Get the Best Winter Activities
Resources: —New Yorkers for Parks: www.ny4p.org —NYPIRG: www.nypirg.org —USPIRG: www.uspirg.org —Consumer Federation of America: www.consumerfed.org —National Program for Playground Safety: www.uni.edu/playground —Consumer Product Safety Commission: www.cpsc.gov
Playground Safety Survey
NYPIRG’s June 2002 Playground Safety Survey assessed conditions at 44 New York City playgrounds, including sites in each of the five boroughs. Each location was evaluated on the following eight potential hazards: (1) Unsafe Surface – any sort of hard surface like concrete, asphalt, grass or soil. Also, loose fill surface such as sand, wood chips or shredded tires is unsafe if it is less than 9 inches in depth; (2) Inadequate Fall Zones –unsafe surfacing or equipment, or other obstacles that children might fall on that (a) extend six feet from the perimeter of the equipment, or (b) nine feet between two pieces of adjacent equipment that exceed 30 inches in height, or (c) six feet from the perimeter of the support structure of swings on each side as well as twice the height of the pivot point in the front and back of the swings; (3) Toxic Playground Risk – (a) peeling, cracking or chipping paint on any equipment surface (could be lead paint), or (b) playground equipment made of wood other than redwood or cedar wood (could be pressure treated); (4) Unsafe Equipment Height – (a) climbers or (b) slides that exceed six feet in height, or (c) swings with the height of the pivot point/swing beam higher than eight feet; (5) Unsafe Swings – (a) swing seats made of hard, rigid material, or (b) swing structures attached to other play equipment, or (c) more than two swing seats per bay or section, or (d) infant/tot swings suspended in the same section as regular seats, or (e) swing seats closer than 24 inches, or (f) swing seats closer than 30 inches to any adjacent support structure; (6) Head Entrapment – any opening with an interior dimension between 3.5 and 9 inches; (7) Clothing Entanglement – open “S’ hooks, gaps, protrusions or equipment components that may act as catch points; (8) Dangerous Equipment — (a) chain or cable walks, or (b) multiple occupancy swings/gliders, or (c) animal swings, or (d) swinging exercise rings/trapeze bars, or (e) rope swings, or (f) individual climbing ropes. Playgrounds received one point for each type of hazard they contained, with a scale of 0-8. Some playgrounds contained more than one type of the same hazard. That is not reflected in their “hazard score”. According to the report, just two of the 44 surveyed playgrounds contained none of these eight hazards: Mullaly Parks Three and Four, both located in the Bronx. NYPIRG found 12 of the 44 surveyed playgrounds contained five or more of the eight potential hazards. NYPIRG’s complete report can be viewed at: http://www.nypirg.org/consumer/playground/playground444.html.