BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    






           SENATE TRANSPORTATION & HOUSING COMMITTEE       BILL NO: AB 2667
          SENATOR ALAN LOWENTHAL, CHAIRMAN               AUTHOR:  hill
                                                         VERSION: 5/6/10
          Analysis by: Carrie Cornwell                   FISCAL:  yes
          Hearing date: June 22, 2010








          SUBJECT:

          Child passenger restraint systems

          DESCRIPTION:

          This bill requires hospitals, clinics, and birthing centers,  
          when discharging a child, to inform the parent or the person to  
          whom the child is released where that person can have a child  
          passenger restraint system inspected and receive instruction on  
          its proper installation at no cost.

          ANALYSIS:

          Existing law prohibits a parent or guardian from transporting a  
          child who is six years of age or younger or who weighs less than  
          60 pounds in a motor vehicle unless that child is in a  
          federally-approved child safety seat in the rear seat of the  
          vehicle. When a parent or guardian is not present, then this  
          responsibility falls to the driver of the vehicle.  

          Existing law requires that each time a hospital, clinic, or  
          birthing center discharges a child under age six or 60 pounds to  
          provide and discuss information on the current law requiring  
          child safety seats to the person to whom the child is released. 

           This bill  :

          1.Requires that a hospital, clinic, and birthing center, when  
            discharging a child who is six years of age or younger or who  
            weighs less the 60 pounds, also to provide information on  
            where, at no cost, the parent or other person to whom the  
            child is discharged can have the child passenger restraint  




          AB 2667 (HILL)                                           Page 2

                                                                       


            system inspected and receive instruction in proper  
            installation. 

          2.Enumerates that this contact information may include the  
            telephone number of the local office of the California Highway  
            Patrol or the website for the National Highway Traffic Safety  
            Administration's Child Safety Seat Inspection Station Locator.

          3.Limits to once per child the number of times that a hospital,  
            clinic, or birthing center must provide information on child  
            passenger restraint systems to a parent or other person to  
            whom the child is discharged.
          
          COMMENTS:

           1.Purpose  . According to the author, over 90 percent of parents  
            and caregivers believe their child safety seats are installed  
            correctly, but National Highway Traffic Safety Administration  
            (NHTSA) research shows that three out of four parents  
            improperly restrain their children in vehicles, putting them  
            at risk for serious injury or death in a crash.

            NHTSA reports that motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause  
            of death of children 3 to 6 years of age.  Many of these  
            deaths can be prevented through the proper use of child safety  
            seats. According to NTHTSA, child safety seats can reduce  
            fatal injury by 7l percent for infants and by 54 percent for  
            toddlers from ages 1 to 4 years.

            The author reports that he hosted two child seat safety check  
            events in his district over the last year and saw first-hand  
            the alarming number of child safety seats that are not  
            installed properly.  The author introduced this bill to  
            improve current law by notifying parents about how to obtain  
            free safety seat inspections for their child's safety seat. 

           2.Responding to the governor  . In 2006 and 2007 Governor  
            Schwarzenegger vetoed two bills, both passed by this  
            committee, to implement NHTSA's recommendation to require  
            children up to eight years of age to ride in a booster seat.  
            In his veto messages the governor stated that, "?the way to  
            better protect our children is through education of and  
            compliance with existing laws, not the addition of new ones."   


            In his veto of the 2007 bill he concluded, "Rather than  




          AB 2667 (HILL)                                           Page 3

                                                                       


            repeatedly passing new laws in response to the age, height or  
            weight factors of our children and modifying legal  
            requirements, a better strategy is to move towards full  
            compliance with the laws we already have."

            The author believes that this bill is consistent with the  
            Governor's views on informing parents about existing child car  
            seat laws.
          
           3.Just once ? Existing law requires that  each time  a child is  
            discharged from a hospital, the hospital shall provide the  
            child's parent or other adult to whom the child is released  
            information on child safety seats. While most children leave  
            the hospital just once before age six, child safety advocates  
            note that as a child grows the type of child restraint system  
            changes dramatically and that parents should be made aware of  
            the requirements based on the size, weight, and age of the  
            child. This bill, however, deletes the requirement that  
            hospitals provide this information each time a child is  
            discharged and instead requires hospitals to provide it just  
            once. Because this bill therefore reduces the information on  
            child safety seats that parents receive, the California  
            Coalition for Children's Safety and Health opposes this bill  
            unless this provision is deleted. To address this concern, the  
            author or the committee may wish to amend the bill to delete  
            the language in the bill (Page 3, lines 13-16) that permits  
            hospitals to provide child safety seat information just once  
            per child.

          Assembly Votes:
               Floor:    65 - 6
               Appr: 16 - 0
               Trans:    10 - 2


          POSITIONS:  (Communicated to the Committee before noon on  
          Wednesday,
                     June 16, 2010)

               SUPPORT:  None received.
          
               OPPOSED:  California Coalition for Children's Safety and  
          Health