21 States Urged to Bolster Child Booster Seat Laws

Back in 1996, federal authorities urged states across the country to enact booster seat laws to provide extra protection for children up to 8 years old. But today, 14 years after the National Transportation Safety Board established its child safety guidelines, 21 states and two territories still fall short of the mark, according to a new tally by the agency.

The NTSB singled out Florida as having the most lenient child passenger laws in the country, requiring child safety seats only for children 3 years or younger. The Palm Beach Post pointed out that lawmakers repeatedly have tried, but failed, since 2001 to expand Florida’s law to add booster seats for kids from ages 4 to 8.

Also criticized by the NTSB were Arizona, South Dakota, American Samoa and Puerto Rico, whose laws cover only children 4 years old or younger. Twelve states have booster seat laws for children 5 years and younger, while six others require the seats for children up to 6 years old.

In a statement, NTSB Chairman Deborah A.P. Hersman urged the 21 states and two territories to pass stronger booster seat laws, saying the current situation “means that millions of children remain at risk of injury or fatality every day on our highways.”

At the same time, the agency praised Alaska, Colorado, Delaware, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Rhode Island and Texas for enacting or upgrading their booster seat laws in the past year.

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One comment to “21 States Urged to Bolster Child Booster Seat Laws”

  1. Office Racing Seat

    You made some good points there. I did a search on the topic and found most people will agree with your article.Thanks

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