Lawmakers working to speed a federal framework for autonomous vehicles into law face a key obstacle that stymied previous attempts: who gets sued in collisions.
The big picture: Manufacturers and tech companies want federal rules of the road for their roll-out of self-driving vehicles. But trial lawyers, a powerful lobby, want key questions on liability in a driverless world answered before legislation advances.
Driving the news: Daniel Hinkle, an attorney with the American Association for Justice, is one of six people testifying at a House Energy & Commerce consumer protection subcommittee hearing Tuesday.
In his written testimony, Hinkle warned that in order to ensure manufacturers live up to the promise that autonomous vehicles will be safe, laws — and consumer access to the courts — must hold them accountable to that promise.
Specifically, trial lawyers want to see manufacturers face liability as the “drivers” in collisions, and want Congress to prohibit forced arbitration so that consumers could sue manufacturers.
“The reality is that vehicle manufacturers have almost never voluntarily embraced safety technology without some precipitating force — and that force has most commonly been public accountability through the courts,” Hinkle wrote.
Yes, but: Others argue the arbitration issue shouldn’t hold up urgently needed legislation.
Arbitration is “a distraction,” said Marc Scribner, senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.
But AAJ notes that early uses of autonomous vehicles could involve ordering up a ride from Uber or Lyft, which already use arbitration clauses in their app contracts.
“When Uber and Lyft are not only providing the car service but they are quite literally driving the car, they should be able to be held accountable not as a ride-share tech company, but as an auto manufacturer,” said Julia Duncan, AAJ senior director of government affairs.
Other groups testifying Tuesday: Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety, Alliance for Automotive Innovation, National Federation of the Blind, Consumer Technology Association and San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency.
Context: After AV legislation stalled in 2017 and 2018, in part because of questions about liability, lawmakers from both parties in both the House and the Senate are working together on a new bill.
What they’re saying: The clock is ticking for Congress to act, Energy and Commerce Republican ranking member Greg Walden (R-OR) argues in prepared remarks.
“The U.S. is in a global race to AVs, but today the cost of inaction is clear: we are behind,” he says.
But consumer advocates argue that safety should be the priority.
Where it stands: Without federal legislation, a hodgepodge of state laws allows the testing and deployment of self-driving cars.
In the meantime, NHTSA will have to consider exemptions from existing safety regulations on a case-by-case basis.
Last week, it granted the first exemption to Nuro, maker of a low-speed delivery vehicle.