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Trucking group unhappy bill leaves out big vehicles
Reuters
Sep. 28, 2017 7:58 pm
WASHINGTON - A U.S. trucking group said Thursday it was disappointed that a compromise bill to advance self-driving cars and eliminate regulatory roadblocks will not include larger vehicles.
American Trucking Associations President Chris Spear said in a statement the announcement 'is not the end of the road for this issue. If more automated cars and trucks are to share the roads, they should also share the same framework.”
Sen. John Thune, a Republican who chairs the Commerce Committee, and Senator Gary Peters, a Michigan Democrat, said they had reached agreement on legislation that would be voted on by the committee on Oct. 4.
General Motors, Alphabet Inc., Ford Motor Co and others have lobbied for the legislation to speed deployment of self-driving cars by allowing federal regulators to approve their use if they deem them safe.
They also want to bar states from blocking autonomous vehicles.
Reuters reported late Wednesday that the bill would not include larger commercial trucks after Democrats and some organized labor leaders objected. The senators confirmed Thursday that the bill would not include vehicles larger than 10,000 pounds.
A bill that unanimously passed the U.S. House earlier this month also excluded bigger vehicles. Under that proposal, states still could set rules on registration, licensing, liability, insurance and safety inspections - but would be barred from setting self-driving car performance standards.
The House measure, the first significant federal legislation aimed at bringing self-driving cars to market, would allow automakers to get approval to sell up to 25,000 vehicles in the first year, rising to 100,000 by year three. That would depend on them being able to demonstrate the vehicles are at least as safe as current vehicles with human controls.

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