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The bill would require the boxes to record at least 60 seconds before a crash and 15 seconds after, much longer than systems typically found in cars today, and require the systems to be resistant to temperature, water, crashes and tampering. Joan Claybrook, a former NHTSA administrator who was to testify at the hearing, said the improved data recorders will offer a "more complete picture" of accidents and eventually decline in cost as they become more common. Some lawmakers have said the new costs, including a proposed per-vehicle fee to boost funding for government safety research, could scare off car shoppers. "Every time you add new regulations, new fees and new costs, that means somebody who was right on the edge of being able to buy a car gets pushed out of the ability to buy a car," said Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich.
[Associated
Press;
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