7-year-old boy died recently after becoming entrapped between a moving elevator’s inner accordion door and outer door at a rental home
FRIDAY, July 23, 2021 (HealthDay News) — The death of another child between a residential elevator’s inner and outer doors has prompted the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) to call on Airbnb and other vacation rental platforms to alert customers to the danger.
The request comes less than two weeks after a 7-year-old boy died after becoming entrapped between a moving elevator’s inner accordion door and outer door at a beach rental home in the Outer Banks in North Carolina, CBS News reported.
The CPSC also asked vacation rental platforms such as AirBnB, Vrbo, and TripAdvisor to require hosts to disable residential elevators or provide inspection certification that there are no hazardous gaps.
“Residential elevators can pose a deadly but unforeseen hazard to children, particularly children who are encountering them in vacation or rental homes,” Robert Adler, acting chairman of the agency, said in a written appeal, CBS News reported. “Children, some as young as 2 and as old as 12, have been crushed to death in this gap, suffering multiple skull fractures, fractured vertebrae and traumatic asphyxia. Other children have suffered horrific and lifelong injuries.”
Airbnb and TripAdvisor said they were reviewing the CPSC recommendations, while Vrbo has committed to at least some of them, CBS News reported. “We will share important elevator safety information with property owners who have residential elevators,” Vrbo said in a statement. “This will include a recommendation to disable elevators until they can be properly inspected and common safety issues addressed. Vrbo has also posted elevator safety information to our Trust & Safety page, accessible by all guests. Our terms require property owners to abide by all safety-related laws and to keep equipment safe and in working order with regular maintenance.”
After decades of lawsuits, the nation’s elevator safety code shrank the door gap in 2017, but the new rules only applied to new installations, leaving hundreds of thousands of existing elevators posing a deadly hazard for small children. Fixes can include space guards or electronic monitoring devices that deactivate the elevators after a child is detected in the gap, according to the CPSC.
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