An Albuquerque teenager is doing
her part to put an end to the spate of children being left in sweltering
hot cars. Alissa Chavez, a high school senior, has a patent for a
device she calls “The Hot Seat,” a pad that is placed inside a car seat
or booster seat that works with a driver’s keychain or car alarm and an
app on their phone.
If a child is left inside the car and the
temperature rises, alarms activate. “It’s loud enough to grab people’s
attention around the vehicle, as well as remind the parent on their key
fob or their cell phone,” Chavez told NBC affiliate KOB.com after
receiving recognition from the mayor of Albuquerque for her gadget.
Chavez said she came up with the idea for her eighth grade science fair,
and is now raising money for a prototype.
At least 18 children have died
after being left in hot cars this year, with an average of 30 to 50 kids
dying in hot cars each year, according to activist group
KidsAndCars.org. Chavez’s invention is not the only one of its kind: a
North Carolina father recently debuted a new app called “Precious
Cargo,” which sends an alert to parents after the car engine stops.
Sources: NBC
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