
targets.2 That requirement, which
remains in the current grant program
authorization under the Bipartisan
Infrastructure Law,3 requires the
Secretary, in consultation with the
Governors Highway Safety Association
(GHSA), to ‘‘develop minimum
performance measures’’ that State
Highway Safety Offices (SHSO) use to
guide their triennial Highway Safety
Plan (3HSP).
Presently, SHSOs submit targets for
15 pre-defined measures and targets to
NHTSA. The current minimum
performance measures are:
• Outcome Measures
States set safety targets and report
progress on the following eleven
outcome measures:
1 Traffic Safety Performance Measures for States
and Federal Agencies’’ (DOT HS 811 025).
2 Public Law 112–141, Section 31102.
3 Public Law 117–58, Section 24102. See also, 23
U.S.C. 402(k)(5).
E:\FR\FM\19JYN1.SGM
19JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 139 (Friday, July 19, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 58876-58880]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-15903]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
[Docket No. NHTSA-2022-0025; Notice 2]
Daimler Trucks North America, LLC, Denial of Petition for
Decision of Inconsequential Noncompliance
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Denial of petition.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Daimler Trucks North America LLC (DTNA) has determined that
certain model year (MY) 2019-2022 Thomas Built Bus school buses do not
fully comply with Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) No.
217, Bus Emergency Exits and Window Retention and Release. DTNA filed
an original noncompliance report dated February 9, 2022, and amended
the report on April 13, 2022. DTNA petitioned NHTSA (the ``Agency'') on
March 1, 2022, and later amended the petition on April 13, 2022, for a
decision that the subject noncompliance is inconsequential as it
relates to motor vehicle safety. This document announces the denial of
DTNA's petition.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Daniel Lind, Safety Compliance
Engineer, NHTSA, Office of Vehicle Safety Compliance, (202) 366-7235.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Overview: On November 20, 2020, NHTSA requested information from
DTNA regarding a test failure with S5.5.3(a) of FMVSS No. 217,
Emergency Exit Identification and Labeling, in a 2019 Thomas Saf-T-
Liner school bus. NHTSA received DTNA's response on December 18, 2020,
and on January 26, 2022, NHTSA requested that DTNA provide additional
information or file a noncompliance report, if it determines that there
is a noncompliance.
As a result, DTNA determined that certain MY 2019-2022 Thomas Built
Bus school buses do not fully comply with paragraph S5.5.3(a) of FMVSS
No. 217, Bus Emergency Exits and Window Retention and Release (49 CFR
571.217).
DTNA filed an original noncompliance report dated February 9, 2022,
and amended the report on April 13, 2022, pursuant to 49 CFR part 573,
Defect and Noncompliance Responsibility and Reports. DTNA petitioned
NHTSA on March 1, 2022, and amended the petition on April 13, 2022, 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, pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 30118(d) and
30120(h) and 49 CFR part 556, Exemption for Inconsequential Defect or
Noncompliance.
Notice of receipt of DTNA's petition was published with a 30-day
public comment period on August 30, 2022, in the Federal Register (87
FR 53044). No comments were received. To view the petition and all
supporting documents log onto the Federal Docket Management System
(FDMS) website at https://www.regulations.gov/. Then follow the online
search instructions to locate docket number ``NHTSA-2022-0025.''
II. Vehicles Involved: Approximately 28,814 MY 2019-2022 Thomas
Built Saf-T-Liner HDX, EFX, C2, and Minotour school buses, manufactured
between September 28, 2018, and February 23, 2021, are potentially
involved.
III. Noncompliance: DTNA explains that the subject school buses are
equipped with ``Emergency Exit'' and ``Emergency Door'' labels that do
not meet the letter height requirements, as required by paragraph
S5.5.3(a) of FMVSS No. 217. Specifically, some of the letters are 4.9
cm instead of the required minimum 5 cm letter height.
IV. Rule Requirements: Paragraph S5.5.3(a) of FMVSS No. 217
includes the requirements relevant to this petition. Each school bus
emergency exit provided in accordance with S5.2.3.1 of FMVSS No. 217 is
required to have the designation ``Emergency Door'' or ``Emergency
Exit,'' as appropriate, in letters that are at least 5 centimeters high
and in a color that contrasts with the background of the letters.
V. Background: In March 2020, NHTSA notified DTNA of a potential
noncompliance regarding the emergency exit identification labeling in
its subject school buses. In April 2020, DTNA responded to NHTSA and
stated its belief that the label ``should be considered compliant''
because ``with standard rounding, the label-letters met the
requirements.'' In its response, DTNA also contended that NHTSA had
previously audited the labels in 2014
[[Page 58877]]
and found them to be compliant. Then in November 2020, DTNA stated that
it received an information request from the Agency, to which DTNA
responded by explaining that ``1) the labels meet the requirements of
FMVSS [No.] 217 following the agency's rules of rounding and precision
and 2) were the exact same labels had previously been reviewed by the
OVSC and found to be compliant during OVSC compliance testing.'' On
January 31, 2022, DTNA received another letter from the Agency
requesting that DTNA submit additional information or file a supporting
noncompliance report. DTNA stated that it decided to file the
noncompliance report ``in order to avoid a protracted dispute with the
agency.''
VI. Summary of DTNA's Petition: The following views and arguments
presented in this section, ``VI. Summary of DTNA's Petition,'' are the
views and arguments provided by DTNA. They do not reflect the views of
the Agency. DTNA describes the subject noncompliance and contends that
the noncompliance is inconsequential as it relates to motor vehicle
safety.
DTNA says ``[t]he relevant labels were designed with letters at
least 5 cm and reasonably believed at all relevant times that they
complied with FMVSS [No.] 217 under applicable law, including NHTSA's
public statements regarding numerical rounding.''
DTNA contends that NHTSA has granted the following petitions in
which the letters did not meet the minimum letter height requirement:
Kia Motors America, Inc., Grant of Petition for Decision
of Inconsequential Noncompliance, 69 FR 41332 (July 8, 2004);
General Motors, LLC, Grant of Petition for Decision of
Inconsequential Noncompliance, 81 FR 92963 (July 9, 2004); and
Hyundai Motor Co., Grant of Petition for Decision of
Inconsequential Noncompliance, 69 FR 41568 (July 9, 2004).
DTNA also states that NHTSA has previously granted two
inconsequentiality petitions that ``could lead to crowding of
passengers trying to flee an exit.'' In the first case,\1\ ``buses were
manufactured with only one emergency exit instead of two,'' and in the
second case,\2\ ``emergency exits were mounted under the same post and
roof bow panel space.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See New Flyer of America, Inc., Grant of Petition for
Decision of Inconsequential Noncompliance, 63 FR 32694 (June 15,
1998).
\2\ See IC Corporation, Grant of Petition for Decision of
Inconsequential Noncompliance, 70 FR 24464 (May 9, 2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DTNA states its belief that although the letter height is 0.1 cm
less than the FMVSS requirement, the letters ``are sufficiently large
as to aid passengers fleeing an emergency'' and that the labels meet
all other applicable FMVSSs. DTNA believes that because some of the
letters exceed the 5 cm minimum requirement, ``the reasonable aggregate
perception of a viewer is that the letters are 5 cm or more.'' DTNA
further states its belief that the 0.1 cm difference does not obscure
the labels or the purpose of the label since the labels are in bold
letters that contrast against the background of the labels.
DTNA claims that it is not aware of any complaint, accident,
injury, or death resulting from the subject noncompliance.
DTNA contends that ``there is a substantial question whether or not
there is fair notice as to how a manufacturer is to comply with FMVSS
[No.] 217 (and potential scores of other FMVSSs) given the agency's
past statements on numerical rounding.'' DTNA believes that NHTSA's
statements with respect to the rounding method it uses \3\ and the
rounding method provided in the FMVSS No. 111 test procedure are
contradicted by a 1990 NHTSA interpretation,\4\ which states that an
FMVSS will specify when rounding is appropriate. DTNA claims that
NHTSA's ``procedures for comparing numbers to a standard is
ambiguous,'' therefore, DTNA states that it lacked ``fair notice as to
which of the above procedures, rounding or not, apply.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See Consumer Information; New Car Assessment Program, 79 FR
28594 (May 16, 2014).
\4\ See Paul Jackson Rice, Chief Counsel, NHTSA, to David G.
Dick Acts Testing Labs, Inc. (September 10, 1990).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DTNA concludes by stating its belief that the subject noncompliance
is inconsequential as it relates to motor vehicle safety and 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.
VII. NHTSA's Analysis: In determining inconsequentiality of a
noncompliance, NHTSA focuses on the safety risk to individuals who
experience the type of event against which a recall would otherwise
protect.\5\ In general, NHTSA does not consider the absence of
complaints or injuries when determining if a noncompliance is
inconsequential to safety. The absence of complaints does not mean
vehicle occupants have not experienced a safety issue, nor does it mean
that there will not be safety issues in the future.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See Gen. Motors, LLC; Grant of Petition for Decision of
Inconsequential Noncompliance, 78 FR 35355 (June 12, 2013) (finding
noncompliance had no effect on occupant safety because it had no
effect on the proper operation of the occupant classification system
and the correct deployment of an air bag); Osram Sylvania Prods.
Inc.; Grant of Petition for Decision of Inconsequential
Noncompliance, 78 FR 46000 (July 30, 2013) (finding occupant using
noncompliant light source would not be exposed to significantly
greater risk than occupant using similar compliant light source).
\6\ See Morgan 3 Wheeler Limited; Denial of Petition for
Decision of Inconsequential Noncompliance, 81 FR 21663, 21666 (Apr.
12, 2016); see also United States v. Gen. Motors Corp., 565 F.2d
754, 759 (D.C. Cir. 1977) (finding defect poses an unreasonable risk
when it ``results in hazards as potentially dangerous as sudden
engine fire, and where there is no dispute that at least some such
hazards, in this case fires, can definitely be expected to occur in
the future'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. General Principles
Congress passed the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act
of 1966 (the Safety Act) with the express purpose of reducing motor
vehicle accidents, deaths, injuries, and property damage. See 49 U.S.C.
30101. To this end, the Safety Act empowers the Secretary of
Transportation to establish and enforce mandatory Federal Motor Vehicle
Safety Standards (FMVSS). See 49 U.S.C. 30111. The Secretary has
delegated this authority to NHTSA. See 49 CFR 1.95.
NHTSA adopts a FMVSS only after the Agency has determined that the
requirements are objective and practicable and meet the need for motor
vehicle safety. See 49 U.S.C. 30111(a). Thus, there is a general
presumption that the failure of a motor vehicle or item of motor
vehicle equipment to comply with a FMVSS increases the risk to motor
vehicle safety beyond the level deemed appropriate by NHTSA through the
rulemaking process. To protect the public from such risks,
manufacturers whose products fail to comply with a FMVSS are normally
required to conduct a safety recall under which they must notify
owners, purchasers, and dealers of the noncompliance and provide a free
remedy. See 49 U.S.C. 30118-30120. However, Congress has recognized
that, under some limited circumstances, a noncompliance could be
``inconsequential'' to motor vehicle safety. It therefore established a
procedure under which NHTSA may consider whether it is appropriate to
exempt a manufacturer from its notification and remedy (i.e., recall)
obligations. See 49 U.S.C. 30118(d), 30120(h). The Agency's regulations
governing the filing and consideration of petitions for
inconsequentiality
[[Page 58878]]
exemptions are set forth at 49 CFR part 556.
Under the Safety Act and Part 556, inconsequentiality exemptions
may be granted only in response to a petition from a manufacturer, and
then only after notice in the Federal Register and an opportunity for
interested members of the public to present information, views, and
arguments on the petition. In addition to considering public comments,
the Agency will draw upon its own understanding of safety-related
systems and its experience in deciding the merits of a petition. An
absence of opposing argument and data from the public does not require
NHTSA to grant a manufacturer's petition.
Neither the Safety Act nor part 556 define the term
``inconsequential.'' Rather, the Agency determines whether a particular
noncompliance is inconsequential to motor vehicle safety based upon the
specific facts before it in a particular petition. An important issue
to consider in determining inconsequentiality based upon NHTSA's prior
decisions on noncompliance issues was the safety risk to individuals
who experience the type of event against which the recall would
otherwise protect.\7\ NHTSA also does not consider the absence of
complaints or injuries when determining whether a noncompliance is
inconsequential to safety. The Safety Act is preventive, and
manufacturers cannot and should not wait for deaths or injuries to
occur in their vehicles before they carry out a recall. See, e.g.,
United States v. Gen. Motors Corp., 565 F.2d 754, 759 (D.C. Cir. 1977).
Indeed, the very purpose of a recall is to protect individuals from
risk. See id. ``Most importantly, the absence of a complaint does not
mean there have not been any safety issues, nor does it mean that there
will not be safety issues in the future.'' \8\ ``[T]he fact that in
past reported cases good luck and swift reaction have prevented many
serious injuries does not mean that good luck will continue to work.''
\9\ Rather, the issue to consider is the consequence to an occupant who
is exposed to the consequence of that noncompliance.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See Gen. Motors, LLC; Grant of Petition for Decision of
Inconsequential Noncompliance, 78 FR 35355 (June 12, 2013) (finding
noncompliance had no effect on occupant safety because it had no
effect on the proper operation of the occupant classification system
and the correct deployment of an air bag); Osram Sylvania Prods.
Inc.; Grant of Petition for Decision of Inconsequential
Noncompliance, 78 FR 46000 (July 30, 2013) (finding occupant using
noncompliant light source would not be exposed to significantly
greater risk than occupant using similar compliant light source).
\8\ Morgan 3 Wheeler Limited; Denial of Petition for Decision of
Inconsequential Noncompliance, 81 FR 21663, 21666 (Apr. 12, 2016).
\9\ United States v. Gen. Motors Corp., 565 F.2d 754, 759 (D.C.
Cir. 1977) (finding defect poses an unreasonable risk when it
``results in hazards as potentially dangerous as sudden engine fire,
and where there is no dispute that at least some such hazards, in
this case fires, can definitely be expected to occur in the
future'').
\10\ See Gen. Motors Corp.; Ruling on Petition for Determination
of Inconsequential Noncompliance, 69 FR 19897, 19900 (Apr. 14,
2004); Cosco, Inc.; Denial of Application for Decision of
Inconsequential Noncompliance, 64 FR 29408, 29409 (June 1, 1999).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Response to DTNA's Arguments
NHTSA reviewed DTNA's arguments that the subject noncompliance is
inconsequential to motor vehicle safety. DTNA contends that the
noncompliance with the letter height requirements that are set forth in
paragraph S5.5.3(a) of FMVSS No. 217, poses little, if any, risk to
motor vehicle safety. NHTSA does not agree.
DTNA's first argument is that the ``relevant labels were designed
with letters at least 5 cm and reasonably believed at all relevant
times that they complied with FMVSS [No.] 217 under applicable law.''
DTNA's belief that the labels were compliant, which might be relevant
if the issue here was its basis for certification, has no bearing on
whether this noncompliance is inconsequential. DTNA may have designed
the labels with letters that were supposed to have at least 5 cm of
letter height, however, the letter heights when measured by both NHTSA
and DTNA, were less than 5 cm. This could be due to a variety of
reasons. For example, the noncompliance could be caused by a variation
in DTNA's production and quality processes, which allowed for smaller
letter heights to be printed on labels. It could also be caused by
insufficient tolerancing applied to the design of the labels (a process
that is meant to ensure that even with the highest degree of variation,
the minimum letter height of 5 cm would still be attained on the
labels). With a robust surveillance program, this type of anomaly may
have been discovered early in the production process, but no such
surveillance data was provided by DTNA. DTNA did not provide any
additional details regarding the design of the labels in its petition,
therefore no additional context or evidence was provided by DTNA in
support of this claim. Consequently, NHTSA is not persuaded by DTNA's
argument that the design of the labels mitigates the noncompliance for
the letter height requirement, as no evidence was provided in support
of this claim. In any event, NHTSA disagrees with DTNA's argument that
a noncompliant label can be considered compliant or inconsequential if
the design of the label meets the applicable FMVSS--but the actual
manufactured label does not.
Regarding the readability of the labels, NHTSA does not agree with
DTNA that the readability of the labels is unaffected by the
noncompliance with the letter height requirement. DTNA did not provide
any additional context, evidence or data to support its claims that (1)
the labels ``are sufficiently large as to aid passengers fleeing an
emergency,'' (2) ``the reasonable aggregate perception of a viewer is
that the letters are 5 cm or more,'' or (3) the letter height
difference does not obscure the labels or the purpose of the labels. As
such, NHTSA is not persuaded by DTNA's argument that the readability of
the labels is unaffected by the noncompliance with the letter height
requirement, as no evidence or data was provided in support of this
claim.
Insofar as conspicuity of the operating instructions is concerned,
NHTSA agrees with DTNA that the letters on the labels ``are in bold
letters that contrast against the background of the labels,'' but NHTSA
does not agree with DTNA that compliance with the conspicuity
requirements negates a failure to comply with school bus emergency exit
label letter minimum height requirements. As such, NHTSA rejects DTNA's
argument that meeting the conspicuity requirements for the labels
mitigates the noncompliance with the letter minimum height requirement,
particularly in the absence of data or evidence supporting this claim.
DTNA further submits that numerical rounding employed by NHTSA in
other contexts establishes that DTNA's noncompliance is inconsequential
to safety. DTNA's argument is not compelling. One of the numerical
rounding methods referenced by DTNA \11\ is not part of the Federal
Motor Vehicle Safety Standards, but is instead part of the voluntary
consumer information New Car Assessment Program (NCAP). That rounding
methodology is not applicable to the requirements of FMVSS No. 217 and
cannot be used to determine whether a label is compliant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See 79 FR 28594.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DTNA also quotes a 1990 NHTSA interpretation letter but
subsequently disagrees with the conclusion in NHTSA's interpretation
letter. NHTSA reaffirms the statement in the 1990 interpretation letter
that: ``Rounding is generally not used in the safety standards. The
standards expressly specify when rounding is
[[Page 58879]]
appropriate.'' \12\ DTNA has not identified anything in FMVSS No. 217
or specific to that standard that allow for rounding. NHTSA does not
agree with DTNA that rounding is permitted in the present case or that
FMVSS No. 217 presents an ambiguity regarding rounding. In fact, the
1990 interpretation goes on to state that ``. . . any value less than
the minimum required value is a noncompliance.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See Paul Jackson Rice, Chief Counsel, NHTSA, to David G.
Dick Acts Testing Labs, Inc. (September 10, 1990).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, DTNA's reference to the rounding methodology in the FMVSS
No. 111 test procedure is also not applicable, since the rounding
methodology refers to the conversion from English to metric units when
direct measurement in metric units is not available--which is not the
case with DTNA's subject noncompliance.
DTNA asserted that five inconsequential noncompliance petitions
that NHTSA had previously granted support DTNA's subject petition.
However, NHTSA disagrees because all of the five cited petitions are
unrelated to school bus emergency exit identification. Furthermore,
NHTSA emphasizes that the Agency examines every inconsequential
noncompliance petition on its own merits. The Agency's decisions are
necessarily highly fact dependent and limited to a particular and often
narrow context. NHTSA therefore believes that prior determinations--
that are not specific to the identification of school bus emergency
exit labels--do not warrant granting this petition.
The first petition,\13\ from Kia Motors America, Inc., and Kia
Motors Corp. (collectively, ``Kia''), involved passenger vehicles which
did not meet the letter height requirements for brake system warning
lights, specifically for the abbreviation ``ABS'' and in some cases the
word ``brake,'' as required by FMVSS No. 101, 105, and 135. In this
case, these passenger vehicles did not meet the minimum letter height
requirement of 3.2 mm. The Agency decided that ``due to the
positioning, color, use of the ISO symbol, and combined size of both
the lettering and symbols, it is very unlikely that a vehicle user
would either fail to see or fail to understand the meaning of the brake
or ABS warning light in the affected vehicles'' and granted the
petition. NHTSA does not agree that granting this prior petition
supports granting DTNA's petition here for the following reasons: (1)
compliance with FMVSS No. 217 was not at issue; (2) emergency exit
identification within the vehicle was not at issue; (3) the warning
lights in Kia's petition both ``illuminated in red (brake warning
light) or yellow (ABS light)'' and also ``include[d] an International
Standards Organization (ISO) symbol combined with the word `brake' or
the abbreviation `ABS,''' which are two features distinctly different
from the emergency exit labels at issue here (which do not illuminate
or contain any symbol); and (4) the warning lights in Kia's petition
were related to the driver's attention, whereas the emergency exit
labels in DTNA's petition are for school bus children to use in the
event of an emergency.
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\13\ See 69 FR 41332.
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The second petition,\14\ from General Motors, LLC (GM), involved
passenger vehicles which did not meet the letter height requirements
for the park brake telltale (identified by the word ``PARK''), as
required by FMVSS No. 101 and 135. In this case, these passenger
vehicles did not meet the minimum letter height requirement of 3.2 mm
for the word ``PARK.'' The Agency decided that ``[i]llumination of both
the `PARK' indicator combined with the information center statement
`Park Brake Set' provides ample communication to the driver that the
parking brake has been applied,'' and granted the petition. NHTSA does
not agree that granting this prior petition supports granting DTNA's
petition here for the following reasons: (1) compliance with FMVSS No.
217 was not at issue; (2) emergency exit identification within the
vehicle was not at issue; (3) the park brake telltale lights in GM's
petition ``illuminated,'' which is a feature distinctly different from
the emergency exit labels at issue here (which do not illuminate); (4)
activation of the park brake telltale light in GM's petition would
simultaneously activate a second illuminated message, which is a
feature distinctly different from the emergency exit labels at issue
here (which do not activate a second message); and (5) the park brake
telltale lights in GM's petition were related to the driver's
attention, whereas the emergency exit labels in DTNA's petition are for
school bus children to use in the event of an emergency.
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\14\ See 81 FR 92963.
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The third petition,\15\ from Hyundai Motor Company (Hyundai),
involved passenger vehicles which did not meet the letter height
requirements for the abbreviation ``ABS'' and in other cases the word
``brake,'' as required by FMVSS No. 105 and 135. In this case, the
passenger vehicles did not meet the minimum letter height requirement
of 3.2 mm. The Agency decided that ``[d]ue to the positioning, color,
use of the ISO symbol, and combined size of both the lettering and
symbols, it is very unlikely that a vehicle user would either fail to
see or fail to understand the meaning of the brake or ABS warning light
in the affected vehicles,'' and granted the petition. However, NHTSA
does not agree that granting this prior petition supports granting
DTNA's petition here for the following reasons: (1) compliance with
FMVSS No. 217 was not at issue; (2) emergency exit identification
within the vehicle was not at issue; (3) the warning lights in
Hyundai's petition both ``illuminated'' and also included an
``International Standards Organization (ISO) symbol for the ABS,''
which are two features distinctly different from the emergency exit
labels at issue here (which do not illuminate or contain any symbol);
and (4) the warning lights in Hyundai's petition were related to the
driver's attention, whereas the emergency exit labels in DTNA's
petition are for school bus children to use in the event of an
emergency.
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\15\ See 69 FR 41568.
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The fourth petition,\16\ from New Flyer of America, Inc., involved
transit buses that had only one emergency exit on the right side of the
bus instead of two, as required by FMVSS No. 217. In this case, these
buses had 3.28 times the required exit area, with two emergency exit
windows on the left side, one emergency exit window on the right side
and two roof exits. Thus, the buses had the minimum number of emergency
exits required by FMVSS No. 217. However, these exits were not
distributed properly. Instead of a second emergency exit on the right
side, these buses had an additional roof exit. The Agency decided that
the additional roof exit provided for an additional level of safety
during a rollover event and granted the petition. However, NHTSA does
not agree that the granting of this prior petition supports granting
DTNA's subject petition because emergency exit identification within
the vehicle was not at issue.
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\16\ See 63 FR 32694.
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The fifth petition,\17\ from IC Corporation (IC), involved school
buses where two side emergency exit doors were located opposite each
other within the same post and roof bow panel space. IC argued that the
requirement prohibiting two exit doors from being located in this
manner appeared to be related to the structural integrity of a bus body
with this configuration. IC indicated that it had no reports of any
[[Page 58880]]
structural failures in the area around the emergency doors but stated
that it would extend to owners of the noncompliant vehicles a 15-year
warranty for any structural or panel failures related to the location
of the doors. NHTSA agreed with IC that, in this case, the
noncompliance did not compromise safety in terms of emergency exit
capability in proportion to maximum occupant capacity, access to side
emergency doors, visibility of the exits, or the ability of bus
occupants to exit after an accident. However, NHTSA does not agree that
the granting of this prior petition supports granting DTNA's petition
here because emergency exit identification within the vehicle was not
at issue.
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\17\ See 70 FR 24464.
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None of the above-discussed five petitions that DTNA provided in
support of its subject petition are related to labeling for emergency
egress of school buses. Emergency egress occurs under states of
emergency, which may include fire, smoke, panicked children, etc. As
such, the dilution of these emergency egress marking requirements in
school buses is consequential to motor vehicle safety.
VIII. NHTSA's Decision: In consideration of the foregoing, NHTSA
has decided that DTNA has not met its burden of persuasion that the
subject FMVSS No. 217 noncompliance is inconsequential to motor vehicle
safety. Accordingly, DTNA's petition is hereby denied and DTNA is
consequently obligated to provide notification of and free remedy for
that noncompliance under 49 U.S.C. 30118 and 30120.
(Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30118, 30120; 49 CFR part 556; delegations of
authority at 49 CFR 1.95 and 501.8).
Eileen Sullivan,
Associate Administrator for Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2024-15903 Filed 7-18-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-59-P