NADA seeks more timely disclosure of total-loss
data
Congressional action called upon
Washington, DC— The National
Automobile Dealers Association (NADA) called on insurance companies
and state titling agencies to provide consumers access to VIN-based
data before they buy used cars.
“Armed with total-loss
data and a better understanding of vehicle histories, both consumers
and dealers will be able to steer clear of rebuilt wrecks and
stolen vehicles,” said David W. Regan, NADA’s vice
president of legislative affairs. “For too long fraudulent
resellers have relied upon a confusing 51-state titling regime
to market rebuilt or stolen vehicles with clean titles,”
said Regan, appearing before the Commerce, Trade and Consumer
Protection Subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
Regan pointed out, however, that
the current system provides starkly different economic incentives
for consumers and insurance companies. “Insurance companies
have a powerful economic incentive to oppose more aggressive title
laws or to underreport under existing laws,” noting the
market-based premium for a clean title at salvage auction. “Consumers
have exactly the opposite economic interest — they want
to know if a vehicle has been declared a total loss,” he
added.
Regan said that Congress already
has granted the Department of Justice the authority to require
insurance companies to disclose total-loss data and salvage auction
data, and Congress should press the agency to act because “an
accurate and publicly accessible total-loss database would curb
fraudulent activity dramatically.”
In the remarks, Regan called
for:
•Greater Transparency:
“Insurance companies should provide VIN-based disclosure
of all totaled vehicles,” he said. “Also, all states
should ‘carry forward’ prior brands when issuing
new titles. States should brand registrations as well as titles.”
“None of this data,” he emphasized, “would
include the personal identifiers protected by federal and state
privacy statutes.”
•More Timeliness: “The
insurance companies should disclose total-loss data at the time
the total-loss payout occurs, because consumers cannot obtain
title histories from DMVs soon enough to put consumers on notice,”
he said. “Also, state DMVs should work with the private
sector to push title data into the public domain faster.”
•Better Use of Technology:
“DMVs should make title data commercially available on
a daily basis to the information industry,” he said. “The
information industry in the private sector has the technology
to dramatically enhance public disclose of insurance company
information about total-loss vehicles and salvage auction sales
data.”
Regan said the combination of
electronic access to total-loss data and faster access to DMV
data will enable consumers and dealers to fight motor vehicle
fraud. |