Sheriff's Department to host events this Saturday
Free Child Safety Seat Clinics offered
Wanda English Burnett - Editor
Knowing the difference between being properly
buckled up and not being properly buckled up can be a matter
of life or death, The Ripley County Sheriff's Department will
be hosting two free Child Safety Seat Clinics this Saturday,
November 6.
The first clinic will take place at the Sunman Volunteer Fire
Department and will be held from 8:00 a.m. until 11:00 a.m.
In the afternoon, a clinic will be held at the Versailles Volunteer
Fire Department and will be held from 1:00 until 4:00 p.m.
The Ripley County Sheriff's Department, Rescue 69, Jefferson
County Health Department, the Cincinnati Children's Medical
Center in Batesville, and the Pregnancy Care Center, Lawrenceburg,
will have Certified Child Passenger Safety Technicians on hand
to assess proper child safety seat installation. They will
also give "hands-on" instruction for parents and
caregivers with small children.
Sheriff Bill Davison invites parents, grandparents and caregivers
of infants, toddlers and small children to stop by one of the
locations and have their child safety seat inspected by one
of the certified technicians.
Literature will be given out on the new booster seat law that
is to take effect July 2005, as well as information on how
parents may be eligible to receive a free child safety or booster
seat from Project LOVE, which is a grant offered through the
Automotive Safety Program.
Sheriff Davison gives parents some very important points regarding
child safety seat usage:
· All children should be placed in safety seats, booster
seats or seat belts - every time they ride in a car or truck.
· Children 12 and younger should be buckled up in the
back seat. The front seat is a dangerous spot. Front air bags
can be deployed in even minor fender-benders seriously hurting
or even killing some children.
· When placing a child safety seat or booster seat
in your car or truck, be sure to read the instructions so you
install and use the seat correctly. Also, look at your vehicle's
owner's manual to see what it says about installing and using
child safety seats and booster seats.
· Children, as they grow, should progress through three
types of child safety before using the seat belt alone: from
rear-facing seats to forward-facing seats to booster seats.
· Infants must always be placed
in rear-facing seats until they are at least one year old and 20 pounds.
· Children between 20 and 40 pounds should be placed
in forward-facing safety seats.
· When a child outgrows his or her forward-facing safety
seat, use a booster seat until your child is at least 8 years
old or over 4 feet 9 inches tall. Seat belts alone are made
for adults.
A booster seat raises a child up so the seat belt fits. This will prevent your
child from being thrown from the car, or thrown around inside it during a crash.
· Children who have outgrown booster seats must use
seat belts.
· Child safety seat use plummets after age 3. In one
study, one-half of 3 to 8 year old children were
not being placed in child safety or booster seats, where most of them belong.
· Small children (age 2 to 5) who are placed in seat
belts rather than child safety seats or booster seats are 3.5
times more likely to be significantly injured in a crash. They
are four times more likely to receive a significant head injury.
· Unrestrained children are three times more likely
to be injured than those who are restrained.
· Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death
for children ages 4 to 14.
· Child safety seats reduce fatal injury by 71% for
infants and by 54% for toddlers (1-4 years old) in passenger
cars. For infants and toddlers in light trucks, the seats reduce
fatal injury by 58% and 59% respectively.
· Traffic crashes have psychological as well as physical
repercussions. A study in the Journal Pediatrics found that
25% of children suf
fering traffic-related injuries were diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder,
as were 15% of their parents. This is a rate similar to that found among children
exposed to violence.
The Sheriff's Department in conjunction with the Indiana Criminal
Justice Institute and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
are pleased to bring these clinics to residents of Ripley County.
For more information about child passenger safety, you can
contact the sheriff's department at 812-689-5558 or the Governor's
Council at 317-232-1295 or visit www.in.gov.cji.