Interpretation ID: nht93-5.2
TYPE: Interpretation-NHTSA
DATE: June 29, 1993
FROM: John Womack -- Acting Chief Counsel, U.S. Department of Transportation, NHTSA
TO: Charles H. Taylor -- U.S. House of Representatives
TITLE: None
ATTACHMT: Attached to letter dated 6-3-93 from Charles H. Taylor to Jackie Lowey (OCC 8735).
TEXT: This responds to your letter of June 3, 1993, to the Acting Secretary for Legislative Affairs, asking the Department of Transportation (DOT) "to reconsider its rules regarding the sale of surplus HMMMV (Humvee) military vehicles to law enforcement organizations." You have enclosed correspondence from your constituent, Sheriff Long of Buncombe County with respect to this matter. Although your letter states that a letter from the Department of Defense to Sheriff Long is also enclosed, we did not receive it.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is the component within DOT that establishes and enforces the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS) under the authority of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966. In recognition of the fact that compliance with the FMVSS could interfere with the ability of a military vehicle to perform its intended task, we have always exempted from compliance with the FMVSS any motor vehicle that is manufactured for, and sold directly to, the Armed Forces of the United States in conformity with contractual specifications.
When such a vehicle has reached the end of its useful military life, the question arises as to its proper disposition. NHTSA has no authority over the disposition that any owner wishes to make of his motor vehicle, whether civilian or military in nature, thus we have no "rules" to reconsider, as you have requested. The Department of Defense (DOD), however, asks our advice on disposal of surplus vehicles; we provide it and DOD appears to follow it. However, in the last analysis, it is DOD's policy that governs the disposal of surplus military motor vehicles.
With respect to the HMMMV, we have advised DOD that we deem it not in the interests of traffic safety to sell for civilian use a motor vehicle that is not in compliance with the FMVSS. We recognize that there is a competing public interest in recovery of Federal funds to the extent practicable but, in our view, it is outweighed by the interest in safety. Given the fact that HMMMVs are now available that meet the FMVSS, we have further advised DOD to consult with the HMMMV's manufacturer to determine whether military vehicles might be retrofitted to comply with the FMVSS. If this can be accomplished, NHTSA would have no objection to the sale of retrofitted military HMMMVs for civilian use.
I hope that this clarifies the matter for you.