Truemag

  • Newsletters
  • Thought Leadership
  • Mobility
  • Safety
  • Work Trucks
  • Videos
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • Contact Us
  • Media Kit
  • Who We Are

Autonomous Advocates Tell Senate to Create Self-Driving Rules

The Detroit Bureau

Auto companies, technology giants and academics gathered before of Senate committee to talk about the coming wave of autonomous vehicles and what it means, what’s expected and what should be next and they all focused on one point: rules.

The Senate Commerce committee was repeatedly told that while self-driving vehicles aren’t quite ready for primetime, one of the reasons why is that there is no standard set of rules that they’ll be governed by once they are ready to be turned loose.

With no nationwide set of regulations, it’s difficult to develop the vehicles because the conditions are different from state to state.

Chris Urmson, technical leader of Google’s self-driving car project, told the committee that legislators in 23 states have introduced 53 bills regulating autonomous cars in recent years, covering everything from legal liability to testing rules.

“If every state is left to go its own way without a unified approach, operating self-driving cars across state boundaries would be an unworkable situation and one that will significantly hinder safety innovation, interstate commerce, national competitiveness and the eventual deployment of autonomous vehicles,” Urmson said.

Thus far, federal agencies have been supportive of the move toward autonomous vehicles, seeing them as a way to reduce traffic fatalities, which are on the rise after decades of drops.

Mark Rosekind, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration administrator, has repeatedly stated he believes autonomous technology is the simplest and quickest way to improve road safety.

To that end, the Obama Administration has earmarked nearly $4 billion to assist in the acceleration of product and technology development for self-driving vehicles.

While most of the participants, which included General Motors and Delphi, which both have self-driving vehicles in development – Delphi’s vehicle completed a trek from California to New York last year – the technology does have some who want to hit the brakes on autonomous technology.

They point out that issues such as road infrastructure and weather can make a self-driving car utterly useless. The vehicle needs clean and clear visibility in order to use the lane markings to drive down the road as well as to be able to track other vehicles and pedestrians around it.

“I am decidedly less optimistic,” said Mary Louise Cummings, director of Duke University’s Humans and Autonomy Lab and Duke Robotics, told the committee, according to a USA Today story. Self-driving cars are “absolutely not ready for widespread deployment, and certainly not ready for humans to be completely taken out of the driver’s seat.”

Despite her glass-half-empty attitude about the readiness of the technology, she does appear to be supportive of ongoing efforts to perfect the system because they’ll ultimately be better than what, or who, is behind the wheel now.

She says she is among those who “enthusiastically support the research, development, and testing of self – driving cars” because “human limitations and the propensity for distraction are real threats on the road.”

Mar 16, 2016connieshedron
NAFA's 2016 Institute & Expo Touts A Lineup Of Powerful And Thoughtful KeynotesDeep in the Heart of Texas
Recent Posts
  • Why Case Studies Close More Deals Than Product Brochures
  • California Just Became the Best Place to Buy a Brand-New EV
  • AFLA Membership Growth: Mary Saunders on Engagement, Volunteerism, and the Value of Connection
  • The Fleet Manager’s Breaking Point: Why AI Must Do More Than Advise
  • Four More Models Take Home Top Safety Pick+ Awards in Latest IIHS Ratings
  • Ford Can Now Stop Some Vehicles Starting, Even with the Key
  • All New Cars in the EU Now Need to Have a Camera Aimed at the Driver’s Face in the Latest Privacy Nightmare
  • WEX Grows EV Charging Network with Greenlane, Synop, and QuickCharge CPO Integrations
  • Moventum Fleet Management is Here!
  • WEX DriverDash Adds CITGO to Mobile Fuel Payments for Fleets
ASSOCIATION NEWS
AFLA Membership Growth: Mary Saunders on Engagement, Volunteerism, and the Value of Connection
How AFLA Is Positioning Itself for the Future of Fleet Mobility
Last Chance to Save: Register for NAFA’s Maintenance Workshop
‘Raise Your Hand and Get Involved’
NAFA Names 2026 Class of Fellows, Honoring Leaders in Fleet Management
Award Winners Honored at NAFA I&E
2026 NAFA I&E Seeks to Change Perceptions, Invigorate Fleets
TECHNOLOGY
The Fleet Manager’s Breaking Point: Why AI Must Do More Than Advise
All New Cars in the EU Now Need to Have a Camera Aimed at the Driver’s Face in the Latest Privacy Nightmare
The Grid Was Melting Down in Last Week’s Heat – Until EVs Came to the Rescue
Improving Productivity with AI: Turning Fleet Data into Faster Decisions
Hyundai Unveils New ‘Plasma Care UVC’ Cabin Sanitizer
Fleet Operations Are Changing – The Industry Needs to Evolve With Them
AI-Powered Vehicle Inspections Move Beyond the Checklist
CONFERENCES & WEBINARS
For The Leaders In The Room
2026 NETS Strength IN Numbers Conference: Early Bird Rates!
AFLA 2026 – Keynotes Announced!
Private Fleets Flex at National Private Truck Council Conference
Free NAFA Webinar: Manage Your Fuel Cost Volatility
Registration Now Open for NETS Annual Conference
Early Bird Pricing for AFLA 2026 – Ending June 1
INDUSTRY ANNOUNCEMENTS
Fleets: Preparing for Natural Disasters
Union Leasing Becomes Moventum Fleet Management as 70-Year Company Accelerates into Next Phase
Fleetio Wins Innovations Award at NAFA’s 2026 Institute & Expo
WIFM is heading to NAFA!
Cox Automotive Unveils Cox Fleet, Setting a New Standard for Fleet Uptime Nationwide
AFLA Canadian Fleet Professional of the Year Award: Nominations Open!
NAFA Webinar: Kickoff the 2026 100 Best Fleets Contest on December 4!

Fleet Management Weekly Newsletter Archive
Access to back issues of the FMW newsletter.

FMW Mobility
How mobility is rapidly changing the fleet management landscape.

Newsletter

Subscribe

FMW Fleet Videos
Video clips of industry leaders speaking on a variety of engaging hot topics in fleet.

2014-2020 © Fleet Management Weekly