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Cabraser is one of the nation's leading personal injury law firms
representing clients nationwide in personal injury lawsuits involving
dangerous drugs, medical devices, and other products. |
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Safety News Article Excerpt |
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| June 4, 2008 |
Detroit Free Press, "Rules on car roofs need to be better, senators warn" |
Key U.S. senators warned federal auto safety regulators today that Congress would act if regulators produce unacceptable and ineffective rules for strengthening vehicle roofs to protect people in rollover crashes. The debate over the exact cause of deaths in rollover accidents, which claimed 9,362 lives in 2006, and how much blame rests with a vehicle's roof strength has raged for years among safety advocates and automakers. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has been working on a new plan for boosting roof-crush standards ahead of a July 1 deadline, since its first proposal issued in August 2005 faced sharp criticism from automakers and safety groups.
Current rules set in 1973 require car and truck roofs to hold 1 1/2 times their weight. NHTSA's proposal called for vehicle roofs to withstand 2 1/2 times their weight on the driver's side, a change that it estimated would cost automakers $95 million and save 13 to 44 lives a year. The proposed rule would also attempt to block state lawsuits over roof crush injuries, a maneuver the Bush administration has applied repeatedly in rules from several agencies.
Sen. Tom Coburn, an Oklahoma Republican who requested the hearing of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, said NHTSA should be less concerned with hitting the July 1 deadline, and that Congress should act if the final rule is too weak. "It's not enough to offer a new standard," Coburn said. The goal "is to have that standard make a difference in American lives." Sen. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., and Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., warned the agency that Congress would also overturn the rule if it limited the legal rights of crash victims. McCaskill said Ford Motor Co. has added new safety features to its models "because they were spurred to action by the legitimate claims in courts around this country about their safety standards." |
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one or a handful of persons. If you have been harmed by a fraud or deceptive
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| Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, LLP is a fifty-plus
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| Since 1972, Lieff Cabraser has successfully represented
plaintiffs in class actions, group and individual cases in the fields of personal
injury and mass torts, employment discrimination and unfair employment practices,
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LIEFF CABRASER HEIMANN & BERNSTEIN, LLP |
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| Notice: Lieff
Cabraser attorneys provide legal advice and practice law for clients in
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Copyright © 2008 Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein,
LLP |
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