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Archive for the ‘Citizen Report’ Category

Government Responds To Report On Safety Hazards Of Yamaha Rhino, Further Action Needed

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

On March 31, 2009, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (“CPSC”), in cooperation with Yamaha Motor Corp. U.S.A., announced a repair program of the Rhino 450, 660, and 700 models to address rollover safety defects which have killed at least 46 persons. Until repaired by a Yamaha dealer, these Rhino models should not be driven.

The CPSC’s action followed upon a comprehensive analysis of the safety defects of the Yamaha Rhino that a group of safety advocates and victim families sent the CPSC last month in a report entitled “Citizen Report on UTV Vehicle Hazards.”

Authors of the report included the Center for Auto Safety, the Trauma Foundation, parents of children killed or injured in Rhino rollovers, and Fabrice N. Vincent, an attorney with Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, the law firm that assisted in the report’s preparation. Input came from experts in vehicle design, injury causation, and vehicle hazard identification.

“In addition to the 46 deaths, scores of adults, teenagers, and children across America have been left permanently disabled after their hands, arms, feet, and legs have been crushed in Yamaha Rhino accidents. Many of these injuries would not have occurred if Yamaha had incorporated readily available safety measures in the original design of the Rhino,” noted attorney Vincent. “Yamaha’s repair program is an important step in ending this ongoing national tragedy. However, Yamaha must acknowledge its legal responsibility to those that have been injured or killed and undertake additional key safety adjustments to fully protect consumers.”

Commentary: Safety Defects In Yamaha Rhino Have Allegedly Led To Hundreds Of Serious Accidents Nationwide

Monday, March 16th, 2009

Scores of adults, teenagers, and children across America have been left permanently disabled after their hands, arms, feet, and legs have been crushed, and some have died, in rollover accidents involving the Yamaha Rhino UTV asserts a recent report issued by victims and consumer safety advocates which has been summarized on OpEd News.

The commentary notes that 38 deaths, many of them of children, are believed to have occurred in Yamaha Rhino accidents in the United States since the end of 2004. One of these was the death of nine-year-old J.T. Crow. Although he was belted, Crow was ejected in a rollover accident and crushed underneath the half-ton Rhino, which was sold by Yamaha without doors or safety netting to contain its occupants.

Lawsuits filed against Yamaha allege that from its introduction to the market in 2004, the Yamaha Rhino has been a rollover-prone vehicle with numerous safety defects,” stated Fabrice N. Vincent of the national plaintiffs’ law firm Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, LLP, and a co-author of the report. “The complaints in these lawsuit have charged believe that none of the injuries or deaths would have occurred if Yamaha had incorporated readily available safety measures in the design of the Rhino that would have protected occupants during a rollover.”

Read the full Op-Ed article at OpEdNews.

Victims and Consumer Safety Advocates Issue Report on Safety Hazards of Utility Terrain Vehicles (UTVs)

Friday, February 27th, 2009

The safety defects of some Utility Terrain Vehicles (UTVs), including the Yamaha Rhino, are causing a mounting toll of death and severe injury to users, warns a February 26, 2009 report entitled Citizen Report on UTV Vehicle Hazards issued by a group of safety advocates and victims. The authors of the report include three individuals who suffered catastrophic injuries while driving or riding in the Yamaha Rhino as well as parents of two children who died in horrific accidents involving the Yamaha Rhino.

The report calls for significant measures to undertaken to improve UTV safety, including:

  • Minimum Occupant Containment Standards: The report explains that it is essential for the safety of occupants that they remain inside the vehicle during a tip over and rollover accident. The report requests that the NHTSA, CPSC, ROHVA and/or manufacturers establish tests that evaluate and ensure adequate occupant containment for legs, arms, hands and heads in rollovers and rollovers, standards which all UTV vehicles must pass before being sold.
  • Supplementary Safety Restraints: According to the authors of the report, the safety envelope of UTV vehicles must be substantially improved through supplementary restraints that prevent excursion of the feet/legs, hands/arms, and torso. The report calls for the installation of partial doors, roll cage cushions and netting on all UTV vehicles.
  • Effective Seat Belt Restraint Systems: The report seeks all UTV vehicles comply with the standards set forth in the United States Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards to ensure that occupants are not ejected from the vehicle during a tip over or rollover. The report charges that one of the reasons for the large number of fatalities and injuries associated with the Yamaha Rhino is due to a deficient seat belt system.
  • Redesigned Roll Cages With Roll Cage Padding: In many cases, when occupants have been ejected from their UTV vehicle, they have suffered a fatal or catastrophic injury from being struck by the vehicle’s heavy, unpadded, steel roll cage. The report calls for moving of the roll cages further from the occupants, re-designing them with minimal crush points and adding padding.
  • Improved Stability And Handling: The report’s authors call upon NHTSA, CPSC, ROHVA and/or manufacturers to establish stability and handling standards, including minimum resistance to rollover, for UTV vehicles in order to substantially reduce the likelihood of tip over accidents.

The report also contains safety recommendations specific to the Yahama Rhino.

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