Here I am

SEMA Update on EPA for race vehicle builders

Attention: TDR Forum Junkies
To the point: Click this link and check out the Front Page News story(ies) where we are tracking the introduction of the 2025 Ram HD trucks.

Thanks, TDR Staff

Don Knotts - Dodge truck ad

Veterans Day

AnonEd

TDR MEMBER
From today's SEMA eNews, FYI:

By SEMA Washington, D.C., Staff

As previously reported, SEMA has intervened in an EPA enforcement case to protect the rights of racers.

The U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona, while acknowledging the fundamental issue raised by SEMA, declined to make a ruling in the lawsuit between the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Gear Box Z. Inc. (GBZ). While pursuing GBZ for tampering allegations, the EPA made statements in its court filings that the Clean Air Act (CAA) does not allow a motor vehicle to be converted into a racing vehicle used solely for competition and that equipment installed to make the conversion is illegal. SEMA challenged this flawed interpretation of the CAA first made by the EPA in 2015 and now repeated in the court filing.

The Court ruled that the EPA produced evidence that the subject products sold by GBZ were being used on highway vehicles, with no evidence of use on motor sports vehicles. Therefore, lacking evidence of the converting of road vehicles to dedicated race cars, which would have necessitated the Court address the issue, the Court declined to rule on whether the CAA disallows conversions of street vehicles to dedicated racing machines.

While not settling the street-to-racecar conversion issue, SEMA’s filing of the amicus brief was impactful for several reasons. First, it demonstrates the need for the U.S. Congress to enact the “Recognizing the Protection of Motorsports Act” (RPM Act), bi-partisan legislation to clarify that it is legal to make such conversions and to produce, market and install racing equipment. Second, the Court’s opinion did offer some favorable language with the Court confirming that it is the EPA’s burden to produce evidence that emissions-related equipment is being used illegally on highway vehicles when making such a claim.

Link to contact your rep:
https://www.votervoice.net/SEMA/campaigns/45394/respond
 
Our son is number 2 guy at a large wholesale exhaust supplier. The EPA has been auditing their books for months. When he was here the other day, bringing the Ford Edge ST down for us, he asked if DW's brother still had his 2008 deleted RAM truck, and said if so he should dump it. He said when the EPA is done with companies like his, they are going after the retail shops and then the consumers. He saw this coming quite a few years ago and set a company policy to not handle anything that was delete related. So for a consumer a 10K fine plus the cost to restore the vehicle to OEM emission standards is going to be expensive.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top