Highway safety nominee to address vehicle crashes

February 20, 2006

The Bush administration’s choice to lead the government’s traffic safety agency pledged this month to make the nation’s highways and roads safer for families while tackling issues like vehicle rollovers and teenage crashes.

Nicole Nas-on, who was Transportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta’s chief legislative liaison, said she would try to “reduce the toll of motor vehicle crashes on America’s families” as administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

“There’s hardly a family in America who has not been impacted by a car crash,” Nason told a Senate panel.

Nason was nominated in January to lead the agency. If confirmed by the Senate, Nason would succeed Dr. Jeffrey Runge, who departed last year to become chief medical officer at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Nason helped shape the federal highway bill approved by Congress last year that includes several safety measures, including requirements for stability standards to prevent rollovers and measures targeting drunken driving and seat belt use.

Nason said the bill provided “significant tools” for safety programs and credited financial incentive grants in the bill for persuading lawmakers in Alaska and Mississippi to approve primary seat belt laws.

But Joan Claybrook, a former NHTSA administrator, said in an interview that Nason was the administration’s point person in opposing the safety measures and was concerned about her level of experience on regulatory matters.

“Is it going to be de minimis or is it going to be robust in terms of the safety standards she will issue?” said Claybrook, president of Public Citizen, a consumer watchdog group.

Transportation Department spokesman Robert Johnson dismissed the criticism as “premature and ill-informed.”

Nason told lawmakers that she learned about the importance of auto safety from her father, a retired Suffolk County, N.Y., police chief.

Nason said people too often open the metro section of newspapers and read of “teenage highway fatalities, and alcohol will often be involved.”

On fuel economy standards involving light trucks, for which the agency is considering rulemaking, Nason said she would seek “the most efficient and safest rule possible.”

Sen. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., asked Nason about her views on the need to strengthen rules involving rollovers, roof crush and the ejection of passengers from vehicles.

Nason said she was “an enormous fan of electronic stability control,” an anti-rollover system.

Topics Auto Legislation

Was this article valuable?

Here are more articles you may enjoy.

From This Issue

Insurance Journal Magazine February 20, 2006
February 20, 2006
Insurance Journal Magazine

Commercial Auto