- October 5, 2017
- No Comment
- 103
Self-Driving Vehicle Bill Forwarded to U.S Senate for Voting
The self-driving car legislation version of the U.S Senate is breaking out political limbo. The U.S Senators in the Science, Commerce, and Transportation Committees have undisputedly approved the AV START Act. It allows car-manufacturers to follow safety exemptions for self-governing vehicles based on production volume. It allows control to states regarding rules for registration, insurance, licensing, and safety regardless their performance. Now, it will be forwarded to the U.S Senate where voting will take place. The U.S House of Representatives had already approved its take on the bill in the beginning of September. The voting in the U.S Senate will be in the favor to leave just the matter of reconciling the 2 bills and forwarding its results to the desk of U.S President to sign.
Both bills excluded self-governing big platform in the wake of adversity from labor unions. They were concerned both about job security and safety for truckers. There isn’t any federal requirement for any disengagement to human control. Car manufacturer companies are free to produce self-governing vehicles as previously they had sold less than a specific number of units in a given year. The companies are limited at 15 thousand vehicles in the first year and 80 thousand in 3 years. There isn’t any limit in the 4th year in the final version of the U.S Senate bill. There are some matters that AV START holds back progress in self-governing trucks and its unmanned car technology hasn’t enough sophisticated to drop out control quickly. The American lawmakers need the U.S to stay on the forefront of self-governing tech and put it on the roads as soon as possible.