FAA Announces Decision on Child Safety Seats

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


AOC 30-05 August 25, 2005
Contact: Alison Duquette
Phone: 202-267-3883 

FAA Announces Decision on Child Safety Seats WASHINGTON, DC
&#151 The Department of Transportation's Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) today announced that it will not mandate the
use of child safety seats on airplanes because of the increased
safety risk to families.

The agency said its analyses showed that, if forced to purchase
an extra airline ticket, families might choose to drive, a
statistically more dangerous way to travel.

The risk for fatalities and injuries to families is              
significantly greater on the roads than in airplanes, according  
to the FAA. Last year, nearly 43,000 people died on America's    
highways as compared to 13 on commercial flights.                

"Statistics show that families are safer traveling in the   
sky than on the road," said FAA Administrator Marion C.     
Blakey. "We encourage the use of child safety seats in      
airplanes. However, if requiring extra airline tickets forces    
some families to drive" then we’re inadvertently       
putting too many families at risk."                         

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)       
supported the FAA's decision based on current FAA and NHTSA      
studies that show a mandate could result in another 13 to        
42 added family member fatalities over 10 years in highway       
accidents.                                                       

As the nation's leading advocate for the use of child restraint  
systems, NHTSA Administrator Jeffrey W. Runge, M.D., today said  
that NHTSA supports the FAA's decision. He said, "This is   
good public policy that is in the best interest of safety for    
the traveling public."                                      

To encourage families who fly to use child restraint systems,    
the FAA is also broadening the categories of the types of        
systems that airlines can provide on aircraft by amending its    
regulations permitting the use of alternative child restraint    
systems to improve safety for children otherwise secured only    
with a lap belt.                                                 

Alternative child restraint systems must be approved by the
FAA and provided by an airline, not passengers. Specifics
are published in a final rule today and available at
www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/ and on display at the Federal
Register.

Airlines currently allow children under the age of two to fly
free of charge as "lap children" and many airlines
offer half-price tickets so parents can be guaranteed that their
child can travel in a safety seat. The FAA continues to educate
parents and encourages them to make informed decision about
traveling with young children by providing helpful guidance at
www.faa.gov/passengers.

An official FAA notice withdrawing the agency's
rulemaking is also published today at http://www.faa.gov/ regulations_policies/ 
and on display at the Federal Register.





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