ban on 3 wheelers
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#3
ban on 3 wheelers
Here is a great page I found on what the SPSC has done and is trying to do. The Ban was on any new production of 3 wheelers, not for ones already produced.
The decree covered a ten-year period. As it neared expiration, the CPSC initiated a series of
comprehensive usage, injury and risk studies designed to determine whether or not the decree
should be extended. The major findings of the usage and injury studies include:
? 95 percent of injured riders under sixteen rode adult-size machines.9
? Children under sixteen accounted for nearly half of all injured ATV riders during the
study period.10
? Children under sixteen were injured more frequently on four-wheel ATVs than the total
population of ATV riders. Overall, 73 percent of the ATVs involved in all incidents were
4-wheel machines. However, four-wheel ATVs were ridden in 87 percent of incidents
involving children twelve to fifteen years old.11
Other research using CPSC data concludes that drivers injured in ATV incidents required
hospitalization four times more frequently (nearly 16 percent compared to 4 percent) than the
average for users of all other consumer products.12
These findings and others demonstrate that the consent decree was ineffective in many
respects. While it successfully barred the production of new three-wheel ATVs, almost every
injured child rode adult-size ATVs, children under sixteen continued to suffer a disproportionate
share of all ATV-related injuries and injuries caused by ATVs continued to be much more severe
when compared with other products.
When the consent decree expired in 1998, the Commission and the major manufacturers
entered into voluntary, company-specific agreements, known generally as ATV Action Plans,
which embody many of the decree’s main tenets (outlined above).
The decree covered a ten-year period. As it neared expiration, the CPSC initiated a series of
comprehensive usage, injury and risk studies designed to determine whether or not the decree
should be extended. The major findings of the usage and injury studies include:
? 95 percent of injured riders under sixteen rode adult-size machines.9
? Children under sixteen accounted for nearly half of all injured ATV riders during the
study period.10
? Children under sixteen were injured more frequently on four-wheel ATVs than the total
population of ATV riders. Overall, 73 percent of the ATVs involved in all incidents were
4-wheel machines. However, four-wheel ATVs were ridden in 87 percent of incidents
involving children twelve to fifteen years old.11
Other research using CPSC data concludes that drivers injured in ATV incidents required
hospitalization four times more frequently (nearly 16 percent compared to 4 percent) than the
average for users of all other consumer products.12
These findings and others demonstrate that the consent decree was ineffective in many
respects. While it successfully barred the production of new three-wheel ATVs, almost every
injured child rode adult-size ATVs, children under sixteen continued to suffer a disproportionate
share of all ATV-related injuries and injuries caused by ATVs continued to be much more severe
when compared with other products.
When the consent decree expired in 1998, the Commission and the major manufacturers
entered into voluntary, company-specific agreements, known generally as ATV Action Plans,
which embody many of the decree’s main tenets (outlined above).
#5
ban on 3 wheelers
Just a bit more I found
The 1988 decree, which substituted for formal agency rule-making by the Consumer
Product Safety Commission, required that large warning labels be placed on ATVs by
manufacturers cautioning consumers about the hazards of sharp turns and advising against
use by children under 16 years. Dealers were also required to offer training incentives for
first time buyers and manufacturers were required to monitor and prevent sale of larger ATVs
for use by children under 16. In addition, the manufacturers of ATVs voluntarily agreed to
stop production of the more dangerous 3-wheel vehicle.
The 1988 decree, which substituted for formal agency rule-making by the Consumer
Product Safety Commission, required that large warning labels be placed on ATVs by
manufacturers cautioning consumers about the hazards of sharp turns and advising against
use by children under 16 years. Dealers were also required to offer training incentives for
first time buyers and manufacturers were required to monitor and prevent sale of larger ATVs
for use by children under 16. In addition, the manufacturers of ATVs voluntarily agreed to
stop production of the more dangerous 3-wheel vehicle.
#6
ban on 3 wheelers
ok, just one more I found interesting.
Four-Wheelers Just as Dangerous as Three-Wheelers:
Many Americans probably believe that the conversion from three-wheel to four-wheel ATVs in the late 1980s would produce sustained safety improvements. However, medical research and comprehensive analysis by CPSC directly challenge the assumption that four-wheel ATVs are fundamentally safer than the three-wheel machines.
• In a 1998 study, doctors from Arkansas conclude: “Although manufacturers have touted the four-wheel vehicles as being safer than the three-wheel variety, the relative increase in safety is negligible … Injuries sustained in accidents involving four-wheel ATVs are just as severe as those incurred with three-wheel ATVs.” (Russell et al, 1998)
• CPSC concludes that four-wheel ATVs are as prone to tipping over as three-wheelers. It found that ATVs (regardless of the number of wheels) were more likely to tip over back to front than side to side (57 percent to 43 percent of accidents). It also states that, “[T]he proportion of [side] to [backward/ forward] tip over was not different between 3- and four-wheel ATVs.” (All-Terrain Vehicle Injury and Exposure Studies, 1998)
Four-Wheelers Just as Dangerous as Three-Wheelers:
Many Americans probably believe that the conversion from three-wheel to four-wheel ATVs in the late 1980s would produce sustained safety improvements. However, medical research and comprehensive analysis by CPSC directly challenge the assumption that four-wheel ATVs are fundamentally safer than the three-wheel machines.
• In a 1998 study, doctors from Arkansas conclude: “Although manufacturers have touted the four-wheel vehicles as being safer than the three-wheel variety, the relative increase in safety is negligible … Injuries sustained in accidents involving four-wheel ATVs are just as severe as those incurred with three-wheel ATVs.” (Russell et al, 1998)
• CPSC concludes that four-wheel ATVs are as prone to tipping over as three-wheelers. It found that ATVs (regardless of the number of wheels) were more likely to tip over back to front than side to side (57 percent to 43 percent of accidents). It also states that, “[T]he proportion of [side] to [backward/ forward] tip over was not different between 3- and four-wheel ATVs.” (All-Terrain Vehicle Injury and Exposure Studies, 1998)
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