ATA’s Spear: Trucking Must “Take Seat at the Table” for Making Autonomous-Driving Policy

2 Oct by Vitaliy Dadalyan

ATA’s Spear: Trucking Must “Take Seat at the Table” for Making Autonomous-Driving Policy

<img width="150" src="http://www.automotive-fleet.com/fc_images/news/m-spearreporters-1.jpg" border="0" alt="

ATA president Chris Spear fielding reporters’ queries on autonomous policymaking. Photo: Evan Lockridge

“>

ATA president Chris Spear fielding reporters’ queries on autonomous policymaking. Photo: Evan Lockridge

“>

LAS VEGAS. Because autonomous driving technologies offer “a lot of potential but also a lot of unknowns,” Chris Spear, president of the American Trucking Associations, said trucking must “take our seat at the table with other industries [primarily the automotive sector] to develop a [policy] framework without stymying innovation.

“The technology is here and will grow rapidly,” Spear told members of the industry press during a brief Q&A on Oct. 2 here on the show floor of ATA’s Management Conference & Exposition. “Suppliers are already creating connected and automated technology.”

He said trucking is “a different animal than the car side” so the association is aiming to ensure the industry’s voice is heard as federal policymaking develops.

Suggesting there is urgency to this issue, Spear lamented that the first federal guidelines for the testing and deployment of autonomous vehicles recently released by the Department of Transportation were put together with almost no input from the trucking industry.

On the other hand, he said that “[technological developments] are not going to wait for the federal government. He also pointed out that autonomous policymaking will move on two tracks.

“States are not waiting for the federal government, either.” He pointed to Nevada, which has enacted legislation and regulations to enable the testing and operation of autonomous vehicles, as an example. “Nevada is innovating; creating a breeding ground for this technology.

“As far as [putting in place] seamless regulation, that has to be done by the federal government,” Spear continued. “But we will also get engaged at the state level to avoid a patchwork of laws [for autonomous trucks.]”

Spear said connected and autonomous vehicles hold the promise of increasing highway safety, reducing fuel consumption and emissions, and by alleviating congestion, boosting trucking productivity, which in turn …Read the rest of this story

Source:: http://www.truckinginfo.com/channel/fleet-management/news/story/2016/10/ata-s-spear-trucking-must-take-seat-at-the-table-to-develop-autonomous-driving-policy.aspx