New York Coalition for Transportation Safety

New York Coalition for Transportation Safety

Child Restraints

One Minute Safety Seat Checklist

Using a safety seat correctly makes a big difference. A child safety seat may not protect your child in a crash if it isn’t used correctly and installed properly in your vehicle. Take a minute
to Check To Be Sure…

All Children age 12 and under should ride properly restrained in the back seat!!!

Never place a rear-facing child safety seat in the front seat where a front mounted
passenger air bag is present.

How They Work Cartoon - person reading direction

Do You Have and Understand the Instructions?

  • Always read the child seat use and installation instruction manual. 

  • Read your vehicle owner’s manual seat belt and child seat
    installation section. 

     

     

Does Your Child Ride in the Correct Safety Seat?

Infants, from birth to age one, and at least 20 pounds should ride in the
back seat in a rear facing safety seat.

  • Harness straps should be at or below the infant’s shoulders. 

  • Harness straps should fit snugly. The straps should lie in a relatively straight line
    without sagging. 

     

     

  • The harness chest clip should be placed at the infant’s armpit level. This keeps the harness straps positioned properly. 

  • Infants weighing 20 pounds or more before age one should ride rear facing in a convertible child safety seat rated for heavier infants (some convertible seats are rated up to 30-35 pounds rear facing).

Four illustrations of properly restrained safety seats

Children over one year and at least 20 pounds may ride in a forward facing child safety seat in the back seat. Children should ride in a safety seat with full harness until they weigh about 40 pounds.

  • Harness straps should be at or above child’s shoulders. 

  • Harness straps should be threaded through the top slots, in most cases. 

  • Harness should be snug. Straps should lie in a relatively straight line without sagging. 

  • Harness chest clip should be at the child’s armpit level, which help keep the harness straps positioned properly on the child’s shoulders.

Two illustrations of properly restrained forward facing safety seats

The Lower Anchors and
Tethers for Children
(LATCH) System is designed to make installation of child safety seats easier by requiring child safety seats to be installed without using the vehicle’s seat belt system. As of September, 1999, all new forward facing child safety seats (not including booster seats) have to meet stricter head protection requirements, which calls for a top tether strap. This adjustable strap is attached to the back of a child safety seat. It has a hook for securing the seat to a tether anchor found either on the rear shelf area of the vehicle or, in the case of mini-vans and station wagons, on the rear floor or the on the back of the rear seat of the vehicle. As of September, 2000, all new cars, minivans, and light trucks will have this tether anchor.

 

Illustration of forward facing safety seat with LATCH top tether strap  

By September 1, 2002, two rear seating positions of all cars, minivans and light trucks will come equipped with lower child safety seat anchorage points located between a vehicle’s seat cushion and seat back. Also by September 1, 2002, all child safety seats will have two attachments which will connect to the vehicle’s lower anchorage attachment points.

Together, the lower anchors and upper tethers make up the LATCH system.

 

All children who have outgrown child safety seats should be properly restrained in
booster seats until they are at least 8 years old, unless they are 4’9″ tall.

  • Belt-positioning boosters can only be used with both the lap and shoulder belt across the child. The shoulder belt should be snug against the child’s chest, resting across the collar bone. The lap belt should lay low across the child’s upper thigh area. 

  • Boosters should be used as “in between” safety devices for children over 40 pounds who have outgrown a forward-facing child seat. 

  • Booster seats should be used until the child can sit with his/her back against the vehicle
    seat back cushion, knees bent over the seat cushion edge, and feet on the floor,
    approximately 4’9″.

 

Belt positioning booster must be used with a lap and shoulder belt 

Illustration of belt positioning booster seat with lap and shoulder belt across child

High-back
booster with 

5 point harness

(used up to 40 pounds)

(harness removed after

40 pounds)

 


Illustration of child secured in high-back booster seat with 5 point harness

High-back,
belt-positioning booster provides head restraint in vehicle back seats
with low backs or no head restraint. Must be used with a lap and
shoulder belt.

Illustration of child secured in high-back, belt-positioning booster seat with lap and shoulder belt in use

 


If only a lap belt is available in the rear seating positions, an option may be to contact the
vehicle dealer to see if retrofit shoulder belts can be installed. Another option may be to install products which can be used with a lap belt only such as a speciality-made harness or vest. Contact the Auto Safety Hotline at (888) 327-4236 for additional information.

 

 

Contact:

New York Coalition for Transportation Safety
Mailing Address:
213-37 39th Avenue, Box 204
Bayside, New York 11361
Phone: (516) 571-6808
Fax: (516) 571-6874

Location

New York Coalition for Traffic Safety
Physical Location Address:
1194 Prospect Avenue
Westbury, N.Y. 11590

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© 2012 • New York Coalition for Transportation Safety • Customized by the Uprooted Group