[nfbmi-talk] another story newsline readers miss here in mi
joe harcz Comcast
joeharcz at comcast.net
Fri Dec 17 20:53:38 UTC 2010
Car sound bill approved
House OKs deadline for hybrid, electric levels to warn blind
David Shepardson / Detroit News Washington Bureau
Washington— The House voted 379-30 Thursday to give federal safety regulators 18 months to set minimum sound levels from quiet electric and hybrid vehicles
to warn blind pedestrians.
The legislation cleared the Senate last week on a unanimous vote. It's the first piece of auto safety legislation expected to become law since President
Barack Obama took office in 2009. Several other safety bills proposed in the wake of Toyota Motor Corp.'s sudden acceleration recalls have been stalled.
The bill will "preserve the right to safe and independent travel for the blind, " said Marc
The Detroit News
http://www.detnews.com/article/20101217/AUTO01/12170344/1148/Car-sound-bill-approvedMaurer, president of the National Federation of the Blind.
Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., the chief sponsor of the bill and a hybrid owner, said it "will allow us to continue to promote our energy independence and technological
innovation while safeguarding those who use senses other than sight to navigate the roads."
The bill requires the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to set requirements for an alert sound that allows blind and other pedestrians to "reasonably
detect a nearby electric or hybrid vehicle" operating at low speeds.
The two major auto trade groups — the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers and the Association of International Automobile Manufacturers — joined two major
advocacy groups for the blind in promoting the legislation.
Blind pedestrians may not hear hybrids that shut off engines as vehicles come to a stop. New plug-in electric vehicles will be quieter still; some will
have no internal combustion engine and will run only on battery power.
Under the bill, drivers won't have to activate sounds; vehicles will do it automatically. The sounds must allow a blind pedestrian "to reasonably detect
a nearby electric or hybrid vehicle."
Automakers will be unable to allow drivers to deactivate the sounds.
Under a deal announced in May, NHTSA must "determine the minimum level of sound emitted from a motor vehicle that is necessary to provide blind and other
pedestrians with the information needed to reasonably detect a nearby electric or hybrid vehicle operating" and must "consider the overall community noise
impact."
Blind pedestrians cannot locate and evaluate traffic by sight and instead must listen to traffic to discern its speed, direction and other attributes to
travel safely and independently.
Other pedestrians, who are not blind, as well as bicyclists, runners and small children, will benefit, too.
Nissan Motor Co. has outfitted its Leaf electric car to automatically alert pedestrians when the car is operating at low speeds.
General Motors Co.'s Chevrolet Volt, powered by a battery and a small internal combustion engine, has a chirping sound the driver can activate.
dshepardson at detnews.com
(202) 662-8735
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