The Norman Transcript

Editorials

September 5, 2010

August deadliest month for kids left in hot cars

NORMAN — August was a record month for child deaths in hot cars. In the United States, at least 41 deaths were reported in August, making it higher than any previous month. Temperatures were relatively high throughout much of the nation but it doesn’t take a lot of heat to turn the inside of a vehicle into an oven for a child strapped in a safety seat.

Consumer safety advocates are pushing for legislation requiring driver-reminder chimes for kids in cars to be included in upcoming highway legislation. If you can require reminder systems for seat belts, why not one that reminds you if a child remains buckled into a safety seat after the car is locked.

USA Today reports several manufacturers have made attempts at car-seat alarms. GM has considered a type of alarm that warns drivers when a child is in the back seat, including an alarm that sounds when the inside of a car gets dangerously hot and a person is still inside.

The science is inexact, GM says. Detecting heartbeats or weights is not as easy as it sounds. Alarms could go off warning drivers at the wrong time or parents could get dependent on them and not pay enough attention to the whereabouts of their children. Also, systems that alert parents children are still in cars aren’t necessarily warning about a dangerous situation. Parents may get tired of hearing that and disconnect systems.

Distracted parents are partly to blame. In more than half of the deaths between 1998 and 2009, children were forgotten in parked cars. But there’s another side to the problem. In 30 percent of the deaths, kids were playing in unattended vehicles. Another 18 percent were intentionally left in cars.

Lights and alarms warn us about low fuel, low tire pressure and that it’s time for a checkup. It seems logical they could also remind us if someone is left inside when we lock the car.

Text Only
Editorials
  • Fallin proposes a flawed tax-cut plan

    There was some relief in the tax-cut proposal negotiated with Gov. Mary Fallin and Republican legislative leaders, but it still calls for some difficult reductions to some necessary services....

    May 25, 2012

  • Keep the capitol gun-free

    Attorneys working for the state AG’s office are now able to carry handguns in their duties representing state agencies. They won’t need a concealed weapon permit. It’s the same as laws allowing U.S. attorneys, district attorneys and their ...

    May 24, 2012

  • Two of the state’s best

    Our hats are off to local educators Dr. Betsy Ballard, of Norman High School, and Teresa Potter, of Fisher Elementary School in Moore. The two won Medals of Excellence in their respective categories at Saturday’s Oklahoma Foundation for ...

    May 24, 2012

  • Tragic end to celebration

    The celebration following Monday night’s Oklahoma City Thunder win was short-lived for many Oklahomans. A shooting spree that followed the late-night game left at least eight people injured....

    May 23, 2012

  • Norman’s high schools two of America’s best

    With graduation ceremonies scheduled Thursday and Friday, it’s fitting that Norman schools received another ranking in a national magazine. U.S. News & World Report placed both Norman High and Norman North in their top category earlier ...

    May 23, 2012

  • War on terrorism isn’t over yet

    Weary of a war on terror that has gone on for years, we would like to declare victory and return to normalcy. Last month, a mini-storm erupted when an Obama administration official was said to have told a writer, “The war on terror is ...

    May 22, 2012

  • ‘Treading water gets us no closer to shore’

    Today may be decision day for the Oklahoma House of Representatives. A vote on House Bill 3061, which lowers the state’s income tax rate from 5.25 percent to 4.8 percent, is expected to be voted on in the House....

    May 22, 2012

  • Other cost of imprisonment

    A decision by the Texas Supreme Court to award more than $2 million to a former inmate who was released from prison after 26 years will empower the dozens of ongoing innocence projects....

    May 22, 2012

  • Is it worth $35 million plus to watch dull conventions?

    We don’t often find ourselves in agreement with Oklahoma Sen. Tom Coburn. But his request for the political parties to refund millions of dollars set aside for the political conventions this summer is starting to make sense....

    May 20, 2012

  • Enthusiasm for the arts

    The handful of annual concerts, festivals and special arts events that make Norman special begin today with the Luncheon on the Grass. It’s a collaboration of OU, the Firehouse, the Jacobson House, the Norman Arts Council and the ...

    May 20, 2012

The Business Marquee
Facebook