shops had sold out
AutoExpress contacted the major retailers - Argos, Halfords, Mothercare, ToysRUs and Woolworth. They found that Argos was out of cushions and boosets nationwide.. but that the other retailers were only out of stock on their cheaper lines: they had the more expensive ones for sale.
Quiote naturally - parents will want to buy the budget models according to how much they can afford to pay.. and even the cheap seats are an item for some - especially if they have not budgeted and have just forked out hundreds for school uniforms in September as well. So - yes I can understand the dilemma for some of these parents from a cost point of view.
However
Sheila Rainger of the RAC in the piece wrote:
Forking out an extra £30 for one of the more expensive seats is a small price to pay How much is a child's life worth?
Well... if your child is an only child.. but most have to buy two seats and the extra cost - especially if the children are borderline height...I can well understand why they will want to wait until the shop gets more of the cheeaper booster back into stock.
The other problem for some.. AutoExrpess measured some of thise kids.. and they were 132 -134 cm.. just one centimetre short. Kids grow so fast and the parents when questioned said they probably would not bother
as they'd soon outgrow them.
The survey found that many parents believed motorwasy were the most dangerous places to drive and would strap thier kids in seats for these drives .. "but not bother in town"
Sheila Rainger of the RAC wrote:
Many believe motorways are the most dangerous places to drive..
but actually they are the safest 
There is much more danger of having an accident in a built up area or close to your home It is imperative that a child under 135 cm uses a booster seat at all times - even for short journeys
Yep.. we said that on here.. familiarity - people don't always concentrate and built up areas... volume of traffic and other hazards lead to prangs.
Worrying though
AutoExpress wrote:
One Luton man who did not want to be named had squeezed four children - eldest aged 9 - and four adults

into his Rover 600. He defiantly siad "They have survived so far without booser seats and I am not bothering to get one"

Had he been in this area.. I think we would have had some words over overloading a vehicle
Oh - in the survey - some had been using these seats long before the rules came into force... like the Mad Doc and those Swiss.. who spent time getting their rogues back into seats beforehand.
But how do you enforce this? AutoExpress spotted police in Luton stiopping cars carrying children not wearing seat belts.
[quote=PC Michelle M of Luton"]
We are concentrating only on those not wearing belts [i] because it's so hard to spot if the kid's are using a booster. Even if the car is crawling in a jam.. you cannot tell. It is also hard to spot a borderline case height wise as well.