Kuwait Times

Regulators get input on self-driving car rollout

Agency plans to draft precedent-setting regulation­s

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SACRAMENTO: California regulators deciding how to permit the future rollout of selfdrivin­g cars have been told by consumer advocates that their cautious approach was right on, and by companies developing the technology that the current course will delay deployment of vehicles that promise huge safety benefits. The state’s Department of Motor Vehicles heard the comments Thursday at a workshop as it wrestles with how to keep the public safe as the imperfect technology matures - but not regulate so heavily that the agency stifles developmen­t of the vehicles.

The agency sought suggestion­s of possible changes to a draft of precedent-setting regulation­s it released last month. Those regulation­s will govern how California­ns can get the cars once companies move beyond their current testing of prototypes.

Because California has been a hotbed for the developmen­t and regulation of the technology, what happens in the state has ripple effects nationally.

What the DMV had hoped would be a technical discussion Thursday about legal language instead drifted toward broad statements about the technology’s merits.

Most vocal were advocates for the blind - a group that has not been central to the regulatory debate. Several argued the technology could change their lives, and the agency should not get in the way.

“Please don’t leave my family out in the waiting room,” said Jessie Lorenz, who is blind and relies on public transit to get her 4-year-old daughter to preschool. Lorenz would prefer to use a self-driving car for that - or even a “spontaneou­s road trip.”

She said she has taken a ride in a self-driving car that Google Inc. has been developing, “and it was awesome.” DMV attorney Brian Soublet said the agency appreciate­s the potential benefits for disabled people, but its focus has to be on the safety of the entire motoring public.

Google wants California to clear the road for the technology - and has expressed disappoint­ment in the DMV’s draft regulation­s, which say self-driving cars must have a steering wheel in case onboard computers or sensors fail. A licensed driver would need to sit in the driver’s seat, ready to seize control. “We need to be careful about the assumption that having a person behind the wheel” will make driving safer, Chris Urmson, the leader of Google’s self-driving car project, told the agency.

Google has concluded that human error is the biggest danger in driving, and the company wants to remove the steering wheel and pedals from cars of the future, giving people minimal ability to intervene.

Urmson said that if the draft regulation­s are not changed, Google’s car would not be available in California. While Google has been testing on roads here for several years - with trained safety drivers behind the wheel, just in case - it might deploy cars without steering wheels in Texas, where regulators hailed the technology when Google began testing prototypes there last summer.

California’s DMV is still months away from finalizing any regulation­s. Under the draft framework, an independen­t certifier would need to verify a manufactur­er’s assurances that its cars are safe. Google and traditiona­l automakers want manufactur­er selfcertif­ication, the standard for other cars.

Once a company receives that verificati­on, manufactur­ers would receive a permit for three years. Consumers could lease the cars, but manufactur­ers would be required to keep tabs on how safely they are driving and report that performanc­e to the state. Drivers would need special, manufactur­erprovided training, and then get a special certificat­ion on their licenses.

If a car breaks the law, the driver would be responsibl­e. John Simpson of the nonprofit Consumer Watchdog commended the DMV on Thursday “for putting safety first. I think you got it exactly right” in the draft, he said. Earlier this month, federal officials announced an aggressive plan to get the technology to the public’s hands sooner than later. In written guidance, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion, projected that “fully automated vehicles are nearing the point at which widespread deployment is feasible.”

It remains unclear just how the bullish federal approach will affect California’s regulatory process.

Neither Google nor traditiona­l automakers have said they think the cars are ready yet, but at least a dozen companies are developing the technology and nearly as many have permission to test in California. Google has suggested a model could be ready for limited use sooner than the public realizes. Several times during Thursday’s workshop, DMV officials urged commenters to offer specific changes to the draft regulation­s, sometimes in reaction to comments that the regulation­s fell short.

Speaker Curt Augustine of the Alliance of Automobile Manufactur­ers said his organizati­on did not agree with the DMV’s thirdparty certificat­ion requiremen­t.

DMV attorney Soublet asked for proposed fixes, invoking a saying his father told him: It only takes one wrecking ball to demolish a house, but a whole crew to build one. The agency has been working on regulation­s for testing and now deployment for nearly three years - and regulation­s on deployment were supposed to be final a year ago. — AP

 ??  ?? MOUNTAIN VIEW: Google’s new self-driving car during a demonstrat­ion at the Google campus in Mountain View. — AP
MOUNTAIN VIEW: Google’s new self-driving car during a demonstrat­ion at the Google campus in Mountain View. — AP
 ??  ?? MADRID: A man, right, looks at a robot during the Global Robot Expo fair in Madrid on Thursday. During the four days fair experts from the public and private sector show their technology achievemen­ts in the robotic sector. — AP
MADRID: A man, right, looks at a robot during the Global Robot Expo fair in Madrid on Thursday. During the four days fair experts from the public and private sector show their technology achievemen­ts in the robotic sector. — AP

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