Orlando Sentinel

Use technology to stop deaths in hot cars

- By Baltimore Sun

Earlier this summer, a bipartisan coalition in the House and Senate introduced legislatio­n requiring new vehicles to eventually be fitted with technology that could make it much more difficult for drivers to unknowingl­y leave children (or pets) in the backseat. It’s a concept worthy of broad support.

Since 1990, there have been more than 800 heatstroke deaths of young children in cars, according to safety advocates . ... What if in all those cases, the drivers had been reminded to check their backseats? How many children would still be alive? Dozens? Hundreds? Surely, it’s not too much for the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion to require some version of “reminder” technology.

What makes the approach especially compelling is that at least one major automaker is already moving in that direction. Last year, General Motors introduced in certain of its 2017 models an integrated “Rear Seat Reminder,” and it’s putting the system in more of its 2018 cars and SUVs. Here’s how it works: The vehicle takes note if any of its rear doors have been opened and closed, then when the vehicle is turned off, five chimes sound and a message flashes on the dashboard display ... It’s a pretty simple and low-cost technology, and Consumer Reports has concluded it’s effective ...

While the Trump administra­tion has generally taken an antiregula­tory view, the obvious alternativ­e — allowing car makers simply to offer rear seat reminders as an option — is unlikely to prove effective. Few, if any, parents believe themselves capable of leaving a young child alone in a hot car. There’s simply not going to be a rush by consumers to seek out this particular safety feature.

Like seat belts, air bags and other helpful safety technology, it’s far better for the federal government to ultimately mandate its installati­on and use. The cost is likely to be modest, but the benefits, potentiall­y hundreds of lives saved, is enormous — if not necessaril­y obvious to adults who would never dream of leaving a child unattended . ...

Another promising technology ... would detect breathing inside a car after a driver has exited.

The bill introduced by Sens. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticu­t and Al Franken of Minnesota, Helping Overcome Trauma for Children Alone in Rear Seats Act (the HOT CARS Act of 2017) gives the federal government two years to further study the issue and set the standards with help from the auto industry. That kind of cooperativ­e approach is how the federal regulatory process is supposed to work . ...

[S]tates like Maryland have made it a crime to leave a child under 8 alone in a locked vehicle. But it’s quite another for a caregiver to simply forget. People would like to think that could never happen to them. The grim statistics show that it can. Public education and prosecutio­ns are helpful, but they simply aren’t enough to save the dozens of children who are killed each year by heatstroke because they were left alone in a hot car.

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