Biden to tap No. 2 official to head U.S. auto safety agency

Reuters

Published Oct 19, 2021 04:03PM ET

Updated Oct 20, 2021 12:26AM ET

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Joe Biden plans to nominate the No. 2 auto safety official to head the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), the White House confirmed on Tuesday.

Steven Cliff, who has been deputy administrator since February, has been a key figure in the Biden administration's proposed rewrite of fuel economy standards through 2026.

He is also overseeing the department's safety probe of Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) Inc and investigation of whether 30 million vehicles produced by nearly https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-autos-safety-idCAKBN2GF0JOtwo dozen automakers have unsafe air bags.

Reuters first reported Cliff's planned nomination earlier on Tuesday.

NHTSA later confirmed a Reuters report that Duke University engineering and computer science professor Missy Cummings is being named a new senior adviser for safety at NHTSA, saying in a statement it looks forward "to leveraging her experience and leadership in safety and autonomous technologies."

The agency added Cummings was being named for a "temporary assignment" under the Intergovernmental Personnel Act Mobility Program. Cummings has previously expressed concerns about Tesla's Autopilot feature.

Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk responded to her hiring on Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) by writing: "Objectively, her track record is extremely biased against Tesla."

She responded to Musk on Twitter saying: "happy to sit down and talk with you anytime."

NHTSA, which is part of the U.S. Transportation Department, faces a backlog of pending auto safety regulations and has not had a Senate-confirmed administrator since January 2017. There has not even been a nominee for https://www.reuters.com/article/us-autos-emissions-usa-idUSKCN1V21VG NHTSA's top job since 2019.

NHTSA in August proposed dramatically revising the Trump administration's rollback of Corporate Average Fuel Economy rules, proposing increasing fuel efficiency by 8% annually for the 2024-2026 model years.

Cliff, a former deputy executive officer at the California Air Resources Board, said the proposal reduces "climate pollution by approximately the same amount as if we took more than 5 million of today’s vehicles off the road."

Since the COVID-19 pandemic, the United States has seen a sustained increase in traffic deaths that NHTSA has ascribed to impaired driving, speeding, a failure to wear seatbelts and other unsafe behavior.

NHTSA last month estimated 8,730 people https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-traffic-deaths-jump-105-early-2021-2021-09-02 died in vehicle crashes in the first three months of 2021, compared with 7,900 deaths during the same period last year - up 10.5% despite a 2.1% drop in miles driven.

Last month, NHTSA asked Tesla https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/us-nhtsa-asks-tesla-why-it-did-not-recall-autopilot-system-ap-2021-10-13 why it has not issued a recall to address software updates made to its Autopilot driver-assistance system.

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NHTSA in August opened a formal safety probe into Tesla's Autopilot system in 765,000 U.S. vehicles after a series of crashes involving Tesla models and emergency vehicles.