GM To Offer Car Trunk Escape Handle
(c) The Associated Press
By CATHERINE STRONG
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Seeking to prevent the deaths of children, General Motors
Corp. said it will offer an escape handle inside car trunks starting next
year.
Ford Motor Co. officials also said Wednesday they were working on a similar
mechanism to offer a way out for children trapped in the extreme heat of
automobile trunks in the summer months.
GM and Ford combined control more than half the car market, and GM said it
would share its trunk handle with other automakers.
Nineteen children have died in the past decade after inadvertently locking
themselves into trunks, often while playing, government officials said. Last
summer, 11 children ages 2 to 6 died inside trunks -- five in Utah, two in
Greensboro, Pa., and four in Gallup, N.M.
GM officials say their 8,000-plus dealerships will have the trunk handles
available for installation as optional equipment by March. The yellow handle
is illuminated in the dark cargo area, below the trunk lid, so a child can see
it and figure out how to escape without being told.
A mechanism also would be installed on the trunk latch to prevent the trunk
from shutting unless an adult manually resets it.
The system will cost $50, including installation, GM officials said.
Ford Motor spokesmen said the company's system would be available by mid-1999
but declined to specify how it would work.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has appointed a panel to
study how to reduce trunk entrapment deaths and injuries.
"This issue of trunk entrapment may seem simple, but it is not simple at
all," said Phil Recht, NHTSA's deputy administrator.
Heather Paul, head of the panel and executive director of the National Safe
Kids campaign, said the panel will review more than 700 known cases of trunk
entrapment of children and adults over several decades.
Escape handles sound like a good idea, she said. "I would expect a trap-
resistant solution should be available to all car owners eventually," she
said.
Some critics have said criminals might be more likely to kill adults they
place in trunks if they know victims can escape. In the case of the GM trunk
kit, criminals would not be able to shut the trunk without manually adjusting
the latch.
Ms. Paul said the panel would be working with law enforcement experts and
examining the known cases of trunk entrapment to see if that is actually a
problem.
Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., a former state trooper and author of legislation to
require trunk safety latches, doubts it would increase the threat of harm.
"Those cases don't happen that way. They're more spontaneous," Stupak said.
Criminals "are going to put you in the trunk and get the heck out of there."
Janette Fennell, who was shut in a trunk by an armed robber in 1995, said
automakers should make trunk releases a standard feature on all cars rather
than providing it as an option.
"If it's an option, it puts the burden on consumers. But no one thinks it's
going to happen to them," said Ms. Fennell, head of the Trunk Releases
Urgently Needed Coalition in San Francisco.
DaimlerChrysler officials said their engineers were looking at the problem of
trunk entrapment but want to work with the safety panel on an answer. "We're
looking for a universal solution that would work for all vehicles," said
spokeswoman Devon Williams.
AP-NY-12-16-98 2022EST
Copyright 1998 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP
news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise
distributed without prior written authority of The Associated Press.
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