Safety advocates push feds, automakers to do more to prevent hot car deaths

In a matter of hours, Laura Beck’s life changed forever.

In June, she lost her son and husband in a manner that almost defies understanding.

Her son, Anderson, died of heatstroke after being left in a vehicle, and her husband, Aaron, took his own life in response. Aaron didn’t realize until getting a frantic call from his wife wondering where their son was that he’d left the 18-month-old boy in his vehicle instead of dropping him at day care.

Aaron Beck, left, took his own life last year following the death of his son, Anderson, right, who had been left in a hot car.

The laughing and singing that the Beck family had experienced that morning over breakfast and the precious times they’d shared before, “all of it stopped,” said Beck, who lives in Richmond, Virginia.

“There’s such a stigma behind these types of tragedies. … It does happen, it happens to amazing parents,” she said, describing her husband’s infectious laugh and the wonder they had both shared at creating such a “beautiful, tiny human.”

Beck told her story for the first time publicly this week, struggling with the tears and emotions of profound loss, to call for action by federal regulators to address the tragedy of hot car deaths. More than 1,054 children have died in hot vehicles since 1990, according to the national advocacy group Kidsandcars.org. The group has recorded two deaths involving 2-year-olds left in vehicles already this year, one in Port St. Lucie, Florida, and the other in Atmore, Alabama.

U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Connecticut, who is among those pushing for more action, noted the urgency of the moment as warmer weather returns across the country, with spring turning to summer in the coming weeks.

“Soon, cars will become death traps if kids are left inside them,” he said this week during an event to raise awareness of the dangers of child hot car deaths and to push for action.

The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, passed in 2021, requires the U.S. Department of Transportation to finalize a rule by this November mandating new vehicles be equipped with a system to alert drivers to check rear-designated seats for children when the engine is shut off.