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-USA Parking "No Noticeable Parking Disturbances, we didn't
even know they were here. They replaced every piece of equipment
out here. Fantastic job", says
Dick Grant. USA Facility Manager.
Port Everglades Project
entering Final Stages-
New
Garage in Port Everglades coming soon, fully integrated into
the existing New Installation.
Royce lands chain of Steak
and Shakes Surveillance deal-
New Internal organizational structure in place, "We hope
to increase efficiency on installations and customer satisfactions
with the new structure in place."
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NEWS
from CPSC
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
|
| Office
of Information and Public Affairs |
Washington,
DC 20207
|
| October
23, 2001 |
CPSC
Contact: Scott Wolfson
|
| Release
# 02-023 |
(301)
504-0580 Ext. 1189
|
New Safety Standard for Automatic Security Gates Helps Prevent
Deaths and Injuries to Children
WASHINGTON, D.C.- The U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission (CPSC) is alerting consumers to a tougher safety
standard that should prevent children from becoming entrapped
in automatic security gates. These sliding or swinging gates
are typically found at the entrances of residences, apartment
buildings, condominiums, parking lots and garages, and commercial
establishments.
Since
1985, CPSC has learned of 32 deaths related to automatic gates,
including 20 deaths to children. From 1990 to 2000, CPSC has
estimated that nearly 25,000 people have been involved in
automatic gate-related injuries, including 9,000 children
under 15 years old. Each year over 2,000 people, including
800 children, are treated in hospital emergency rooms for
injuries to the head, neck, arm, or hand.
Children
and adults can be severely injured or killed if they become
entrapped in the gates as they are automatically opened or
closed. The injuries also include cuts, broken bones, hematomas,
and amputations. Many older gates do not have sensing devices
or reversing mechanisms to prevent these entrapments.
"If
your apartment or condominium complex has an older gate, contact
a manager or your homeowners' association and have it replaced
with a safer automatic gate that meets the new standard. It
could save a life," said CPSC Chairman Ann Brown.
"In
educating the public about the danger these gates can present,
it is my hope that other families will not suffer, like my
family and nephew have," said Michelle Talbert, aunt
of 8-year-old Marlow Santos, of Gardena, Calif., who died
after he became entrapped in a sliding gate.
CPSC
worked with Underwriters Laboratories (UL) to develop the
tougher safety standard that requires automatic gates to have
at least two mechanisms to prevent entrapment. These provisions
are similar to the standards in effect for automatic garage
doors. The standard, which UL adopted in March 2000, requires
a sensing device that will reverse the gate if it encounters
an obstruction when opening or closing; and a secondary sensing
mechanism, such as an electric eye or an edge sensor that
will reverse the gate if an obstruction is detected.
|
Additional
safety measures related to gate installation include:
|
| |
Elimination
of all gaps over 2.25 inches. |
| |
Installation
of controls far enough from the gate so users cannot come
into contact with the gate while operating the controls.
|
| |
Installation
of controls where the user has full view of the gate operation.
|
| |
Elimination
of pinch points. |
| |
Installation
of guarding on exposed rollers. |
| |
Posting
of warning signs on each side of the gate. |
Consumers
can also view a video
clip about this recall (transcript).
This is in "streaming
video" format.
The
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission protects the public
from unreasonable risks of injury or death from 15,000 types
of consumer products under the agency's jurisdiction. To report
a dangerous product or a product-related injury, call CPSC's
hotline at (800) 638-2772 or CPSC's teletypewriter at (800)
638-8270, or visit CPSC's web site at
http://www.cpsc.gov/talk.html. For information on CPSC's
fax-on-demand service, call the above numbers or visit the web
site at
http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/pubs/103.html. To order a press
release through fax-on-demand, call (301) 504-0051 from the
handset of your fax machine and enter the release number. Consumers
can obtain this release and recall information at CPSC's
web site at http://www.cpsc.gov.
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