The Auto Channel
The Largest Independent Automotive Research Resource
The Largest Independent Automotive Research Resource
Official Website of the New Car Buyer

Slater Marks National Child Passenger Safety Week

14 February 2000

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
NHTSA 05-00
Monday, February 14, 2000 Contact: NHTSA, Cathy Hickey, (202) 366-9550


$7.5 million in Grants to 47 States

U.S. Transportation Secretary Slater
Marks National Child Passenger Safety Week
By Promoting Booster Seat Use

Advancing another step in the national strategy to increase seat belt and child safety seat use as the nation observes National Child Passenger Safety Week, U.S. Transportation Secretary Rodney E. Slater today urged parents to use belt positioning booster seats for all children who have outgrown their child safety seats but are too small for adult seat belts. National Child Passenger Safety Week is Feb. 13-19.

Secretary Slater also marked the week by announcing $7.5 million in grants to 47 states, the U.S. Territories, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the Indian Nations exclusively for promoting child passenger safety education and training activities.

"Booster seats, properly used, can help prevent injury to older children by making adult-sized seat belts fit effectively and thus improve safety, which is President Clinton's and Vice President Gore's highest transportation priority," Secretary Slater said.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) surveys show that less than seven percent of these children -- those who weigh 40 to 80 pounds and are approximately 4 to 8 years-old -- are using booster seats. Children using adult belts can suffer serious internal injuries in a crash, and risk slipping out of the belts altogether and being ejected from the vehicle.

To address this problem, Slater today launched "Don't Skip a Step," a campaign to educate parents not to skip any step as their children grow: beginning with rear-facing infant seats and progressing to forward-facing child safety seats, booster seats, and properly restrained in an adult belt in the back seat, up to age 13. As part of the campaign, the U.S. Department of Transportation's NHTSA distributed more than 50,000 campaign brochures to enlist the support of child safety advocates, health care providers, law enforcement personnel and others to help spread the booster seat safety message across the country.

The public education campaign is intended to provide parents vital information to ensure their children's safety.

According to NHTSA Acting Administrator Rosalyn G. Millman, even the most safety-conscious parents are often unaware of the need for booster seats or the danger their children face when improperly restrained in an adult safety belt. Because most state laws only require child safety seat use up to age three or four, many parents incorrectly assume older kids are safe in just a seat belt. In addition, while child safety seats and child safety seat displays have been readily found in retail stores for years, until recently booster seats were not marketed as widely.

"A child's growth requires that restraints change to fit properly and provide the maximum protection," said Millman. "Unfortunately, many parents are not using the third step to protect their children - booster seats."

Millman reminded parents of the proper restraint for children of all sizes. The appropriate restraints are as follows:

  • Children weighing less than 20 pounds (and up to 1 year old) should be in a rear-facing safety seat placed in the back seat.
  • Children at least 20 pounds and up to 40 pounds (1 to approximately 4 years old) should be in a forward-facing child safety seat placed in the back seat.
  • Children weighing more than 40 pounds who cannot properly fit in an adult safety belt system (usually less than 4'9" tall) should be in a booster seat in the back seat, properly.
  • Once a child can fit properly into the adult safety belt system he or she should be properly restrained in the back seat, up to age 13.

"As a pediatrician, I can tell you that we are treating too many children because they are not buckled up properly," said Dr. Flaura Winston, principal investigator of the Partners for Child Passenger Safety Project of The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania and State Farm Insurance Companies. "Too often, it is an ill-fitting adult seat belt that causes or contributes to these injuries."

The project's findings show that optimal restraint use among children drops significantly after they outgrow their child safety seats. While approximately 70 percent of children in the study ages three and under are properly restrained for their weight and age, that number drops as low as 20 percent for children between ages 4 and 9. While most children of those ages are restrained, they are not restrained properly.

In addition to the booster seat public awareness campaign launched today, the Secretary announced $7.5 million in grants to 47 states, the U.S. Territories, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the Indian Nations exclusively for promoting child passenger safety education and training activities. The grants are authorized by Section 2003(b) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21) and range from $18,000 to $700,000 per recipient. The attached table lists the states receiving grants and their grant amounts.

Fiscal Year 2000 Grants to Promote Child Passenger Safety
STATE TOTAL
Alabama $135,237
Alaska $37,500
Arizona $109,097
Arkansas $97,748
California $746,132
Colorado $114,260
Connecticut $83,547
Delaware $37,500
District of Columbia $37,500
Florida $344,855
Georgia $199,066
Hawaii $37,500
Idaho $45,735
Illinois $321,705
Indiana $168,549
Iowa $115,678
Kansas $118,918
Kentucky $117,521
Louisiana $123,414
Maine $38,260
Maryland $121,547
Massachusetts $151,645
Michigan $266,013
Minnesota $160,236
Mississippi $92,414
Missouri $172,933
Montana $51,004
Nebraska $79,302
Nevada $48,634
New Hampshire $37,500
New Mexico $62,343
New York $456,826
North Carolina $195,356
North Dakota $55,319
Ohio $298,333
Oklahoma $123,821
Oregon $103,952
Pennsylvania $322,988
Rhode Island $37,500
South Carolina $108,930
Tennessee $150,397
Texas $521,422
Utah $58,215
Vermont $37,500
Virginia $171,890
Washington $147,143
West Virginia $57,190
Wisconsin $162,721
Am. Samoa $18,750
Guam $18,750
N. Marianas $18,750
Puerto Rico $85,954
Virgin Islands $18,750
B.I.A. $56,250
TOTAL - 54 grants $7,500,000