The new law was enacted because the risk of injury to a child is reduced by 33% in the back seat as compared to the front seat. There are a few exemptions to the new law, so a child may ride in the front seat if:
- The vehicle has no rear seats.
- The rear seats are side-facing jump seats. (Child safety restraints must never be placed on side-facing vehicle seats.)
- The child restraint system cannot be properly installed in the rear seat.
- Children under age 12 occupy all rear seats.
- A valid medical reason as written by the child's pediatrician.
The CHP web site has an FAQ with some sample scenarios, such as when all belts in the back seat are lap belts.
You can sign up for car seat recall notifications from the NHTSA here.
2 comments:
I really hate it when they write these laws based on age rather than height/weight! Our eldest was the size of a 12 year old when she was 8 (and didn't NEED the booster anymore) and our 5 year old is the size of a "normal" 7 year old. But our son is small for a 3 year old. Age means absolutely nothing when it comes to kids. Just venting. :-)
I hear what you're saying, and I think the age is important because it has to do with bone density/development, i.e., just because the child is the size of a kid two years older doesn't mean her bones are as "mature", if that makes sense. But I totally agree that the use of a booster should be based solely on whether it's needed to position the belt properly.
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