Highway Bill Would Bolster NHTSA Funding, Authority
The Obama administration's transportation bill, delivered to the U.S. Congress March 30, would triple funding for the federal safety agency's auto defect investigation office.
by Staff
March 30, 2015
NHTSA Administrator Mark Rosekind
1 min to read
NHTSA Administrator Mark Rosekind
The Obama administration’s $478-billion six-year transportation bill calls for tripling funding for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s defects investigation office, in hopes of more quickly identifying life-threatening auto defects that warrant a safety recall.
The federal agency, part of the U.S. Department of Transportation, drew sharp criticism last year for its slow response to complaints about defects tied to Takata air bag inflators and General Motors’ ignition switches. Agency leaders, in turn, cited shortages in funding and staffing.
Ad Loading...
Dubbed the Grow America Act, the proposed legislation seeks to bolster NHTSA’s authority. The agency would have the power to stop the sale of vehicles that posed an imminent risk of injury or death. NHTSA could make that determination independently, without input from the involved automaker. A pilot program would be established to improve safety recall notification and response rates, by checking for open recalls when a vehicle is registered with a state DMV.
The bill also would raise the maximum penalty that NHTSA could impose on a company that violates a federal safety regulation – from $35 million to $300 million.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx sent the legislation to Congress March 30. The bill would invest $317 billion in roads and bridges and $115 billion in such public transportation options as buses and light rail trains.
Distracted driving remains one of the most persistent risks in fleet operations. New approaches focus on removing mobile device use entirely while adding real-time safety support.
As distraction risks evolve, fleets are turning to smarter, more connected technologies to better understand what’s happening behind the wheel. Part 2 explores how these tools are helping identify risky behaviors and improve visibility across operations.
Distracted driving is often measured by what we can see—phones in hand, eyes off the road. But what about the distractions we can’t? A recent incident raises a bigger question about awareness, attention, and why subtle risks so often go unnoticed.
Fleets have more driver data than ever, so why isn't behavior changing? Training requires more than reports and coaching — it requires real-world practice.
A two-part conversation with Stefan Heck on how AI is transforming the fight against distracted driving. As fleets adopt smarter tools, the focus shifts from reacting to preventing risk. In Part 1, we look at where AI is making an impact for fleets today.
An 11% drop in pedestrian fatalities in early 2025 signals progress in U.S. road safety, but elevated death rates and ongoing risks underscore the need for continued action from fleets and policymakers.