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CRA Continues Campaign Against Untested Aftermarket Bumper Reinforcements

CRA demonstrates difference between OEM and aftermarket parts to TV station, calls on insurance commissioner to stop insurers from including aftermarket bumper reinforcements on estimates.

4/14/2010

The Collision Repair Association of California (CRA) is continuing its campaign to eliminate potentially unsafe aftermarket bumper reinforcements from body shops and insurers’ damage estimates.

CRA held a press conference last week with I-CAR instructor Toby Chess and Assemblyman Dave Jones to demonstrate the difference between an aftermarket bumper reinforcement and its OEM counterpart and to alert consumers that insurers looking to cut costs could be calling for potentially unsafe parts in estimates.

In a demonstration televised by FOX40, Chess used an electric saw to cut through an aftermarket bumper reinforcement, but the saw was barely able to penetrate its OEM counterpart. The report described the aftermarket bumper parts as “cheap parts from Taiwan and China.”

The TV station advised consumers to check collision repair invoices for the term “OE,” warning consumers that they may have a “fake part” installed if “OE” doesn’t appear on the form.

FOX40 also reported that State Assemblyman Dave Jones is calling on the Department of Insurance (DOI) to recall vehicles with aftermarket bumper reinforcements installed.

“There’s many body shops out there that definitely need to be reprimanded and need to step up. And if they do a recall, they should eat the liability,” CRA President Lee Amaradio told the TV station.

CRA also announced this week that it hand-delivered a letter to Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner asking that he enforce state law by requiring insurers to either stop putting aftermarket reinforcement bars in damage estimates, or else warrant to the claimant that the aftermarket bar is as good as high-strength steel bars produced by OEMs. CRA believes it’s the responsibility of insurers, not repairers, to determine whether an aftermarket part is OEM-equivalent.

“There is no mystery to the law,” CRA Executive Director Allen Wood wrote. “It clearly requires insurers to warrant that the aftermarket part is at least equal to OEM. Therefore, Commissioner Poizner, show us you can lead by enforcing current law. The CRA has yet to hear if the commissioner or his staff understands that the burden of proof on the worthiness of aftermarket reinforcement bars falls on the insurer.”

CRA says this is the third letter the group has sent to Poizner asking him to take action on potentially unsafe aftermarket structural parts.

CRA’s actions stem from a demonstration by Chess at the January Collision Industry Conference demonstrating the difference between OEM and aftermarket structural parts. Chess’s demonstration has created a domino effect of reactions from parts manufacturers and distributors, repairers and insurers.

More information:

• See the TV report on aftermarket parts

• Read the CRA’s letter to Poizner

• Track industry reaction to the parts issue
Submit a Comment    Comments (2)
Comment by:
Joe bodyman
4/17/2010
8:49 AM
Why should the body shop eat the rerepair of autos repaired with aftermarket bumpers. First the customer has to okay the parts being used before repairs to begin. Second, the insurance company wouldn't pay for OEM parts because the consumer had to okay the type of parts used on their vehicle for repair (removes liability). Third, only the manufacturer can guarantee the products they make available for sale, not the insurance company and not the body shop. If the government gets off their duffs and warrants a recall for theses parts (which they should) then the manufacturers should pay full reinbursement for their defective, categorically inferior, counterfeit parts and no one else. The government made Toyota, the manufacturer of defective gas pedals come up with a repair to correct the problem, what's the difference between the two.
 
Comment by:
Johnny Guy
4/15/2010
2:31 PM
Let's see. Three letters to poizner and no real action yet. Does anybody think that the

DOI would have anybody other than someone that

works for them holding that seat? And even if he did adress the problem who's going to enforce it? Probably the same folks that have been enforcing all the criminal activities

that the insurers have been getting away with for years!
 
 
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