The Chicago City Council on Wednesday will
consider a proposal aimed at getting parents expert help when it comes
to wrestling the alligator that is a child car safety seat.
An estimated 83.9 percent of
child car seats are not installed correctly, potentially exposing
children to serious risk.
"The scary part about that is
when parents are polled, 96 percent of parents think their car seat is
in correctly," according to Steve Breden, a certified child passenger
safety technician.
Those numbers inspired Ald. James Balcer (11th) to introduce an
ordinance that would require any retailer selling child car seats to
post an informational flyer with 20 feet of the car seat that is for
sale. The flyer would provide parents with a phone number and a website
where they can access a certified child passenger safety technician who
can install a seat or answer questions about the process.
He said the legislation, which passed through
subcommittee last week, would save frustration and lives.
"One thousand children are
dying each year [and ]184,000 are injured. I felt something had to be
done," he said.
But the measure is opposed by
the Illinois
Retail Merchants Association, which said the idea would put stores
on a slippery slope.
"The concern we have is that
somehow the responsibility for educating consumers on the proper way to
install a car seat has fallen on the retailers," said IRMA Senior
Counsel Tanya Triche. "So you can imagine a certain percentage of our
store being taken up with 'educational' sort of signs. So that's an
issue for us."
Balcer took IRMA to task upon
hearing the comments.
"Shame on them. It's a
slippery slope. Fine, let it keep sliding. Whatever it takes to save
the lives of children, to prevent children from being injured -- I'm all
for that," he said.
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