Doctors Nationwide Call on CPSC to Act on ATV Safety Petition Commission Will Hold Critical Meeting Next Week
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 16, 2005
CONTACT:
Jack Gillis, CFA
(202) 737-0766
Scott Kovarovics, NTWC
(202) 429-2696
Washington, DC - More than 140 pediatricians, nurses, surgeons and
other medical professionals from across the country wrote to U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) Chairman Hal Stratton today
urging him to develop a national safety standard that would help to
protect children under age 16 from dangerous adult-size all-terrain
vehicles (ATVs). Last month, CPSC staff recommended against developing
this standard. The Commission will meet on March 22 to receive a staff
briefing on this issue, and it could vote then to accept or reject that
recommendation.
"Like a virus, ATVs are causing an epidemic of death and disability
across our nation, especially among children younger than 16 years. The
CPSC has the opportunity and obligation to reign-in this modern
plague," said Dr. Gary A. Smith, MD, DrPH, Director, Center for Injury
Research and Policy, Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. "If this
were West Nile Virus, there would be no hesitation to act swiftly and
decisively. As health professionals who treat children with ATV-related
injuries and know first-hand the human damage that ATVs cause, we call
on the CPSC to fulfill its mandate to protect our vulnerable youth."
"If the Commission votes against a national standard, it will abdicate
its responsibility to protect children from unreasonable risk of
serious injury and death," said Rachel Weintraub, Assistant General
Counsel at Consumer Federation of America.
In early February, CPSC released the staff's recommendation as part of
a 200-plus page briefing package. Specifically, the staff recommends
that the Commission deny a petition submitted in August 2002 by
Consumer Federation of America, American Academy of Pediatrics,
American College of Emergency Physicians, and six other national
medical, conservation and consumer groups requesting that CPSC develop
a federal regulation barring the sale of adult-size ATVs for use by
children under age 16. Staff offers this recommendation while also
concluding that a national standard barring the sale of adult-size ATVs
for use by children under would have "substantial benefits" and "[G]etting children to drive youth models rather than more powerful adult models could reduce the injury risk by half."(emphasis
added) Based on staff's analysis, cutting serious injuries and deaths
could save more than $1 billion annually in medical and economic costs
and pain and suffering.
In their letter, medical professionals from 32 states challenge CPSC's
conclusions and its failure to consider new approaches to the growing
problem:
"We are concerned that the staff's recommendation overall deemphasizes
the significant public health and monetary benefits that could be
achieved with a national standard, including the fact that moving
children from adult-size ATVs to youth models could cut the risk of
serious injury and death in half. Instead, staff focus on costs that
can not be quantified and appear relatively minor when compared to the
benefits associated with reducing serious injuries and fatalities.
Furthermore, we question how the staff can effectively propose to
continue to rely on industry's approach to safety when the Commission
has documented significant dealer noncompliance with manufacturers'
voluntary agreement not to recommend the sale of adult-size ATVs for
use by children."
When the full Commission meets next week, it could formally vote on
staff's recommendation. It has three options: accept the
recommendation; reject it and initiate the rulemaking process to
develop a national standard; or defer action until a later date. Based
on past experience, the Commission rarely rejects staff's
recommendations.
"Children under 16 represent the largest age category for ATV-related
injury. A painful lesson learned from the rising childhood injury and
death statistics is that these vehicles are serious machines - not
toys," said Dr. John Hafner, MD, an emergency doctor and Professor of
Surgery in Peoria, Illinois. "Properly controlling an ATV requires
physical skill, manual dexterity and split-second decision making -
abilities that children under 16 have not yet fully developed. It seems
unthinkable to let an 11-year-old drive a truck off-road at 40 mph, yet
that same child can drive an ATV at similar speeds, often without a
helmet or safety training."
A copy of the letter is attached. The Commission will meet on March 22
at 10 AM in Room 420 of the Bethesda Towers Building, 4330 East-West
Highway, Bethesda, Maryland.