Coming Soon to California: Cars Without a Human Behind the Wheel
Coming Soon to California: Cars Without a Human Behind
the Wheel
Regulator takes step toward permitting driverless car
tests
State also aims to allow autonomous car use by the public
By Ryan Beene October 11, 2017, 10:35 AM PDT
California took another step Wednesday toward permitting
testing of self-driving vehicles without a human driver, continuing a shift
away from previous policies that companies criticized as being overly
restrictive.
The state’s Department of Motor Vehicles on Wednesday
released revisions to regulations proposed in March to allow such autonomous
car testing on public roads, which could take effect by next June, California
DMV Chief Counsel Brian Soublet said on a conference call with reporters.
The proposed rules would also allow companies to
introduce self-driving vehicles that can be used by the general public.
The development of autonomous vehicle technology and
public policy in the U.S. has been concentrated in California. Much of the
development work is concentrated in Silicon Valley where companies such as
Alphabet Inc.’s Waymo LLC and Cruise Automation Inc. are testing vehicles on
public roads.
California has permitted self-driving car tests with a
human driver ready to take control since September 2014. State regulators have
permitted 42 companies to test self-driving vehicles in the state, up from 11
last June.
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