To Save Lives Homeowners Should Replace Non-Reversing Garage Doors
NEWS from CPSC
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
Office of Information and Public Affairs
Washington, DC 20207
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
October 22, 1990
(301) 504-7908
Release # 90-163
To Save Lives Homeowners Should Replace Non-Reversing Garage Doors
WASHINGTON, DC -- Government safety experts are asking
homeowners to help save children's lives by checking their garage
door openers and, if the doors fail to reverse automatically on
striking an object, to have the garage door opener repaired or
replaced immediately.
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is
issuing this advisory as part of its mission to protect the
public from unreasonable risks of injury and death associated
with consumer products. The CPSC is the Federal agency
responsible for product safety. Some 15,000 products fall within
the Commission's jurisdiction and each year these products are
involved in an estimated 30 million injuries and 22,000 deaths.
According to the CPSC, at least 45 children between the
ages of 2 and 14 died between March, 1982 and June, 1990 when
they were trapped under closing garage doors. In these cases,
garage doors did not reverse automatically when they struck the
children.
CPSC said units manufactured before 1982 do not have the
safety features incorporated into the voluntary standard (ANSI-UL
325-1982). Some old openers are equipped with a device that only
stops the closing door and does not reverse when it strikes an
object. Other pre-1982 openers include a device intended to
cause the closing door to reverse when it strikes an object, but
for reasons mostly related to age, installation and maintenance,
these may not be safe enough to prevent child deaths. The
devices cannot be adjusted or repaired to provide the safety
available in garage door openers manufactured in 1982 or later.
Homeowners who are uncertain about the safety of their
garage door opener can check the unit by placing a two-inch
wooden block in the path of the door. If the door does not
promptly reverse on striking the block, the unit should be
disengaged and a service technician called to see if repairs are
needed. If the opener does not have the reversing feature, the
old garage door should be disconnected and replaced with one
meeting the ANSI-UL voluntary standard.
Additional safeguards are now available to protect children
from danger, CPSC added. On many post-1982 units, service
technicians can install an "electric eye" near floor level to
reverse a closing garage door automatically whenever an object
crosses the path of the door.
In addition to relocating wall switches away from the reach
of young children, CPSC also urged homeowners to keep remote
controllers in the glove compartment of the car. Garage doors
should be checked periodically to make sure that track rollers
and other hardware are functioning properly.
The Commission staff met with manufacturers urging them to
intensify their efforts at informing owners of garage door
operators of the hazards, the need to test the mechanism
periodically, and the need to replace garage door operators
manufactured before 1982. The Commission staff is in the process
of reviewing the industry's response. Further action may be
recommended after the CPSC staff completes its review of the
response from industry.