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Parents: Face Your Child’s Car Safety Seat in the Right Direction

Publicado el 09/25/18.

(TENGA EN CUENTA: El Departamento de Policía de Sevierville participa en la Semana Nacional de Seguridad de los Niños Pasajeros, que se lleva a cabo del 23 al 29 de septiembre. Como parte del evento, SPD llevará a cabo un evento de revisión de asientos de seguridad para niños el sábado de Revisión Nacional de Asientos. 29 de septiembre. Agencias de todo el país llevarán a cabo eventos sobre asientos para niños en el automóvil ese día. El evento del SPD será en el Departamento de Policía (300 Gary Wade Blvd.) en el Complejo Municipal de 10 a. m. a 2 p. m.

Facing the car seat in the correct direction for the age, height, weight, and developmental level of the child is critical to the safety of child passengers. Many children are advanced to the next seat stage before they are truly ready, which puts them at greater risk for injury in a crash. NHTSA suggests that children should ride rear-facing to the upper limits of their seats, and convertible seats with higher rear-facing weight and height limits allow many children to ride rear-facing well past the age of 2. Children are also being moved prematurely from harnessed car seats into booster seats, as well as from booster seats into adult seat belts, which puts them at greater risk for injury if the seat belt does not fit them correctly. Safekids.org says that for the best protection, keep your baby in a rear-facing car seat until 2 years old or more.

 

Tennessee’s child passenger restraint law states the following:
Children under one (1) year of age, or any child, weighing twenty (20) pounds or less, must be secured in a child passenger restraint system in a rear-facing position, meeting federal motor vehicle safety standards, in a rear seat, if available, or according to the child safety restraint system or vehicle manufacturer's instructions. (Note: If the child safety seat has a higher rear-facing weight rating, usually 30 or 35 pounds, it may be continued to be used in a rear-facing position so long as the child's weight permits. Check the manufacturers instructions accompanying the child safety seat for more information.)

In summary, although the Tennessee law allows children one year old and weighing more than 20 pounds to be placed in a forward-facing position, the SPD, along with NHTSA recommends that your child remain in the rear-facing position longer, if doing so would be in accordance with manufacturers instructions. You can find the exact height and weight limit on the side or back of your car seat. Kids who ride in rear-facing seats have the best protection for the head, neck and spine. It is especially important for rear-facing children to ride in a back seat away from the airbag.

Para obtener más información sobre las leyes de retención infantil de Tennessee, consulte TCA 55-9-602.

Contáctenos

Bob Stahlke, Oficial de información pública

300 Gary Wade Blvd.
Sevierville, TN 37864-5500
Teléfono: 865.453.5506