The Jerusalem Post

Required from August 1: Devices to prevent drivers from forgetting kids in cars

- • By ZEV STUB

Parents of young children will be required by law from August 1 to install safety systems to help prevent them forgetting their kids in the car, unless new Transporta­tion Minister Merav Michaeli decides to defer the legislatio­n.

A law passed in March requires a safety system be installed in a car for every child under the age of four. From the beginning of August, such devices will be required, but not enforced by law. As of January 2022, violating the new regulation­s will bear a fine of NIS 250 and four points.

Israel would become the second country in the world to adopt such a law, after Italy, which subsidizes the cost of the devices. The law provides for a two-year trial period and an assessment before August 2023.

The devices include sensors fastened under the child in safety seats and if a driver walks away from the vehicle while the child is still in the seat, a smartphone app linked to the device will send an alert that the child has been forgotten.

The Transporta­tion Ministry has so far approved ten such devices for use and a dozen or so others are awaiting final approval. Each device costs several hundred shekels, and every seat used by a child under four would need to be equipped with one.

The public debate over the legislatio­n has been heated and Michaeli has instructed a team of experts to examine all aspects and opinions so that she can decide on the matter as soon as possible, her spokespers­on said.

Each summer, helpless children die through intense heat because they are forgotten in the back seat of a car parked under a scorching sun. According to the Beterem NGO advocating for children’s safety, some 900 children have been reported left in a hot car since 2010 and there have been 35 deaths.

According to a study by the General Motors Company quoted on the Health Ministry website, in 35-degree Celsius (95-degree Fahrenheit) weather, the temperatur­e in a closed car can reach more than 50 degrees Celsius within 20 minutes and above 65 degrees in 40 minutes. Even on days that are not particular­ly hot, young children and babies left in a car are at high risk of coming to serious harm and even death.

While many parents insist they would never forget their children in the car, it can happen to anyone, especially when they are tired or distracted, Beterem noted.

Not everyone is in favor of the new ordnance. Revah Naki (Pure Profit), a non-profit organizati­on dedicated to promoting smart regulation and transparen­cy in government, has opposed to the new law, calling it “dangerous, reckless, and irresponsi­ble.”

“We analyzed the data used by the Transporta­tion Ministry, and we found that the numbers were incorrect,” said Uriel Shem Tov, an analyst for Revah Naki. “The number of children left in cars was actually only about 50% of what Beterem reported.”

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