More states are expanding their seat belt laws to include rear-seat passengers in the hope of preventing traffic injuries and deaths.
Since 2007, six states — Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, New Jersey and Texas — have started to require adult passengers in the back, along with those in front, to wear seat belts, USA Today reports. The newspaper lists, in all, 25 states and the District of Columbia as requiring seat belts for all adult passengers.
An unbuckled rider can “become a back-seat bullet” in a crash, said Pam Fischer, New Jersey’s highway traffic safety director. Experts say that’s because rear seat passengers move at the same rate of speed as the vehicle they ride in — until they slam into something, such as a seat back or dashboard.
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, seat belts saved more than 13,000 lives in 2008. The agency did not have figures on how many traffic deaths involved rear-seat passengers who didn’t buckle their seat belts.
In some states, the use of rear-seat belts has dropped even as front-belt usage has increased.


