FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 3, 2003
Release # 03-136
CPSC Consumer Hotline: (800) 638-2772
CPSC Media Contact: Bruce Richardson, (301) 504-7908
35 Witnesses Set to Testify at CPSC Regional ATV Safety Hearing in West
Virginia - ATV Injuries Double in 5-Year Period, Deaths Continue To
Climb
WASHINGTON D.C. - The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission says that
35 witnesses have registered to testify about all-terrain vehicle (ATV)
safety at the commission's regional public hearing to be held in
Morgantown, W.Va., on June 5, 2003. Estimated ATV-related injuries in
the U.S. have doubled in a recent 5-year period and deaths also continue
to climb.
The 35 witnesses include medical doctors, injury prevention
researchers, ATV dealers, ATV riders, consumer safety advocates, and
families of victims from ATV-related crashes.
"The diversity of views is exactly what we want to hear at the ATV
safety hearing," said CPSC Chairman Hal Stratton. "We are concerned
about the disproportionate increase in the number of deaths and injuries
associated with ATV use in recent years, and we hope the hearing will
help us understand the causes of these deaths and injuries."
ATV injuries requiring an emergency room visit increased by 104
percent from an estimated 54,700 in 1997 to 111,700 in 2001. In 2001,
about a third of these victims were under 16 years old. In this same
period the estimated number of ATV drivers increased 36 percent, driving
hours grew 50 percent and the number of ATVs increased 40 percent,
according to a recent commission analysis.
For 1999, the last year for which death records are substantially
complete, the commission has reports of 357 people who died as a result
of ATV use, up from 251 in 1998 and 241 in 1997.
The 35 witnesses who will testify at the June 5 hearing come from
West Virginia, Maryland, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Idaho, New Hampshire,
California, Montana, and South Carolina.
"West Virginia and Pennsylvania ranked in the top six states for
ATV-related deaths between 1982 and 2001," Stratton said, "so it makes
sense to hold a hearing in that area." (Pennsylvania and West Virginia
recorded 264 and 194 deaths, respectively, in that period. Ohio
recorded 124 deaths and Maryland 25 deaths.)
"The field hearing gives local people a voice and an opportunity
to participate when they otherwise might not have been able if we
limited our hearings to Washington D.C.," Stratton said.
The Consumer Federation of America and other groups petitioned the
commission in September 2002 to ban the sale of adult-size, four-wheel
ATVs sold for the use of children under the age of 16. The commission
sought written public comments on the petition from October 2002 through
March 16, 2003. The West Virginia hearing will provide an additional
opportunity for the public to express its views about this petition.
The hearing is from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the Robert C. Byrd Health
Sciences Center, West Virginia University Health Sciences Campus, in
Morgantown.