Stove Tip-Overs – How Safe Is Your Stove?
by Katie Hammer, WTVO
"You would have no idea that by opening an oven door
and placing weight on the edge of the door that the
range would tip," says attorney Dan Sciano. But it does,
if small metal brackets known as anti-tip devices are
not installed.
Sciano says they are rarely installed and several
kids across the country have died as a result. "It's a
latent defect; it's a defect that's hidden," says
Sciano.
The manufacturers provide the device and warn
consumers of the danger, but Sciano says the warning is
too small to read. "If you look down and someone says,
'what does it say?' You can't do it. You would have to
get down on your knees and still I don't think you could
understand it," says Sciano, referring to the small
label that is inside the oven door.
Regardless, he says installers rarely put them in
place. "98% percent of the time they're not installed,
100% of the time with others, 10% percent of the time
installed with other manufacturers."
WTVO performed some random spot checks and found
Sciano's claims to be true.
"I'm surprised, I would even have to think about this
that something isn't already pre-done with the stove to
make sure it doesn't tip," says James Smitley. Before we
stopped by Smitley's home, he had never heard of
anti-tip brackets, and he was shocked when we asked him
to put pressure on his oven door. "See I'm barely
putting any pressure and it's tipping over," says
Smitley.
The same thing happened when we stopped by Lucia
Butera's home, who is a mother of three. "I've never
heard about an anti-tip device for the stove. I would
think that would be so heavy kids couldn't push it
over," says Butera.
Sciano is from out of state but he's in Rockford
working on a case. A child living in the Concord Commons
housing complex was burned after a stove tipped over on
her. It is just one of more than 100 cases involving
stove tip-overs Sciano has been involved with.
"In those moments, the children come into the
kitchen, open the oven door, put weight on the door, and
the pot of boiling oil hits the 2 year old and
catastrophically burns her," says Sciano, describing the
Rockford case.
Sciano has even come up with a design he says would
have prevented these injuries and deaths. "Make the door
yield without a bracket on the back of the range. That
can be done in many ways, add weight to the back of the
range, they're already 140 pounds and take two people to
move them."
But time and time again his argument has been lost
against the manufacturers in court. "'There are not
enough injuries' is what we hear from the lawyer of the
major manufacturer," says the attorney.
Sciano is so passionate about saving the children, he
says he will continue his campaign until he never has to
represent another family that has lost a child.
In a written statement to WTVO from The Association
of Home Appliance Manufacturers, they tell us
"Manufacturers adhere to all safety and stability
requirements set by U.S. Safety Organizations"
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