95-31583. Defect and Noncompliance Reports; Record Retention; and Defect and Noncompliance Notification  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 3 (Thursday, January 4, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 274-279]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-31583]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
    
    49 CFR Parts 573, 576, and 577
    
    [Docket No. 93-68; Notice 8]
    RIN 2127-AG15
    
    
    Defect and Noncompliance Reports; Record Retention; and Defect 
    and Noncompliance Notification
    
    AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, DOT.
    
    ACTION: Grant in part and denial in part of petitions for 
    reconsideration.
    
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    SUMMARY: In this document, the National Highway Traffic Safety 
    Administration (NHTSA) is granting in part petitions for 
    reconsideration of an April 5, 1995 final rule that, among other 
    things, amended 49 CFR Parts 573, 576, and 577 (60 FR 17254). On 
    reconsideration, the agency is amending provisions of that final rule 
    concerning submission by manufacturers of schedules for recall 
    campaigns, recordkeeping regarding recalls of leased vehicles, record 
    retention period, and notification to lessees of recall campaigns. 
    NHTSA has concluded that these changes will reduce manufacturer burdens 
    without adversely affecting the agency's recall program.
    
    DATES: Effective date: The amendments made by this final rule are 
    effective on January 4, 1996.
        Any petitions for reconsideration must be received by NHTSA no 
    later than February 5, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: Any petitions for reconsideration should refer to the docket 
    and notice number of this notice and be submitted to: Docket Section, 
    Room 5109, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 400 Seventh 
    Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. (Docket Room hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4 
    p.m., Monday through Friday.)
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Jonathan D. White, Office of Defects Investigation, National Highway 
    Traffic Safety Administration, 400 Seventh Street SW., Room 5319, 
    Washington, DC 20590; (202) 366-5227.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 
    
    Background
    
        This final rule amends several sections of 49 CFR Parts 573, 576, 
    and 577, as those parts were recently amended on April 5, 1995. These 
    changes are being adopted by NHTSA in response to four petitions for 
    reconsideration of the April 5 final rule that were submitted by the 
    Association of International Automobile Manufacturers (AIAM), Chrysler 
    Corporation (Chrysler), Ford Motor Company (Ford), and General Motors 
    Corporation (GM).
        In addition to seeking substantive changes, the petitions asked for 
    an extension of the original May 5, 1995 effective date of the April 5 
    amendments on the ground that it would be difficult to achieve 
    compliance by that date. On May 16, 1995, the agency published a notice 
    in the Federal Register setting a new effective date of July 7, 1995 
    for the April 5 amendments. 60 FR 26002. Subsequently, on July 7, 1995, 
    NHTSA suspended until further notice the effective date of four of the 
    provisions for which the petitioners had sought reconsideration. 60 FR 
    35458. That notice also confirmed that all other provisions of the 
    April 5 final rule would go into effect on July 7, 1995.
        In September 1995, the Office of the Federal Register informed 
    NHTSA that it could not leave the effective date of a regulation 
    indefinite, as it had done in the July 7 Federal Register notice. 
    Accordingly, NHTSA published another notice setting January 2, 1996, as 
    the effective date of those four provisions, pending the decision on 
    reconsideration. 60 FR 50476 (Sept. 29, 1995).
        Based on its review of the petitions for reconsideration, NHTSA 
    also decided that it would be advisable to obtain further information 
    from the public on four of the issues raised in the petitions. 
    Accordingly, the agency announced that it would hold a public meeting 
    in Detroit, Michigan to receive oral presentations on those issues and 
    to ask questions of those present, and that it would also receive 
    written comments on those issues. 60 FR 35459 (July 7, 1995).
        The following five entities made presentations at the Detroit 
    meeting, which took place on July 24, 1995: AIAM, Chrysler, Ford, GM, 
    and the R. L. Polk Company (Polk). The following ten entities submitted 
    written comments to the public docket: Advocates for Highway and Auto 
    Safety (Advocates), American Automotive Leasing Association (AALA), 
    American Honda Motor Company, Inc. (Honda), Association of Consumer 
    Vehicle Lessors (ACVL), Ford, GM, Institute of International Container 
    Lessors (IICL), National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA), 
    National Vehicle Leasing Association (NVLA), and Truck Renting and 
    Leasing Association (TRALA). In addition, NHTSA placed a written 
    transcript of the Detroit meeting in the public docket for this 
    rulemaking. 
    
    [[Page 275]]
    
        The notice published today grants the petitions for reconsideration 
    with respect to the four provisions specified above and denies the 
    petitions insofar as they sought amendments to other provisions of the 
    April 5 final rule. The four provisions pertain to the enforcement of 
    the provisions of Chapter 301 of Title 49 of the United States Code (49 
    U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 30101-30169) that set forth the obligations of 
    manufacturers of motor vehicles and motor vehicle equipment to provide 
    notification that motor vehicles or items of motor vehicle equipment 
    contain a safety-related defect or do not comply with a Federal motor 
    vehicle safety standard and to remedy the defect or noncompliance 
    without charge. 49 U.S.C. 30116-30121. The provisions of the final rule 
    regarding notification of defects and noncompliances in leased vehicles 
    implement a provision of the Intermodal Surface Transportation 
    Efficiency Act of 1991 (ISTEA) that requires vehicle lessors to send 
    their lessees a copy of notifications received from manufacturers 
    regarding a safety-related defect or noncompliance in the lessees' 
    vehicles. 49 U.S.C. 30119(f).
    
    Amendments to Part 573--Defect and Noncompliance Reports
    
        NHTSA is amending two sections of 49 CFR Part 573, one that sets 
    forth requirements regarding the submittal by manufacturers of 
    schedules for owner notification and remedy campaigns (recalls) under 
    certain circumstances (section 573.5(c)(8)), and one that specifies 
    recordkeeping requirements for manufacturers in connection with recalls 
    of leased vehicles (section 573.7(d) and (e)).
    
    Schedule for Recall Campaigns
    
        In order to address an increase in the number of recalls in which 
    there has been a significant delay between the manufacturer's decision 
    that a defect or noncompliance exists and the commencement and 
    conclusion of the manufacturer's recall campaign, NHTSA included in the 
    April 5 final rule a requirement that manufacturers include in their 
    defect/noncompliance reports submitted to NHTSA pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 
    30119 and 49 CFR Part 573 (Part 573 Report) a detailed schedule for 
    those notification campaigns that would not begin within thirty days of 
    the Part 573 Report or end within 75 days of that Report. Several 
    petitioners objected to this requirement as unnecessary and unduly 
    burdensome. In oral statements at the public meeting and in their 
    written comments, manufacturers indicated that the time periods 
    specified in the final rule would mean that detailed schedules would be 
    required in most recalls, because most notification campaigns are 
    either begun more than 30 days after the Part 573 Report or not 
    completed within 75 days of that Report. In addition, they asserted 
    that the need to file detailed scheduling information with NHTSA at the 
    outset of most recalls would have the effect of delaying implementation 
    of recalls, because personnel and resources would have to be taken away 
    from other aspects of recall implementation to ensure compliance with 
    the added reporting requirements.
        Pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 30119(c), manufacturers must notify owners, 
    purchasers, and dealers of safety defects and noncompliances ``within a 
    reasonable time'' after the decision that the defect or noncompliance 
    exists. NHTSA continues to believe strongly that safety recalls should 
    be implemented as soon as reasonably possible. However, it also 
    recognizes that the concerns raised by the manufacturers are serious 
    and need to be considered.
        In order to make the rule more responsive both to the 
    manufacturers' concerns and to the public safety interest in prompt 
    notification of safety-related defects and noncompliances, NHTSA has 
    decided to modify the burdensome aspects of the recall schedule 
    provisions of the April 5 final rule. Thus, the agency is deleting the 
    requirement that extensive scheduling information and explanatory 
    material be provided in the manufacturer's Part 573 Report in instances 
    where notification would begin more than 30 days after the Part 573 
    Report is submitted or end more than 75 days after the Report. Instead, 
    under the rule adopted today, manufacturers will only be required to 
    include in their Part 573 Reports the estimated date when owners will 
    first be notified that a remedy for the defect or noncompliance is 
    available and the estimated date when all owners will have been so 
    notified.
        No additional scheduling information will be required under the 
    regulation. In those relatively rare instances where the agency wishes 
    to further examine whether the manufacturer's time frame for the recall 
    is reasonable under the circumstances, it may request more detailed 
    information from the manufacturer on a case-by-case basis.
        As NHTSA noted in the preamble to the April 5 final rule, in most 
    cases, manufacturers develop a recall implementation schedule for their 
    own internal use at the time they decide that a defect or noncompliance 
    exists, or promptly thereafter. The final rule adopted today simply 
    requires manufacturers to provide the agency with the two most basic 
    elements of this scheduling information when they file their Part 573 
    Reports. Under this revision, manufacturers will have flexibility to 
    tailor the recall notification schedule to the circumstances of the 
    particular recall, with far less of a reporting burden, while NHTSA 
    will retain the ability, on a case-by-case basis, to ensure that the 
    timing of recall notification is reasonable. The agency is retaining 
    its authority, as set forth in new section 577.7(a)(1), to order a 
    manufacturer to notify owners on a specific date when it finds, after 
    consideration of available information and the views of the 
    manufacturer, that such notification is in the public interest.
        NHTSA recognizes that in some cases a manufacturer may not have any 
    scheduling information at the time it submits its Part 573 Report 
    (e.g., where the remedy has not been developed or tested, or where the 
    scope of the recall is uncertain). In such instances, the manufacturer 
    should indicate in the Report that the information is not available. 
    Thereafter, in accordance with section 573.5(b), the required 
    information ``shall be submitted as it becomes available.''
        On reconsideration, NHTSA has also decided to rescind new section 
    573.5(c)(8)(iii), which would have required a manufacturer to describe 
    all factors that it anticipated could interfere with its ability to 
    adhere to the proposed recall schedule and to describe with specificity 
    the likely effect of each of those factors. The agency believes that 
    the burden of requiring advance information about events which might 
    never actually have any effect on the recall significantly outweighs 
    whatever safety benefit might be derived from it. In addition, the 
    agency believes that the purpose of that requirement can as readily be 
    served by the requirement, retained in today's final rule, that a 
    manufacturer must promptly advise NHTSA if circumstances arise that can 
    result in unanticipated delays of two weeks or more in recall campaign 
    implementation. This requirement, formerly included in section 
    573.5(c)(8)(iv), is now renumbered as Sec. 573.5(c)(8)(ii).
        This final rule renumbers sections 573.5(c)(8) (v) and (vi) as 
    sections 573.5(c)(8) (iii) and (iv), respectively, and makes minor 
    changes in those paragraphs to reflect the changes to this section 
    described above, but makes no substantive changes. These provisions are 
    concerned with the effect on the requirement to file a notification 
    
    [[Page 276]]
    schedule of a manufacturer's intent to submit a petition for an 
    exemption from the recall requirements of the statute on the ground 
    that the defect or noncompliance is inconsequential.
    
    Recordkeeping Regarding Recalls of Leased Vehicles
    
        After reviewing the petitions for reconsideration and the oral and 
    written comments, NHTSA has decided to revise 49 CFR Sec. 573.7 (d) and 
    (e), which imposed requirements on manufacturers and lessors to 
    maintain lists of the names and addresses of ``known'' lessees of 
    vehicles covered by recall campaigns.
        All of the manufactures that participated in the reconsideration 
    process stated that the divisions of the company that deal with recalls 
    and maintain owner lists do not know whether a particular vehicle is 
    leased. However, the manufacturers were concerned that they could be 
    held responsible under the rule for ``knowing'' that a vehicle was 
    leased because that information is contained in records maintained 
    elsewhere in the organization, such as corporate offices or 
    subsidiaries involved with fleet operations or consumer credit matters.
        These manufacturers stated that it would be extremely costly and 
    time-consuming to integrate their leased vehicle records with the 
    vehicle owner lists prepared in connection with recall campaigns. Such 
    records are generally maintained in separate databases in separate 
    parts of the company and integrating the databases and reprogramming 
    the systems to generate the information in the manner required by 
    section 573.7(d) would require many months of work and substantial 
    additional financial cost. Similarly, Polk, which is the principal 
    source of vehicle registration information used by manufacturers in 
    recall mailings, stated at the public meeting that it could not 
    specifically identify for their manufacturer clients which vehicles on 
    a given list of registered vehicles were leased. Finally, even apart 
    from cost considerations, the manufacturers contended that they should 
    not have to bear the burden of maintaining records reflecting lessee 
    notification, since that should be the responsibility of the vehicle 
    lessors.
        On the basis of the foregoing information, NHTSA has concluded that 
    any benefit to be gained by requiring manufacturers to identify those 
    vehicles on its recall notification lists that are leased and the 
    person or entity to whom notification was sent as the lessor or lessee 
    is far outweighed by the cost and time burdens that manufacturers would 
    incur to implement such a system. Moreover, the agency agrees that it 
    is not appropriate to require manufacturers to bear the burdens 
    associated with keeping records regarding the notification of lessees, 
    when Congress imposed the responsibility for such notification on the 
    lessors.
        Accordingly, NHTSA has decided to rescind in its entirety section 
    573.7(d) of the April 5 final rule. The agency will monitor lessor 
    compliance with notification requirements of section 30119(f) through 
    direct contact with lessors rather than by reviewing manufacturer 
    records. To identify such lessors, NHTSA plans to obtain information 
    from manufacturers and lessor organizations.
        For similar reasons, the agency is also amending section 573.7(e), 
    which primarily sets forth recordkeeping requirements applicable to 
    lessors, by deleting language in the last two sentences that are 
    applicable to record retention by manufacturers who send out recall 
    notifications directly to lessees pursuant to agreements with lessors. 
    Such lessees are, in effect, being notified as if they were owners, 
    without any lessor involvement, so there is no need to apply additional 
    recordkeeping burdens on the manufacturers to assure compliance 
    requirements of section 30119(f).
        Two commenters, AALA and TRALA, representing lessors, contended 
    that the recordkeeping requirements for lessors set forth in section 
    573.7(e) are overly burdensome and time consuming because they require 
    them to establish new systems for keeping these records. In addition, 
    AALA questioned the utility of requiring lessors to maintain these 
    records in light of the fact that, once the lease has expired, the 
    vehicle generally undergoes one or more rapid changes of ownership. 
    AALA questioned the purpose behind the requirement to maintain records 
    on ``vehicles whose future ownership the lessor would be unable to 
    verify.''
        The purpose of this recordkeeping requirement is not to verify 
    ``future ownership'' of vehicles; it is to give NHTSA a means of 
    verifying that lessors are complying with their duty to provide their 
    lessees with copies of safety recall notifications. This is analogous 
    to the requirement that manufacturers must keep a record of recall 
    notifications sent to registered owners.
        The agency has made every effort to ensure that the recordkeeping 
    requirements impose as little burden as possible on lessors. The 
    information required is minimal (less than what is required of 
    manufacturers), and it should not entail great expenditure of resources 
    to develop and maintain a record retention system. For these reasons, 
    NHTSA is retaining the substantive requirements of section 573.7(e) as 
    they apply to the lists that must be maintained by lessors.
    
    Amendments to Part 576--Record Retention
    
        Prior to the April 5 final rule, 49 CFR Sec. 576.5 required vehicle 
    manufacturers to retain relevant records for five years from the date 
    they are generated or acquired. The April 5 rule amended section 576.5 
    to require such records to be maintained for eight years from the last 
    date of the model year in which the vehicle to which the records relate 
    was produced. After considering the petitions for reconsiderations and 
    the oral and written comments submitted on this subject, NHTSA has 
    decided to rescind the amendment to section 576.5 and reinstate the 
    preexisting requirement.
        The primary reason for this decision is the time and cost burdens 
    that the amendment would have placed upon vehicle manufacturers. 
    Several manufacturers stated that it would be highly costly and 
    extremely time consuming to change their computerized record keeping 
    systems to comply with the new record retention requirements. The 
    agency has concluded that the safety benefit that would be derived from 
    revising the record retention period requirements would be far 
    outweighed by costs and other burdens on resources that would be 
    incurred by manufacturers in order to make the change.
        The agency is also making a technical amendment to 49 CFR 
    Sec. 576.6, which defines the records that must be retained by 
    manufacturers under Part 576. Ford pointed out that in the text of the 
    April 5 amendment, the word ``such'' does not appear as a modifier to 
    the term ``malfunctions'' the second time that word appears (in the 
    second sentence of the section). Ford expressed concern that the 
    removal of the word ``such'' could be construed to broaden the scope of 
    the section to cover additional types of records beyond those related 
    to motor vehicle safety.
        The agency does not agree that the slight change in the wording of 
    this phrase would have had a substantive affect on the record retention 
    requirements, since the revised language specified that the requirement 
    only applied to records of ``malfunctions that may be related to motor 
    vehicle safety.'' Nevertheless, to prevent any possible 
    misunderstanding, NHTSA is making a 
    
    [[Page 277]]
    technical amendment to this section to reinstate the preexisting 
    wording. The agency wishes to emphasize that the April 5 amendment to 
    section 576.6 that clarified that the record retention requirements 
    apply to records made on electronic media has not changed, and remains 
    in effect.
    
    Amendments to Part 577--Defect and Noncompliance Notification
    
        In its September 1993 notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) to 
    implement the ISTEA requirement that vehicle lessors furnish their 
    lessees with copies of notifications of safety-related defects and 
    noncompliances in leased vehicles, NHTSA proposed to require 
    manufacturers to include language in all recall notification letters to 
    lessors that would remind them of their statutory obligations. Several 
    comments submitted in response to the NPRM pointed out that it would be 
    very difficult for manufacturers to identify which owners were lessors. 
    On the basis of those comments, the April 5 final rule added a new 
    section 577.5(h), which required manufacturers to include language 
    describing a lessor's obligation to notify lessees of safety recalls in 
    all owner notification letters.
        During the reconsideration process, this requirement was vigorously 
    challenged. Most commenters stated that the inclusion of lessor/lessee 
    language in all owner notification letters would add clutter to the 
    letter and could confuse the recipients of the owner notification 
    letter who are not lessors/lessees. In addition, commenters 
    representing various elements of the leased vehicle industry generally 
    expressed the view that requiring manufacturers to notify lessors of 
    their obligations is unnecessary for several alternative reasons: (1) 
    Many lessors have an arrangement with manufacturers in which the latter 
    mails recall letters directly to individuals on a list furnished by the 
    lessor; (2) many individual lessees receive notification letters 
    directly from manufacturers because the name of the lessee appears on 
    the title as the owner; and (3) many lessors are already aware of their 
    obligations and are complying with them.
        These commenters also argued that the rule as written failed to 
    take into account several features of the leased vehicle market: e.g., 
    the fact that in consumer leasing, the lessee is likely to be the 
    driver, whereas in commercial leasing, the vehicles will be driven by 
    individuals who are not the lessee of record; and the fact that some 
    lessors regard their lists of lessees as trade secrets and do not 
    disclose them to manufacturers (which are often perceived as 
    competitors).
        On reconsideration, the agency has concluded that section 577.5(h) 
    should be rescinded. The likely confusion resulting from the inclusion 
    of this information in all owner notification letters will outweigh any 
    potential safety benefit associated with reminding lessors of their 
    obligations, particularly since there is reason to believe that most 
    lessors are already aware of those obligations. However, since it is 
    likely that not all lessors are aware of the duty to notify their 
    lessees of recalls, the agency believes that further steps are 
    appropriate to maximize the number of lessors that are informed of 
    their obligations under the statute and regulations. To that end, NHTSA 
    plans to send a notice to vehicle lessors informing them of their 
    statutory and regulatory obligations with respect to recall 
    notification of their lessees. The agency will also monitor the 
    performance of such lessors through periodic compliance reviews. The 
    agency plans to identify vehicle lessors from several sources, 
    including manufacturers, lessor associations, and commercial 
    publications.
    
    Other Issues
    
        The agency has also considered issues raised by petitioners and 
    commenters concerning other aspects of the April 5 final rule. Several 
    entities asserted that NHTSA should have allowed more time to comply 
    with the April 5 amendments. The agency recognized that the original 
    30-day period may not have allowed sufficient time for those affected 
    by the changes to come into compliance. However, NHTSA remains 
    convinced that the extension of the effective date for the provisions 
    not affected by the petitions for reconsideration to July 7 (providing 
    a total of over 90 days) was sufficient.
        Most of the concerns about the time centered on the provisions 
    regarding manufacturer recordkeeping for leased car notifications 
    (section 573.7) and the changes in the duration of the record retention 
    requirements of section 576.5. However, those concerns are now moot due 
    to the substantive changes made to those sections on reconsideration.
        The other issues raised by the petitions for reconsideration were 
    essentially restatements of arguments made during the comment period 
    prior to issuance of the final rule. The agency has concluded that no 
    change of those provisions is warranted.
        Advocates objected to the fact that NHTSA postponed the effective 
    date of several provisions of the final rule while it was considering 
    the merits of the petitions for reconsideration. It noted that the 
    agency had recently failed to stay a regulatory action when Advocates 
    filed a petition for reconsideration.
        Under 49 CFR Sec. 553.35(d), a petition for reconsideration does 
    not stay the effectiveness of a rule ``unless the Administrator so 
    provides.'' Thus, a decision whether or not to stay the effective date 
    of a rule pending consideration of petitions for reconsideration is 
    within the discretion of the Administrator.
        In the Federal Register notice that first extended the effective 
    date of all provisions of the April 5 rule from May 5 to July 7, 1995 
    (60 FR 26002), the agency noted, ``The [petitioners] have presented 
    NHTSA with information that makes a credible showing that they are not 
    able to achieve compliance with at least some provisions of the final 
    rule by May 5, and that it will be some months before they are able to 
    do so.'' In addition, NHTSA noted that the short time between the 
    filing of the petitions for reconsideration and original effective date 
    precluded it from sorting through all of the provisions of this 
    multifaceted rule and the arguments in the petitions in order to 
    identify particular provisions whose effective date should have been 
    extended. Id.
        The agency extended the effective date of four specified provisions 
    of the final rule beyond July 7, because it had decided that it needed 
    to gather further information on those issues. See 60 FR 35458 (July 7, 
    1995). The agency believes that this decision was reasonable under the 
    circumstances, and was adequately explained at the time.
        The fact that the agency did not stay a rule for which Advocates 
    sought reconsideration is not material. Unlike the manufacturers, 
    Advocates did not risk noncompliance with Federal law if the agency had 
    not stayed its action.
        Advocates also contended that NHTSA should not have considered the 
    merits of the arguments raised in the petitions for reconsideration 
    because the manufacturers did not present any new information that 
    could not have been presented prior to the issuance of the final rule. 
    While it may be true that the information was previously available, 
    there were relatively significant changes made to each of the four 
    provisions between the NPRM and the April 5 final rule. The 
    manufacturers could not have known exactly what the agency would 
    require in those provisions. Thus, it was appropriate to consider the 
    additional information and arguments presented in the reconsideration 
    petitions and in the subsequent comments.
    
    [[Page 278]]
    
    
    Rule Making Analyses and Notices
    
    1. Executive Order 12866 (Federal Regulations) and DOT Regulatory 
    Policies and Procedures
    
        NHTSA has analyzed the changes made by this revised final rule and 
    determined that it is not ``significant'' within the meaning of the 
    Department of Transportation regulatory policies and procedures. OMB 
    has also determined that it is not significant within the meaning of 
    Executive Order 12866. These changes will not impose any costs on the 
    regulated parties and are likely to reduce such costs.
    
    2. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The agency has also considered the effects of this rulemaking 
    action under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.). I 
    certify that this proposed rule will not, if promulgated, have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
    
    3. National Environmental Policy Act
    
        In accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 
    the agency has analyzed the environmental impacts of this rulemaking 
    action and determined that implementation of this action will not have 
    a significant impact on the quality of the human environment.
    
    4. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The amendments made by this final rule on reconsideration will not 
    impose any new recordkeeping burdens and are likely to reduce such 
    burdens.
    
    5. Executive Order 12612 (Federalism)
    
        This action has been analyzed in accordance with the principles and 
    criteria contained in Executive Order 12612, and it has been determined 
    that the rule making does not have sufficient federalism implications 
    to warrant the preparation of a Federalism Assessment.
    
    6. Civil Justice Reform Act
    
        This final rule does not have a retroactive or preemptive effect. 
    Judicial review of this rule may be obtained pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 
    section 702. That section does not require that a petition for 
    reconsideration be filed prior to seeking judicial review.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    49 CFR Part 573
    
        Imports; Motor vehicle safety; Motor vehicles; Reporting and record 
    keeping requirements; Tires.
    
    49 CFR Part 576
    
        Motor vehicle safety; Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    49 CFR Part 577
    
        Motor vehicle safety.
    
        In consideration of the foregoing, Parts 573, 576, and 577 of Title 
    49 of the Code of Federal Regulations are amended as follows:
    
    PART 573--DEFECT AND NONCOMPLIANCE REPORTS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 573 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30102-30103, 30112, 30117-30121, 30166-
    30167; delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.50
    
        2. Section 573.5 is amended by removing paragraphs (c)(8) (ii), 
    (iii), and (iv), redesignating paragraphs (c)(8) (v) and (vi) as 
    paragraphs (c)(8) (iii) and (iv) and revising them, and by adding a new 
    paragraph (c)(8)(ii) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 573.5  Defect and noncompliance information report.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (8) * * *
        (ii) The estimated date on which it will begin sending 
    notifications to owners that there is a safety-related defect or 
    noncompliance and that a remedy without charge will be available, and 
    the estimated date on which it will have completed such notification. 
    If a manufacturer subsequently becomes aware that either the beginning 
    or the completion date reported to the agency will be delayed by more 
    than two weeks, it shall promptly advise the agency of the delay and 
    the reasons therefor, and furnish a revised estimate.
        (iii) If a manufacturer intends to file a petition for an exemption 
    from the recall requirements of the Act on the basis that a defect or 
    noncompliance is inconsequential as it relates to motor vehicle safety, 
    it shall notify NHTSA of that intention in its report to NHTSA of the 
    defect or noncompliance under this section. If such a petition is filed 
    and subsequently denied, the manufacturer shall provide the information 
    required by paragraph (c)(8)(ii) of this section within five Federal 
    government business days from the date the petition denial is published 
    in the Federal Register.
        (iv) If a manufacturer advises NHTSA that it intends to file such a 
    petition for exemption from the notification and remedy requirements on 
    the grounds that the defect or noncompliance is inconsequential as it 
    relates to motor vehicle safety, and does not do so within the 30-day 
    period established by 49 CFR 556.4(c), the manufacturer must submit the 
    information required by paragraph (c)(8)(ii) of this section no later 
    than the end of that 30-day period.
        3. Section 573.7 is amended by removing paragraph (d), 
    redesignating paragraph (e) as paragraph (d), and revising new 
    paragraph (d) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 573.7  Lists of purchasers, owners, lessors and lessees.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) Each lessor of leased motor vehicles that receives a 
    notification from the manufacturer of such vehicles that the vehicle 
    contains a safety-related defect or fails to comply with a Federal 
    motor vehicle safety standard shall maintain, in a form suitable for 
    inspection, such as computer information storage devices or card files, 
    a list of the names and addresses of all lessees to which the lessor 
    has provided notification of a defect or noncompliance pursuant to 49 
    CFR 577.5(h). The list shall also include the make, model, model year, 
    and vehicle identification number of each such leased vehicle, and the 
    date on which the lessor mailed notification of the defect or 
    noncompliance to the lessee. The information required by this paragraph 
    must be retained by the lessor for one calendar year from the date the 
    vehicle lease expires.
    
    PART 576--RECORD RETENTION
    
        4. The authority citation for part 576 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30112, 30115, 30117-30121, 30166-30167; 
    delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.50.
    
        5. Section 576.5 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 576.5  Basic requirements.
    
        Each manufacturer of motor vehicles shall retain as specified in 
    Sec. 576.7 all records described in Sec. 576.6 for a period of five 
    years from the date on which they were generated or acquired by the 
    manufacturer.
        6. Section 576.6 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 576.6  Records.
    
        Records to be retained by manufacturers under this part include all 
    documentary materials, films, tapes, and other information-storing 
    media that contain information concerning malfunctions that may be 
    related to motor vehicle safety. Such records include, but are not 
    limited to, communications from vehicle users and memoranda of user 
    complaints; reports and other documents, including material generated 
    or communicated by computer, telefax or other electronic means, that 
    are related to work 
    
    [[Page 279]]
    performed under, or claims made under, warranties; service reports or 
    similar documents, including electronic transmissions, from dealers or 
    manufacturer's field personnel; and any lists, compilations, analyses, 
    or discussions of such malfunctions contained in internal or external 
    correspondence of the manufacturer, including communications 
    transmitted electronically.
    
    PART 577--DEFECT AND NONCOMPLIANCE NOTIFICATION
    
        7. The authority citation for part 577 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30102-30103, 30112, 30115, 30117-30121, 
    30166-30167; delegations of authority at 49 CFR 1.50 and 49 CFR 
    501.8.
    
    
    Sec. 577.5  [Amended]
    
        8. Section 577.5 is amended by removing paragraph (h) and 
    redesignating paragraph (i) as paragraph (h).
    
        Issued on: December 21, 1995.
    Ricardo Martinez,
    Administrator.
    [FR Doc. 95-31583 Filed 12-29-95; 10:49 am] 
    BILLING CODE 4910-59-M
    
    

Document Information

Published:
01/04/1996
Department:
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Grant in part and denial in part of petitions for reconsideration.
Document Number:
95-31583
Pages:
274-279 (6 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 93-68, Notice 8
RINs:
2127-AG15: Defect and Noncompliance Reports; Record Retention; and Defect and Noncompliance Notification
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/2127-AG15/defect-and-noncompliance-reports-record-retention-and-defect-and-noncompliance-notification
PDF File:
95-31583.pdf
CFR: (6)
49 CFR 573.5
49 CFR 573.7
49 CFR 576.5
49 CFR 576.6
49 CFR 576.7
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