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United States News Title: Stop Driving Recalled Toyotas, Says Agency Chief Ray LaHood, the transportation secretary, said Wednesday morning during a House Appropriations panel hearing that owners of recalled Toyotas should stop driving them and take them to their dealers to be repaired. Mr. LaHood said his advice to owners of recalled Toyotas was to stop driving it, take it to a Toyota dealer because they believe they have a fix for it. We need to fix the problem so people dont have to worry about disengaging the engine or slamming the brakes on or put it in neutral," Mr. LaHood said in response to questions. His comments came shortly after Mr. LaHood told reporters that he planned to call the president of Toyota, Akio Toyoda, about the recalls and after the Japanese government told the carmakerto examine the brakes on its hybrid Prius amid reports that the brakes momentarily stopped working when driving at low speeds. Im going to take the initiative to have a conversation with Mr. Toyoda very soon, to talk to him about how serious this is, and to make sure that he understands, Mr. LaHood said. I think he understands, but Ive never talked to him. I just feel like I need to have a conversation with him. Mr. LaHood told reporters that regulators have the resources and expertise to conduct a thorough review of consumer complaints regarding unintended acceleration in Toyota focusing on electronic throttles. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is not finished with this safety issue involving Toyota, he said, explaining that the department would look into the possibility of electromagnetic interference with the accelerator system. I think at the department, we will continue to look at the electronics, continue to study that, continue to work with Toyota on that, and then make a judgment about that, Mr. LaHood said. He confirmed Wednesday that the Transportation Department was considering a civil penalty against Toyota over the handling of the recalls. Lawmakers and the Transportation Department have stepped up pressure on Toyota, seeking proof that problems that could cause its cars to speed up unexpectedly were limited to floor mats and sticking pedals. In a letter to James E. Lentz III, the president of Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A., Representatives Henry A. Waxman and Bart Stupak asked the automaker to provide documents showing that the computer systems on its cars were not at fault something Toyota has vigorously denied. Mr. Waxman is the chairman and Mr. Stupak a subcommittee chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. Mr. LaHood said in a statement Tuesday that Toyota had announced the recalls only after department officials flew to Japan to remind Toyota about its legal obligations. In a statement, Toyota said it had received and was reviewing the committees letter. We will of course cooperate with the committees inquiry, Martha Voss, a Toyota spokeswoman, said. She did not comment on Mr. LaHoods statement. As it worked on solutions to the acceleration problem, Toyota has said that computers on its cars were not at fault. But lawyers, safety advocates and consumers continue to raise questions about the cars electronic systems, which they say could cause a cars throttle to stick. Toyota faces 11 class-action lawsuits over accidents involving the defect. In their letter, Mr. Waxman, Democrat of California, and Mr. Stupak, Democrat of Michigan, told Mr. Lentz that statements he had made in interviews appeared to contradict information Toyota officials gave to committee staff members in a meeting last week. The Energy and Commerce Committee plans a hearing late this month to explore two recalls of Toyota vehicles related to reports of cars speeding up unexpectedly. The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform plans its own hearing on Toyota next week. Mr. LaHood is expected to testify, as is Yoshimi Inaba, the chief executive of Toyotas North American operations. On Monday, the company announced a remedy meant to prevent accelerator pedals from sticking on 2.3 million vehicles in the United States. Toyota also has recalled more than five million vehicles because their floor mats could become stuck in floor pedals. In a conference call with journalists on Monday, and in interviews on NBC, CNBC and ABC, Mr. Lentz emphasized that Toyota was confident its fixes would solve the problem. It is not an electronics issue, Mr. Lentz said. In response, the Energy and Commerce Committee asked Toyota to submit documents supporting the claim as well as information that might counter it. It is seeking the documentation by Friday. In the letter, Mr. Waxman and Mr. Stupak also took issue with Mr. Lentzs comments that Toyota first knew of sticking gas pedals in late October. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 20.
#17. To: Brian S (#0)
Since this article was written, we now know of problems with the Prius, the golden car of enviromental wacko's everywhere. Guess they believe if you get KILLED driving one of these death traps reduces your 'carbon footprint' to zero, and thats a 'good thing' eh? (laughing)
My neighbor, a professional golfer and staunch Pubby supporter is getting rid of his second one because he doesn't think it is as good as his first one.
A lot of the guys I work with commute to their respective train stations in a Prius...they were all commiserating this AM... You got to any mall, the Prius today is what the Accord was 15 years ago...
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