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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: MM: 10 WORST: GENERAL MOTORS
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.091523.13435@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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- Organization: PACH
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 09:15:23 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 97
-
- [From the Dec 1992 issue of Multinational Monitor. Subscription info below]
-
- GENERAL MOTORS EXPLODING GAS TANKS
-
- GENERAL MOTORS (GM) IS IN DEEP TROUBLE. Its share of the world
- automobile market continues to drop. In an effort to stave off
- disaster, institutional shareholders have forced out older executives
- and replaced them with younger ones.
-
- It can only be hoped that one lesson this new, younger management will
- learn is that no corporation can succeed for long if it holds its
- fellow citizens--workers, consumers, neighbors --in contempt.
-
- General Motors has a dirty track record in this regard. From its
- conviction in 1949 of a criminal conspiracy to destroy the nation's
- mass transit system, to its marketing of hazardous automobiles such as
- the Corvair, to its unsuccessful public campaign to beat down support
- for the lifesaving air bag, to its venal destruction of the Poletown
- neighborhood of Detroit, Michigan, GM has ensured a permanent place for
- itself in any Corporate Hall of Shame.
-
- Recently unearthed documents reveal a new episode in GM history that
- auto safety experts are calling the "Pinto of the 90s." The Center for
- Auto Safety charged earlier this year that GM manufactured and marketed
- pickup trucks with hazardous gas tanks which have led to over 300
- deaths--a death rate 10 times higher than that of the infamous Ford
- Pinto. The Center claims that GM then covered up the exploding gas tank
- problem and the company's decision not to install safety liners which
- would have reduced crash fires in the vehicles.
-
- The defect stems from GM's decision to install side-mounted fuel tanks
- outside of the frame rails on all "C" and "K" style pickup trucks
- manufactured between 1972 and 1987. The design exposes the tanks to
- direct hits and resulting ruptures from impacting vehicles in side
- collisions. Other manufacturers placed their pickup truck fuel tanks
- inside protective frame rail structures during the same model years.
-
- A number of consumer groups and newspapers in Texas asked a court in
- Fort Worth, Texas to require GM to release crash test films and other
- documents showing the company's long-standing knowledge of the defect
- and its failure to remedy it. The documents had been produced by GM in
- a subsequently-settled burn death case--Zelenuck v. GM--but were
- shielded from public view by a protective order imposed earlier at GM's
- request.
-
- Moments before the court began an open hearing on the documents, GM
- withdrew its objections to their release, apparently to avoid protracted
- publicity about its efforts to keep the documents secret.
-
- The Center for Auto Safety obtained a 67-page index to the collected
- papers of Ronald E. Elwell, which the Center calls "a roadmap to GM's
- coverup of exploding gas tanks." Elwell worked for GM for 30 years and
- was designated by GM in numerous trials as its employee most knowl-
- edgeable about fuel tank safety in 1973-1987 GM pickups.
-
- The index reveals that GM's former president, James McDonald, rejected
- a 1978 company task force proposal to Install an inexpensive safety
- liner in the fuel tanks. Installing the liners in the tanks would have
- sharply reduced the fire deaths and injuries, auto safety experts
- charge. Had GM put the liners in the pickups, "about 185 of the 248
- people burned to death in side impacts of the GM vehicles could have
- survived, judging from death rates for such vehicles during the
- 1981-1986 period," says Ben Kelley, president of the Institute for
- Injury Reduction.
-
- The Center for Auto Safety has called on the National Highway Traffic
- Administration to order GM to recall the pickups and fix the problem.
- "GM knew about this deadly defect for 20 years and rejected a $10 fix
- recommended by its own top fuel tank experts," says the Center's
- Clarence Ditlow. "Access to these documents could save hundreds of
- people from horrible burn injuries and death by showing these vehicles
- could be recalled and repaired by installing tanks with safety liners
- that GM's former President James McDonald rejected."
-
- Ditlow points out that GM modified its Chevrolet Corvette to include a
- bladder in the gas tank after the Corvette was involved in numerous
- low-speed fire crashes in which the tank ruptured much like the tanks in
- the C/K series pickups. Even if the tank ruptures in a crash, the
- bladder remains intact and retains gasoline, thus preventing an
- explosive crash fire, Ditlow says. Tests of the 1975 Corvette showed
- that its bladder would withstand 41.1 mph rear crashes with no fuel
- leakage, meeting a crash standard almost twice as stringent as required
- by federal law.
-
- --------
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