Strapping children into safety seats becomes the law in China By LI FUSHENG | China Daily | Updated: 2021-06-07 09:55 Share CLOSE A man introduces a child safety seat to a woman at a children product fair held in Beijing in November 2020. [Photo provided to China Daily]
If your children are not in safety seats when you drive, you are risking their safety and violating a newly enacted law.
The use of child safety seats has been made mandatory in China s newly revised minor protection law, which took effect on Tuesday, marking this year s Children s Day.
The law stipulates that parents or other guardians of minors should take measures including installing child safety seats and educating their children to obey traffic regulations.
Two babies suffocated while sleeping in tragic North Texas accidents, police say
Fort Worth Star-Telegram 1 hr ago Domingo Ramirez Jr., Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Jun. 3 FORT WORTH Irving police asked on Thursday that parents and caretakers review their safety guidelines for putting babies to sleep after two infants died last week when they accidentally suffocated.
In the separate cases, the infants suffocated to death as they slept on a bed and a couch, Irving police said.
Police did not release many details on the cases, but authorities noted that in one case a parent fell asleep with the child on a couch and the child got stuck between the couch cushions.
UP Teams With Safe Kids on Education
UP Teams With Safe Kids on Education Written by Marybeth Luczak, Executive Editor
Union Pacific (UP) and nonprofit Safe Kids Worldwide will expand their partnership over the next three years with new initiatives to “raise awareness, educate families, and prevent rail-related injuries and deaths involving children,” they reported.
Their new efforts will include:
• A hub to provide digital toolkits to educators, partners and community advocates.
• An engagement program to educate “community influencers” and help raise rail safety awareness in target communities.
• Continued engagement with more than 400 Safe Kids coalitions across the U.S.