Owner's Manual - Page 313

For PASSPORT 2001.

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It's well-known that all children are safer
when they are properly restrained in the back
seat, not the front seat.
To avoid the possiblity of an infant being seriously injured or killed by
an inflating passenger airbag, a rear-facing child seat should always
be secured in the back seat, never in the front.
We also know that passenger airbags pose
additional risks to infants and children who
ride in the front. As a result, we urge you to
follow these rules:
Never put a rear-facing child seat in the
front seat of a car with a passenger airbag. If
the airbag inflates, it can hit the back of the
child seat with enough force to kill or severely
injure an infant.
Placing a forward-facing child seat in the
front seat of a car with a passenger airbag
can also be hazardous. If the vehicle seat is
too far forward, or the child's head is thrown
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