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CASES & INVESTIGATIONS |
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GENERAL INFORMATION |
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| June 24, 2004 |
Washington
Post, "Car Window Deaths
Anger Safety Groups" |
At
least seven children have died nationwide in
the past three months by getting strangled in
automobile power windows, prompting safety advocates
to charge the auto industry and the government
with dragging their feet in making relatively
simple changes to reduce the danger.
The National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, the federal agency responsible for monitoring auto safety,
has no rules governing power window safety and no formal way of tracking such
accidents despite examining the issue for several years. A spokesman said the
agency plans to propose a rule requiring safer power windows in about a month,
followed by a comment period and then a phase-in period for industry to comply.
Until the recent unexplained
surge in deaths, power windows were thought to be responsible for only about
two to four child deaths per year, a small fraction of the 43,220 people killed
annually in U.S. traffic accidents. But safety advocates say any such deaths
are unnecessary because they are readily preventable. The problem is primarily
with U.S.-made cars sold in the U.S. market, which traditionally have used "rocker" or
toggle-style switches that can cause power windows to close inadvertently if
someone leans on the switch.
Because some foreign governments
have window safety requirements, most Asian- and European-brand vehicles use
a type of switch that has to be pulled upward to raise the window, making it
difficult for a child to trip it accidentally. Many foreign brands also offer
bounce-back features that cause windows to lower automatically if they hit an
obstacle, similar to the safety feature on garage-door openers. Such equipment
is available on Volkswagens, for example, sold in the United States or abroad.
Most U.S.-brand cars sold
in Europe also offer such features, but are just beginning to offer the equipment
in the domestic market. Ford Motor Co., for example, offers the safer-style switches
on all Jaguars and Volvos, most Mazdas, Lincoln Navigators and Aviators, and
Ford Mustangs and Thunderbirds, a spokeswoman said. |
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