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Car Seat Safety
One Minute Safety Seat Checklist
Using a safety seat correctly makes a big
difference. A child safety seat may not protect your child in a crash if it
isn’t used correctly and installed properly in your vehicle. Take a minute to
Check To Be Sure...
All Children age 12 and under
should ride properly restrained in the back seat!!!
Never place a rear-facing
child safety seat in the front seat where a front mounted passenger air bag is
present.

Do You Have and
Understand the Instructions?
Does Your Child Ride
in the Correct Safety Seat?
Infants, from birth to age
one, and at least 20 pounds should ride in the back seat in a rear facing safety
seat.
- Harness straps should be at or below the
infant’s shoulders.
- Harness straps should fit snugly. The straps
should lie in a relatively straight line without sagging.
- The harness chest clip should be placed at the
infant’s armpit level. This keeps the harness straps positioned properly.
- Infants weighing 20 pounds or more before age
one should ride rear facing in a convertible child safety seat rated for
heavier infants (some convertible seats are rated up to 30-35 pounds rear
facing).

Children over one year and at
least 20 pounds may ride in a forward facing child safety seat in the back seat.
Children should ride in a safety seat with full harness until they weigh about
40 pounds.
- Harness straps should be at or above child’s
shoulders.
- Harness straps should be threaded through the
top slots, in most cases.
- Harness should be snug. Straps should lie in a
relatively straight line without sagging.
- Harness chest clip should be at the child’s
armpit level, which help keep the harness straps positioned properly on the
child’s shoulders.

The Lower
Anchors and Tethers
for Children (LATCH)
System is designed to make installation of child safety seats easier by
requiring child safety seats to be installed without using the vehicle’s seat
belt system. As of September, 1999, all new forward facing child safety seats
(not including booster seats) have to meet stricter head protection
requirements, which calls for a top tether strap. This adjustable strap is
attached to the back of a child safety seat. It has a hook for securing the seat
to a tether anchor found either on the rear shelf area of the vehicle or, in the
case of mini-vans and station wagons, on the rear floor or the on the back of
the rear seat of the vehicle. As of September, 2000, all new cars, minivans, and
light trucks will have this tether anchor.
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By September 1, 2002, two rear seating
positions of all cars, minivans and light trucks will come equipped with
lower child safety seat anchorage points located between a vehicle’s seat
cushion and seat back. Also by September 1, 2002, all child safety seats
will have two attachments which will connect to the vehicle’s lower
anchorage attachment points.
Together, the lower anchors and upper tethers make up the
LATCH system. |
All children who have outgrown
child safety seats should be properly restrained in booster seats until they are
at least 8 years old, unless they are 4'9" tall.
- Belt-positioning boosters can only be used
with both the lap and shoulder belt across the child. The shoulder belt should
be snug against the child’s chest, resting across the collar bone. The lap
belt should lay low across the child’s upper thigh area.
- Boosters should be used as “in between” safety
devices for children over 40 pounds who have outgrown a forward-facing child
seat.
- Booster seats should be used until the child
can sit with his/her back against the vehicle seat back cushion, knees bent
over the seat cushion edge, and feet on the floor, approximately 4'9".
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Belt positioning
booster must be used with a lap and shoulder belt
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High-back booster
with
5 point harness
(used up to 40 pounds)
(harness removed after
40 pounds)
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High-back,
belt-positioning booster provides head restraint in vehicle back seats
with low backs or no head restraint. Must be used with a lap and shoulder
belt.
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If only a lap belt is available in the rear
seating positions, an option may be to contact the vehicle dealer to see if
retrofit shoulder belts can be installed. Another option may be to install
products which can be used with a lap belt only such as a speciality-made
harness or vest. Contact the Auto Safety Hotline at (888) 327-4236 for
additional information.
This information provided by

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