logo
Automakers want US to move faster on self-driving car rules

Automakers want US to move faster on self-driving car rules

Reuters4 hours ago

WASHINGTON, June 26 (Reuters) - Major automakers want Congress and the Trump administration to move faster to make it easier to deploy autonomous vehicles without human controls as new robotaxi tests expand.
Congress has been divided for years about whether to pass legislation to address deployment hurdles, while the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has not moved quickly to rewrite safety rules or allow exemptions for up to 2,500 vehicles without human controls annually and ease other hurdles.
"The auto industry wants, it needs a functioning and effective auto safety regulator. We don't have that today," said Alliance for Automotive Innovation CEO John Bozzella at a U.S. House of Representatives hearing on Thursday. "The agency isn't nimble. Rulemakings take too long if they come at all."
Autonomous Vehicle Industry Association Director Jeff Farrah urged Congress to pass long-stalled nationwide legislation to allow the United States to globally lead on AVs as China moves aggressively in the field.
"Right now we are fighting with one hand tied behind our back," Farrah said. Companies have pushed for more action for years.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said in April that a new department framework to boost autonomous vehicles would help U.S. automakers compete with Chinese rivals.
Earlier this month, NHTSA said it would speed reviews of requests from automakers to deploy self-driving vehicles without required human controls like steering wheels, brake pedals or mirrors.
Representative Frank Pallone of New Jersey, a Democrat, cited reports showing NHTSA has lost as much as 35% of its expert staff this year through layoffs and other exits, which puts the ability of the agency to function at risk.
NHTSA said "significantly fewer people have left" than Pallone suggested and that it remains "staffed to continue to conduct all safety- and mission-critical work" and is boosting its Office of Autonomous Safety.
Meanwhile, U.S. traffic deaths remain sharply above pre-COVID levels. Despite falling 3.8% in 2024 to 39,345, they are still significantly higher than the 36,355 killed in 2019 and double the average rate of other high-income countries.
"NHTSA is failing to meet the moment," Insurance Institute for Highway Safety President David Harkey told lawmakers.
"In recent years, it has approached its job with a lack of urgency, using flawed methodologies that underestimate the safety benefits of obviously beneficial interventions," he said.
NHTSA routinely fails to write regulations even when directed by Congress and has often gone years without a Senate-confirmed leader.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Clearspeed raises $60m for voice-based risk assessment tech
Clearspeed raises $60m for voice-based risk assessment tech

Finextra

time26 minutes ago

  • Finextra

Clearspeed raises $60m for voice-based risk assessment tech

Clearspeed, the global leader in voice-based risk assessment technology, today announced it has secured $60 million in Series D funding, bringing the company's total funding to $110 million. 0 This content is provided by an external author without editing by Finextra. It expresses the views and opinions of the author. The round was led by Align Private Capital, with participation from IronGate Capital Advisors, Bravo Victor Venture Capital, and KBW Ventures. General David H. Petraeus (US Army, Ret.) also joined as a multi-round investor. In addition to the raise, the company will add Anna Nekoranec, Co-Founder and CEO of Align Private Capital, to Clearspeed's Board of Directors. Nekoranec said, 'Clearspeed has demonstrated true dual-use potential—with scalable commercial results and meaningful impact in high-stakes environments. It's rare to see a solution that can reduce fraud, mitigate security threats, and save significant costs without creating friction for the end user. This is the innovation needed to build smarter, more human-centered systems of trust.' In insurance, Clearspeed consistently yields more than 30X return on investment by assessing risk early in the claims and underwriting process – driving faster, more accurate decisions that improve customer outcomes, including cutting claims handling time in half and increasing immediate payments to customers by 40%. Zurich Insurance—a global multi-line insurer serving 75 million customers across 200+ countries—has significantly accelerated claims payment to customers where they've implemented Clearspeed, allowing them to provide more immediate relief in moments of need. 'We see Clearspeed as a powerful complement to an insurer's multi-layered global risk strategy—offering a streamlined, trust-building experience for customers while helping to make more confident decisions and combat increasingly complex fraud,' said Scott Clayton, Head of Claims Fraud, Zurich Insurance. Government stakeholders increasingly view Clearspeed's commercial success as critical to combating fraud, waste, and abuse—and advancing national security priorities such as countering threat financing, drug testing, personnel vetting, and partner force screening. Agencies using Clearspeed have seen a 95% reduction in vetting cycle time and a 65% drop in investigation costs. 'As security threats evolve, so must the solutions designed to counter them,' said private investor General David H. Petraeus (US Army, Ret.), former CIA Director and Commander of U.S. Central Command. 'Clearspeed's AI-enabled voice analytics delivers outsized value for personnel vetting, insider threat mitigation, and enterprise security—where building trust quickly is paramount.' 'This investment propels Clearspeed into a bold new chapter,' said Alex Martin, Co-Founder and CEO of Clearspeed. 'We're doubling down on the markets where trust and speed matter most—government, defense, insurance, banking—and expanding globally to meet the growing demand for secure, high-integrity screening. We're investing in our teams, accelerating innovation, and ensuring our technology stays ahead—not just to grow, but to help organizations worldwide realize the strategic advantage of rapidly establishing trust.'

Why millionaires are planning to escape from New York
Why millionaires are planning to escape from New York

Times

time29 minutes ago

  • Times

Why millionaires are planning to escape from New York

The morning after Zohran Mamdani's surprise victory in the New York City Democratic mayoral primary, Tom O'Donoghue's phone was ringing off the hook. O'Donoghue, who runs a luxury construction firm in the Hamptons — the summer playground for rich New Yorkers — said his clients were in 'complete disbelief' that a socialist was suddenly the favourite to win November's general election. 'One of my clients has 150 commercial buildings in the city and he just told me that he had contacted his attorney this morning. They're getting out of New York,' he said. • Meet Zohran Mamdani, the man who promises to make NYC affordable Though the former New York governor Andrew Cuomo had been the favourite to win Tuesday's primary, Mamdani snared 43.5 per cent of the vote, compared with Cuomo's 36.4 per cent. By 10.30pm local time, the ex-governor had conceded, saying of his opponent: 'Tonight is his night. He deserved it — he won.' Mamdani, a 33-year-old state assemblyman, promised to freeze rent on stabilised apartments, impose a 2 per cent wealth tax on New York residents who earn more than $1 million a year, and raise the corporate tax from 7.25 per cent to 11.5 per cent. New York is home to approximately 350,000 millionaires and 123 billionaires, according to Forbes, and many are seriously thinking about leaving the city. Bill Ackman, one of New York's most vocal billionaires, has long said that a Mamdani victory could lead to an exodus. In a post on X on Thursday, he said: 'The ability for New York City to offer services for the poor and needy, let alone the average New Yorker, is entirely dependent on New York City being a business-friendly environment and a place where wealthy residents are willing to spend 183 days and assume the associated tax burden. Unfortunately, both have already started making arrangements for the exits.' In 2021, the top 1 per cent of New York City taxpayers paid 48 per cent of taxes — up from 40 per cent in 2019, according to a report from the city's finance department. Wilbur Ross, who served as commerce secretary in President Trump's first term, predicted that a Mamdani mayoralty could increase the city's financial difficulties. 'I don't understand how New York is going to survive the desertion of wealthy people,' Ross, a former Wall Street banker, told The Times. 'New York City does not have strong financials and there is significant risk that the city will get into financial trouble because a few tens of thousands pay the bulk of income tax.' Harriet Newman Cohen, a divorce attorney to New York's wealthiest, is already worried about the exodus. The lawyer represented Mamdani's mother, the Indian-American filmmaker Mira Nair, when she split from her first husband in the late 1980s, but she says Mamdani's platform will make life harder for her clients. 'This will be hard on business,' said Newman Cohen, who also represented Cuomo during his 2005 divorce from JFK's niece Kerry Kennedy. 'I may see my practice go down because wealthy people will move out of New York City and my client base may go down.' • What Zohran Mamdani's win means for the Democratic Party Charles Saffati, who owns the Carlton Fine Arts gallery on Madison Avenue, where a $100,000 Marc Chagall painting was lost in a smash-and-grab robbery in 2023, said Mamdani's plans to cut the budget of the city's police department and create a new department focused on mental health intervention was 'crazy'. 'The quality of life would be disgusting,' he said. 'Wealthy people, along with anyone afraid of crime, will go to the suburbs and many companies will be looking for other places to move. 'All I've heard in the last day and a half is people saying they want to move their businesses out of the city.' Wealthy New Yorkers have long been attracted to the Republican stronghold of Florida thanks to the warm weather, low cost of living and lack of state income tax. During the pandemic, an influx of wealth reshaped the luxury property market in south Florida; from September 2019 to January this year, the median listing price in Palm Beach nearly doubled from $1.5 million to $2.9 million, figures show. Even before Tuesday's upset, the Florida governor, Ron DeSantis, trolled New Yorkers over the prospect of a Mamdani victory. 'Just when you thought Palm Beach real estate couldn't go any higher,' he posted on X this week. Mamdani, who has been called a 'TikTok savant' by The New York Times, won nearly half of early voters younger than 45 — many of whom recently have moved to the city and are struggling with the high cost of living and unaffordable rents. He also has a few wealthy backers, including the Sex and the City actress Cynthia Nixon, who celebrated his election win at a rooftop victory party in Long Island City on Tuesday night. 'Zohran's victory was so hard-fought, so hard-won and so deeply needed,' the actress wrote in an Instagram post, calling it 'one of the greatest nights ever'. Euan Rellie, the managing partner of the Wall Street investment bank BDA Partners, said he noticed this enthusiasm for the young mayoral candidate when he was dining at his favourite restaurant Malaparte in the West Village this week. The young waitresses were 'cockahoop' about the prospects of a Mamdani victory — a feeling he has some sympathy for. But he said he hoped that Mamdani would temper some of his policies before the general election. 'I just wish he would reach out to business and say, 'we recognise business does something for New York',' Rellie said. 'Because honestly, if you get even 10,000 rich people leaving New York and going to Florida — 10,000 more on top of all the ones who've left — that's a terrible dent to the tax base.' Mamdani's win has already had an impact on publicly listed firms with a stake in the New York property market. Shares of Flagstar, a regional New York bank which has billions in outstanding loans to rent-stabilised apartment buildings, fell by 6 per cent on Wednesday.

Immigration officers arrest Iranian asylum-seekers in Los Angeles
Immigration officers arrest Iranian asylum-seekers in Los Angeles

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Immigration officers arrest Iranian asylum-seekers in Los Angeles

LOS ANGELES, June 26 (Reuters) - Pastor Ara Torosian received a distressed phone call from two Iranian members of his Farsi-speaking church on Tuesday -- U.S. federal immigration officers were at their Los Angeles home to arrest them. It was the second such call he received this week. On Monday, an Iranian couple with a 3-year-old was detained at a routine immigration appointment, Torosian said. Both families were recently arrived asylum seekers, who had entered the United States at the U.S.-Mexico border after making an appointment, he said. The appointment system, known as CBP One, was launched by former U.S. President Joe Biden to promote orderly border crossings. President Donald Trump ended the program when he took office, as part of his aggressive crackdown on immigration. Torosian said when he arrived at the couple's home on Tuesday he saw an 'army' of federal law enforcement officers and began filming on his cell phone as officers stopped him from getting close to his church members. As officers restrained the woman being detained she started to have a panic attack and began convulsing on the floor, he said. 'She's sick! Call 911!' Torosian is heard shouting on the video. 'Why are you guys doing this?' Torosian said the couple fled religious persecution in Iran. In a statement on X, the Department of Homeland Security said that it detained two Iranian nationals in Los Angeles on Tuesday, who had been flagged for national security reasons. It said the woman was taken to hospital, but was later discharged and both are now in immigration custody. The arrests came after U.S. military bombers carried out strikes against three Iranian nuclear facilities in the early hours of Sunday morning local time. In a press release on Tuesday, the DHS said it had arrested 11 Iranians in the country illegally over the weekend. Iran doesn't accept deportees from the United States, but on Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for the Trump administration to deport migrants to countries other than their own, without offering them a chance to show the harms they could face there. Torosian said his congregation has between 50 and 60 members, most of whom have been in the country for less than two years. He said he is telling them to stay home rather than come to church. "In a million years, a million years, I never imagined, one day I can call my members and tell them that better not to come to the church, because as I know, America is a free country, but they're afraid," Torosian said. "Some of them lock themselves in their house." Torosian himself is a naturalized U.S. citizen. He said the arrest he witnessed was traumatic. "When I was seeing the masked soldiers put down a woman, a female, on the ground, it triggered me," he said. "I'm on the street of Los Angeles or the street of Tehran? So that was what made me very sad and I cried a lot."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store