[clari.biz.top] Auto groups attack clean air bill

clarinews@clarinet.com (STAN DARDEN, UPI Business Writer) (02/08/90)

	ATLANTA (UPI) -- A Chrysler Corp. official said Wednesday the Senate
clean air bill now being debated in Washington could seriously affect
the production of  medium- and family-size cars in the United States.
	Al Slechter, Chrysler's federal affairs technical director, said a
provision in the bill would require U.S. manufacturers to produce cars
that would average 40 miles a gallon by the year 2000, severely limiting
the production of medium- and large sedans, as well as some light trucks
and vans.
	Another provision would set tailpipe emission standards for new
cars so stringent that even government technology experts say they are
not feasible.
	``We're concerned about where this is all going and what it is the
Senate is really voting for,'' said Slechter.
	He said the bill is under debate now in closed-door hearings
between senators and members of the Bush administration.
	``The senators want to avoid bloodbaths on the floor of the
Senate,'' said Slechter. ``It's very touchy for members of the Senate to
vote for anything that has to do with clean air legislation.''
	Slechter and representatives of Ford Motor Co., General Motors and
the Georgia Auto Dealers Association told a news conference that the
bill would hurt Georgia's economy, which is closely tied to the auto
industry. Both Ford and GM have auto plants in suburban Atlanta.
	Slechter said Chrysler and the other automakers were not opposed to
the clean air bill that cleared the House committee.
	He said cars built since 1983 are fitted with emission-control
equipment that has reduced tailpipe emission by more than 90 percent
compared to earlier cars.
	Cars manufactured before 1983 account for about half the cars now
on the road, but contribute nearly 90 percent of total tailpipe
emissions.
	``What we want is for the Senate to moderate its position so that
something reasonable can come out of the Congress,'' said Slechter.
	Also expressing concern about the Senate version of the bill was
Bob Anderson, manager of Ford's Atlanta assembly plant, which produces
the Ford Taurus and Mercury Sable, and Tom Brady, manager of General
Motors' Doraville plant, which produces the Oldsmobile Cutlass.
	``Georgia's economy has already suffered from the slow-down in
automobile production,'' Anderson said. ``The last thing we need here is
a new law from Washington that would shut us down completely.''
	Brady said none of the cars built by either GM or Ford in Georgia
would meet the proposed federal emission standards. ``With Georgia being
the fourth largest producer of automobiles in the United States, this
would have a negative impact on the entire country,'' Brady said.