Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Child Restraint Systems; Denial of Petition for Rulemaking

Published date29 March 2021
Citation86 FR 16314
Record Number2021-06223
SectionProposed rules
CourtNational Highway Traffic Safety Administration
Federal Register, Volume 86 Issue 58 (Monday, March 29, 2021)
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 58 (Monday, March 29, 2021)]
                [Proposed Rules]
                [Pages 16314-16319]
                From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
                [FR Doc No: 2021-06223]
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                DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
                National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
                49 CFR Part 571
                Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Child Restraint Systems;
                Denial of Petition for Rulemaking
                AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),
                Department of Transportation.
                ACTION: Denial of petition for rulemaking.
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                SUMMARY: This document denies a petition for rulemaking from Jewkes
                Biomechanics (Jewkes) requesting that NHTSA amend Federal Motor Vehicle
                Safety Standard (FMVSS) No. 213, ``Child restraint systems,'' to remove
                a requirement that child restraint systems (CRSs) must meet performance
                requirements without use of a top tether, or exclude from that
                requirement a new kind of CRS that the petitioner would like to develop
                called a ``hybrid CRS.'' Alternatively, the petitioner requests that
                the definition of a ``harness'' in FMVSS No. 213 be amended to include
                its hybrid CRS. NHTSA is denying the petition because the requested
                amendments would unreasonably reduce the child occupant protection
                provided by FMVSS No. 213.
                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For non-legal issues, you may contact
                Cristina Echemendia, Office of Crashworthiness Standards, National
                Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,
                Washington, DC 20590. Telephone: 202-366-6345. For legal issues, you
                may contact Deirdre Fujita, Office of the Chief Counsel, National
                Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,
                Washington, DC 20590. Telephone: 202-366-5246.
                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                Table of Contents
                I. Background
                II. Petition for Rulemaking
                III. Discussion
                 a. NHTSA Denies the Request To Remove the Untethered Test
                Completely
                 b. NHTSA Denies the Request To Remove the Untethered Test for
                Hybrid CRSs
                 c. The Requested Amendment's Possible Adverse Effect on Child
                Occupant Protection
                 d. The Absence of Safety Advantages
                 e. Denial of Request To Consider Hybrid CRSs as Harnesses
                I. Background
                 FMVSS No. 213 specifies performance and other requirements for
                child restraint systems to reduce the number of children killed or
                injured in motor vehicle crashes.\1\ Under FMVSS No. 213, ``child
                restraint systems'' are devices, except vehicle lap or lap/shoulder
                belts, designed for use in a motor vehicle to restrain, seat, or
                position children weighing 36 kilograms (80 pounds) or less. S5(b)
                requires each child restraint system to meet the requirements of the
                standard when tested in accordance with S6.1 and S5. Among other tests
                is a dynamic frontal sled test involving a 48-kilometer per hour (km/h)
                (30-mile per hour (mph)) velocity change. NHTSA dynamically tests CRSs
                with anthropomorphic test devices (test dummies) of sizes representing
                the children for whom the CRS is designed.
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                 \1\ 49 CFR 571.213, ``Child restraint systems.'' All references
                to subparagraphs in this denial of the petition for rulemaking are
                to FMVSS No. 213 unless otherwise noted. All references in this
                document to the requirements in FMVSS No. 213 are to the
                requirements for ``add-on'' (portable) CRSs (as opposed to ``built-
                in'' CRSs). (See S4 of 49 CFR 571.213 for definitions of these
                terms.) NHTSA published a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) on
                November 2, 2020 proposing updates to FMVSS No. 213, including
                updating the standard seat assembly used to test CRSs in NHTSA's
                compliance tests (85 FR 69388).
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                 S6.1 specifies the conditions and procedures for the dynamic sled
                test. Under S6.1.2(a)(1)(B), NHTSA may test a CRS without a top tether
                attached.\2\
                [[Page 16315]]
                One of the dynamic performance requirements for forward-facing CRSs
                tested in the untethered condition is an 813 mm (32 inch) limit on head
                excursion. Head excursion refers to the distance the test dummy's head
                moves forward during the dynamic test (S5.1.3.1(a)(1)).\3\ The limit on
                head excursion reduces the likelihood of a child head's striking
                harmful objects or surfaces in a crash. The CRSs must also meet other
                dynamic performance requirements without use of a tether, including
                limits on the head and chest acceleration of the test dummies during
                the sled test (S5.1.2.1). This document refers to the requirement that
                CRSs meet FMVSS No. 213 without using the tether as the ``untethered
                test requirement.''
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                 \2\ In this document, the terms ``tether,'' ``top tether'' and
                the like also include other supplementary features that must be
                attached by the consumer separately from the lower anchorages of a
                child restraint anchorage system or seat belt to install the CRS to
                the vehicle seat.
                 \3\ In addition, S5.1.3.1(a)(1) also requires CRSs to provide
                enhanced head protection by way of a 720 mm (28 inch) head excursion
                limit. This requirement may be met through attachment of a tether
                strap.
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                 The purpose of the untethered test requirement is to ensure that
                CRSs provide at least a minimum level of adequate protection when the
                tether strap is not attached. When a tether strap is properly attached,
                a forward-facing child restraint equipped with a tether strap will
                generally offer the best protection for child occupants. However,
                survey results have continuously shown that tether straps are not
                widely used by caregivers to secure CRSs in vehicles. Recent studies
                from NHTSA's National Child Restraint Use Special Study (NCRUSS) \4\
                and the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) \5\ show that
                tether use is low in the field, as it has been since the initial
                implementation of FMVSS No. 213. NCRUSS found that the overall tether
                use in forward-facing CRSs with internal harnesses was 42 percent.
                Tether use was 71 percent when the CRS was attached with the lower
                anchorages of a child restraint anchorage system and 31 percent when
                the CRS was attached with seat belts. IIHS researchers analyzed data
                from 479 vehicle observations and found that the top tether was used
                only 56 percent of the time.
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                 \4\ National Child Restraint Use Special Study, DOT HS 811 679,
                https://crashstats.nhtsa.dot.gov/Api/Public/ViewPublication/812142.
                NCRUSS is a large-scale nationally-representative survey that
                involves both an inspection of the child passenger's restraint
                system by a certified child passenger safety technician and a
                detailed interview of the driver. Between June and August 2011, the
                survey collected information on drivers and child passengers ages 0-
                8 years.
                 \5\ Eichelberger, A. H., Decina, L.E., Jermakian, J. S.,
                McCartt, A. T., ``Use of top tether with forward facing child
                restraints: Observations and driver interviews,'' Insurance
                Institute for Highway Safety, April 2013. IIHS surveyed collected
                data at roughly 50 suburban sites near Fredericksburg, VA.,
                Philadelphia, PA, Seattle, WA, and Washington, DC Shopping centers,
                recreation facilities, child-care centers, car-seat checkpoints and
                health-care facilities were among the locations.
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                 To address this problem, FMVSS No. 213 requires forward-facing
                CRSs, with certain limited exceptions, to meet the standard's minimum
                performance requirements without attachment of a tether. In that way,
                children will be afforded at least a minimum level of adequate occupant
                protection even if the caregiver does not attach the tether. That
                untethered test requirement applies to the restraint that Jewkes seeks
                to develop.
                II. Petition for Rulemaking
                 Jewkes submitted a petition for rulemaking, dated February 21,
                2017, requesting NHTSA to either: (a) Remove the untethered test
                requirement; or (b) classify a child restraint system the petitioner
                would like to develop as a new type of CRS (``hybrid CRS''), and
                exclude these restraints from the standard's untethered test
                requirement. The petitioner states that the untethered test requirement
                ``automatically disqualifies use of so-called `hybrid' '' child
                restraints. NHTSA understands the statement to mean that the child
                restraints cannot meet the untethered test requirement of FMVSS No.
                213.
                 Jewkes describes a hybrid CRS as ``a CRS with a flexible connection
                between car-seat bottom and back . . . with a five-point harness.''
                Jewkes provided a schematic drawing of ``a type of hybrid CRS,'' which
                NHTSA has reproduced in Figure 1 below.\6\ The petitioner suggests
                FMVSS No. 213 define a hybrid CRS as ``an add-on forward facing CRS
                with five-point harness using a combination of flexible materials
                connecting a rigid seat-bottom to a seat-back structure.''
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                 \6\ To view a copy of the petition, see https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=NHTSA-2017-0007-0004. The schematic
                drawing in the petition was not clear, so NHTSA enhanced the
                outlines so the schematic could be published in this document. It
                appears the schematic is showing a hybrid CRS positioned on a
                vehicle seat with a head restraint.
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                [[Page 16316]]
                [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP29MR21.007
                 Alternatively, Jewkes suggests that NHTSA amend the existing
                ``harness'' definition in FMVSS No. 213 so that the definition includes
                child restraints such as the petitioner's hybrid CRS.\7\ The aim of
                this approach is to exclude the subject CRSs from the untethered test
                requirement on the basis that they are ``harnesses,'' as currently,
                under FMVSS No. 213, harnesses are not subject to the requirement.
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                 \7\ FMVSS No. 213 (S4) defines a ``harness'' as ``a combination
                pelvic and upper torso child restraint system that consists
                primarily of flexible material, such as straps, webbing or similar
                material, and that does not include a rigid seating structure for
                the child.'' The petitioner's restraint system does not meet this
                definition; it has a rigid seating structure.
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                 The petitioner claims that there is no need for hybrid CRSs to be
                subject to an untethered test requirement because caregivers would know
                to attach the tether. It did not provide data supporting this
                assertion. Jewkes notes its belief that, due to the untethered test
                requirement, child restraints must have a ``rigid junction'' between
                the child restraint's seat bottom and the CRS seat back. The petitioner
                states, without providing supporting data, that CRSs with a rigid
                junction between the CRS bottom and back--
                appear to average users to function equally well with and without
                top-tether. As such, users do not recognize the necessity for top-
                tether use to increase their child's safety and, thus, fail to
                utilize the top tether. By contrast, the need to use the top tether
                with the hybrid CRS is readily apparent, because the shoulder
                harness is not accessible without it. As such, misuse of the car
                seat by omitting the top tether-the primary reason FMVSS No. 2013
                [sic] requires compliance without top tether use--is negligible in
                the case of the hybrid CRS. Because the hybrid CRS does not
                necessitate concern for use without top-tether, it should be
                exempted from FMVSS No. 213 as petitioned.
                 Moreover, the petitioner asserts that its hybrid CRS is a ``lighter
                species of the five-point restraint'' and a ``remedy'' to ``several
                drawbacks'' caused by the untethered test requirement. Jewkes states
                that, due to the untethered test requirement, the ``rigid junction''
                between a CRS's seat bottom and seat back creates bulk which ``can
                compromise child safety in several ways.'' The petitioner lists what it
                believes to be five advantages its devices have over CRSs with ``rigid
                junctions.'' NHTSA addresses those views later in the section below.
                III. Discussion
                a. NHTSA Denies the Request To Remove the Untethered Test Completely
                 NHTSA denies the request to remove the untethered test requirement
                in FMVSS No. 213 as applied to all CRSs. The untethered test
                requirement ensures that CRSs provide at least a minimum level of
                adequate protection when the tether strap is not attached. As noted
                above in this preamble, NCRUSS and IIHS data show that tether nonuse
                continues to be a problem. Thus, the untethered test requirement serves
                an important safety need. Jewkes did not provide any data or rationale
                supporting its request. NHTSA concludes that the requested amendment
                would subject children to an unacceptable risk of injury in crashes and
                does not meet the need for motor vehicle safety.
                b. NHTSA Denies the Request To Remove the Untethered Test for Hybrid
                CRSs
                 The Agency also denies the request to exclude the petitioner's
                ``hybrid'' child restraints from the untethered test requirement. The
                petitioner asserts that the untethered test is unnecessary for hybrid
                CRSs because caregivers will know to tether the restraint. Jewkes did
                not provide any data supporting this proposition. Furthermore, the data
                that are available to NHTSA do not support that view.
                 Studies have shown that caregivers do not use the tether anchorage
                because they are not familiar with it or do not know what it is for. A
                2006 study by Decina et al.\8\ found that 61 percent of upper tether
                nonusers cited their lack of knowledge--not knowing what the tethers
                were, that they were available in the vehicle, the importance of using
                them, or how to properly use them--as the reason for not using them.
                The study
                [[Page 16317]]
                did not find that consumers were forgoing tether use because they
                believed that CRSs with ``rigid junctions'' ``appear . . . to function
                equally well with and without top-tether,'' as Jewkes asserts.
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                 \8\ Decina, L.E. et al. ``Child Restraint Use Survey: LATCH Use
                and Misuse.'' December 2006. DOT HS 810 679. Link: https://crashstats.nhtsa.dot.gov/Api/Public/ViewPublication/810679.
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                 Similarly, a 2013 study by IIHS \9\ showed that the top reasons for
                not using the tether were:
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                 \9\ Eichelberger A.H., et al. ``Use of top tethers with forward-
                facing child restraints: observations and driver interviews.'' Link
                to public presentation http://www.iihs.org/media/85044cce-4c80-4818-b1d5-75a695f6924d/R3iBdw/Presentations/Eichelberger_tethers_Lifesavers.pdf.
                 22% did not know it was there,
                 15% did not know how to use,
                 13% in a hurry/not enough time to use it,
                 10% did not know where to attach the tether,
                 9% did not think it was important or needed,
                 9% did not know they had tether anchors in their vehicle and,
                 5% had no anchor for the seating position.
                 None of the reasons listed above for not using the tether
                specifically include a belief that the CRS, installed with no tether,
                has comparable performance to a tethered CRS.
                 The petitioner also claims that the need to use the tether with the
                hybrid CRS is ``readily apparent, because the shoulder harness is not
                accessible without it.'' The petitioner did not provide any data to
                support this assertion. Further, from the sketch provided by Jewkes in
                its petition and from the ``hybrid CRS'' definition it suggests, NHTSA
                cannot conclude that it is ``readily apparent'' that the tether must be
                used. Nothing in the sketch or the definition would prevent a user from
                ``accessing'' the shoulder harness of a hybrid CRS if the tether were
                not used. Given the findings of the Decina and IIHS studies which
                showed a substantial degree of unfamiliarity and unawareness on the
                part of consumers with tethers, NHTSA does not believe it should be
                assumed that consumers will automatically know or make the effort to
                attach the tether of a ``hybrid CRS.''
                 The consequences of a caregiver's not attaching the tether on a
                hybrid CRS can be severe. For example, a child in an untethered hybrid
                CRS would experience excessive head excursion and a high risk of head
                injury due to impacts with structures or objects in front of the
                seat.\10\ Data from the National Automotive Sampling System--
                Crashworthiness Data System (NASS-CDS) \11\ for the years 1995-2009
                show that 39 percent of Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) 2+ \12\ injuries
                to restrained children in frontal crashes are to the head and face,
                with 59 percent of these injuries due to contact with the seat and back
                support. In a study of 28 cases of children ages 0 to 15 who sustained
                AIS 2+ head or face injuries in a frontal crash, Arbogast et al. (2012)
                found that the front row seat back and the B-pillar were the most
                commonly contacted components.\13\ The petitioner provided no data
                showing a lack of a safety need for the untethered test for children in
                hybrid CRSs. The requested amendment does not meet the need for motor
                vehicle safety and is denied.
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                 \10\ The petitioner provided no information on how head and
                chest accelerations on the child could be affected if the hybrid CRS
                were untethered in a crash.
                 \11\ In 2016, NASS-CDS was replaced with the Crash Investigation
                Sampling System (CISS).
                 \12\ The Abbreviated Injury Scale is a 6-point ranking system
                used for ranking the severity of injuries. AIS2+ injuries are
                injuries of severity level 2 (moderate), 3 (serious), 4 (severe),
                and 5 (critical) according to the Abbreviated Injury Scale.
                www.aaam.org.
                 \13\ Arbogast, K.B., S. Wozniak, Locey, C.M., Maltese, M.R., and
                Zonfrillo, M.R. (2012). Head impact contact points for restrained
                child occupants. Traffic Injury Prevention, 13(2):172-81.
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                c. The Requested Amendment's Possible Adverse Effect on Child Occupant
                Protection
                 The petitioner asserts that children are safer in a hybrid CRS
                compared to CRSs with a ``rigid junction.'' (NHTSA understands from the
                petition that CRSs with a ``rigid junction'' consist of a rigid seat
                bottom and rigid seat back, with a rigid side structure.) Although the
                petitioner did not specify the ages of the children for whom its
                product is intended, NHTSA gathers from the petition that hybrid CRSs
                would be for children weighing less than 30 or 40 pounds, who now use
                what is commonly known as a ``car safety seat'' (rather than a booster
                seat). For simplicity, hereinafter the agency will use ``car safety
                seat'' in referring to the CRSs that Jewkes describes as having a
                ``rigid junction between seat-bottom and seat back.'' These car safety
                seats with ``a rigid junction between the seat-bottom and seat back''
                have an internal harness to restrain the child (and are different from
                high back booster seats, which do not have internal harnesses).
                 The petitioner provided no data supporting its argument that
                children will be safer in a hybrid CRS than in a car safety seat. To
                the contrary, NHTSA believes children are afforded greater protections
                in a car safety seat because FMVSS No. 213 requires car safety seats to
                provide adequate occupant protection (limiting a child's head
                excursion, and head and chest accelerations) even when the tether is
                not used. With tether use rates as low as they are (e.g., NCRUSS,
                supra, found that the overall tether use was only 42 percent), NHTSA
                believes that a large portion of hybrid CRSs may similarly be used
                untethered. While petitioner asserts that hybrid CRS would not face the
                same type of untethered use, it does not support this assertion with
                data, and the risks presented by any potential misuse are high. The
                untethered test requirement ensures that a child's head would be
                reasonably protected against head impacts in an untethered car safety
                seat. That same child's head would be almost totally unprotected in an
                untethered hybrid CRS; the restraint would have no structure to keep
                the child's torso from rotating forward.
                 Another reason children would be more protected in a car safety
                seat than in hybrid CRSs is that car safety seats have a padded back
                and padded side structure that protect the head and torso of a
                restrained child in side crashes. Impacts to the side of a vehicle rank
                almost equal to frontal crashes as a source of occupant fatalities and
                serious injuries to children ages 0 to 12. In response to a safety need
                to improve side impact protection and pursuant to the Moving Ahead for
                Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21), NHTSA has proposed side
                impact protection requirements for CRSs manufactured for children
                weighing up to 18 kilograms (40 pounds), and is in the process of
                finalizing these requirements.\14\
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                 \14\ Section 31501(a) of MAP-21 states that the Secretary of
                Transportation (authority delegated to NHTSA) shall issue a final
                rule amending FMVSS No. 213 to ``improve the protection of children
                seated in child restraint systems during side impact crashes.''
                NHTSA published an NPRM on January 28, 2014, proposing to amend
                FMVSS No. 213 to adopt side impact performance requirements for CRSs
                designed to seat children in a weight range that includes weights up
                to 18 kilograms (40 pounds) (79 FR 4570, Docket No. NHTSA-2014-
                0012). See Fall 2020 Unified Agenda of Regulatory and Deregulatory
                Actions, https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/eAgendaMain, and search
                for Regulation Identifier Number 2127-AK95.
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                 NHTSA found in conducting its research for the side impact
                rulemaking that the padded side structure (wings) on current car safety
                seats appear to be soundly effective in providing protection in side
                impacts. Hybrid CRSs have no side structure and padding. The petitioner
                provided no information on the performance of its hybrid CRS in side
                impacts, or discussed the proposed side impact protection requirements.
                In the absence of these data and information, NHTSA denies the
                petition.
                d. The Absence of Safety Advantages
                 As discussed in this section, NHTSA disagrees with the petitioner's
                assertions
                [[Page 16318]]
                that hybrid CRSs have advantages over car safety seats.
                 1. The petitioner states that the ``greater fore-aft bulk'' due to
                the ``rigid junction'' reduces ``the available space for head
                excursion'' and increases the risk of neck or head injury to the
                child.'' Jewkes believes because a hybrid CRS lacks a rigid junction,
                there is increased available space for head excursion which reduces the
                risk of neck or head injury.
                 NHTSA's Response: Jewkes failed to provide supporting data
                demonstrating that the increased headspace for head excursions
                (stemming from a hybrid CRS's initial placement of the child's head
                closer to the vehicle seat back) offsets the increased risk of head and
                neck injury resulting from removing the limit on head excursions in the
                hybrid CRS's untethered condition. If the consumer does not attach the
                tether of a hybrid CRS--and data indicate the potential that many will
                not--there is a high likelihood the child's head will impact an object
                or surface that can cause injury, such as the seat back, B-pillar, or
                another passenger.
                 2. The petitioner states that the rigid junction introduces stiffer
                materials, increasing the ``mass and expense of the car-seat.'' Jewkes
                believes that the increased mass ``often limits the permissible child
                weight to barely over 40 pounds as the combined load limit for lower
                anchors has been proposed at 65 pounds.'' \15\
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                 \15\ The petitioner refers to FMVSS No. 213 labeling
                requirements instructing the consumer to use the lower anchorages of
                a child restraint anchorage system only while the child's weight
                plus the weight of the CRS is under 65 pounds. NHTSA requires the
                label (S5.5.2(l)(3)) to ensure that the lower anchorages will not be
                overloaded by loads that could potentially be imposed by heavier
                CRSs and heavier children in very severe crashes. FMVSS No. 225
                requires vehicle manufacturers to install a child restraint
                anchorage system in rear seating positions of passenger vehicles.
                For simplicity, this document will refer to the child restraint
                anchorage system as the ``FMVSS No. 225 system.''
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                 NHTSA's Response: The petitioner did not provide any information
                about the ``mass and expense'' of a hybrid CRS. NHTSA does not view the
                possible longer use by children of the FMVSS No. 225 system when in a
                hybrid CRS as a relevant factor. When the weight of a car safety seat
                plus the child exceeds 65 pounds, the CRS manufacturer instructs the
                consumer to install the car safety seat using a seat belt instead of
                the FMVSS No. 225 system. A car safety seat installed with a seat belt
                is also used with the tether, just as it is with an FMVSS No. 225
                system.
                 More importantly, NHTSA does not view the ability of a hybrid CRS
                to use the FMVSS No. 225 system longer as a factor that outweighs the
                safety concerns discussed above. If a consumer does not attach the
                tether of a hybrid CRS, there would be a significantly higher risk of
                head injury compared to that of a child in an untethered car safety
                seat. Car safety seats are required to restrict head excursions when
                untethered. Under the sought-after amendment, an untethered hybrid CRS
                would have no restriction on head excursion and would not provide the
                same protection. Further, a hybrid CRS does not provide any head,
                thorax, pelvic or leg protection in side impacts even when tethered--
                whereas car safety seats can and do provide such protection. NHTSA does
                not view a hybrid CRS's longer use of the FMVSS No. 225 system as
                relevant or advantageous to safety.
                 3. The petitioner believes that a hybrid CRS would ``significantly
                simplify access'' to the lower anchorage bars of an FMVSS No. 225
                system or to (lap) belt routing paths since it is less bulky than a car
                safety seat, which would make a tight installation of the hybrid CRS
                easier to achieve.
                 NHTSA's Response: The petitioner provides no data supporting its
                assertions. Data available to NHTSA indicate that there are vehicle
                \16\ and CRS features \17\ that affect the correct, tight installation
                of CRSs, such as the kind of connector used to attach to the FMVSS No.
                225 system, the forces needed to attach the connectors, the position of
                the lower anchorages relative to the vehicle seat cushion and seat
                back, the location of the seat belt buckle stalk, and the presence of
                components that assist in tightening a seat belt used to attach the
                CRS. The bulk of the CRS back is not among the identified factors.
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                 \16\ Klinich, K., et al. ``Effects of Vehicle Features on CRS
                Installation Errors,'' DOT HS 811626, July 2012. https://www.nhtsa.gov/sites/nhtsa.dot.gov/files/811626.pdf.
                 \17\ Id.
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                 4. The petitioner states that caregivers may prematurely graduate
                their children to [belt-positioning booster seats (BPB)] or vehicle
                belts ``to avoid the expense of, or difficulty traveling with, a
                forward-facing car-seat [sic] following the baby, convertible or
                combination seats.'' The petitioner asserts that a hybrid CRS would
                reduce the number of users graduating their children to booster seats
                prematurely.
                 NHTSA's Response: NHTSA recommends that from birth to 12 months,
                children ride in a rear-facing car seat, and from 1 to 3 years they
                should be rear-facing as long as possible and then move to a harnessed
                forward-facing seat (car safety seat with tether) when they outgrow the
                rear-facing seat. From ages 4 to 7, children should ride in the
                harnessed forward-facing car safety seat (with tether) until they
                outgrow the seat, then ride in a booster seat. From ages 8 to 12,
                children should be in a booster seat until they are big enough to fit a
                vehicle seat belt properly.\18\
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                 \18\ NHTSA's Car Seat Recommendations can be found at https://www.nhtsa.gov/equipment/car-seats-and-booster-seats#age-size-rec.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The petitioner provides no data supporting its assertion that
                consumers prematurely transition their children into boosters or belts
                to avoid the cost of purchasing a car safety seat or a booster seat,
                respectively, or to avoid difficulties traveling with such CRSs.\19\ It
                provides no information supporting its claim that its product would
                reduce premature graduation.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 \19\ The petitioner provided no information on the price
                difference between hybrid CRSs and car safety seats. There are some
                inexpensive options of car safety seats in the U.S. market, as their
                prices range from $60 to over $300.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 NHTSA did not find information on reasons consumers transition
                toddlers to boosters prematurely. The Agency did find a 2008 Australian
                study \20\ on factors associated with premature graduation of children
                into seat belts. The study showed that children who were moved
                prematurely into a seat belt were more likely to be older/heavier, have
                other children travelling in the vehicle and have younger parents
                compared to children appropriately restrained in a booster seat. In
                this study, parents identified the following reasons for moving a child
                into a seat belt:
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 \20\ Koppel,S., et al. ``Factors associated with the premature
                graduation of children into seatbelts,'' Monash University Accident
                Research Center. Accident Analysis & Prevention. March 2008. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001457507001510.
                 Child was too big for toddler/booster seat (27 percent)
                 Child was old enough to not slide out of seat belt unaided (19
                percent)
                 Child had reached the upper weight limit of the CRS with
                integral harness/booster seat (14 percent)
                 Child would be more comfortable in a seat belt (12 percent)
                 Child disliked toddler/booster seat or feels too grown up for
                CRS with integral harness/booster seat (8 percent)
                 Child would be safer in a seat belt (4 percent)
                 Needed toddler/booster seat for another child (1 percent)
                 Other (24 percent)
                 These reasons did not include the desire to avoid costs of another
                CRS or the difficulty in traveling with CRSs.
                [[Page 16319]]
                Given what is known, NHTSA cannot agree with the petitioner's view that
                hybrid CRSs would prevent premature graduation into a booster or belt
                system.
                 5. The petitioner states that ``people with multiple CRS users
                would be able to place up to three hybrid CRSs side-by-side, such that
                compromising the child's safety can be avoided'' by avoiding premature
                graduation to a booster seat or to the adult belt system.
                 NHTSA's Response: The petitioner did not provide any information
                supporting its view. Fitting three CRSs side-by-side does not offset
                the concern that hybrid CRSs provide a reduced degree of occupant
                protection than car safety seats. In addition, NCRUSS \21\ data show
                that few consumers are faced with this issue. The NCRUSS data show that
                only 1.4 percent of vehicles had CRSs adjacently installed.
                Specifically, NCRUSS found that of the 4,132 vehicles with children 9
                years old or younger in the second row, 329 vehicles (8 percent) had
                two children in car seats in the second row--of these, 293 vehicles (7
                percent) had the two children in the outboard seating positions and 36
                vehicles (0.9 percent) had the two children in adjacent seating
                positions, (one in an outboard seating position and one in the center
                seating position). Twenty vehicles (0.5 percent) of the 4,132 vehicles
                had three children seated in a CRS in the second row--of these, 8
                vehicles (0.2 percent) had three children in car safety seats, 1
                vehicle (0.025 percent) had 2 car safety seats and a booster seat and
                11 vehicles (0.26 percent) had 2 booster seats and 1 car safety seat.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 \21\ National Child Restraint Use Special Study, supra.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                e. Denial of Request To Consider Hybrid CRSs as Harnesses
                 Products meeting the definition of a ``child restraint system''
                must meet the requirements of FMVSS No. 213. In some instances, sub-
                groups of child restraints (e.g., car beds, booster seats, harnesses)
                are subject to specialized requirements or are excluded from a
                requirement. The standard currently does not subject harnesses to the
                untethered test requirement (S5.1.3.1(a)(1)). Harnesses have also been
                excluded from NHTSA's proposal establishing side impact protection
                requirements for children in child restraints.\22\
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 \22\ 79 FR 4570; January 28, 2014, supra.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 S4 defines a ``harness'' as ``a combination pelvic and upper torso
                child restraint system that consists primarily of flexible material,
                such as straps, webbing or similar material, and that does not include
                a rigid seating structure for the child.'' The petitioner's hybrid CRS
                does not meet the current harness definition as it has a rigid seating
                structure.\23\
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 \23\ See also September 21, 2016, letter to Mr. Charles Vits,
                (CRS with a booster seating structure is not a harness), https://isearch.nhtsa.gov/files/14-001678%20IMMI%20STAR%20crs.htm.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Jewkes suggests amending the definition along the lines of the
                following: ``An add-on forward facing CRS with five-point harness using
                a combination of flexible materials connecting a rigid seat-bottom to a
                seat-back structure.'' The effect of the suggested wording would be to
                exclude the petitioner's hybrid CRS from the untethered test
                requirement and the proposed side impact protection requirement.
                 NHTSA is denying the request. NHTSA considers harnesses to be a
                niche product that is not widely used in private vehicles.\24\ NHTSA's
                Car Seat Recommendations, supra, do not mention harnesses at all in
                guiding consumers on how best to restrain children in motor vehicles.
                Because FMVSS No. 213 does not apply the same safety requirements to
                harnesses that it does to car safety seats, children are generally not
                as protected in harnesses in the general motor vehicle population as
                they are in car safety seats. NHTSA believes that a hybrid CRS with the
                rigid seating structure would not look as different from forward-facing
                car safety seats as a harness does. The Agency is concerned that
                consumers might purchase hybrid CRSs thinking that they afford the same
                protection as a traditional car safety seat, which is not the case.
                NHTSA declines to expand the harness definition to allow market
                entrance of a kind of CRS that does not provide equivalent crash
                protection to a car safety seat. The suggested amendment would provide
                caregivers a false sense of security about the level of crash
                protection provided their children.\25\
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 \24\ NHTSA is aware of a niche market for harnesses for use on
                large school buses to restrain preschoolers, children needing help
                sitting upright, and children needing to be physically restrained
                because of physical or behavioral needs. See 79 FR at 4576
                (harnesses excluded from side impact proposal); 69 FR 10928, March
                9, 2004 (``seat-mounted'' harnesses permitted for school bus seats).
                In the school bus environment, there is assurance that harnesses
                will be correctly used, as school bus drivers and monitors receive
                training to ensure harnesses are properly attached to the school bus
                seat and that passengers are all properly restrained.
                 \25\ Additionally, expanding the definition to allow entry into
                the general marketplace of a CRS that does not ``improve the
                protection of children seated in child restraint systems during side
                impact crashes'' (MAP-21 section 31501(a)) would not be consistent
                with Congress's intent in enacting section 31501.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 In accordance with 49 CFR part 552, NHTSA hereby denies Jewkes'
                February 21, 2017 petition.
                 Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115, 30117 and 30166;
                delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.95 and 501.8.
                Raymond R. Posten,
                Associate Administrator for Rulemaking.
                [FR Doc. 2021-06223 Filed 3-26-21; 8:45 am]
                BILLING CODE 4910-59-P
                

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