My friend posted a picture of her son in the car ready for their road trip to another state, hundreds of miles away. He was sitting in a seat with a seat belt. He had a blanket in his lap, so I couldn't tell if he had one of those little boosters under him. He turned three earlier this year. He's tall for his age, but he's still only three. I posted that wow, I couldn't believe he was big enough for just a booster already, he's growing so fast! DH says it was mean. I feel I need to be more direct and intend to give her a pamphlet from our Dr (we use the same practice) that outlines the laws regarding seats in our state. I wouldn't say much typically, but I found out that the last time DD1 road with her, no seats were used. C is 6, but only 40 in and still legally needs a booster.

C 7.16.2008 | L 11.12.2010 | A 3.18.2013
Re: Was I Mean?
C 7.16.2008 | L 11.12.2010 | A 3.18.2013
Has she commented back?
But I don't understand how any rational person can think it's okay to have a 3 year old in just a booster or nothing. I mean, you'd have to be willfully ignorant about it.
I don't think it's *willfully* ignorant necessarily. It's just ignorant-- uninformed, not understanding. Some people just don't know the laws or they don't understand the risks, or both. I have found most of the information I know about car seats by actively looking online. And I still learn new things I wasn't aware of. Most people are not that proactive and don't see any need to be. Ideally there would be better publicly available info (PSAs, mailings, idk) or pediatricians would make more of a point to inform their patients. As an individual you can inform people you see doing risky things or maybe write to government or professional groups (American Academy of Pediatrics for example) to encourage them to spread the word better. Or maybe stores could post information at the point of sale like with alcohol and cigarettes. Sorry, these are just some things I was thinking about.
My husband is a doctor, he works with people who all have at least some post-secondary education. He mentioned our 12 month old was in a rear facing seat and not a single one of his office staff was aware that he should be or that it was the law .
C 7.16.2008 | L 11.12.2010 | A 3.18.2013
@zbeesma86 She hasn't responded.
I do get just not knowing years ago. The "rule" was 12 mo and 20 pounds when C was a baby. I turned her right at 12 mo because I didn't know any better. Now the Dr reminds us at every visit of the safest seating for all three kids. We see the same Dr.
I think I'll hand her the pamphlet from the Dr office and say "hey, Dr. X gave me this and I thought I'd share. I'd hate to see you get a ticket or the kids get hurt." and just drop it. It's up to her then.
I've also learned my lesson. My kid takes her seat with anyone from now on.
C 7.16.2008 | L 11.12.2010 | A 3.18.2013
The one he was speaking directly to has a 10 year old. Idk about the others.
I just think that this is a massive public health issue and maybe getting people the information should be made a priority. Parents and all the friends, relatives and others who drive kids shouldn't have to even ask. (Edit: I mean they shouldn't have to ask in that they should be told over and over like all the stuff about wearing a seatbelt or you will get a ticket. That works better than wear a seatbelt or you will die.) It wouldn't solve everything, but having a poster hanging in every doctor's office, school or store that sells children's products would be a start. There shouldn't be an excuse not to know, but right now there seems to be. Maybe we can and should do something about that.
You're right on both points. I'm just going to give her the pamphlet instead of posting like that again. I'm afraid it won't change anything, but I feel bad not saying anything at all. Hopefully something from the Dr will have some impact. At least she could do it to avoid tickets if she doesn't see the danger? Do people actually get tickets for improper restraints? I've never personally heard of anyone getting ticketed.
C 7.16.2008 | L 11.12.2010 | A 3.18.2013
You're right on both points. I'm just going to give her the pamphlet instead of posting like that again. I'm afraid it won't change anything, but I feel bad not saying anything at all. Hopefully something from the Dr will have some impact. At least she could do it to avoid tickets if she doesn't see the danger? Do people actually get tickets for improper restraints? I've never personally heard of anyone getting ticketed.
Yes you can but I'm not sure what the fine is.