Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut and Senator Edward
Markey of Massachusetts told reporters that they would wage a floor
battle to require used-car dealers to repair defects in the vehicles
they sell, eliminate caps on fines for automakers and impose
criminal penalties on auto executives who knowingly hide deadly
defects.
The same provisions were rejected by the Senate Commerce Committee
last week, when the panel approved legislation for a six-year, $275
billion surface transportation bill that Republican aides say could
come up for a full Senate vote within the next few days.
"I will be going to the Senate floor to fight to make sure we add in
stronger ... rules," Markey said in a conference call.
The long-term surface transportation bill has bipartisan support in
the Senate. But Democrats and consumer advocates say many of its
safety provisions favor industry despite the public outcry over
deadly defects involving General Motors Co ignition switches and
Takata Corp air bag inflators.
Republicans say the legislation includes some key advances in safety
including a doubling of the penalty cap for automakers from $35
million to $70 million, a ban against rental car companies renting
defective vehicles, added features to prevent tank car oil spills
and additional funding for the Amtrak passenger rail service.
The legislation would increase funding for the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, the U.S. auto safety watchdog, after
the agency incorporates reforms recommended by government auditors.
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A Republican aide pointed out that three Commerce Committee
Democrats joined Republicans to vote against stronger auto safety
rules favored by Blumenthal and Markey.
Last week, U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx joined safety
advocates in expressing concern that the legislation would weaken
safety by making it harder for the government to regulate cell phone
use in cars, delaying requirements for railroads to adopt new safety
equipment and removing public access to safety performance data on
large trucks and buses.
"It's not only a step backwards," Blumenthal said on Monday. "It's
also a devastating missed opportunity for the future."
(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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