NHTSA Administrator Mark Rosekind has been critical of Fiat Chrysler's handling of 20 recalls.

The relations between Fiat Chrysler and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration may becoming more tense after FCA revealed it missed five federally mandated recall deadlines in a document it submitted answering questions about a series of 20 recalls.

In an 18-page filing, which was in response to questions from federal safety officials, the automaker said it missed the 60-day requirement for notifying owners of new recalls five times.

FCA said four times it missed the deadline by four days and once by 12 days. However, the maker also noted in the report that it has increased the number of investigators by 65%, created a biweekly executive campaign execution review team to oversee recalls and plans for a “review of the recall execution process to identify and measure additional improvement opportunities.”

By responding to the questions, Fiat Chrysler officials hoped NHTSA would cancel the public hearing scheduled on July 2 regarding the automaker’s handling of 20 recalls covering 10 million vehicles over the last 30 months.

FCA CEO Sergio Marchionne said earlier the company was cooperating with federal safety officials in regard to 20 recalls involving 10 million vehicles.

“Our overall completion rate is nearly the best in the industry,” the automaker said in the document. “FCA US believes our approach to review and identify with NHTSA input and implement changes based on the (lessons learned) obviates the need for a hearing.”

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No such luck, according to Mark Rosekind, NHTSA’s administrator.

“Twenty recalls are a problem — 10 million vehicles. There’s a pattern here of things we’re concerned about,” he told the Detroit News. “And they weren’t just little things — they were big things including major safety issues related to fire, door latches that could open up when people were driving. It’s not just, ‘Oh, they were late on something.’ If they didn’t start, it was late, it means all that time people are at risk. And they told us something different.”

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The hearing will be a chance for witnesses from NHTSA, the automaker, and the public will be able to present evidence on Fiat Chrysler’s performance in each recall. If NHTSA determines, based on the hearing and other evidence, that the company has failed its legal obligations under the Motor Vehicle Safety Act, the agency could order actions designed to improve the company’s performance, including the buy-back or replacement of affected vehicles.

The recalls in question cover vehicles dating back to 1993, including Dodge Ram pickups, and Chrysler Town and Country minivans, versions of the Grand Cherokee.

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Perhaps the highest-profile action is the 2013 recall of 1.56 million Jeep vehicles equipped with fuel tanks that could rupture and cause a fire. The automaker is involved in several lawsuits regarding the vehicles, which it insists is safe and met the criteria at the time. It said last month it had repaired about 21% of those vehicles.

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