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Justice Department Rule Will Help Increase Public Transparency of Flooded and Rebuilt Wrecks
NADA will continue to seek legislation to fill gaps
The National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA) strongly supports the National Motor Vehicle Title Information System (NMVTIS) rule, which will improve the ability of auto dealers and consumers to track potentially dangerous salvage vehicles. NADA is seeking enhancements to the rule, so that the used car resale market can access this information. NADA is also seeking to modernize the rule, which was based on a 17-year-old law.
The NMVTIS rule is significant because it closes several loopholes. For example, insurers would not only have to report totaled vehicles found to be a total-loss under the laws of the applicable state but also totaled vehicles as designated by its own policies. While insurance companies collect data on severely damaged vehicles for their shared private databases, they have not been required to disclose the vehicle identification numbers (VINs) of all totaled vehicles, permanently "red flagging" these vehicles for the public.
"Insurance companies have resisted reporting the VINs of all their totaled vehicles to the public for years," said
Connecting the state motor vehicle agencies under NMVTIS will help carry forward salvage information from other states and provide more transparency in the used car market. Since state vehicle salvage disclosure laws are inconsistent and incomplete, unscrupulous sellers can wash titles and hide a salvage history by acquiring titles outside the state. NMVTIS will aid dealers and consumers by verifying title histories and combating fraud.
NADA is still concerned that 14 states are not yet participating in NMVTIS, and that
"Unfortunately many states are reluctant to provide their total-loss information to the NMVTIS database, which is why legislation is still needed," Rivera added.
Recently, Reps.
Because the NMVTIS rule is based on a 1992 statute, the rule only requires monthly reporting from insurance, junk and salvage yards. H.R. 1257 and S. 202 would make the reporting requirement electronic and timelier to eliminate the window for fraud.
In addition, H.R. 1257 and S. 202 allow the tracking of totaled vehicles in a commercial format so that consumers and dealers can track the VINs of total-loss vehicles through multiple VIN lookups and searches.
"A public-private partnership that combines NMVTIS with the technological expertise of private sector vehicle history report companies would allow anyone buying used cars -- consumers, businesses, dealers, auto auctions, etc. -- to more easily identify one of these totaled cars or trucks," Rivera said.
NADA, founded in 1917 and based in
SOURCE National Automobile Dealers Association













