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Child Passenger Law
The New law
Starting July 1, 2005, Indiana children from birth to age 8 years must ride in
child restraints.
Boosters are the most common type of child restraint for children who have
outgrown their child safety harness with straps. This is usually when a
child weighs about 40 pounds.
There are other child safety seats with harnesses and safety vests that fir
children who weigh more than 40 pounds. these are helpful for children who
will not stay seated in a booster seat.
The Best Place to Ride
All children should ride in the rear seat until age 13. They should be
buckled up in a child safety seat, booster seat, or seat belt that is right for
their age and size.
How Booster Seats Work
Booster seats lift the child up so that the seat belt fits correctly.
Without a booster seat, a seat belt can ride up on a child's stomach or across
the neck. This can cause injuries to the stomach or spine in a crash.
A child can also be thrown from a vehicle when a seat belt does not fit.
Booster seats must always be used with a lap/shoulder belt; never just a
lap belt.

Types of Booster Seats
These seats have head and neck support for a child. They can be used in
vehicles that do not have head rests.

These seats do not have backs.
They can only be used in vehicles with head rests.
How to use a Booster Seat
Place the booster on the vehicle
seat. Have the child sit in the booster seat. Bring the lap/shoulder
belt over the child's hips and chest.
Buckle the vehicle seat belt and pull
it tight. The belt should be tight and flat on the child's body. If
there is a shoulder belt guide on the booster, bring the shoulder belt through
the guide. The shoulder belt should lie between the child's neck and
shoulder.
When to use an Adult Seat Belt
A child is ready to use a seat belt
when he or she can sit all the way back on the vehicle seat without slouching.
The child's knees should hang over the edge of the vehicle seat. this is
usually when a child is about 4'9" tall. A properly fitting lap/shoulder
belt will lie flat on the upper thighs and between the neck and shoulder.
Indiana Child Passenger Law
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Children for birth to age 8 must
ride in child restraints.
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Children 8 to 16 years old must
use child restraints or seat belts.
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This law applies to all vehicles
including trucks and SUV's.
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This law applies to all vehicle
seating positions.
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Children under the age of 16
cannot ride in the bed of a pickup.
Remember:
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Booster seats can protect a child
from severe injuries or death in a crash.
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Booster seats must be used with a
lap/shoulder belt. The shoulder belt should lie flat between the neck
and shoulder and the lap belt low over the upper thighs.
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