SVreX (Forum Supporter) said:
Personal responsibility doesn't work, so instead of trying to encourage personal responsibility and hold the users responsible for their actions, we add multiple layers of nannies and enforcement on manufacturers and people who are not in control of the the actual violations.
Typical EPA.
Same agency that says dirt is the most common pollutant in water, then regulates the E36 M3 out of construction activities (where erosion control manufacturers have massive lobbying influence) but keeps their hands off DOT, farming, and mining operations. (for political reasons)
The obvious answer is to use the tools that already exist to put pressure on the actual violators and encourage personal responsibility. Standard emissions testing should have more teeth on the endline users. But it's easier and more profitable for the EPA to go after manufacturers.
Not sure where you are getting at- but "personal responsibility" was a pretty huge loophole the whole motorsports arena was given ever since the non-tampering rule was put into place. For the most part, nobody did anything about it, until pretty obvious trolling was going on, and the EPA was essentially forced to enforce their own rules. New rules were not invented, just that enforcement of said rules is happening due to complaints.
Unless we want to pretend that coal rolling does not exist, which is the oblivious path where citizens demand action.
And, by law, the actual violators are the makers of the part- that's where the EPA has their jurisdiction. States and localities have the power over individuals. Some states have inspections, some have simple dyno tests, some have complex tests- and each of them deal with individuals on their own.
You've made your own point about EPA, DOT, DOI, etc- they have their own domains that are not supposed to cross over. Laws are written, and then clarified if needed, for specific agencies do to specific things. It's far from a perfect way, and we are all allowed to contact our representation to fix problems with interactions.
In terms of implementation- do we all want to have to annually present our cars for inspection that we are not violating the law, or would it be easier (and cheaper) to just prevent things that are not legal to be made and sold to the general public?
And I'm not sure that the EPA is a profit center. The money they get for fines just goes back into the federal coffers, and it's pretty small in the scheme of things.
Hate them all you want- if you have a better way to prevent people from putting things on their cars that cause emissions problems, what are they? Ones that don't cost a lot of tax payer dollars to implement.