Make Inoperative Exemptions; Retrofit Air Bag On-Off Switches and Air Bag Deactivations, 76035-76064 [2024-20651]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
Section Number and Title:
90.242 Travelers’ information
stations.
Brief Description: Section 90.250
describes how meteor burst
communications may be authorized for
the use of private radio stations.
Need: This rule furthers the
Commission’s interests in promoting the
use of the radio spectrum by setting
forth the frequency bands, technical
requirements, and geographic use area
for this particular type of radio
communication.
Legal Basis: 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 161,
303(g), 303(r), 332(c)(7), 1401–1473.
Section Number and Title:
90.250 Meteor burst
communications.
PART 101—FIXED MICROWAVE
SERVICES
Subpart N—Operating Requirements
[FR Doc. 2024–21111 Filed 9–16–24; 8:45 am]
Brief Description: The part 90 rules
govern private land mobile radio
services. Subpart N sets forth operating
requirements. Section 90.425 requires
stations licensed under this part to
transmit identification in accordance
with the listed procedures.
Need: Section 90.425(f) was added to
provide special provisions for stations
licensed under this part that are not
classified as commercial mobile radio
service providers under part 20 of this
chapter, and the rule is needed on an
ongoing basis.
Legal Basis: 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 161,
303(g), 303(r), 332(c)(7), 1401–1473.
Section Number and Title:
90.425 Station identification.
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Subpart R—Regulations Governing the
Licensing and Use of Frequencies in
the 763–775 and 793–805 MHz Bands
Brief Description: These rules
primarily address technical issues
associated with the 758–769/788–799
MHz band, which is licensed to the First
Responder Network Authority (FirstNet)
on a nationwide basis.
Need: To set forth the regulations
governing the licensing and operations
of all systems operating in the 758–775
MHz and 788–805 MHz frequency
bands, including eligibility, operational,
planning and licensing requirements
and technical standards for stations
licensed in these bands.
Legal Basis: 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 161,
303(g), 303(r), 332(c)(7), 1401–1473.
Section Number and Title:
90.523 Eligibility.
90.533 Transmitting sites near the
U.S./Canada or U.S./Mexico border.
90.542 Broadband transmitting
power limits.
90.543 Emission limitations.
90.549 Transmitter certification.
90.555 Information exchange.
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Subpart C—Technical Standards
Brief Description: Section 101.129
describes what a radio station applicant
must determine with respect to
technical considerations applicable to
transmitter locations prior to filing its
license application.
Need: This rule furthers the
Commission’s interest in managing the
use of the radiofrequency spectrum as
well as its statutory requirement to
determine the location of individual
stations.
Legal Basis: 47 U.S.C. 154, 303.
Section Number and Title:
101.129 Transmitter location.
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
49 CFR Part 595
[Docket No. NHTSA–2024–0046]
RIN 2127–AL64
Make Inoperative Exemptions; Retrofit
Air Bag On-Off Switches and Air Bag
Deactivations
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPRM).
AGENCY:
This Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking proposes amendments to
the requirements and processes for
individuals to request that the agency
permit them to have an air bag on-off
switch installed in their vehicle. The
proposed amendments would eliminate
the sunset date, and would also narrow
the population of people eligible to have
an on-off switch installed. Furthermore,
the agency also proposes amendments
to several appendices, and proposes the
addition of a new appendix. Lastly, this
NPRM proposes that NHTSA codify its
process for reviewing requests for air
bag deactivations, which are currently
granted or denied through the agency’s
enforcement discretion. In this
document, NHTSA solicits feedback
from the public to better inform the
agency’s decision-making on the
proposed amendments.
DATES: You should submit your
comments early enough to be received
not later than November 18, 2024.
SUMMARY:
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Proposed effective date: We propose
that the effective date for the
amendments in this rulemaking action
would be immediately after the date of
publication of the final rule in the
Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
to the docket number identified in the
heading of this document by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
online instructions for submitting
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 or Courier: 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE, West Building
Ground Floor, Room W12–140, between
9 a.m. and 5 p.m. EST, Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
• Fax: (202) 493–2251.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the agency name and docket
number or Regulatory Information
Number (RIN) for this rulemaking. Note
that all comments received will be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided. (For
more details, please see the Privacy Act
discussion below.) We will consider all
comments received before the close of
business on the comment closing date
indicated above. To the extent possible,
we will also consider comments filed
after the closing date.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov at any time or to
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, West
Building, Room W12–140, Washington,
DC 20590, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
Holidays. Telephone: (202) 366–9826.
Privacy Act: Anyone can search the
electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the
comment (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review DOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement in the Federal Register
published on April 11, 2000, (Volume
65, Number 70; Pages 19477–78) or you
may visit https://www.dot.gov/
privacy.html.
Confidential Business Information: If
you wish to submit any information
under a claim of confidentiality, you
should submit three copies of your
complete submission, including the
information you claim to be confidential
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
business information, to the Chief
Counsel, NHTSA, at the address given
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT. In addition, you should
submit two copies, from which you
have deleted the claimed confidential
business information, to Docket
Management at the address given above.
When you send a comment containing
information claimed to be confidential
business information, you should
include a cover letter setting forth the
information specified in our
confidential business information
regulation (49 CFR part 512).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
technical issues, you may contact Ms.
Carla Rush, Office of Crashworthiness
Standards, Telephone: (202) 366–4583,
Facsimile: (202) 493–2739. For legal
issues, you may contact Mr. Matthew
Filpi, Office of the Chief Counsel,
Telephone: (202) 366–2992, Facsimile:
(202) 366–3820. The mailing address of
these officials is: National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC
20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Regulatory History of Air Bag On-Off
Switches and Deactivation
B. Background on Advanced Air Bag
Systems
C. Current Part 595 Subpart B
Requirements and Procedures for
Obtaining Exemptions for Retrofit On-Off
Switches
D. Air Bag Deactivations
III. Proposed Amendments
A. Removal of the Sunset Date Provision
for Retrofit Air Bag On-Off Switches
B. Adjustment of Criteria for At-Risk
Occupants To Obtain a Retrofit Air Bag
On-Off Switch for Vehicles Equipped
With Advanced Air Bags
i. Exemptions for Infants in Rear-Facing
Child Restraint Systems Who Must Be
Transported in the Front Passenger Seat
ii. Exemptions for Children Ages 1 to 12
Who Must Be Transported in the Front
Passenger Seat
C. Requests for Air Bag Deactivations
(General Public)
D. Exemptions for Law Enforcement and
Emergency Vehicles
i. On-Off Switches
ii. Deactivations
E. Update of Information Brochure
IV. Estimates of Benefits and Costs
V. Proposed Effective Date
VI. Regulatory Notices and Analyses
VII. Public Participation
I. Executive Summary
Since the late 1990s, NHTSA has
permitted, under certain circumstances,
both manufacturers and repair shops to
install switches in motor vehicles that
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allow the occupant to turn on and off
the vehicle’s air bag system. This
installation would typically be a
violation of the ‘‘make inoperative’’
provision of the National Traffic and
Motor Vehicle Safety Act, but NHTSA
added an express exemption to that
provision for air bags because of the
threat of injury that early air bag
systems posed to children and smaller
statured occupants. This exemption—49
CFR part 595 subpart B—outlines the
process by which an individual can
petition the agency for an air bag on-off
switch to be installed in their vehicle.
NHTSA has stated repeatedly since
creating part 595 subpart B that the
solution to the dangers posed by early
air bag systems was advanced air bag
systems that could adapt or suppress
their deployment based on the vehicle
occupant. Accordingly, NHTSA has
repeatedly put a sunset date on the onoff switch provision, with the most
recent sunset date in 2015. Since then,
NHTSA has continued to use its
enforcement discretion to grant requests
for air bag on-off switches. The agency
has also used its enforcement discretion
to grant air bag system deactivation in
special circumstances, even though the
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards
(FMVSS) do not currently provide a
formal process for requesting
deactivation. This NPRM proposes
several updates to part 595 to take into
account the continued development and
effectiveness of advanced air bag
systems. Additionally, the NPRM
proposes codifying the process by
which individuals may petition the
agency for air bag deactivation in
special circumstances. The agency seeks
public comment on the proposals listed
below.
II. Background
A. Regulatory History of Air Bag On-Off
Switches and Deactivation
To prevent or mitigate the risk of
injuries or fatalities in frontal crashes,
FMVSS No. 208, Occupant Crash
Protection,1 requires that passenger
vehicles be equipped with seat belts and
frontal air bags. Although FMVSS No.
208 did not require frontal air bags on
passenger cars until model year (MY)
1998 and on multipurpose passenger
vehicles and light trucks until MY 1999,
air bags were already in widespread use
by the early 1990s. These earlygeneration air bags were highly effective
in protecting occupants in frontal
crashes, but caused a number of
fatalities to certain occupants who were
1 49
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CFR 571.208.
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especially vulnerable to air bag-related
risks.
NHTSA has long maintained that the
long-term solution to the problem of air
bag-related injuries to these at-risk
populations was the development and
widespread implementation of
advanced air bag systems, which could
sense the kind of occupant seated and
adjust deployment to protect at-risk
passengers. However, during the 1990s,
when air bag-related injuries and
fatalities emerged as a safety problem,
advanced air bags were still a nascent
technology.2 To provide time for the
development and dissemination of
advanced air bag systems into new
vehicle production, and to address
safety concerns posed by pre-advanced
air bags in vehicles already on the road,
NHTSA implemented an array of
interim measures designed to protect
those passengers most susceptible to air
bag-related injuries. These measures
focused both on behavioral changes
(e.g., consumer education on the
importance of seat belts and on putting
children in rear seating positions) and
relatively modest technological changes
(e.g., amending FMVSS No. 208 to
temporarily allow for depowered air
bags and permitting installation of on/
off switches).
Consumer Education Efforts
A particular focus of these measures
was efforts to protect children from air
bag related injuries and fatalities. Early
data indicated that children were at a
significant risk of harm from air bags.
The data indicated that children who
were either seated in child restraint
systems (CRS) 3 or seated without CRSs
were at risk of serious injury or death
when seated in a position with a frontal
air bag. Because of the agency’s
significant concern for the safety of
children, NHTSA took multiple actions
throughout the 1990s to protect children
from potential harm from air bags.
First, the agency began providing CRS
recommendations informing caretakers
how and where they should equip child
restraints in a vehicle. NHTSA’s
recommendation has always been to
install CRSs in the back seat of vehicles.
2 An advanced air bag senses or responds to
differences in crash severity, occupant size or the
position of the occupant relative to the air bag at
the time of a crash. NHTSA amended FMVSS No.
208 in 2000 to require advanced air bags at the front
outboard seats in new passenger vehicles and light
trucks, implementing the requirement on a twostage phase-in schedule (May 12, 2000 final rule, 65
FR 30679). Per FMVSS No. 208, currently all new
passenger vehicles and light trucks sold in the
United States must meet the advanced air bag
requirements.
3 Child Restraint Systems refers to devices such
as rear-facing child seats, forward-facing child seats,
and booster seats.
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Furthermore, there are different CRSs
for children of different ages. NHTSA
recommends that from birth to 12months old a child should be secured in
a rear-facing CRS. From 1 year old to 3
years old NHTSA recommends keeping
a child in a rear facing seat for as long
as possible—the child’s height and
weight will determine when they
should be moved to a forward-facing
CRS. From 4 years old to 7 years old
NHTSA recommends keeping a child in
a forward-facing CRS until they exceed
the weight and height maximums for the
respective seat. Once a child outgrows
the forward-facing seat NHTSA
recommends children be belted using
the traditional seat belt, but with the use
to a booster seat; children should
remain in a booster seat until they are
tall enough to fit in a seat belt properly
without the assistance of a booster seat.
NHTSA recommends that the child be
belted in the back seat of a vehicle for
all of these different stages.
Second, the agency made several
recommendations and took several
actions to ensure children seated in the
front were protected from air bags.4
Early on, the agency primarily
encouraged behavioral changes from
owners of vehicles with air bags. For
example, in the early 1990s, agency
testing showed that using a rear-facing
child restraint in the front seat of a
vehicle where frontal air bags were
active presented a significant risk to
child occupants. In December 1991 the
agency issued a Consumer Advisory
warning owners of rear-facing child
restraints to not use such devices in the
front seat of a vehicle equipped with a
passenger air bag. Throughout the
1990s, NHTSA released several
additional News Releases on this issue.
NHTSA also took regulatory action on
this issue in 1993, when it issued a final
rule which, in part, required that
vehicles equipped with air bags include
labels on sun visors providing specific
cautions, including a statement not to
install rearward-facing child seats in
front passenger positions. The agency
took further regulatory action in 1994,
when it required rear-facing child
restraints manufactured on or after
August 15, 1994, to include a warning
against using the restraint in any vehicle
seating position equipped with an air
bag.
Third, the agency took a number of
other communication-based actions to
improve safety outcomes relating to
children and air bags. On October 27,
4 For a detailed history of all actions NHTSA took
before the 1997 final rule allowing for retrofit air
bag on-off switches, see 61 FR 40784, 40787–88,
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Occupant
Crash Protection (July 26, 1996).
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1995, after several fatalities to children
seated in air bag-equipped seating
positions, NHTSA issued a warning in
a press release, ‘‘SAFETY AGENCY
ISSUES WARNING ON AIR BAG
DANGER TO CHILDREN.’’ In the press
release, the agency warned that children
sitting in air bag-equipped seating
positions not restrained by a seat belt
could be seriously injured or killed by
an air bag. The release also stated in
very strong terms that parents should
ensure their children are belted in the
back seat of a vehicle whenever
possible. During the late 1990s, the
agency also published several articles in
widely circulated journals and
periodicals on the dangers air bags pose
to children. NHTSA has continued this
education campaign by publishing
information on the NHTSA website on
the dangers air bags pose to children.
In addition to these efforts to protect
children, NHTSA also considered that
certain adult passengers were at risk
from air bag systems. As described in
the paragraphs above, many of the
agency’s attempts to both educate the
public and improve vehicle technology
countermeasures to increase the safety
outcomes of early air bag systems were
focused on children. The agency has
also acknowledged in both informal
guidance as well as previous
rulemakings that certain adults may also
be at risk of serious injury from air bag
systems. For example, certain smallerstatured individuals may have to sit
closer to the steering wheel to reach the
foot pedals, which may put them at
increased risk of injury if an air bag
were to deploy. NHTSA’s website
recommends that individuals sit at least
10 inches away from the steering wheel
to reduce the risk of injury from air bag
deployment.5 Accordingly, individuals
who must sit closer than 10 inches to
the steering wheel to reach the pedals
may need to have an air bag on-off
switch installed. The 1997 final rule
that allowed for air bag on-off switches
to be installed (discussed below)
explicitly discussed specific situations
where adult passengers (including adult
drivers) may need an on-off switch
installed.
Vehicle Technology Countermeasures
Although NHTSA recommended (and
continues to recommend) that children
be placed in a rear seating position and
that adults sit 10 inches or more away
from the steering wheel, the agency
recognized early on that there were
5 https://www.nhtsa.gov/older-drivers/drivingsafely-while-aging-gracefully#:∼:text=Sit%20at
%20least%20ten%20inches,to%20always%20wear
%20your%20seatbelt.
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instances where this guidance would
not be helpful. For example, certain
vehicles don’t have rear seats and
certain adults can’t sit more than 10
inches from the steering wheel without
their feet reaching the foot pedals. When
the agency first considered taking action
to improve vehicle technology
countermeasures in the mid-1990s to
ensure children and shorter statured
adults were protected from potential
harm from air bags, advanced air bag
systems were still a nascent technology.
Starting in 1995, NHTSA began
facilitating a few different types of
vehicle technology countermeasures:
original equipment on-off switches,
retrofit on-off switches, and air bag
deactivations.
Original Equipment On-Off Switches.
In 1995, NHTSA for the first time
promulgated a final rule that allowed
manufacturers the option of installing a
manual device that motorists could use
to deactivate the front passenger-side air
bag in vehicles in which infant
restraints could only be used in the
front seat. This final rule was the first
instance in which the agency allowed
an original equipment manufacturer
(OEM) to install an air bag on-off switch,
but the scenario in which the OEM onoff switch could be installed was very
narrow and left up to the discretion of
the OEM.6 Because on-off switches were
intended only as a temporary measure,
the agency sunset this provision. The
provision sunset on September 1, 2012.7
Retrofit on-off switches. In 1997,
NHTSA published another final rule
addressing air bag on-off switches.8 This
rule broadened the 1995 final rule that
had been extended in 1997, and focused
on more than just children needing
protections from on-off switches.
Under National Traffic and Motor
Vehicle Safety Act (Safety Act), 49
U.S.C. 30122, no manufacturer,
distributor, dealer, rental company, or
motor vehicle repair business may
knowingly make inoperative any part of
a device or element of design installed
or in a motor vehicle or motor vehicle
equipment in compliance with an
applicable motor vehicle safety
standard. This provision is commonly
referred to as the ‘‘make inoperative’’
provision of the Safety Act. Because of
this provision, unless NHTSA explicitly
exempts a manufacturer, distributor,
dealer, rental company, or motor vehicle
repair business from this requirement,
those entities cannot knowingly make a
compliant motor vehicle or motor
vehicle part inoperative. In other words,
6 FMVSS
208 S4.5.4.
id.
8 62 FR 62406.
7 See
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without an explicit exemption from this
requirement, the entities listed above
could not knowingly make air bags
inoperative, because they would be
making a FMVSS No. 208 compliant
motor vehicle part inoperative.
Among additional details discussed
below, the most notable action the 1997
final rule 9 took was creating an explicit
exemption for motor vehicle dealers and
repair businesses from the make
inoperative provision of the Safety Act.
This exemption permitted on-off
switches to be installed not just in new
vehicles but also to be retrofitted into
vehicles that had already been sold. It
also meant that an additional entity—
motor vehicle repair businesses—could
now install on-off switches. Thus,
NHTSA’s regulations, at that point,
allowed for two different types of on-off
switches: (1) original equipment air bag
switches, installed as original
equipment on a vehicle before the
vehicle was sold other than for resale;
and (2) retrofit air bag switches,
installed after the vehicle had been
produced and sold to the consumer.
Because retrofit air bag switches are
installed after purchase of a vehicle, the
onus is on the vehicle owner to decide
if they would like an on-off switch
installed. However, as discussed below,
air bags generally improve safety
outcomes significantly for most
individuals involved in crashes. So
instead of leaving the decision up to the
individual whether an on-off switch
would produce a beneficial safety
outcome for a specific individual, the
1997 final rule created a process by
which individuals could submit a
request to NHTSA for an air bag on-off
switch, and if approved, the individual
could then have one installed. That
process is discussed in more detail in
Section II.C. As with original equipment
on-off switches, the part 595 exemption
for retrofit on-off switches was subject
to a sunset provision; this exemption
expired on September 1, 2015.10
Air bag deactivations. Although air
bag on-off switches were an effective
solution to protect individuals who may
be vulnerable to air bag systems, there
are certain scenarios where on-off
switches cannot be installed in a
vehicle. In situations where an on-off
switch cannot be installed, the 1997
final rule outlined that NHTSA would
continue to use its enforcement
discretion to allow air bag deactivation.
The key distinction between an air bag
switch and air bag deactivation is that
the vehicle operator can turn the air bag
system on or off with a switch, whereas
9 62
FR 62406.
CFR 595.5.
16:52 Sep 16, 2024
B. Background on Advanced Air Bag
Systems
As discussed in the section above,
early air bag technology presented
several safety risks to both children and
smaller-statured individuals. The
agency has repeatedly expressed that
the solution to the dangers from early
air bag technology was to develop
advanced air bag technology. This belief
is also reflected in the sunset dates for
air bag on-off switches. FMVSS No. 208,
Occupant crash protection, requires that
all new passenger vehicles and light
trucks sold in the United States meet
certain minimum performance criteria
for protecting vehicle occupants during
and after a collision. ‘‘Advanced air bag
requirements’’ is a term used to refer
collectively to a subset of these
requirements that was added to FMVSS
No. 208 as part of a May 12, 2000, final
rule to protect children and other at-risk
occupants from air bag-related injury.
The advanced air bag requirements
became fully phased-in on September 1,
2010.
Under the advanced air bag
requirements, both the driver-side and
passenger-side frontal air bag system
must pass several barrier crash tests
using 50th percentile adult male and 5th
percentile adult female dummies in
both belted and unbelted conditions
(the tests require various test speeds,
test conditions, and dummy
placement).11 These tests must be
performed at both the driver and right
front passenger seating positions. In
addition to barrier tests (which are
designed to protect the adult-sized
population at-large), passenger-side
advanced air bag systems must also
meet several requirements that are
intended to protect children.
Specifically, passenger-side frontal air
bag systems must alter their deployment
in the presence of three child-sized test
dummies—representing a 12-month-old,
a 3-year-old, and a 6-year-old—in
multiple positions, both with and
without the child restraints specified in
Appendix A–1 of FMVSS No. 208.
Unlike the barrier tests described above,
the tests for deployment in the presence
of children are static tests conducted in
a stationary setting.
The requirements and static tests
related to child and smaller-statured
11 S5.1.1(b)(2), S5.1.2(b), S14.5.2, S15.1,
S14.5.1(b), S16.1(b), S17.
10 49
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once a repair shop or manufacturer
deactivates an air bag system, the
vehicle operator cannot turn the system
back on. NHTSA has not codified a
process for individuals to request an air
bag system deactivation.
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occupants may be met using one of
three strategies: suppression, low risk
deployment (LRD), or a dynamic
automatic suppression system (DASS).
Suppression-based advanced air bag
systems will suppress (i.e., not deploy)
the passenger air bag in a crash if the
system senses a child in a rear-facing
CRS, a child in a forward-facing CRS, or
a child not in a CRS but who is below
a certain size or is out of position in the
passenger seat. LRD-based advanced air
bag systems will deploy the passenger
air bag in all of these situations, but will
do so in a low-risk manner that does not
exceed certain injury assessment
reference values for children.12 DASSbased advanced air bag systems
dynamically suppress air bag
deployment during a crash by sensing
and interpreting the occupant
characteristics and/or locations of
occupants in relation to the air bag.13
Manufacturers are not required to use
the same option for all three child
dummy sizes. Currently, all vehicles
equipped with advanced air bags use
either ‘‘conventional’’ (i.e., non-DASS)
suppression or LRD to meet advanced
air bag requirements, with the vast
majority of manufacturers choosing
suppression.14 For the remainder of the
discussion, unless indicated otherwise,
‘‘suppression’’ systems are
conventional, non-DASS systems.
Data collected by NHTSA indicate
that advanced air bags substantially
reduce the risk of air bag-related injuries
to children and smaller statured adults.
In 1997, when air bag-related fatalities
peaked in the era before advanced air
bags were introduced, there were 52 air
bag-related fatalities, 31 of which were
children. Since the introduction of
advanced air bags, air bag-related
fatalities have declined significantly,
and in fact there have been no
confirmed air bag-related fatalities
among children in vehicles equipped
with certified advanced air bags.15
12 Compare S19.2, S21.1, & S23.2 with S19.3,
S21.4, & S23.4.
13 Unlike suppression and LRD, FMVSS No. 208
contains no predefined test procedure associated
with the DASS option. A manufacturer wishing to
use DASS must petition the agency for an expedited
rulemaking under subpart B of part 552. No
manufacturer has ever successfully petitioned the
agency for this option.
14 Based on model year 2023 compliance data, the
agency estimates that 5 percent of the fleet chooses
the LRD option for all required performance tests
with child-sized dummies. The remaining vehicles
use conventional suppression for all required
performance tests with child-sized dummies or a
combination of suppression and LRD.
15 ‘‘Counts of Frontal Air Bag Related Fatalities
and Seriously Injured Persons,’’ Special Crash
Investigations, DOT HS 811 104, January 2009. The
agency continues to monitor this issue and has not
identified any new cases of air bag-related fatalities
in advanced air bag compliant vehicles.
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Although it is likely that much of this
reduction can be attributed to child
safety initiatives (i.e., air bag warning
label requirements, changes to State
laws, greater enforcement of those laws,
and publicity campaigns) that have
encouraged parents and caregivers to
move children 12 and younger from the
front seat to the rear seat of vehicles, the
agency nonetheless believes that the
complete absence of air bag-related
fatalities in children over the last
several years demonstrates that
advanced air bags provide a crucial
safety countermeasure backstop for
situations in which children are placed
in the front passenger seat.
C. Current Part 595 Subpart B
Requirements and Procedures for
Obtaining Exemptions for Retrofit OnOff Switches
The 1997 final rule created part 595
subpart B. Subpart B sets out several
requirements for vehicle owners who
want to request a retrofit on-off switch.
Specifically, it identifies five situations
in which the agency will authorize onoff switches:
• Medical condition: The driver has a
medical condition and a doctor
indicates that an air bag would pose a
special risk of harm to that person and
the risk of harm outweighs the risk of
the passenger hitting the steering wheel
or windshield in a crash;
• Distance from driver air bag:
Despite taking all reasonable steps to
move back from the driver air bag, the
driver is not able to maintain a 10-inch
distance from the center of his or her
breastbone to the center of the driver air
bag cover;
• Infant: An infant (less than 1 year
old) must ride in the front seat because
the vehicle has no rear seat, the
vehicle’s rear seat is too small to
accommodate a rear-facing infant seat,
or the infant has a medical condition
that makes it necessary for the infant to
ride in the front seat so the driver can
monitor the infant;
• Child Age 1 to 12: A child age 1 to
12 must ride in the front seat because
the vehicle has no rear seat, children
ages 1 to 12 must ride in the front seat
of the vehicle because no space is
available in the rear seat, or the child
has a medical condition that makes it
necessary for the child to ride in the
front seat so the driver can monitor the
child.
These criteria were consistent with
the general rationale of the 1997 final
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rule, as advanced air bag technology
was still in the early stages of
development. As discussed previously,
the agency created the part 595 petition
as a temporary measure to ensure
vulnerable passengers were protected
from potential harm from air bag
systems. It was intended to be a
temporary measure as advanced air bag
technologies developed. Accordingly,
the provision sunset in 2015.
Subpart B of part 595 sets out the
specific steps that a vehicle owner/
installation technician must follow to
obtain an exemption for an on-off
switch.16
If an individual wants an on-off
switch installed in their vehicle, they
must fill out the request form that can
be found in appendix B to part 595. The
first portion of this form provides
instructions to individuals seeking the
installation of an on-off switch, and part
of these instructions directs the vehicle
owner or lessee to read NHTSA’s
information brochure on air bag on-off
switches, which can be found in
appendix A to part 595. After reviewing
the brochure, if the vehicle owner/lessee
is still interested in having an air bag
on-off switch installed, the vehicle
owner/lessee then fills the request form
out, including an indication of which
air bags (passenger or driver) they
would like the on-off switch for. The
request form includes a list of the
eligibility criteria NHTSA deemed
acceptable for a retrofit on-off switch in
the 1997 final rule with a check box
next to each justification. A list of these
eligibility criteria is also included in the
safety brochure (appendix A to part
595). The applicant must check which
justification they are requesting an onoff switch under as part of completing
the request form. After completing the
request form, the owner/lessee mails the
form to NHTSA. NHTSA then reviews
the request form and determines
whether the owner/lessee should be
granted their request to have an on-off
switch installed. If NHTSA determines
the information provided in the request
is sufficient, the agency notifies the
individual if the request is granted or
denied in writing. If the request is
missing information, the agency will
request the necessary information from
the requestor. In addition to the signed
form, NHTSA also sends the installation
16 49 CFR 595.5, Appendix A Information
Brochure, Appendix B Request Form, Appendix C
Installation of Air Bag On-Off Switches.
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form (appendix C to part 595) (to be
filled out by the manufacturer or repair
shop).
The manufacturer or repair shop has
several obligations that it must also
comply with under part 595. These
include ensuring a telltale light is
installed and operating that indicates
when the air bag switch is in the ‘‘off’’
mode and providing the owner/lessee of
the vehicle with an insert for the vehicle
owner’s manual that describes the
operation of the switch, explains the atrisk groups set forth in Appendix B, and
indicates that the on-off switch should
only be used in the ‘‘off’’ mode if one
of the at-risk groups is present in the
relevant seat. The manufacturer or
repair shop must also fill out the
installation form that can be found in
appendix C to part 595 and return it to
NHTSA within seven (7) days of
installation.
D. Air Bag Deactivations
As noted earlier, while part 595 does
not provide for air bag deactivations,
NHTSA has been considering requests
for air bag deactivations on a case-bycase basis using its enforcement
discretion. Under the existing process,
vehicle owners who would like to have
their air bag system (or part of the
system) deactivated must submit their
request in a letter to NHTSA with a
detailed explanation for why
deactivation is necessary. This letter
must include information such as the
subject vehicle’s make, model, and
vehicle identification number. In
addition, requests based on certain
medical conditions other than those for
which the National Conference on
Medical Indications for Air Bag
Deactivation has recommended air bag
deactivation must be accompanied by a
physician statement.17 This statement
must indicate the particular medical
condition of the patient, as well as the
physician’s judgment that the condition
causes air bags to pose a special risk to
that person, and that the condition
makes the potential harm to the person
from contacting an air bag in a crash
greater than the potential harm from
turning off the air bag.
17 At the request of the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, the Ronald Reagan Institute
of Emergency Medicine, with the assistance of the
National Crash Analysis Center (NCAC), both of
The George Washington University (GW), convened
an expert panel of physicians to formulate
recommendations on specific medical indications
for air bag deactivation.
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Once NHTSA reviews the
deactivation request letter, it notifies the
requestor in writing of its decision to
either grant or deny the request. If
NHTSA denies the request, it explains
the basis for the denial; if the reason for
the denial was a lack of information, the
request may be resubmitted with the
necessary information. If NHTSA grants
the request, it provides the requestor
with an authorization letter, a copy of
the information brochure contained in
appendix A to part 595, labels to be
attached to the vehicle interior for
alerting vehicle users about the
deactivated air bag(s), and a form to be
filled out and mailed back to the agency
regarding the deactivation. The
recipient can then take the authorization
letter to a car dealer or a motor vehicle
repair business to have their vehicle’s
air bag deactivated.
III. Proposed Amendments
The changes proposed in this
document would revise NHTSA’s
policies and procedures regarding
retrofit on-off switches and
deactivations to account for the benefits
of advanced air bags. Over the last two
and a half decades, NHTSA has
repeatedly stated in multiple
rulemaking notices that its regulations
permitting air bag on-off switches and
deactivations were intended to be
temporary. During the 1990s, NHTSA’s
primary reason for allowing air bag onoff switches and deactivations was to
provide time for manufacturers to
develop advanced air bag technology.
NHTSA also continued allowing air bag
on-off switches and deactivations even
after the phase-in of advanced air bag
requirements to promote public
acceptance of the technology and to give
the agency time to study advanced air
bags in real-world situations before
making long-term policy decisions
regarding the continued need for air bag
on-off switches and deactivations.
This rulemaking would complete
NHTSA’s evaluation of current
advanced air bag efficacy and the need
for on-off switches and deactivations.
Unlike our previous rulemakings in this
area, the changes proposed in this
document are not intended to be interim
solutions. Rather, they represent
NHTSA’s conclusions regarding the
need for air bag switches and
deactivations as it exists for the
foreseeable future. NHTSA considered
several factors in crafting the proposed
amendments in this NPRM, including
the interest in and need for retrofit air
bag on-off switches and air bag
deactivations, the degree to which
advanced air bags mitigate the risk of air
bag-related injuries, and the safety
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benefits of advanced air bags relative to
retrofit on-off switches and
deactivations.
Furthermore, the changes proposed in
the following sections will improve
motor vehicle safety. As discussed
above, data indicate that advanced air
bag systems significantly improve safety
outcomes for most vehicle occupants.
NHTSA acknowledges that certain
individuals have the potential to be
harmed by air bags, primarily because of
their stature; however, advancements in
air bag suppression technology have
resulted in most air bag suppression
systems protecting smaller stature
occupants without needing an air bag
on-off switch. Retrofit on-off switches
can be misused by consumers because
they may forget to set the switch to the
position appropriate for the passenger
occupying the seat. By narrowing the
eligibility criteria for obtaining an air
bag on-off switch to only include groups
that are at heightened risk of air bagrelated injuries even with advanced air
bag systems, the proposed rule would
result in fewer installations of
unnecessary retrofit switches. By
eliminating the sunset date provision,
the proposed rule would increase
NHTSA’s regulatory flexibility to allow
the installation of retrofit air bag on-off
switches to serve at-risk groups,
regardless of when their vehicles were
manufactured. In addition, the proposed
rule improves overall agency
transparency and public accountability
by articulating and codifying NHTSA’s
processes for approving requests for
retrofit air bag on-off switches and, if
necessary, for air bag deactivation, when
warranted by a safety need.
As the 1997 final rule indicates, the
part 595 petition process has always
focused on weighing the safety benefits
that air bags provide vis-à-vis the
potential harm that air bag systems can
do to at-risk populations.18 The
development and widespread use of
advanced air bag systems has
significantly altered this calculus,
which is why the agency is proposing
changes to part 595’s substantive
requirements as part of this NPRM.
A. Removal of the Sunset Date Provision
for Retrofit Air Bag On-Off Switches
This rulemaking would remove from
part 595 subpart B the language limiting
the installation of retrofit air bag on-off
switches to vehicles manufactured
before September 1, 2015. As noted
above, when NHTSA authorized air bag
on-off switches in past rulemakings, the
agency imposed a sunset date for their
availability because it believed that
18 62
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advanced air bags would largely obviate
the need for manual air bag on-off
switches. NHTSA tried to set these
sunset dates far enough in the future to
provide sufficient time both for
manufacturers to develop advanced air
bags and for the agency to assess
advanced air bags’ effect on safety.
NHTSA has determined that, even
with advanced air bags, there is and will
be a continuing need for retrofit air bag
on-off switches for the foreseeable
future for at least some at-risk segments
of the population. There is a small
segment of the vehicle occupant
population (e.g., those that meet our
new eligibility criteria to obtain a
retrofit air bag on-off switch, which are
discussed below) to whom current
frontal air bags pose a risk that
outweighs a safety benefit, and whose
risk characteristics are such that they
cannot necessarily be detected or
mitigated by current advanced air bag
technology. Because the risks to this
population are not addressed by
advanced air bags, we tentatively
believe that it would be safer in some
instances for air bags to be suppressed
by a manually operated air bag on-off
switch than to deploy as designed. This
population will likely need the
continued availability of retrofit air bag
on-off switches for the indefinite future,
so NHTSA proposes to remove the
sunset date of September 1, 2015, and
to continue allowing retrofit air bag onoff switches for certain at-risk
populations until further notice.
Comments are requested on this
proposal.
B. Adjustment of Criteria for At-Risk
Occupants To Obtain a Retrofit Air Bag
On-Off Switch for Vehicles Equipped
With Advanced Air Bags
This rulemaking proposes to amend
the eligibility criteria for owners and
users of vehicles equipped with
advanced air bags to obtain a retrofit air
bag on-off switch under part 595 subpart
B. We believe that advanced air bags
have sufficiently addressed the safety
concerns of some of the groups that
were previously deemed at-risk for air
bag-related injuries at the time that Part
595 subpart B was established. This
rulemaking would narrow the eligibility
requirements for obtaining a retrofit air
bag on-off switch under part 595 subpart
B such that these groups would not all
qualify for an air bag on-off switch on
vehicles equipped with advanced air
bags. The proposed amendments
specifically relate to the categories
concerning infants in rear-facing CRSs
and children ages 1 to 12 who must be
transported in the front passenger seat.
Below we discuss each in turn.
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1. Vehicles Certified to the SuppressionBased Compliance Option Would No
Longer Be Eligible for an Exemption
This NPRM distinguishes between
vehicles meeting the advanced air bag
requirements by way of suppression
versus via a low-risk deployment
option. Under this NPRM, vehicles
certified to meet the advanced air bag
requirements for children in rear-facing
CRSs in the front seat using suppression
would not be eligible for a retrofit air
bag on-off switch. This proposal reflects
our tentative conclusion, based on over
two and a half decades of field data, that
air bag suppression is an extremely
effective tool for protecting children in
rear-facing CRSs from air bag-related
injuries. Based on these data, NHTSA
tentatively believes there is no longer a
safety need to permit the installation of
retrofit air bag on-off switches in these
circumstances.
Like on-off switches, suppressionbased advanced air bags mitigate the
risk to children in rear-facing CRSs by
eliminating the possibility of air bag/
CRS interaction entirely. Moreover, the
automatic operation of suppressionbased advanced air bags makes the
suppression systems safer overall as
compared to retrofit air bag on-off
switches, which do not operate
automatically and are susceptible to
misuse. Thus, NHTSA tentatively
believes there is no longer a safety need
to permit the installation of retrofit air
bag on-off switches in vehicles
equipped with suppression-based
advanced air bags for the transport of
children in rear-facing CRSs in the front
passenger seat. NHTSA tentatively
believes that this proposal would
benefit safety by reducing the number of
unneeded retrofit air bag on-off switches
that would be present in the fleet that
could potentially be misused.
2. Vehicles Certified to the Low-Risk
Deployment Compliance Option Would
Still Be Eligible for an Exemption
Under the proposed rule, vehicles
certified to meet advanced air bag
requirements for children in rear-facing
CRSs in the front seat using low risk
deployment (LRD) would continue to be
eligible for a make inoperative
exemption for a retrofit air bag on-off
switch.
The agency has decided to
differentiate between suppression-based
and LRD-based advanced air bag
systems for children in rear-facing CRSs
because, although NHTSA has
confidence in both suppression and
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LRD technologies, LRD systems are not
as prevalent in the fleet and have not
had the same degree of field experience
confirming their effectiveness as have
suppression systems.
There are several safety
considerations specific to rear-facing
CRSs interacting with LRD-based
advanced air bags that NHTSA believes
justify the agency’s cautious approach
here. First, children in rear-facing CRSs
are typically younger and more
vulnerable than other at-risk groups.
Second, children in rear-facing seats are
always exceedingly close to a frontmounted air bag, especially compared to
other categories of at-risk occupants.
This proximity matters because the
primary factor that determines a child’s
risk of air bag-related injury is the
child’s proximity to the air bag at the
time of deployment. Given that children
in rear-facing CRSs are especially at risk
for air bag-related injuries because of
their constant close proximity to the air
bag risk zone as compared to other atrisk groups, NHTSA has determined
that it would be prudent at this time to
allow vehicle owners with LRD
advanced air bag systems to have the
option of an on-off switch if they must
seat a child in the front seat of their
vehicle.
ii. Exemptions for Children Ages 1 to 12
Who Must Be Transported in the Front
Passenger Seat
Under the proposed rule, vehicles
meeting the advanced air bag
requirements that are used to transport
children ages 1 to 12 in the front
passenger seat (including children
secured in a forward-facing CRS) would
not be eligible for a make inoperative
exemption for a retrofit air bag on-off
switch. This change would apply
regardless of whether the vehicle is
equipped with suppression-based or
LRD-based advanced air bags.
NHTSA originally designated
children ages 1 to 12 an ‘‘at-risk’’ group
for purposes of determining eligibility
for an exemption under part 595, to
address the dangers that early (nonadvanced) air bags posed to
unrestrained older children. Identifying
this risk group required NHTSA to
establish an objective, practicable way
of determining both when a child is
large enough that the air bags deploying
would not pose a significant safety risk,
and when a child was behaviorally
mature enough that the child was not
likely to be out of position at the time
an air bag deploys. NHTSA chose age as
a proxy for making these
determinations, because age normally
correlates to a child’s size and level of
maturity, and it is a simple and
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76041
objective way to determine eligibility.
However, a child’s age is, at best, an
imperfect measure of whether the child
is at risk for air bag-related injuries
because age is an imperfect proxy for
size or maturity.
Advanced air bag systems do not rely
on age as a proxy for a child’s size or
likely position at the time of air bag
deployment. Rather, they use sensors to
detect a child’s size and use either
sensors or other design features to safely
account for children who are out of
position at the time of a crash. Because
a child’s size and position are the two
most important indicators of whether it
is safe to deploy the air bag (or whether
to deploy it in a low-risk manner),
advanced air bags can use that data to
either suppress the air bag or tailor the
air bag’s deployment to the child (as
opposed to early generation air bags,
which would always deploy the air bag
at full force in a triggering crash,
regardless of the size or position of the
occupant). The agency is unaware of a
single reported crash fatality of a child
aged 1 to 12 (or a child in a forwardfacing CRS) that has been attributed to
a certified advanced air bag since the
technology was introduced. Based on
available evidence, the agency believes
there is no longer a safety need that
justifies permitting the installation of
retrofit air bag on-off switches for
children ages 1 to 12 (or children in
forward-facing CRSs) in vehicles
equipped with advanced air bags solely
on the basis of age. The agency would
continue to approve requests for retrofit
on-off switches for children ages 1 to 12
(or children in forward-facing CRSs) in
vehicles equipped with non-advanced
air bags.
Notwithstanding the agency’s
tentative conclusion that children ages 1
to 12 (or children in forward-facing
CRSs) are not an at-risk group under
part 595, subpart B in vehicles equipped
with advanced air bags, NHTSA
acknowledges that there is a remote
possibility an air bag on-off switch may
be permissible for these children under
certain circumstances, such as if a
specific child in that age range has
unique characteristics that a vehicle’s
advanced air bag system has difficulty
detecting. Similarly, given the variety of
forward-facing and rear-facing CRSs that
exist, the agency acknowledges that
there is a remote possibility that some
advanced air bag systems may not be
designed to detect certain models of
forward-facing CRSs that have unusual
footprints. To address these sorts of
edge cases, the agency foresees using its
enforcement discretion to permit the
installation of retrofit on-off switches in
these rare situations.
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Comments are requested on the above
issues.
C. Requests for Air Bag Deactivations
(General Public)
NHTSA proposes to codify the
process by which vehicle owners
request a ‘‘make inoperative’’ exemption
so that they may have their vehicles’ air
bags deactivated. This informal process
for requesting deactivations was
initially intended to be used in a limited
number of circumstances where the
requestor was eligible for an exemption
to install an air bag on-off switch, but an
air bag on-off switch was not available
from the manufacturer of the requestor’s
vehicle. The agency believes it can
improve on the deactivation request
process with the proposals described in
detail below.
NHTSA’s proposal to codify the
deactivation request process would
improve transparency while keeping the
process largely unchanged aside from a
few slight modifications. First, NHTSA
would require that deactivation
requestors certify that they have read
the information brochure contained in
appendix A, since the safety
justification underlying that
requirement (e.g., ensuring the requestor
is aware of the risks associated with
switching off the air bag) applies to
deactivations as well as on-off switches.
Second, consistent with the
requirements for on-off switch
exemptions based on a medical need,
we would no longer require a physician
statement if the deactivation is for a
medical purpose. Lastly, we would
require that requestors specifically
explain why an air bag on-off switch is
insufficient for their needs. The reason
for this requirement is that NHTSA
considers deactivations to be a greater
potential risk to overall vehicle safety
than on-off switches. A deactivated air
bag deprives all vehicle occupants of the
safety benefits of air bags regardless of
whether they are at-risk of air bagrelated injuries, whereas an on-off
switch enables occupants who are not
at-risk to keep the air bag activated.
NHTSA will continue to evaluate
deactivation requests on a case-by-case
basis, and will only grant them if the
agency believes that doing so is
consistent with the Safety Act and is in
the interest of motor vehicle safety.
Comments are requested on the
codification of the deactivation request
process.
D. Exemptions for Law Enforcement and
Emergency Vehicles On-Off Switches
NHTSA proposes amending part 595
subpart B to add a process that
specifically applies to air bag on-off
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switch requests for law enforcement and
emergency vehicles, along with a
corresponding request form. The form
would be codified as appendix D to part
595.
For a number of years, NHTSA has
granted requests from law enforcement
and emergency service officials to
install air bag on-off switches through
the exercise of the agency’s enforcement
discretion. In the 2012 final rule, the
agency explained that one reason for
extending the sunset date under part
595 subpart B was to ‘‘consider other
topics that have arisen over the years
such as our continued use of our
enforcement discretion for
circumstances not covered by part 595
(e.g., the application of retrofit switches
for emergency and law enforcement
vehicles).’’ The agency’s primary safety
concern with air bags in law
enforcement and emergency vehicles is
that these vehicles are necessarily
outfitted with job-related equipment
that could pose a danger to occupants
should the air bag deploy. This danger
is not necessarily addressed by
advanced air bags, since FMVSS No.
208 does not require that advanced air
bags be tested in the presence of this
job-related equipment, nor would such
a requirement be reasonably practicable
at this time. Given this concern, we
have used our enforcement discretion to
permit the installation of retrofit on-off
switches and air bag deactivations on
law enforcement and emergency
vehicles through a process similar to the
process used to evaluate deactivation
requests from the general public.
In the interest of transparency of
agency processes, NHTSA seeks to
formalize the process by which law
enforcement and emergency service
providers obtain make inoperative
exemptions for retrofit on-off switch
installations. To this end, this NPRM
proposes to add a new section to part
595 subpart B specifically for
‘‘Emergency Vehicles’’ along with a
corresponding new form contained in
appendix D. This new section would
contain the procedures that emergency
service providers must follow to obtain
a make inoperative exemption for their
law enforcement or emergency vehicles.
The accompanying form would require
that a requesting entity certify that the
vehicle on which the air bag on-off
switch will be installed is intended to
be used for law enforcement, fire
response, or medical response.
Comments are requested on this
proposal.
ii. Deactivations
As with exemption requests from the
general public, if a retrofit air bag on-off
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switch is unavailable or inadequate for
an emergency or law enforcement
vehicle, officials may request approval
for an air bag deactivation. The process
for requesting an air bag deactivation for
a law enforcement vehicle or an
emergency vehicle would be the same as
the process for the general public.
Comments are requested on the above
issues. A copy of the law enforcement
and emergency response request form
can be found in the docket for this
NPRM.
E. Update of Information Brochure
NHTSA proposes to revise the
Information Brochure contained in
appendix A to part 595. Appendix A
contains the Information Brochure that
air bag on-off switch requestors must
read as part of the application process
for obtaining an exemption for a retrofit
air bag on-off switch under subpart B.
The purpose of the Information
Brochure is to provide requestors with
relevant information about the safety
benefits and potential risks of air bags,
so that they can make an informed
decision whether to request an
exemption under part 595 subpart B.
NHTSA codified the Information
Brochure as appendix A to part 595 as
part of the same November 1997 final
rule that established part 595 subpart B.
In the more than two decades that have
passed since then, air bag technology
has evolved substantially. Given these
changes, the Information Brochure
currently found in appendix A to part
595 is no longer complete or accurate.
To address this problem, this NPRM
proposes major revisions to the
Information Brochure. The updated
brochure would provide more complete
and accurate information about current
air bag technology to better ensure
consumers will make an informed
decision regarding whether to request
an exemption under part 595 subpart B.
The agency has also included stylistic
changes, such as formatting changes that
make the material more engaging and
easier to read, and a 10-inch ruler
printed on the outer cover so that
drivers can measure their distance to the
steering wheel. A copy of our proposed
revised Information Brochure for at-risk
passengers has been placed in the
docket to this NPRM.
The agency seeks comment on our
proposed revisions to the Information
Brochure contained in Appendix A to
part 595.
IV. Estimates of Benefits and Costs
NHTSA performed an economic
analysis for the proposed rule, and has
determined that the proposed rule
would be net beneficial. The agency
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found that there would be significant
cost savings as a result of the proposed
rule. A summary of the economic
analysis is below, and the full economic
analysis can be found in the docket for
this NPRM.
Methodology. To determine the costs
and safety impacts of this NPRM,
NHTSA considered two baselines in its
analysis. The first baseline is what the
agency refers to as the Enforcement
Discretion Baseline. This baseline
considers the status quo, where NHTSA
uses its enforcement discretion to grant
air bag on-off switch requests since the
last sunset for the on-off program for
MY 2015 vehicles. This baseline
assumes that there is potential for all
vehicles (not just MY 2015 and earlier
vehicles) to receive exemptions. In other
words, this baseline includes analysis of
all MY vehicles, rather than
incorporating only MY 2015 and earlier
vehicles not impacted by the 2015
sunset.
The second baseline is what the
agency refers to as the Enforcement
Non-Discretion Baseline. This baseline
considers a scenario under which the
sunset provision is strictly enforced.
Under this baseline, the proposed rule
has a smaller net effect because
enforcing just the sunset provision
would yield the same procedural
changes as the proposed rule for all MY
2016 and later vehicles. Thus, the net
effect under the Enforcement NonDiscretion Baseline would be limited to
pre-MY 2016 vehicles with advanced air
bags.
Air Bag On-Off Switch Cost Impacts.
For this analysis, NHTSA assumed that
the volume of annual exemption
requests for air bag on-off switches will
be equal to the annual average from
2015–2017 (the most recent available
data), or 58 requests per year under the
Enforcement Discretion baseline. For
the Enforcement Non-Discretion
baseline, NHTSA assumed that the
number of annual requests will be equal
76043
to the estimated share of all vehicles
with advanced air bags comprised of
pre-MY 2016 vehicles, multiplied by 58.
The share of all vehicles with advanced
air bags comprised of pre-MY 2016
vehicles is estimated as the sum of
surviving MY 2004 (i.e., the first year
with mandatory advanced air bags)
through MY 2015 vehicles, divided by
the projected sum of MY 2004 through
MY 2021 vehicles at the end of 2021.
The resulting estimate of the relevant
share comprised of pre-MY 2016
vehicles is approximately 59 percent,
yielding an estimate of 34.2 requests per
year under the Enforcement NonDiscretion baseline.
The total annual cost impact for the
subset of on-off switch exemption
requests that would be eliminated under
the proposed rule compared to the costs
under the Enforcement Discretion
baseline is summarized in Table 1 (See
the docketed economic analysis for this
proposed rule for details):
TABLE 1—ESTIMATED ANNUAL COST IMPACTS IN CASES WHERE THE ON-OFF SWITCH EXEMPTION IS ELIMINATED
[2022 Dollars, Enforcement Discretion Baseline]
Status
quo cost
Cost item (entity)
Cost under
proposed
rule
Net cost
impact
Requests (Applicants) ..................................................................................................................................
On-Off Switch Installation (Applicants) ........................................................................................................
Data Processing and Storage (Government) ..............................................................................................
Documentation and Reporting (Industry) ....................................................................................................
$686.14
8,186.32
61.39
87.58
$0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
¥$686.14
¥8,186.32
¥61.39
¥87.58
Total ......................................................................................................................................................
9,021.43
0.00
¥9,021.43
The corresponding annual cost impact
under the Enforcement Non-Discretion
baseline is summarized in Table 2:
TABLE 2—ESTIMATED ANNUAL COST IMPACTS IN CASES WHERE THE ON-OFF SWITCH EXEMPTION IS ELIMINATED
[2022 Dollars, Enforcement Non-Discretion Baseline]
Status
quo cost
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Cost item (entity)
Cost under
proposed
rule
Net cost
impact
Requests (Applicants) ..................................................................................................................................
On-Off Switch Installation (Applicants) ........................................................................................................
Data Processing and Storage (Government) ..............................................................................................
Documentation and Reporting (Industry) ....................................................................................................
$404.06
4,820.80
36.15
51.58
$0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
¥$404.06
¥4,820.80
¥36.15
¥51.58
Total ......................................................................................................................................................
5,312.60
0.00
¥5,312.60
The total annual cost impact is
estimated to be ¥$9,021.43 under the
Enforcement Discretion baseline and
¥$5,312.60 under the Enforcement
Non-Discretion baseline.
Air Bag On-Off Switch Safety Impacts.
Safety effects of the proposed rule in
this category are assumed to be limited
to the reduction in risk for front-seat
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passengers 13 years of age or older in
vehicles with no on-off switch. NHTSA
assumed that advanced air bags are
estimated to be equally safe with or
without an on-off switch for passengers
12 years of age or younger, because
advanced air bags are designed either
not to deploy or to deploy in a low-risk
manner when small children are present
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(i.e., the switch does not offer any
benefit or detriment for small children).
For passengers 13 years of age or older,
reducing on-off switch exemption
requests would improve safety by
mitigating the risk of traveling while an
on-off switch is in the off position,
removing the protective effect of the air
bag.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
The safety benefit per vehicle in this
category is estimated as the reduction in
fatality risk per mile for front-seat
passengers 13 years of age or older,
multiplied by the vehicle miles traveled
(VMT) where such passengers are
present and the monetized value of a
unit reduction in fatality risk. Analyses
of 2017–2021 Crash Reporting Sampling
System data and Fatality Analysis
Reporting System data indicate that the
front seat of light-duty vehicles was
occupied by a passenger 13 years of age
or older approximately 12 percent of the
time in non-fatal crashes and 14 percent
of the time in fatal crashes. Studies have
estimated an overall light-duty vehicle
occupant fatality rate of 0.82 fatality per
100 million VMT,19 which represents
approximately 73 percent of the average
overall fatality rate from 2009 through
2012. The agency applied this ratio to
the most recent overall fatality rate of
1.34 fatalities per 100 million VMT to
identify an estimated light-duty vehicle
fatality rate of 0.98 fatalities per 100
million VMT. Multiplying this fatality
rate by 14 percent yields an estimated
fatality rate for front-seat occupants 13
years of age or older of 0.14 fatality per
100 million VMT.
Studies indicate the effectiveness of
frontal air bags in reducing fatalities for
front-seat occupants to be 12 percent for
passenger cars and 14 percent for light
trucks and vans (LTVs).20 Thus,
traveling with an inactivated frontal air
bag is estimated to be 1/(1–0.12), or 13.6
percent, riskier in passenger cars (1/(1–
0.14), or 16.3 percent, riskier in LTVs).
Assuming a light-duty vehicle sales split
of one-third passenger cars and twothirds LTVs for the vehicles affected by
the proposed rule (which reflects recent
vehicle sales splits), the average
increase of risk of traveling in the front
seat with an improperly deactivated
frontal air bag is estimated to be 15.4
percent. NHTSA assumed a 10.3 percent
misuse rate for air bag on-off switches
when adults travel in the front
passenger seat. Multiplying this misuse
rate by the estimated 15.4 percent
increase in risk when on-off switches
are misused yields an estimate of
incremental risk of 1.6 percent for frontseat passengers 13 years of age or older
in the presence of air bag on-off
switches. In turn, multiplying the
estimated incremental risk by the
fatality rate for front-seat passengers 13
years of age or older (0.14 fatality per
100 million VMT) yields an estimate of
incremental fatality risk for these
passengers in the presence of an air bag
on-off switch equal to 0.0022 fatality per
100 million VMT.
For the Enforcement Discretion
baseline, the agency estimated expected
per-vehicle annual VMT (i.e., expected
VMT taking scrappage into account) by
multiplying the average of the passenger
car and LTV VMT schedules used in the
analysis supporting the Corporate
Average Fuel Economy Rulemaking by
their corresponding vehicle survival
schedules. Applying three-percent- and
seven-percent discount rates yields
estimates of discounted lifetime vehicle
VMT equal to 13.0 times and 9.7 times
the first-year VMT.
TABLE 3—VMT SCHEDULE AND ESTIMATED DISCOUNTED VEHICLE VMT (FOR SELECTED VEHICLE AGES)
Annual VMT
for surviving
vehicles
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Vehicle age
Survival
rate × 3%
discount
factor
Survival
rate × 7%
discount
factor
Annual
exposure
(3% discount
rate)
Annual
exposure
(7% discount
rate)
1 ...........................................................................................
5 ...........................................................................................
10 .........................................................................................
15 .........................................................................................
20 .........................................................................................
25 .........................................................................................
30 .........................................................................................
35 .........................................................................................
17,040
14,641
12,310
10,546
9,165
7,981
6,805
5,454
1.000
0.853
0.636
0.377
0.178
0.087
0.049
0.017
1.000
0.732
0.452
0.221
0.086
0.035
0.016
0.005
17,040
14,535
10,843
6,421
3,036
1,477
831
294
17,040
12,480
7,696
3,766
1,472
592
275
81
Total/Year 1 ..................................................................
........................
........................
........................
13.0
9.7
The monetized (undiscounted) value
of the per-vehicle safety benefit in the
first year of vehicle use in this category
is estimated to be $13.12 (0.0022
mitigated fatality per 100 million VMT
× 17,040/100 million VMT × $35.4
million per mitigated fatality 21). Thus,
at a three-percent discount rate, the
estimated lifetime per-vehicle safety
benefit is estimated to be approximately
$171 ($13.12 × 13.0 = $170.58) under
the Enforcement Discretion baseline. At
a seven-percent discount rate, the
estimated lifetime per-vehicle safety
benefit is estimated to be approximately
19 Kahane, C. J. (2015, January). Lives saved by
vehicle safety technologies and associated Federal
Motor Vehicle Safety Standards, 1960 to 2012—
Passenger cars and LTVs—With reviews of 26
FMVSS and the effectiveness of their associated
safety technologies in reducing fatalities, injuries,
and crashes. (Report No. DOT HS 812 069).
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$127 ($13.12 × 9.7 = $127.28) under the
Enforcement Discretion baseline.
For the Enforcement Non-Discretion
baseline, the above approach is used,
with one key change: per-vehicle safety
benefits are estimated as the above pervehicle safety benefits multiplied by the
share of total lifetime discounted VMT
comprised of pre-MY 2016 vehicles. In
turn, the share of total lifetime
discounted VMT comprised of pre-MY
2016 vehicles is estimated as the sum of
estimated discounted lifetime VMT for
MY 2004 through 2015 vehicles,
divided by the sum of estimated
discounted lifetime VMT for MY 2004
through MY 2021 vehicles. Using this
approach, the estimated per-vehicle
safety benefits are 67 percent lower than
in the other baseline at a three-percent
discount rate (0.33 × $170.58, or
$56.29). The corresponding estimate at
a seven-percent rate is 72 percent lower
than in the other baseline (0.28 ×
$170.58, or $34.37).
The total annual safety benefit in this
category under the proposed rule is
equal to the per-vehicle safety benefit
multiplied by the number of affected
vehicles. Thus, at a three-percent
discount rate, the total annual safety
benefit is estimated to be $9,893.80
Washington, DC: National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration.
20 Ibid.
21 The total estimated safety value per mitigated
fatality is equal to a base value per fatality ($12.8
million in 2022 dollars) adjusted by factors
accounting for: (1) the share of comprehensive
economic costs of crashes comprised of fatalities;
and (2) the relative rate of front right seat
occupation in non-fatal versus fatal crashes. This
calculation is presented in more detail in the
docketed accompanying economic analysis.
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under the Enforcement Discretion
baseline ($170.58 per request × 58
requests per year). At a seven-percent
discount rate, the total annual safety
benefit is estimated to be $7,382.30
under the Enforcement Discretion
baseline ($127.58 per request × 58
requests per year). The total annual
safety benefit under the Enforcement
Non-Discretion baseline is $1,925.20 at
a three-percent discount rate ($56.29 ×
34.2 = $1,925.20) and $1,175.31 at a
seven-percent discount rate ($34.37 ×
34.2 = $1,175.31).
Air Bag Deactivation. The proposed
rule will formalize and modify the
process by which vehicle owners or
users can obtain an exemption from the
‘‘make inoperative’’ provision for an air
bag deactivation. The proposed rule will
have a cost impact for requestors of air
bag deactivation exemptions and
business entities that deactivate air bags.
For this analysis, the agency assumed
that annual deactivation requests will be
equal to the 2015–2017 annual average
of deactivation requests under the
proposed rule (seven per year). The
agency felt there was no need to run a
two-pronged analysis like it did for the
on-off switch analysis because there was
no change in the way the agency
processed air bag deactivation requests;
there has never been a formal process
for requesting deactivation, and NHTSA
has used its enforcement discretion to
grant deactivations since the agency
started doing so in the mid-1990s.
Furthermore, because the agency is
simply formalizing a process that is
unlikely to result in a noticeable impact
on the number of deactivation requests
received, granted, or denied, NHTSA
does not believe there will be a safety
impact for this part of the proposed rule.
Individuals requesting air bag
deactivation exemptions under the
status quo incur costs associated with
preparing the request letter, acquiring
supporting documentation, and having
76045
the deactivation performed. Under the
status quo, a deactivation requestor
must write a letter to NHTSA that
includes information about the
requestor’s vehicle and the requestor’s
reason for requesting an air bag
deactivation.
The cost of deactivating an air bag
system is unaffected by the proposed
rule, meaning the proposed rule would
have no impact on the costs associated
with deactivation. Furthermore, the
proposed rule does not include any
additional requirements for businesses
performing air bag deactivations,
meaning the proposed rule would also
have no impact on the costs businesses
incur by performing deactivations.
Table 4 below estimates the costs
associated with the proposed
amendments to the air bag deactivation
process (see the docketed economic
analysis for this proposed rule for
details).
TABLE 4—ESTIMATED ANNUAL COST IMPACTS FOR AIR BAG DEACTIVATION REQUESTS
[2022 Dollars]
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Cost item
(entity)
Status
quo cost
Cost under
proposed
rule
Net cost
impact
Requests (Applicants) ......................................................................................................................................
Deactivation (Applicants) .................................................................................................................................
Distributing Forms and Labels, and Data Processing (Government) .............................................................
Return Form and Labels (Industry) .................................................................................................................
Safety (Occupants) ..........................................................................................................................................
$160.72
542.50
61.81
18.90
N/A
$186.69
542.50
61.81
18.90
N/A
$25.97
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
Total ..........................................................................................................................................................
722.12
748.09
25.97
V. Proposed Effective Date
VI. Regulatory Notices and Analyses
We propose that the amendments in
this rulemaking become effective
immediately after publication of a final
rule in the Federal Register. The
proposed amendments would not
markedly impact the current process or
requestors’ ability to get approval for an
air bag on-off switch or deactivation
except regarding forward-facing
children ages 1 to 12, children in
forward-facing CRSs, and children in
rear-facing CRSs in vehicles equipped
with suppression-based advanced air
bag systems. Because this final rule
would have no impact on the public and
only changes NHTSA processes, the
agency does not believe that any lead
time is necessary for this potential final
rule. Comments are requested on this
proposed effective date.
Executive Order 12866, Executive Order
14904, Executive Order 13563, and DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures
NHTSA has considered the potential
impact of this proposed rule under
Executive Order 12866, Executive Order
14094, Executive Order 13563, DOT
Order 2100.6A and the Department of
Transportation’s regulatory policies and
procedures. This NPRM is not
considered to be significant under the
Department of Transportation’s
regulatory policies and procedures.22
This document proposes several
changes to part 595 subpart B but does
not impose any new costs. It proposes
the elimination of the sunset date of an
existing exemption for retrofit on-off
switches for frontal air bags, slight
narrowing of the eligibility requirement
for obtaining that exemption going
forward, and the codification of existing
processes for obtaining retrofit air bag
on-off switches for emergency vehicles
22 44
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FR 11034 (Feb. 26, 1979).
Frm 00069
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
and air bag deactivations for all
vehicles. It also proposes changes to the
information brochure contained in
appendix A. The agency notes that part
595 subpart B does not require a motor
vehicle manufacturer, dealer, or repair
business to take any action or bear any
costs except in instances in which a
dealer or repair business voluntarily
agrees to deactivate or install an air bag
on-off switch for an air bag. For
consumers, the purchase and
installation of a retrofit air bag on-off
switch or the deactivation a vehicle’s
frontal air bag is permissive, not
prescriptive.
When an eligible consumer obtains
the agency’s authorization for the
installation of a retrofit air bag on-off
switch or air bag deactivation and
enlists a dealer or repair business to
modify their vehicle accordingly, there
will be costs associated with that action.
However, these are costs that the
consumer chooses to bear if they want
an air bag on-off switch or air bag
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deactivation, they are not costs
prescribed by NHTSA’s regulation.
Moreover, the agency notes that the
amendments to part 595 that are
proposed here would either only
slightly amend existing processes for
vehicle owners to request a make
inoperative exemption or would codify
longstanding procedures relating to
requests for deactivations. Given that
these proposed changes would not
substantially change the process by
which vehicle owners currently obtain
make inoperative exemptions for retrofit
air bag on-off switches and
deactivations, and the fact that these
changes will affect a relatively small
number of vehicles, there are virtually
no new costs imposed by this
rulemaking. A detailed description of
the costs and benefits can be found
above. Furthermore, the agency
prepared an economic analysis for this
proposed rule, which can be found in
the docket for this NPRM.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., as amended by
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) of
1996), whenever an agency is required
to publish a notice of proposed
rulemaking, it must prepare and make
available for public comment a
regulatory flexibility analysis that
describes the effect of the rule on small
entities (i.e., small businesses, small
organizations, and small governmental
jurisdictions) unless the head of an
agency certifies the proposal will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The Small Business Administration’s
regulations at 13 CFR part 121 define a
small business, in part, as a business
entity ‘‘which operates primarily within
the United States.’’ 13 CFR part
121.105(a). SBREFA amended the
Regulatory Flexibility Act to require
Federal agencies to provide a statement
of the factual basis for certifying that a
proposal will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
I certify that the changes proposed in
this NPRM would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The
amendments proposed in this NPRM
eliminate the sunset provision in
Subpart B of part 595, make some
relatively minor changes to on-off
switch eligibly that only affect a small
number of vehicles, and codify existing
agency practices regarding treatment of
law enforcement and emergency
vehicles and air bag deactivations.
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This NPRM does not propose any
changes that would significantly affect
small entities. Small organizations and
small governmental units would not be
significantly affected by the proposed
amendments of this NPRM since the
potential cost impacts associated with
this action are negligible.
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
NHTSA has examined this proposed
rule pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.)
13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999)
and concluded that no additional
consultation with States, local
governments or their representatives is
mandated beyond the rulemaking
process. The agency has concluded that
the rulemaking would not have
sufficient federalism implications to
warrant consultation with State and
local officials or the preparation of a
federalism summary impact statement.
This proposed rule would not have
‘‘substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.’’
NHTSA rules can have preemptive
effect in two ways. First, the National
Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act
contains an express preemption
provision stating that, if NHTSA has
established a standard for an aspect
motor vehicle or motor vehicle
equipment performance a State may
only prescribe or continue in effect a
standard for that same aspect of
performance if the State standard is
identical to the Federal standard. 49
U.S.C. 30103(b)(1). It is this statutory
command by Congress that preempts
any non-identical State legislative and
administrative law addressing the same
aspect of performance.
The express preemption provision
described above is subject to a savings
clause under which ‘‘[c]ompliance with
a motor vehicle safety standard
prescribed under this chapter does not
exempt a person from liability at
common law.’’ 49 U.S.C. 30103(e).
Pursuant to this provision, State
common law tort causes of action
against motor vehicle manufacturers
that might otherwise be preempted by
the express preemption provision are
generally preserved.
NHTSA rules can also preempt State
law if complying with the FMVSS
would render the motor vehicle
manufacturers liable under State tort
law. Because most NHTSA standards
established by an FMVSS are minimum
standards, a State common law tort
cause of action that seeks to impose a
higher standard on motor vehicle
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Frm 00070
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
manufacturers will generally not be
preempted. However, if and when such
a conflict does exist—for example, when
the standard at issue is both a minimum
and a maximum standard—the State
common law tort cause of action is
impliedly preempted. See Geier v.
American Honda Motor Co., 529 U.S.
861 (2000).
Pursuant to E.O. 13132, NHTSA has
considered whether this proposed rule
could or should preempt State common
law causes of action. The agency’s
ability to announce its conclusion
regarding the preemptive effect of one of
its rules reduces the likelihood that
preemption will be an issue in any
subsequent tort litigation. To this end,
the agency has examined the nature
(e.g., the language and structure of the
regulatory text) and objectives of this
proposed rule and finds that this NPRM,
like many NHTSA rules, prescribes only
a minimum safety standard.
Accordingly, NHTSA does not intend
that this proposed rule preempt state
tort law that would effectively impose a
higher standard on motor vehicle
manufacturers than that established by
this proposed rule. Establishment of a
higher standard by means of State tort
law would not conflict with the
minimum standard finalized in this
document. Without any conflict, there
could not be any implied preemption of
a State common law tort cause of action.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the procedures established by
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), Federal
agencies must obtain approval from the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for each collection of
information they conduct, sponsor, or
require through regulations, and a
person is not required to respond to a
collection of information by a Federal
agency unless the collection displays a
valid OMB control number. This
proposed rulemaking proposes changes
to the existing information collection
requirements under 49 CFR part 595.5,
‘‘Retrofit On-Off Switches for Air Bags.’’
In compliance with the requirements
of the PRA, NHTSA intends to request
approval for a reinstatement with
modification of a previously approved
information collection request.
Specifically, NHTSA is requesting
reinstatement of the information
collection request (ICR) with OMB
Control No. 2127–0588. This ICR
corresponds to appendix B to part 595,
which is a form that any owner or lessee
of a motor vehicle seeking the
installation of an air bag on-off switch
must complete and submit to NHTSA
before NHTSA will grant or deny
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approval for an on-off switch to be
installed. Additionally, NHTSA plans to
request that the previously approved
ICR be modified in accordance with the
proposals discussed in this NPRM. As
discussed in the sections above, this
NPRM proposes to amend several of the
appendices in part 595, and proposes
adding an additional appendix to part
595, which means the burden on the
public may be different from the
originally approved ICR.
As part of seeking approval to
reinstate the ICR with OMB, NHTSA
will separately publish a notice giving
the public the opportunity to comment
on the reinstatement and modification
of the ICR. Those notices will provide
significant detail on the ICR
reinstatement, and on how the ICR will
be modified based on the proposals
discussed in this proposed rule.
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA)
NHTSA has analyzed this NPRM for
the purposes of the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The
agency has determined that
implementation of this action will not
have any significant impact on the
quality of the human environment.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (UMRA) requires Federal
agencies to prepare a written assessment
of the costs, benefits and other effects of
proposed or final rules that include a
Federal mandate likely to result in the
expenditure by State, local or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of more than $100
million annually (adjusted annually for
inflation, with base year of 1995).
UMRA also requires an agency issuing
an NPRM or final rule subject to the Act
to select the ‘‘least costly, most costeffective or least burdensome alternative
that achieves the objectives of the rule.’’
This NPRM would not result in a
Federal mandate that will likely result
in the expenditure by State, local or
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or
by the private sector, of more than $100
million annually (adjusted annually for
inflation, with base year of 1995).
Executive Order 12778 (Civil Justice
Reform)
When promulgating a regulation,
agencies are required under E.O. 12988
to make every reasonable effort to
ensure that the regulation, as
appropriate: (1) specifies in clear
language the preemptive effect; (2)
specifies in clear language the effect on
existing Federal law or regulation,
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including all provisions repealed,
circumscribed, displaced, impaired, or
modified; (3) provides a clear legal
standard for affected conduct rather
than a general standard, while
promoting simplification and burden
reduction; (4) specifies in clear language
the retroactive effect; (5) specifies
whether administrative proceedings are
to be required before parties may file
suit in court; (6) explicitly or implicitly
defines key terms; and (7) addresses
other important issues affecting clarity
and general draftsmanship of
regulations.
Pursuant to this Order, NHTSA notes
as follows. The preemptive effect of this
NPRM is discussed above. NHTSA notes
further that there is no requirement that
an individual submit a petition for
reconsideration or pursue other
administrative proceedings before they
may file suit in court.
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
Under the National Technology
Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995
(NTTAA) (Pub. L. 104–113), all Federal
agencies and departments shall use
technical standards that are developed
or adopted by voluntary consensus
standards bodies, using such technical
standards as a means to carry out policy
objectives or activities determined by
the agencies and departments.
Voluntary consensus standards are
technical standards (e.g., materials
specifications, test methods, sampling
procedures, and business practices) that
are developed or adopted by voluntary
consensus standards bodies, such as the
International Organization for
Standardization and the Society of
Automotive Engineers. The NTTAA
directs us to provide Congress, through
OMB, explanations when we decide not
to use available and applicable
voluntary consensus standards. There
are no voluntary consensus standards
developed by voluntary consensus
standards bodies pertaining to this
proposed rule.
Plain Language Requirement
E.O. 12866 requires each agency to
write all rules in plain language.
Application of the principles of plain
language includes consideration of the
following questions:
• Have we organized the material to
suit the public’s needs?
• Are the requirements in the rule
clearly stated?
• Does the rule contain technical
language or jargon that isn’t clear?
• Would a different format (grouping
and order of sections, use of headings,
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paragraphing) make the rule easier to
understand?
• Would more (but shorter) sections
be better?
• Could we improve clarity by adding
tables, lists, or diagrams?
• What else could we do to make the
rule easier to understand?
NHTSA has considered these
questions and attempted to use plain
language in promulgating this proposed
rule. If readers have suggestions on how
we can improve our use of plain
language, please write us.
Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
The Department of Transportation
assigns a regulation identifier number
(RIN) to each regulatory action listed in
the Unified Agenda of Federal
Regulations. The Regulatory Information
Service Center publishes the Unified
Agenda in April and October of each
year. The RIN contained in the heading
at the beginning of this notice may be
used to find this action in the Unified
Agenda.
Privacy Act
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(c),
DOT solicits comments from the public
to better inform its decision-making
process. DOT posts these comments,
without edit, including any personal
information the commenter provides, to
www.regulations.gov, as described in
the system of records notice (DOT/ALL–
14 FDMS), which can be reviewed at
www.transportation.gov/privacy.
Anyone is able to search the electronic
form of all comments received into any
of our dockets by the name of the
individual submitting the comment (or
signing the comment, if submitted on
behalf of an association, business, labor
union, etc.). You may review DOT’s
complete Privacy Act Statement in the
Federal Register published on April 11,
2000 (Volume 65, Number 70; Pages
19477–78).
VII. Public Participation
How do I prepare and submit
comments?
• To ensure that your comments are
correctly filed in the Docket, please
include the Docket Number in your
comments.
• Your comments must not be more
than 15 pages long. NHTSA established
this limit to encourage you to write your
primary comments in a concise fashion.
However, you may attach necessary
additional documents to your
comments, and there is no limit on the
length of the attachments.
• If you are submitting comments
electronically as a PDF (Adobe) file,
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NHTSA asks that the documents be
submitted using the Optical Character
Recognition process, thus allowing
NHTSA to search and copy certain
portions of your submissions.
• Please note that pursuant to the
Data Quality Act, for substantive data to
be relied on and used by NHTSA, it
must meet the information quality
standards set forth in the OMB and DOT
Data Quality Act guidelines.
Accordingly, NHTSA encourages you to
consult the guidelines in preparing your
comments. DOT’s guidelines may be
accessed at https://
www.transportation.gov/regulations/
dot-information-dissemination-qualityguidelines.
Tips for Preparing Your Comments
When submitting comments, please
remember to:
• Identify the rulemaking by docket
number and other identifying
information (subject heading, Federal
Register date and page number).
• Explain why you agree or disagree,
suggest alternatives, and substitute
language for your requested changes.
• Describe any assumptions you make
and provide any technical information
and/or data that you used.
• If you estimate potential costs or
burdens, explain how you arrived at
your estimate in sufficient detail to
allow for it to be reproduced.
• Provide specific examples to
illustrate your concerns, and suggest
alternatives.
• Explain your views as clearly as
possible, avoiding the use of profanity
or personal threats.
• To ensure that your comments are
considered by the agency, make sure to
submit them by the comment period
deadline identified in the DATES section
above.
• For additional guidance on
submitting effective comments, see
https://www.regulations.gov/docs/Tips_
For_Submitting_Effective_
Comments.pdf.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
How can I be sure that my comments
were received?
If you wish Docket Management to
notify you upon its receipt of your
comments, enclose a self-addressed,
stamped postcard in the envelope
containing your comments. Upon
receiving your comments, Docket
Management will return the postcard by
mail.
How do I submit confidential business
information?
If you wish to submit any information
under a claim of confidentiality, you
should submit your complete
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submission, including the information
you claim to be confidential business
information (CBI), to the NHTSA Chief
Counsel. When you send a comment
containing CBI, you should include a
cover letter setting forth the information
specified in our CBI regulation (49 CFR
part 572). In addition, you should
submit a copy from which you have
deleted the claimed CBI to the Docket
by one of the methods set forth above.
To facilitate social distancing due to
COVID–19, NHTSA is treating
electronic submission as an acceptable
method for submitting CBI to the
Agency under 49 CFR part 512. Any CBI
submissions sent via email should be
sent to an attorney in the Office of Chief
Counsel at the address given above
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT.
Will the agency consider late
comments?
We will consider all comments
received before the close of business on
the comment closing date indicated
above under DATES. To the extent
possible, we will also consider
comments that the docket receives after
that date. If the docket receives a
comment too late for us to consider in
developing a final rule (assuming that
one is issued), we will consider that
comment as an informal suggestion for
future rulemaking action.
How can I read the comments submitted
by other people?
You may read the comments received
by the docket at the address given above
under ADDRESSES. The hours of the
docket are indicated above in the same
location. You may also see the
comments on the internet. To read the
comments on the internet, go to https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for accessing the dockets.
Please note that even after the
comment closing date, we will continue
to file relevant information in the docket
as it becomes available. Further, some
people may submit late comments.
Accordingly, we recommend that you
periodically check the docket for new
material. You can arrange with the
docket to be notified when others file
comments in the docket. See
www.regulations.gov for more
information.
If you have any questions about CBI
or the procedures for claiming CBI,
please consult the person(s) identified
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 595
Imports, Motor vehicle safety, Motor
vehicles.
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In consideration of the foregoing,
NHTSA is proposing to amend 49 CFR
part 595 as follows:
PART 595—MAKE INOPERATIVE
EXEMPTIONS
1. The authority citation for part 595
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115,
30117, 30122 and 30166; delegation of
authority at 49 CFR 1.95.
2. Amend § 595.4 by adding in
alphabetical order definitions for
‘‘Deactivation’’, ‘‘Emergency vehicle’’,
and ‘‘On-off switch’’ to read as follows:
■
§ 595.4
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Deactivation means that a dealer or
motor vehicle repair business disables
an air bag system in a motor vehicle.
*
*
*
*
*
Emergency vehicle means law
enforcement vehicles, as that term is
defined in S7 of § 571.208 of this
chapter, firefighting vehicles, and
ambulances, as that term is defined in
S3 of § 571.201 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
On-off switch means a switch that
allows an occupant to turn an air bag in
the vehicle on or off.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Revise the heading to Subpart B to
read as follows:
Subpart B—Retrofit On-Off Switches
for Air Bags and Air Bag Deactivations
■
4. Revise § 595.5 to read as follows:
§ 595.5
Requirements.
(a) Overview of general conditions for
a vehicle owner or lessee to obtain
approval to install a retrofit air bag onoff switch. For installing a retrofit air
bag on-off switch on vehicles other than
an emergency vehicle, prior to the
installation of the retrofit air bag on-off
switch either the owner or lessee of the
motor vehicle reads the information
brochure in appendix A to this part and
submits the completed form in
appendix B to this part to the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA) in accordance with the
instructions on the form. For emergency
vehicles, the authorized representative
of the owner or lessee of the emergency
vehicle submits the completed form in
appendix D to this part to NHTSA in
accordance with the instructions on the
form. NHTSA will consider whether the
request is consistent with motor vehicle
safety and the purpose and policies of
the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle
Safety Act. If NHTSA agrees to the
request, NHTSA sends a letter to the
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requestor authorizing the installation of
an on-off switch in that vehicle for that
air bag.
(b) Requirements for dealer or motor
vehicle repair businesses when
installing retrofit on-off switches for air
bags. A dealer or motor vehicle repair
business may modify a motor vehicle by
installing an on-off switch subject to the
conditions in paragraphs (b)(1) through
(5) of this section.
(1) The dealer or motor vehicle repair
business receives from the owner or
lessee of the motor vehicle a letter from
the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration that authorizes the
installation of an on-off switch in that
vehicle for that air bag.
(2) The dealer or motor vehicle repair
business installs the on-off switch in
accordance with the instructions of the
manufacturer of the switch.
(3) The on-off switch meets all of the
conditions specified in paragraphs
(b)(3)(i) and (ii) of this section.
(i) The on-off switch is operable solely
by a key or a key-like object. The on-off
switch shall be separate from the
ignition switch for the vehicle, so that
the driver must take some action other
than inserting the ignition key or
turning the ignition key in the ignition
switch to turn off the air bag. Once
turned off, the air bag shall remain off
until it is turned back on by means of
the device. If a single on-off switch is
installed for more than one air bag in
the vehicle, the on-off switch shall
allow each air bag to be turned off
without turning off the other air bag(s).
The readiness indicator required by
S4.5.2 of § 571.208 of this chapter shall
continue to monitor the readiness of the
air bags even when one or more air bags
have been turned off. The readiness
indicator light shall not be illuminated
solely because an air bag has been
deactivated by means of an on-off
switch.
(ii) A telltale light in the interior of
the vehicle shall be illuminated
whenever an air bag is turned off by
means of the on-off switch. The telltale
for a driver air bag shall be clearly
visible to an occupant of the driver’s
seating position. The telltale for a front
passenger air bag shall be clearly visible
to occupants of all front seating
positions. The telltale for an air bag:
(A) Shall be yellow;
(B) Shall have the identifying words
‘‘DRIVER AIR BAG OFF’’,
‘‘PASSENGER AIR BAG OFF’’, or
‘‘PASS AIR BAG OFF’’, as appropriate,
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on the telltale or within 25 millimeters
of the telltale;
(C) Shall remain illuminated for the
entire time that the air bag is ‘‘off’’;
(D) Shall not be illuminated at any
time when the air bag is ‘‘on’’; and,
(E) Shall not be combined with the
readiness indicator required by S4.5.2 of
§ 571.208 of this chapter.
(4) The dealer or motor vehicle repair
business provides the owner or lessee
with an insert for the vehicle owner’s
manual that—
(i) Describes the operation of the onoff switch;
(ii) Lists the risk groups on the request
form set forth in appendix B to this part;
(iii) States that an on-off switch
should only be used to turn off an air
bag for a member of one of those risk
groups; and
(iv) States the safety consequences of
using the on-off switch to turn off an air
bag for persons who are not members of
any of those risk groups. The
description of those consequences
includes information, specific to the
make, model, and model year of the
affected vehicle, about any seat belt
energy managing features, e.g., load
limiters, that will affect seat belt
performance when the air bag is turned
off.
(5) In the form included in the agency
authorization letter specified in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section,
Appendix C of this part, the dealer or
motor vehicle repair business fills in
information describing itself and the onoff switch installation(s) it makes in the
motor vehicle. The dealer or motor
vehicle repair business then sends the
form to the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration within 7 working
days after the completion of the
described installations.
(c) Overview of general conditions for
a vehicle owner or lessee to obtain
approval to deactivate an air bag. (1)
For air bag deactivations, prior to the
deactivation of the air bag the owner or
lessee of the vehicle submits a written
request to NHTSA with the following
information:
(i) The name and address of the
vehicle owner or lessee;
(ii) A request that an air bag be
deactivated and whether the request
applies to the driver air bag, front
passenger air bag, or both;
(iii) A certification that the owner or
lessee has read the information brochure
in appendix A to this part;
(iv) A detailed justification why
deactivation is necessary and why the
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76049
installation of an on-off switch is not a
viable option; and
(v) Any documentation that supports
the stated justification; and a
certification that if the deactivation is
no longer justified or if they sell the
vehicle, the owner or lessee would have
the air bag reactivated or would inform
the buyer that the air bag has been
deactivated prior to the sale.
(2) The owner or lessee mails the
request to the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, Attention: Air
Bag Deactivation Requests, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC
20590 or faxes the request to 202–493–
2833. NHTSA will consider whether the
request is consistent with motor vehicle
safety and the purpose and policy of the
National Traffic and Motor Vehicle
Safety Act. If NHTSA agrees to the
request, NHTSA sends a letter to the
requestor authorizing the deactivation of
the specified air bag in the vehicle, with
labels to be affixed by the dealer or
motor vehicle repair business to both
sides of the sun visor at each seating
position with a deactivated air bag,
alerting vehicle users about the
deactivated air bag(s).
(d) Requirements for dealers or motor
vehicle repair businesses when
performing air bag deactivations. A
dealer or motor vehicle repair business
may modify a motor vehicle by
deactivating an air bag subject to the
conditions in paragraphs (d)(1) through
(3) of this section.
(1) Prior to the deactivation of the air
bag, the dealer or motor vehicle repair
business receives from the owner or
lessee of the motor vehicle a letter from
NHTSA that authorizes the deactivation
of the specified air bag in the vehicle
and labels to be affixed by the dealer or
motor vehicle repair business to both
sides of the sun visor at each seating
position with a deactivated air bag,
alerting vehicle users about the
deactivated air bag(s).
(2) The dealer or motor vehicle repair
business affixes the labels to both sides
of the sun visor at each seating position
with a deactivated air bag.
(3) If a deactivated air bag gets
reactivated the dealer or motor vehicle
repair business shall remove the labels
indicating the air bag was deactivated.
■ 5. Revise Appendices A through C to
read as follows:
BILLING CODE 4910–59–P
Appendix A to Part 595—Advanced
Frontal Air Bags and Air Bag On-Off
Switch Information Brochure
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ADVANCED FRONTAL AIR BAGS AND AIR BAG
ON-OFF SWITCH INFORMATION
U.S~ Department of Transportation,
NationalHighway Traffic Safety Administration
INTRODUCTION
Cor:isumerswho are inJ:ertain risk groups have the option to have a frontai afr hagori'Offswitch
installed ihtheifvehide bv a vehicle dealeror tepait busii'iess, This brochurepto.vides thefatts
you rieedto knowaboutairbagsaridretro:fitalr bagon-offswitchessoyoncanmakean
ihformeddetisiohJ1boutwhethetltistalling'aswitch ilthetorrectchoice for you.
NHTSAhas studledfhe effectiveness of advanced frontal. air· bags and determined thatthey can
significantly r_educe the risk Cifcrash-relatedinjuryand death fur average-'Sizeand larger adults,
and have,also eliminated these risks to child.passengers and small adults posed by earlier
generation airbags;
When an advanced frontal air bag dep.1oys in a crash, the most common airbag:" related itijfrries
indude minorcuts, bruises, or abrasfo_ns. There:have been no confirmed atr0 bag-related
fatalities invehide!> equipped with. advanced airbags, which beg:airthelt iritrod1Jctibn to the
market with 2004 modef year veh ides. Although advanced air bags gfve better protection to a
widerrahge ofoctupaht$, NHTSA still tetomrnends thatfrontseatotcllpahtsmaihtaina l0°ihth
mirHmun,distance between the frontal arr bagceiver-or dasl)board and theirbreastbone;and
fasten their seat belKAil' hags are supplementatrestraints ahdare designed to work hestin
combination withseatbelts.
Most pepple can mlhimitethe risk of~etiQos air baginJury by makings,mpfo,chariges Jn
behavior. Front seatadultpassengers can sitasafe distance from the. air bag; Shorter drivers can
adjusttheirseating position to achieve a safe distance from the air bag; Infants. and children
undernyeats old should sitinth-e. back seat whenever pos!>ible. And everyone can be property
restrained.
Those who mayhotbeableto tonowthese recornmehdationsmayface.anintreasedtiskof
serious air bag injury. The limited categories of at-risk people who may betJefit;from havingthe
option toti..lrn of'ftheitair bags indude:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
DriVers.Who.cannotmaintain the recommended distance.from.the air hag cover;
Ddverswith a medical condition thatincreases the risk oh serious,air bag injury;:
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•
•
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
•
•
•
76051
Individuals who musHransport a child i11 a rear-facing car seat in the fronts eat with an
active airbag}
Jndividuals whQ rnust:transport a forward 0 fach:rg child in thefro11fseaHn aveh iGl'e:
Without advanced airbags; and
lndividualswho IT1ust transport a p·assef:(ge! whq ti'as a medlcai condition :that a
physician a$tees increases the risk ofa serious air bag injutyJnthefrontseat.
HOWAIR BAGS WORK
When there is a moderate to. severe-trash, a signal is sehlfrotri the air bag system's electro hie
control unitto the inflator within the airbag module.. An igniter iri theJnflator starts a themkal
reactionthatproduces a harmless_gas,which inflates theai[ bag within theblink:ofan eye -or
less than 1/201:h of a second, Air bags have vents, so theydeflateimmediatelyafter cushioning
you. They cannot smother you and they don't restrict your movement.
Are all air bapthe$ame?
No .. Air bags differ In design and performance, Differem:es.exlst 1ri ihecrash speeds that trigger
aif bagdeployment,the.speed andfotteot deployment; the.size and .Shape ofafr bags; and the
manner in whlchthey unfold and fnflate,Thatiswhyym.rshould contact your veh1de
manufacturer ityouwantspetificintorrnatibtl about the arr bags ihyour-carortruck.
ADVANCED FRONTALAIR BAGS
What areadvanced frontal airbags?
In a2014
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Po all newvehiclescomewith advanced frc,ntal air hap?
76052
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
Yes. All passenger cars andHght trucks {including pickup trucks, SUVs and vans) with a gross
vehicle weight rating (GVWR)6f8,SOO pounds or less,.ahdari unloaded vehicle weight ofs,soo
pounds or less, produced after September 1, 2006, have advanced frontal air bags. The GVWR is
the weight ofthe empty\,ehicl e plus the maximum weightofcargo and passengers that can be
safely loaded in the vehide, as specified by the rnanufacturer.. Sotne vehicles produced between
September 1,2003, and September 1, 2006, will also have advanced frontal air bags. You Will
k110wif your vehicle has advanced frontal air bags if the air bag warning label. on the sun visor
begins withthe phrase"EVENWITHADVANCEDAIR BAGS."
How does sensor technology classify the type of occupant?
Most occupantdassificationsystems in use today classify the occupant based uponweight,
Which is typit;illy determined Using pressure sensors in the seat cushion. Other tethnologieS:
utilize pattern recognition ofd,e pressure pmfile onthe seat bottom. Still rnore sophisticated
systemstould potentially be Utilized, such as op.tical, ihfrc1red, ultrasonice>r electric field sensors
toclassifythe occupant type. You can check your owner's manual or contact your vehicle's
manufacturer to determine what type ofoccupant classification technology you may have in
your vehicle.
Have advanced air bag systems been tested on child-size dummies?
Yes. Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) l\lo. 208, which specifies theteq1Jirements
for advanced air bag systems, requires that all light vehfdes (passenger cars and light duty
tTl!cks} must meet specific safety performance criteria for dummies representing 12~month-Old
infants, 3°year-old toddlers; 6~year0 old children~ andsmall0 stature females. For those
manufacturers electing to provide a lower-powered air bagdep loyment to a chi Id or small
female occupant in certain tow-speed crashes, the advanced frontal air bag must meet spedfic
safety injury criteria as set forth in FMVSS No, 208. Forthose manufacturers electing to
suppress (nOt deploy) a passenger air bag for an infant or child occupant in all crashes, their
advanced frontal air bag systems must detect child-size dummies, representing infants in tar
seats and small children in and out of car seats, and be suppressed when tested with those
dummies.
How do I kn()W if my child in a rear-facing car.seat is in front of an active air bag?
(Note~ NHTSA recommends against placing a child in a rear-facing car seat in
front of an active passenger air bag.)
Parents and caregivers should verify the air bag.status forevery.childahd rear-facing car seat
combination. lfyour vehicle is equipped with advanced frontal air bags (the vehicle has a
warning label Oh the sun visor with the phrase "EVEN WITH ADVANCED AIR BAGS") and if the
vehicle uses an automatic air bag sup.pression system; thenit wHI suppress. the air bag for
infants and/or children and provide alightthatlndicatesthe.air bag is off; For a vehicle with a
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suppression system, if your child in a rear-facing car seat does not activatethe light indicating
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
76053
the air bag is off, then the air bag is active. If the vehicle is equipped with advanced frontal air
bags, but does notliave a I ight indicatingthe.air bag suppression status, then the. air bag is.
active, but it is d.eslgned to.deploy in a low risk manner in low-to-moderate speed crashes for
children. lfyourvehicle is not equippedwitli advanced frontal air bags (the vehicle does .Mt
have a warning label on the sun visor with tl:)ephrase "EVEN WITH ADVANCED AIR BAGS"); and
achHd in a rear•facing tar seat is placed in the front passenger seat, the air bag will be active:
and the child wilt be at r'isk from the fuH force oftheair bag deployment. Parents or caregivers
rnay benefiffrom haViriga retrofit switch installed toturn off.the air hag ifthe child in a reat•
facing car seat must be transported in the frontpassenger seat infront ofan active air bag,
I Just bought a vehitl~ with advanced frontal air bags. Does this mean I can start
putting my kids in the front seat again?
No. Please keep:in mind that placing a child in the front seat, no matter what the circumstances,
ce1mes with increased risk. NHTSA recommends that all children underB years old ride in the
rear seatinfherightcar.s:eat. Select a car seat based on your child's age and size, and choose a
seat that fits in your vehicle and use it every time.
Do I still need to maintain 10 inches between the air bag cover and my
breastbone?
Yes; To rninil'Tlize the potential of any air-bag-related injury; NHTSAstill recommends maintaining
a 10-inch minimum distance between theJrontal airbag cover and the driver's breastbone. This
can be done by keeping a proper sea.ting positi:on and by moving the seat as. far back as
possibte.
AIR BAGON-OFFSWITCHES
What does an air bag on-'off switch do?
When an on-off switch is turned to the off posirldn, it deactivates the air bag system and the air
bag wi Ii not d·eptoy in a crash ofany severity, When an on'-01:Y.switch•is turned oh,the system
will function normally, te., it may depfoy rn a crash dependingonthe.crash severity; For vehicles
with advanced frontal air bags, a switch turned on WI II alloWthe system to activate its advanced
functions, which could mean shutting off the air bag for smaller passengers (seeAdva11ced
Frontal Air Bag section belo:w). The on-off sWitch can be installed for the driver, passenger, .cir
both. To limilmisuse, a key must be used to operate the on-off switch. Whentheair)ag is
turhet:Loff, a irght cbmes on. lhere is a message on or nearthe fightsayrhg ''DRIVERAIR BAG
OFF," ;'PASSENC:lE R AIR BAG OFF/'or "P.4$S AIR BAG OFF." The air bag will remain off until the key
is used to turn it back oh. For vehideswith advanced frontal air bags, there maybe another air
bag status light This status light will operate independently pf the.air bag switch status; based
on inputfrom the occupant detectiontechnologyin thatseat briversshouid.rely oh theafr bag
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switch status to determine if the air bag has heen switched off.
76054
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
What steps can you take to reduce air bag risk without buying an on-off switch?
•
Children in rearcfacingcarseats should never ride in front ofanactive passenger air bag.
•
Transport children under 13years old lnthe back seat and use the correct restrainHor
theirweight and height.
Always buckle your seat belt,
Keep 10 inches between the center ofthe frontal air bag cover ordashboard, and your
breastbone.
•
•
Thernajority of peopfe don•t need an on-off switch. Almost everyone is safer with air bags than
with6utthem. In fact, in advanced air bag vehicles! all people (including children 1 to 12 years
old) who are. properly restrc1ined and who can sit far enough back from their advanced frontal
air bag are safer, Ideally; you should sit with atleast.10rnchesbetween the center of your
breastboneandthe covefofyourairbagordashboard, Thefarther back you can move,the
l6wery6ur risk ofbeihg injured by the. deploying air bag.
REDUClNG THE RISK
What is the safest way to rideln front of a frontal air bag?
First; move the seat as far back as possible and buckle up -every trip; everytlme. The lap belt
needstofitoveryourhips -not your abdomen,and theshoulderbeltshould lie on your chest
and over your shoulder, not across the neck or face, Remove any slack from the belt. In a crash,
seat belts stretch and slow down your movement toward the steering Wheel or dashboard.
Moving back and properly using seat belts give the frontal air bag a chance to inflate in a crash
before you make contact With the air bag.
How do I best protect children in my vehicle?
NHTSArecommendsthatall children under 13 years old ride in the.rear seat in the appropriate
child restraint system. Children are. saferln the rear seat, However, when children must sit in the
front, because the vehicle. has no rear seat; there are too many children for all to ride in back, or
a child has a medical conditionthatrequires monitoring, they should use the seatbelt and/or
car seat appropriate for their age, weight and height (see the recommendations at the end. of
this brochure) and avoid leaning forward. The vehideseatshould be moved as far back frorn the
air bag as practical. Make sure the chi~d's shoulder b.eltis positibned pfoperly or the car seat
ha mess is properly adjusted, If adult seat belts donotfit properly, use a booster seat NHTSA
also recommends consultingyourvehicle's owner's manual for their recommendations on
transporting children in the front passenger seat. Also,children should never ride on the laps of
others orsharea seat belt withanother person;
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What should teenagers and adults do to be.safest on the passenger side?
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
76055
Always wear seat belts. This reduces the distance that they can move forward during a crash.
Move the seat back as far as practical. The distance between a passenger's chest and the
dashboard where the air bag is stored is usually more than 10 inches, even with the passenger
seat all the way forward.
Who should consider installing an on-off switch?
•
People who must transport children riding in rear-facing car seats in the front passenger
seat of a vehicle with an active frontal air bag due to a medical condition or the lack of
an available rear seat
•
People who must transport-forward-facing children (under 13 years old) in the front
passenger seat due to a medical condition or the lack of an available rear seat in a
vehicle without advanced frontal air bags
•
•
Drivers who cannot change their customary driving position and keep lOinches.between
the air bag cover and the center of their breastbone
People (including children} who must.ride in the driver or front passenger seat and
whose doctors say that, due to their medical condition, the air bag poses a special risk
that outweighs the risk of hitting their head, neck on:hest in a crash if the frontal air bag
is turned off
If you cannot certify that you or any user of your vehicle is in one ofthese groups, you are not
eligible for an on-off switch. If you are not in one of these groups, turning off your air bag will
increase the risk of striking the steering wheel or dashboard in a moderate to severe crash.
Keep in mind that for some vehicles with advanced air bags, the air bag will automatically turn
off for some children and small stature adults, and a light indicating that the air bag is
suppressed will illuminate. Checktosee if this is the case since this could eliminate your need
for a manual on-off switch.
THE ON-OFF SWITCH DECISION
Vehicle owners and lessees can obtain an on-off switch for one or both frontal air bags only if
they can certify thatthey or a user of their vehicle are in one of the risk groups listed below.
•
Children in rear-facing·car seats who must be transported in the front seat in front of
an active air bag. A rear-facing car seat should never be placed in the path of an active
front passenger air bag; therefore, in a vehicle. Without advanced air bags, parents and
caregivers of children in rear-facing car seats that must be transported in the front
passenger seat can opt to.have a retrofit on-off switch installed. For a front passenger
advanced air bag that provides a telltale light indicating the air bag suppression status, if
your child in a rear-fating car seat does not activate the light indicating the air bag is off,
then the air bag is active. lfthe advanced front passenger air bag does not provide a
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light indicating the air bag suppression status, then the air bag is active, bot it is
76056
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
d~signed to deploy in a low-risk manner,. These parents and caregivers that must
transportchildreii iii rear faeiiigtar seats in front ofattiVe advanced alt bagscan also
optto have a retrofit.on-off switch instaU~dtoturrrnff the frorit passenger air bag.
0
•
•
Drivers who c:annonit 10 inches away from the air bag. I~ despiteyour besteffotts,
you cannot siUO.inches from the air bag, you mc1ywisl:i to consult your dealer orvehicl e
manufatturedoradvite ormodifitations to help you move back or consider requesthig
an on-off switch;
Drivers ofpassengerswith certain medic:afconditic,ns. These are people (indudiiigthitd
fro11t passengers)who have been advfaed bya physician that, due to.a rne(!ical
condition, they may benefit from turning off their airbag because an air bag depldyment
poses greater injury risk to thern than that of hittingt!,eir !,ead, neck orchest in a crash
lfthe fronti:ifair bag ii.turned off. Withoutan airbag,. even a belted octtipanttoold hit
their head, neck or chest in a crash.
o
A national conference ofphysiciiiiis Considered all medical conditions:commonly
cited as possible Jusfificationsfor turning off air bags. The physicians did NOT
recommend turning off air bags fot people With pacemi!kers, supplemental
oxygen1 eyeglassesimedlan stemotomy,anglna,chronicobstructive pulmonary
disease, emphysema, asthma,.breast teconstruct'ion-, mastectomy; scolit!sis (if the
person-can be positioned properly), previous back or neck surgery; previous facial
reconstrucfive surgery or racial injlny, hyperacusis, tinnitus, advanced age,
osteogenesis imperfecta,osteoporosisand arthritis (if the person cansita-safe
distance from the frontal air bag), previousophthalmolc,gic surgery; Down
o
•·
syndrome and atlanfoaxialinstability (ifthe person can reliably sit properly
aligned),orpregnancy.
The physicians recommended turning off an air bag ifa safe sitti ngdisfance or
position cannot be rnaintai ned. by:a driver because of scoliosis or ac[:iondtoplasia,
or-by a passenger because of scoliosis or D'own syndrome and atlantoaxial
instability. The physiciansatso noted that a passengerfrontal air bag might have.
to be turned off ifan infant.or-child has a medical condition and must rideln
front so that he or she can be monitored. To obtain a copy of the
recommendations,calLthe NHTSAVehicle Safety Hotline(888·327~4236)or visit
the NHTSAwebsite;·www;nhtsa,govteguipmenttair-ba:gsitthe;to:pfo'<>ncoff~
switch.
Fol'ward-fadngchiidrehwho must be: transported in the front passenger seat in:a
vehicle Without advanced air bags. Chlldrenunder13years-old should be transported in
the backseatwhenever possible.Chtldr.enunder 13yearsoldwho must be transported
in the front passenger seat should be properly restrained With the seat moved as.far
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back as possible, and they should notlean forward. The vastmajodty of all fatally
injured children in a vehicle withoutadvanced air bags were.completely unrestrained. If
children sit or lean.forward, tbey may slip out oftheirshoulderbelts, which puts them at
risk; ffavehicl e owner or Iessee musHransport a ch Hd in the front seatof a veh i clec
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
76057
Sinc!'!the air bagwiUnotautomaticallytum itselfbackonafter you tum it off with an oo-off
switch, you mustfemembettoturh itonwheh someone who iShotatrisk iSsittihg in that seat.
Every onsoffswitch has a light to rernind you whenttie c1ir bag:is Wmlld cjff,
If Iturn off my airbag:, wrn myseat belts provide enough protection?
Air bags increase the protection provided by seat belts alone. lfthe air bag isturnedoff, you
lose·this extra protection,
lo some hewe.r vehicles;,tutnihg offyour air bag may have additional cohsequences. These
vehicles have.seatbeltsthatwere specially designed to work together with airbags. lhhe crash
forces becon:re too great, ttreseseat belts have pretensfoners and loadli miters that are
designedto make: seat belts more effective, Pretensioners retractthe seat belt to. remove excess
slack almosfinstantly upons·ensingthevehide-has crashed; load limitersallowthe beltfo
''.giife!' or yield when forces on the belt rise above a.safe. levet. Most, if notaU! new cars and light
truckssold in the UhitedStateshave been equipped withpretel'.fsionersand load limitersinthe
driver's.and righMront passehger's seats.The arr bagpreventsyou frorn movingtoo fatforward
aftertheseat belts yield. Withouttheair bag to cushion thisforward movement, th·e chance of
the occupant hitting the vehicle interfor is.increased..
I
What Restraint Is Right for Your Child?
II
~•._•)'!"ir.·'diild.•.~•·~~~~···~··~•t
liami,os.mmtt.e... :u~diti-liip•~""~
lliiilt~J;j,Jimr¥.•~~Ono~)'!!\ii'·
iiliilll~~-..-~~
-
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tt'itinie•lifln'id bi:••l>iioiiiri--.'!iiiitsllll·to;illiibiu;
76058
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Appendix B to Part 595—Request Form
for Frontal Air Bag On-Off Switch
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
0
0MB No. 2127-0588
Appendix B to Part 595
U.S. Departmant 01 Trcnportallal
NallOIIIII Hllllway Traffic: lalely
Adffllnlllraflon
76059
Request for Frontal
Air Bag On-Off Switch
Vehicle Owner or Lessee Instructions: Read the National Highway 11-:,ffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) information brochure,
Ad,1ancedFtontalAir Bagi· &Air Bag011-0jfSwi1ch liiformatibn. If you want authorization for your driver air bag, passe11ger air bag, or both, :fill out
Parts A, B, E, and F completely, fill out Parts C and Das appropriate, and send th.is form to:
For faster response, fox to 202-493-2833
or email derri.ck.lewis@dot.gov.
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
Attention: Derrick Lewis (NIO-120)
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE
Washington, DC 20590-1000
Please print:
Incomplete forms will 'be returned to the owner or lessee.
If you -need a copy of the brochure or have any quest.ions about how to fill out this torm, ·call- the
NHTSA Hotline at 888-327-4236.
Part A, Name and
Contact Information
Email
Phone
First
Middle
Last
Street Address (Residence)
City
State
ZIP Code
Part B. I own or lease the following vehicle (owners of multiple vehicles should consult the additional
instructions at the end of this form):
Vehicle Identification Number (located on driver's side of dashboard
Model and Trim
Make
.near windshield and on certification label on driver', door frame)
Model Year
Date of Mfr.
Part C. Switch for Driver Air Bag
I request authorization for the installation of an on-off switch for the driver air bag in my vehicle. I certify that I or another driver
of my vehicle meets the criteria for the risk group checked below. (At least one box must be checked.)
Medical condition. The driver has a medical condition which, according to his or her physician:
• Causes the driver air bag to pose a special risk for the driver; and
• Makes the potential harm from the driver air bag in a crash greater than the potential harm from turning off that air bag and allowing the driver, even if bdted, to hit the steering wheel, dashboard, or
windshield in a crash.
Distance from driver air bag. Despite taking all reasonable steps to move back from the driver air
bag, the driver is not able to maintain a i 0-inch distance from the center of his or her breastbone to the
center of the driver air bag cover,
continued_,.
HS Form603
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76060
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
Part D. Switch for Passenger Air Bag
I request authorization for the installation of an on-off switch for the passenger air bag in my vehicle. I certify that I or
another passenger in my vehicle meets the criteria for the risk group checked below. (At least one box must be checked.)
Child in rear-facing car seat. I transport a child in a rear-facing car seat who must ride in the
front seat in from of an active air bag (refer to the information brochure) because:
0
My vehicle has no rear seat;
My vehicle has a rear seat too small to accommodate a rear-facing car seat; or
The child has a medical condition which, according to the infant\ physician, makes it necessary for
the child to ride in the front seat so that the driver can constantly monitor the child's condition.
Forward-facing child. A forward-facing child under 13 years old must ride in the front sear in a
pre-advanced air bag vehicle (refer to the information brochure) because:
My vehicle has no rear seat;
Although children ages 1 to 12 ride in the rear seat(s) whenever possible, children ages
1 to 12 sometimes must ride in the front because no space is available in the rear
seat(s) of my vehicle; or
111e child has a medical condition which, according to tht child's physician, makes
it
for the child to ride in the front seat so that the driver can cot1stanrly
child's condition.
Medical condition. A passenger (including children ages 1 to 12) has a medical condition which,
according to his or her physician:
Causes the passenger air bag to pose a special risk for the passenger; and
Makes the potential harm from rhe passenger air bag in a crash greater than the potential harm from
tnrning off that air bag and allowing the passenger, even if belted, .to hit the dashboard, or wind
shield in a crash.
Part E. I make this request based on the following understandings
(check each box. below after reading carefully):
Information brochure. I certify that I have read the NHTSA information brochure, Admnced Frontal Afr
Bags & On-OffSwitch information. I understand that air bags should be turned off only for people at risk
and tnrned back on for people not at risk.
Loss of air bag protection. I understand that tnrning off an air bag may have serious safety consequences.
\Vhen an air bag is off, even belted people may hit their head, neck, or chest on the steering wheel,
dashboard, or windshield in a moderate to serious crash. That possibility may be increased in some newer
vehicles with seat belts that are specially designed to work with the air bag. Those belts, which are designed
to reduce the concentration of crash forces on any single part of the body, typically allow the occupant to
move farther forward in a crash than older belts. Without the air bag to cushion this forward movement, the
chance of the occupant hitting the vehicle interior is increased.
0
Waiver. I understand that motor vehicle dealers and repair b,tsinesses may require me to sign a waiver of
liability before they install an on-off switch.
continued-I!
HS Form603
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
76061
Part F. Certification
I certify to. the U.S. Departinent ofThmsportation that the infunnation, certifications, and understandings given or indicated by
inc on this furmaretruthful, correct, and romplete to the best ofmy knowledge and belie£ I recognize that the statements I have
made on this funn concetn a matter within the jurisdiction.of a department of the United States and iliattnaking a fuise, fictitious,
or fraudnlem: stateme11t may render me·subject to criminal prosecution under Tttle 18, United States Code, Section 1001.
I
Date
Signatute of owner/lessee
Additional instructions and information fur whlcle owners and lessees, An owner or lessee of multiple vehicles (e.g., a fleet owner) who
wants an on-off switch fonhe same air bag (e.g., just the pMsenger air bag) in more than one vehicle and for the. same reason·does not need
to submit a separate form for each vehicle. Instead, the owner. or lessee may list the make, model, model year, and vehicle identification
number for each of those ·vehicles and attach the list to a copy of th is form .. Each page of the list must be signed and dated by the owner 2014
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76062
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0
U.S. Deparlmanl cl Trcmportallcn
Nllll-l HlgllwaY Trllffk: Slllely
Aclmlnlllratlon
0MB No. 2127-0588
Appendix C to Part 595
Installation of
Air Bag On-Off Switches
The form and ins.ructions be.low will be included in agency letters sent to vehicle own.ers or lessees authorizing the installation of air bag
on.-oif switches. Each letter '1'.ill identify the owner or lessee and the vehicle for which instalLition is attthorized.
The vehicle dealer or repair business identified below made the following on-off switch instal!ation(s) for the air bag(s) in the motor
vehicle identified above:
Name of motor vehicle dealer or repair business
Street Address (Residence)
State
City
ZIP Code
On-off switch(es) were installed for the air bag(s) checked on this form:
O
O
Driver air bag
Passenger air bag
Date of installation
Signature of authoti7.ed representative of dealer or repair business
Instructions for vehicle dealers and repair businesses: Within 7 days of your installation of an on-off switch in the vehicle
identified ab(We, you must complete this form and send it to:
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
Attention: Derrick Lewis (NIO-120)
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE
Washington, DC 20590-1000
For faster response, fax to 202-493-2833
or email derrick.lewis@dot.gov.
Note: An agency may not conduct or sponsor, :llid a person is not required to .respond to, a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid 0MB controlnumber. T11at number appears above.
HS Form 603
15974o-071223-v2a
■
6. Add Appendix D to read as follows:
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Appendix D to Part 595—Request Form
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Emergency Vehicles
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OMBNo. 2_127--0588
Appendix D to Part 595
U~DlpartrrW!rf.A'T11;1NjMlulka1
Nllllliniil HlgllWiii, 1ililk tiiliily
Adml~
76063
Reque$t for
Air llag On-off Switch
For Emergency Vehicles·
!fan Emergency Services Departmertt or: Organitariony,imts authorization for-· front ~nger a.it bag on'°ffswitches fur its emttgency vehicles, the organitarionmmt 1ii1 out thl$ form completdyand send it to:
••
•
•
For-lasterresptmse, fax to 202-493°283-3
or email ·derricldewis@dor;gov.
National Highway'I'ralficSafety.Admfuiscration
.Attentioh: Derrick Lewis (NIO-120).
12.00 NewJerseyAveriueSE
Washington,DC 20590-1000
Please:·prfur,
Please ttoredii:complete for.ms will not be protessed'cand>che teiil'lation
. ·· .
··
.... ··.··Phone
Email
Name ofOrganization
Ncame ofApplicant
Street Address
City
State
ZIP Code
Part B. My department or company owns,or leases. the.-following vehicle(s) (for multiple
fur all ydiicles on a. separate piece ofpaper):
vehicles, please attach this-identifying information
Make
Vehicle Identification Number {17 numbei,;/lette.-.locatedon. the
driver's; lide of tlre dashboard neat: ik wfndshidd, -and. on the certification
label·on the··driver·side-door frame)
Model.
Model year
Part C. Switch for Front F'assengel'.' Air Bag
lrequest authorw.tlonfot the lnsrallatiorr of an on-off switch fur thefront passenger airbag in my·department's or
0
company's emergencyvehicle(s)to: delictivate: the frortt passenger air bag{s}· in the vehicle{s) to protect our personnel,
computers and.related equipment frorn a deployment ofthefront passenger air b~s).
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contiiUied _ .
B$Fotm603.
76064
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 17, 2024 / Proposed Rules
Part D. I make this reci•est MSed on the fallowing certifications and understandings
(md adt om: Wow ak ~ the sllll:l!mmllli ~ } :
Need fDr tile installation of ecpdpment. in the front passenger seating
compartment. l certify that. my 4ep:tttl00llt or mmp:my mqrwm th!i! m!ltllllbt:il:m or oompi1w. or other
jl:!b-Rb.md equipi:mmt in the depklyment mne of me froEl2014
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Issued in Washington, DC, under authority
delegated in 49 CFR 1.95 and 501.5.
Sophie Shulman,
Deputy Administrator.
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 180 (Tuesday, September 17, 2024)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 76035-76064]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-20651]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
49 CFR Part 595
[Docket No. NHTSA-2024-0046]
RIN 2127-AL64
Make Inoperative Exemptions; Retrofit Air Bag On-Off Switches and
Air Bag Deactivations
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This Notice of Proposed Rulemaking proposes amendments to the
requirements and processes for individuals to request that the agency
permit them to have an air bag on-off switch installed in their
vehicle. The proposed amendments would eliminate the sunset date, and
would also narrow the population of people eligible to have an on-off
switch installed. Furthermore, the agency also proposes amendments to
several appendices, and proposes the addition of a new appendix.
Lastly, this NPRM proposes that NHTSA codify its process for reviewing
requests for air bag deactivations, which are currently granted or
denied through the agency's enforcement discretion. In this document,
NHTSA solicits feedback from the public to better inform the agency's
decision-making on the proposed amendments.
DATES: You should submit your comments early enough to be received not
later than November 18, 2024.
Proposed effective date: We propose that the effective date for the
amendments in this rulemaking action would be immediately after the
date of publication of the final rule in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments to the docket number identified in
the heading of this document by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the online instructions for submitting
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 or Courier: 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, West
Building Ground Floor, Room W12-140, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. EST,
Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Fax: (202) 493-2251.
Instructions: All submissions must include the agency name and
docket number or Regulatory Information Number (RIN) for this
rulemaking. Note that all comments received will be posted without
change to https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal
information provided. (For more details, please see the Privacy Act
discussion below.) We will consider all comments received before the
close of business on the comment closing date indicated above. To the
extent possible, we will also consider comments filed after the closing
date.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov at any time or to
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, West Building, Room W12-140, Washington, DC
20590, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal
Holidays. Telephone: (202) 366-9826.
Privacy Act: Anyone can search the electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the name of the individual
submitting the comment (or signing the comment, if submitted on behalf
of an association, business, labor union, etc.). You may review DOT's
complete Privacy Act Statement in the Federal Register published on
April 11, 2000, (Volume 65, Number 70; Pages 19477-78) or you may visit
https://www.dot.gov/privacy.html.
Confidential Business Information: If you wish to submit any
information under a claim of confidentiality, you should submit three
copies of your complete submission, including the information you claim
to be confidential
[[Page 76036]]
business information, to the Chief Counsel, NHTSA, at the address given
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. In addition, you should submit
two copies, from which you have deleted the claimed confidential
business information, to Docket Management at the address given above.
When you send a comment containing information claimed to be
confidential business information, you should include a cover letter
setting forth the information specified in our confidential business
information regulation (49 CFR part 512).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For technical issues, you may contact
Ms. Carla Rush, Office of Crashworthiness Standards, Telephone: (202)
366-4583, Facsimile: (202) 493-2739. For legal issues, you may contact
Mr. Matthew Filpi, Office of the Chief Counsel, Telephone: (202) 366-
2992, Facsimile: (202) 366-3820. The mailing address of these officials
is: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Regulatory History of Air Bag On-Off Switches and
Deactivation
B. Background on Advanced Air Bag Systems
C. Current Part 595 Subpart B Requirements and Procedures for
Obtaining Exemptions for Retrofit On-Off Switches
D. Air Bag Deactivations
III. Proposed Amendments
A. Removal of the Sunset Date Provision for Retrofit Air Bag On-
Off Switches
B. Adjustment of Criteria for At-Risk Occupants To Obtain a
Retrofit Air Bag On-Off Switch for Vehicles Equipped With Advanced
Air Bags
i. Exemptions for Infants in Rear-Facing Child Restraint Systems
Who Must Be Transported in the Front Passenger Seat
ii. Exemptions for Children Ages 1 to 12 Who Must Be Transported
in the Front Passenger Seat
C. Requests for Air Bag Deactivations (General Public)
D. Exemptions for Law Enforcement and Emergency Vehicles
i. On-Off Switches
ii. Deactivations
E. Update of Information Brochure
IV. Estimates of Benefits and Costs
V. Proposed Effective Date
VI. Regulatory Notices and Analyses
VII. Public Participation
I. Executive Summary
Since the late 1990s, NHTSA has permitted, under certain
circumstances, both manufacturers and repair shops to install switches
in motor vehicles that allow the occupant to turn on and off the
vehicle's air bag system. This installation would typically be a
violation of the ``make inoperative'' provision of the National Traffic
and Motor Vehicle Safety Act, but NHTSA added an express exemption to
that provision for air bags because of the threat of injury that early
air bag systems posed to children and smaller statured occupants. This
exemption--49 CFR part 595 subpart B--outlines the process by which an
individual can petition the agency for an air bag on-off switch to be
installed in their vehicle.
NHTSA has stated repeatedly since creating part 595 subpart B that
the solution to the dangers posed by early air bag systems was advanced
air bag systems that could adapt or suppress their deployment based on
the vehicle occupant. Accordingly, NHTSA has repeatedly put a sunset
date on the on-off switch provision, with the most recent sunset date
in 2015. Since then, NHTSA has continued to use its enforcement
discretion to grant requests for air bag on-off switches. The agency
has also used its enforcement discretion to grant air bag system
deactivation in special circumstances, even though the Federal Motor
Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS) do not currently provide a formal
process for requesting deactivation. This NPRM proposes several updates
to part 595 to take into account the continued development and
effectiveness of advanced air bag systems. Additionally, the NPRM
proposes codifying the process by which individuals may petition the
agency for air bag deactivation in special circumstances. The agency
seeks public comment on the proposals listed below.
II. Background
A. Regulatory History of Air Bag On-Off Switches and Deactivation
To prevent or mitigate the risk of injuries or fatalities in
frontal crashes, FMVSS No. 208, Occupant Crash Protection,\1\ requires
that passenger vehicles be equipped with seat belts and frontal air
bags. Although FMVSS No. 208 did not require frontal air bags on
passenger cars until model year (MY) 1998 and on multipurpose passenger
vehicles and light trucks until MY 1999, air bags were already in
widespread use by the early 1990s. These early-generation air bags were
highly effective in protecting occupants in frontal crashes, but caused
a number of fatalities to certain occupants who were especially
vulnerable to air bag-related risks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 49 CFR 571.208.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NHTSA has long maintained that the long-term solution to the
problem of air bag-related injuries to these at-risk populations was
the development and widespread implementation of advanced air bag
systems, which could sense the kind of occupant seated and adjust
deployment to protect at-risk passengers. However, during the 1990s,
when air bag-related injuries and fatalities emerged as a safety
problem, advanced air bags were still a nascent technology.\2\ To
provide time for the development and dissemination of advanced air bag
systems into new vehicle production, and to address safety concerns
posed by pre-advanced air bags in vehicles already on the road, NHTSA
implemented an array of interim measures designed to protect those
passengers most susceptible to air bag-related injuries. These measures
focused both on behavioral changes (e.g., consumer education on the
importance of seat belts and on putting children in rear seating
positions) and relatively modest technological changes (e.g., amending
FMVSS No. 208 to temporarily allow for depowered air bags and
permitting installation of on/off switches).
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\2\ An advanced air bag senses or responds to differences in
crash severity, occupant size or the position of the occupant
relative to the air bag at the time of a crash. NHTSA amended FMVSS
No. 208 in 2000 to require advanced air bags at the front outboard
seats in new passenger vehicles and light trucks, implementing the
requirement on a two-stage phase-in schedule (May 12, 2000 final
rule, 65 FR 30679). Per FMVSS No. 208, currently all new passenger
vehicles and light trucks sold in the United States must meet the
advanced air bag requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consumer Education Efforts
A particular focus of these measures was efforts to protect
children from air bag related injuries and fatalities. Early data
indicated that children were at a significant risk of harm from air
bags. The data indicated that children who were either seated in child
restraint systems (CRS) \3\ or seated without CRSs were at risk of
serious injury or death when seated in a position with a frontal air
bag. Because of the agency's significant concern for the safety of
children, NHTSA took multiple actions throughout the 1990s to protect
children from potential harm from air bags.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Child Restraint Systems refers to devices such as rear-
facing child seats, forward-facing child seats, and booster seats.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
First, the agency began providing CRS recommendations informing
caretakers how and where they should equip child restraints in a
vehicle. NHTSA's recommendation has always been to install CRSs in the
back seat of vehicles.
[[Page 76037]]
Furthermore, there are different CRSs for children of different ages.
NHTSA recommends that from birth to 12-months old a child should be
secured in a rear-facing CRS. From 1 year old to 3 years old NHTSA
recommends keeping a child in a rear facing seat for as long as
possible--the child's height and weight will determine when they should
be moved to a forward-facing CRS. From 4 years old to 7 years old NHTSA
recommends keeping a child in a forward-facing CRS until they exceed
the weight and height maximums for the respective seat. Once a child
outgrows the forward-facing seat NHTSA recommends children be belted
using the traditional seat belt, but with the use to a booster seat;
children should remain in a booster seat until they are tall enough to
fit in a seat belt properly without the assistance of a booster seat.
NHTSA recommends that the child be belted in the back seat of a vehicle
for all of these different stages.
Second, the agency made several recommendations and took several
actions to ensure children seated in the front were protected from air
bags.\4\ Early on, the agency primarily encouraged behavioral changes
from owners of vehicles with air bags. For example, in the early 1990s,
agency testing showed that using a rear-facing child restraint in the
front seat of a vehicle where frontal air bags were active presented a
significant risk to child occupants. In December 1991 the agency issued
a Consumer Advisory warning owners of rear-facing child restraints to
not use such devices in the front seat of a vehicle equipped with a
passenger air bag. Throughout the 1990s, NHTSA released several
additional News Releases on this issue. NHTSA also took regulatory
action on this issue in 1993, when it issued a final rule which, in
part, required that vehicles equipped with air bags include labels on
sun visors providing specific cautions, including a statement not to
install rearward-facing child seats in front passenger positions. The
agency took further regulatory action in 1994, when it required rear-
facing child restraints manufactured on or after August 15, 1994, to
include a warning against using the restraint in any vehicle seating
position equipped with an air bag.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ For a detailed history of all actions NHTSA took before the
1997 final rule allowing for retrofit air bag on-off switches, see
61 FR 40784, 40787-88, Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards;
Occupant Crash Protection (July 26, 1996).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Third, the agency took a number of other communication-based
actions to improve safety outcomes relating to children and air bags.
On October 27, 1995, after several fatalities to children seated in air
bag-equipped seating positions, NHTSA issued a warning in a press
release, ``SAFETY AGENCY ISSUES WARNING ON AIR BAG DANGER TO
CHILDREN.'' In the press release, the agency warned that children
sitting in air bag-equipped seating positions not restrained by a seat
belt could be seriously injured or killed by an air bag. The release
also stated in very strong terms that parents should ensure their
children are belted in the back seat of a vehicle whenever possible.
During the late 1990s, the agency also published several articles in
widely circulated journals and periodicals on the dangers air bags pose
to children. NHTSA has continued this education campaign by publishing
information on the NHTSA website on the dangers air bags pose to
children.
In addition to these efforts to protect children, NHTSA also
considered that certain adult passengers were at risk from air bag
systems. As described in the paragraphs above, many of the agency's
attempts to both educate the public and improve vehicle technology
countermeasures to increase the safety outcomes of early air bag
systems were focused on children. The agency has also acknowledged in
both informal guidance as well as previous rulemakings that certain
adults may also be at risk of serious injury from air bag systems. For
example, certain smaller-statured individuals may have to sit closer to
the steering wheel to reach the foot pedals, which may put them at
increased risk of injury if an air bag were to deploy. NHTSA's website
recommends that individuals sit at least 10 inches away from the
steering wheel to reduce the risk of injury from air bag deployment.\5\
Accordingly, individuals who must sit closer than 10 inches to the
steering wheel to reach the pedals may need to have an air bag on-off
switch installed. The 1997 final rule that allowed for air bag on-off
switches to be installed (discussed below) explicitly discussed
specific situations where adult passengers (including adult drivers)
may need an on-off switch installed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ https://www.nhtsa.gov/older-drivers/driving-safely-while-
aging-
gracefully#:~:text=Sit%20at%20least%20ten%20inches,to%20always%20wear
%20your%20seatbelt.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vehicle Technology Countermeasures
Although NHTSA recommended (and continues to recommend) that
children be placed in a rear seating position and that adults sit 10
inches or more away from the steering wheel, the agency recognized
early on that there were instances where this guidance would not be
helpful. For example, certain vehicles don't have rear seats and
certain adults can't sit more than 10 inches from the steering wheel
without their feet reaching the foot pedals. When the agency first
considered taking action to improve vehicle technology countermeasures
in the mid-1990s to ensure children and shorter statured adults were
protected from potential harm from air bags, advanced air bag systems
were still a nascent technology. Starting in 1995, NHTSA began
facilitating a few different types of vehicle technology
countermeasures: original equipment on-off switches, retrofit on-off
switches, and air bag deactivations.
Original Equipment On-Off Switches. In 1995, NHTSA for the first
time promulgated a final rule that allowed manufacturers the option of
installing a manual device that motorists could use to deactivate the
front passenger-side air bag in vehicles in which infant restraints
could only be used in the front seat. This final rule was the first
instance in which the agency allowed an original equipment manufacturer
(OEM) to install an air bag on-off switch, but the scenario in which
the OEM on-off switch could be installed was very narrow and left up to
the discretion of the OEM.\6\ Because on-off switches were intended
only as a temporary measure, the agency sunset this provision. The
provision sunset on September 1, 2012.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ FMVSS 208 S4.5.4.
\7\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Retrofit on-off switches. In 1997, NHTSA published another final
rule addressing air bag on-off switches.\8\ This rule broadened the
1995 final rule that had been extended in 1997, and focused on more
than just children needing protections from on-off switches.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ 62 FR 62406.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act (Safety Act),
49 U.S.C. 30122, no manufacturer, distributor, dealer, rental company,
or motor vehicle repair business may knowingly make inoperative any
part of a device or element of design installed or in a motor vehicle
or motor vehicle equipment in compliance with an applicable motor
vehicle safety standard. This provision is commonly referred to as the
``make inoperative'' provision of the Safety Act. Because of this
provision, unless NHTSA explicitly exempts a manufacturer, distributor,
dealer, rental company, or motor vehicle repair business from this
requirement, those entities cannot knowingly make a compliant motor
vehicle or motor vehicle part inoperative. In other words,
[[Page 76038]]
without an explicit exemption from this requirement, the entities
listed above could not knowingly make air bags inoperative, because
they would be making a FMVSS No. 208 compliant motor vehicle part
inoperative.
Among additional details discussed below, the most notable action
the 1997 final rule \9\ took was creating an explicit exemption for
motor vehicle dealers and repair businesses from the make inoperative
provision of the Safety Act. This exemption permitted on-off switches
to be installed not just in new vehicles but also to be retrofitted
into vehicles that had already been sold. It also meant that an
additional entity--motor vehicle repair businesses--could now install
on-off switches. Thus, NHTSA's regulations, at that point, allowed for
two different types of on-off switches: (1) original equipment air bag
switches, installed as original equipment on a vehicle before the
vehicle was sold other than for resale; and (2) retrofit air bag
switches, installed after the vehicle had been produced and sold to the
consumer. Because retrofit air bag switches are installed after
purchase of a vehicle, the onus is on the vehicle owner to decide if
they would like an on-off switch installed. However, as discussed
below, air bags generally improve safety outcomes significantly for
most individuals involved in crashes. So instead of leaving the
decision up to the individual whether an on-off switch would produce a
beneficial safety outcome for a specific individual, the 1997 final
rule created a process by which individuals could submit a request to
NHTSA for an air bag on-off switch, and if approved, the individual
could then have one installed. That process is discussed in more detail
in Section II.C. As with original equipment on-off switches, the part
595 exemption for retrofit on-off switches was subject to a sunset
provision; this exemption expired on September 1, 2015.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 62 FR 62406.
\10\ 49 CFR 595.5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air bag deactivations. Although air bag on-off switches were an
effective solution to protect individuals who may be vulnerable to air
bag systems, there are certain scenarios where on-off switches cannot
be installed in a vehicle. In situations where an on-off switch cannot
be installed, the 1997 final rule outlined that NHTSA would continue to
use its enforcement discretion to allow air bag deactivation. The key
distinction between an air bag switch and air bag deactivation is that
the vehicle operator can turn the air bag system on or off with a
switch, whereas once a repair shop or manufacturer deactivates an air
bag system, the vehicle operator cannot turn the system back on. NHTSA
has not codified a process for individuals to request an air bag system
deactivation.
B. Background on Advanced Air Bag Systems
As discussed in the section above, early air bag technology
presented several safety risks to both children and smaller-statured
individuals. The agency has repeatedly expressed that the solution to
the dangers from early air bag technology was to develop advanced air
bag technology. This belief is also reflected in the sunset dates for
air bag on-off switches. FMVSS No. 208, Occupant crash protection,
requires that all new passenger vehicles and light trucks sold in the
United States meet certain minimum performance criteria for protecting
vehicle occupants during and after a collision. ``Advanced air bag
requirements'' is a term used to refer collectively to a subset of
these requirements that was added to FMVSS No. 208 as part of a May 12,
2000, final rule to protect children and other at-risk occupants from
air bag-related injury. The advanced air bag requirements became fully
phased-in on September 1, 2010.
Under the advanced air bag requirements, both the driver-side and
passenger-side frontal air bag system must pass several barrier crash
tests using 50th percentile adult male and 5th percentile adult female
dummies in both belted and unbelted conditions (the tests require
various test speeds, test conditions, and dummy placement).\11\ These
tests must be performed at both the driver and right front passenger
seating positions. In addition to barrier tests (which are designed to
protect the adult-sized population at-large), passenger-side advanced
air bag systems must also meet several requirements that are intended
to protect children. Specifically, passenger-side frontal air bag
systems must alter their deployment in the presence of three child-
sized test dummies--representing a 12-month-old, a 3-year-old, and a 6-
year-old--in multiple positions, both with and without the child
restraints specified in Appendix A-1 of FMVSS No. 208. Unlike the
barrier tests described above, the tests for deployment in the presence
of children are static tests conducted in a stationary setting.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ S5.1.1(b)(2), S5.1.2(b), S14.5.2, S15.1, S14.5.1(b),
S16.1(b), S17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The requirements and static tests related to child and smaller-
statured occupants may be met using one of three strategies:
suppression, low risk deployment (LRD), or a dynamic automatic
suppression system (DASS). Suppression-based advanced air bag systems
will suppress (i.e., not deploy) the passenger air bag in a crash if
the system senses a child in a rear-facing CRS, a child in a forward-
facing CRS, or a child not in a CRS but who is below a certain size or
is out of position in the passenger seat. LRD-based advanced air bag
systems will deploy the passenger air bag in all of these situations,
but will do so in a low-risk manner that does not exceed certain injury
assessment reference values for children.\12\ DASS-based advanced air
bag systems dynamically suppress air bag deployment during a crash by
sensing and interpreting the occupant characteristics and/or locations
of occupants in relation to the air bag.\13\
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\12\ Compare S19.2, S21.1, & S23.2 with S19.3, S21.4, & S23.4.
\13\ Unlike suppression and LRD, FMVSS No. 208 contains no
predefined test procedure associated with the DASS option. A
manufacturer wishing to use DASS must petition the agency for an
expedited rulemaking under subpart B of part 552. No manufacturer
has ever successfully petitioned the agency for this option.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Manufacturers are not required to use the same option for all three
child dummy sizes. Currently, all vehicles equipped with advanced air
bags use either ``conventional'' (i.e., non-DASS) suppression or LRD to
meet advanced air bag requirements, with the vast majority of
manufacturers choosing suppression.\14\ For the remainder of the
discussion, unless indicated otherwise, ``suppression'' systems are
conventional, non-DASS systems.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Based on model year 2023 compliance data, the agency
estimates that 5 percent of the fleet chooses the LRD option for all
required performance tests with child-sized dummies. The remaining
vehicles use conventional suppression for all required performance
tests with child-sized dummies or a combination of suppression and
LRD.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Data collected by NHTSA indicate that advanced air bags
substantially reduce the risk of air bag-related injuries to children
and smaller statured adults. In 1997, when air bag-related fatalities
peaked in the era before advanced air bags were introduced, there were
52 air bag-related fatalities, 31 of which were children. Since the
introduction of advanced air bags, air bag-related fatalities have
declined significantly, and in fact there have been no confirmed air
bag-related fatalities among children in vehicles equipped with
certified advanced air bags.\15\
[[Page 76039]]
Although it is likely that much of this reduction can be attributed to
child safety initiatives (i.e., air bag warning label requirements,
changes to State laws, greater enforcement of those laws, and publicity
campaigns) that have encouraged parents and caregivers to move children
12 and younger from the front seat to the rear seat of vehicles, the
agency nonetheless believes that the complete absence of air bag-
related fatalities in children over the last several years demonstrates
that advanced air bags provide a crucial safety countermeasure backstop
for situations in which children are placed in the front passenger
seat.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ ``Counts of Frontal Air Bag Related Fatalities and
Seriously Injured Persons,'' Special Crash Investigations, DOT HS
811 104, January 2009. The agency continues to monitor this issue
and has not identified any new cases of air bag-related fatalities
in advanced air bag compliant vehicles.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Current Part 595 Subpart B Requirements and Procedures for Obtaining
Exemptions for Retrofit On-Off Switches
The 1997 final rule created part 595 subpart B. Subpart B sets out
several requirements for vehicle owners who want to request a retrofit
on-off switch. Specifically, it identifies five situations in which the
agency will authorize on-off switches:
Medical condition: The driver has a medical condition and
a doctor indicates that an air bag would pose a special risk of harm to
that person and the risk of harm outweighs the risk of the passenger
hitting the steering wheel or windshield in a crash;
Distance from driver air bag: Despite taking all
reasonable steps to move back from the driver air bag, the driver is
not able to maintain a 10-inch distance from the center of his or her
breastbone to the center of the driver air bag cover;
Infant: An infant (less than 1 year old) must ride in the
front seat because the vehicle has no rear seat, the vehicle's rear
seat is too small to accommodate a rear-facing infant seat, or the
infant has a medical condition that makes it necessary for the infant
to ride in the front seat so the driver can monitor the infant;
Child Age 1 to 12: A child age 1 to 12 must ride in the
front seat because the vehicle has no rear seat, children ages 1 to 12
must ride in the front seat of the vehicle because no space is
available in the rear seat, or the child has a medical condition that
makes it necessary for the child to ride in the front seat so the
driver can monitor the child.
These criteria were consistent with the general rationale of the
1997 final rule, as advanced air bag technology was still in the early
stages of development. As discussed previously, the agency created the
part 595 petition as a temporary measure to ensure vulnerable
passengers were protected from potential harm from air bag systems. It
was intended to be a temporary measure as advanced air bag technologies
developed. Accordingly, the provision sunset in 2015.
Subpart B of part 595 sets out the specific steps that a vehicle
owner/installation technician must follow to obtain an exemption for an
on-off switch.\16\
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\16\ 49 CFR 595.5, Appendix A Information Brochure, Appendix B
Request Form, Appendix C Installation of Air Bag On-Off Switches.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If an individual wants an on-off switch installed in their vehicle,
they must fill out the request form that can be found in appendix B to
part 595. The first portion of this form provides instructions to
individuals seeking the installation of an on-off switch, and part of
these instructions directs the vehicle owner or lessee to read NHTSA's
information brochure on air bag on-off switches, which can be found in
appendix A to part 595. After reviewing the brochure, if the vehicle
owner/lessee is still interested in having an air bag on-off switch
installed, the vehicle owner/lessee then fills the request form out,
including an indication of which air bags (passenger or driver) they
would like the on-off switch for. The request form includes a list of
the eligibility criteria NHTSA deemed acceptable for a retrofit on-off
switch in the 1997 final rule with a check box next to each
justification. A list of these eligibility criteria is also included in
the safety brochure (appendix A to part 595). The applicant must check
which justification they are requesting an on-off switch under as part
of completing the request form. After completing the request form, the
owner/lessee mails the form to NHTSA. NHTSA then reviews the request
form and determines whether the owner/lessee should be granted their
request to have an on-off switch installed. If NHTSA determines the
information provided in the request is sufficient, the agency notifies
the individual if the request is granted or denied in writing. If the
request is missing information, the agency will request the necessary
information from the requestor. In addition to the signed form, NHTSA
also sends the installation form (appendix C to part 595) (to be filled
out by the manufacturer or repair shop).
The manufacturer or repair shop has several obligations that it
must also comply with under part 595. These include ensuring a telltale
light is installed and operating that indicates when the air bag switch
is in the ``off'' mode and providing the owner/lessee of the vehicle
with an insert for the vehicle owner's manual that describes the
operation of the switch, explains the at-risk groups set forth in
Appendix B, and indicates that the on-off switch should only be used in
the ``off'' mode if one of the at-risk groups is present in the
relevant seat. The manufacturer or repair shop must also fill out the
installation form that can be found in appendix C to part 595 and
return it to NHTSA within seven (7) days of installation.
D. Air Bag Deactivations
As noted earlier, while part 595 does not provide for air bag
deactivations, NHTSA has been considering requests for air bag
deactivations on a case-by-case basis using its enforcement discretion.
Under the existing process, vehicle owners who would like to have their
air bag system (or part of the system) deactivated must submit their
request in a letter to NHTSA with a detailed explanation for why
deactivation is necessary. This letter must include information such as
the subject vehicle's make, model, and vehicle identification number.
In addition, requests based on certain medical conditions other than
those for which the National Conference on Medical Indications for Air
Bag Deactivation has recommended air bag deactivation must be
accompanied by a physician statement.\17\ This statement must indicate
the particular medical condition of the patient, as well as the
physician's judgment that the condition causes air bags to pose a
special risk to that person, and that the condition makes the potential
harm to the person from contacting an air bag in a crash greater than
the potential harm from turning off the air bag.
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\17\ At the request of the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, the Ronald Reagan Institute of Emergency Medicine,
with the assistance of the National Crash Analysis Center (NCAC),
both of The George Washington University (GW), convened an expert
panel of physicians to formulate recommendations on specific medical
indications for air bag deactivation.
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[[Page 76040]]
Once NHTSA reviews the deactivation request letter, it notifies the
requestor in writing of its decision to either grant or deny the
request. If NHTSA denies the request, it explains the basis for the
denial; if the reason for the denial was a lack of information, the
request may be resubmitted with the necessary information. If NHTSA
grants the request, it provides the requestor with an authorization
letter, a copy of the information brochure contained in appendix A to
part 595, labels to be attached to the vehicle interior for alerting
vehicle users about the deactivated air bag(s), and a form to be filled
out and mailed back to the agency regarding the deactivation. The
recipient can then take the authorization letter to a car dealer or a
motor vehicle repair business to have their vehicle's air bag
deactivated.
III. Proposed Amendments
The changes proposed in this document would revise NHTSA's policies
and procedures regarding retrofit on-off switches and deactivations to
account for the benefits of advanced air bags. Over the last two and a
half decades, NHTSA has repeatedly stated in multiple rulemaking
notices that its regulations permitting air bag on-off switches and
deactivations were intended to be temporary. During the 1990s, NHTSA's
primary reason for allowing air bag on-off switches and deactivations
was to provide time for manufacturers to develop advanced air bag
technology. NHTSA also continued allowing air bag on-off switches and
deactivations even after the phase-in of advanced air bag requirements
to promote public acceptance of the technology and to give the agency
time to study advanced air bags in real-world situations before making
long-term policy decisions regarding the continued need for air bag on-
off switches and deactivations.
This rulemaking would complete NHTSA's evaluation of current
advanced air bag efficacy and the need for on-off switches and
deactivations. Unlike our previous rulemakings in this area, the
changes proposed in this document are not intended to be interim
solutions. Rather, they represent NHTSA's conclusions regarding the
need for air bag switches and deactivations as it exists for the
foreseeable future. NHTSA considered several factors in crafting the
proposed amendments in this NPRM, including the interest in and need
for retrofit air bag on-off switches and air bag deactivations, the
degree to which advanced air bags mitigate the risk of air bag-related
injuries, and the safety benefits of advanced air bags relative to
retrofit on-off switches and deactivations.
Furthermore, the changes proposed in the following sections will
improve motor vehicle safety. As discussed above, data indicate that
advanced air bag systems significantly improve safety outcomes for most
vehicle occupants. NHTSA acknowledges that certain individuals have the
potential to be harmed by air bags, primarily because of their stature;
however, advancements in air bag suppression technology have resulted
in most air bag suppression systems protecting smaller stature
occupants without needing an air bag on-off switch. Retrofit on-off
switches can be misused by consumers because they may forget to set the
switch to the position appropriate for the passenger occupying the
seat. By narrowing the eligibility criteria for obtaining an air bag
on-off switch to only include groups that are at heightened risk of air
bag-related injuries even with advanced air bag systems, the proposed
rule would result in fewer installations of unnecessary retrofit
switches. By eliminating the sunset date provision, the proposed rule
would increase NHTSA's regulatory flexibility to allow the installation
of retrofit air bag on-off switches to serve at-risk groups, regardless
of when their vehicles were manufactured. In addition, the proposed
rule improves overall agency transparency and public accountability by
articulating and codifying NHTSA's processes for approving requests for
retrofit air bag on-off switches and, if necessary, for air bag
deactivation, when warranted by a safety need.
As the 1997 final rule indicates, the part 595 petition process has
always focused on weighing the safety benefits that air bags provide
vis-[agrave]-vis the potential harm that air bag systems can do to at-
risk populations.\18\ The development and widespread use of advanced
air bag systems has significantly altered this calculus, which is why
the agency is proposing changes to part 595's substantive requirements
as part of this NPRM.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ 62 FR 62406.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Removal of the Sunset Date Provision for Retrofit Air Bag On-Off
Switches
This rulemaking would remove from part 595 subpart B the language
limiting the installation of retrofit air bag on-off switches to
vehicles manufactured before September 1, 2015. As noted above, when
NHTSA authorized air bag on-off switches in past rulemakings, the
agency imposed a sunset date for their availability because it believed
that advanced air bags would largely obviate the need for manual air
bag on-off switches. NHTSA tried to set these sunset dates far enough
in the future to provide sufficient time both for manufacturers to
develop advanced air bags and for the agency to assess advanced air
bags' effect on safety.
NHTSA has determined that, even with advanced air bags, there is
and will be a continuing need for retrofit air bag on-off switches for
the foreseeable future for at least some at-risk segments of the
population. There is a small segment of the vehicle occupant population
(e.g., those that meet our new eligibility criteria to obtain a
retrofit air bag on-off switch, which are discussed below) to whom
current frontal air bags pose a risk that outweighs a safety benefit,
and whose risk characteristics are such that they cannot necessarily be
detected or mitigated by current advanced air bag technology. Because
the risks to this population are not addressed by advanced air bags, we
tentatively believe that it would be safer in some instances for air
bags to be suppressed by a manually operated air bag on-off switch than
to deploy as designed. This population will likely need the continued
availability of retrofit air bag on-off switches for the indefinite
future, so NHTSA proposes to remove the sunset date of September 1,
2015, and to continue allowing retrofit air bag on-off switches for
certain at-risk populations until further notice.
Comments are requested on this proposal.
B. Adjustment of Criteria for At-Risk Occupants To Obtain a Retrofit
Air Bag On-Off Switch for Vehicles Equipped With Advanced Air Bags
This rulemaking proposes to amend the eligibility criteria for
owners and users of vehicles equipped with advanced air bags to obtain
a retrofit air bag on-off switch under part 595 subpart B. We believe
that advanced air bags have sufficiently addressed the safety concerns
of some of the groups that were previously deemed at-risk for air bag-
related injuries at the time that Part 595 subpart B was established.
This rulemaking would narrow the eligibility requirements for obtaining
a retrofit air bag on-off switch under part 595 subpart B such that
these groups would not all qualify for an air bag on-off switch on
vehicles equipped with advanced air bags. The proposed amendments
specifically relate to the categories concerning infants in rear-facing
CRSs and children ages 1 to 12 who must be transported in the front
passenger seat. Below we discuss each in turn.
[[Page 76041]]
i. Exemptions for Infants in Rear-Facing Child Restraint Systems Who
Must Be Transported in the Front Passenger Seat
1. Vehicles Certified to the Suppression-Based Compliance Option Would
No Longer Be Eligible for an Exemption
This NPRM distinguishes between vehicles meeting the advanced air
bag requirements by way of suppression versus via a low-risk deployment
option. Under this NPRM, vehicles certified to meet the advanced air
bag requirements for children in rear-facing CRSs in the front seat
using suppression would not be eligible for a retrofit air bag on-off
switch. This proposal reflects our tentative conclusion, based on over
two and a half decades of field data, that air bag suppression is an
extremely effective tool for protecting children in rear-facing CRSs
from air bag-related injuries. Based on these data, NHTSA tentatively
believes there is no longer a safety need to permit the installation of
retrofit air bag on-off switches in these circumstances.
Like on-off switches, suppression-based advanced air bags mitigate
the risk to children in rear-facing CRSs by eliminating the possibility
of air bag/CRS interaction entirely. Moreover, the automatic operation
of suppression-based advanced air bags makes the suppression systems
safer overall as compared to retrofit air bag on-off switches, which do
not operate automatically and are susceptible to misuse. Thus, NHTSA
tentatively believes there is no longer a safety need to permit the
installation of retrofit air bag on-off switches in vehicles equipped
with suppression-based advanced air bags for the transport of children
in rear-facing CRSs in the front passenger seat. NHTSA tentatively
believes that this proposal would benefit safety by reducing the number
of unneeded retrofit air bag on-off switches that would be present in
the fleet that could potentially be misused.
2. Vehicles Certified to the Low-Risk Deployment Compliance Option
Would Still Be Eligible for an Exemption
Under the proposed rule, vehicles certified to meet advanced air
bag requirements for children in rear-facing CRSs in the front seat
using low risk deployment (LRD) would continue to be eligible for a
make inoperative exemption for a retrofit air bag on-off switch.
The agency has decided to differentiate between suppression-based
and LRD-based advanced air bag systems for children in rear-facing CRSs
because, although NHTSA has confidence in both suppression and LRD
technologies, LRD systems are not as prevalent in the fleet and have
not had the same degree of field experience confirming their
effectiveness as have suppression systems.
There are several safety considerations specific to rear-facing
CRSs interacting with LRD-based advanced air bags that NHTSA believes
justify the agency's cautious approach here. First, children in rear-
facing CRSs are typically younger and more vulnerable than other at-
risk groups. Second, children in rear-facing seats are always
exceedingly close to a front-mounted air bag, especially compared to
other categories of at-risk occupants. This proximity matters because
the primary factor that determines a child's risk of air bag-related
injury is the child's proximity to the air bag at the time of
deployment. Given that children in rear-facing CRSs are especially at
risk for air bag-related injuries because of their constant close
proximity to the air bag risk zone as compared to other at-risk groups,
NHTSA has determined that it would be prudent at this time to allow
vehicle owners with LRD advanced air bag systems to have the option of
an on-off switch if they must seat a child in the front seat of their
vehicle.
ii. Exemptions for Children Ages 1 to 12 Who Must Be Transported in the
Front Passenger Seat
Under the proposed rule, vehicles meeting the advanced air bag
requirements that are used to transport children ages 1 to 12 in the
front passenger seat (including children secured in a forward-facing
CRS) would not be eligible for a make inoperative exemption for a
retrofit air bag on-off switch. This change would apply regardless of
whether the vehicle is equipped with suppression-based or LRD-based
advanced air bags.
NHTSA originally designated children ages 1 to 12 an ``at-risk''
group for purposes of determining eligibility for an exemption under
part 595, to address the dangers that early (non-advanced) air bags
posed to unrestrained older children. Identifying this risk group
required NHTSA to establish an objective, practicable way of
determining both when a child is large enough that the air bags
deploying would not pose a significant safety risk, and when a child
was behaviorally mature enough that the child was not likely to be out
of position at the time an air bag deploys. NHTSA chose age as a proxy
for making these determinations, because age normally correlates to a
child's size and level of maturity, and it is a simple and objective
way to determine eligibility. However, a child's age is, at best, an
imperfect measure of whether the child is at risk for air bag-related
injuries because age is an imperfect proxy for size or maturity.
Advanced air bag systems do not rely on age as a proxy for a
child's size or likely position at the time of air bag deployment.
Rather, they use sensors to detect a child's size and use either
sensors or other design features to safely account for children who are
out of position at the time of a crash. Because a child's size and
position are the two most important indicators of whether it is safe to
deploy the air bag (or whether to deploy it in a low-risk manner),
advanced air bags can use that data to either suppress the air bag or
tailor the air bag's deployment to the child (as opposed to early
generation air bags, which would always deploy the air bag at full
force in a triggering crash, regardless of the size or position of the
occupant). The agency is unaware of a single reported crash fatality of
a child aged 1 to 12 (or a child in a forward-facing CRS) that has been
attributed to a certified advanced air bag since the technology was
introduced. Based on available evidence, the agency believes there is
no longer a safety need that justifies permitting the installation of
retrofit air bag on-off switches for children ages 1 to 12 (or children
in forward-facing CRSs) in vehicles equipped with advanced air bags
solely on the basis of age. The agency would continue to approve
requests for retrofit on-off switches for children ages 1 to 12 (or
children in forward-facing CRSs) in vehicles equipped with non-advanced
air bags.
Notwithstanding the agency's tentative conclusion that children
ages 1 to 12 (or children in forward-facing CRSs) are not an at-risk
group under part 595, subpart B in vehicles equipped with advanced air
bags, NHTSA acknowledges that there is a remote possibility an air bag
on-off switch may be permissible for these children under certain
circumstances, such as if a specific child in that age range has unique
characteristics that a vehicle's advanced air bag system has difficulty
detecting. Similarly, given the variety of forward-facing and rear-
facing CRSs that exist, the agency acknowledges that there is a remote
possibility that some advanced air bag systems may not be designed to
detect certain models of forward-facing CRSs that have unusual
footprints. To address these sorts of edge cases, the agency foresees
using its enforcement discretion to permit the installation of retrofit
on-off switches in these rare situations.
[[Page 76042]]
Comments are requested on the above issues.
C. Requests for Air Bag Deactivations (General Public)
NHTSA proposes to codify the process by which vehicle owners
request a ``make inoperative'' exemption so that they may have their
vehicles' air bags deactivated. This informal process for requesting
deactivations was initially intended to be used in a limited number of
circumstances where the requestor was eligible for an exemption to
install an air bag on-off switch, but an air bag on-off switch was not
available from the manufacturer of the requestor's vehicle. The agency
believes it can improve on the deactivation request process with the
proposals described in detail below.
NHTSA's proposal to codify the deactivation request process would
improve transparency while keeping the process largely unchanged aside
from a few slight modifications. First, NHTSA would require that
deactivation requestors certify that they have read the information
brochure contained in appendix A, since the safety justification
underlying that requirement (e.g., ensuring the requestor is aware of
the risks associated with switching off the air bag) applies to
deactivations as well as on-off switches. Second, consistent with the
requirements for on-off switch exemptions based on a medical need, we
would no longer require a physician statement if the deactivation is
for a medical purpose. Lastly, we would require that requestors
specifically explain why an air bag on-off switch is insufficient for
their needs. The reason for this requirement is that NHTSA considers
deactivations to be a greater potential risk to overall vehicle safety
than on-off switches. A deactivated air bag deprives all vehicle
occupants of the safety benefits of air bags regardless of whether they
are at-risk of air bag-related injuries, whereas an on-off switch
enables occupants who are not at-risk to keep the air bag activated.
NHTSA will continue to evaluate deactivation requests on a case-by-
case basis, and will only grant them if the agency believes that doing
so is consistent with the Safety Act and is in the interest of motor
vehicle safety.
Comments are requested on the codification of the deactivation
request process.
D. Exemptions for Law Enforcement and Emergency Vehicles On-Off
Switches
NHTSA proposes amending part 595 subpart B to add a process that
specifically applies to air bag on-off switch requests for law
enforcement and emergency vehicles, along with a corresponding request
form. The form would be codified as appendix D to part 595.
For a number of years, NHTSA has granted requests from law
enforcement and emergency service officials to install air bag on-off
switches through the exercise of the agency's enforcement discretion.
In the 2012 final rule, the agency explained that one reason for
extending the sunset date under part 595 subpart B was to ``consider
other topics that have arisen over the years such as our continued use
of our enforcement discretion for circumstances not covered by part 595
(e.g., the application of retrofit switches for emergency and law
enforcement vehicles).'' The agency's primary safety concern with air
bags in law enforcement and emergency vehicles is that these vehicles
are necessarily outfitted with job-related equipment that could pose a
danger to occupants should the air bag deploy. This danger is not
necessarily addressed by advanced air bags, since FMVSS No. 208 does
not require that advanced air bags be tested in the presence of this
job-related equipment, nor would such a requirement be reasonably
practicable at this time. Given this concern, we have used our
enforcement discretion to permit the installation of retrofit on-off
switches and air bag deactivations on law enforcement and emergency
vehicles through a process similar to the process used to evaluate
deactivation requests from the general public.
In the interest of transparency of agency processes, NHTSA seeks to
formalize the process by which law enforcement and emergency service
providers obtain make inoperative exemptions for retrofit on-off switch
installations. To this end, this NPRM proposes to add a new section to
part 595 subpart B specifically for ``Emergency Vehicles'' along with a
corresponding new form contained in appendix D. This new section would
contain the procedures that emergency service providers must follow to
obtain a make inoperative exemption for their law enforcement or
emergency vehicles. The accompanying form would require that a
requesting entity certify that the vehicle on which the air bag on-off
switch will be installed is intended to be used for law enforcement,
fire response, or medical response.
Comments are requested on this proposal.
ii. Deactivations
As with exemption requests from the general public, if a retrofit
air bag on-off switch is unavailable or inadequate for an emergency or
law enforcement vehicle, officials may request approval for an air bag
deactivation. The process for requesting an air bag deactivation for a
law enforcement vehicle or an emergency vehicle would be the same as
the process for the general public.
Comments are requested on the above issues. A copy of the law
enforcement and emergency response request form can be found in the
docket for this NPRM.
E. Update of Information Brochure
NHTSA proposes to revise the Information Brochure contained in
appendix A to part 595. Appendix A contains the Information Brochure
that air bag on-off switch requestors must read as part of the
application process for obtaining an exemption for a retrofit air bag
on-off switch under subpart B. The purpose of the Information Brochure
is to provide requestors with relevant information about the safety
benefits and potential risks of air bags, so that they can make an
informed decision whether to request an exemption under part 595
subpart B.
NHTSA codified the Information Brochure as appendix A to part 595
as part of the same November 1997 final rule that established part 595
subpart B. In the more than two decades that have passed since then,
air bag technology has evolved substantially. Given these changes, the
Information Brochure currently found in appendix A to part 595 is no
longer complete or accurate.
To address this problem, this NPRM proposes major revisions to the
Information Brochure. The updated brochure would provide more complete
and accurate information about current air bag technology to better
ensure consumers will make an informed decision regarding whether to
request an exemption under part 595 subpart B. The agency has also
included stylistic changes, such as formatting changes that make the
material more engaging and easier to read, and a 10-inch ruler printed
on the outer cover so that drivers can measure their distance to the
steering wheel. A copy of our proposed revised Information Brochure for
at-risk passengers has been placed in the docket to this NPRM.
The agency seeks comment on our proposed revisions to the
Information Brochure contained in Appendix A to part 595.
IV. Estimates of Benefits and Costs
NHTSA performed an economic analysis for the proposed rule, and has
determined that the proposed rule would be net beneficial. The agency
[[Page 76043]]
found that there would be significant cost savings as a result of the
proposed rule. A summary of the economic analysis is below, and the
full economic analysis can be found in the docket for this NPRM.
Methodology. To determine the costs and safety impacts of this
NPRM, NHTSA considered two baselines in its analysis. The first
baseline is what the agency refers to as the Enforcement Discretion
Baseline. This baseline considers the status quo, where NHTSA uses its
enforcement discretion to grant air bag on-off switch requests since
the last sunset for the on-off program for MY 2015 vehicles. This
baseline assumes that there is potential for all vehicles (not just MY
2015 and earlier vehicles) to receive exemptions. In other words, this
baseline includes analysis of all MY vehicles, rather than
incorporating only MY 2015 and earlier vehicles not impacted by the
2015 sunset.
The second baseline is what the agency refers to as the Enforcement
Non-Discretion Baseline. This baseline considers a scenario under which
the sunset provision is strictly enforced. Under this baseline, the
proposed rule has a smaller net effect because enforcing just the
sunset provision would yield the same procedural changes as the
proposed rule for all MY 2016 and later vehicles. Thus, the net effect
under the Enforcement Non-Discretion Baseline would be limited to pre-
MY 2016 vehicles with advanced air bags.
Air Bag On-Off Switch Cost Impacts. For this analysis, NHTSA
assumed that the volume of annual exemption requests for air bag on-off
switches will be equal to the annual average from 2015-2017 (the most
recent available data), or 58 requests per year under the Enforcement
Discretion baseline. For the Enforcement Non-Discretion baseline, NHTSA
assumed that the number of annual requests will be equal to the
estimated share of all vehicles with advanced air bags comprised of
pre-MY 2016 vehicles, multiplied by 58. The share of all vehicles with
advanced air bags comprised of pre-MY 2016 vehicles is estimated as the
sum of surviving MY 2004 (i.e., the first year with mandatory advanced
air bags) through MY 2015 vehicles, divided by the projected sum of MY
2004 through MY 2021 vehicles at the end of 2021. The resulting
estimate of the relevant share comprised of pre-MY 2016 vehicles is
approximately 59 percent, yielding an estimate of 34.2 requests per
year under the Enforcement Non-Discretion baseline.
The total annual cost impact for the subset of on-off switch
exemption requests that would be eliminated under the proposed rule
compared to the costs under the Enforcement Discretion baseline is
summarized in Table 1 (See the docketed economic analysis for this
proposed rule for details):
Table 1--Estimated Annual Cost Impacts in Cases Where the On-Off Switch
Exemption Is Eliminated
[2022 Dollars, Enforcement Discretion Baseline]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost under
Cost item (entity) Status proposed Net cost
quo cost rule impact
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Requests (Applicants).............. $686.14 $0.00 -$686.14
On-Off Switch Installation 8,186.32 0.00 -8,186.32
(Applicants)......................
Data Processing and Storage 61.39 0.00 -61.39
(Government)......................
Documentation and Reporting 87.58 0.00 -87.58
(Industry)........................
------------------------------------
Total.......................... 9,021.43 0.00 -9,021.43
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The corresponding annual cost impact under the Enforcement Non-
Discretion baseline is summarized in Table 2:
Table 2--Estimated Annual Cost Impacts in Cases Where the On-Off Switch
Exemption Is Eliminated
[2022 Dollars, Enforcement Non-Discretion Baseline]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost under
Cost item (entity) Status proposed Net cost
quo cost rule impact
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Requests (Applicants).............. $404.06 $0.00 -$404.06
On-Off Switch Installation 4,820.80 0.00 -4,820.80
(Applicants)......................
Data Processing and Storage 36.15 0.00 -36.15
(Government)......................
Documentation and Reporting 51.58 0.00 -51.58
(Industry)........................
------------------------------------
Total.......................... 5,312.60 0.00 -5,312.60
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The total annual cost impact is estimated to be -$9,021.43 under
the Enforcement Discretion baseline and -$5,312.60 under the
Enforcement Non-Discretion baseline.
Air Bag On-Off Switch Safety Impacts. Safety effects of the
proposed rule in this category are assumed to be limited to the
reduction in risk for front-seat passengers 13 years of age or older in
vehicles with no on-off switch. NHTSA assumed that advanced air bags
are estimated to be equally safe with or without an on-off switch for
passengers 12 years of age or younger, because advanced air bags are
designed either not to deploy or to deploy in a low-risk manner when
small children are present (i.e., the switch does not offer any benefit
or detriment for small children). For passengers 13 years of age or
older, reducing on-off switch exemption requests would improve safety
by mitigating the risk of traveling while an on-off switch is in the
off position, removing the protective effect of the air bag.
[[Page 76044]]
The safety benefit per vehicle in this category is estimated as the
reduction in fatality risk per mile for front-seat passengers 13 years
of age or older, multiplied by the vehicle miles traveled (VMT) where
such passengers are present and the monetized value of a unit reduction
in fatality risk. Analyses of 2017-2021 Crash Reporting Sampling System
data and Fatality Analysis Reporting System data indicate that the
front seat of light-duty vehicles was occupied by a passenger 13 years
of age or older approximately 12 percent of the time in non-fatal
crashes and 14 percent of the time in fatal crashes. Studies have
estimated an overall light-duty vehicle occupant fatality rate of 0.82
fatality per 100 million VMT,\19\ which represents approximately 73
percent of the average overall fatality rate from 2009 through 2012.
The agency applied this ratio to the most recent overall fatality rate
of 1.34 fatalities per 100 million VMT to identify an estimated light-
duty vehicle fatality rate of 0.98 fatalities per 100 million VMT.
Multiplying this fatality rate by 14 percent yields an estimated
fatality rate for front-seat occupants 13 years of age or older of 0.14
fatality per 100 million VMT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Kahane, C. J. (2015, January). Lives saved by vehicle
safety technologies and associated Federal Motor Vehicle Safety
Standards, 1960 to 2012--Passenger cars and LTVs--With reviews of 26
FMVSS and the effectiveness of their associated safety technologies
in reducing fatalities, injuries, and crashes. (Report No. DOT HS
812 069). Washington, DC: National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Studies indicate the effectiveness of frontal air bags in reducing
fatalities for front-seat occupants to be 12 percent for passenger cars
and 14 percent for light trucks and vans (LTVs).\20\ Thus, traveling
with an inactivated frontal air bag is estimated to be 1/(1-0.12), or
13.6 percent, riskier in passenger cars (1/(1-0.14), or 16.3 percent,
riskier in LTVs). Assuming a light-duty vehicle sales split of one-
third passenger cars and two-thirds LTVs for the vehicles affected by
the proposed rule (which reflects recent vehicle sales splits), the
average increase of risk of traveling in the front seat with an
improperly deactivated frontal air bag is estimated to be 15.4 percent.
NHTSA assumed a 10.3 percent misuse rate for air bag on-off switches
when adults travel in the front passenger seat. Multiplying this misuse
rate by the estimated 15.4 percent increase in risk when on-off
switches are misused yields an estimate of incremental risk of 1.6
percent for front-seat passengers 13 years of age or older in the
presence of air bag on-off switches. In turn, multiplying the estimated
incremental risk by the fatality rate for front-seat passengers 13
years of age or older (0.14 fatality per 100 million VMT) yields an
estimate of incremental fatality risk for these passengers in the
presence of an air bag on-off switch equal to 0.0022 fatality per 100
million VMT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the Enforcement Discretion baseline, the agency estimated
expected per-vehicle annual VMT (i.e., expected VMT taking scrappage
into account) by multiplying the average of the passenger car and LTV
VMT schedules used in the analysis supporting the Corporate Average
Fuel Economy Rulemaking by their corresponding vehicle survival
schedules. Applying three-percent- and seven-percent discount rates
yields estimates of discounted lifetime vehicle VMT equal to 13.0 times
and 9.7 times the first-year VMT.
Table 3--VMT Schedule and Estimated Discounted Vehicle VMT (for Selected Vehicle Ages)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual VMT for Survival rate Survival rate Annual Annual
Vehicle age surviving x 3% discount x 7% discount exposure (3% exposure (7%
vehicles factor factor discount rate) discount rate)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1............................... 17,040 1.000 1.000 17,040 17,040
5............................... 14,641 0.853 0.732 14,535 12,480
10.............................. 12,310 0.636 0.452 10,843 7,696
15.............................. 10,546 0.377 0.221 6,421 3,766
20.............................. 9,165 0.178 0.086 3,036 1,472
25.............................. 7,981 0.087 0.035 1,477 592
30.............................. 6,805 0.049 0.016 831 275
35.............................. 5,454 0.017 0.005 294 81
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total/Year 1................ .............. .............. .............. 13.0 9.7
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The monetized (undiscounted) value of the per-vehicle safety
benefit in the first year of vehicle use in this category is estimated
to be $13.12 (0.0022 mitigated fatality per 100 million VMT x 17,040/
100 million VMT x $35.4 million per mitigated fatality \21\). Thus, at
a three-percent discount rate, the estimated lifetime per-vehicle
safety benefit is estimated to be approximately $171 ($13.12 x 13.0 =
$170.58) under the Enforcement Discretion baseline. At a seven-percent
discount rate, the estimated lifetime per-vehicle safety benefit is
estimated to be approximately $127 ($13.12 x 9.7 = $127.28) under the
Enforcement Discretion baseline.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ The total estimated safety value per mitigated fatality is
equal to a base value per fatality ($12.8 million in 2022 dollars)
adjusted by factors accounting for: (1) the share of comprehensive
economic costs of crashes comprised of fatalities; and (2) the
relative rate of front right seat occupation in non-fatal versus
fatal crashes. This calculation is presented in more detail in the
docketed accompanying economic analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the Enforcement Non-Discretion baseline, the above approach is
used, with one key change: per-vehicle safety benefits are estimated as
the above per-vehicle safety benefits multiplied by the share of total
lifetime discounted VMT comprised of pre-MY 2016 vehicles. In turn, the
share of total lifetime discounted VMT comprised of pre-MY 2016
vehicles is estimated as the sum of estimated discounted lifetime VMT
for MY 2004 through 2015 vehicles, divided by the sum of estimated
discounted lifetime VMT for MY 2004 through MY 2021 vehicles. Using
this approach, the estimated per-vehicle safety benefits are 67 percent
lower than in the other baseline at a three-percent discount rate (0.33
x $170.58, or $56.29). The corresponding estimate at a seven-percent
rate is 72 percent lower than in the other baseline (0.28 x $170.58, or
$34.37).
The total annual safety benefit in this category under the proposed
rule is equal to the per-vehicle safety benefit multiplied by the
number of affected vehicles. Thus, at a three-percent discount rate,
the total annual safety benefit is estimated to be $9,893.80
[[Page 76045]]
under the Enforcement Discretion baseline ($170.58 per request x 58
requests per year). At a seven-percent discount rate, the total annual
safety benefit is estimated to be $7,382.30 under the Enforcement
Discretion baseline ($127.58 per request x 58 requests per year). The
total annual safety benefit under the Enforcement Non-Discretion
baseline is $1,925.20 at a three-percent discount rate ($56.29 x 34.2 =
$1,925.20) and $1,175.31 at a seven-percent discount rate ($34.37 x
34.2 = $1,175.31).
Air Bag Deactivation. The proposed rule will formalize and modify
the process by which vehicle owners or users can obtain an exemption
from the ``make inoperative'' provision for an air bag deactivation.
The proposed rule will have a cost impact for requestors of air bag
deactivation exemptions and business entities that deactivate air bags.
For this analysis, the agency assumed that annual deactivation requests
will be equal to the 2015-2017 annual average of deactivation requests
under the proposed rule (seven per year). The agency felt there was no
need to run a two-pronged analysis like it did for the on-off switch
analysis because there was no change in the way the agency processed
air bag deactivation requests; there has never been a formal process
for requesting deactivation, and NHTSA has used its enforcement
discretion to grant deactivations since the agency started doing so in
the mid-1990s. Furthermore, because the agency is simply formalizing a
process that is unlikely to result in a noticeable impact on the number
of deactivation requests received, granted, or denied, NHTSA does not
believe there will be a safety impact for this part of the proposed
rule.
Individuals requesting air bag deactivation exemptions under the
status quo incur costs associated with preparing the request letter,
acquiring supporting documentation, and having the deactivation
performed. Under the status quo, a deactivation requestor must write a
letter to NHTSA that includes information about the requestor's vehicle
and the requestor's reason for requesting an air bag deactivation.
The cost of deactivating an air bag system is unaffected by the
proposed rule, meaning the proposed rule would have no impact on the
costs associated with deactivation. Furthermore, the proposed rule does
not include any additional requirements for businesses performing air
bag deactivations, meaning the proposed rule would also have no impact
on the costs businesses incur by performing deactivations.
Table 4 below estimates the costs associated with the proposed
amendments to the air bag deactivation process (see the docketed
economic analysis for this proposed rule for details).
Table 4--Estimated Annual Cost Impacts for Air Bag Deactivation Requests
[2022 Dollars]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost under
Cost item (entity) Status proposed Net cost
quo cost rule impact
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Requests (Applicants)........................................................ $160.72 $186.69 $25.97
Deactivation (Applicants).................................................... 542.50 542.50 0.00
Distributing Forms and Labels, and Data Processing (Government).............. 61.81 61.81 0.00
Return Form and Labels (Industry)............................................ 18.90 18.90 0.00
Safety (Occupants)........................................................... N/A N/A 0.00
----------------------------------
Total.................................................................... 722.12 748.09 25.97
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Proposed Effective Date
We propose that the amendments in this rulemaking become effective
immediately after publication of a final rule in the Federal Register.
The proposed amendments would not markedly impact the current process
or requestors' ability to get approval for an air bag on-off switch or
deactivation except regarding forward-facing children ages 1 to 12,
children in forward-facing CRSs, and children in rear-facing CRSs in
vehicles equipped with suppression-based advanced air bag systems.
Because this final rule would have no impact on the public and only
changes NHTSA processes, the agency does not believe that any lead time
is necessary for this potential final rule. Comments are requested on
this proposed effective date.
VI. Regulatory Notices and Analyses
Executive Order 12866, Executive Order 14904, Executive Order 13563,
and DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures
NHTSA has considered the potential impact of this proposed rule
under Executive Order 12866, Executive Order 14094, Executive Order
13563, DOT Order 2100.6A and the Department of Transportation's
regulatory policies and procedures. This NPRM is not considered to be
significant under the Department of Transportation's regulatory
policies and procedures.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ 44 FR 11034 (Feb. 26, 1979).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This document proposes several changes to part 595 subpart B but
does not impose any new costs. It proposes the elimination of the
sunset date of an existing exemption for retrofit on-off switches for
frontal air bags, slight narrowing of the eligibility requirement for
obtaining that exemption going forward, and the codification of
existing processes for obtaining retrofit air bag on-off switches for
emergency vehicles and air bag deactivations for all vehicles. It also
proposes changes to the information brochure contained in appendix A.
The agency notes that part 595 subpart B does not require a motor
vehicle manufacturer, dealer, or repair business to take any action or
bear any costs except in instances in which a dealer or repair business
voluntarily agrees to deactivate or install an air bag on-off switch
for an air bag. For consumers, the purchase and installation of a
retrofit air bag on-off switch or the deactivation a vehicle's frontal
air bag is permissive, not prescriptive.
When an eligible consumer obtains the agency's authorization for
the installation of a retrofit air bag on-off switch or air bag
deactivation and enlists a dealer or repair business to modify their
vehicle accordingly, there will be costs associated with that action.
However, these are costs that the consumer chooses to bear if they want
an air bag on-off switch or air bag
[[Page 76046]]
deactivation, they are not costs prescribed by NHTSA's regulation.
Moreover, the agency notes that the amendments to part 595 that are
proposed here would either only slightly amend existing processes for
vehicle owners to request a make inoperative exemption or would codify
longstanding procedures relating to requests for deactivations. Given
that these proposed changes would not substantially change the process
by which vehicle owners currently obtain make inoperative exemptions
for retrofit air bag on-off switches and deactivations, and the fact
that these changes will affect a relatively small number of vehicles,
there are virtually no new costs imposed by this rulemaking. A detailed
description of the costs and benefits can be found above. Furthermore,
the agency prepared an economic analysis for this proposed rule, which
can be found in the docket for this NPRM.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.,
as amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
(SBREFA) of 1996), whenever an agency is required to publish a notice
of proposed rulemaking, it must prepare and make available for public
comment a regulatory flexibility analysis that describes the effect of
the rule on small entities (i.e., small businesses, small
organizations, and small governmental jurisdictions) unless the head of
an agency certifies the proposal will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. The Small Business
Administration's regulations at 13 CFR part 121 define a small
business, in part, as a business entity ``which operates primarily
within the United States.'' 13 CFR part 121.105(a). SBREFA amended the
Regulatory Flexibility Act to require Federal agencies to provide a
statement of the factual basis for certifying that a proposal will not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
I certify that the changes proposed in this NPRM would not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
The amendments proposed in this NPRM eliminate the sunset provision in
Subpart B of part 595, make some relatively minor changes to on-off
switch eligibly that only affect a small number of vehicles, and codify
existing agency practices regarding treatment of law enforcement and
emergency vehicles and air bag deactivations.
This NPRM does not propose any changes that would significantly
affect small entities. Small organizations and small governmental units
would not be significantly affected by the proposed amendments of this
NPRM since the potential cost impacts associated with this action are
negligible.
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
NHTSA has examined this proposed rule pursuant to Executive Order
(E.O.) 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999) and concluded that no
additional consultation with States, local governments or their
representatives is mandated beyond the rulemaking process. The agency
has concluded that the rulemaking would not have sufficient federalism
implications to warrant consultation with State and local officials or
the preparation of a federalism summary impact statement. This proposed
rule would not have ``substantial direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the national government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of
government.''
NHTSA rules can have preemptive effect in two ways. First, the
National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act contains an express
preemption provision stating that, if NHTSA has established a standard
for an aspect motor vehicle or motor vehicle equipment performance a
State may only prescribe or continue in effect a standard for that same
aspect of performance if the State standard is identical to the Federal
standard. 49 U.S.C. 30103(b)(1). It is this statutory command by
Congress that preempts any non-identical State legislative and
administrative law addressing the same aspect of performance.
The express preemption provision described above is subject to a
savings clause under which ``[c]ompliance with a motor vehicle safety
standard prescribed under this chapter does not exempt a person from
liability at common law.'' 49 U.S.C. 30103(e). Pursuant to this
provision, State common law tort causes of action against motor vehicle
manufacturers that might otherwise be preempted by the express
preemption provision are generally preserved.
NHTSA rules can also preempt State law if complying with the FMVSS
would render the motor vehicle manufacturers liable under State tort
law. Because most NHTSA standards established by an FMVSS are minimum
standards, a State common law tort cause of action that seeks to impose
a higher standard on motor vehicle manufacturers will generally not be
preempted. However, if and when such a conflict does exist--for
example, when the standard at issue is both a minimum and a maximum
standard--the State common law tort cause of action is impliedly
preempted. See Geier v. American Honda Motor Co., 529 U.S. 861 (2000).
Pursuant to E.O. 13132, NHTSA has considered whether this proposed
rule could or should preempt State common law causes of action. The
agency's ability to announce its conclusion regarding the preemptive
effect of one of its rules reduces the likelihood that preemption will
be an issue in any subsequent tort litigation. To this end, the agency
has examined the nature (e.g., the language and structure of the
regulatory text) and objectives of this proposed rule and finds that
this NPRM, like many NHTSA rules, prescribes only a minimum safety
standard.
Accordingly, NHTSA does not intend that this proposed rule preempt
state tort law that would effectively impose a higher standard on motor
vehicle manufacturers than that established by this proposed rule.
Establishment of a higher standard by means of State tort law would not
conflict with the minimum standard finalized in this document. Without
any conflict, there could not be any implied preemption of a State
common law tort cause of action.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the procedures established by the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), Federal agencies must obtain
approval from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for each
collection of information they conduct, sponsor, or require through
regulations, and a person is not required to respond to a collection of
information by a Federal agency unless the collection displays a valid
OMB control number. This proposed rulemaking proposes changes to the
existing information collection requirements under 49 CFR part 595.5,
``Retrofit On-Off Switches for Air Bags.''
In compliance with the requirements of the PRA, NHTSA intends to
request approval for a reinstatement with modification of a previously
approved information collection request. Specifically, NHTSA is
requesting reinstatement of the information collection request (ICR)
with OMB Control No. 2127-0588. This ICR corresponds to appendix B to
part 595, which is a form that any owner or lessee of a motor vehicle
seeking the installation of an air bag on-off switch must complete and
submit to NHTSA before NHTSA will grant or deny
[[Page 76047]]
approval for an on-off switch to be installed. Additionally, NHTSA
plans to request that the previously approved ICR be modified in
accordance with the proposals discussed in this NPRM. As discussed in
the sections above, this NPRM proposes to amend several of the
appendices in part 595, and proposes adding an additional appendix to
part 595, which means the burden on the public may be different from
the originally approved ICR.
As part of seeking approval to reinstate the ICR with OMB, NHTSA
will separately publish a notice giving the public the opportunity to
comment on the reinstatement and modification of the ICR. Those notices
will provide significant detail on the ICR reinstatement, and on how
the ICR will be modified based on the proposals discussed in this
proposed rule.
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
NHTSA has analyzed this NPRM for the purposes of the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The agency has determined that
implementation of this action will not have any significant impact on
the quality of the human environment.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) requires Federal
agencies to prepare a written assessment of the costs, benefits and
other effects of proposed or final rules that include a Federal mandate
likely to result in the expenditure by State, local or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of more than
$100 million annually (adjusted annually for inflation, with base year
of 1995). UMRA also requires an agency issuing an NPRM or final rule
subject to the Act to select the ``least costly, most cost-effective or
least burdensome alternative that achieves the objectives of the
rule.'' This NPRM would not result in a Federal mandate that will
likely result in the expenditure by State, local or tribal governments,
in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of more than $100 million
annually (adjusted annually for inflation, with base year of 1995).
Executive Order 12778 (Civil Justice Reform)
When promulgating a regulation, agencies are required under E.O.
12988 to make every reasonable effort to ensure that the regulation, as
appropriate: (1) specifies in clear language the preemptive effect; (2)
specifies in clear language the effect on existing Federal law or
regulation, including all provisions repealed, circumscribed,
displaced, impaired, or modified; (3) provides a clear legal standard
for affected conduct rather than a general standard, while promoting
simplification and burden reduction; (4) specifies in clear language
the retroactive effect; (5) specifies whether administrative
proceedings are to be required before parties may file suit in court;
(6) explicitly or implicitly defines key terms; and (7) addresses other
important issues affecting clarity and general draftsmanship of
regulations.
Pursuant to this Order, NHTSA notes as follows. The preemptive
effect of this NPRM is discussed above. NHTSA notes further that there
is no requirement that an individual submit a petition for
reconsideration or pursue other administrative proceedings before they
may file suit in court.
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
Under the National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995
(NTTAA) (Pub. L. 104-113), all Federal agencies and departments shall
use technical standards that are developed or adopted by voluntary
consensus standards bodies, using such technical standards as a means
to carry out policy objectives or activities determined by the agencies
and departments. Voluntary consensus standards are technical standards
(e.g., materials specifications, test methods, sampling procedures, and
business practices) that are developed or adopted by voluntary
consensus standards bodies, such as the International Organization for
Standardization and the Society of Automotive Engineers. The NTTAA
directs us to provide Congress, through OMB, explanations when we
decide not to use available and applicable voluntary consensus
standards. There are no voluntary consensus standards developed by
voluntary consensus standards bodies pertaining to this proposed rule.
Plain Language Requirement
E.O. 12866 requires each agency to write all rules in plain
language. Application of the principles of plain language includes
consideration of the following questions:
Have we organized the material to suit the public's needs?
Are the requirements in the rule clearly stated?
Does the rule contain technical language or jargon that
isn't clear?
Would a different format (grouping and order of sections,
use of headings, paragraphing) make the rule easier to understand?
Would more (but shorter) sections be better?
Could we improve clarity by adding tables, lists, or
diagrams?
What else could we do to make the rule easier to
understand?
NHTSA has considered these questions and attempted to use plain
language in promulgating this proposed rule. If readers have
suggestions on how we can improve our use of plain language, please
write us.
Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
The Department of Transportation assigns a regulation identifier
number (RIN) to each regulatory action listed in the Unified Agenda of
Federal Regulations. The Regulatory Information Service Center
publishes the Unified Agenda in April and October of each year. The RIN
contained in the heading at the beginning of this notice may be used to
find this action in the Unified Agenda.
Privacy Act
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(c), DOT solicits comments from the
public to better inform its decision-making process. DOT posts these
comments, without edit, including any personal information the
commenter provides, to www.regulations.gov, as described in the system
of records notice (DOT/ALL-14 FDMS), which can be reviewed at
www.transportation.gov/privacy. Anyone is able to search the electronic
form of all comments received into any of our dockets by the name of
the individual submitting the comment (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association, business, labor union, etc.).
You may review DOT's complete Privacy Act Statement in the Federal
Register published on April 11, 2000 (Volume 65, Number 70; Pages
19477-78).
VII. Public Participation
How do I prepare and submit comments?
To ensure that your comments are correctly filed in the
Docket, please include the Docket Number in your comments.
Your comments must not be more than 15 pages long. NHTSA
established this limit to encourage you to write your primary comments
in a concise fashion. However, you may attach necessary additional
documents to your comments, and there is no limit on the length of the
attachments.
If you are submitting comments electronically as a PDF
(Adobe) file,
[[Page 76048]]
NHTSA asks that the documents be submitted using the Optical Character
Recognition process, thus allowing NHTSA to search and copy certain
portions of your submissions.
Please note that pursuant to the Data Quality Act, for
substantive data to be relied on and used by NHTSA, it must meet the
information quality standards set forth in the OMB and DOT Data Quality
Act guidelines. Accordingly, NHTSA encourages you to consult the
guidelines in preparing your comments. DOT's guidelines may be accessed
at https://www.transportation.gov/regulations/dot-information-dissemination-quality-guidelines.
Tips for Preparing Your Comments
When submitting comments, please remember to:
Identify the rulemaking by docket number and other
identifying information (subject heading, Federal Register date and
page number).
Explain why you agree or disagree, suggest alternatives,
and substitute language for your requested changes.
Describe any assumptions you make and provide any
technical information and/or data that you used.
If you estimate potential costs or burdens, explain how
you arrived at your estimate in sufficient detail to allow for it to be
reproduced.
Provide specific examples to illustrate your concerns, and
suggest alternatives.
Explain your views as clearly as possible, avoiding the
use of profanity or personal threats.
To ensure that your comments are considered by the agency,
make sure to submit them by the comment period deadline identified in
the DATES section above.
For additional guidance on submitting effective comments,
see https://www.regulations.gov/docs/Tips_For_Submitting_Effective_Comments.pdf.
How can I be sure that my comments were received?
If you wish Docket Management to notify you upon its receipt of
your comments, enclose a self-addressed, stamped postcard in the
envelope containing your comments. Upon receiving your comments, Docket
Management will return the postcard by mail.
How do I submit confidential business information?
If you wish to submit any information under a claim of
confidentiality, you should submit your complete submission, including
the information you claim to be confidential business information
(CBI), to the NHTSA Chief Counsel. When you send a comment containing
CBI, you should include a cover letter setting forth the information
specified in our CBI regulation (49 CFR part 572). In addition, you
should submit a copy from which you have deleted the claimed CBI to the
Docket by one of the methods set forth above.
To facilitate social distancing due to COVID-19, NHTSA is treating
electronic submission as an acceptable method for submitting CBI to the
Agency under 49 CFR part 512. Any CBI submissions sent via email should
be sent to an attorney in the Office of Chief Counsel at the address
given above under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
Will the agency consider late comments?
We will consider all comments received before the close of business
on the comment closing date indicated above under DATES. To the extent
possible, we will also consider comments that the docket receives after
that date. If the docket receives a comment too late for us to consider
in developing a final rule (assuming that one is issued), we will
consider that comment as an informal suggestion for future rulemaking
action.
How can I read the comments submitted by other people?
You may read the comments received by the docket at the address
given above under ADDRESSES. The hours of the docket are indicated
above in the same location. You may also see the comments on the
internet. To read the comments on the internet, go to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the online instructions for accessing the
dockets.
Please note that even after the comment closing date, we will
continue to file relevant information in the docket as it becomes
available. Further, some people may submit late comments. Accordingly,
we recommend that you periodically check the docket for new material.
You can arrange with the docket to be notified when others file
comments in the docket. See www.regulations.gov for more information.
If you have any questions about CBI or the procedures for claiming
CBI, please consult the person(s) identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 595
Imports, Motor vehicle safety, Motor vehicles.
In consideration of the foregoing, NHTSA is proposing to amend 49
CFR part 595 as follows:
PART 595--MAKE INOPERATIVE EXEMPTIONS
0
1. The authority citation for part 595 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115, 30117, 30122 and 30166;
delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.95.
0
2. Amend Sec. 595.4 by adding in alphabetical order definitions for
``Deactivation'', ``Emergency vehicle'', and ``On-off switch'' to read
as follows:
Sec. 595.4 Definitions.
* * * * *
Deactivation means that a dealer or motor vehicle repair business
disables an air bag system in a motor vehicle.
* * * * *
Emergency vehicle means law enforcement vehicles, as that term is
defined in S7 of Sec. 571.208 of this chapter, firefighting vehicles,
and ambulances, as that term is defined in S3 of Sec. 571.201 of this
chapter.
* * * * *
On-off switch means a switch that allows an occupant to turn an air
bag in the vehicle on or off.
* * * * *
0
3. Revise the heading to Subpart B to read as follows:
Subpart B--Retrofit On-Off Switches for Air Bags and Air Bag
Deactivations
0
4. Revise Sec. 595.5 to read as follows:
Sec. 595.5 Requirements.
(a) Overview of general conditions for a vehicle owner or lessee to
obtain approval to install a retrofit air bag on-off switch. For
installing a retrofit air bag on-off switch on vehicles other than an
emergency vehicle, prior to the installation of the retrofit air bag
on-off switch either the owner or lessee of the motor vehicle reads the
information brochure in appendix A to this part and submits the
completed form in appendix B to this part to the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) in accordance with the
instructions on the form. For emergency vehicles, the authorized
representative of the owner or lessee of the emergency vehicle submits
the completed form in appendix D to this part to NHTSA in accordance
with the instructions on the form. NHTSA will consider whether the
request is consistent with motor vehicle safety and the purpose and
policies of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act. If NHTSA
agrees to the request, NHTSA sends a letter to the
[[Page 76049]]
requestor authorizing the installation of an on-off switch in that
vehicle for that air bag.
(b) Requirements for dealer or motor vehicle repair businesses when
installing retrofit on-off switches for air bags. A dealer or motor
vehicle repair business may modify a motor vehicle by installing an on-
off switch subject to the conditions in paragraphs (b)(1) through (5)
of this section.
(1) The dealer or motor vehicle repair business receives from the
owner or lessee of the motor vehicle a letter from the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration that authorizes the installation of an
on-off switch in that vehicle for that air bag.
(2) The dealer or motor vehicle repair business installs the on-off
switch in accordance with the instructions of the manufacturer of the
switch.
(3) The on-off switch meets all of the conditions specified in
paragraphs (b)(3)(i) and (ii) of this section.
(i) The on-off switch is operable solely by a key or a key-like
object. The on-off switch shall be separate from the ignition switch
for the vehicle, so that the driver must take some action other than
inserting the ignition key or turning the ignition key in the ignition
switch to turn off the air bag. Once turned off, the air bag shall
remain off until it is turned back on by means of the device. If a
single on-off switch is installed for more than one air bag in the
vehicle, the on-off switch shall allow each air bag to be turned off
without turning off the other air bag(s). The readiness indicator
required by S4.5.2 of Sec. 571.208 of this chapter shall continue to
monitor the readiness of the air bags even when one or more air bags
have been turned off. The readiness indicator light shall not be
illuminated solely because an air bag has been deactivated by means of
an on-off switch.
(ii) A telltale light in the interior of the vehicle shall be
illuminated whenever an air bag is turned off by means of the on-off
switch. The telltale for a driver air bag shall be clearly visible to
an occupant of the driver's seating position. The telltale for a front
passenger air bag shall be clearly visible to occupants of all front
seating positions. The telltale for an air bag:
(A) Shall be yellow;
(B) Shall have the identifying words ``DRIVER AIR BAG OFF'',
``PASSENGER AIR BAG OFF'', or ``PASS AIR BAG OFF'', as appropriate, on
the telltale or within 25 millimeters of the telltale;
(C) Shall remain illuminated for the entire time that the air bag
is ``off'';
(D) Shall not be illuminated at any time when the air bag is
``on''; and,
(E) Shall not be combined with the readiness indicator required by
S4.5.2 of Sec. 571.208 of this chapter.
(4) The dealer or motor vehicle repair business provides the owner
or lessee with an insert for the vehicle owner's manual that--
(i) Describes the operation of the on-off switch;
(ii) Lists the risk groups on the request form set forth in
appendix B to this part;
(iii) States that an on-off switch should only be used to turn off
an air bag for a member of one of those risk groups; and
(iv) States the safety consequences of using the on-off switch to
turn off an air bag for persons who are not members of any of those
risk groups. The description of those consequences includes
information, specific to the make, model, and model year of the
affected vehicle, about any seat belt energy managing features, e.g.,
load limiters, that will affect seat belt performance when the air bag
is turned off.
(5) In the form included in the agency authorization letter
specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, Appendix C of this part,
the dealer or motor vehicle repair business fills in information
describing itself and the on-off switch installation(s) it makes in the
motor vehicle. The dealer or motor vehicle repair business then sends
the form to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration within 7
working days after the completion of the described installations.
(c) Overview of general conditions for a vehicle owner or lessee to
obtain approval to deactivate an air bag. (1) For air bag
deactivations, prior to the deactivation of the air bag the owner or
lessee of the vehicle submits a written request to NHTSA with the
following information:
(i) The name and address of the vehicle owner or lessee;
(ii) A request that an air bag be deactivated and whether the
request applies to the driver air bag, front passenger air bag, or
both;
(iii) A certification that the owner or lessee has read the
information brochure in appendix A to this part;
(iv) A detailed justification why deactivation is necessary and why
the installation of an on-off switch is not a viable option; and
(v) Any documentation that supports the stated justification; and a
certification that if the deactivation is no longer justified or if
they sell the vehicle, the owner or lessee would have the air bag
reactivated or would inform the buyer that the air bag has been
deactivated prior to the sale.
(2) The owner or lessee mails the request to the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, Attention: Air Bag Deactivation
Requests, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590 or faxes the
request to 202-493-2833. NHTSA will consider whether the request is
consistent with motor vehicle safety and the purpose and policy of the
National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act. If NHTSA agrees to the
request, NHTSA sends a letter to the requestor authorizing the
deactivation of the specified air bag in the vehicle, with labels to be
affixed by the dealer or motor vehicle repair business to both sides of
the sun visor at each seating position with a deactivated air bag,
alerting vehicle users about the deactivated air bag(s).
(d) Requirements for dealers or motor vehicle repair businesses
when performing air bag deactivations. A dealer or motor vehicle repair
business may modify a motor vehicle by deactivating an air bag subject
to the conditions in paragraphs (d)(1) through (3) of this section.
(1) Prior to the deactivation of the air bag, the dealer or motor
vehicle repair business receives from the owner or lessee of the motor
vehicle a letter from NHTSA that authorizes the deactivation of the
specified air bag in the vehicle and labels to be affixed by the dealer
or motor vehicle repair business to both sides of the sun visor at each
seating position with a deactivated air bag, alerting vehicle users
about the deactivated air bag(s).
(2) The dealer or motor vehicle repair business affixes the labels
to both sides of the sun visor at each seating position with a
deactivated air bag.
(3) If a deactivated air bag gets reactivated the dealer or motor
vehicle repair business shall remove the labels indicating the air bag
was deactivated.
0
5. Revise Appendices A through C to read as follows:
BILLING CODE 4910-59-P
Appendix A to Part 595--Advanced Frontal Air Bags and Air Bag On-Off
Switch Information Brochure
[[Page 76050]]
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[[Page 76051]]
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[[Page 76052]]
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[[Page 76053]]
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[[Page 76054]]
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[[Page 76055]]
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[[Page 76056]]
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[[Page 76057]]
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[[Page 76058]]
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Appendix B to Part 595--Request Form for Frontal Air Bag On-Off Switch
[[Page 76059]]
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[[Page 76060]]
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[[Page 76061]]
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Appendix C to Part 595--Installation of Air Bag On-Off Switches
[[Page 76062]]
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0
6. Add Appendix D to read as follows:
Appendix D to Part 595--Request Form for Air Bag On-Off Switch for
Emergency Vehicles
[[Page 76063]]
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[[Page 76064]]
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Issued in Washington, DC, under authority delegated in 49 CFR
1.95 and 501.5.
Sophie Shulman,
Deputy Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2024-20651 Filed 9-16-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-59-C