T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1127.1 | | NETCAD::FERGUSON | | Thu Apr 18 1996 14:44 | 1 |
| each state has its own law. what state are you asking about?
|
1127.2 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | It's the foodchain, stupid | Thu Apr 18 1996 15:36 | 4 |
| In colorado it is four years of age OR 40 pounds. I kept Carrie in her
seat until she started 1st grade, as she was a real light-weight and I
have had it forcefully brought to my attention just how valuable car
seats are with a small person.
|
1127.3 | Car Seat | DKAS::DKAS::OLEARY | Nancy B. O'Leary | Thu Apr 18 1996 15:53 | 3 |
| I'm interested in Massachusetts...but what happens if you cross state borders?!
Nancy
|
1127.4 | I'm not aware of specific laws. | CPEEDY::FLEURY | | Thu Apr 18 1996 16:17 | 16 |
| From what I understand, Federal law states that all kids under 12
should be "restrained". There is no particular difinitive law which
states that at under 40 lbs you need to be in X... Common sense should
rule here. Placing an infant in just a seatbelt is crazy at best.
For the most part, if the child is too small to use either a booster
seat or seatbelt, use a carseat.
Now we can have the discussion about whether to use the front or back
seats and whether or not to face the seat forward...
FWIW: I wish that there was some enforcement of even the general
restraint portion for children. I too often see young kids jumping
around in moving vehicles.
Dan
|
1127.5 | 5 years old in MA | WMOIS::PHILPOT | | Thu Apr 18 1996 16:29 | 9 |
|
I called the State Police about 2 years ago, and was told that all
children under 5 (in MA) must be in a car seat/booster seat. There
was no height or weight requirement, just age. I found that a little
strange, since all 5 year olds are obviously not the same size, and
the smaller kids would be safer staying in a child seat a while longer.
The state, however, doesn't care how big you are, just how old.
-Lynne
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1127.6 | Too Tall Jones, er, duBois | GOOEY::DUBOIS | Justice is not out-of-date | Thu Apr 18 1996 16:45 | 11 |
| There is one thing, though, that is very important and which I learned from
another PARENTING noter (Stuart Brook, note 30.25). A child under age 4 can
be too tall to be safely kept in a car seat. If the bump on the back of the
head is over the height of the back of the carseat, the child should be moved
to a booster seat (or another carseat, if you can find one the right size).
I believe this is to avoid whiplash.
Justin (tall boy now :-) ) has just turned 3 1/2 and will be moving to a
booster seat very soon.
Carol
|
1127.7 | | CSC32::BROOK | | Thu Apr 18 1996 17:35 | 45 |
| >There is one thing, though, that is very important and which I learned from
>another PARENTING noter (Stuart Brook, note 30.25). A child under age 4 can
>be too tall to be safely kept in a car seat. If the bump on the back of the
>head is over the height of the back of the carseat, the child should be moved
>to a booster seat (or another carseat, if you can find one the right size).
>I believe this is to avoid whiplash.
>
>Justin (tall boy now :-) ) has just turned 3 1/2 and will be moving to a
>booster seat very soon.
Thanks for bringing this up Carol, it is so important. It is indeed to
avoid whiplash injury ... and on a small child, whiplash == broken neck!
or injuries virtually identical to sheaken baby syndrome!
This is no longer a personal problem in our house ... but I still care strongly
about it. The one size fits all laws countries / states pass don't take
such things into account, and moreover, the car seat makers still haven't
figured it out yet either!
Since most laws simply state "an approved child restraint", the
transition between rear-facing infant seat and forward facing car seat is
only critical for most families on weight / height / fit. The same applies
to the transition between car seat and booster seat.
Now the time to graduate to a conventional seatbelt is where the biggest
legal headache occurs, where the law is based on age and or weight. There
are some cars where no booster seat is low enough to protect a child's head
from whiplash. The older Cara-Voyagers were an example.
I probably broke the law for this in numerous places ... but what worried me
more than that, was that in the event of a crash, an improperly restrained
passenger could cause insurance problems ... possibly invalidating any insurance
claims for the child's injuries. OUCH!
I think in general, the police are not going to pay a great deal of attention,
unless out to get some brownie points (you know ... to meet those ticket
quotas that they never admit to having), as long as the child is restrained
in an *apparently* suitable manner. Put an infant in a lap belt and you're
pushing your luck, and similarly, putting your 50lb child in an infant seat
probably wouldn't cut it either!!!
Stuart
|
1127.8 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | It's the foodchain, stupid | Thu Apr 18 1996 17:49 | 11 |
| Stuart
Glad you clarified that. With Carrie, when she was in the ist grade
she was still well under the wieght requirment for car seats in CO, but
much too tall to be safely in one. it would be nice, indeed if SOMEONE
would take into consideration the height/weight thingies. I guess
Colorado did this with the over 4 or over 40 pound law.
Such is the price of having fairy children.
meg
|
1127.9 | | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Thu Apr 18 1996 18:30 | 18 |
|
I'm 90% sure that in NH it's 4 yrs or 40lbs, and under, must be in a
child safety seat. Under 12 must be restrained. If you cross state
lines, it is your responsibility to find out what the laws are in that
state, and you must obey them. Ignorance of the law is not an excuse.
Unrestrained/improperly restrained children is not a "stoppable"
offense. Meaning they won't pull you over for it. BUT, if they pull
you over for something else, it's definitely ticket-able. In NH, it's
statute #265:107-a, and the fine is $43.20 per child. (I just got a
speeding ticket, so I happen to have the whole "menu of fines" to refer
to (-:)
I know that the pedi's office, and hospitals have the "rules" posted
all over the place - call any one of them, in the state you're
concerned about, and they should know.
-Patty
|
1127.10 | | CSC32::BROOK | | Thu Apr 18 1996 18:52 | 10 |
| >
> I know that the pedi's office, and hospitals have the "rules" posted
> all over the place - call any one of them, in the state you're
> concerned about, and they should know.
>
A good source of this info is AAA ... including the rules for the Canadian
provinces, Mexico, etc etc etc
Stuart
|
1127.12 | True in Mass.! | SUBPAC::BJUBINVILLE | CMP Equipment Engineering | Fri Apr 19 1996 22:41 | 9 |
|
re-1
Absolutely... Weld went after protecting the kids.
Police will and have pulled cars over because kids were
running around the vehicle like a jungle-gym.
BJ
|
1127.13 | | CPEEDY::FLEURY | | Mon Apr 22 1996 09:11 | 10 |
| RE: .-1
If in fact the police can pull over cars wiht unrestrained kids, I've
never seen it. Even when obvious, the police don't seem to care. They
do care though, if you have a right front blinker out and happen to
have a "reject" sticker from an inspection. But I digress...
Where are their priorities?
Dan
|
1127.14 | | SUBPAC::BJUBINVILLE | CMP Equipment Engineering | Mon Apr 22 1996 09:25 | 7 |
|
re -1
There a still officers out there that will do it...
BJ
|
1127.15 | 50% of their head | JUGHED::DRURY | | Mon Apr 22 1996 12:19 | 6 |
| I received my carseat from Fallon Clinic at a discounted price if I
attended a one hour car seat safety course. They stated that once a
child is 40 pounds, OR 50% of their head is over the top of the seat, it
is no longer considered a safety device.
Andrea
|
1127.16 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Crown Him with many crowns | Thu Apr 25 1996 11:14 | 8 |
|
Timely note... we are in the process of selecting a booster seat
for (almost) 4 year old Emily, as she is 38 pounds and legally
needs a seat for another year.
My only quandry is which of my two car seats to sell ;-)
|
1127.18 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Crown Him with many crowns | Wed May 29 1996 10:38 | 5 |
|
Is this information from the Red Cross an update to
Massachusetts Law, or a Red Cross recommendation? In
note .11, you mentioned Massachusetts Law says 5.
|
1127.19 | | DECWIN::MCCARTNEY | | Wed May 29 1996 13:21 | 3 |
| NH law says 4 years, period. No weight restriction.
|
1127.20 | | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed May 29 1996 14:48 | 7 |
| re .17
The Breverra car seat is much taller than any other I've noticed. I
keep looking at it wondering if it'd be comfortable .... anyone have
one? Do your kids like/hate it?
|
1127.21 | | GUSTAF::PARMLIND | | Wed May 29 1996 15:10 | 8 |
|
My kids are 5.5 and 6.5 and they both still use the Breverra. I think
it is comfortable because the times we don't bother to use it (like in
a rental car) they complain they can't see. I've been meaning to double
check how tall of a child the seat is meant for. My son is now 49"
(full price at Canobie Lake Park :^)
Elizabeth
|
1127.22 | According to the news yesterday..... | GMASEC::MOTT | | Thu Apr 10 1997 09:20 | 5 |
| Massachusetts just changed it's car seat law and it went into effect
yesterday (4/9/97)......Your child must be both 5 years old and over
40 pounds to not use the car seat. Failure to comply is a $25.00 fine.
Roberta
|
1127.23 | | DECCXX::WIBECAN | That's the way it is, in Engineering! | Thu Apr 10 1997 10:28 | 10 |
| >> Massachusetts just changed it's car seat law and it went into effect
>> yesterday (4/9/97)......Your child must be both 5 years old and over
>> 40 pounds to not use the car seat. Failure to comply is a $25.00 fine.
The major point of the new law is that it is a PRIMARY OFFENSE. Previously,
you would only get fined if you were pulled over for some reason and they then
noticed you had a child with no car seat. Now, if they notice you have a child
with no car seat, they can pull you over for that reason alone.
Brian
|
1127.24 | | STAR::LEWIS | | Thu Apr 10 1997 10:34 | 7 |
| I'm still confused about this. I'm planning to look at the state web
site for more details. How is "car seat" defined? Is a booster seat
a car seat? Is it really 5 years AND 40 pounds? My 4 year old son
weighed 49 pounds at his checkup in December; I won't put him in a
"car seat" that is only rated to 40 pounds. I do put him in a booster
seat, though. I told my husband I'd risk the fine.
Sue
|
1127.25 | | SMARTT::JENNISON | And baby makes five | Thu Apr 10 1997 11:11 | 7 |
|
Sue,
The booster seat will qualify.
Karen
|
1127.26 | a few free seats | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Thu Apr 10 1997 12:23 | 7 |
| and they were giving out free carseats (I think still fining the person
so they cost $25 if the fine was paid).
Other things to worry about - does it count as a moving violation (ie insurance
company takes you off their good driver list for five years)?
bjm
|
1127.27 | I'm confused | SBUOA::POIRIER | Hakuna Matata | Thu Apr 10 1997 12:25 | 6 |
|
What about my 6 year old who weighs 34 pounds? Do I have to put her in
a carseat when we travel to MA?
beth
|
1127.28 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Thu Apr 10 1997 12:34 | 11 |
| Beth,
it does become an interesting issue. Carrie didn't hit 40 pounds until
she was over 7, but was too tall for the 50 pound car seat, or the
booster seats I had seen. Fortunately Colorado does have the 4 years
or 40 pounds as Atlehi is running right in Carrie's footsteps, although
she is a bit heavier. (almost 30 pounds at almost 4 and stringbeanie)
I do keep them in seats as long as they are in a seat rated for their
weight and height.
meg
|
1127.29 | | SMARTT::JENNISON | And baby makes five | Thu Apr 10 1997 12:34 | 4 |
|
Yes.
|
1127.30 | | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Thu Apr 10 1997 13:13 | 7 |
| >> Yes.
I assume that is to the question of the 40 pound question? If so yes, no
matter the age, under 40 pounds requires some sort of car seat/booster seat -
at least that is what the news reports were saying last night.
bjm
|
1127.31 | text of AP story | HNDYMN::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Thu Apr 10 1997 13:18 | 60 |
| From:
http://www.boston.com/dailynews/wirehtml/100/Police__kids_should_be_in_car_seats.htm
(ie boston globe on line)
Police: kids should be in car
seats
Associated Press, 04/10/97 00:01
BOSTON (AP) - At a police traffic
crackdown in the city's Dorchester section,
police were pulling people over and handing
out child safety seats.
Police who stop cars by the side of the road
usually hand out speeding tickets. But at this
Morrissey Boulevard traffic stop Wednesday,
they mostly handed out warnings to motorists
violating a new law that requires car seats for
small children.
And a couple of lucky people ended up with a
free $110 child safety seat along with their
warnings.
``One woman from South Boston was
elated,'' said State Police Lt. Brian Greeley.
``She couldn't afford to buy the seat itself.
Why give her a $25 ticket when she had a
hard enough time purchasing the seat itself?''
The law, which became effective Wednesday,
requires children to ride in a car seat until
they are at least 5 years old and weigh more
than 40 pounds. Violations bring a $25 fine.
The police traffic stops came after a nearby
news conference.
``Our mission is to save lives. ... Today, we
were showing we cared about her children
and we wanted them safe,'' Greeley said.
The Child Passenger Safety Law also says
children 5 and older have to wear a seat belt,
and police can stop drivers solely for having a
child under 12 in the car not wearing a seat
belt.
The Governor's Highway Safety Bureau has
also been urging people not to let children
under 12 ride in the front seat because of the
possible danger from exploding air bags.
The bureau has been waging a statewide
campaign to promote air bag safety. The
slogan: ``The Back Is Where It's At!''
|
1127.32 | Too tall? | ASDG::HORTERT | | Fri Apr 11 1997 10:20 | 9 |
| I'm still concerned about this law. My 4yr old is 40 pounds, but too
tall for a carseat. If I put her in a booster seat her head is a
little above the back seat of the van and I was told that is very
dangerous. I'm wondering if there is a booster seat that is not
too high. Otherwise I'll risk the $25 and save her neck.
P.S. I always have her in a seatbelt with the shoulder strap.
Rose
|
1127.33 | Try a Kangaroo Seat | ALFA2::SMYERS | | Fri Apr 11 1997 10:29 | 14 |
| Rose,
My daughter, 5 in 3 weeks, is 44.5" tall and a whopping 36lbs, there is
no way she would ever fit in a car seat. What we use is a Kangaroo
booster seat. It's been discussed elsewhere in PARENTING, but
basically it is a big foam seat that that is very high in the back (we
have a van, too, and the booster extends up beyond the seat back) and
also has extended sides so when she falls asleep in the car she has a
place to rest her head. You need a lap AND shoulder belt for it. They
are expensive, we paid $70 two years ago, but it's worth it.
We've been very happy with it.
/Susan
|
1127.34 | | SMARTT::JENNISON | And baby makes five | Fri Apr 11 1997 10:33 | 10 |
|
Hmm, I guess I'm lucky not to have that minivan yet.
Emily's (4 years 11 months) is 43 pounds, 75th percentile for
height. She sits in a Gerry booster seat, with a shoulder and
lap belt (and a Safe-T-Fit to keep the straps off her neck).
Her head is not above the seat.
|
1127.35 | I've joined the masses... | ALFA2::SMYERS | | Fri Apr 11 1997 11:34 | 13 |
| Karen,
We just bought the mommy-van 2 weeks ago. I can't believe I'm writing
this, but I LOVE IT. It's so easy to get the girls in and out and
Kimberly is thrilled that she can actually see out the window now.
What a difference from the Sable I drove, I don't think I will miss
that car at all (the people that bought it are coming to get it today,
yeah, yeah, yeah!).
My van is the nice shiny, white Windstar in the HLO2 parking lot.
/Susan
|
1127.36 | Century Braverra (?) | MAL009::MAGUIRE | | Fri Apr 11 1997 15:43 | 5 |
| Century makes a booster seat named the Braverra (I think). I have one
in my car for my grandaughter. The back of the booster comes up high
enough to "act" as a headrest. The seat is not that high off the
actual car seat, maybe about four inches. It uses the car seat belts.
I think it's pretty good.
|