[nfbwatlk] Hybrid cars silent, deadly, advocates for blind warn

Kaye Kipp kkipp123 at msn.com
Fri May 25 10:39:17 CDT 2007


Oo gee.  That's scary.

Kaye
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Nightingale, Noel" <Noel.Nightingale at ed.gov>
To: <nfbwatlk at nfbnet.org>; <quietcarsd at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Friday, May 25, 2007 8:29 AM
Subject: [nfbwatlk] Hybrid cars silent, deadly, advocates for blind warn





Hybrid cars silent, deadly, advocates for blind warn


By Peter Rice
Wednesday, May 23, 2007


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Art Schreiber took a walk in his Old Town neighborhood recently - he
often does while on the hunt for a bite to eat or just to run some
errands.

Approaching the corner of 12th Street and Roma Avenue Southwest, he
stopped to do what all blind people do at intersections: listen for
cars.

Hearing none, he started to walk across the street.

"Suddenly, I hear a horn and a screeching of brakes," he said. "The
driver swerved to miss me. Fortunately, there was nothing coming the
other way."

Schreiber had nearly been injured or killed by what is an increasingly
vexing problem facing the visually impaired, and, some say, pedestrians
in general: superquiet hybrid cars.

"I didn't hear anything," Schreiber said. "It's going to be, more and
more, a problem. I don't know what we're going to do."

At lower speeds, hybrids run off of batteries, which means the engine
makes almost no noise. A louder gasoline engine kicks in at higher
speeds.

The cars are proving popular, and manufacturers are struggling to keep
up with demand. But worries grow right along with the popularity.

"The strides that we've made in terms of training blind people to travel
independently are in jeopardy," said Greg Trapp, the executive director
of the New Mexico Commission for the Blind. "This is an issue of life
and death."

Imagine another scenario: Someone with 20/20 vision is putting groceries
in the back of a car. He hears a conventional car behind him, then looks
over at it.

"That's the reaction that keeps you from backing up into the path of a
car," Trapp said. "I really think this is an issue that goes beyond
people who are blind and visually impaired."

So, what to do? One obvious solution is to install some sort of
noise-making device on the cars.

"Everybody that we've talked to on the engineering side says that there
are technical fixes," said Fred Schroeder, a vice president at the
National Federation of the Blind. But, "we've contacted the major car
manufacturers many times and really not had a response from them."

The big fish in the hybrid pond is Toyota, which has sold just over
500,000 hybrid cars in the United States since 2000 and leads the world
in manufacturing the vehicles.

"Toyota is aware of this issue, and we are studying it," said Sam Butto,
a spokesman for the company. He said it was a matter of balancing
concerns about the visually impaired with concerns about noise
pollution.

One Albuquerquean is offering what could become a technical solution to
the problem. Mike Langner, the retired engineer of KKOB radio, says an
enterprising company could put together a motion-sensing device that
could give a sound-based clue about approaching objects.

Pack it all together and it could act as a kind of flashlight that blind
people could use to avoid hybrids.

"It's all commercial, off-the-shelf stuff," Langner said. "It just needs
to be put together."

Trapp called it a laudable idea, but said it's a long way off and could
present some problems, such as what would happen if the batteries died.

"I tend to favor low-tech solutions," he said. "We really need a
solution that will solve the problem that we're encountering today."

 <http://www.scripps.com>
(c) 2006 The Albuquerque Tribune




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