Safety Standard for Booster Seats, 22925-22934 [2017-10044]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 96 / Friday, May 19, 2017 / Proposed Rules
Aviation Administration, Air Traffic
Organization, Central Service Center,
Operations Support Group, 10101
Hillwood Parkway, Fort Worth, TX
76177.
All communications received before
the specified closing date for comments
will be considered before taking action
on the proposed rule. The proposal
contained in this notice may be changed
in light of the comments received. A
report summarizing each substantive
public contact with FAA personnel
concerned with this rulemaking will be
filed in the docket.
Availability and Summary of
Documents Proposed for Incorporation
by Reference
This document proposes to amend
FAA Order 7400.11A, Airspace
Designations and Reporting Points,
dated August 3, 2016, and effective
September 15, 2016. FAA Order
7400.11A is publicly available as listed
in the ADDRESSES section of this
document. FAA Order 7400.11A lists
Class A, B, C, D, and E airspace areas,
air traffic service routes, and reporting
points.
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The Proposal
The FAA is proposing an amendment
to Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations
(14 CFR) part 71 by modifying Class E
airspace extending upward from 700
feet above the surface within a 6.5-mile
radius (reduced from 7.5-miles) of
Wayne Municipal Airport, Wayne, NE.
Airspace redesign of standard
instrument approach procedures is
necessary for IFR operations at the
airport due to the decommissioning of
the Wayne NDB, and cancellation of the
NDB approach. The geographic
coordinates of the airport also would be
updated to be in concert with the FAA’s
aeronautical database. This action
would enhance the safety and
management of the standard instrument
approach procedures for IFR operations
at the airport.
Class E airspace designations are
published in paragraph 6005 of FAA
Order 7400.11A, dated August 3, 2016,
and effective September 15, 2016, which
is incorporated by reference in 14 CFR
71.1. The Class E airspace designations
listed in this document will be
published subsequently in the Order.
Regulatory Notices and Analyses
The FAA has determined that this
regulation only involves an established
body of technical regulations for which
frequent and routine amendments are
necessary to keep them operationally
current, is non-controversial and
unlikely to result in adverse or negative
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comments. It, therefore: (1) Is not a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ under
Executive Order 12866; (2) is not a
‘‘significant rule’’ under DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures (44
FR 11034; February 26, 1979); and (3)
does not warrant preparation of a
regulatory evaluation as the anticipated
impact is so minimal. Since this is a
routine matter that will only affect air
traffic procedures and air navigation, it
is certified that this rule, when
promulgated, would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the criteria of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.
Environmental Review
This proposal will be subject to an
environmental analysis in accordance
with FAA Order 1050.1F,
‘‘Environmental Impacts: Policies and
Procedures’’ prior to any FAA final
regulatory action.
List of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 71
Airspace, Incorporation by reference,
Navigation (air).
The Proposed Amendment
Accordingly, pursuant to the
authority delegated to me, the Federal
Aviation Administration proposes to
amend 14 CFR part 71 as follows:
PART 71—DESIGNATION OF CLASS A,
B, C, D, AND E AIRSPACE AREAS; AIR
TRAFFIC SERVICE ROUTES; AND
REPORTING POINTS
1. The authority citation for 14 CFR
part 71 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 106(g); 40103,
40113, 40120; E.O. 10854, 24 FR 9565, 3 CFR
1959–1963 Comp., p. 389.
§ 71.1
[Amended]
2. The incorporation by reference in
14 CFR 71.1 of FAA Order 7400.11A,
Airspace Designations and Reporting
Points, dated August 3, 2016, and
effective September 15, 2016, is
amended as follows:
■
Paragraph 6005 Class E Airspace Areas
Extending Upward From 700 Feet or More
Above the Surface of the Earth.
*
*
*
ACE NE E5
*
*
Wayne, NE [Amended]
Wayne Municipal Airport, NE
(Lat. 42°14′30″ N., long. 96°58′56″ W.)
That airspace extending upward from 700
feet above the surface within a 6.5-mile
radius of Wayne Municipal Airport.
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22925
Issued in Fort Worth, Texas, on May 8,
2017.
Walter Tweedy,
Acting Manager, Operations Support Group,
ATO Central Service Center.
[FR Doc. 2017–10077 Filed 5–18–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
16 CFR Parts 1112 and 1237
[CPSC Docket No. 2017–0023]
Safety Standard for Booster Seats
Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
Section 104 of the Consumer
Product Safety Improvement Act of
2008 (CPSIA) requires the United States
Consumer Product Safety Commission
(Commission or CPSC) to promulgate
consumer product safety standards for
durable infant or toddler products.
These standards are to be ‘‘substantially
the same as’’ applicable voluntary
standards, or more stringent than the
voluntary standard if the Commission
concludes that more stringent
requirements would further reduce the
risk of injury associated with the
product. The Commission is proposing
a safety standard for booster seats in
response to the direction under section
104(b) of the CPSIA. In addition, the
Commission is proposing an
amendment to include booster seats in
the list of notice of requirements (NORs)
issued by the Commission.
DATES: Submit comments by August 2,
2017. Submit comments regarding
information collection by June 19, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Comments related to the
Paperwork Reduction Act aspects of the
marking, labeling, and instructional
literature requirements of the proposed
mandatory standard for booster seats
should be directed to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs, the
Office of Management and Budget, Attn:
CPSC Desk Officer, FAX: 202–395–6974,
or emailed to oira_submission@
omb.eop.gov.
Other comments, identified by Docket
No. CPSC–2017–0023, may be
submitted electronically or in writing:
Electronic Submissions: Submit
electronic comments to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
The Commission does not accept
comments submitted by email, except
through www.regulations.gov. The
SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 96 / Friday, May 19, 2017 / Proposed Rules
Commission encourages you to submit
electronic comments by using the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, as
described above.
Written Submissions: Submit written
submissions by mail/hand delivery/
courier to: Office of the Secretary,
Consumer Product Safety Commission,
Room 820, 4330 East West Highway,
Bethesda, MD 20814; telephone (301)
504–7923.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and
docket number for this proposed
rulemaking. All comments received may
be posted without change, including
any personal identifiers, contact
information, or other personal
information provided, to: https://
www.regulations.gov. Do not submit
confidential business information, trade
secret information, or other sensitive or
protected information that you do not
want to be available to the public. If
furnished at all, such information
should be submitted in writing.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to: https://
www.regulations.gov, and insert the
docket number, CPSC–2017–0023, into
the ‘‘Search’’ box, and follow the
prompts.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Celestine T. Kish, Project Manager,
Directorate for Engineering Sciences,
U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission, 5 Research Place,
Rockville, MD 20850; telephone: (301)
987–2547; email: ckish@cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS
I. Background and Statutory Authority
The CPSIA was enacted on August 14,
2008. Section 104(b) of the CPSIA
requires the Commission to: (1) Examine
and assess the effectiveness of voluntary
consumer product safety standards for
durable infant or toddler products, in
consultation with representatives of
consumer groups, juvenile product
manufacturers, and independent child
product engineers and experts; and (2)
promulgate consumer product safety
standards for durable infant or toddler
products. Standards issued under
section 104 are to be ‘‘substantially the
same as’’ the applicable voluntary
standards, or more stringent than the
voluntary standard if the Commission
concludes that more stringent
requirements would further reduce the
risk of injury associated with the
product.
Section 104(f)(1) of the CPSIA defines
the term ‘‘durable infant or toddler
product’’ as ‘‘a durable product
intended for use, or that may be
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reasonably expected to be used, by
children under the age of 5 years.’’
Section 104(f)(2)(C) of the CPSIA
specifically identifies ‘‘booster chairs’’
as a durable infant or toddler product.
Pursuant to section 104(b)(1)(A) of the
CPSIA, the Commission consulted with
manufacturers, retailers, trade
organizations, laboratories, consumer
advocacy groups, consultants, and
members of the public in the
development of this notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPR), largely through the
ASTM process.
Based on a briefing package prepared
by CPSC staff, the proposed rule would
incorporate by reference the most recent
booster seat voluntary standard
developed by ASTM International,
ASTM F2640–17ε1, Standard Consumer
Safety Specification for Booster Seats,
without modification. [https://cpsc.gov/
s3fs-public/Notice%20of
%20Proposed%20Rulemaking%20-%20
Booster%20Seats%20-%20
May%203%202017.pdf?97pmoM5UAGy
QBBPFtTPyvFu_RjCZMAwL] If
finalized, the ASTM standard would be
a mandatory safety rule under the
Consumer Product Safety Act (CPSA).
The testing and certification
requirements of section 14(a) of the
CPSA apply to the standards
promulgated under section 104 of the
CPSIA. Section 14(a)(3) of the CPSA
requires the Commission to publish an
NOR for the accreditation of third party
conformity assessment bodies (test
laboratories) to assess conformity with a
children’s product safety rule to which
a children’s product is subject. The
proposed rule for booster seats, if issued
as a final rule, would be a children’s
product safety rule that requires the
issuance of an NOR. To meet the
requirement that the Commission issue
an NOR for the booster seats standard,
this NPR also proposes to amend 16
CFR part 1112 to include 16 CFR part
1237, the CFR section where the booster
seat standard will be codified if the
standard becomes final.
seats, notably those intended for home
use, have removable trays, allowing a
table to be used as an alternative eating
surface. Some booster seats are intended
to double as floor seats for toddlers, and
others are high chair/booster seat
combination products. The ASTM
standard covers combination products
when they are in their booster seat
configuration.
Several suppliers produce booster
seats that are designed specifically for
use in restaurants. These suppliers sell
their ‘‘food-service’’ booster seats
directly to restaurants or through
restaurant supply companies; however,
consumers may purchase these products
directly, for example online through
third parties such as Amazon.com.
Consequently, these food-service
booster seats may also be found in
homes. Furthermore, consumers use
these food-service booster seats in
establishments open to the public.
ASTM F2640–17ε1 broadly defines
booster seats as ‘‘a juvenile chair, which
is placed on an adult chair to elevate a
child to standard dining table height.’’
There is no exclusion for food-service
booster seats and ASTM subcommittee
members have stated in several
subcommittee meetings that foodservice booster seats are included in the
standard.
The standard does not cover car
booster seats, which are also sometimes
referred to as ‘‘booster seats.’’
II. Product Information
B. Booster Seat Means of Attachment to
Adult Chairs
Currently, booster seats use a variety
of methods to secure the booster on an
adult chair; most employ a method of
attachment, such as straps or suction, to
attach to an adult chair. However, a few
booster seats rely on the occupant’s
weight (along with anti-skid bottoms or
grip feet to minimize slippage by means
of friction) to secure the booster seat
onto an adult chair. As discussed below
in section VI.A., not all methods of
securing a booster seat to an adult chair
comply with the attachment
requirements in ASTM F2640–17ε1.
A. Definition of ‘‘Booster Seat’’
ASTM F2640–17 ε1 defines a ‘‘booster
seat’’ as ‘‘a juvenile chair, which is
placed on an adult chair to elevate a
child to standard dining table height.
The booster seat is made for the purpose
of containing a child, up to 5 years of
age, and normally for the purposes of
feeding or eating. A booster seat may be
height adjustable and include a reclined
position.’’ Booster seats may be
constructed from a wide variety of
materials, including wood, plastic,
fabric, metal, and/or foam. Most booster
III. Incident Data
The Commission is aware of a total of
867 incidents (2 fatal, 865 nonfatal)
related to booster seats, reported to have
occurred between January 1, 2008 and
September 30, 2016. Information on 83
percent of these incidents was based on
retailer and manufacturer reports
submitted through the CPSC’s ‘‘Retailer
Reporting Program.’’ Various sources,
such as hotlines, Internet reports,
newspaper clippings, medical
examiners, and other state and local
authorities provided the CPSC with the
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remaining incident reports. Because
reporting is ongoing, the number of
reported fatalities, nonfatal injuries, and
non-injury incidents may change in the
future.
A. Fatalities
CPSC has reports of two fatalities
associated with the use of a booster seat:
D In one incident, a 22-month-old
female, sitting on a booster seat attached
to an adult chair, pushed off from the
table and tipped the adult chair
backwards into a glass panel of a china
cabinet behind her. The cause of death
was listed as ‘‘exsanguination due to
hemorrhage from incised wound.’’
D In the other incident, a 4-year-old
male fell from a booster seat to the floor;
he seemed uninjured at the time, but
later that evening when riding his bike,
the child fell, became unresponsive, and
later died. The cause of death was
multiple blunt force trauma.
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B. Nonfatalities
CPSC has reports of 146 booster seat
nonfatal injury incidents occurring
between January 1, 2008 and September
30, 2016. Among the incidents with age
information available, a majority of the
incidents involved children 18 months
and under. The severity of the injury
types among the 146 reported injuries
were as follows:
D Four children required a hospital
admission. The injuries were skull
fractures, concussions, and other head
injuries.
D Another 22 children were treated
and released from a hospital emergency
department (ED) for injuries resulting
mostly from falls.
D The remaining incidents primarily
involved contusions, abrasions, and
lacerations, due to falls or entrapment of
limbs/extremities.
The remaining 719 non-injury
incident reports specified that no injury
had occurred or provided no
information about any injury. However,
many of the descriptions indicated the
potential for a serious injury or even
death.
C. Hazard Pattern Identification
CPSC staff considered all 867 reported
incidents to identify hazard patterns
associated with booster seats;
subsequently, staff considered the
hazard patterns when reviewing the
adequacy of ASTM F2640–17ε1. CPSC
staff identified the following hazard
patterns associated with booster seats:
1. Restraint/Attachment Problems
(37%): 317 incidents involved the
mechanism for attaching a booster seat
to an adult chair, or the restraint system
that contains the child within the
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booster seat. Issues with the attachment
mechanism included anchor Buckles/
clasps/straps breaking, tearing, fraying,
detaching or releasing. Restraint-system
problems included: Buckles/prongs
breaking, jamming, releasing too easily,
or separating from straps; straps tearing
or fraying, pinching, or coming undone;
and general inadequacy or
ineffectiveness of restraints in
containing the child in place. In 18
incident reports, it was not clear from
the report if the buckle or strap referred
to in the report meant the restraint or
the attachment system. In eight of the
incident reports, both systems were
reported to have failed. Thirty-seven
injuries are included in this category, of
which seven were treated at a hospital
ED.
2. Seat-Related Issues (29%): 254
incidents involved seat-related issues.
These incidents included failure of the
lock/latch that controls the seat-recline
function; seat pads tearing, cracking,
and/or peeling; the seat back detaching
altogether; seat height adjustment lock/
latch failure; and seat detachment from
the base available for certain models.
Twenty-one injuries are included in this
category, two resulting in
hospitalizations and five of which were
ED-treated injuries.
3. Tray-Related Issues (20%): 171
incidents involved issues relating to
booster seat trays. These incidents
included tray paint finish peeling off,
trays failing to lock/stay locked, trays
with sharp protrusions on the
underside, trays too tight/difficult to
release, and trays pinching fingers.
These incidents also included
complaints about broken toyaccessories, which are usually attached
to the tray (or tray-insert). Thirty-six
injuries are included in this category,
including one that required ED
treatment.
4. Design Problems (4%): 33 incidents
involved a potential entrapment hazard
due to the design of the booster seat.
Most of these incidents involved limbs,
fingers, and toes entrapped in spaces/
openings between the armrest and seat
back/tray, between passive crotch
restraint bar and seat/tray, between tray
inserts, or in toy accessories. Fifteen
injuries were included in this category,
two requiring ED treatment.
5. Stability-Related Issues (4%): 31
incidents involved issues of booster seat
stability. Most of these incidents (27 of
31) concerned the adult chair to which
the booster seat was attached tipping
back or over. Some of these incidents
resulted from the child pushing back
from the table or counter. Twenty-two
injuries (including two hospitalizations
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and five ED-treated injuries) and one
fatality are included in this category.
6. Armrest Problems (3%): 24
incidents involved booster seat armrests
cracking or breaking. In a few cases, the
armrest reportedly arrived broken inside
the booster seat packaging. One injury is
included in this category.
7. Miscellaneous Product Issues (2%):
16 miscellaneous incidents involved a
variety of product-related issues,
including unclear assembly
instructions, poor quality construction,
odor, rough surface, breakage, or loose
hardware at unspecified sites. Nine
injuries were included in this category,
including two ED-treated injuries.
8. Combination of Multiple Issues
(2%): 17 incidents involved a
combination of the above-listed product
hazards. Four injuries were included in
this category.
9. Unknown Issues (<0.5%): Four
incidents involved unknown issues. In
these incidents, insufficient information
was available for CPSC staff to
determine how the incidents occurred.
In one incident in this category, a
fatality, there were confounding factors
reported that likely contributed to the
death. One other injury was reported in
this category.
D. Product Recalls
Compliance staff reviewed recalls of
booster seats that occurred from January
1, 2008 to September 30, 2016. During
that time, there was one consumer-level
recall involving booster seats. The recall
was conducted to resolve a fall hazard
caused when the stitching on the
booster seat’s restraint straps loosened,
allowing the straps to separate from the
seat and the child to fall out of the seat.
IV. International Standards for Booster
Seats
CPSC staff identified one
international standard—BS EN16120
Child Use and Care Articles—Chair
Mounted Seat—intended for a similar
product category. EN16120 addresses
products for a more narrow age range of
children (up to 36 months); whereas,
F2640–17ε1 includes products intended
for children up to 5 years of age. Some
individual requirements in the EN16120
standard are more stringent than ASTM
F2640–17ε1. For example, EN16120
contains requirements for head
entrapment, lateral protection, surface
chemicals, cords/ribbons, material
shrinkage, packaging film, and
monofilament threads. Conversely,
some individual requirements in
F2640–17ε1 are more stringent than
those found in EN 16120; ASTM F2640–
17ε1 includes requirements for tray
performance and toy accessories. CPSC
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staff believes that the current ASTM
standard, ASTM F2640–17ε1, is the most
comprehensive of the standards to
address the identified product hazards.
V. Voluntary Standard—ASTM F2640
A. History of ASTM F2640
The voluntary standard for booster
seats was first approved and published
in 2007, as ASTM F2640–07, Standard
Consumer Safety Specification for
Booster Seats. ASTM has revised the
voluntary standard nine times since
then. The current version of the
standard, ASTM F2640–17ε1 was
approved on March 01, 2017 and
published in March 2017.
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B. Description of the Current Voluntary
Standard–ASTM F3118–17ε1
ASTM F2640–17ε1 includes the
following key provisions: Scope,
terminology, general requirements,
performance requirements, test
methods, marking and labeling, and
instructional literature.
Scope. This section states the scope of
the standard, detailing what constitutes
a booster seat. As stated in section II.A.
of this preamble, the Scope section
describes a booster seat as ‘‘a juvenile
chair, which is placed on an adult chair
to elevate a child to standard dining
table height.’’ The scope section further
specifies appropriate ages for children
using a booster seat, stating that a
‘‘booster seat is made for the purpose of
containing a child, up to 5 years of age,
and normally for the purposes of
feeding or eating.’’
Terminology. This section provides
definitions of terms specific to this
standard.
General Requirements. This section
addresses numerous hazards with
several general requirements; most are
also found in the other ASTM juvenile
product standards. The general
requirements included in this section
are:
D Sharp edges or points;
D Small parts;
D Wood parts;
D Lead in paint;
D Scissoring, shearing, and pinching;
D Openings;
D Exposed coil springs;
D Protective components;
D Labeling; and
D Toys.
Performance Requirements and Test
Methods. These sections contain
performance requirements specific to
booster seats (discussed here) and the
test methods that must be used to assess
conformity with such requirements.
D Tray impact test: This test assesses
the tray’s resistance to breaking into
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small pieces or creating sharp points/
edges when dropped from a specified
height.
D Tray engagement test: This test
assesses the tray’s ability to remain
engaged to the booster seat when
subjected to a specified force
horizontally and vertically.
D Static load test: This test assesses
whether the booster seat can support its
maximum recommended weight, by
gradually applying a static load on the
center of the seating surface for a
specified amount of time.
D Restraint system test: This test
assesses whether the restraint system
can secure a child in the manufacturer’s
recommended-use positions.
D Attachment test: This test specifies
that a booster seat must have a means
of attaching a booster seat to an adult
chair and assesses the booster seat’s
ability to remain fastened to the adult
chair when force is applied.
D Structural integrity: This
requirement assesses the durability of
the locking/latching devices to prevent
folding or adjustment of the booster
seat.
D Maximum booster seat dimensions:
This requirement assesses how large a
booster seat can be in relation to the
adult chair dimensions specified on the
booster seat’s packaging.
Marking and Labeling. This section
contains various requirements relating
to warnings, labeling, and required
markings for booster seats. This section
prescribes various substance, format,
and prominence requirements for such
information.
Instructional Literature. This section
requires that easily readable and
understandable instructions be provided
with booster seats. Additionally, the
section contains requirements relating
to instructional literature contents and
format.
VI. Assessment of the Voluntary
Standard ASTM F2640–17ε1
CPSC staff identified 867 incidents
(including two fatalities) related to the
use of booster seats. CPSC staff
examined the incident data, identified
hazard patterns in the data, and worked
with ASTM to develop the performance
requirements in ASTM F2640. The
incident data and identified hazard
patterns served as the basis for the
development of ASTM F2640–17ε1 by
ASTM with CPSC staff support
throughout the process.
CPSC believes that the current
voluntary standard, ASTM F2640–17ε1,
addresses the primary hazard patterns
identified in the incident data. The
following section discusses how each of
the identified product-related issues or
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hazard patterns listed in section III.C. of
this preamble is addressed by the
current voluntary standard:
A. Restraint/Attachment Problems
Restraint system and attachment
problems included buckles/prongs
breaking, jamming, releasing too easily,
or separating from straps; straps tearing
or fraying, pinching, or coming undone;
and inadequacy or ineffectiveness of
restraints in containing the child in
place, Similarly, complaints about the
seat attachment system involved anchor
buckles/clasps/straps breaking, tearing,
fraying, detaching, or releasing. CPSC
evaluated the attachment and restraint
system tests in ASTM F2640–17ε1, and
believes that these tests adequately
address this hazard.
Section 6.5 of ASTM F2640–17ε1
requires that a booster seat must have a
means of ‘‘attaching’’ to an adult chair,
and be able to withstand a specified
force without becoming detached from
the adult chair. Booster seats may
employ several methods to secure to an
adult chair, including straps, suction,
and anti-skid bottoms or grip feet that
minimize slippage on the chair by
means of friction. However, because
‘‘grip feet’’ and ‘‘friction bottoms’’ do
not actually attach (i.e., fasten) the
booster seat to an adult chair, a majority
of ASTM subcommittee members, as
well as CPSC staff, does not consider
these means of securing booster seats to
an adult chair to be a means of
attachment that Section 6.5 requires.
Conversely, because suction physically
fastens the booster seat to an adult chair,
CPSC staff and a majority of ASTM
subcommittee members consider
suction to be a means of attachment
under Section 6.5 of the current ASTM
standard; nevertheless, any booster seat
using suction as a means of attachment
must still pass the attachment test to be
compliant.
Thus, promulgating the requirements
of ASTM F2640ε1 as a mandatory
standard might result in the following:
(1) Booster seats that currently use grip
feet/friction bottoms to secure the
booster seat to the surface upon which
it sits (disproportionately used on foodservice booster seats) would not comply
with the mandatory standard due to
their lack of a means of attachment; and
(2) booster seats that currently use
suction as a means of attachment may
not pass the mandatory standard’s
attachment test. CPSC requests
comments on the effect of ASTM
F2640–17ε1’s attachment requirements
becoming mandatory on booster seats
that currently use grip feet/friction
bottoms to secure the booster to the
surface upon which it sits. Furthermore,
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CPSC requests comments on whether a
suction attachment method is capable of
passing ASTM F2640ε1’s attachment
test.
B. Seat-Related Issues
Seat-related issues included failure of
the lock/latch that controls the seatrecline function; seat pads tearing,
cracking, and/or peeling; seat backs
detaching altogether; seat height
adjustment lock/latch failures; and seat
detachment from the base that is
available for certain models. CPSC
evaluated the static load and dynamic
booster seat tests in ASTM F2640–17ε1,
and believes that these tests adequately
address this hazard.
C. Tray-Related Issues
Tray-related issues included trays
with paint finish peeling off, trays
failing to lock/stay locked, trays with
sharp protrusions on the underside,
trays that were too tight/difficult to
release, and trays pinching fingers.
Upon evaluation, CPSC believes that the
general requirements section of F2640–
17ε1 adequately addresses peeling paint,
sharp protrusions, and pinching
hazards, and the standard’s tray
engagement test adequately address the
tray locking failures.
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D. Design Problems
Booster seat design problems resulted
in limbs, fingers, and toes entrapped in
spaces/openings between the armrest
and seat back/tray, between passive
crotch restraint bar and seat/tray,
between tray inserts, or in toy
accessories. CPSC evaluated the general
requirements of ASTM 2640–17ε1
(namely requirements relating to
scissoring, shearing, and pinching,
openings, and toys) and believes that
the ASTM standard adequately
addresses this hazard.
E. Stability-Related Issues
Stability-related incidents included
instances where the adult chair to
which the booster seat was attached,
tipped back or tipped over. Addressing
the stability of the booster seat while
attached to an adult chair is difficult in
a standard for booster seats because
stability is dependent on the adult chair.
The ASTM booster seat subcommittee
and CPSC staff worked diligently to find
an effective requirement to adequately
address stability without specifying
requirements for the adult chair.
Although ASTM F2640–17ε1 does not
contain a performance requirement to
address this hazard, it does contain a
labeling requirement, whereby booster
seats must contain a cautionary
statement: ‘‘Never allow a child to push
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away from table.’’ Moreover, ASTM
F2640–17ε1 requires a booster seat to
identify on the booster seat packaging
the size of adult chair on which the
booster seat can fit, thereby allowing
consumers to make a more informed
purchasing choice.
F. Armrest Problems
Armrest problems included booster
seat armrests cracking, and in a few
cases, the armrest arriving to the
consumer broken in the packaging.
CPSC evaluated the static and dynamic
load tests contained in ASTM F2640–
17ε1, and believes that those tests
adequately address armrest-related
hazards.
G. Miscellaneous Product-Related Issues
Miscellaneous product-related issues
included unclear assembly instructions,
poor quality construction, odor, rough
surface, breakage, or loose hardware at
unspecified sites. CPSC evaluated the
general requirements section, as well as
the instructional literature requirements
of ASTM F2640–17ε1, and believes that
those requirements adequately address
this hazard.
VII. Proposed Standard for Booster
Seats
As discussed in the previous section,
the Commission concludes that ASTM
F2640–17ε1 adequately addresses the
hazards associated with booster seats.
Thus, the Commission proposes to
incorporate by reference ASTM F2640–
17ε1, without modification, into the
final rule.
VIII. Proposed Amendment to 16 CFR
Part 1112 To Include NOR for Booster
Seats
The CPSA establishes certain
requirements for product certification
and testing. Products subject to a
consumer product safety rule under the
CPSA, or to a similar rule, ban, standard
or regulation under any other act
enforced by the Commission, must be
certified as complying with all
applicable CPSC-enforced requirements.
15 U.S.C. 2063(a). Certification of
children’s products subject to a
children’s product safety rule must be
based on testing conducted by a CPSCaccepted third party conformity
assessment body. Id. 2063(a)(2). The
Commission must publish an NOR for
the accreditation of third party
conformity assessment bodies to assess
conformity with a children’s product
safety rule to which a children’s product
is subject. Id. 2063(a)(3). Thus, the
proposed rule for 16 CFR part 1237,
Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Booster Seats, if issued
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as a final rule, would be a children’s
product safety rule that requires the
issuance of an NOR.
The Commission published a final
rule, Requirements Pertaining to Third
Party Conformity Assessment Bodies, 78
FR 15836 (March 12, 2013), codified at
16 CFR part 1112 (part 1112) and
effective on June 10, 2013, which
establishes requirements for
accreditation of third party conformity
assessment bodies to test for conformity
with a children’s product safety rule in
accordance with section 14(a)(2) of the
CPSA. Part 1112 also codifies all of the
NORs issued previously by the
Commission.
All new NORs for new children’s
product safety rules, such as the booster
seats standard, require an amendment to
part 1112. To meet the requirement that
the Commission issue an NOR for the
booster seats standard, as part of this
NPR, the Commission proposes to
amend the existing rule that codifies the
list of all NORs issued by the
Commission to add booster seats to the
list of children’s product safety rules for
which the CPSC has issued an NOR.
Test laboratories applying for
acceptance as a CPSC-accepted third
party conformity assessment body to
test to the new standard for booster seats
would be required to meet the third
party conformity assessment body
accreditation requirements in part 1112.
When a laboratory meets the
requirements as a CPSC-accepted third
party conformity assessment body, the
laboratory can apply to the CPSC to
have 16 CFR part 1237, Standard
Consumer Safety Specification for
Booster Seats, included in the
laboratory’s scope of accreditation of
CPSC safety rules listed for the
laboratory on the CPSC Web site at:
www.cpsc.gov/labsearch.
Incorporation by Reference
The Commission proposes to
incorporate by reference ASTM F2640–
17ε1, without modification. The Office
of the Federal Register (OFR) has
regulations concerning incorporation by
reference. 1 CFR part 51. For a proposed
rule, agencies must discuss in the
preamble to the NPR ways that the
materials the agency proposes to
incorporate by reference are reasonably
available to interested persons or how
the agency worked to make the
materials reasonably available. In
addition, the preamble to the proposed
rule must summarize the material. 1
CFR 51.5(a).
In accordance with the OFR’s
requirements, section V.B. of this
preamble summarizes the provisions of
ASTM F2640–17ε1 that the Commission
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proposes to incorporate by reference.
ASTM F2640–17ε1 is copyrighted. By
permission of ASTM, the standard can
be viewed as a read-only document
during the comment period on this NPR,
at: https://www.astm.org/cpsc.htm.
Interested persons may also purchase a
copy of ASTM F2640–17ε1 from ASTM
International, 100 Bar Harbor Drive,
P.O. Box 0700, West Conshohocken, PA
19428; https://www.astm.org/cpsc.htm.
One may also inspect a copy at CPSC’s
Office of the Secretary, U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission, Room 820,
4330 East West Highway, Bethesda, MD
20814, telephone 301–504–7923.
IX. Effective Date
The Administrative Procedure Act
(APA) generally requires that the
effective date of a rule be at least 30
days after publication of the final rule.
5 U.S.C. 553(d). Although a 6-month
effective date has been adopted for
several other section 104 rules, the
Commission is proposing an effective
date of 12 months after publication of
the final rule in the Federal Register to
allow booster seat manufacturers
additional time to bring their products
into compliance after the final rule is
issued. CPSC was unable to rule out a
significant economic impact for some
booster seat importers and small firms,
and a 12-month effective date will allow
additional time for manufacturers and
importers to make necessary changes to
bring their booster seats into
conformance with the ASTM F2640–
17ε1 and arrange for third party testing.
X. Regulatory Flexibility Act
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A. Introduction
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
requires that agencies review a proposed
rule for the rule’s potential economic
impact on small entities, including
small businesses. Section 603 of the
RFA generally requires that agencies
prepare an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis (IRFA) and make the analysis
available to the public for comment
when the agency publishes an NPR. 5
U.S.C. 603. Section 605 of the RFA
provides that an IRFA is not required if
the agency certifies that the rule will
not, if promulgated, have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Staff could not
rule out a significant economic impact
on 20 of the 29 small suppliers of
booster seats to the U.S. market.
Accordingly, staff prepared an IRFA and
poses several questions for public
comment to help staff assess the rule’s
potential impact on small businesses.
The IRFA must describe the impact of
the proposed rule on small entities and
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identify significant alternatives that
accomplish the statutory objectives and
minimize any significant economic
impact of the proposed rule on small
entities. Specifically, the IRFA must
contain:
D A description of the reasons why
action by the agency is being
considered;
D a succinct statement of the
objectives of, and legal basis for, the
proposed rule;
D a description of, and where feasible,
an estimate of the number of small
entities to which the proposed rule will
apply;
D a description of the projected
reporting, recordkeeping, and other
compliance requirements of the
proposed rule, including an estimate of
the classes of small entities subject to
the requirements and the type of
professional skills necessary for the
preparation of reports or records; and
D identification, to the extent possible,
of all relevant federal rules that may
duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the
proposed rule; and
In addition, the IRFA must describe
any significant alternatives to the
proposed rule that accomplish the
stated objectives of applicable statutes
and minimize any significant economic
impact of the proposed rule on small
entities.
B. Market Description
The Commission has identified 49
firms supplying booster seats to the U.S.
market, 39 that supply home-use booster
seats, and 10 that supply food-service
booster seats. Forty-four of these firms
(28 manufacturers, 15 importers, and
one supplier with an unknown supply
source) are domestic. The remaining
five firms are foreign.
C. Reason for Agency Action and Legal
Basis for Proposed Rule
As discussed in section I. of this
preamble, section 104 of the CPSIA
requires the CPSC to promulgate
consumer product safety standards for
durable infant or toddler products that
are substantially the same as, or more
stringent than, the relevant voluntary
standard. Section 104(f)(2)(C) of the
CPSIA specifically identifies ‘‘booster
chairs’’ as a durable infant or toddler
product for which the Commission shall
promulgate a consumer product safety
standard.
D. Impact of Proposed 16 CFR Part 1237
on Small Businesses
CPSC staff is aware of 49 firms
currently marketing booster seats in the
United States, 44 that are domestic.
Under U.S. Small Business
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Administration (SBA) guidelines, a
manufacturer is considered small if it
has 500 or fewer employees; and
importers and wholesalers are
considered small if they have 100 or
fewer employees. Staff limited its
analysis to domestic firms because SBA
guidelines and definitions pertain to
U.S.-based entities. Based on these
guidelines, 29 of the 44 domestic firms
are small—18 manufacturers, 10
importers, and one firm with an
unknown supply source. Additional
unknown small domestic booster seat
suppliers may be operating in the U.S.
market.
1. Small Manufacturers
i. Small Manufacturers With Compliant
Booster Seats
Of the 18 small manufacturers, eight
produce booster seats that comply with
ASTM F2640–14, the voluntary
standard currently in effect for testing
purposes under the Juvenile Product
Manufactures Association (JPMA)
certification program. In general, it is
expected that the small manufacturers
whose booster seats already comply
with the current voluntary standard will
remain compliant with the voluntary
standard as it evolves, because these
small manufacturers follow, and in
some cases, participate actively in the
standard development process. ASTM
F2640–17ε1 has already been published
and will be in effect by the time the
mandatory standard becomes final.
Moreover, history indicates that these
firms are likely to be in compliance by
the time the mandatory standard takes
effect.
All but one of these eight alreadycompliant firms supply home-use
booster seats that use straps/belts as an
attachment method. The remaining
small manufacturer uses suction to
attach their home-use booster seat to
adult chairs. It is unclear whether the
suction-type booster seats would pass
the attachment test in ASTM F2640–
17ε1 without modifications. Several
participants in the ASTM voluntary
standards development process,
including one of the supplier
representatives contacted by CPSC staff,
believes that belts and/or straps will be
required to pass the attachment test. If
modifications were required, the impact
could be significant. The firm could
undertake efforts to improve their
existing suction system, or they could
modify the chair to use strap/belt
attachment system, which would
involve creating new product molds, as
well as the cost of the belts and buckles.
Several of the supplier representatives
staff contacted believe that a complete
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redesign for booster seats costs
approximately $500,000. Although it is
unlikely that the cost of addressing the
attachment performance requirement
would be that high, any change that
involves redesign can be expensive, and
the affected firm likely has relatively
low sales revenue. Therefore, staff
cannot rule out a significant impact on
this firm.
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ii. Small Manufacturers With
Noncompliant Booster Seats
Ten small manufacturers produce
booster seats that do not comply with
the voluntary standard; half are homeuse booster seat manufacturers, and the
other half are food-service booster seat
manufacturers. Staff cannot rule out a
significant economic impact for any of
these small manufacturers. The booster
seats manufactured by all 10 firms are
likely to require modifications, some of
which may be significant, to meet the
requirements of the voluntary standard.
For example, eight of the 10 firms use
attachment methods other than belts or
straps, such as suction or friction, on
one or more of their booster seat
products. Six of those firms supply
plastic or foam booster seats, which are
likely to be more expensive to modify
than wooden booster seats. In addition,
some plastic booster seats may require
a complete redesign to comply with the
warning label requirements, even if
sufficient space is available on the
product to display the labels.
Staff cannot determine the extent and
cost of the changes required for
compliance of these manufacturers’
booster seat products; therefore, staff
cannot rule out a significant economic
impact on these businesses. However,
based on the revenue data available for
these firms, the impact is not likely to
be significant for two of the firms,
unless modifications that cost more than
$200,000 are required. The impact on
five of the firms could be significant,
even with relatively minor changes (i.e.,
less than $40,000). Without additional
information, staff cannot determine the
impact on the remaining three firms.
The Commission requests information
on the changes that may be required to
meet the voluntary standard, ASTM
F2640–17ε1 and, in particular, the time
and cost associated with any necessary
redesign or retrofitting. The Commission
also requests information on the degree
to which modifications required as a
result of ASTM F2640–17ε1’s
attachment test may add to a firm’s
costs.
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iii. Third Part Testing Costs for Small
Manufacturers
Under section 14 of the CPSA, once
the requirements of ASTM F2640–17ε1
are effective, all manufacturers will be
subject to the third party testing and
certification requirements under the
1107 rule. Third party testing will
include any physical and mechanical
test requirements specified in the final
booster seat rule. Manufacturers and
importers should already be conducting
required lead testing for booster seats.
Third party testing costs are in addition
to the direct costs of meeting the
requirements of the booster seat
standard.
Eight of the 18 small booster seats
manufacturers are already testing their
products, although not necessarily by a
third party, to verify compliance with
the ASTM standard. For these
manufacturers, the impact on testing
costs will be limited to the difference
between the cost of third party tests and
the cost of current testing regimes. CPSC
staff contacted small booster seat
manufacturers. They estimate that third
party testing booster seats to the ASTM
voluntary standard would cost about
$500 to $1,000 per model sample. For
the eight small manufacturers that are
already testing, the incremental costs
are unlikely to be economically
significant.
For the 10 small manufacturers that
are not currently testing their products
to verify compliance with the ASTM
standard, the impact of third party
testing could result in significant costs
for three firms. Although CPSC does not
currently know how many samples will
be needed to meet the ‘‘high degree of
assurance’’ criterion required in the
1107 rule, testing costs could exceed
one percent of gross revenue for two of
these firms, if five samples are needed
to be tested (assuming high-end testing
costs of $1,000 per model sample).
Revenue information was not available
for the third firm, but that firm’s
revenue appears to be very small.
Accordingly, that firm might be
significantly affected by third party
testing costs.
The Commission welcomes comments
regarding overall testing costs and
incremental costs due to third party
testing (i.e., how much does moving
from a voluntary to a mandatory third
party testing regime add to testing costs,
in total, and on a per-test basis). In
addition, the Commission seeks
comments on the number of booster seat
units that typically need to be tested to
provide a ‘‘high degree of assurance.’’
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2. Small Importers
CPSC does not believe that any of the
10 small importers of booster seats
currently complies with the ASTM
standard. There is insufficient
information to rule out a significant
impact for any of the 10 small importers
supplying noncompliant booster seats.
Whether there will be a significant
economic impact will depend upon the
extent of the changes required to
comply and the responses of importers’
supplying firms. Any increase in
production costs experienced by their
suppliers from changes made to meet
the mandatory standard may be passed
on to these importers. Costs would
include expenses associated with
coming into compliance with the
voluntary standard, as well as costs
associated with the attachment test (all
of the home-use booster seats supplied
by these firms already use straps/belts,
but neither of the food-service suppliers
appears to do so, and therefore, they
will likely need to make changes to
come into compliance).
Four of the 10 importers with
noncompliant booster seats (two import
food-service booster seats, and two
import home-use booster seats) do not
appear to have direct ties to their
product suppliers. These firms may opt
to switch to alternative suppliers (or, in
some cases, alternative products), rather
than bear the cost of complying with the
standard. Although it is unclear whether
the costs associated with changing
suppliers would be significant for these
firms.
The remaining six firms (all of which
import home-use booster seats) are
directly tied to their foreign suppliers,
and therefore, finding an alternative
supply source would not be a viable
alternative. The foreign suppliers of
these firms, however, may have an
incentive to work with their U.S.
subsidiaries/distributors to maintain an
American market presence. It is also
possible that these firms may
discontinue the sale of booster seats
altogether because booster seats are not
a large component of their product
lines. CPSC staff was unable to
determine whether exiting the booster
seats market would generate significant
economic impacts due to the lack of
sales revenue for booster seats, as well
as the lack of revenue data for most of
these firms.
As with manufacturers, importers will
be subject to third party testing and
certification requirements;
consequently, importers will be subject
to costs similar to those of
manufacturers, if their supplying foreign
firm(s) does not perform third party
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testing. Moving to third party
certification for the requirements of the
proposed rule is unlikely to result in
significant costs for the four small
importers for whom revenue data are
available. However, there was no
revenue data available for the remaining
six small importers; accordingly, CPSC
had no basis for examining the size of
the impact on those firms.
3. Summary
In summary, based upon current
information, CPSC cannot rule out a
significant economic impact for 20 of
the 29 booster seat firms operating in
the U.S. market. The 12-month
proposed effective date would help to
spread costs over a longer time-frame.
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4. Alternatives
One alternative is available to
minimize the economic impact on small
entities supplying booster seats while
also meeting the statutory objectives.
The Commission could allow a later
effective date than proposed.
The Commission is proposing a 12month effective date to allow booster
seat manufacturers additional time
(beyond the more usual 6-month
effective date) to bring their products
into compliance after the final rule is
issued. The Commission believes that
the proposed 12-month effective date
would allow firms that may not be
aware of the ASTM voluntary standard,
or may believe that their product falls
outside the scope of the standard,
additional time to make this
determination and thereafter, bring their
products into compliance. The
Commission could further reduce the
proposed rule’s impact on small
businesses by setting an effective date
later than 12 months after the final rule
is issued. A later effective date would
reduce the economic impact on firms in
two ways. First firms would be less
likely to experience a lapse in
production/importation, which could
result if they are unable to bring their
products into compliance and certify
compliance based on third party tests
within the required timeframe.
Additionally, firms could spread the
costs of developing compliant products
over a longer time period, thereby
reducing their annual costs, as well as
the present value of their total costs (i.e.,
they could time their spending to better
accommodate their individual
circumstances).
E. Impact of Proposed 16 CFR Part 1112
Amendment on Small Businesses
This proposed rule also would amend
part 1112 to add booster seats to the list
of children’s products for which the
Commission has issued an NOR. As
required by the RFA, staff conducted a
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(FRFA) when the Commission issued
the part 1112 rule (78 FR 15836, 15855–
58). The FRFA concluded that the
accreditation requirements would not
have a significant adverse impact on a
substantial number of small testing
laboratories because no requirements
were imposed on test laboratories that
did not intend to provide third party
testing services. The only test
laboratories that were expected to
provide such services were those that
anticipated receiving sufficient revenue
from the mandated testing to justify
accepting the requirements as a business
decision.
Based on similar reasoning, amending
16 CFR part 1112 to include the NOR for
the booster seat product standard will
not have a significant adverse impact on
small test laboratories. Moreover, based
upon the number of test laboratories in
the United States that have applied for
CPSC acceptance of accreditation to test
for conformance to other mandatory
juvenile product standards, we expect
that only a few test laboratories will
seek CPSC acceptance of their
accreditation to test for conformance
with the booster seats standard. Most of
these test laboratories will have already
been accredited to test for conformance
to other mandatory juvenile product
standards, and the only costs to them
would be the cost of adding the booster
seat standard to their scope of
accreditation. Consequently, the
Commission certifies that the proposed
NOR amending 16 CFR part 1112 to
include the infant booster seat standard
will not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
XI. Environmental Considerations
The Commission’s regulations address
whether the agency is required to
prepare an environmental assessment or
an environmental impact statement.
Under these regulations, certain
categories of CPSC actions normally
have ‘‘little or no potential for affecting
the human environment,’’ and therefore,
they do not require an environmental
assessment or an environmental impact
statement. Safety standards providing
requirements for products come under
this categorical exclusion. 16 CFR
1021.5(c)(1). The proposed rule falls
within the categorical exclusion.
XII. Paperwork Reduction Act
This proposed rule contains
information collection requirements that
are subject to public comment and
review by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–
3521). In this document, pursuant to 44
U.S.C. 3507(a)(1)(D), we set forth:
D A title for the collection of
information;
D a summary of the collection of
information;
D a brief description of the need for
the information and the proposed use of
the information;
D a description of the likely
respondents and proposed frequency of
response to the collection of
information;
D an estimate of the burden that shall
result from the collection of
information; and
D notice that comments may be
submitted to the OMB.
Title: Safety Standard for Booster
Seats.
Description: The proposed rule would
require each booster seat to comply with
ASTM F2640–17ε1, Standard Consumer
Safety Specification for Booster Seats.
Sections 8 and 9 of ASTM F2640–17ε1
contain requirements for marking,
labeling, and instructional literature.
These requirements fall within the
definition of ‘‘collection of
information,’’ as defined in 44 U.S.C.
3502(3).
Description of Respondents: Persons
who manufacture or import booster
seats.
Estimated Burden: We estimate the
burden of this collection of information
as follows:
TABLE 1—ESTIMATED ANNUAL REPORTING BURDEN
16 CFR Section
Number of
respondents
Frequency of
responses
Total annual
responses
Hours per
response
Total burden
hours
1237 .....................................................................................
49
2
98
1
98
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Our estimate is based on the
following:
Forty-nine known entities supply
booster seats to the U.S. market and may
need to make some modifications to
their existing warning labels. We
estimate that the time required to make
these modifications is about 1 hour per
model. Based on an evaluation of
supplier product lines, each entity
supplies an average of 2 models of
booster seats; therefore, the estimated
burden associated with labels is 1 hour
per model × 49 entities × 2 models per
entity = 98 hours. We estimate the
hourly compensation for the time
required to create and update labels is
$33.53 (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics,
‘‘Employer Costs for Employee
Compensation,’’ December 2016, Table
9, total compensation for all sales and
office workers in goods-producing
private industries: https://www.bls.gov/
ncs/). Therefore, the estimated annual
cost to industry associated with the
labeling requirements is $3,286 ($33.53
per hour × 98 hours). No operating,
maintenance, or capital costs are
associated with the collection.
Section 9.1 of ASTM F2640–17ε1
requires instructions to be supplied
with the product. Under the OMB’s
regulations (5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2)), the
time, effort, and financial resources
necessary to comply with a collection of
information that would be incurred by
persons in the ‘‘normal course of their
activities’’ are excluded from a burden
estimate, where an agency demonstrates
that the disclosure activities required to
comply are ‘‘usual and customary.’’ We
are unaware of booster seats that
generally require use instructions but
lack such instructions. Therefore, we
tentatively estimate that no burden
hours are associated with section 9.1 of
ASTM F2640–17ε1, because any burden
associated with supplying instructions
with booster seats would be ‘‘usual and
customary’’ and not within the
definition of ‘‘burden’’ under the OMB’s
regulations.
Based on this analysis, the proposed
standard for booster seats would impose
a burden to industry of 98 hours at a
cost of $3,286 annually.
In compliance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3507(d)), we have submitted the
information collection requirements of
this rule to the OMB for review.
Interested persons are requested to
submit comments regarding information
collection by June 19, 2017, to the Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs,
OMB (see the ADDRESSES section at the
beginning of this notice).
Pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A),
we invite comments on:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:29 May 18, 2017
Jkt 241001
D Whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the CPSC’s functions,
including whether the information will
have practical utility;
D the accuracy of the CPSC’s estimate
of the burden of the proposed collection
of information, including the validity of
the methodology and assumptions used;
D ways to enhance the quality, utility,
and clarity of the information to be
collected;
D ways to reduce the burden of the
collection of information on
respondents, including the use of
automated collection techniques, when
appropriate, and other forms of
information technology; and
D the estimated burden hours
associated with label modification,
including any alternative estimates.
XIII. Preemption
Section 26(a) of the CPSA, 15 U.S.C.
2075(a), provides that when a consumer
product safety standard is in effect and
applies to a product, no state or political
subdivision of a state may either
establish or continue in effect a standard
or regulation that prescribes
requirements for the performance,
composition, contents, design, finish,
construction, packaging, or labeling of
such product dealing with the same risk
of injury unless the state requirement is
identical to the federal standard. Section
26(c) of the CPSA also provides that
states or political subdivisions of states
may apply to the Commission for an
exemption from this preemption under
certain circumstances. Section 104(b) of
the CPSIA refers to the rules to be
issued under that section as ‘‘consumer
product safety rules.’’ Therefore, the
preemption provision of section 26(a) of
the CPSA would apply to a rule issued
under section 104.
XIV. Request for Comments
This NPR begins a rulemaking
proceeding under section 104(b) of the
CPSIA to issue a consumer product
safety standard for booster seats, and to
amend part 1112 to add booster seats to
the list of children’s product safety rules
for which the CPSC has issued an NOR.
We invite all interested persons to
submit comments on any aspect of this
proposal. In addition to requests for
specific comments elsewhere in this
NPR, the Commission requests
comments on the differences between
home-use and food-service booster seats
and the ability of each type of booster
seat to meet the requirements in the
proposed booster seat standard, the
proposed effective date, and the costs of
compliance with, and testing to, the
proposed booster seats standard. During
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
22933
the comment period, ASTM F2640–17ε1,
Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Booster Seats, is
available as a read-only document at:
https://www.astm.org/cpsc.htm.
Comments should be submitted in
accordance with the instructions in the
ADDRESSES section at the beginning of
this notice.
List of Subjects
16 CFR Part 1112
Administrative practice and
procedure, Audit, Consumer protection,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Third party conformity
assessment body.
16 CFR Part 1237
Consumer protection, Imports,
Incorporation by reference, Infants and
children, Labeling, Law enforcement,
and Toys.
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Commission proposes to
amend Title 16 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
PART 1112—REQUIREMENTS
PERTAINING TO THIRD PARTY
CONFORMITY ASSESSMENT BODIES
1. The authority citation for part 1112
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2063; Pub. L. 110–
314, section 3, 122 Stat. 3016, 3017 (2008).
2. Amend § 1112.15 by adding
paragraph (b)(47) to read as follows:
■
§ 1112.15 When can a third party
conformity assessment body apply for
CPSC acceptance for a particular CPSC rule
or test method?
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(47) 16 CFR part 1237, Safety
Standard for Booster Seats.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Add part 1237 to read as follows:
PART 1237—SAFETY STANDARD FOR
BOOSTER SEATS
Sec.
1237.1
1237.2
Scope.
Requirements for booster seats.
Authority: Sec. 104, Pub. L. 110–314, 122
Stat. 3016 (August 14, 2008); Sec. 3, Pub. L.
112–28, 125 Stat. 273 (August 12, 2011).
§ 1237.1
Scope.
This part establishes a consumer
product safety standard booster seats.
§ 1237.2
Requirements for booster seats.
Each booster seat must comply with
all applicable provisions of ASTM
F2640–17ε1, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Booster Seats
E:\FR\FM\19MYP1.SGM
19MYP1
22934
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 96 / Friday, May 19, 2017 / Proposed Rules
(approved on March 1, 2017). The
Director of the Federal Register
approves this incorporation by reference
in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and
1 CFR part 51. You may obtain a copy
from ASTM International, 100 Bar
Harbor Drive, P.O. Box 0700, West
Conshohocken, PA 19428; https://
www.astm.org/cpsc.htm. You may
inspect a copy at the Office of the
Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission, Room 820, 4330
East West Highway, Bethesda, MD
20814, telephone 301–504–7923, or at
the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA). For
information on the availability of this
material at NARA, call 202–741–6030,
or go to: https://www.archives.gov/
federal_register/code_of_
federalregulations/ibr_locations.html.
Dated: May 15, 2017.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2017–10044 Filed 5–18–17; 8:45 am]
33 CFR Part 100
RIN 1625–AA08
Special Local Regulation;
Commencement Bay, Tacoma, WA
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The Coast Guard proposes to
establish a temporary special local
regulation for certain waters of
Commencement Bay for the 2017 World
Water Ski Racing Championships. This
action is necessary to safeguard
participants and spectators from the
hazards associated with race events and
to ensure public safety during the
duration of the events on
Commencement Bay near Tacoma, WA,
during the 2017 World Water Ski Racing
Championships on July 29, 31, and
August 2, 2017. This special local
regulation prohibits non-participant
persons and vessels from entering,
transiting through, anchoring in, or
remaining within the race area and
prohibits vessels from transiting at
speeds that cause wake within the
spectator area unless authorized by the
Captain of the Port Puget Sound or a
Designated Representative. We invite
SUMMARY:
Jkt 241001
On December 8, 2016, Overload
Productions notified the Coast Guard
that it intends on conducting a high
speed water ski race on Commencement
Bay. Approximately 40 motor boats and
water skiers will be participating in the
races and operating at high speeds with
limited maneuverability, which poses a
significant hazard to race participants
and other boaters. In addition the event
sponsors anticipate a potential small
number of on-water spectators to be
present during the races.
The purpose of this rulemaking is to
ensure the safety of vessels and
participants in the race as well as
spectators and the maritime public. The
rulemaking would accomplish this
purpose by establishing two regulated
areas before, during, and after the
scheduled event, one for race
participants, and one for spectators and
the maritime public. Many factors
amplify the potential hazards of the
race, including limited maneuverability
of the race participants, commercial
vessel traffic, and the number of local
recreational and fishing vessels. The
Coast Guard proposes this rulemaking
under authority in 33 U.S.C. 1233.
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
III. Discussion of Proposed Rule
This proposed rule would create a
temporary special local regulation on
certain waters of Commencement Bay in
Tacoma, WA for the 2017 World Water
Ski Racing Championships. This special
local regulation would establish two
separate regulated areas, a race area and
a spectator area. Within the race area, all
persons and vessels, except those
persons and vessels participating in the
high-speed water ski races, are
prohibited from entering, transiting
through, anchoring in, or remaining
within. Within the spectator area, all
vessels are prohibited from anchoring
and are required to transit at the
minimum speed necessary to maintain
course, minimizing vessels wake, unless
authorized by the Captain of the Port
Puget Sound or a Designated
Representative. The regulatory text we
are proposing appears at the end of this
document.
IV. Regulatory Analyses
II. Background, Purpose, and Legal
Basis
[Docket Number USCG–2017–0334]
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS
If
you have questions about this proposed
rulemaking, call or email Petty Officer
Zachary Spence, Sector Puget Sound
Waterways Management Branch, U.S.
Coast Guard; telephone 206–217–6051,
email SectorPugetSoundWWM@
uscg.mil.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
DHS Department of Homeland Security
FR Federal Register
NPRM Notice of proposed rulemaking
§ Section
U.S.C. United States Code
Coast Guard
18:29 May 18, 2017
You may submit comments
identified by docket number USCG–
2017–0334 using the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov. See the ‘‘Public
Participation and Request for
Comments’’ portion of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for
further instructions on submitting
comments.
ADDRESSES:
I. Table of Abbreviations
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Comments and related material
must be received by the Coast Guard on
or before June 19, 2017.
DATES:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
ACTION:
your comments on this proposed
rulemaking.
We developed this proposed rule after
considering numerous statutes and
Executive orders related to rulemaking.
Below we summarize our analyses
based on a number of these statutes and
Executive orders and we discuss First
Amendment rights of protestors.
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
E.O.s 12866 (‘‘Regulatory Planning
and Review’’) and 13563 (‘‘Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review’’)
direct agencies to assess the costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and equity.
Executive Order 13563 emphasizes the
importance of quantifying both costs
and benefits, of reducing costs, of
harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. Executive Order 13771
(‘‘Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs’’), directs agencies to
reduce regulation and control regulatory
costs and provides that ‘‘for every one
new regulation issued, at least two prior
regulations be identified for elimination,
and that the cost of planned regulations
be prudently managed and controlled
through a budgeting process.’’
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has not designated this proposed
rule a significant regulatory action
under section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866. Accordingly, OMB has not
reviewed it.
As this proposed rule is not a
significant regulatory action, this rule is
E:\FR\FM\19MYP1.SGM
19MYP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 96 (Friday, May 19, 2017)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 22925-22934]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-10044]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
16 CFR Parts 1112 and 1237
[CPSC Docket No. 2017-0023]
Safety Standard for Booster Seats
AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety Commission.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Section 104 of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of
2008 (CPSIA) requires the United States Consumer Product Safety
Commission (Commission or CPSC) to promulgate consumer product safety
standards for durable infant or toddler products. These standards are
to be ``substantially the same as'' applicable voluntary standards, or
more stringent than the voluntary standard if the Commission concludes
that more stringent requirements would further reduce the risk of
injury associated with the product. The Commission is proposing a
safety standard for booster seats in response to the direction under
section 104(b) of the CPSIA. In addition, the Commission is proposing
an amendment to include booster seats in the list of notice of
requirements (NORs) issued by the Commission.
DATES: Submit comments by August 2, 2017. Submit comments regarding
information collection by June 19, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Comments related to the Paperwork Reduction Act aspects of
the marking, labeling, and instructional literature requirements of the
proposed mandatory standard for booster seats should be directed to the
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, the Office of Management
and Budget, Attn: CPSC Desk Officer, FAX: 202-395-6974, or emailed to
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov.
Other comments, identified by Docket No. CPSC-2017-0023, may be
submitted electronically or in writing:
Electronic Submissions: Submit electronic comments to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments. The Commission does not accept
comments submitted by email, except through www.regulations.gov. The
[[Page 22926]]
Commission encourages you to submit electronic comments by using the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, as described above.
Written Submissions: Submit written submissions by mail/hand
delivery/courier to: Office of the Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission, Room 820, 4330 East West Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814;
telephone (301) 504-7923.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name
and docket number for this proposed rulemaking. All comments received
may be posted without change, including any personal identifiers,
contact information, or other personal information provided, to: https://www.regulations.gov. Do not submit confidential business information,
trade secret information, or other sensitive or protected information
that you do not want to be available to the public. If furnished at
all, such information should be submitted in writing.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to: https://www.regulations.gov, and insert the
docket number, CPSC-2017-0023, into the ``Search'' box, and follow the
prompts.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Celestine T. Kish, Project Manager,
Directorate for Engineering Sciences, U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission, 5 Research Place, Rockville, MD 20850; telephone: (301)
987-2547; email: ckish@cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background and Statutory Authority
The CPSIA was enacted on August 14, 2008. Section 104(b) of the
CPSIA requires the Commission to: (1) Examine and assess the
effectiveness of voluntary consumer product safety standards for
durable infant or toddler products, in consultation with
representatives of consumer groups, juvenile product manufacturers, and
independent child product engineers and experts; and (2) promulgate
consumer product safety standards for durable infant or toddler
products. Standards issued under section 104 are to be ``substantially
the same as'' the applicable voluntary standards, or more stringent
than the voluntary standard if the Commission concludes that more
stringent requirements would further reduce the risk of injury
associated with the product.
Section 104(f)(1) of the CPSIA defines the term ``durable infant or
toddler product'' as ``a durable product intended for use, or that may
be reasonably expected to be used, by children under the age of 5
years.'' Section 104(f)(2)(C) of the CPSIA specifically identifies
``booster chairs'' as a durable infant or toddler product.
Pursuant to section 104(b)(1)(A) of the CPSIA, the Commission
consulted with manufacturers, retailers, trade organizations,
laboratories, consumer advocacy groups, consultants, and members of the
public in the development of this notice of proposed rulemaking (NPR),
largely through the ASTM process.
Based on a briefing package prepared by CPSC staff, the proposed
rule would incorporate by reference the most recent booster seat
voluntary standard developed by ASTM International, ASTM F2640-
17[egr]\1\, Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Booster Seats,
without modification. [https://cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/Notice%20of%20Proposed%20Rulemaking%20-%20Booster%20Seats%20-%20May%203%202017.pdf?97pmoM5UAGyQBBPFtTPyvFu_RjCZMAwL] If finalized,
the ASTM standard would be a mandatory safety rule under the Consumer
Product Safety Act (CPSA).
The testing and certification requirements of section 14(a) of the
CPSA apply to the standards promulgated under section 104 of the CPSIA.
Section 14(a)(3) of the CPSA requires the Commission to publish an NOR
for the accreditation of third party conformity assessment bodies (test
laboratories) to assess conformity with a children's product safety
rule to which a children's product is subject. The proposed rule for
booster seats, if issued as a final rule, would be a children's product
safety rule that requires the issuance of an NOR. To meet the
requirement that the Commission issue an NOR for the booster seats
standard, this NPR also proposes to amend 16 CFR part 1112 to include
16 CFR part 1237, the CFR section where the booster seat standard will
be codified if the standard becomes final.
II. Product Information
A. Definition of ``Booster Seat''
ASTM F2640-17 [egr]\1\ defines a ``booster seat'' as ``a juvenile
chair, which is placed on an adult chair to elevate a child to standard
dining table height. The booster seat is made for the purpose of
containing a child, up to 5 years of age, and normally for the purposes
of feeding or eating. A booster seat may be height adjustable and
include a reclined position.'' Booster seats may be constructed from a
wide variety of materials, including wood, plastic, fabric, metal, and/
or foam. Most booster seats, notably those intended for home use, have
removable trays, allowing a table to be used as an alternative eating
surface. Some booster seats are intended to double as floor seats for
toddlers, and others are high chair/booster seat combination products.
The ASTM standard covers combination products when they are in their
booster seat configuration.
Several suppliers produce booster seats that are designed
specifically for use in restaurants. These suppliers sell their ``food-
service'' booster seats directly to restaurants or through restaurant
supply companies; however, consumers may purchase these products
directly, for example online through third parties such as Amazon.com.
Consequently, these food-service booster seats may also be found in
homes. Furthermore, consumers use these food-service booster seats in
establishments open to the public. ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ broadly
defines booster seats as ``a juvenile chair, which is placed on an
adult chair to elevate a child to standard dining table height.'' There
is no exclusion for food-service booster seats and ASTM subcommittee
members have stated in several subcommittee meetings that food-service
booster seats are included in the standard.
The standard does not cover car booster seats, which are also
sometimes referred to as ``booster seats.''
B. Booster Seat Means of Attachment to Adult Chairs
Currently, booster seats use a variety of methods to secure the
booster on an adult chair; most employ a method of attachment, such as
straps or suction, to attach to an adult chair. However, a few booster
seats rely on the occupant's weight (along with anti-skid bottoms or
grip feet to minimize slippage by means of friction) to secure the
booster seat onto an adult chair. As discussed below in section VI.A.,
not all methods of securing a booster seat to an adult chair comply
with the attachment requirements in ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\.
III. Incident Data
The Commission is aware of a total of 867 incidents (2 fatal, 865
nonfatal) related to booster seats, reported to have occurred between
January 1, 2008 and September 30, 2016. Information on 83 percent of
these incidents was based on retailer and manufacturer reports
submitted through the CPSC's ``Retailer Reporting Program.'' Various
sources, such as hotlines, Internet reports, newspaper clippings,
medical examiners, and other state and local authorities provided the
CPSC with the
[[Page 22927]]
remaining incident reports. Because reporting is ongoing, the number of
reported fatalities, nonfatal injuries, and non-injury incidents may
change in the future.
A. Fatalities
CPSC has reports of two fatalities associated with the use of a
booster seat:
[ssquf] In one incident, a 22-month-old female, sitting on a
booster seat attached to an adult chair, pushed off from the table and
tipped the adult chair backwards into a glass panel of a china cabinet
behind her. The cause of death was listed as ``exsanguination due to
hemorrhage from incised wound.''
[ssquf] In the other incident, a 4-year-old male fell from a
booster seat to the floor; he seemed uninjured at the time, but later
that evening when riding his bike, the child fell, became unresponsive,
and later died. The cause of death was multiple blunt force trauma.
B. Nonfatalities
CPSC has reports of 146 booster seat nonfatal injury incidents
occurring between January 1, 2008 and September 30, 2016. Among the
incidents with age information available, a majority of the incidents
involved children 18 months and under. The severity of the injury types
among the 146 reported injuries were as follows:
[ssquf] Four children required a hospital admission. The injuries
were skull fractures, concussions, and other head injuries.
[ssquf] Another 22 children were treated and released from a
hospital emergency department (ED) for injuries resulting mostly from
falls.
[ssquf] The remaining incidents primarily involved contusions,
abrasions, and lacerations, due to falls or entrapment of limbs/
extremities.
The remaining 719 non-injury incident reports specified that no
injury had occurred or provided no information about any injury.
However, many of the descriptions indicated the potential for a serious
injury or even death.
C. Hazard Pattern Identification
CPSC staff considered all 867 reported incidents to identify hazard
patterns associated with booster seats; subsequently, staff considered
the hazard patterns when reviewing the adequacy of ASTM F2640-
17[egr]\1\. CPSC staff identified the following hazard patterns
associated with booster seats:
1. Restraint/Attachment Problems (37%): 317 incidents involved the
mechanism for attaching a booster seat to an adult chair, or the
restraint system that contains the child within the booster seat.
Issues with the attachment mechanism included anchor Buckles/clasps/
straps breaking, tearing, fraying, detaching or releasing. Restraint-
system problems included: Buckles/prongs breaking, jamming, releasing
too easily, or separating from straps; straps tearing or fraying,
pinching, or coming undone; and general inadequacy or ineffectiveness
of restraints in containing the child in place. In 18 incident reports,
it was not clear from the report if the buckle or strap referred to in
the report meant the restraint or the attachment system. In eight of
the incident reports, both systems were reported to have failed.
Thirty-seven injuries are included in this category, of which seven
were treated at a hospital ED.
2. Seat-Related Issues (29%): 254 incidents involved seat-related
issues. These incidents included failure of the lock/latch that
controls the seat-recline function; seat pads tearing, cracking, and/or
peeling; the seat back detaching altogether; seat height adjustment
lock/latch failure; and seat detachment from the base available for
certain models. Twenty-one injuries are included in this category, two
resulting in hospitalizations and five of which were ED-treated
injuries.
3. Tray-Related Issues (20%): 171 incidents involved issues
relating to booster seat trays. These incidents included tray paint
finish peeling off, trays failing to lock/stay locked, trays with sharp
protrusions on the underside, trays too tight/difficult to release, and
trays pinching fingers. These incidents also included complaints about
broken toy-accessories, which are usually attached to the tray (or
tray-insert). Thirty-six injuries are included in this category,
including one that required ED treatment.
4. Design Problems (4%): 33 incidents involved a potential
entrapment hazard due to the design of the booster seat. Most of these
incidents involved limbs, fingers, and toes entrapped in spaces/
openings between the armrest and seat back/tray, between passive crotch
restraint bar and seat/tray, between tray inserts, or in toy
accessories. Fifteen injuries were included in this category, two
requiring ED treatment.
5. Stability-Related Issues (4%): 31 incidents involved issues of
booster seat stability. Most of these incidents (27 of 31) concerned
the adult chair to which the booster seat was attached tipping back or
over. Some of these incidents resulted from the child pushing back from
the table or counter. Twenty-two injuries (including two
hospitalizations and five ED-treated injuries) and one fatality are
included in this category.
6. Armrest Problems (3%): 24 incidents involved booster seat
armrests cracking or breaking. In a few cases, the armrest reportedly
arrived broken inside the booster seat packaging. One injury is
included in this category.
7. Miscellaneous Product Issues (2%): 16 miscellaneous incidents
involved a variety of product-related issues, including unclear
assembly instructions, poor quality construction, odor, rough surface,
breakage, or loose hardware at unspecified sites. Nine injuries were
included in this category, including two ED-treated injuries.
8. Combination of Multiple Issues (2%): 17 incidents involved a
combination of the above-listed product hazards. Four injuries were
included in this category.
9. Unknown Issues (<0.5%): Four incidents involved unknown issues.
In these incidents, insufficient information was available for CPSC
staff to determine how the incidents occurred. In one incident in this
category, a fatality, there were confounding factors reported that
likely contributed to the death. One other injury was reported in this
category.
D. Product Recalls
Compliance staff reviewed recalls of booster seats that occurred
from January 1, 2008 to September 30, 2016. During that time, there was
one consumer-level recall involving booster seats. The recall was
conducted to resolve a fall hazard caused when the stitching on the
booster seat's restraint straps loosened, allowing the straps to
separate from the seat and the child to fall out of the seat.
IV. International Standards for Booster Seats
CPSC staff identified one international standard--BS EN16120 Child
Use and Care Articles--Chair Mounted Seat--intended for a similar
product category. EN16120 addresses products for a more narrow age
range of children (up to 36 months); whereas, F2640-17[egr]\1\ includes
products intended for children up to 5 years of age. Some individual
requirements in the EN16120 standard are more stringent than ASTM
F2640-17[egr]\1\. For example, EN16120 contains requirements for head
entrapment, lateral protection, surface chemicals, cords/ribbons,
material shrinkage, packaging film, and monofilament threads.
Conversely, some individual requirements in F2640-17[egr]\1\ are more
stringent than those found in EN 16120; ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ includes
requirements for tray performance and toy accessories. CPSC
[[Page 22928]]
staff believes that the current ASTM standard, ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\,
is the most comprehensive of the standards to address the identified
product hazards.
V. Voluntary Standard--ASTM F2640
A. History of ASTM F2640
The voluntary standard for booster seats was first approved and
published in 2007, as ASTM F2640-07, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Booster Seats. ASTM has revised the voluntary
standard nine times since then. The current version of the standard,
ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ was approved on March 01, 2017 and published in
March 2017.
B. Description of the Current Voluntary Standard-ASTM F3118-17[egr]\1\
ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ includes the following key provisions: Scope,
terminology, general requirements, performance requirements, test
methods, marking and labeling, and instructional literature.
Scope. This section states the scope of the standard, detailing
what constitutes a booster seat. As stated in section II.A. of this
preamble, the Scope section describes a booster seat as ``a juvenile
chair, which is placed on an adult chair to elevate a child to standard
dining table height.'' The scope section further specifies appropriate
ages for children using a booster seat, stating that a ``booster seat
is made for the purpose of containing a child, up to 5 years of age,
and normally for the purposes of feeding or eating.''
Terminology. This section provides definitions of terms specific to
this standard.
General Requirements. This section addresses numerous hazards with
several general requirements; most are also found in the other ASTM
juvenile product standards. The general requirements included in this
section are:
[ssquf] Sharp edges or points;
[ssquf] Small parts;
[ssquf] Wood parts;
[ssquf] Lead in paint;
[ssquf] Scissoring, shearing, and pinching;
[ssquf] Openings;
[ssquf] Exposed coil springs;
[ssquf] Protective components;
[ssquf] Labeling; and
[ssquf] Toys.
Performance Requirements and Test Methods. These sections contain
performance requirements specific to booster seats (discussed here) and
the test methods that must be used to assess conformity with such
requirements.
[ssquf] Tray impact test: This test assesses the tray's resistance
to breaking into small pieces or creating sharp points/edges when
dropped from a specified height.
[ssquf] Tray engagement test: This test assesses the tray's ability
to remain engaged to the booster seat when subjected to a specified
force horizontally and vertically.
[ssquf] Static load test: This test assesses whether the booster
seat can support its maximum recommended weight, by gradually applying
a static load on the center of the seating surface for a specified
amount of time.
[ssquf] Restraint system test: This test assesses whether the
restraint system can secure a child in the manufacturer's recommended-
use positions.
[ssquf] Attachment test: This test specifies that a booster seat
must have a means of attaching a booster seat to an adult chair and
assesses the booster seat's ability to remain fastened to the adult
chair when force is applied.
[ssquf] Structural integrity: This requirement assesses the
durability of the locking/latching devices to prevent folding or
adjustment of the booster seat.
[ssquf] Maximum booster seat dimensions: This requirement assesses
how large a booster seat can be in relation to the adult chair
dimensions specified on the booster seat's packaging.
Marking and Labeling. This section contains various requirements
relating to warnings, labeling, and required markings for booster
seats. This section prescribes various substance, format, and
prominence requirements for such information.
Instructional Literature. This section requires that easily
readable and understandable instructions be provided with booster
seats. Additionally, the section contains requirements relating to
instructional literature contents and format.
VI. Assessment of the Voluntary Standard ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\
CPSC staff identified 867 incidents (including two fatalities)
related to the use of booster seats. CPSC staff examined the incident
data, identified hazard patterns in the data, and worked with ASTM to
develop the performance requirements in ASTM F2640. The incident data
and identified hazard patterns served as the basis for the development
of ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ by ASTM with CPSC staff support throughout the
process.
CPSC believes that the current voluntary standard, ASTM F2640-
17[egr]\1\, addresses the primary hazard patterns identified in the
incident data. The following section discusses how each of the
identified product-related issues or hazard patterns listed in section
III.C. of this preamble is addressed by the current voluntary standard:
A. Restraint/Attachment Problems
Restraint system and attachment problems included buckles/prongs
breaking, jamming, releasing too easily, or separating from straps;
straps tearing or fraying, pinching, or coming undone; and inadequacy
or ineffectiveness of restraints in containing the child in place,
Similarly, complaints about the seat attachment system involved anchor
buckles/clasps/straps breaking, tearing, fraying, detaching, or
releasing. CPSC evaluated the attachment and restraint system tests in
ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\, and believes that these tests adequately address
this hazard.
Section 6.5 of ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ requires that a booster seat
must have a means of ``attaching'' to an adult chair, and be able to
withstand a specified force without becoming detached from the adult
chair. Booster seats may employ several methods to secure to an adult
chair, including straps, suction, and anti-skid bottoms or grip feet
that minimize slippage on the chair by means of friction. However,
because ``grip feet'' and ``friction bottoms'' do not actually attach
(i.e., fasten) the booster seat to an adult chair, a majority of ASTM
subcommittee members, as well as CPSC staff, does not consider these
means of securing booster seats to an adult chair to be a means of
attachment that Section 6.5 requires. Conversely, because suction
physically fastens the booster seat to an adult chair, CPSC staff and a
majority of ASTM subcommittee members consider suction to be a means of
attachment under Section 6.5 of the current ASTM standard;
nevertheless, any booster seat using suction as a means of attachment
must still pass the attachment test to be compliant.
Thus, promulgating the requirements of ASTM F2640[egr]\1\ as a
mandatory standard might result in the following: (1) Booster seats
that currently use grip feet/friction bottoms to secure the booster
seat to the surface upon which it sits (disproportionately used on
food-service booster seats) would not comply with the mandatory
standard due to their lack of a means of attachment; and (2) booster
seats that currently use suction as a means of attachment may not pass
the mandatory standard's attachment test. CPSC requests comments on the
effect of ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\'s attachment requirements becoming
mandatory on booster seats that currently use grip feet/friction
bottoms to secure the booster to the surface upon which it sits.
Furthermore,
[[Page 22929]]
CPSC requests comments on whether a suction attachment method is
capable of passing ASTM F2640[egr]\1\'s attachment test.
B. Seat-Related Issues
Seat-related issues included failure of the lock/latch that
controls the seat-recline function; seat pads tearing, cracking, and/or
peeling; seat backs detaching altogether; seat height adjustment lock/
latch failures; and seat detachment from the base that is available for
certain models. CPSC evaluated the static load and dynamic booster seat
tests in ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\, and believes that these tests
adequately address this hazard.
C. Tray-Related Issues
Tray-related issues included trays with paint finish peeling off,
trays failing to lock/stay locked, trays with sharp protrusions on the
underside, trays that were too tight/difficult to release, and trays
pinching fingers. Upon evaluation, CPSC believes that the general
requirements section of F2640-17[egr]\1\ adequately addresses peeling
paint, sharp protrusions, and pinching hazards, and the standard's tray
engagement test adequately address the tray locking failures.
D. Design Problems
Booster seat design problems resulted in limbs, fingers, and toes
entrapped in spaces/openings between the armrest and seat back/tray,
between passive crotch restraint bar and seat/tray, between tray
inserts, or in toy accessories. CPSC evaluated the general requirements
of ASTM 2640-17[egr]\1\ (namely requirements relating to scissoring,
shearing, and pinching, openings, and toys) and believes that the ASTM
standard adequately addresses this hazard.
E. Stability-Related Issues
Stability-related incidents included instances where the adult
chair to which the booster seat was attached, tipped back or tipped
over. Addressing the stability of the booster seat while attached to an
adult chair is difficult in a standard for booster seats because
stability is dependent on the adult chair. The ASTM booster seat
subcommittee and CPSC staff worked diligently to find an effective
requirement to adequately address stability without specifying
requirements for the adult chair. Although ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ does
not contain a performance requirement to address this hazard, it does
contain a labeling requirement, whereby booster seats must contain a
cautionary statement: ``Never allow a child to push away from table.''
Moreover, ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ requires a booster seat to identify on
the booster seat packaging the size of adult chair on which the booster
seat can fit, thereby allowing consumers to make a more informed
purchasing choice.
F. Armrest Problems
Armrest problems included booster seat armrests cracking, and in a
few cases, the armrest arriving to the consumer broken in the
packaging. CPSC evaluated the static and dynamic load tests contained
in ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\, and believes that those tests adequately
address armrest-related hazards.
G. Miscellaneous Product-Related Issues
Miscellaneous product-related issues included unclear assembly
instructions, poor quality construction, odor, rough surface, breakage,
or loose hardware at unspecified sites. CPSC evaluated the general
requirements section, as well as the instructional literature
requirements of ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\, and believes that those
requirements adequately address this hazard.
VII. Proposed Standard for Booster Seats
As discussed in the previous section, the Commission concludes that
ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ adequately addresses the hazards associated with
booster seats. Thus, the Commission proposes to incorporate by
reference ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\, without modification, into the final
rule.
VIII. Proposed Amendment to 16 CFR Part 1112 To Include NOR for Booster
Seats
The CPSA establishes certain requirements for product certification
and testing. Products subject to a consumer product safety rule under
the CPSA, or to a similar rule, ban, standard or regulation under any
other act enforced by the Commission, must be certified as complying
with all applicable CPSC-enforced requirements. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a).
Certification of children's products subject to a children's product
safety rule must be based on testing conducted by a CPSC-accepted third
party conformity assessment body. Id. 2063(a)(2). The Commission must
publish an NOR for the accreditation of third party conformity
assessment bodies to assess conformity with a children's product safety
rule to which a children's product is subject. Id. 2063(a)(3). Thus,
the proposed rule for 16 CFR part 1237, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Booster Seats, if issued as a final rule, would be a
children's product safety rule that requires the issuance of an NOR.
The Commission published a final rule, Requirements Pertaining to
Third Party Conformity Assessment Bodies, 78 FR 15836 (March 12, 2013),
codified at 16 CFR part 1112 (part 1112) and effective on June 10,
2013, which establishes requirements for accreditation of third party
conformity assessment bodies to test for conformity with a children's
product safety rule in accordance with section 14(a)(2) of the CPSA.
Part 1112 also codifies all of the NORs issued previously by the
Commission.
All new NORs for new children's product safety rules, such as the
booster seats standard, require an amendment to part 1112. To meet the
requirement that the Commission issue an NOR for the booster seats
standard, as part of this NPR, the Commission proposes to amend the
existing rule that codifies the list of all NORs issued by the
Commission to add booster seats to the list of children's product
safety rules for which the CPSC has issued an NOR.
Test laboratories applying for acceptance as a CPSC-accepted third
party conformity assessment body to test to the new standard for
booster seats would be required to meet the third party conformity
assessment body accreditation requirements in part 1112. When a
laboratory meets the requirements as a CPSC-accepted third party
conformity assessment body, the laboratory can apply to the CPSC to
have 16 CFR part 1237, Standard Consumer Safety Specification for
Booster Seats, included in the laboratory's scope of accreditation of
CPSC safety rules listed for the laboratory on the CPSC Web site at:
www.cpsc.gov/labsearch.
Incorporation by Reference
The Commission proposes to incorporate by reference ASTM F2640-
17[egr]\1\, without modification. The Office of the Federal Register
(OFR) has regulations concerning incorporation by reference. 1 CFR part
51. For a proposed rule, agencies must discuss in the preamble to the
NPR ways that the materials the agency proposes to incorporate by
reference are reasonably available to interested persons or how the
agency worked to make the materials reasonably available. In addition,
the preamble to the proposed rule must summarize the material. 1 CFR
51.5(a).
In accordance with the OFR's requirements, section V.B. of this
preamble summarizes the provisions of ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ that the
Commission
[[Page 22930]]
proposes to incorporate by reference. ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ is
copyrighted. By permission of ASTM, the standard can be viewed as a
read-only document during the comment period on this NPR, at: https://www.astm.org/cpsc.htm. Interested persons may also purchase a copy of
ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ from ASTM International, 100 Bar Harbor Drive,
P.O. Box 0700, West Conshohocken, PA 19428; https://www.astm.org/cpsc.htm. One may also inspect a copy at CPSC's Office of the
Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, Room 820, 4330 East
West Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814, telephone 301-504-7923.
IX. Effective Date
The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) generally requires that the
effective date of a rule be at least 30 days after publication of the
final rule. 5 U.S.C. 553(d). Although a 6-month effective date has been
adopted for several other section 104 rules, the Commission is
proposing an effective date of 12 months after publication of the final
rule in the Federal Register to allow booster seat manufacturers
additional time to bring their products into compliance after the final
rule is issued. CPSC was unable to rule out a significant economic
impact for some booster seat importers and small firms, and a 12-month
effective date will allow additional time for manufacturers and
importers to make necessary changes to bring their booster seats into
conformance with the ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ and arrange for third party
testing.
X. Regulatory Flexibility Act
A. Introduction
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) requires that agencies review
a proposed rule for the rule's potential economic impact on small
entities, including small businesses. Section 603 of the RFA generally
requires that agencies prepare an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis (IRFA) and make the analysis available to the public for
comment when the agency publishes an NPR. 5 U.S.C. 603. Section 605 of
the RFA provides that an IRFA is not required if the agency certifies
that the rule will not, if promulgated, have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. Staff could not rule
out a significant economic impact on 20 of the 29 small suppliers of
booster seats to the U.S. market. Accordingly, staff prepared an IRFA
and poses several questions for public comment to help staff assess the
rule's potential impact on small businesses.
The IRFA must describe the impact of the proposed rule on small
entities and identify significant alternatives that accomplish the
statutory objectives and minimize any significant economic impact of
the proposed rule on small entities. Specifically, the IRFA must
contain:
[ssquf] A description of the reasons why action by the agency is
being considered;
[ssquf] a succinct statement of the objectives of, and legal basis
for, the proposed rule;
[ssquf] a description of, and where feasible, an estimate of the
number of small entities to which the proposed rule will apply;
[ssquf] a description of the projected reporting, recordkeeping,
and other compliance requirements of the proposed rule, including an
estimate of the classes of small entities subject to the requirements
and the type of professional skills necessary for the preparation of
reports or records; and
[ssquf] identification, to the extent possible, of all relevant
federal rules that may duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the
proposed rule; and
In addition, the IRFA must describe any significant alternatives to
the proposed rule that accomplish the stated objectives of applicable
statutes and minimize any significant economic impact of the proposed
rule on small entities.
B. Market Description
The Commission has identified 49 firms supplying booster seats to
the U.S. market, 39 that supply home-use booster seats, and 10 that
supply food-service booster seats. Forty-four of these firms (28
manufacturers, 15 importers, and one supplier with an unknown supply
source) are domestic. The remaining five firms are foreign.
C. Reason for Agency Action and Legal Basis for Proposed Rule
As discussed in section I. of this preamble, section 104 of the
CPSIA requires the CPSC to promulgate consumer product safety standards
for durable infant or toddler products that are substantially the same
as, or more stringent than, the relevant voluntary standard. Section
104(f)(2)(C) of the CPSIA specifically identifies ``booster chairs'' as
a durable infant or toddler product for which the Commission shall
promulgate a consumer product safety standard.
D. Impact of Proposed 16 CFR Part 1237 on Small Businesses
CPSC staff is aware of 49 firms currently marketing booster seats
in the United States, 44 that are domestic. Under U.S. Small Business
Administration (SBA) guidelines, a manufacturer is considered small if
it has 500 or fewer employees; and importers and wholesalers are
considered small if they have 100 or fewer employees. Staff limited its
analysis to domestic firms because SBA guidelines and definitions
pertain to U.S.-based entities. Based on these guidelines, 29 of the 44
domestic firms are small--18 manufacturers, 10 importers, and one firm
with an unknown supply source. Additional unknown small domestic
booster seat suppliers may be operating in the U.S. market.
1. Small Manufacturers
i. Small Manufacturers With Compliant Booster Seats
Of the 18 small manufacturers, eight produce booster seats that
comply with ASTM F2640-14, the voluntary standard currently in effect
for testing purposes under the Juvenile Product Manufactures
Association (JPMA) certification program. In general, it is expected
that the small manufacturers whose booster seats already comply with
the current voluntary standard will remain compliant with the voluntary
standard as it evolves, because these small manufacturers follow, and
in some cases, participate actively in the standard development
process. ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ has already been published and will be
in effect by the time the mandatory standard becomes final. Moreover,
history indicates that these firms are likely to be in compliance by
the time the mandatory standard takes effect.
All but one of these eight already-compliant firms supply home-use
booster seats that use straps/belts as an attachment method. The
remaining small manufacturer uses suction to attach their home-use
booster seat to adult chairs. It is unclear whether the suction-type
booster seats would pass the attachment test in ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\
without modifications. Several participants in the ASTM voluntary
standards development process, including one of the supplier
representatives contacted by CPSC staff, believes that belts and/or
straps will be required to pass the attachment test. If modifications
were required, the impact could be significant. The firm could
undertake efforts to improve their existing suction system, or they
could modify the chair to use strap/belt attachment system, which would
involve creating new product molds, as well as the cost of the belts
and buckles. Several of the supplier representatives staff contacted
believe that a complete
[[Page 22931]]
redesign for booster seats costs approximately $500,000. Although it is
unlikely that the cost of addressing the attachment performance
requirement would be that high, any change that involves redesign can
be expensive, and the affected firm likely has relatively low sales
revenue. Therefore, staff cannot rule out a significant impact on this
firm.
ii. Small Manufacturers With Noncompliant Booster Seats
Ten small manufacturers produce booster seats that do not comply
with the voluntary standard; half are home-use booster seat
manufacturers, and the other half are food-service booster seat
manufacturers. Staff cannot rule out a significant economic impact for
any of these small manufacturers. The booster seats manufactured by all
10 firms are likely to require modifications, some of which may be
significant, to meet the requirements of the voluntary standard. For
example, eight of the 10 firms use attachment methods other than belts
or straps, such as suction or friction, on one or more of their booster
seat products. Six of those firms supply plastic or foam booster seats,
which are likely to be more expensive to modify than wooden booster
seats. In addition, some plastic booster seats may require a complete
redesign to comply with the warning label requirements, even if
sufficient space is available on the product to display the labels.
Staff cannot determine the extent and cost of the changes required
for compliance of these manufacturers' booster seat products;
therefore, staff cannot rule out a significant economic impact on these
businesses. However, based on the revenue data available for these
firms, the impact is not likely to be significant for two of the firms,
unless modifications that cost more than $200,000 are required. The
impact on five of the firms could be significant, even with relatively
minor changes (i.e., less than $40,000). Without additional
information, staff cannot determine the impact on the remaining three
firms.
The Commission requests information on the changes that may be
required to meet the voluntary standard, ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ and, in
particular, the time and cost associated with any necessary redesign or
retrofitting. The Commission also requests information on the degree to
which modifications required as a result of ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\'s
attachment test may add to a firm's costs.
iii. Third Part Testing Costs for Small Manufacturers
Under section 14 of the CPSA, once the requirements of ASTM F2640-
17[egr]\1\ are effective, all manufacturers will be subject to the
third party testing and certification requirements under the 1107 rule.
Third party testing will include any physical and mechanical test
requirements specified in the final booster seat rule. Manufacturers
and importers should already be conducting required lead testing for
booster seats. Third party testing costs are in addition to the direct
costs of meeting the requirements of the booster seat standard.
Eight of the 18 small booster seats manufacturers are already
testing their products, although not necessarily by a third party, to
verify compliance with the ASTM standard. For these manufacturers, the
impact on testing costs will be limited to the difference between the
cost of third party tests and the cost of current testing regimes. CPSC
staff contacted small booster seat manufacturers. They estimate that
third party testing booster seats to the ASTM voluntary standard would
cost about $500 to $1,000 per model sample. For the eight small
manufacturers that are already testing, the incremental costs are
unlikely to be economically significant.
For the 10 small manufacturers that are not currently testing their
products to verify compliance with the ASTM standard, the impact of
third party testing could result in significant costs for three firms.
Although CPSC does not currently know how many samples will be needed
to meet the ``high degree of assurance'' criterion required in the 1107
rule, testing costs could exceed one percent of gross revenue for two
of these firms, if five samples are needed to be tested (assuming high-
end testing costs of $1,000 per model sample). Revenue information was
not available for the third firm, but that firm's revenue appears to be
very small. Accordingly, that firm might be significantly affected by
third party testing costs.
The Commission welcomes comments regarding overall testing costs
and incremental costs due to third party testing (i.e., how much does
moving from a voluntary to a mandatory third party testing regime add
to testing costs, in total, and on a per-test basis). In addition, the
Commission seeks comments on the number of booster seat units that
typically need to be tested to provide a ``high degree of assurance.''
2. Small Importers
CPSC does not believe that any of the 10 small importers of booster
seats currently complies with the ASTM standard. There is insufficient
information to rule out a significant impact for any of the 10 small
importers supplying noncompliant booster seats. Whether there will be a
significant economic impact will depend upon the extent of the changes
required to comply and the responses of importers' supplying firms. Any
increase in production costs experienced by their suppliers from
changes made to meet the mandatory standard may be passed on to these
importers. Costs would include expenses associated with coming into
compliance with the voluntary standard, as well as costs associated
with the attachment test (all of the home-use booster seats supplied by
these firms already use straps/belts, but neither of the food-service
suppliers appears to do so, and therefore, they will likely need to
make changes to come into compliance).
Four of the 10 importers with noncompliant booster seats (two
import food-service booster seats, and two import home-use booster
seats) do not appear to have direct ties to their product suppliers.
These firms may opt to switch to alternative suppliers (or, in some
cases, alternative products), rather than bear the cost of complying
with the standard. Although it is unclear whether the costs associated
with changing suppliers would be significant for these firms.
The remaining six firms (all of which import home-use booster
seats) are directly tied to their foreign suppliers, and therefore,
finding an alternative supply source would not be a viable alternative.
The foreign suppliers of these firms, however, may have an incentive to
work with their U.S. subsidiaries/distributors to maintain an American
market presence. It is also possible that these firms may discontinue
the sale of booster seats altogether because booster seats are not a
large component of their product lines. CPSC staff was unable to
determine whether exiting the booster seats market would generate
significant economic impacts due to the lack of sales revenue for
booster seats, as well as the lack of revenue data for most of these
firms.
As with manufacturers, importers will be subject to third party
testing and certification requirements; consequently, importers will be
subject to costs similar to those of manufacturers, if their supplying
foreign firm(s) does not perform third party
[[Page 22932]]
testing. Moving to third party certification for the requirements of
the proposed rule is unlikely to result in significant costs for the
four small importers for whom revenue data are available. However,
there was no revenue data available for the remaining six small
importers; accordingly, CPSC had no basis for examining the size of the
impact on those firms.
3. Summary
In summary, based upon current information, CPSC cannot rule out a
significant economic impact for 20 of the 29 booster seat firms
operating in the U.S. market. The 12-month proposed effective date
would help to spread costs over a longer time-frame.
4. Alternatives
One alternative is available to minimize the economic impact on
small entities supplying booster seats while also meeting the statutory
objectives. The Commission could allow a later effective date than
proposed.
The Commission is proposing a 12-month effective date to allow
booster seat manufacturers additional time (beyond the more usual 6-
month effective date) to bring their products into compliance after the
final rule is issued. The Commission believes that the proposed 12-
month effective date would allow firms that may not be aware of the
ASTM voluntary standard, or may believe that their product falls
outside the scope of the standard, additional time to make this
determination and thereafter, bring their products into compliance. The
Commission could further reduce the proposed rule's impact on small
businesses by setting an effective date later than 12 months after the
final rule is issued. A later effective date would reduce the economic
impact on firms in two ways. First firms would be less likely to
experience a lapse in production/importation, which could result if
they are unable to bring their products into compliance and certify
compliance based on third party tests within the required timeframe.
Additionally, firms could spread the costs of developing compliant
products over a longer time period, thereby reducing their annual
costs, as well as the present value of their total costs (i.e., they
could time their spending to better accommodate their individual
circumstances).
E. Impact of Proposed 16 CFR Part 1112 Amendment on Small Businesses
This proposed rule also would amend part 1112 to add booster seats
to the list of children's products for which the Commission has issued
an NOR. As required by the RFA, staff conducted a Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) when the Commission issued the part 1112
rule (78 FR 15836, 15855-58). The FRFA concluded that the accreditation
requirements would not have a significant adverse impact on a
substantial number of small testing laboratories because no
requirements were imposed on test laboratories that did not intend to
provide third party testing services. The only test laboratories that
were expected to provide such services were those that anticipated
receiving sufficient revenue from the mandated testing to justify
accepting the requirements as a business decision.
Based on similar reasoning, amending 16 CFR part 1112 to include
the NOR for the booster seat product standard will not have a
significant adverse impact on small test laboratories. Moreover, based
upon the number of test laboratories in the United States that have
applied for CPSC acceptance of accreditation to test for conformance to
other mandatory juvenile product standards, we expect that only a few
test laboratories will seek CPSC acceptance of their accreditation to
test for conformance with the booster seats standard. Most of these
test laboratories will have already been accredited to test for
conformance to other mandatory juvenile product standards, and the only
costs to them would be the cost of adding the booster seat standard to
their scope of accreditation. Consequently, the Commission certifies
that the proposed NOR amending 16 CFR part 1112 to include the infant
booster seat standard will not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
XI. Environmental Considerations
The Commission's regulations address whether the agency is required
to prepare an environmental assessment or an environmental impact
statement. Under these regulations, certain categories of CPSC actions
normally have ``little or no potential for affecting the human
environment,'' and therefore, they do not require an environmental
assessment or an environmental impact statement. Safety standards
providing requirements for products come under this categorical
exclusion. 16 CFR 1021.5(c)(1). The proposed rule falls within the
categorical exclusion.
XII. Paperwork Reduction Act
This proposed rule contains information collection requirements
that are subject to public comment and review by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501-3521). In this document, pursuant to 44 U.S.C.
3507(a)(1)(D), we set forth:
[ssquf] A title for the collection of information;
[ssquf] a summary of the collection of information;
[ssquf] a brief description of the need for the information and the
proposed use of the information;
[ssquf] a description of the likely respondents and proposed
frequency of response to the collection of information;
[ssquf] an estimate of the burden that shall result from the
collection of information; and
[ssquf] notice that comments may be submitted to the OMB.
Title: Safety Standard for Booster Seats.
Description: The proposed rule would require each booster seat to
comply with ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Booster Seats. Sections 8 and 9 of ASTM F2640-
17[egr]\1\ contain requirements for marking, labeling, and
instructional literature. These requirements fall within the definition
of ``collection of information,'' as defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(3).
Description of Respondents: Persons who manufacture or import
booster seats.
Estimated Burden: We estimate the burden of this collection of
information as follows:
Table 1--Estimated Annual Reporting Burden
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Frequency of Total annual Hours per Total burden
16 CFR Section respondents responses responses response hours
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1237............................................................... 49 2 98 1 98
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 22933]]
Our estimate is based on the following:
Forty-nine known entities supply booster seats to the U.S. market
and may need to make some modifications to their existing warning
labels. We estimate that the time required to make these modifications
is about 1 hour per model. Based on an evaluation of supplier product
lines, each entity supplies an average of 2 models of booster seats;
therefore, the estimated burden associated with labels is 1 hour per
model x 49 entities x 2 models per entity = 98 hours. We estimate the
hourly compensation for the time required to create and update labels
is $33.53 (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, ``Employer Costs for
Employee Compensation,'' December 2016, Table 9, total compensation for
all sales and office workers in goods-producing private industries:
https://www.bls.gov/ncs/). Therefore, the estimated annual cost to
industry associated with the labeling requirements is $3,286 ($33.53
per hour x 98 hours). No operating, maintenance, or capital costs are
associated with the collection.
Section 9.1 of ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\ requires instructions to be
supplied with the product. Under the OMB's regulations (5 CFR
1320.3(b)(2)), the time, effort, and financial resources necessary to
comply with a collection of information that would be incurred by
persons in the ``normal course of their activities'' are excluded from
a burden estimate, where an agency demonstrates that the disclosure
activities required to comply are ``usual and customary.'' We are
unaware of booster seats that generally require use instructions but
lack such instructions. Therefore, we tentatively estimate that no
burden hours are associated with section 9.1 of ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\,
because any burden associated with supplying instructions with booster
seats would be ``usual and customary'' and not within the definition of
``burden'' under the OMB's regulations.
Based on this analysis, the proposed standard for booster seats
would impose a burden to industry of 98 hours at a cost of $3,286
annually.
In compliance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3507(d)), we have submitted the information collection requirements of
this rule to the OMB for review. Interested persons are requested to
submit comments regarding information collection by June 19, 2017, to
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, OMB (see the
ADDRESSES section at the beginning of this notice).
Pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A), we invite comments on:
[ssquf] Whether the collection of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the CPSC's functions, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
[ssquf] the accuracy of the CPSC's estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information, including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
[ssquf] ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected;
[ssquf] ways to reduce the burden of the collection of information
on respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques,
when appropriate, and other forms of information technology; and
[ssquf] the estimated burden hours associated with label
modification, including any alternative estimates.
XIII. Preemption
Section 26(a) of the CPSA, 15 U.S.C. 2075(a), provides that when a
consumer product safety standard is in effect and applies to a product,
no state or political subdivision of a state may either establish or
continue in effect a standard or regulation that prescribes
requirements for the performance, composition, contents, design,
finish, construction, packaging, or labeling of such product dealing
with the same risk of injury unless the state requirement is identical
to the federal standard. Section 26(c) of the CPSA also provides that
states or political subdivisions of states may apply to the Commission
for an exemption from this preemption under certain circumstances.
Section 104(b) of the CPSIA refers to the rules to be issued under that
section as ``consumer product safety rules.'' Therefore, the preemption
provision of section 26(a) of the CPSA would apply to a rule issued
under section 104.
XIV. Request for Comments
This NPR begins a rulemaking proceeding under section 104(b) of the
CPSIA to issue a consumer product safety standard for booster seats,
and to amend part 1112 to add booster seats to the list of children's
product safety rules for which the CPSC has issued an NOR. We invite
all interested persons to submit comments on any aspect of this
proposal. In addition to requests for specific comments elsewhere in
this NPR, the Commission requests comments on the differences between
home-use and food-service booster seats and the ability of each type of
booster seat to meet the requirements in the proposed booster seat
standard, the proposed effective date, and the costs of compliance
with, and testing to, the proposed booster seats standard. During the
comment period, ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Booster Seats, is available as a read-only document
at: https://www.astm.org/cpsc.htm.
Comments should be submitted in accordance with the instructions in
the ADDRESSES section at the beginning of this notice.
List of Subjects
16 CFR Part 1112
Administrative practice and procedure, Audit, Consumer protection,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Third party conformity
assessment body.
16 CFR Part 1237
Consumer protection, Imports, Incorporation by reference, Infants
and children, Labeling, Law enforcement, and Toys.
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Commission proposes
to amend Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 1112--REQUIREMENTS PERTAINING TO THIRD PARTY CONFORMITY
ASSESSMENT BODIES
0
1. The authority citation for part 1112 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2063; Pub. L. 110-314, section 3, 122
Stat. 3016, 3017 (2008).
0
2. Amend Sec. 1112.15 by adding paragraph (b)(47) to read as follows:
Sec. 1112.15 When can a third party conformity assessment body apply
for CPSC acceptance for a particular CPSC rule or test method?
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(47) 16 CFR part 1237, Safety Standard for Booster Seats.
* * * * *
0
3. Add part 1237 to read as follows:
PART 1237--SAFETY STANDARD FOR BOOSTER SEATS
Sec.
1237.1 Scope.
1237.2 Requirements for booster seats.
Authority: Sec. 104, Pub. L. 110-314, 122 Stat. 3016 (August
14, 2008); Sec. 3, Pub. L. 112-28, 125 Stat. 273 (August 12, 2011).
Sec. 1237.1 Scope.
This part establishes a consumer product safety standard booster
seats.
Sec. 1237.2 Requirements for booster seats.
Each booster seat must comply with all applicable provisions of
ASTM F2640-17[egr]\1\, Standard Consumer Safety Specification for
Booster Seats
[[Page 22934]]
(approved on March 1, 2017). The Director of the Federal Register
approves this incorporation by reference in accordance with 5 U.S.C.
552(a) and 1 CFR part 51. You may obtain a copy from ASTM
International, 100 Bar Harbor Drive, P.O. Box 0700, West Conshohocken,
PA 19428; https://www.astm.org/cpsc.htm. You may inspect a copy at the
Office of the Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, Room
820, 4330 East West Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814, telephone 301-504-
7923, or at the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA).
For information on the availability of this material at NARA, call 202-
741-6030, or go to: https://www.archives.gov/federal_register/code_of_federalregulations/ibr_locations.html.
Dated: May 15, 2017.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission.
[FR Doc. 2017-10044 Filed 5-18-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355-01-P