Enterprise Rent A Car bought thousands of 2006-08 Chevy Impalas and used a "fleet delete" option to remove side-impact airbags, a standard feature. The Kansas City Star broke the story this past Saturday.

The decision saved the company $175 on each airbag, or $11.5 million overall. To compound the matter, hundreds of those used rental units were sold saying they have the standard equipment, which includes the side-impact airbags.

I have been doing an informal survey of fleet buyers and sellers. The reaction has run the gamut from outrage to indifference, though all with a begrudging respect for the smartest buyers and sellers in the business.

First, the consensus is that Enterprise, as they have maintained, did not know that the cars were being sold out of fleet without disclosure that the side-impact airbags have been removed. Though it's no excuse, the error is easily believable, knowing how systems and procedures are set up with rigid protocols and how the information handoff between buyers and sellers in the same company is not always set up to catch every anomaly.

Second, some immediate reactions in Enterprise's defense:

● Enterprise is taking swift action on a make good. The company is informing the 745 people who bought those airbag-less units from its used car lots that Enterprise will buy back the cars at $750 above book value, regardless of condition.

● Enterprise is completely within the law. Side-impact airbags are not federally mandated. (Head-protecting restraints are required for 2010.)

● This was not a custom build for Enterprise. GM offered that "delete" option for all fleet customers. (They don't anymore.)

● "Fleet deletes" for items such as power equipment are common, especially in rental.

As one can imagine, this story isn't over. General Motors is in the process of contacting its dealers to track down the units Enterprise sold to them so that they can inform their customers.

For certified vehicle sales, used car sellers are protected to an extent by small print on the disclaimer that says "options listed may not represent actual installed features." 

But these comments and answers have only lead to more questions, about the disclosure process in general:

● Is that disclaimer enough of a legal liability protection for a seller should an injury and lawsuit follow? How widespread is that disclaimer, outside of certified, pre-owned inspections?

● If this was offered as a fleet-delete option to rental, commercial and government fleets, what about the supposed thousands of other units out there that do not have this standard equipment?

● What percentage of fleet units were ordered without side-impact airbags?

● At auctions, is there a standard procedure to identify to the buyer that certain standard equipment (especially, in this case, a safety item that cannot be seen) is definitively not in the vehicle, outside of a blanket disclaimer?

● Enterprise may be completely self-insured on this, but how would an insurance company view the decision to delete those airbags?

Fleet purchasers (regardless of buyer, either a rental car company or commercial fleet) have a responsibility to their companies to keep fleet costs as low as possible. With today's cost pressures, that task is monumental. We applaud those that do it well.

In terms of deleting safety equipment from a purchase, those buyers obviously made a risk assessment in the potential savings. But here is one last question for those fleets that chose to delete the side-impact airbags: do your drivers know you chose to buy the car without them? I can only hope so.

Originally posted on Business Fleet

About the author
Chris Brown

Chris Brown

Associate Publisher

As associate publisher of Automotive Fleet, Auto Rental News, and Fleet Forward, Chris Brown covers all aspects of fleets, transportation, and mobility.

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