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 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration chief Mark Rosekind on Tuesday sounded the alarm after a House panel approved a spending bill that doesn’t boost the agency’s budget to investigate auto safety defects.

Last week, a Republican-led House appropriations subcommittee approved a spending bill that doesn’t adopt the Obama administration’s request to triple NHTSA’s defect budget and double staffing. It essentially held the agency’s budget at the current level.

“We’re pretty concerned. You can’t keep talking about wanting to make things safer and more efficient,” Rosekind said in an interview Tuesday on the sidelines of an event at an elementary school. “We’re going to do everything we can internally... but without certain resources we’re not going to get the level (of performance) that everyone expects.”

The House Appropriations Committee is expected to take up the 2016 $55.3 billion Transportation, Housing and Urban Development spending bill next week.



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New NHTSA Budget Approved By House Says NO To Obama's Request To Triple Funding

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