Seat belts became mandatory in the United States starting in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The first federal regulation requiring seat belts in new cars was implemented in 1968, and by 1975, several states had enacted laws requiring their use. However, it wasn't until the 1980s and 1990s that many states began to adopt primary seat belt laws, allowing law enforcement to stop drivers solely for not wearing a seat belt. Today, seat belt laws vary by state, but their use is widely promoted for safety.
1952
1987
1984
Seat belts became mandatory for front-seat passengers in Tennessee in 1986. The law was later expanded to require seat belts for all passengers in a vehicle. Compliance with this law has been aimed at improving road safety and reducing fatalities in accidents.
the year that Henry ford sent out cars to Ontario, Canadaotherwise, 1938
in 1984 i think
1976
Seat belts became mandatory in the U.S. starting in the late 1960s. The first state to enact a mandatory seat belt law was New York in 1984. Over the following decades, other states adopted similar laws, and by the early 2000s, most states had implemented regulations requiring seat belt use for drivers and passengers. The push for these laws was driven by safety studies highlighting the effectiveness of seat belts in reducing injuries and fatalities in car accidents.
In the year 1949 seat belts became an option in cars.
Seat belt was not the result of an accident. It was the idea of a French inventor named Gustave-Désiré Leveau. It was then adopted by car manufacturers, being offered as an option. The seat belt law became a law in Australia in 1970.
1989
The law requiring the use of seat belts in the UK was introduced on January 31, 1983. This mandatory seat belt law applies to both drivers and passengers in the front and rear seats of a vehicle.