Repairer Driven News
« Back « PREV Article  |  NEXT Article »

Foxx: U.S. to recommend automatic braking with car-safety star rating

By on
Market Trends | Technology
Share This:

U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx on Thursday said the government planned to recommend automatic braking systems be part of the New Car Assessment Program customer checklist.

In a speech to the Society of Automotive Engineers, Foxx cited a new report finding that safety technology — and the vehicle standards ensuring it — has saved 614,000 lives from crash-related deaths from 1960 to 2012. He spoke of the government’s hope for a future without crashes.

More RDN crash-prevention coverage

Two views on self-driving cars

Ford, GM gathering auto insurance-related data in new telematics push

Mercedes, Valeo, Audi self-driving cars shown off at CES

“We have a vision of America where driving on the roads is as risky as driving  in one of those games in an arcade — where car crashes are as much a part of the past as horse-and-buggy accidents — and where everyone gets from A to B without visiting the ER in the middle,” Foxx said in his prepared remarks.

That’s one of those sentiments collision repairers have to halfheartedly applaud. We’re all for zero injuries. But zero crashes impacts our ability to contribute to the auto-related job boom Foxx was also touting Thursday.

(One also wonders what arcade game he’s playing — we’d argue gamers crash their virtual cars way more than their real ones.)

However, it’s probably not really the end of the industry. According to IIHS’ Highway Loss Data Institute, these kind of systems don’t actually stop all crashes — though they seem to cut front-end collisions down by around 15 percent and make them less severe in nature (presumably to the occupants as well as the cars). The technology is also more expensive, and so the crashes you do work on could have a higher repair bill.

Types of automatic braking

According to Foxx, both crash-imminent braking and dynamic brake support would count.

The first hits the brakes automatically if a crash looks likely and a driver isn’t braking. Dynamic brake support puts more pressure on the brakes if the driver isn’t hitting them hard enough to avoid a crash.

The government is taking comments on the proposed rule for about two months. Find out how to submit one, more details about the government’s analysis, and what they’re most interested in hearing about here.

Correction: This article had erroneously stated that the government had proposed automatic braking be part of the five-star safety rating; the government recommended that it be included in the recommendations accompanying that rating. The article has been corrected.

More information:

“Transportation secretary Foxx announces plan to add two automatic emergency braking systems to recommended vehicle advanced technology features” 

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Jan. 22, 2015

Featured image: Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx, right, speaks after being introduced by Democratic President Barack Obama, center, as the nominee for Secretary of Transportation at the White House as outgoing Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood looks on April 29, 2013, in Washington, DC. (Win McNamee/Getty Images/Thinkstock file)

Share This: