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In 1979, nearly half the new vehicles received one or two stars, the two lowest ratings, but none of the new cars got those scores in 2008. About 95 percent of current vehicles receive four or five stars. "If everything's a five-star, then consumers have no choices and there's no pressure on manufacturers to improve," said Adrian Lund, president of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, which conducts its own crash test ratings. When Peters announced plans to upgrade the system in January 2007, officials said they wanted to maintain the speed of 35 miles per hour for front-end tests and study raising the speed from 38.5 mph for side-impact tests. Transportation officials also noted that they do not require crash testing at speeds below 25 mph and a "low-speed rating program could provide opportunities for injury reduction in these ranges." About 70 percent of injuries in side crashes occurred at 25 mph or less, the agency said at the time. ___ On the Net: NHTSA's New Car Assessment Program:
http://www.safercar.gov/
[Associated
Press;
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