95-5416. Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Child Restraint Systems  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 43 (Monday, March 6, 1995)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 12192-12194]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-5416]
    
    
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
    
    49 CFR Part 571
    
    [Docket No. 95-009, Notice 01]
    
    
    Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Child Restraint Systems
    
    AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), DOT.
    
    ACTION: Notice of public meeting; request for comments.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: This notice announces that NHTSA will be holding a public 
    meeting regarding the misuse of child restraint systems (safety seats). 
    NHTSA seeks comments on actions that the agency, industry and public 
    can do to improve the proper installation and use of child safety 
    seats.
    
    DATES: Public meeting: A public meeting to hear views and comments will 
    be held in Indianapolis, Indiana on April 2, 1995, from 1 p.m. to 4 
    p.m.
        Those wishing to make oral presentations at the meeting should 
    contact Dr. George Mouchahoir, at the address or telephone number 
    listed below by March 24, 1995.
        Written comments: Written comments may be submitted to the agency 
    and must be received by April 2, 1995.
    
    ADDRESSES: Public meeting: The public meeting will be held at the 
    following location: The Hyatt Regency Indianapolis, One South Capitol 
    Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204, Telephone: (317) 632-1234/(800) 
    233-1234 Toll Free Reservations.
        Written comments: All written comments must refer to the docket and 
    notice number of this notice and be submitted (preferable 10 copies) to 
    the Docket Section, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration 
    (NHTSA), Room 5109, 400 Seventh St., S.W., Washington, DC 20590. Docket 
    hours are from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday.
    
     [[Page 12193]] FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. George Mouchahoir, 
    Office of Vehicle Safety Standards, National Highway Traffic Safety 
    Administration, 400 Seventh St., SW, Washington, DC, 20590 (telephone 
    202-366-4919).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: A child safety seat that is installed 
    properly and used correctly provides very effective crash protection 
    for a child. However, the safety benefits of a child seat can be 
    reduced or negated by misuse of the seat. The agency believes in most 
    cases, the misuse is unknown to the person installing or using the 
    restraint.
        In September 1994, three-year-old Dana Hutchinson was killed in a 
    misused child seat. The DANA Foundation, established by the child's 
    family after the crash to encourage correct safety seat use, describes 
    the crash:
    
        Dana's father had installed her child safety seat in their car 
    for a short trip to Grandma's house. As always, he checked it to 
    make sure it was tightly held. When her mother picked her up from 
    school, Dana was securely fastened in the seat, and the installation 
    was double-checked. As always, she and her two brothers were safely 
    buckled in before the trip began.
        It was raining very hard, and the roads were slippery. Their car 
    was in a serious collision with a pick-up truck, and Dana, her 
    mother, and her two brothers were injured. A few days later, Dana 
    died from severe head and neck injuries. The police report from the 
    accident stated an opinion that her child safety restraint was 
    improperly secured.
    
        The vehicle in which Dana Hutchinson was restrained required a 
    supplemental buckle that was specially designed for use with child 
    seats. The need for this buckle was discussed in the vehicle owner's 
    manual. While Dana's parents did not read the manual, they thought they 
    had done everything they were supposed to do to secure their child in 
    the car seat.
        Improving the proper installation and use of child seats is a NHTSA 
    priority. In recent months, NHTSA Administrator Ricardo Martinez 
    appeared on national television to make the public more aware of misuse 
    problems. The agency has also worked with newspapers, magazines and 
    other journals across the country to alert the public that misuse is 
    ``foiling child safety seat's effectiveness'' (quoting headline in 
    December 12, 1994 article of the Washington Post). Further, last month 
    Administrator Martinez announced the formation of a ``blue ribbon 
    panel'' of experts to recommend ways that safety seats can be made 
    easier to install and use. Panel members include senior representatives 
    of the motor vehicle, child safety seat and seat belt industries, a 
    pediatric physician and several child safety seat practitioners. Mr. 
    Joseph Colella, the executive director of the DANA Foundation, is also 
    a member. The panel moderator is Philip Haseltine, president of the 
    American Coalition for Traffic Safety. By June 1, the panel will make 
    recommendations to the industries affected and the general public.
        NHTSA is having the public meeting to afford interested persons the 
    opportunity to comment on child seat misuse problems. The transcript of 
    the meeting will be made available to the blue ribbon panel for its 
    consideration. While blue ribbon panel members may be attending the 
    public meeting as observers, they will not be participating formally in 
    the proceeding.
        The agency would like information about misuse problems from 
    parents or other caretakers who personally had difficulty using a 
    safety seat with a child. What feature of the child seat promoted the 
    misuse problem? NHTSA is also interested in the observations of 
    educators or safety specialists who have encountered misuse problems 
    when training members of the public to use child seats correctly. How 
    are safety seats being misused? What has been or could be done to 
    reduce that misuse? How can parents and other caretakers be encouraged 
    to read owner's manuals to learn how to use a child safety seat 
    correctly? The agency seeks information from child seat and vehicle 
    manufacturers on what aspects of Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 
    213, ``Child Restraint Systems,'' encourage or discourage proper child 
    seat use. For example, child seat labeling requirements have often been 
    criticized as overwhelming the consumer with long and complex warnings 
    and instructions. How can these labeling requirements be improved? 
    Which aspects of the labeling requirements should be retained, and 
    which should be abolished, and why? How do manufacturers assess whether 
    a child seat will be misused (i.e., the potential for misuse)? What 
    actions have been taken by vehicle and child seat manufacturers to 
    reduce consumers' misuse of child seats?
        NHTSA requests comments from all interested persons on the 
    compatibility between vehicle seat and belt assemblies and child safety 
    seats that promote system misuse. NHTSA is concerned that child safety 
    seats and the vehicles they are used in are not always readily 
    compatible, making it difficult for parents to install and use the 
    safety seat to ensure that their child receives the best level of 
    protection. The incompatibility arises from differences in vehicle seat 
    cushion width, depth and angles; forward-mounted anchorage points, and 
    vehicle belt systems with emergency locking retractors, at times create 
    an improper fit or difficult installation of the safety seat. As noted 
    above, the blue ribbon panel will recommend ways to make child safety 
    seats and vehicles more compatible to promote convenient and correct 
    usage.
        The agency has chosen the date and place of the public meeting to 
    coincide with NHTSA's Lifesavers 1995 National Conference on Highway 
    Safety Priorities, which will be held on April 2-5, 1995 in 
    Indianapolis, Indiana. It hopes that scheduling the public meeting for 
    April 2 will encourage persons participating in the Lifesavers 
    conference to attend the public meeting to share their views. 
    Typically, Lifesavers participants work in state highway safety 
    agencies, community traffic safety programs, state or local EMS or 
    injury prevention offices, and state or local law enforcement agencies. 
    (For information about the Lifesavers conference, contact Ms. Shirley 
    Barton, NHTSA Office of Traffic Safety Programs, at (202) 366-2687.)
    
    Procedural Matters
    
        As noted at the beginning of this notice, persons wishing to speak 
    at the public meeting should contact Dr. Mouchahoir by the indicated 
    date. If the number of requests for oral presentations exceeds the 
    available time, NHTSA will ask prospective speakers with similar views 
    to combine presentations. To facilitate communication, NHTSA will 
    provide auxiliary aids (e.g., sign-language interpreter, braille 
    materials, large print materials and/or a magnifying device) to 
    participants as necessary, during the meeting. Thus, any person 
    desiring assistance of auxiliary aids should contact Ms. Barbara 
    Carnes, NHTSA Office of Rulemaking, telephone (202) 366-1810, no later 
    than 10 days before the meeting.
        Those speaking at the public meeting should limit their 
    presentation to 10 minutes. If the presentation will include slides, 
    motion pictures, or other visual aids, the presenters should bring at 
    least one copy to the meeting so that NHTSA can readily include the 
    material in the public record.
        The presiding officials at the meeting may ask questions of any 
    speaker, and any participant may submit written questions for the 
    official, at its discretion, to address to other meeting participants. 
    There will be no opportunity for participants directly to question each 
    other. If time permits, [[Page 12194]] persons who have not requested 
    time, but would like to make a statement, will be afforded an 
    opportunity to do so.
        A schedule of participants making oral presentations will be 
    available at the designated meeting room. NHTSA will place a copy of 
    any written statement in the docket for this notice. A verbatim 
    transcript of the meeting will be prepared and also placed in the NHTSA 
    docket as soon as possible after the meeting.
        Participation in the meeting is not a prerequisite for the 
    submission of written comments. NHTSA invites written comments from all 
    interested parties. It is requested but not required that 10 copies be 
    submitted.
        If a commenter wishes to submit certain information under a claim 
    of confidentiality, three copies of the complete submission, including 
    purportedly confidential business information, should be submitted to 
    the Chief Counsel, NHTSA, at the street address given above, and copies 
    from which the purportedly confidential information has been deleted 
    should be submitted to the Docket Section. A request for 
    confidentiality should be accompanied by a cover letter setting forth 
    the information specified in the agency's confidential business 
    information regulation. 49 CFR Part 512.
        All comments received before the close of business on the comment 
    closing date indicated above will be considered. To the extent 
    possible, comments filed after the closing date will also be 
    considered. Comments will be available for inspection in the docket.
        NHTSA will continue to file relevant information as it becomes 
    available in the docket after the closing date. It is therefore 
    recommended that interested persons continue to examine the docket for 
    new material.
        Those desiring to be notified upon receipt of their comments in the 
    docket should enclose a self-addressed, stamped postcard in the 
    envelope with their comments. Upon receiving the comments, the docket 
    supervisor will return the postcard by mail.
    
    List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 57l
    
        Imports, Motor vehicle safety, Motor vehicles.
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115, 30117 and 30166; 
    delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.50.
    
        Issued on: March 1, 1995.
    Barry Felrice,
    Associate Administrator for Rulemaking.
    [FR Doc. 95-5416 Filed 3-3-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-59-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/06/1995
Department:
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of public meeting; request for comments.
Document Number:
95-5416
Dates:
Public meeting: A public meeting to hear views and comments will be held in Indianapolis, Indiana on April 2, 1995, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Pages:
12192-12194 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 95-009, Notice 01
PDF File:
95-5416.pdf
CFR: (1)
49 CFR 571