The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bill advances to smooth way for self-driving cars

It would let makers seek safety standard exemptions.

- By Joan Lowy

WASHINGTON — Legislatio­n that could help usher in a new era of self-driving cars advanced in Congress on Wednesday after the bill’s sponsors agreed to compromise­s to address some concerns of safety advocates.

The Senate Commerce, Science and Transporta­tion Committee approved the bill by a voice vote, a sign of broad, bipartisan support. It would allow automakers to apply for exemptions to current federal auto safety standards in order to sell up to 15,000 self-driving cars and light trucks per manufactur­er in the first year after passage. Up to 40,000 per manufactur­er could be sold in the second year, and 80,000 each year thereafter.

Action by the full Senate is still needed, and difference­s with a similar bill passed by the House would have to be worked out before the measure could become law.

The bill initially would have allowed manufactur­ers to sell up to 100,000 self-driving vehicles a year, but that number was reduced in last-minute negotiatio­ns. In another change, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion would evaluate the safety performanc­e of the vehicles before increasing the number of vehicles manufactur­ers can sell.

Supporters of the bill, which was sought by the auto industry, say it would be a boon to safety since an estimated 94 percent of crashes involve human error. They say it would also help the disabled.

The bill “is primarily about saving lives,” but it will also increase U.S. internatio­nal competitiv­eness and create jobs, said Sen. Gary Peters, D-Michigan.

Safety advocates said the bill has been significan­tly improved, but they still have serious concerns. Joan Claybrook, a NHTSA administra­tor under President Jimmy Carter, said the bill is one of the “biggest assaults” ever on the landmark 1966 law that empowered the federal government to set auto safety standards because it permits such large and unpreceden­ted number of exemptions to those standards.

Automakers are “making guinea pigs out of their car buyers,” she said.

Under the bill, the NHTSA would have 180 days after an applicatio­n in which to grant or deny the exemption. Manufactur­ers must show that they can provide an equivalent of safety. Safety advocates say six months isn’t enough time for an agency that is understaff­ed and lacks expertise in self-driving technology to effectivel­y make such determinat­ions.

The bill is broad enough to permit exemptions to standards that protect occupants in a crash, like air bags, safety advocates said.

There are no federal safety standards for many of the technologi­es at the heart of self-driving cars, like software and sensors, and there is no sign that the Trump administra­tion would create such standards. Administra­tion and auto and technology industry officials suggest that new regulation­s would be unable to keep up with rapid developmen­ts in technology and would slow deployment of self-driving cars.

The bill pre-empts state and local government­s from enacting their own safety standards in the absence of federal standards. Industry officials have complained that being forced to comply with a patchwork of state safety laws would be unmanageab­le. But another compromise made to the bill allows states to continue their traditiona­l roles of licensing vehicles and regulating auto insurance even if their actions affect the design of vehicles. Wrongful death lawsuits against manufactur­ers would also be allowed in states that permit them.

Automakers have experience­d the largest number of recalls for safety defects in the industry’s history in recent years. General Motors, for example, was found to have buried evidence of an ignition switch defect that ultimately caused the recall of 2.6 million small cars worldwide. The switches played a role in at least 124 deaths and 275 injuries.

Also, about 70 million defective Takata air bag inflators are being recalled in the U.S. The inflators are responsibl­e for up to 19 deaths worldwide and more than 180 injures.

 ?? TONY AVELAR / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2015 ?? Google, a pioneer in research on self-driving cars such as this Lexus, could get an easier path to putting such cars on the road under a bill meant to clear away obstacles to them. Safety advocates said it would give carmakers free rein to put unsafe...
TONY AVELAR / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2015 Google, a pioneer in research on self-driving cars such as this Lexus, could get an easier path to putting such cars on the road under a bill meant to clear away obstacles to them. Safety advocates said it would give carmakers free rein to put unsafe...

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