|
Natural
Trails & Waters Coaliton, Consumer Federation of America and
Bluewater Network
November
6 , 2003
Consumer and Conservation Groups Join Doctors
in Urging the Consumer Product Safety Commission to Take a New
Approach to ATV Safety at Hearing in New Mexico
2002 is Record-Breaking Year for ATV Injuries
and Deaths
Contact:
Scott Kovarovics, Natural Trails and Waters Coalition, 202-429-2696
Rachel Weintraub, Consumer Federation of America, 202-939-1012
Sean Smith, Bluewater Network, 415-544-0790
Washington, DC - The Chairman of the U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission (CPSC) held a field hearing today on all-terrain vehicle
(ATV) safety one week after the Commission released a report estimating
ATVs caused 113,900 injuries requiring emergency room treatment
in 2002 - breaking a record set in 2001. This increase in injuries
continues a trend dating to 1993. The CPSC also estimates that ATV-related
deaths were the highest ever, rising from 569 in 2000 to a minimum
of 634 in 2001.
"While the ATV industry cranks up its spin machine, serious
injuries and deaths caused by ATVs continue to break records,"
said Scott Kovarovics, Director of the Natural Trails and Waters
Coalition, who testified at the hearing in New Mexico. "The
fact is, these new records continue a tragic upward spiral dating
to the mid-1990s. It is time for a new approach to ATV safety led
by CPSC and states."
This new data follows the release of a report in August by Consumer
Federation of America, Natural Trails and Waters Coalition, Bluewater
Network and doctors documenting how the ATV industry's voluntary
approach to safety is failing to reduce serious injuries or protect
children under 16 from the dangers posed by adult-size ATVs. This
report - ATV Safety Crisis: America's Children STILL At Risk
- also describes and challenges the industry's proposal - floated
in June - to abolish age recommendations and put some children on
bigger, faster ATVs made specifically for adults.
Major findings of CPSC's 2002 Annual Report on All-Terrain Vehicle
(ATV)-Related Deaths and Injuries include:
· Serious injuries requiring emergency room treatment increased
from 110,100 in 2001 to 113,900 in 2002.
· The estimated number of ATV-related fatalities increased
11 percent from 569 in 2000 to 634 in 2001.
· Children under 16 suffered 37,100 injuries in 2002 up from
34,300 in 2001. This age group received more serious injuries than
any other.
· Between 1985 and 2002, children under 16 accounted for
37 percent of all injuries and 33 percent of all deaths.
· The CPSC continues to make clear that the increase in injuries
is not explained by rising ATV sales.
At the hearing today, consumer advocates, conservation groups and
physicians called on CPSC to issue a national safety standard barring
the sale of adult-size ATVs for use for children under 16 and state
legislatures to set minimum age limits and require training and
appropriate safety gear for all ATV riders.
"Last year more children than ever were needlessly injured
and killed on ATVs due to industry self-regulation," stated
Ray Prushnok, consumer advocate for the New Mexico Public Interest
Research Group. "We commend Chairman Stratton for holding these
hearings and we encourage the CPSC and state governments to take
immediate action, first banning adult-size ATVs for children's use."
"A national safety standard would provide a minimum level
of protection for every child, give CPSC a strong enforcement tool
to hold ATV dealers accountable, and send a powerful message to
parents about how dangerous adult-size ATVs are for children under
16," stated Rachel Weintraub, assistant general counsel at
Consumer Federation of America.
"Every year more than 100,000 adults and children are killed
or hurt on ATVs, or roughly the number of people in a small city,"
said Sean Smith, Bluewater Network public lands director. "What
will it take to get the CPSC to take strong action on this matter
-- yearly ATV injury rates that surpass city populations?"
The CPSC's findings in 2002 mirror trends over a longer period
of time. Earlier this year, CPSC issued the latest in a long line
of studies documenting the dramatic increase in ATV injuries and
deaths. In assessing trends between 1997 and 2001, the Commission
provides compelling evidence that the industry is failing to protect
consumers. CPSC concludes:
· ATV-related injuries requiring emergency room treatment
increased 108 percent from 52,800 to 110,100 while the number of
ATVs in use increased by less than 40 percent;
· Injuries suffered by children under 16 increased 66 percent
to more than 34,000 in 2001. The proportion of these children among
the driving population grew by 13 percent; and
· Injuries caused by bigger and more powerful ATVs, defined
by the Commission as machines with engines bigger than 400 cc, shot
up 567 percent from 3,662 to 24,437 while the number of these machines
grew by less than half as much.
While this evidence is compelling, the Consumer Federation and
Natural Trails performed additional analysis of data from 2001 -
not previously released by the Commission - which cements the conclusion
that the industry's approach to safety is ineffective. For example:
· Less than four percent of injured ATV drivers received
formal safety training from a dealer, salesperson or organized training
program. This proportion is unchanged since 1997;
· More than 40 percent of drivers injured in 2001 stated
that their ATV did not have warning labels or they did not know
if it did at the time of their accident; and
· Nearly 90 percent of children under 16 were injured while
riding adult-size ATVs in spite of the industry's voluntary policy
not to sell these machines for use by children. This proportion
is also unchanged since 1997.
As the Chairman receives testimony in New Mexico,
the Commission has a petition pending from Consumer Federation,
American Academy of Pediatrics and other medical and conservation
groups formally requesting that it issue a rule prohibiting the
sale of adult-size ATVs for use by children under 16. That petition
was submitted in August 2002.
-30-
Return to Press Room or Press
Release Archives
|