Skip to main content

Latest News


  • Leaving A Child In A Hot Car Is A Tragedy That Could Happen To Anyone

    As we focus on child safety tips this summer, one of the most dangerous incidents happens in something we use everyday: a car. 37 children die every year from being left in a hot vehicle in easily-preventing accidents. Vice President of Kids And Cars Susan Auriemma gives us an in-depth look at the issue of vehicle safety and accident prevention.

  • What You Need to Know About Backup Cameras

    Backup cameras are more than just a cool feature: They can be lifesavers. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is making those cameras mandatory, and for good reason: The agency wants to help prevent the 210 fatalities and 15,000 injuries caused each year by backover crashes.

  • Don't Leave Them Kids Alone: State Lawmakers Target Parents

    Parents who fear the judgment of neighbors if they leave their kids alone at home or in a car may soon have more than a "tsk tsk" to worry about in Rhode Island.

  • Hot-car deaths, Tragedy or crime?

    I've never met Wade Naramore, the suspended circuit jodge from Garland County who's pleaded innoicent to negligently leaving his 17-month-old son, Thomas, to die in superheated car last July.

  • Federal regulators considering safety changes to keyless ignition vehicles

    Keyless ignition vehicles are increasingly popular and don't require a key to turn off the engine.  Critics say drivers often forget to push a button to turn off the vehicle, leading carbon monoxide to flood into the home and kill those inside without warning.

Scroll to top of page