A 2008 law signed by President George W. Bush directed the DOT to revamp rear visibility standards by February 2011. But the DOT pushed back the deadline several times and now plans to issue a final rule by January 2015.
"Assuming DOT does not again delay the rule, the backover rule-making will have taken nearly seven years more than twice as long as Congress envisioned for the rule-making at a significant cost in human lives," according to the lawsuit.
Separately, U.S. officials said on Tuesday they added rear view video systems to its list of recommended safety features, which has historically encouraged automakers and consumers to consider vehicles equipped with the technology.
"While adding this technology to our list of safety features is important, I remain committed to implementing the rear visibility rule as well," U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said in a statement.
Backover accidents cause an average of 292 deaths and 18,000 injuries a year, according to a 2010 study conducted by the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. About 44 percent of the deaths are children younger than five years old.
If installed in all new U.S. vehicles, backup cameras could save annually at least 95 lives and prevent more than 7,000 injuries, NHTSA said in the 2010 study.
Requiring these cameras would add between $58 and $203 to the vehicle's price, or as much as $2.7 billion to equip a fleet of 16.6 million vehicles. The last time U.S. new light vehicle sales reached that level was in 2006.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/09/25/us-usa-autos-camera-idUSBRE98O03Y20130925
In the grand scheme of things is 95 lives really worth this additional regulation at a cost of $28,420,000 per life saved? Seems like we could find a much better $:life saved ratio somewhere else - like feeding starving children
The lawsuit against the DOT is brought by Public Citizen on behalf of a group that includes Greg Gulbransen, who lobbied for a change to DOT standards after he accidentally backed into his son Cameron, who died. The 2008 law is named after Cameron.
The other petitioners are Susan Auriemma, whose daughter Kate survived a similar accident, the nonprofits Consumers Union of United States and Kids And Cars, Inc, and Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety.
Ooooohhhhhh - now I get it. These parents backed over their kids so now they need the government to step in and make everyone else in the country who buys a car pay more because they fucked up