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    House panel challenges gov't response on Volt

    WASHINGTON (AP) — A GOP-led House committee is challenging the Obama administration's investigation into Chevy Volt batteries that caught fire last year, raising questions about whether the government's partial ownership of General Motors Co. created a conflict of interest.

    The report by the Republican staff of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform said it was "deeply troubling" that safety regulators waited several months before telling the public that a Volt battery caught fire three weeks after a government crash test. The fire happened in June but was not made public until November — "a period of time that also coincides with the negotiation over the 2017-2025 fuel economy standards," the report states, adding that it was possible that those negotiations "incentivized NHTSA to remain silent on the issue."

    But in a recent letter to committee chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif., National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Administrator David Strickland said that the agency's investigation into the Chevy Volt "is completely unrelated to the fuel economy standards rulemaking."

    The committee was set to hold a subcommittee hearing on the issue Wednesday. The Associated Press obtained a copy of the report ahead of its official release.

    In an email Tuesday, NHTSA spokeswoman Lynda Tran said that following the June fire, the agency needed to determine through careful forensic analysis whether the Volt was the actual cause — and if so, what the implications were for safety — and that took time.

    "If at any time during this process we had reason to believe that vehicle owners faced any imminent safety risk we would have made that point known to the public right away," she said.

    NHTSA began studying the Volt last June after a fire broke out in one of the cars three weeks after it was crashed as part of safety testing. Two other fires related to separate safety tests occurred later, and NHTSA opened an official investigation into the vehicle on Nov. 25. The government ended its investigation last week, concluding that the Volt and other electric cars don't pose a greater fire risk than gasoline-powered cars. The agency and General Motors Co. know of no fires in real-world crashes.

    But some critics have criticized the government's response, accusing it of having a conflict of interest because the government still owns 26.5 percent of the company's shares, and because the administration has touted electric cars. Wednesday's subcommittee hearing of the House Oversight and Government Reform was titled, "Volt Vehicle Fire: What Did NHTSA Know and When Did They Know It?"

    "Questions have been raised as to whether or not GM receives special deference from the administration because of its status as a ward of the state," the committee report states, adding, "the Obama administration has tied the political reputation of the president closely to the success of GM generally, and to the Chevy Volt specifically." The report also accuses NHTSA officials of not cooperating with its investigation, and of being unprepared to respond to car battery risks.

    Both Strickland and GM chairman and CEO Daniel F. Akerson were scheduled to testify at Wednesday's hearing.

    In written testimony, Akerson said that testing by government regulators resulted in fires "after putting the battery through lab conditions that no driver would experience in the real world."

    The company advised Volt owners to return their cars to dealers for repairs that will lower the risk of battery fires. GM hopes that, by adding steel to the plates protecting the batteries, it will ease worries about the car's safety. The cars are covered by a "customer satisfaction program" run by GM, which is similar to a safety recall but allows the carmaker to avoid the bad publicity and federal monitoring that come with a recall.

    "The Volt is safe," Akerson said.

     

    38 comments

    • DavidV  •  29 days ago
      Last night I heard someone talking about no more handouts, no more bailouts, no more corporate tax breaks, and everyone playing by the same rules. Yes! Woohoo! Umm, so, does that mean we taxpayers get to stop paying a $6,000 tax credit when someone else decides to buy a Volt?
    • JustAGuy  •  28 days ago
      Barack Obama has a response: Believe what I say, pay no attention to what I do.
    • Dean  •  28 days ago
      Liar, liar, Volt on fi-yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    • Rick  •  28 days ago
      Do you think if a Toyota caught fire in a government crash test they would have waited months to release it?
    • John Galt  •  29 days ago
      The subsidies on a Volt are a wealth transfer from working American taxpayers to rich elitist snobs.....thanks dems and Obama, way to take from the poor and give to the rich...too bad the people that vote for you are too stupid to figure that out or they stick their fingers in their ears and say lalalalala…..
    • Michael  •  Nashville, Tennessee  •  28 days ago
      Gee, you think this may have something to do with the fact that Obummer is subsidizing the Volt at nearly $300,000 a car?
    • DONALD  •  Oklahoma City, Oklahoma  •  29 days ago
      What, this administrtion trying to pull a fast one? Come on, they're so above anything like that. This is the most ethical administration in history - they even tell us how ethical they are. HA ha ha.
    • Danbury  •  Weed, California  •  28 days ago
      So far, the public hasn't been told how you can survive an accident impact with an electric car and the get electrocuted getting out if the 300 Amp power cable is exposed. That info has only been provided to police, fire, tow truck operators, ambulance personnel, etc.
    • Harry  •  Prince Frederick, Maryland  •  28 days ago
      The good news is most people are not stupid enough to pay nearly $50,000 for a piece of junk car made by a government-owned company. If you subtract the number of Volts "bought" by gov't agencies and contractors, Volt sales would be almost zero. Which is where they belong.
    • Mike  •  29 days ago
      Most transparent administration EVAH!
    • kenneth s  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  28 days ago
      gubmint motors sez "the volt is safe" ...translation = "the volt is a giant piece of crap"
    • Danbury  •  Weed, California  •  28 days ago
      Maybe Government Motors could sell more Volts if they came with marshmallows to roast...
    • chimp out  •  28 days ago
      VOLT is a POS! You would have to be a card carrying communist liberal dip shift to buy one of those piles!
    • Get Real  •  28 days ago
      Volt? Nah. I want one of those Ford Diesel cars they sell in Europe that gets 62 mpg.
    • kerrdog  •  Harper, Texas  •  28 days ago
      We better hope the Volt is safe, we're paying out the nose for every one sold. Being made by the same company/union that gave us the Vega, and diesels made out of the worst pos gas engine in history make one wonder if the NHSTA, the same people who have been caught faking results over and over again and who spent an unknown fortune to develope a rear steer motorcycle, may be politicaly driven to OK yet another untested piece of junk.
    • HopeWeChange  •  Riggins, Idaho  •  28 days ago
      Some fools think that the Volt is powered by electricty that "magically appears at the plug in on the wall".
    • John  •  Mt Hamilton, California  •  28 days ago
      Glad to see this investigation. There have been at least three tests I've read of where the Volt burst into flames because of its battery, and the Federal Government exonerated itself after investigating itself!?!? Now look into how in the world CFLs ever got approved -- those light bulbs are toxic waste hazards in your home!
    • Hobson Victim  •  28 days ago
      Oliver Stone is a dope head. Has been since the 70's. Used to work for him. He would vote for Ho Chi Minh if it would get him over.
    • AZsmitty  •  Peoria, Arizona  •  29 days ago
      Amazed? Not! Customer satisfaction program rather than actual recall because it isn't made public.................how convienient.
    • HopeWeChange  •  Riggins, Idaho  •  28 days ago
      So the coal powered Volt has battery issues?
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