CHP Focused on Safe, Secure Rides for Children

Press release from the CHP:

The California Highway Patrol (CHP) is dedicating the third week of September to ensuring California’s youngest motor vehicle passengers are safe and secure while traveling on the state’s roadways.

chp checking carseat restraintNational Child Passenger Safety Week is September 17-23, 2023.  The week serves as an opportunity to educate and encourage parents and caregivers to make certain that every child is properly restrained for every trip, facing the correct direction, and in the correct safety seat for their age and size.

“Child safety seats, when correctly installed, afford the best protection for infants and young children,” said CHP Commissioner Sean Duryee.  “The CHP has trained Child Passenger Safety Technicians available in communities throughout the state, who offer parents and caregivers free, one-on-one instruction and car seat installation to help achieve the best fit for their child.”

Motor vehicle traffic crashes are the leading cause of death of children in the United States.  According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in 2021, 711 child passengers ages 12 and younger were killed in motor vehicle crashes in the United States, and in 2020 more than 63,000 were injured.  Of the children who were killed in a crash, 36 percent were not buckled up.  These deaths can be avoided.  According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, child safety seats have been shown to reduce fatal injury by 71% for infants (under the age of 1) and by 54% for toddlers (1-4 years old).

The CHP has trained thousands of uniformed and nonuniformed personnel to be Child Passenger Safety (CPS) Technicians since the program began in 1999.  CHP CPS Technicians provide safety seat inspections, education, and hands-on training for parents and caregivers year-round.

If you are not confident how to properly secure your child in a safety seat, contact your local CHP Area office, and ask to speak with a child passenger safety technician.  Click on this link to locate a local CHP Area office anywhere in California.

California law requires children under the age of two, weighing less than 40 pounds or below 40 inches tall, ride in a rear-facing car seat.  All children under the age of eight must ride in the back seat in an age-appropriate safety seat. Additionally, it is recommended that all children 13 and under should ride in the back seat.  For more information about child passenger safety, visit the CHP Child Safety Seat Programs.

The mission of the CHP is to provide the highest level of Safety, Service, and Security.

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5 Let us come and reason together. Isaiah 1:18
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BudD
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Bud
11 months ago

When I was a kid our first car didn’t have seat belts. Our little league coach would haul us on the freeway to games in the back of his pickup.

Just say’n…

WakaWaka
Guest
WakaWaka
11 months ago
Reply to  Bud

Are you for or against mandated vaccines?

BudD
Member
Bud
11 months ago
Reply to  WakaWaka

Um. I am not sure how we got from riding in the back of a pickup to vaccine mandates.

If you are referring to the untested experimental Covid shots, they are not vaccines (in that it does not protect you from contracting Covid), and since it isn’t vaccine (and is untested) I think it is unreasonable to force people to take it. Actual vaccines that have been fully tested for serious diseases like measles etc, I think there is an argument for mandates…

tru matters
Guest
tru matters
11 months ago
Reply to  Bud

Grandkids to mom. “Hey mom guess what? Grandpa Bud let us ride in the back of his pickup.
Don’t worry we will find little Jimmy. Seems we lost him after hitting that bump.
And gramma dang near went thru the windshield when Granpa hit the brakes. She is still asleep in the truck.” “Granpaw says she will be fine”

Last edited 11 months ago
Martin
Guest
11 months ago

I salute the California Highway Patrol for their program focused on safe and secure rides for children. If it just saves one life it is completely worth it!