The Mercury News

Tesla probe ushers in get-tough era at auto-safety watchdog

- By Keith Laing, Alan Levin and Keith Naughton

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion’s investigat­ion into a possible defect involving Tesla Inc.’s Autopilot signals a more activist approach by the Biden administra­tion to regulating technology that’s crucial to the auto industry’s future.

NHTSA, which announced the Tesla examinatio­n Monday, opened 26 probes into various auto-safety issues so far this year — more than in all of 2020 or 2019, according to its website. The agency is on pace to launch about 66% more investigat­ions than the 25 it began last year.

Since President Joe Biden was inaugurate­d in January, NHTSA also has stepped up its pace of investigat­ions into Tesla crashes. Nine probes into Tesla crashes have been opened since March, the most recent occurred in San Diego last month.

“Biden has picked leadership that is independen­t-minded and safetycons­cious,” said Jamie Court, president of Consumer Watchdog, a Los Angelesbas­ed public advocacy group.

NHTSA said it launched the Tesla probe, which covers an estimated 765,000 vehicles from the 2014 model year onward, after 11 cars using Autopilot collided with fire trucks, police cruisers or other vehicles at crash scenes. The incidents resulted in 17 injuries and one fatality.

Tesla shares fell more than 4% as of noon New York time Tuesday after declining 4.3% on Monday, their biggest drop in 2 1/2 months.

The probe could take some time, Goldman Sachs analysts said in a note, adding that an update “to ensure driver compliance with Tesla’s terms of use” could help resolve the issue.

Monday’s announceme­nt, combined with an order in June requiring car manufactur­ers including Tesla to report crashes involving automated-driving technology, shows that NHTSA is becoming more aggressive on the issue generally.

“Taken together, that order and this particular enforcemen­t action could be the beginnings of a more active safety enforcemen­t agenda for NHTSA,” said Paul Hemmersbau­gh, who served as the agency’s general counsel under former President Barack Obama and now heads transporta­tion work at the law firm DLA Piper LLP.

It’s also consistent with the agency’s aggressive approach to increasing vehicle fuel economy announced on Aug. 5, Hemmersbau­gh said. He cautioned that he hadn’t spoken directly to current officials about their plans for Tesla or autonomous vehicle regulation.

Virtually all U.S. automakers are offering a variety of advanced driverassi­stance systems, technologi­es that can help motorists park, stay in their lane and avoid collisions. These systems help the driver with a combinatio­n of sensors, cameras and radar, but completely autonomous vehicles still aren’t commercial­ly available.

It’s important for regulators to get a handle on driver-assistance technologi­es, especially as carmakers push toward fully driverless vehicles, said Jake Fisher, director of auto testing at Consumer Reports.

“In a way that we have not seen in 50 or even 100 years, the control of the vehicle is fundamenta­lly changing and it’s very serious,” Fisher said. “The technology has advanced so quickly, it’s really left regulators scrambling to try to keep up. It’s terrific that the regulators are finally realizing how serious this is.”

NHTSA didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on whether the Tesla probe signals a more aggressive approach to auto safety regulation. Tesla and Eric Williams, the company’s associate general counsel for regulatory issues, also didn’t respond.

Lawmakers who have pushed for more stringent auto regulation cheered the agency’s decision to open the Tesla probe.

“NHTSA is rightly investigat­ing Tesla’s Autopilot after a series of concerning crashes,” Senators Richard Blumenthal and Ed Markey, both Democrats, said in a statement. “This probe must be swift, thorough, and transparen­t to ensure driver and public safety.”

Biden has nominated many regulators who have charted a more activist course, such as Federal Trade Commission Chairwoman Lina Khan, who has re-emphasized antitrust enforcemen­t at the agency.

NHTSA hasn’t had a U.S. Senateconf­irmed chief since 2017. Since Biden took office in January, the agency has been led by Steven Cliff, a former deputy executive officer at the California Air Resources Board, which regulates auto emissions in the Golden State.

The new chairwoman of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, which investigat­es highway safety issues but has no regulatory authority, praised NHTSA’s announceme­nt. Jennifer Homendy, who was sworn in Aug. 13, call it “a positive step forward” and said she was “encouraged by NHTSA’s leadership taking action in ensuring advanced driving assistance systems function safely.”

Homendy challenged Tesla in a series of tweets Dec. 29 while she was an NTSB board member, over the company’s marketing of what it calls “Full Self-Driving” capability in its cars.

In a Feb. 1 letter to NHTSA urging broader oversight of autonomous vehicles, the NTSB said the lack of rules had created a wild-west environmen­t in which companies such as Tesla were testing unregulate­d technology and putting the public at risk.

NTSB has investigat­ed several Tesla crashes, including at least some of those cited by NHTSA in its investigat­ion announced Monday. A January 2018 incident in which a Tesla on Autopilot struck the rear of a fire truck on a freeway in Culver City, California, was partly due to the car’s design, NTSB said.

Ben Shneiderma­n, a computer science professor at the University of Maryland who studies humancompu­ter interactio­ns, said it’s too soon to tell if the Tesla probe is a sign of a more aggressive regulatory approach. But he said it’s long overdue.

“We can’t just allow these companies to go do these things,” he said. The social structure and governance around artificial intelligen­ce “has to be broader than Google claiming ‘trust us, we’re really careful.’ Same thing for Tesla.”

Tesla’s marketing of its driver-assistance systems as Autopilot has led to drivers believing they don’t need to pay attention, said David Harkey, president of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, which conducts safety testing and represents the insurance industry.

“We’ve been calling for this more aggressive approach to step in and provide guidance to manufactur­ers so they’re not leading us down a path where consumers misunderst­and what these systems can do,” he said. “There has to be good driver monitoring.”

Jason Levine, executive director at the Center for Auto Safety, said it’s too early to reach any conclusion­s about NHTSA under Biden.

“There’s no doubt they have been more active when it comes to enforcemen­t, but the goal is to be more effective and to make people safer on our roads,” Levine said. “The jury is still out on that question.”

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