Jeff Boyer, a GM veteran who has been with the company for more than
40 years, has been appointed vice president of global vehicle
safety, effective immediately.
The No. 1 U.S. automaker said Boyer's responsibilities will be "to
quickly identify and resolve product safety issues," including
handling recalls. Boyer, who was executive director of engineering
operations and systems development, will provide frequent updates on
vehicle safety to Chief Executive Mary Barra, senior management and
the board of directors.
"Jeff's appointment provides direct and ongoing access to GM
leadership and the board of directors on critical customer safety
issues," Barra said in a statement.
"This new role elevates and integrates our safety process under a
single leader so we can set a new standard for customer safety with
more rigorous accountability," she added. "If there are any
obstacles in his way, Jeff has the authority to clear them. If he
needs any additional resources, he will get them."
In the last two months, GM has recalled more than 3.3 million
vehicles globally, following the announcement on Monday of three new
recalls affecting 1.75 million vehicles, most in the United States.
Barra said on Monday that the Detroit automaker would take a $300
million charge in the first quarter, primarily to cover the costs
related to the ignition-switch recall and the three new recalls. She
also said there would be "more developments to announce" in the
future as the company works to improve its recall process.
[to top of second column] |
GM said that when the ignition switch was jostled, a key could turn
off the car's engine and disable airbags, sometimes while traveling
at high speed. Barra previously apologized for GM's failure to catch
the problem sooner.
The decade-long process that led to last month's ignition-switch
recall of such older GM models as the 2005-2007 Chevrolet Cobalt and
2003-2007 Saturn Ion has led to government criminal and civil
investigations, congressional hearings and class-action lawsuits in
the United States and Canada. All ask why GM took so long to address
a problem it has said first came to its attention in 2001.
In his new safety job, Boyer, 58, will report to John Calabrese,
vice president in charge of global vehicle engineering and be a
member of global product development chief Mark Reuss's staff, GM
said. Boyer will have global responsibility for the safety
development of GM vehicle systems as well as post-sale safety
activities, including recalls.
(Reporting by Ben Klayman in Detroit; editing by Stephen Powell)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|