Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Council forming to study purview

Issue is new tech, agency oversight

- RENZO DOWNEY AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN

AUSTIN, Texas — The federal government is creating a council to address oversight gaps created by emerging technologi­es, such as autonomous vehicles, that fall within the jurisdicti­on of multiple Department of Transporta­tion agencies.

Speaking Tuesday before the start of the department’s five interactiv­e sessions at South by Southwest, U.S. Secretary of Transporta­tion Elaine Chao said the NonTraditi­onal and Emerging Transporta­tion Technology Council will meet for the first time later this week and involve industry innovators. Possible topics for the council include tunneling, hyperloops and selfdrivin­g cars.

Eleven distinct administra­tions oversee different areas of the Transporta­tion Department, including highways, air travel, and pipelines and hazardous materials. Emerging technologi­es often fall under the jurisdicti­ons of several agencies.

“We basically have a 20th-century organizati­onal structure for 21st-century technologi­es. So when new technologi­es don’t fit

neatly into the existing modal structure, the results can slow down and even stifle transporta­tion infrastruc­ture,” Chao said.

The council will centralize the discussion of emerging transporta­tion technologi­es, streamlini­ng the review processes. Members at the council’s first meeting will create the board’s structure and begin to address tunneling technology, officials said.

Different specificat­ions and safety standards are necessary, depending on the type of tunnel. Highway

tunnels would require higher ventilatio­n standards, and high-speed rail tunnels would require air pressuriza­tion, currently covered by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion.

“We are talking nothing less than transformi­ng the way in which we move, live and work. We want to do so in a responsibl­e way,” Chao said.

Being responsibl­e includes providing necessary oversight while allowing private industry to innovate without government interferen­ce, Chao said. “The role of the government is to address the legitimate public concerns about safety, security

and privacy without hampering innovation, and that’s the tough part.”

The Transporta­tion Department released updated plans on the future of transporta­tion in October, expanding the plan to include all automated vehicles.

Automated vehicles would reduce congestion and increase safety on the road, but a majority of the public is anxious about getting in a driverless car, Chao said Tuesday. “I challenge … people at Silicon Valley to share with us their confidence and their comfort with the new technology, because consumer acceptance will be a constraint to growth.”

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