DOT 57-09
Friday, April 24, 2009
Contact: Maureen Knightly
Tel.: (202) 366-4570
U.S. DOT Announces New Consumer Program for Child Safety Seats
The U.S. Department of Transportation announced today that it will create
a new consumer program to help parents and caregivers find a child seat
that fits in their vehicle. The new program is the result of a
comprehensive review ordered by Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood to
improve child passenger safety and Federal child seat standards.
Secretary LaHood also ordered the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration to develop a new side impact safety standard for car seats.
Side impact crashes account for one-third of all highway deaths among
children under thirteen years old.
The internal review found that current standards, which require child
seats to withstand forces that are more severe than 99.5 percent of
real-world crashes, are effective. However, Secretary LaHood urged NHTSA
to do better.
“Infants and children are our most precious cargo,” said Transportation
Secretary Ray LaHood. “We need to constantly improve our track record and
help parents to choose a child seat that fits in their vehicle.”
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration task force, which
reviewed child safety regulations, was comprised of a team of 30 experts.
The team found that while current standards offer a high degree of
protection, the agency should consider adding a first ever side-impact
standard for child safety seats. It also recommended research on future
improvements to the current frontal impact standard.
NHTSA will institute a new program beginning with the 2011 model year to
make it easier for parents to choose child safety seats. Car manufacturers
will recommend specific seats in various price ranges that fit for
individual vehicles. Car manufacturers including Nissan and others in
Europe already provide similar recommendations.
The review also found that half of all children between the ages of zero
to seven years of age, who were killed in motor vehicle crashes, were not
in child safety seats.
“A child safety seat cannot do its job if it’s not used at all,” said
Secretary LaHood. “Parents and caregivers need to make sure their children
are buckled up properly and child seats are installed correctly.”