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Natural
Trails & Waters Coalition, Consumer Federation of America &
Bluewater Network
August
20 , 2003
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Rachel Weintraub, Consumer Federation of America,
202-387-6121
Scott Kovarovics, Natural Trails and Waters Coalition, 202-429-2696
Sean Smith, Bluewater Network, 415-544-0790 x.19
NEW REPORT CHALLENGES INDUSTRY'S
DANGEROUS
RESPONSE TO ATV SAFETY CRISIS
Consumer Groups, Conservation Advocates,
and Doctors Call on CPSC to End Voluntary Approach to Safety
Washington, DC - A report issued today demonstrates that
the all-terrain vehicle (ATV) industry is failing to reduce injuries
or better protect children under 16 from dangerous adult-size ATVs.
This report, All-Terrain Vehicle Safety Crisis: America's
Children STILL at Risk, also directly challenges the industry's
proposal to abolish minimum age limits and put some children on
bigger, faster ATVs made specifically for adults. Consumer and conservation
advocates and doctors join together once again to call on the U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) to issue national safety
standards to protect children.
"This report documents that industry's approach to safety
has led to more injuries, more deaths and bigger and more powerful
ATVs on the market," stated Rachel Weintraub, Assistant General
Counsel for Consumer Federation of America and co-author of the
report. "CPSC must act now by issuing a rule to protect all
consumers, especially children, from what continues to be a hidden
epidemic."
New Data on People Injured on ATVs
The ATV industry's voluntary approach to safety relies upon recommendations
against the sale of adult-size ATVs (defined by industry and CPSC
as ATVs with engines larger than 90 cc) for use by children under
16, warning labels and offers of training to purchasers of new ATVs.
New analysis of data on ATV injuries collected by CPSC between 1997
and 2001 documents that this voluntary approach is failing in every
major area:
· Serious injuries requiring emergency room treatment more
than doubled to nearly 112,000;
· Injuries increased across every driver age group, up nearly
76 percent for children 12 to 15, 233 percent for children younger
than 6, and more than 500 percent for drivers 65 and older;
· In 2001, at least 97 percent of children under 16 were
injured by ATVs larger than recommended for their age up from 95
percent in 1997;
· Injuries caused by the biggest ATVs - those with engines
larger than 400 cc - skyrocketed by 567 percent, from fewer than
4,000 to more than 24,000. The number of these ATVs in use during
this period increased by less than half as much;
· In 2001, approximately 42 percent of all injured drivers
reported that their ATV did not have warning labels or they do not
know if it did; and
· CPSC found that only 7 percent of the 16 million ATV drivers
received formal safety training at any point since they began riding.
(See full report for related graphs)
Industry Proposes Putting Children on Bigger, Faster ATVs
As the safety crisis continues, the ATV industry attempts to minimize
the problem and shift responsibility to parents, victims and land
managers. On the crucial issue of protecting children under 16 from
the threats posed by adult-size ATVs, the industry proposes to abolish
age limits and put some children on bigger, faster ATVs made specifically
for adults. This was the message from dealers, state ATV associations
and other industry representatives when CPSC convened a hearing
on ATV safety in June. For example, the Executive Director of the
Pennsylvania Off-Highway Vehicle Association said, "establishing
machine size limits based upon a child's age is inadequate and misguided."
He went on to explain how his organization is working to change
the State's safety program to allow some children to operate adult-size
ATVs.
At the same hearing, the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the
Specialty Vehicle Institute of America (SVIA), which represents
every major ATV manufacturer, rejected intervention by CPSC. Instead,
he touted the companies' model state legislation that would bar
any child under 16 from riding an adult-size ATV on public land.
Neither he nor any other representative of SVIA at the hearing challenged
their colleagues' calls to end age recommendations.
"The ATV manufacturers can not have it both ways," said
Scott Kovarovics, Director of the Natural Trails and Waters Coalition
and co-author of the report. "They can't claim to continue
to support age limits for children under 16 while their surrogates
criticize and work to abolish them at the state level. Is this industry
committed to the principles in its model bill or it is another device
to deflect responsibility for this safety crisis?"
Doctors and surgeons who treat children injured by ATVs strongly
challenge the industry's suggestion that age limits should be eliminated.
"Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh has seen the number of
kids injured in ATV accidents more than triple in the last five
years," said Dr. Jeffrey Upperman, trauma surgeon at Children's.
"The types of injuries we see from ATV accidents are so serious,
including fractures, internal injuries and head trauma, because
in many cases the machines are too big and too fast for small riders
to control. We need to keep young children off these potentially
dangerous vehicles in the first place."
"When compared to sport- and bicycle-related injuries treated
at Cincinnati Children's Hospital, the injuries sustained from ATV
crashes are much more severe, resulting in more admissions to the
intensive care unit and more operative procedures," said Dr.
Rebeccah Brown, Assistant Director of Trauma Services. "Just
because a child has the physique to fit comfortably on an adult-sized
ATV does not mean that he has the maturity and judgement to handle
it safely," stated Dr. Brown.
Will CPSC Act to Protect Children?
Last August, the Consumer Federation of America, American Academy
of Pediatrics and seven other medical and conservation groups submitted
a formal petition to CPSC requesting that it issue a national rule
barring the sale of adult-size ATVs for use by children under age
16. In response, the Commission requested public comment last fall
and held a field hearing on ATV safety in Morgantown, WV in June.
In addition, CPSC Chairman Hal Stratton independently held several
other public meetings on this issue in Alaska in July.
"A national safety standard issued by CPSC would have many
benefits," stated Weintraub. "It would provide protection
for every child and send a powerful message to parents about how
dangerous large ATVs are for children."
"It is time for CPSC to take the driver's seat on this issue
and protect the American people from these dangerous machines,"
said Sean Smith, Public Lands Director for Bluewater Network.
Some parents who have lost their children in ATV crashes believe
a clear statement from CPSC could help other parents avoid their
heartbreak. Susan and Tom Rabe lost their 10-year-old son in 2002
when the adult-size ATV he was driving rolled over on him. They
are committed to helping other parents avoid their tragedy.
"Adult-size four-wheelers should not be ridden by kids under
any circumstances," the Rabes said. "A law may be necessary
to send that message. We use laws to protect our children in many
ways. If someone had taken action to pass a law and work to educate
consumers about ATV dangers, we would have been celebrating Kyle's
12th birthday with him this past weekend."
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Consumer Federation of America is a non-profit association of
300 consumer groups, with a combined membership of more than 50
million people. CFA was founded in 1968 to advance the consumers'
interest through advocacy and education. www.consumerfed.org
The Natural Trails and Waters Coalition includes more than 100
conservation, recreation and other groups working to protect and
restore all public lands and waters from the damage caused by snowmobiles,
all-terrain vehicles, dirt bikes, jet skis and all other off-road
vehicles. www.naturaltrails.org
Bluewater Network is a national organization aggressively confronting
the root causes of climate change and fighting environmental damage
from the shipping, oil, and motorized recreation industries. www.bluewaternetwork.org
The report can be found at any of the web sites listed above.
http://www.naturaltrails.org/issues/ATVSafety/index.html
and http://www.consumerfed.org/
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