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LATThe Senate Commerce Committee says the agency lacks the expertise to handle complex auto electronics systems and questions whether government officials are too cozy with the industry they oversee.
Reporting from Washington - Senators slammed the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on Tuesday for not identifying serious safety problems with Toyota vehicles earlier, saying that the agency does not have enough technical expertise to handle increasingly complex auto electronics systems and questioning whether government officials are too cozy with the industry they oversee.
"NHTSA's actions -- and inactions -- in the years leading up to today are deeply troubling," Senate Commerce Committee Chairman John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.) told transportation officials at the start of his panel's hearing on the Toyota recalls. "The American people count on NHTSA to protect them and to provide them with clear and reliable safety information -- and even today that picture is not clear."
Rockefeller said NHTA officials failed to properly respond to a flood of complaints beginning in 2003 about sudden unintended acceleration in Toyota vehicles. One reason, he said, was that agency employees lacked the expertise and desire to investigate if the problems were caused by the electronic throttle control system rather than with improperly installed floor mats.
"I think that NHTSA investigators . . . would rather focus on floor mats than microchips because they understand floor mats," Rockefeller said.
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http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-toyota-hearing3-2010mar03,0,4259968.story