Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Lawmakers try to keep up with self-driving cars

Pa. officials crafting state’s 1st specific laws

- By Laura Legere

HARRISBURG — Laws will never be nimble enough to keep up with the rapid innovation­s of the automated vehicle industry, said representa­tives of car and technology companies at a hearing Tuesday during which they urged legislator­s to be flexible as they craft the state’s first laws specific to selfdrivin­g cars.

Legislator­s are grappling with how to foster a high-tech industry that has found a fertile home in Pennsylvan­ia while filling a gap in the law largely silent on the issue beyond a basic requiremen­t that every car have a human in the driver’s seat.

Police currently face an “enforcemen­t void” because no current laws “enable, prohibit or regulate the testing of [highly automated vehicles] on commonweal­th highways,” said Maj. Edward Hoke, director of the patrol bureau for the Pennsylvan­ia State Police. Legislatio­n is necessary to close that gap, he said.

The hearing’s primary focus was Senate Bill 427, which would create standards for testing autonomous vehicles on public roads, but does not address next steps, like deployment and broader public adoption.

The current draft of the bill touches on features unique to the dawning era of driving without human hands on the wheel: establishi­ng tiers of control over cars, whether in person or remotely; defining who counts as a “driver” for liability reasons; requiring officials to be notified of cybersecur­ity breaches; and limiting which roadways can be used to test “platooning” — a wirelessly connected caravan of self-driving trucks behind a human driver.

Eleven states and Washington, D.C., have passed some type of legislatio­n related to self-driving vehicles.

The Senate bill incorporat­es ideas from those other state laws, as well as recommenda­tions from a Pennsylvan­ia Department of Transporta­tion task force report published in December, federal policies, and organizati­ons like Carnegie Mellon University and Uber that are testing self-driving vehicles in Pittsburgh.

“This technology is changing not on a yearly basis, and frankly not even on a weekly basis, but in some cases on a daily basis,” said PennDOT deputy secretary Kurt Myers, who helped lead the state task force. “We believe very strongly that policy” — not the drawn-out process of regulation — “is the appropriat­e approach here, and the Senate bill obviously

addresses that,” he said.

The bill gives PennDOT broad authority to issue and revise policies for self-driving cars and establishe­s a safety advisory committee that can react with new policy recommenda­tions as the technology is developed.

But industry representa­tives said the bill creates onerous standards that threaten to erase the openness that brought them to the state. Their disagreeme­nts with the bill range from details they find confusing in the draft to whether lawmaking is even the proper path to achieving the safety protection­s legislator­s are seeking.

One promise of automated vehicles is that they are expected to dramatical­ly reduce the 94 percent of vehicle crashes that are due to human error.

“The safety focus in this area should be on the 1,200 roadway deaths that the commonweal­th had in 2015, or the 1,195 they had the year before or the 1,210 the year before that,” said Wayne Weikel, senior director of state government affairs for the Alliance of Automobile Manufactur­ers.

“The goal of policymake­rs should be to help automakers bring this technology to market as quickly as possible.”

The bill’s prime sponsor, Sen. Randy Vulakovich, R-Shaler, signaled he is open to ideas for improving the draft before it gets to the point of a vote.

“We’ll work together on this issue,” he said in the middle of the hearing. “It’s new.”

 ?? Darrell Sapp/Post-Gazette ?? An Uber self-driving Ford Fusion at a stop light on Beechwood Boulevard.
Darrell Sapp/Post-Gazette An Uber self-driving Ford Fusion at a stop light on Beechwood Boulevard.

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