Hearings

Senate Standing Committee on Transportation

March 24, 2026
  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    So the transportation committee will come to order for today's hearing. We will be hearing all of the panels on the agenda for today, prior to taking any public comments. So all public comment at the end. Once we've heard all the witnesses and the testimony, we'll have a public comment period for those who wish to comment as I just noted. That period will be limited to one minute per person.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Presenters today will be presenting their opening comments for five minutes per person. I also want to announce that all hearing materials including the agenda background and handouts are posted and can be accessed on the senate transportation committee web page for those who wanna follow along in that manner. There are also agendas and copies of the background available in the back of this committee room. I wanna first thank all of our panelists for taking the time to testify today.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I also wanna thank all of our committee members for attending and participating in the hearing today.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Today's informational hearing will serve as an overview of autonomous vehicle technology in the state which is not the same as we all know. As AV technology continues to evolve and AV use expands across California, it's important that we as policymakers continue to understand the current AV environment. California is at the forefront of AV technology and robo taxi services. This means that California is also at the forefront of learning how to ensure that this technology is deployed safely and fairly.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    This encompasses a wide array of issues including critical safety concerns with AV deployment, how our first responders interact with AVs on our roads, how our state agencies regulate AVs and robotaxi services.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    So today, we'll hear from experts across government, industry, and the private sector about these critical issues. We'll hear from the AV industry and safety advocates about how these vehicles are deployed on California roads. We'll hear from our police and fire departments about the challenges AVs pose for their operations. Finally, we'll hear from DMV and CPUC about how AVs are regulated now and how those regulations will likely change going forward.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Now let's hear from our first panel and, that will begin with Ariel Wolf, general counsel, the autonomous vehicle industry association.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Let me get Ariel Wolf, doctor Missy Cummings, Robert O'Dowd, and Dylan Angelo up here. And let me note Ariel Wolf is a partner in general counsel to the Autonomous Vehicle Industry Association, otherwise known as AVIA. Doctor Missy Cummings is with George Mason University, Robert O'Dowd, the Dawn Project, and Dylan Angelo Angelo, individual crash survivor. All of that's noted on the official agenda for this hearing. So welcome to all of you.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I see I have three of you. Somebody's still in route, I guess. We have

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Oh, virtual. Okay. Thank you. In case anyone else is confused about that besides me, doctor Cummings is with us virtually today. So we as I noted, we're gonna start with Ariel Wolf and please proceed.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    You'll have five minutes if you can stick to that. We appreciate that. Let me just say for the other panels are here for subsequent panels in case I forget to say so. It's appreciated especially by those testifying at the end of the hearing if we can stick to our five minutes and, you know, we're hopeful that we have plenty of q and a. If we do, that's gonna expand your opportunities to give us information as well. So, mister Wolf, you're first. Thank you.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Thank you. Just making sure this is

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    okay. Great.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Chair Cortesi, members of the committee, my name is Ariel Wolf. I serve as general counsel to the Autonomous Vehicle Industry Association, which represents the world's leading autonomous vehicle companies deploy deploying AVs across the country. Thank you very much for having me here today to discuss the state of the AV industry and its role in California's transportation future.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    I have a few slides to accompany my remarks. I'm, of course, eager to answer any questions. You can stay as long as you need for that. First, shown here is Avia's membership. We cover the gamut of companies that are building the autonomous vehicle future.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Light duty and heavy duty vehicles, robotaxis, delivery vehicles, auto manufacturers, and hardware and software suppliers, and others. I say all that because it's important to understand the expanding ecosystem that is flourishing across The United States and here in California today due to the ingenuity of our nation's innovators and the promise of AV technology to solve real problems. Before we get deeper though, I want to make one key point to avoid any confusion.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    People talk about the six levels of autonomy, and I will show that in a moment. But there are really just two technologies to focus on for this discussion.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    One, of course, is autonomous vehicles. And two, vehicles with driver assist technology. Autonomous vehicles drive the car without human driver intervention. In AVs, humans are the passengers, not the drivers. Driver assist technology requires a human driver to remain fully engaged, monitor the roadway, and be ready to take control of the vehicle at any moment.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    This tech is widely available in consumer vehicles today, like lane keep assist, automatic and emergency braking, and adaptive cruise control. You must be attentive at the wheel and keep your hands and eyes forward. This distinction matters both for safety and for public understanding. If a human has to be attentive at the wheel at all times, it is not an AV regardless of how it's described or marketed. And you may have seen these levels of automation before, in the slide here.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Given the time constraints, I won't go through this now, but I'm happy to return to this at a later time, for any questions. Here, in the slide is a generalized description of an AV. It shows the many sensors and technologies that are used by the automated driving system or the ADS to perform the driving task. One quick note here is that these sensors see beyond what the human eye can perceive in a many in many directions all at once.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    The ability to synthesize all of this information simultaneously is what gives an AV a full picture of its surroundings.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    This is an image from a lidar unit on the left, a light infrared detection. Light detection and ranging, I should say. And then the one next to it is a from a vehicle's object classification function. And the next few slides focus on the crisis we have in our roads today, and will frame the rest of my remarks. Two weeks ago, this committee held a joint informational hearing that examined recent crash data.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    The background memo for that hearing made clear that, quote, road injury is consistently the leading cause of death for children and young people ages five to 24 in California. There were seventeen thousand seven hundred and forty five fatal and serious injury crashes in California in 2024, and California's rate of fatal and serious injury crashes is still far higher than it was ten years ago. The committee's memo emphasized the central role of human behavior in these crashes. DUIs, distraction, fatigue, and excessive speed.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    And I would direct you back to that memo that lays out the grim statistics of human caused fatalities.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    AV deployment is not an abstract policy debate. It is a response to a present and urgent public safety failure caused by human behavior. Some data already suggested AVs have reduced serious injuries and crashes by ninety two percent. We can either continue to rely on attempts to manage human behavior, or we can embrace technologies designed to remove the risks that our current system has struggled to control.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    AVs operate today on public roads across the country as shown here, including here in California with a strong and growing safety record.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    They are transporting passengers and delivering goods, commercially in places like California, Arizona, Nevada, Texas, and Michigan. The workforce opportunities created by the AV industry are diverse and expanding. These include service technicians, remote support and delivery personnel, and data collection specialists. Many of these roles do not require a four year college degree, but do offer pathways to stable high quality employment. The AV industry also is an economic engine for California.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    In fact, one of our members, Zukes, has opened the first ever serial production facility for purpose built all electric robo taxis in The US and will create hundreds of jobs in the San Francisco Bay Area. California has has been the birthplace of this industry and remains a global leader. Right now, the California DMV is finalizing updates to its AV regulations. The DMV's AV regulations already are the most stringent in the country. I'm gonna go without you.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    AVs represent a transformative advancement in transportation, one that is already saving lives and reinforcing California's position as a innovation. The AV industry is eager to work with the committee and all policymakers to achieve this vision. Thank you very much, and I look forward to your questions.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Thank you very much. I apologize for the pause there. We got competing committees calling over here. We'll move on now to, doctor Missy Cummings who's with us, virtually.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    Thank you. Thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today. I do want to recognize that there are a lot of positive benefits to autonomous vehicles. We may argue that driving assist systems, I do think they count as autonomy even though they're partial autonomy, which we'll talk a little bit about later. And indeed, I wanna start there.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    I have three very significant concerns and I will first address the driving assist systems. They, as well as self driving cars, rely on computer vision. This is very important because computer vision is a very unreliable technology, and it's especially a problem because unreliable technology in any autonomous vehicle, ADAS or self driving car, if it's unreliable and you rely on a human, but humans are have a tendency towards complacency in vehicles, then it's especially problematic when the autonomy fails and then the human is not paying attention.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    You're gonna hear more about that from another witness today. But these problems mean that no ADAS vehicle should ever be allowed to operate in any operational design domain for what which it was not explicitly designed for.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    Moving on to my second point. You've heard a lot here today about self driving cars. There is no such thing as a self driving car anywhere in the world. All of them. All of them.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    All of them in California require significant human babysitting in the form of remote operations. And California, your self driving cars are being controlled from people in The Philippines, people who do not have US driver's license licenses. This is very unsafe because the latency in the signals between California and The Philippines has and will continue to provide unsafe situations that puts the public at risk. These people need to be brought back to The United States, and they need to have US driver's licenses.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    My last point, it actually involves both ADAS and self driving cars. And this revolves around, yet again, computer vision, a very unreliable technology, but this problem is the problem of hallucinations. These cars, again, cars with ADAS and self driving cars hallucinate. They see things that aren't there. This will often result in an emergency hard breaking maneuver, which can and has led to accidents, can and will continue to kill people.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    If the state of California does not do something about addressing this phantom braking problem and you let self driving trucks roll out on your highways, I assure you people will die.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    The people of California have been guinea pigs for the self driving car community, and there are very serious problems which we have data on and we need more data to address, but we can't ignore these problems and the public in California shouldn't be made to pay that price. I yield my time.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Alright. Thank you very much. So we'll move, to the next individual testifying, Robert O'Dowd. Welcome.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    Are you able to hear me? Okay. Chairman, members of this committee, thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak today. My name is Robert O'Dowd and I'm a member of the Dawn project. A public safety advocacy organization dedicated to making computers safe for humanity.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    But I am not just simply an unaffected advocate. I'm also the father of a two year old. And no parent should ever have to hear that their child was struck by autonomous driving vehicle with software that was known to be defective. And then have to fight through years of litigation against corporate obstruction in order to reveal crash data that was hiding on their service for years. I know that this is possible because the victim in Willow is here with us today.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    Allow me to explain. Current law permits any company to deploy AI at scale, on the roads, with little to no oversight. Tesla Motors does this under the product names of full self driving and autopilot. This trail blazes a dangerous path for other actors to imitate. The incentives are clear.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    Push an autonomous driving intelligence onto our roads by disrupting labor and transportation and then selling it to safety conscious Californians by repeating that it's safer than a human driver right now today. However, the evidence has borne out that it is not in fact safer. So they have to exploit gaps in the law in order to avoid regulatory oversight and investigations into how their system is works and designs.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    In the event of an accident, the manufacturer is allowed to protect information about the software's implications in the accident and then place all the remaining blame on the human operators. Any safety statistics statistics regarding the operation of these vehicles comes through their own corporate marketing functions cherry picked and manipulated.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    Help us fix this problem by addressing these gaps in the law that allows self driving software to operate anywhere with no independent safety validation. Victims harmed by these accidents, by the corporate Goliath in an uphill battle as they profit from selling this technology with no obligation to the truth. By far, the worst offender of all of this manipulation is Tesla. To date, Tesla has reported fifty nine fifty nine fatalities to this to NHTSA involving full self driving and autopilot. Over half of those fatalities for right here in California.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    We have provided video evidence that Tesla's running using full self driving technology ignore school zones, stop signs, and close roads. We have verified reports of Tesla's using these features colliding into emergency vehicles and first responders. However, under current law, fixing these mistakes are voluntary and at Tesla's own convenience. These are not edge cases. The scope and scale of these deployments are immature, are premature.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    And this constitutes a public safety hazard. Tesla promotes self full self driving by frequently promoting that it will be ready, fully autonomous by the end of this year. A line that they have repeated every year for the last decade. But a nearly complete project should not still continue to have flagrant design emissions as well as safety critical defects. Litigation has revealed that Tesla knows about these capability gaps.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    It fights to conceal audible safety statistics. However, at this moment I wanna focus on one inexcusable failure. Consider the case of Tillman Mitchell. In November 2023, the Dawn project published its scathing report to the New York Times that the AIs in Tesla could not recognize the school buses, their stop signs extended. We informed Tesla, we informed the regulators, and no changes were made.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    Five months later, Mitchell was hit as he was exiting his school bus by a Tesla running autopilot, sending a child to the hospital with life changing injuries. Now this may come as a surprise, but these defects are still present in the versions on the roads today. And under current law, Tesla has no obligations to address them, opting to blame the humans every single time these defects manifest. It is unconscionable to allow millions of users to unwittingly enable a defective AI with crucial fixtures without crucial fixes.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    I ask you, vanish this from our roads never to see the light of day again.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    It has only been through the victims such as Dylan here today and during years of litigation that we can establish this pattern of malfeasance. You have an opportunity to ensure that no more families need to fight to uncover information that is in the public's interest. We have to ask of this committee. Force any program controlling a vehicle to comply with level four autonomous vehicle disclosure standards. No more ability to hide no more ability to redact to hide failures.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    No more hiding behind a legal that is simply a level two driver assistant in order to place blame on victims. Second, mandate the prompt resolution of known safety defects in any software controlling steering and braking. For these vehicles cannot be fixed, the software must be disabled. We cannot allow known defective systems to remain active on our roads any longer. Members of this committee, Tesla operates under the arrogant assumption that this committee will change nothing and permit them to continue obstructing justice for their victims.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    The delay in justice is itself an injustice. Thank you. And I look forward to answering your questions.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Thank you very much. Appreciate everyone working hard to abide by the the time limitations. I'm sure everyone else does as well. Mister Angelo, welcome. Appreciate you being here. And you can start anytime you want.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    Mic's not working. Mister chairman, mister chairman and members of the committee, thank you for giving me the chance to speak today. My name is Dillon Angulo, and I flew here all the way from Florida for one reason. Because I still believe my pain ... life can mean something if it helps protect other families from going through what we went through. I came here to honor Nybel Benavides Leon, the woman I loved whose life was taken in an instant.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    And I came here to stand up for every victim and every family who should not have to bury someone or live the rest of their life broken because dangerous technology was allowed on public roads without enough rules, transparency, and accountability. On 04/25/2019, Nibel and I were standing on the shoulder of a road in Key Largo, Florida. A Tesla model s operating with autopilot engaged came through a t intersection at about 62 miles per hour.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    The evidence showed the car recognized a stop sign, recognized us pedestrians, recognized the end of drivable space, and recognized our parked vehicle off the road. Yet, it still went straight through without stopping or warning the driver in time.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    Nibel was killed. I survived, but I did not walk away whole. I suffered a traumatic brain injury, a shattered pelvis, a fractured sacrum, and other severe injuries that changed my life forever. I live with permanent pain and I walk away. I walk I walk like a broken old man.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    So when this technology is described as innovation, driver convenience, and the future of transportation, it is important to understand what that sounds like to a person like me. This is not a theory. This is not a branding issue. This is a death. This is a permanent injury.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    This is a real human cost. And that is why I came all the way here asking for action before more families are destroyed. Tesla has has had these vehicles on public roads for about a decade. The state may cough classify them as level two systems, but they are being marketed in ways that create the impression of full autonomy. Meanwhile, the public and Tesla's own customers have been unwilling participants and Tesla's real world self driving testing.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    Our public roads have become Tesla's test track. Tesla rushed this unfinished technology onto public roads while trying to lead the race to develop autonomous vehicles without the safeguard the public deserves. And in court, we proved why that is so dangerous. We proved these vehicles were not as safe as Tesla claimed. We proved Tesla was not transparent with critical data, including failing to turn over the augmented video and crash data from the autopilot computer.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    We proved Tesla claims that these vehicles were safer than human drivers was not truthful. We prove Tesla ignored safety regulators and failed to meanfully geofence or limit this technology. That is why this is bigger than my case. Sadly, Nibel's story is not the only one. California knows this issue is not theoretical.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    And that is exactly why this state should be paying close attention and leading the way on regulation and accountability. To a pedestrian standing on the roadside, there is no meaningful difference between the so called driver assistance system and a more advanced autonomous system. If the vehicle fails to break when a human life is in front of it, the labels don't matter. When the outcome is the same. And if this gap remains open, other families will go through what we went through.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    So I respectfully ask this committee and the state of California to help make sure Nible's life leads to change by regulating this technology before more lives are destroyed. Please require real transparency when these systems crash. Please require preservation and disclosure of vehicle data after serious collisions. Please require safety limits including restricting these systems from roads and conditions where they have not actually been proven safe. And please hold these comp these companies accountable when they put the public at risk.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    This is not anti technology. This is pro human life. That is what responsible leadership looks like. Nibel never got a second chance. She never got to go home.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    She never got to grow older. She never got to live the life she deserved. I did get a second chance, but I have to live every day with the pain, trauma, and damage this technology left behind. So I am asking respectfully but urgently. Please do not let more families pay this price before meaningful action is taken.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    Please hold these companies accountable. And please make sure Nybel's life and the suffering of other victims lead to change. Thank you.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Alright. Thank you, mister Angulo. I apologize for mispronouncing your name earlier. It's the least I could do having traveled here 3,000 plus miles. We appreciate you being here as I said earlier.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    We will you know, bring it back to the committee at this time and I do want in case any anyone came in after the introductions to, point out or remind that doctor Missy Cummings is available for q and a as well, on the monitor. She's here virtually. So start with vice chair Strickland.

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Sorry about your loss. I know how hard that is. My best friend when I was in fifth grade got hit by a car on a bike.

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    Lost my best friend in fifth grade and my teammate, my basketball teammate in tenth grade got in a car wreck. Car wrecks are just there's no words I could do moving forward. But I do have some questions, for mister Wolf. When you drive a car, it's an incredible responsibility and accidents are happening all the time. Is there data that talks about people who drive their cars themselves versus, you know, the AV cars and do you have data that shows maybe one having more accidents than other?

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    Is is there data out there that that would enlighten us as a committee?

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Yeah. Vice chair Strickland, thanks for the question. And I'll associate myself with your comments as well and I have four daughters and it's it's terrible to hear tragedies. Absolutely. In terms of the data, I think it is very important to point that out and the stories of course that you noted are are compelling.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    The data very clearly shows, as I noted in some of the slides from the committee's own work a couple weeks ago, that human impairment, distraction, intoxication, drug driving, fatigue, that those are the primary drivers of collisions and fatalities and injuries. I think, you know, that the number that's used a lot because it's true is that we average around forty thousand fatalities, traffic fatalities a year, overwhelmingly caused by human impairment. What it doesn't talk about, as was noted here, the injuries on top of that.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Hundreds of thousands, millions of injuries, life altering injuries, of course. And so, those are the numbers and no the statistic ninety four percent has been used for some time for human impairment.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    It may be a little bit less than that. But regardless, the point is is straightforward. Human behavior is the primary cause of the carnage on the roads. And so the question then becomes, can technology play a role in solving that? Some initial data, we're gonna be coming out in just a little bit of time with a new number of miles that autonomous vehicles have been on public roads in commercial service.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    It's in the hundreds of millions of miles over the past number of years and the data is showing that it's having a dramatic positive impact up to even ninety two percent reduction in fatalities, eighty percent reduction in collisions in within the areas that that that they are present, of course. And so I think that starts to show something that we need to we need to do there. And I just wanna make one final point there is where I started in my opening remarks.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    That is talking about level four fully autonomous vehicles, not vehicles that expect to have a an attentive human licensed human driver at the wheel with other technology around it. That is a different type of technology.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    It's not an autonomous vehicle, and there's some discussion of that. But I wanna make that distinction very clearly. On the autonomous vehicle side, fully autonomous vehicle side, it's having a dramatically positive impact on safety.

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    Well, a follow-up question. The testimony from is it doctor Cummings or miss it's doctor. Doctor Cummings. She said that your autonomous vehicles are not done by computers but by people in The Philippines. What's your response to that?

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    Because you said you're trying to get away from human error but if humans are doing The Philippines, you would still have the human error, wouldn't you? ,

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Yeah I of course, direct questions to to the specific companies that that are talking about that particular note about Philippines. But I I think as a general matter, there's two kinds of remote operations. One is remote assistance and one is remote driving. Maybe take the latter, remote driving would actually be driving the vehicle remotely sort of with the, you know, sort of teleoperation is another term for it. That's not what is we described with the level four autonomous.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    It would not be an autonomous vehicle.

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    So that would not be the case for level four. No one from The Philippines is controlling.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    My understanding, sir, that that's not the case. That remote remote assistance would be the vehicle remains the one the the the vehicle is performing the driving task. All aspects of the driving task. It may encounter a situation that then gets referred to a remote assistant to make a decision, a binary decision, yes or no. Sort of a a sliding scale of how that remote assistance gets involved.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    But at no point in that remote assistance is that performing the driving task. That would be a different a different set, you know, a lower level of autonomy. So in in fully autonomous vehicles, it would be remote assistance. There are different ways of doing it. I know for some companies, it's all being done here in The United States.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    There's other companies can answer for themselves. But that's the the essence of the distinction.

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    So my understanding is Tesla performs the same functions as the autonomous system, steering, braking, navigation. Why, should it be exempt from the same testing, reporting standards that required for companies like Waymo? What would be your response to that?

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Well, at at at the outset, I would just say Tesla is not a member of our association. Okay. I don't speak for Tesla, so I would direct any questions to to the company. What I can say is that in the state of California, it's required to obtain a permit to put a level three or above, you know, fully autonomous vehicles on the roads. And it's my understanding that that Tesla does not do that.

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    Back to mister O'Dowd. Mister O'Dowd, you mentioned, and I didn't catch it. Tesla had a certain amount of fatalities. What was the number I just I was trying to write it down. I didn't get the

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    The number was 59.

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    Fifty nine. And have you measured that versus normal accidents with, you know, just say a a Toyota or how many accidents are happened from Tesla versus some of the other cars around the road?

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    In absolute scale or in relative to Relative.

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    You know, obviously, I wanna compare apples to apples.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    It is difficult to say because these are accidents that are attributable to FSD or to autopilot. But there isn't a comparable autonomous level two type of system that operates in the same domain that would fall under the same classification. You would have to take a look at the total number of fatalities attributed to either one of the manufacturers and then drill down into how many of them have reported their level two systems because that is how Tesla categorizes and compare them.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    When we have done the statistic, Tesla makes up the overwhelming bulk of the level two fatalities. I would I could get back to you with a precise number but it is larger than any other manufacturer.

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    Could you get back to me because I would be interested again, we have to compare apples to apples. If if a level two Tesla has so many fatalities and you have the same amount of cars on the other side, what would that comparison be? Because we're not kind of starting from a position of zero.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    Yes. In absolute count, it is the majority of level two fatalities are attributable to Tesla. Okay.

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    I think I have I think that hold on. I'm gonna have one more. So last one from mister O'Dowd. You mentioned some of these failed to stop. From your experience or from your expertise, is it a learning curve issue or is it a fundamental failure with the software from your perspective?

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    My perspective on this particular matter is that Tesla has been working using this methodology of collecting data through successful and also failed incidents where it is successfully started stop signs and to promote those types of learnings within their AI. And then to take every time that has failed to stop for a stop sign and then use those to penalize the AI.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    Over years and after millions and billions of miles, it has tried training an AI that can try to sort out the situations where it should stop and where it should not stop. This has yielded some results and that is the product of the vehicle that owns the roads today. However, right now, I can give you a 100% guarantee and you can even drive in the car with the current updated version that it will still make these mistakes easily and replicably.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    There are roads within my own backyard where I can go and it will 100% of the time demonstrate failures to recognize basic signage on the roads and basic road rules. I would say that this is a failure of capability and approach. I do not believe that more data or a more powerful hardware stack will solve these at a fundamental level. There are far more details that could be going to and I'd be happy to go into that.

  • Tony Strickland

    Legislator

    And that statement, are you talking about level four and level two or just level two?

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    My particular stance in this matter is that if the car is capable of setting navigation and then you could release your hands from the wheel and go from location to location, it would fall under what we would imagine is the level four designation.

  • Robert O'dowd

    Person

    But Tesla does label their system as a level two system legally and that feels like a bit of an issue because if it was required to be reported the level four expectations that it would probably be very incapable as a level four fully autonomous vehicle. Thank you, mister chairman.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Okay. Thank you. Any other members of the committee? We have a couple of questions. I part of the part of the difficulty in in just following all of all the testimony and dialogue so far, I will get used to it, I guess, by the end of the by the end of the committee hearing.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And I may be speaking for myself, but we've had, testimony, if you will, from you, mister Wolf, that there are only two kinds of of of vehicles out there, autonomous in

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    a driver assist. But we have DMV itself using terms like FSD or FSD supervised. We've had, I thought, some good questions from the vice chair around whether or not there's driver assist available even with autonomous vehicles that you're distinguishing from driver assist. And it it's my understanding that there's some level of of driver assist available for all autonomous vehicles that are on the road today. Is that incorrect?

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Thank you, mister chairman. I I think it is very important to clarify this and I I would agree. It it can be confusing because in part, perhaps, because for a number of years, there was the SAE levels of automation zero through through five and that created a decision that continues to be irrelevant relevant for engineering. But the distinction between the two kinds of vehicles is really important.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Whether a human is participating in any way, even just an expectation of taking back control, that's the industry does not consider that an autonomous vehicle.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    And I think maybe the the place to really draw the distinction is increasingly now because of federal government involvement, there are going to be vehicles and there are some vehicles that do not have any manual controls in the in the vehicle at all. And that, you know, of course, is gonna be a fully autonomous vehicle. There's no ability to to drive it other than the vehicle itself driving.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    So that's as you continue to have some level four vehicles with manual controls because of a federal motor vehicle safety standard issue. That's that presents some of the confusion.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    But that dichotomy, I think, is very important to to have in place at at any company that is saying human licensed, even if they're really doing very little in the end, that more and more of the vehicle is performing a driving task. If the expectation is to be able to take back control at a a seconds notice and to be attentive to the road, it's assisting that driver. It's not the vehicle. It's the human's not the passenger.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Humans are participating in that and that that's important to retain as a distinction and we feel as the autonomous vehicle industry.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    So I mean, am I am I mistaken in sort of, you know, simple it'll be an oversimplification of understanding the technology, but you have a coded electronic computerized system that's running an fully autonomous vehicle as you're as I mentioned, you're defining it where you you have no essentially no human able to take actual manual control at the time. But that coding in in that programming was done by humans at some level. Correct?

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Yeah. I think that's that's right.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And and if I'm if I'm understanding the way this works when that coded information has problems informing the autonomous vehicle as to how to navigate a situation. There's there's human assist on a remote level. Is that not true?

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Well, as an operational thank you for the question. There there is an operational apparatus around the deployment of an autonomous fleet. That involves, of course, maintenance and and everything that goes into managing a fleet.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    In the case of autonomous vehicle operation, and this is one of the interesting things about workforce development, there's an apparatus associated with the the operations of that fleet that could involve in a situation where a vehicle that is has been tested rigorously and and and over many many millions of miles of simulation that on on road testing that encounters a situation that requires a human to point out something like that. But that still does occur.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Of course, that learning one interesting thing about the way that works is that learning in that instance gets pushed to all of the vehicles in the entire fleet for that autonomous vehicle. Unlike the human driver situation, if we learn something in one case, it doesn't get imputed to all the other millions of drivers on the road as well. So it's actually a so so those situations help the vehicles learn and the and the, the operations improve.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    That's good to know. And what I was really getting at is, you know, your your concerns, valid concerns about human failure when it comes to controlling, you know, vehicles that are moving down the road at moderate to high speeds, making navigation decisions that was you I think kind of broad brushed 92% safety increase with autonomous vehicles over human drivers. The question and and that's because of elimination of things like human fatigue, intoxication, or substance abuse, and I forget what the other issue was.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Wouldn't those same issues be of concern in a backroom operation with remote driver assist?

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    So, chairman, it's a great question. So there's there's remote driving, which we said is not the case in autonomous vehicle that those would present certainly. I think there are workforce issues to explore for remote operations. And that's it's a discussion that's happening also in Washington.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Same kind of line of questioning. I think it is important to look at those those things. I know the companies have rigorous method methods and and workforce issues and operations that they put in place for those kinds of things. So I think it probably is a little bit different than a intoxicated person sitting behind the wheel of a car going a 110 miles an hour on the on the road versus those situations.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    But to the extent that they require examination, I think the companies are are forthcoming about that and certainly sharing information with with NHTSA and and other entities.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And I think, you know, I'm I'm asking you these questions because it seems to me that if there's genuine concern about eliminating human error, then it begs the question, what are we doing to eliminate human error with autonomous vehicles as well? And, you know, and what I guess I'd ask you as an attorney and and I don't know where your area of specialty is. I practice a little bit of tort law, when I was practicing full time. Shouldn't it be a concern?

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Some some level of concern for, your members that that there should be some standards for the behavior that's that's taking place with the human element that's backing up and informing these autonomous vehicles from just from a strict liability standpoint?

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Yeah. It's certainly an important issue that's being looked at by all the companies. I think, as a as a general matter, tend to look at the liability and and see it as as an area that can well be accommodated by existing tort law and a portioning liability in that respect.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    I think in a in a situation where there's a company that owns and operates and manages the entire fleet and the vehicle is fully autonomous and the human has no role, In in some respects, depending on the facts of the case, it can be simpler than having then a human driver and trying to ascertain what happened. It it it would be, you know, the automated driving system to the extent that there were facts to indicate it was at fault.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Of course, we see more, you know, overwhelmingly the opposite that, there's there's reason to believe that it's human drivers that are causing the issues and and collisions. But to that extent, it can be it can be simpler.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yeah. And I I I get that. And and again, just trying to bring it back to, you know, classic legislative regulation which typically wants to make uniform standards to protect the public but also to to create fair play to make it possible, you know, through mechanisms like insurance to to make people whole if if and when there are breakdowns when there's, you know, toward awards basically.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And so so really my question was as you deal with all these what we are currently talking about in in terms of with an emergence an emerging technology, several different types of technology being used or utilized, but all of them all of them at some level, having a human oversight element to them. Should we be looking at trying to to create uniform standards?

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    You mentioned NHTSA, that's that's the federal side. When I say we, I'm talking about California, the state of California. Obviously, we have folks, you know, operating operating here right now, especially in in the field of robotaxis.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Well, I think it's interesting point. I I would say, just on the insurance point, I know Swiss Re has looked at and done some studies and and has been able to corroborate a certain amount of data showing the the diminution and and the reduction of collisions and severe injuries and so forth as a result of AV deployment.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    I think topics like remote remote assistance, as long as I think it's contextualized as what it is and not conflated as can happen because of there's there's so many different things going on. Conflated with remote driving or or even more significant remote operations. Remote assistance is an important topic and I know that the important dialogue with, DMV and and the agencies and with lawmakers, of course, to help understand how we can provide assistance and information about how that works.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And I, you know, I appreciate the fact that, like like so many things the courts, you know, based on current case law can easily sort out liability and comparative negligence and who has to pay and who doesn't have to pay. But I I think from, again, from a consumer protection standpoint, there's the question of how much can you do to to head off those kind of claims in the first place.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    We heard some of that testimony today and and granted, I think the testimony today was relative to a technology that's not involved in your particular association. I understand that. So we're not it's not a pointed question.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    But it is a question about whether or not there should be more uniform standards and there is right now, whether or not there's a benefit to the industry. It's at large.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    And mister chairman, just first, quickly, I would just say, the industry strongly supports uniform standards Certainly, you know, design construction and performance at the federal level, which helps ensure that we can drive a vehicle from Washington DC to Sacramento, not get stopped in between. But but, certainly other kinds of uniform standards whether it's regulatory, legal regulatory or engineering or other kinds of policy that is always helpful to not have that kind of patchwork of of types of approaches.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I think thank you very much for your candid responses. And I would I'd like to come back to you but I wanna give you a chance to think about this one because I I have questions for two other panelists right now. Anyway, the the 8% if you will, it is you know that, we we talk about 92% improvement in in safety.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    The 8% of non improvement, I'd love to come back to you in a moment before we excuse the panel and and ask you to just think about who should be accountable for that 8%, you know, given the pre autonomous vehicle standards that we have typically in the state that put points on a driver's license that can revoke people's driver's licenses, you know, on the 9092% that are on the driver's side.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    It's pretty clear what the liability is, what the accountability is, what can be done from a state standpoint to get that person off the road, to impound the vehicle, etcetera.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    What should that look like with the 8%? And and and who is that, you know, that becomes or should be accountable? Thank you. Let me let me go to doctor doctor Cummings just for a moment.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Doctor Cummings, if you're still there?

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    I am.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Oh, great. I want to give you a chance to talk about the the comment that you made that there's no such thing as no human oversight or assistance with with any of the technologies that we're talking about today. I hope I'm not paraphrasing you in a in a way that misrepresents what you said. But I think you didn't know the comment I'm referring to. If you could just restate that and and say more about that.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    Sure. As a professor, I'm used to being taken out of context all the time. So

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    As a politician, we used to changing context all the time. So

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    Absolutely. So to be fair, Ariel is right that there are two kinds of general remote operations. One is remote driving and that is like video game driving. The other is remote assist. But don't be fooled.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    Remote assist is also remote control. So for example, today, self driving car companies, instead of driving the car with an accelerator and a brake pedal, they actually use keystrokes. They can tell a car, go forward five feet at five miles an hour. Go forward a half a mile at 20 miles an hour. So I really appreciated your conversation about standards because we are in the wild, wild west of this.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    It is not correct to say that remote assist is not controlled. It is controlled. And we need to understand that regardless of whether or not you're doing remote assist or remote driving, and the military learned this the hard way, you cannot do this from The Philippines safely. It incurs at least an additional two second latency delay. On average, it could be much worse.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    And that two seconds is enough. It has caused an accident, at least one in California. There are others that are being looked at. So we know that the time delay from The Philippines, from the remote assistant to the cars operating in California can cause accidents. They have yet to cause deaths, but it's just a matter of time. And

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    and with that said, you have any thoughts on on how to standardize that human element? How to begin that process? Policy wise, it's it's a common practice for example, in the world we're in to go look at best practices. I don't know if that's Waymo right now or or somebody else and start there and try to build upon good work that's already been done by the industry. Is is that the way to start here or is academia the way to start or

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    Well, you know, you're awesome. You're like my straight man. I just published an article a few days ago that said that the self driving car industry should look at best practices from the military in their remote drone operations. Indeed, there's a lot of lessons that they could and should be learning from that. I do not think that Waymo has the best practices.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    Waymo is the company with the self driving remote operations in The Philippines. This is unacceptable. As far as standards go, I did I was a senior staking adviser for NHTSA a few years ago, and I was trying to get my arms around the problem then. Federal government is slow to move. I absolutely think that this should be driven.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    The lead should be taken by the Federal Government. They are being slow to act. California, it this is all happening in your backyard. I would wish that you would take the lead, make regulations that legislation that remote operation must bring those jobs back to California and also must make them have California driver's license.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And and in some sense, just in fairness to Waymo, what the general comment I was making or trying to make was they have a a model and a system that essentially again, from their from their own corporate standpoint requires the folks that are in The Philippines. I I don't know that we throw that model out out the window, but do we build on the practice and and try to bring it to California standards, which is what I'm hearing you saying. But, again, I don't wanna put words in your mouth.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    Well, if I could say, you know, they aren't the only game in town. The company that I would point you to for effective remote operations would be Zukes before I would point you to Wayne.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Alright. Fair enough. Let me turn to, mister Angulo and you you very eloquently stated your case and and also what happened in your actual case. You you at least ran through, some of the things that you were evidently able to prove at trial as as I understand your testimony. What was the the most challenging aspect of proving up your case?

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    The most challenging part was that this was a new technology that no one knew how to get the data from it or know how to prove that the car was at fault. No one knew. This was all new. I wasn't even aware that these cars were on the roads and they were driving themselves. The most challenging part was getting our hands on that data, and this is a year's long it's going on seven years now.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    And that's what really changed the case was an anonymous hacker that was able to get the autopilot computer and get it and see what the car was seeing and processing through the augmented video. And at first, officer Rizzo, Florida Highway Patrol, on June 19 took took the autopilot computer to Tesla headquarters, and Tesla gave it back to him saying there was nothing on this. It's just corrupted, and they gave him encrypted data that he couldn't even understand.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    You know, the that was incredibly hard of getting that data, and we finally got it. And the car and that data showed that the car recognized pedestrian, a stop sign that was 989% sure there's a stop sign at one point, and the vision system was confused.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    It thought my vehicle that was parked off the road was a bicycle, a car, an SUV, a minivan, and it went straight to the stop sign, ran a red light, ran over intersection signs, and all the system decided to do was abort autopilot a second and a little bit more than a second before impact. You know, it's not it's not just to not fully report these crashes.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    There was, like, some order that was done where now they have to report any cars that are autonomous or on autopilot within five or ten seconds of a crash to prove if autopilot was at fault. That was very hard.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    It's it was also very hard, you know, seeing Elon Musk on news stations in US and even on his website, Tesla, where people buy cars, showing the car driving itself, stopping at stop signs, turning, navigating from point a to point b, and then come to the courtroom and say, no.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    This is just your grandma's cruise control. It just keeps you centered in the lane. And, I mean, it's a bunch of they're they're hiding behind loopholes. This whole level two and level five I mean, this car is advertised as level five, and they're trying to be under level two. There needs to be change with that.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    This was very it's an incredible battle that we're going against going against, you know, Musk and Tesla. And, you know, we're currently on the appeal process, and we're prepared to take this to the Supreme Court. And that's not that's not right for a family that lost a loved one and someone that was injured. And, you know, we're here to hold them accountable and to hopefully encourage the regulators to put the right rules in place. Thank you.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yeah. Thank you. I so an unfair question to ask, you know, someone who had to go through that Yes. To, you know, to now I'm gonna ask you expertise kind of question and it may very well be above your pay grade as they say it's above mine. I wouldn't be asked the question in the first place.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    It's not a question of the answer to. But what what should be available when there's a catastrophic accident like that? A black box like they have in in with commercial air flight or or what? Have you thought about that at all? What, you know, during the course of the trial or I'm not asking what your attorneys told you.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    That's that's not appropriate. But did you have thoughts yourself about if if only it were the law that x has to be available, this would've this would've all been a lot different. What's x?

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    I mean, firstly, these cars need to be fully tested before they're on the road. You know, these they just threw this car on the road and they were learning as they were going with crashes that we're having, training the computer to not do it again. And we're pretty much guinea pigs.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    You know, there should be standards where automatically the data, the vision system, what the car is processing and seeing, not just a bunch of logs, which those are also important, but we need to see what the car was seeing and processing. You know, the highway patrol, the police officers, the lawyers, the judges, insurance companies, all should have access to this.

  • Dillon Angulo

    Person

    This shouldn't be something where a a lawyer or a police officer has to go to Tesla and ask them for it. It should be something that automatically they can get on their own. There's there's so many layers layers to this, but I'm here for the fight.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yeah. Well, thank you. And, again, we appreciate your stamina and courage and resilience to come here today and testify. And before I thank all the panelists, I wanna turn to I wanna turn to Senator Valderas who's joined us. It looks like she would like ....

  • Suzette Martinez Valladares

    Legislator

    Thank you, mister chair. And I appreciate this hearing on this very important issue. It's an emerging reality that we're faced here in the state of California across the nation and the globe. My question is for doctor Missy Cummings who's on the line. Is she still on the line?

  • Suzette Martinez Valladares

    Legislator

    Do we know? I believe so. Okay. So we're kind of I feel like we're we're in between two places right now and that we need some policy parameters, guard rails that ensure that the public is safe. But also we don't wanna stifle technology.

  • Suzette Martinez Valladares

    Legislator

    What's that what do you have any recommendations, any insight as to what the guardrails should look like could look like, based on your research and expertise?

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    No. I think it's a great question. I am not at all against self driving cars. I have a teenager who just crashed my own car. So I I want them more than anyone.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    But I also think that we are in this wild wild west of understanding that, look, self driving cars are not fully autonomous. If they were, they wouldn't need human babysitters. I applaud the companies for using the remote operators. But instead of trying to pretend that they're not doing as much as they are, I think we need to embrace them. It's a human AI collaboration, has jobs that go with it.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    Great. I I think that we need to be open and states and the Federal Government needs to look at the remote operations and say, look. This is it's risk management. It's gonna be good for the companies. It'll help build public trust.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    So instead of thinking remote operations are bad, we need to think that remote operations are good. But also what goes along with embracing remote operations is more transparent access to data. We need data in terms of how many operators the company's got, how often they're intervening. This is data that just simply doesn't exist right now even though Ed Markey, a Senator from Massachusetts, has been asking for and the companies keep pushing back.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    So more data about what's happening with remote operations, but also remote more data about this phantom braking problem.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    I cannot emphasize that if self driving trucks are allowed to operate without a human in them, they are going to kill somebody. This phantom braking problem is very serious. But it's not fair to hold all companies to one standard. So we need to or to to yes. We should hold the one standard.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    We we shouldn't point the finger at all of them unless we have their data. So we need heartbreaking data. I know that your DMV is looking at this. So more data, heartbreaking data, remote operations data. Their crash data that the the companies are giving you, they like to spend the data their own way.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    Of course, academics, we like to spend the data in in our own way. But I think having the data having them give the data to third objective third parties to validate the results that so way more for example, wants to say we are reducing accidents by 92. Great. Give that data to a third party for independent verification.

  • Suzette Martinez Valladares

    Legislator

    And so do would you like to elaborate? I think it was brought up earlier on this concept of a black box, such as airplanes, are required by law to have. Can you elaborate on on that at all in your perspective of whether or not whether or not that would be beneficial needed? And also, do you think that there is, that self driving system should be required to have a backup? Some type of any type of backup in the event it's a primary sensor suite fails?

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    Well, this is complicated. Maybe we should have a workshop that I can come for an entire day and talk about it. I will tell you that this idea of a digital black box that could go on not just self driving cars, but driving assist cars. This has been thought about at NHTSA, at the federal level for some time. And, again, the Federal Government is slow to action.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    Maybe over the next few years, this will gain momentum as more accidents happen. I will say that what happens with self driving cars are they are just gigantic sensors. There's no data that you can't get off of this, of a self driving car right now that would have to come in some other form. Now whether it all goes to this one centralized repository that comes off with every accident, I think that's a a situation that needs to be discussed.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    And and, unfortunately, I think that this I agree with Ariel on this point.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    It really needs to come at the federal level because, you know, you don't wanna have different states having different regulations if we're gonna have, like, for the reason that EDRs, these are electronic data recorders that have been so useful is because all states use them. All cars have them. So I do think that that's something if we're going to go down that route, we need to kinda work together across state lines.

  • Missy Cummings

    Person

    That being said, every self driving car that is operating on California roads right now has all the data that you need to look at an accident, including video. They must, and often they do, but I think for every accident that were in the recordings, both internal and external, should be that the normal part of data that is turned over because what you will see in the video will often show a different story than what the, companies are reporting in the federal reporting date.

  • Suzette Martinez Valladares

    Legislator

    Thank you.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Alright. And, I do wanna come back to mister Wolf and just ask I asked the Senator asked a question earlier. It should probably be self explanatory when he, gives me the response to it. But if not, I'll I'll repeat. Thank you.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Sure, mister chairman. So I think the the idea is a 92% improvement. What what happens with the the remainder and how do you set up guard rails with what what should be done in in those situations. I think it starts with the idea that in any situation, the facts will determine liability. But I think beyond that, California's regulatory structure has a permitting structure and all states have that.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    And so there's always the idea of rescinding permits. You know, Texas just updated this law in a certain respect for operations to have a process by which if there's a situation that the authorities have determined there's a reason to try and make impound a vehicle or to make certain judgments about that to to engage in that process and and remove the authority to be able to based on the representations the company's made to the state. So I think there are a number of analogs.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Our associations got involved in our model legislation across the country and thinking about that. And certainly, we'd be happy to have further dialogue on how to how to do it.

  • Ariel Wolf

    Person

    Of course, the the last piece of the puzzle is at the federal level. Anytime there's some issue or incident of a safety nature, NISA can and it does now repeatedly open those kinds of investigations.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yeah. Short of a appreciate that very much. Thank you for the thoughtful answer. Short of a a a recall or, you know, complete, you know, voiding of of the permitting or or licensing up to that point. I think, you know, the the human nature is to go back to the the system of of the of motor vehicle regulation that we have had since Henry Ford and say, look.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    It's it's been regulated pretty well, in terms of accountability. Again, that was an accountability question. People get a ticket. If they go too fast, people get more serious consequences under the law, not just in terms of civil liability. In in many cases, we just had a big discussion in the Senate public safety about that today and and moved a bill along that will increase liability.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    None of that would have be applicable to autonomous vehicles. And and maybe the difference there's a difference in the fact that the the fact patterns that you see aren't gonna be the same with autonomous vehicles as they would be with a human driven vehicle including the most obvious one is you you don't have a person there that can account for their actions behind the wheel. We've established today there's there's humans evolved somewhere in in oversight. But, that that that's where we could use help. I'm not asking you for a further response.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I I think if the industry and this is one person's one Senator's opinion, if the industry wants to avoid a barrage of attempts to figure out ways, you know, to hold the industry accountable. The best way to do that is collaboratively is to come back and say, that's why I used the term best practices earlier. Look, you know, this this should be this should be the penalty for blocking traffic in the middle of the street or whatever the case may be.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    We know what that penalty is to a human driver right now. I I I don't think in fact, I know that in the state of California right now, we just we don't have a remedy.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And again, you know, just to cite the the old maximum of equity for we live in a world where we believe for every wrong, there should be a remedy. And I think people are struggling right now with because they're seeing wrongs or potential wrongs. Even if they're eight cases out of a 100 that there should be a remedy for and we we have no place to go with that. And and I don't think it's healthy is what I'm saying. I know I'm not here to lecture you.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I I don't I think sooner or later what you end up with is regulation foisted upon you rather than regulation that's, you know, that's brought forward in in a mutually beneficial way. So that would be that would always be the hope. Thank you all for being here, especially our long distance traveler and you're obviously extremely powerful testimony and I hope you're willing to to keep doing that. I imagine there may be committees here in the future that are actually voting.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    This is an informational hearing, but they're actually voting on new policies and new bills that are gonna want you back as as a witness if we can get you back here in the future.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And, mister O'Dowd, thank you very much for representing. With that, we'll move on to the next panel. Thank you. Thank you. The next panel, in thank you, Doctor. Cummings. The next panel is, Adam Wood, San Francisco Fire Department, former executive board member of the San Francisco Firefighters. Brandon Sanchez, deputy chief, San Jose PD.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Joseph Augusto, California Gig Workers Union, and Shane Guzman, Teamsters California. Welcome to all of you. Looks like everyone is here and accounted for. You can really go in whatever order you want. But why don't we start with mister Wood, since I called your name first.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And again, five minutes. Hopefully, the rest of the way the q and a will go a little more briskly. That was on me and mostly the last panel, but I had had a lot of questions. It is what it is. But but I appreciate you trying to keep to about five minutes out of your opening, and that'll give us more time. Thank you.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    Should be able to hear me now. Hi. Good afternoon, Chair Cortese and members of the committee. My name is Adam Wood. I retired from the San Francisco Fire Department in June 2024 with 29 years of service, and I served on the executive committee of the firefighters union in San Francisco Local 798 beginning in 2012, and I'm here representing that organization.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    I'm speaking to you today about our experience in San Francisco with autonomous passenger vehicles, also known as robo taxis, and the challenges that they've presented to firefighters and other emergency workers in the city. There's been a number of issues, but the main problem that we've had with these vehicles as first responders is their tendency to shut down and immobilize themselves when confronted with an emergency scene or with emergency vehicles responding to a scene with lights and sirens.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    We've had AVs pulling to the middle of an active shooter scene and shut down, thankfully without a passenger in that case. We've had them drive into a fire scene and park on top of a dry fire hose. That prevents that hose from being charged with water and used to extinguish the fire.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    We've had them block in an ambulance with a patient on board who needed to be transported to the hospital. We had one shut down directly in front of an apparatus door at a firehouse as the apparatus door was opening and a vehicle was preparing to leave for an emergency response, taking that vehicle completely out of the emergency response.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    We've had multiple cases on the narrow congested streets of San Francisco of an autonomous vehicle confronted with a responding emergency vehicle, shutting down, blocking all traffic, and making that route unpassable. And last December 2025, we had a massive power outage affecting the western side of the city. Traffic signals went out, and we lost local cellular coverage.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    And the result was we had dozens of autonomous vehicles immobilized at the intersections throughout stopping traffic throughout entire neighborhoods, from anywhere between twenty minutes to almost an hour. So the solution that the AV companies have presented to us as a city is they provided the city with a hotline that allows dispatchers to contact a remote operating center and have a remote operator move the vehicle. As you may expect from your own experiences with remote services, it's not been an effective solution.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    Often, the dispatchers have trouble reaching the remote operating center and once they do, the remote operators, in some cases, can still not move the vehicle. In the power outage in December, the city reported 31 calls from dispatchers to the hotline with many of them put on hold for extended periods of time.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    One dispatcher was put on hold for fifty three minutes. So ever since San Francisco became the California laboratory for autonomous vehicles, the San Francisco fire department leadership, both on the labor side and the command staff, have appealed to the autonomous vehicle companies and the CPUC to, first of all, slow down the deployment so that we could address these problems we were beginning to see in the field.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    And also, one of the key things we were asking for was a public safety manual override option that would allow a police officer, a firefighter, or a paramedic confronted with a stalled vehicle at an emergency scene or en route to move it without the intervention of a third party, a remote operator.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    We had hoped that what we consider to be a common sense solution to the problem would be agreed to voluntarily by the companies, but the years have gone by and and here we are still seeking help to help us weigh in on crafting this technology so that it's serves its purpose, but still serves the best needs of the citizens we're trying to protect.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    I believe it is possible that we can come to a solution that gives us effective autonomous vehicles with no negative impact on public safety.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    But at this point in time, I don't think it's gonna be possible without some element of the tool of local regulation so that we can weigh in and actually have an impact on what's done with this technology. Because committee members, this December last past December was a wake up call.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    In San Francisco, we're going to have a disaster, whether it's an earthquake or whether it's a windstorm fired followed by a conflagration such as Los Angeles experienced a little over a year ago, where we're gonna have a combination of a power outage and the need to rapidly evacuate residents from danger and create routes for emergency workers to respond. If we have a fleet of stalled emergency vehicles blocking those routes, there's gonna be serious consequences.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    So there there is some urgency to this need for reform and in the future, anything you as senators can do and can do to help us will be greatly appreciated.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    Thank you for your time and happy to answer any questions.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Thank you. We'll get to questions at the end of the panel. Who is next on the agenda? Brandon Sanchez, San Jose Police Department.

  • Brandon Sanchez

    Person

    Good afternoon, chair and members of the committee. Thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today regarding autonomous vehicles and public safety. My name is Brandon Sanchez. I'm the deputy chief for the San Jose Police Department and I'm be I'm I'm here on behalf of the California Police Chiefs Association representing municipal police chiefs and public safety leaders across California. Autonomous vehicle technology represents one of the most significant changes to transportation in decades.

  • Brandon Sanchez

    Person

    From a law enforcement perspective, our priority is simple, safer roads and safer communities. We recognize that autonomous vehicles have the potential to reduce crashes, particularly those caused by impaired, distracted, or fatigued drivers. Because human error is leading is a leading cause of collisions, this technology offers real promise to improve road roadways safety. We are also beginning to see how autonomous systems can support public safety operations.

  • Brandon Sanchez

    Person

    Currently, the Miami Dade Sheriff's Office is piloting a the first in the nation autonomous law enforcement support vehicle equipped with tools such as deployable drones and real time situational awareness capabilities to assist officers in the field.

  • Brandon Sanchez

    Person

    These technologies could help improve response times, expand officer awareness, enhance safety for both first responders and the public. California police chiefs recognize these benefits and support reasonable innovation. At the same time, the technology is still developing and presents real world challenges. Autonomous vehicles today are not fully independent and do not always respond predictably in complex environments. Officers across California are already encountering issues in the field.

  • Brandon Sanchez

    Person

    In Santa Monica, a Waymo vehicle struck a child near an elementary school prompting a federal investigation. Autonomous vehicles have blocked fire engines, ambulances, and police vehicles responding to emergencies. There have been incidents where vehicles stopped in active traffic lanes and failed to navigate around emergency vehicles and emergency scenes. These are not theoretical concerns. They are real operational issues affecting public safety today.

  • Brandon Sanchez

    Person

    One of the biggest challenges for law enforcement is the lack of clarity around responsibility and enforcement. When there is no driver, it is it is unclear who is responsible for a traffic violation, who receives a citation, and how existing laws apply. Officers are still adapting the training around how to properly redirect these vehicles when necessary. Without clear authority and adequate training, enforcement becomes difficult and inconsistent. It is critical that autonomous vehicles can safely interact with first responders.

  • Brandon Sanchez

    Person

    Officers must have a clear and reliable way to stop a vehicle, redirect it, ensure it does not interfere with emergency operations. Well, ultimately, an officer can rely on their authority to remove an an obstruction. The delay of even a few seconds at an emergency scene can have serious consequences. From the perspective of California police chiefs, several principles are essential moving forward. Public safety must remain the top priority in all deployment decisions.

  • Brandon Sanchez

    Person

    Law enforcement must be consulted at every stage of deployment and implementation. This includes at the local level where more needs need to be done. There must be clear statutory authority for enforcement and accountability and rapid responses required of the vehicles during an emergency. Standardized protocols must exist for first responders interaction with autonomous vehicles and training is essential. Transparency is critical when incidents occur.

  • Brandon Sanchez

    Person

    We wanna be clear, law enforcement is not opposed to autonomous vehicles. We see the potential to reduce crashes and save lives. The innovation must be paired with accountability and safety. The margins on roadway safety and in in in legislative decision making are often very small. A handful of incidents or a few seconds of confusion in an emergency can have life altering consequences.

  • Brandon Sanchez

    Person

    California has the opportunity to lead in this space, but we must do so thoughtfully and responsibly. Thank you for allowing me to share my thoughts, and I'll be here to answer any questions.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Thank you, deputy chief. Mister Augusto.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    Good afternoon, chair and members of the committee. My name is Joseph Augusto. I am a San Francisco resident and have been a full time Uber and Lyft driver in the Bay Area for the past decade. Over that time, I've completed more than 25,000 rides and maintained consistently high ratings. I spend the majority of my time and waking hours on the road.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    I take pride in operating safely and professionally. I'm here today to express my serious concerns about the safety of autonomous vehicle passenger services. In San Francisco, San Francisco is the center of this issue. The Bay Area is the birthplace of robotaxi technology and currently more robotaxis there are more robotaxis there than anywhere else in the country, making it a real world testing ground for this technology at scale. Over the past two years, there have been a noticeable shift in the autonomous vehicle's behavior.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    Early on, they tended to be overly cautious sometimes to the point of outright slowing down traffic. But more recently, I've seen the opposite. I now frequently see autonomous vehicles accelerating aggressively, creeping onto sidewalks and making maneuvers that create confusion and risk for everyone around them. I have personally experienced two near collisions involving autonomous vehicles in San Francisco. One occurred near DeBose Triangle and the other at the intersection of Noe And Market Street.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    In both cases, the autonomous vehicle ran a red light. As a professional and experienced driver, I am able to anticipate hazards, but these incidents were abrupt and unexpected and dangerous. Safety on our public roads must always be the top priority. For those of us who drive for a living, the margin of error is small and the consequences of mistakes can be life changing. What concerns me even more is that my experience sharing the road with autonomous vehicle is not isolated.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    Each day, there seems to be more reports and video evidence showing autonomous vehicles violating basic traffic laws and creating unsafe conditions. For example, the following reports and some have alluded to some of these things already. An autonomous vehicle carrying passengers blocked emergency responders during a mass shooting incident in Austin. Also in Austin, there have been more than 20 incidents of robo taxis illegally passing stopped school buses. Another autonomous vehicle drove through a police standoff in Los Angeles with a passenger inside.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    In Chandler, Virginia, an autonomous vehicle stopped in front of ongoing traffic to make a left hand turn. I'm sorry. That's not funny. But in Santa Monica, an autonomous vehicle struck a child near an elementary school. These incidents point to a broader pattern.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    When these systems fail, they can fail in ways that are unpredictable and difficult for human drivers and first responders to manage. In San Francisco, we have seen additional challenges. Many of you are aware of the robotaxi disruption during the December power outages last year. Hundreds of vehicles stalled on the public streets creating traffic congestion and safety hazards. I experienced this firsthand.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    I was stuck in traffic behind stalled robo taxis unable to move for an extended period of time. Our board of supervisors, transportation and land use committee held a informational hearing to get to the bottom of what happened. We came out of that hearing. What came out of the hearing was more even more disturbing concerning. During those power outages, city officials in charge of emergency response responses reported that there were significant delays in connecting with the companies responsible for stalled autonomous vehicles.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    And that first responders were forced to physically move disabled autonomous cars out of the roadway. That raises serious questions about preparedness and accountability. If these vehicles depend on remote assistance to function properly, then they then that support must be reliable, immediate and adequately staffed, especially during emergencies. When it's not, the burden and the cost shift to our cities or first responders and the public. I believe autonomous vehicles must be held to the same standards as human drivers.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    And in many cases, to even higher standards given that they are being deployed to scale on our public roads. First, robo taxi companies should be required to adequately staff and support their fleets so that they are not relying on emergency responders or our city personnel to fix malfunctions. Second, local authorities must have a clear tools to hold these company companies accountable. That includes the ability to to issue fines and in cases or repeated violations to suspend permits until safety compliance can be demonstrated.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    Third, the public deserves transparency.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    We should have access to timely accurate data about permits, safety records, incident reports, and traffic violations. Without transparency, there is no accountability. And without accountability, there is no trust. I urge you to act now to ensure that our streets remain safe, not just for passengers in these autonomous vehicles, but for pedestrians, cyclists, first responders, and professional drivers like me who share the road every day. Thank you for the opportunity to testify.

  • Joseph Augusto

    Person

    I look forward to your leadership on this critical issue.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Okay. Thank you for being here. Mister Gusman.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    Good afternoon. Mister chairman, members of the committee, thank you for inviting me here to speak on this important topic. My name is Shane Gusman. I am the legislative director for Teamsters California, which is the statewide organization for the international brother of Teamsters. Spent the last three decades representing the the Teamsters here at the state capitol.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    Among other things on highway safety issues and that's why I'm here today to speak to you. We are here because California is at a crossroads in our view. The Department of Motor Vehicles is taking us down a dangerous path. The DMVs proposed heavy DD autonomous vehicle regulations are not cautious. They are not incremental.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    They are not safety first. They are a green light for the rapid and reckless deployment of heavy duty autonomous trucks on California's public roads. And that should concern every single one of us here. Let me be clear about what is happening. Up until recently, California law recognized a basic reality.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    Vehicles weighing over 10,000 pounds, large commercial trucks, pose a pose uniquely high risks. And they should not operate autonomously without strict safeguards. These regulations or proposed regulations erase that line. They would allow autonomous trucks weighing 80,000 pounds to operate on public roads, not after proven safety, but based largely on manufacturer self certification. That is not oversight in our opinion.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    That is abdication of responsibility. And the risks here are not theoretical. When something goes wrong with a with a passenger vehicle as you've heard here today, the consequences are very serious. However, when something goes wrong with an 80,000 pound truck traveling at highway speeds, the consequences can be catastrophic. Stopping distances are longer.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    Kinetic energy is exponentially higher. The margin for error disappears. And yet the DMV is proposing to allow these vehicles onto our roads without requiring independent safety validation, without meaningful operational limits, and without demonstrated performance in California's real world conditions. California is not Arizona. It is not Texas.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    Our roads are more complex. Our traffic is denser. Our conditions are more extreme. We have dense urban corridors filled with pedestrians and cyclists. We have mountain passes, winding roads, steep grades.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    We have fog, wildfire, smoke, flooding and snow. We have some of the most complex freeway interchanges in the world. And yet, these regulations allow companies to prove safety in other states and then deploy here. That is not a safety standard. That is a loophole.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    Even more troubling is how these regulations define safety. Instead of requiring independent third party validation, the DMV relies on something called safety case, a safety case, excuse me. A document prepared by the manufacturer itself. No independent audit, no external verification, no enforceable performance threshold. We are being asked to trust that companies will police themselves when human stakes are alive.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    Alright. Human lives are at stake. That is not how we regulate companies that put dangerous products on the road, and that is not on into the stream of commerce, and that is not how we should regulate these vehicles. The proposal also fails to place meaningful limits on where these vehicles can operate. There is nothing that clearly prevents deployment in residential neighborhoods, near schools, or in dense urban corridors.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    Precisely environments where the technology is least reliable, and where the consequences of failure are highest. And finally, these regulations allow deployment far too early. A company can move from testing to full deployment without demonstrating consistent real world safety performance across diverse conditions. There is no clear minimum performance standard, no stage rollout tied to proven safety benchmarks, no requirement to earn public trust before scaling. That is not careful governance.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    It's a rush to deployment. At its core, this raises the fundamental question. What is the role of government here? Is it to facilitate the rapid commercialization of unproven technology to benefit a few companies? Or is it to protect the public?

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    Because right now the DMV is choosing speed over safety. We are not opposed to innovation, but innovation cannot come at the expense of public safety. And it is certainly and it certainly cannot come at the expense of basic regulatory responsibilities. If the DMV will not step up and fulfill its duty to protect the public, then this legislature must. We cannot stand by while heavy duty autonomous vehicles, and all autonomous vehicles for that matter, are deployed under conditions that endanger our communities.

  • Shane Gusman

    Person

    If the regulatory agency will not put safety first, it is this legislature responsibility to ensure that no AV deployment proceeds until public safety is truly guaranteed. Thank you.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Thank you. Thank you all. Return to the center, see if he has any questions or comments to start.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    No. I think you guys covered it very well. All of the public safety aspects of the autonomous vehicles. I watched them perform in Santa Monica and I watched them not perform in Santa Monica before. And and so, you know, it's it it I think it's technology that's going to continue to emerge, but we do have to figure out that sweet spot of, you know, hey, where maybe where they're appropriate and where they're not.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Or they where they don't work the most. Because, you know, I I can see some advantages for some people that are not not able to drive a car themselves and still can get around town using one of these vehicles. But when they're in condensed areas, it's just like any anywhere else. There's sometimes they become their own liability. We have to we have to kinda sort through that.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    And as the technology is, helped along, to see where it can go, we also have to provide some backstops. And, so I think that's what people are asking here is looking at backstops. That's all.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Alright. Thank you, Senator. The question for mister Wood, I guess, that's your title as retired. Response times and I I don't know how long you've been out of that loop, but in the San Jose area, both as a county supervisor and as a council member, I was quite aware of statutory or contractual response times that were set up, for EMTs, particularly, coming out of either fire or or private ambulance companies.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Do you recall what those would typically be in in San Francisco and oh, give you a deputy chief a chance to respond to if you if you know.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I I didn't come here knowing the answer, but I'm curious about how much time would be adequate response time for for somebody responding from an autonomous vehicle company to a scene.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    Yeah. The for cities that have 201 rights to to provide their own ambulance service in San Jose also and San Francisco, there are state regulations on response time for those for those units, for those medical units. And San Francisco was making steady progress towards lowering those response times. And then we have seen a spike again. And it it's not that every delayed response is because of a direct interaction between an autonomous vehicle and an ambulance.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    But I will say that in San Francisco, that the volume of autonomous vehicles on the road has added to congestion in noticeable ways. And and and the one of the problems we have is we cannot get a direct answer from the companies on what their actual fleet sizes are. It's just what we observe. And that is slowing response times across the board, especially I'll say especially in the central and Northeastern part of the cities, which are the most congested part of the cities.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    We've seen a noticeable spike again, where we we're always covering hovering right on the edge of the limit required by the two zero one rights, and and we occasionally go over it as the allowable percentage of the time, but we're the the autonomous vehicle congestion has definitely made the problem worse.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yeah. I appreciate that. And I I didn't wanna get into, you know, who's which city is meeting their response times, which isn't I was look more looking for a standard. I I guess really though in the context of this, what happens if you meet your response time and an autonomous vehicle is is a part of the collision at the scene. So not delaying the response?

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Asking you the question, how soon do they need to be there? If if you were in in in your mayor's shoes or my shoes, actually, the mayor can't promulgate any laws because state law preempts San Francisco and San Jose from from doing any local control. You alluded to that earlier. But if you could, what would you be trying to align? Is there an alignment in terms of response time?

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I'm really thinking in in terms of of passengers. Could be no fault of of of Waymo or any other companies that have passengers trapped in in a vehicle Oh, yes.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    Into the scene If we're not able to access the passenger.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And you and you need cooperation from from the remote operator.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    Well, that's As soon as that need to happen. We we would need to have it. I mean, if once we're on scene, we would need that to happen in less than five minutes. You know, the the so it's not so much the response time to the scene. It's trying to get access to the patient on scene if it's if it's create there's some obstacle in getting into

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Someone trapped under a vehicle.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    Yeah. We we would have which is again why we were the idea that came to us was the idea of a public safety manual override so that we could take, with whether with a code or a key fob or something that doesn't require contacting a remote operating center, being able to take control of the vehicle either to make sure the doors are unlocked or to move it out of harm's way and and, yeah, in that case, to access a patient.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    So we would need it in a much shorter time than we're able to do currently using a hotline to the remote operating center.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    My recollection is that the Santa Clara County slash San Jose contract response time was somewhere around eight and a half. Yeah. That's In other words, if you don't meet it, you don't get paid, basically.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    Right. That's right. You don't meet it, you don't get paid, and you can lose your ability to provide a municipal ambulance service if it's if it's the if you're missing those numbers consistently.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    But am I am I in the ballpark in terms of response? Yeah. Yeah. That's right. Okay.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And you but you're saying this those are that information should be readily available at the state? Oh, yeah. The 201 Certainly. Rules. Okay.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yeah. And how does dispatch you you talk use one example of the many that you gave, you know, about a a dispatch delay. And I don't know I mean, I I also having been in county government and city government, I understand there's people who do nothing but, the ins and outs of dispatch. So if you don't know the answer, that's fine. But what what I'm trying to understand is how does dispatch work now under the current scheme of things with an autonomous vehicle situation?

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    You you because you alluded to a delay of 56 minutes or something like that. Right.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    Those that was so that the we have a a 24 dispatch center, emergency command center, who are it's a combination of police, fire, and medical all coming from a central location. Okay. So those dispatchers are sending out the appropriate units to whatever the 911 call responds to.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    And if the responding units encounter a delay caused by an autonomous vehicle, they'll communicate that to the dispatcher, and the dispatcher will utilize the hotline to try to get the remote operating center to move the car if that's what the problem requires. But that's where we're running into these delays.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    So the autonomous vehicle companies, at least as of now, are not affirmatively notifying dispatch that their vehicle has been in an incident?

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    No. Mostly when these calls to the hotline are being made, they're usually requested units in

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    the field. So you're already late? You're already late. Okay. Yeah.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And is is my understanding is there's technology out there and it may be just my experience with my own non autonomous vehicle, my EV, with OnStar systems and such that you're in an accident and immediately there's a note there's a a dispatch notification that comes from that vehicle. I don't know if you're aware of that. Is that is that technology, at least generally, available through municipal systems? I don't mean provided by San Francisco, but is it compatible with San Francisco's dispatch?

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    It may be the overwhelming majority of the problems we're running into is not involving an AV in an accident. So that it might not trigger that OnStar type response because it's not experiencing an accident itself or become inoperable because of a of a trauma or a a but it's it's just frozen by an unusual situation.

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    Now so I don't know if that triggers any response from the vehicle to its own remote operator, but it certainly seems that the call has to come from us before anything actually happens.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Would it be helpful to have the technology and the autonomous vehicle notify its remote operator and have the and the remote operator then notify dispatch?

  • Adam Wood

    Person

    If that would speed up the resolution of the situation, it would be very helpful. Yeah.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Okay. Any I don't know if you're aware of the the technology around dispatch in San Jose. I know it's a good system. Yes. We use San Jose guy, but what what do you know about that? Yes.

  • Brandon Sanchez

    Person

    Thank you, Senator, for the question. We have interacted with OnStar in similar technology when we've had instances of crashes involving the vehicle that has that capability in it. They'll contact our dispatch. Our dispatch will pass along to the officers in the field. But to my understanding, you know, in in the autonomous world, we have to generally, like my colleague said, make the first call into them first.

  • Brandon Sanchez

    Person

    We don't get anything from them on the front end.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Right. Okay. If you learn anything more about that, the aftermath of this hearing, in fairness to all involved, you know, please let us know. We'll certainly distribute that information to committee members, you know, folks who are, you know, again later on dealing with bills and policy and trying to maybe fix some of the rules.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yes, Senator Seyarto.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    I have a question on, you're talking about the response time. Yes. Were you talking about from the time that, they dispatch to the time they arrive on scene?

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yeah. I mean

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Because the the response time that is recorded and and for contracts for ambulance companies and stuff is is that time. Once you get on scene, you just punch on scene. And then you have you try to figure out what needs to be done.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    In the case where they have a a patient inside a car and then they can't get access and they can't get a hold of well, then the car becomes a a demolition vehicle and they start cutting it up and you you make forcible entry. So that's not as I think it's not as big as the issue.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    If there's an an autonomous vehicle blockage and they can't get through to a call, then the dispatchers will will dispatch the next closest rig and and they talk to each other about, hey, you're gonna have to come from the other side and and you know, get to whatever address we're going to. So there could be a potential, delay in that in that that process.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    But but as far as getting on scene, it's whatever it takes to get from the and it's usually those contracts are usually five to ten minutes depending upon where they're located in, you know, if they're out in the country or if they're out in in a in a city or wherever it is. That's that's where that comes in handy.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yeah. Thank you. It sounds like as of given the experience you have as a high level first responder, it reminds me of the days I sat. I had a seatmate, John Dequisto, the late John Dequisto, who was a battalion chief in in the day, retired, served on the city council, and we were having a similar conversation about fire apparatus access when blocked. And he said he leaned over and said it won't really matter because they'll just take the truck and move everything out of the way.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    But in the in the in the issue of a an injury, we heard testimony earlier of an of an injury more than we've heard testimony from all of you of of certain injuries that have occurred. And, you know, clearly that that can that can happen again.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    My concern, I'm just trying to get at the issue of as the as the legislature is trying to work with the industry on industry on, what would be an appropriate response time standard that aligns with, with public safety standards, what would that be? And I I think I have a general answer to the question. It sounds like it might be in the eight minute range and and you made it very clear we can find that out right here at the state of California.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    So we'll go do that. Anything else, senators? If not, I'm going to let this let this panel go. We appreciate all of you being here. Appreciate your testimony very much.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    It's added greatly to the hearing today and informing a lot of people. Should mention, I think all the Sacramento folks here know this, but we've had people coming in and out. Of course, they're on other committees and, multiple committees meeting today. In fact, I keep you checking my text here to see when they're gonna call me over to vote, in the in the audit committee anytime now. I'm gonna have to leave for a few minutes.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    But just know that much like city hall and so forth, this place is completely wired. We have staff and all the fours here watching on monitors, listening, members listening and people, of course, who are gonna run back the tape afterwards and and, you know, utilize your testimony, hopefully, for good things to happen. So thank you. The next and final panel on state regulatory agencies. I wanna invite Bernard Soriano, deputy director of policy, Department of Motor vehicles.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Miguel Acosta, autonomous vehicles branch chief, department of motor vehicles. And Tara Curtis, director consumer protection enforcement division California public utilities commission. Thank you all for being here. Welcome.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Miguel Acosta, autonomous vehicles branch chief, department of motor vehicles. And Tara Curtis, director consumer protection enforcement division California public utilities commission. Thank you all for being here. Welcome.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And, I'm a go ahead and get you started.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I see someone waving me, which probably means that I have to run over across the street and run back again. So I'll put one of the Senators here in charge while I'm gone but we'll get you started in five minutes each and mister Soriano since you were listed first, we'll call on you first. Thank you.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    Well, good afternoon, Mr. Chair and committee members. Thank you for inviting us, to testify. I'm Bernard Soriano. I'm the deputy director at the DMV.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    And joining me at the table is Miguel Acosta. He's the chief of our autonomous vehicles branch. Miguel will be reading a prepared statement. But before doing so, I wanted to point out that California has started regulating AVs since 2014. Well over a decade.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    And those regulations have evolved to the point where today, California has coordinated end to end framework for vehicle operation and passenger service. With active oversight and enforcement at every stage. Thank you again for inviting us and giving us the opportunity to testify. Miguel will go ahead and read the statement and after that, we will be available to address any questions that you may have.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Okay. Thank you. Go ahead, mister Acosta.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    Good afternoon, chair, committee members. As Bernard mentioned, my name is Miguel Acosta. I'm Chief of Autonomous Vehicles, here at the California DMV. Senate bill 1298 in 2012 established vehicle code Section 38750 directing the DMV to adopt regulations necessary to ensure the safe operation of autonomous vehicles on California public roads. Since then, the department has adopted three rule makings authorizing testing with the safety driver in 2014, driverless testing and deployment in 2018, and light duty autonomous motor trucks in 2019.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    The department is now developing a fourth rule making package. Throughout this process, we have engaged extensively with local partners, including transportation agencies and first responder departments in cities like Los Angeles, Santa Monica, and San Francisco. And we've convened two statewide first responder round tables to ensure operational concerns are fully incorporated. The new proposal establishes a path for testing and deploying heavy duty autonomous vehicles and strengthens the department's safety oversight.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    It adds more detailed and frequent reporting, including vehicle immobilizations, system failures, hard breaking, and aligned federal crash reporting requirements, and expands the department's enforcement tools.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    It also implements Assembly Bill 1777 by requiring AVs to respond appropriately to emergency geofence messages, comply with law enforcement direction, and support first responders when an override system is present. The rule making also creates a formal process for law enforcement to notify the department and manufacturers when an AV is involved in a moving violation.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    California's approach continues to align with the federal model or manufacturers self certified compliance with federal motor vehicle safety standards or receive exemptions through NHTSA, while the state oversees driver licensing, vehicle registration, insurance, and operational safety. The department currently administers three AV permit types, testing with the safety driver, driverless testing, and deployment. Today, 28 manufacturers hold driver testing permits, six hold driverless testing permits, and three are authorized for deployment.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    Under existing regulations for testing with the safety driver, manufacturers must operate light duty vehicles that meet federal standards or hold a NHTSA exemption. They must maintain $5,000,000 in insurance, report collisions within ten days, submit annual disengagement reports, and ensure their test drivers have clean driving records. Driverless testing carries similar requirements, but requires a defined operational design domain, meaning speed, roadway type, weather constraints, time of day operations, a communication link to a remote operator, and a law enforcement interaction plan.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    Deployment builds on these standards by allowing manufacturers to receive compensation and requiring consumer education for vehicles sold to the public, as well as continued communication capabilities and an ODD description that reflects actual testing performance. The department maintains strong oversight through ongoing incident review, data reporting, and post permitting enforcement.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    DMV has issued three revocations and 14 suspensions since 2014, such as the 2023 suspension of cruises driverless testing and deployment permits in San Francisco, and the 2021 suspension of Pony.AI's driverless testing permit following a system failure related crash in Fremont. California's regulatory framework supports the continued development of autonomous technology while prioritizing roadway safety, compliance with state law, and safe interactions with other road users. We appreciate the opportunity today and welcome any questions you may have.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Thank you very much for your testimony. We'll move right on to you, miss Curtis, and hear what you have to say. And then depending upon when the chair gets back, he may have some questions for you. But if he doesn't, we're gonna go right to public testimony and then we'll come back and answer questions afterwards. Okay? Thanks.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    Thank you. Thank you, chair and members of the committee. My name is Terra Curtis. I'm the director of the Consumer Protection and Enforcement Division at the California Public Utilities Commission. And I appreciate the opportunity to speak today about the commission's role in regulating autonomous, autonomous passenger service in California.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    The commission's authority focuses on passenger service, ensuring that companies can safely transport members of the public for hire. We do not regulate all autonomous vehicle activity. Our responsibility is limited to passenger transportation, including including ride hail services as they're commonly referred to in the public. Private use, delivery services, and other non passenger operations are outside of our jurisdiction. Passenger safety is our foremost priority and shapes how we design and implement the permitting framework.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    Under the commission's permitting framework, companies must meet the requirements, that apply to transportation charter party carriers, such as limousines and tour buses in addition to autonomous vehicle specific requirements. Autonomous vehicle companies that seek to offer passenger service may apply for either pilot or deployment authorization. In both contexts, companies may apply for permits to operate with or without drivers. And commercial commercial passenger service is only permitted once an operator satisfies the commission's deployment requirements. Safety oversight does not end once a permit is issued.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    Operators must continue to demonstrate that they can safely transport members of the public and comply with all applicable rules. As part of this ongoing oversight, permit holders are required to submit safety plans and operational data and comply with all reporting requirements. The commission monitors operations, reviews complaints, and follows up when safety concerns arise. We may request additional information, conduct inspections, and take enforcement actions when necessary. When concerns are identified, staff may open investigations and issue citations or notices to cease and desist or other enforcement orders.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    The commission may also initiate formal enforcement proceedings, which can result in corrective actions, find, financial penalties or permit suspension or revocation. These enforcement tools enable the commission to ensure compliance with permit conditions, reporting requirements, and passenger safety obligations. We also coordinate closely with other regulators where our responsibilities overlap, including federal and state agencies such as the Department of Motor Vehicles. While the DMV oversees vehicle safety and operation on public roads, the commission's role focuses on passenger service. This coordination ensures that safety issues are addressed comprehensively.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    As autonomous vehicle passenger service continues to evolve, the commission is actively updating its regulatory framework through a rulemaking opened in August 2025 following the conclusion of the prior proceeding. Given how quickly the industry has changed, this rule making is focused on ensuring the framework keeps pace by strengthening safety requirements, clarifying accountability, and improving transparency and data reporting. Ultimately, our goal is that autonomous vehicle passenger service operates safely under a clear and enforceable framework.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    Our role is not to endorse technologies or pick winners, but to ensure that when companies transport members of the public, they do so under strong oversight and that we can act if problems arise. Thank you.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    I'm happy to answer any questions.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Great. Thank you. Senator Araquin, do you have any questions? Okay. So, I would imagine the chair will have some questions for you.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    One of the questions I have is, you know, it seems like the the structure of, accountability is in place. And maybe the breakdown is sometimes what happens out the field, which is normally the the case. We are hearing some testimony about, you know, delayed responses, delayed time when they're trying they tried to call the company and they they can't get a hold of them or they're put on hold. How do how are those issues handled by whatever department is notified?

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    Yeah. It's a great question. So as I mentioned, our framework includes a robust incident review. If we have incidents where, for example, there's a report of some blockage where, let's say, blocking a fire engine or police or those kinds of things, we meet with the manufacturer, try to understand that situation, fully understand all the facts associated with it and, in some cases, ask the manufacturer how they're gonna remediate that situation.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    Every type of situation is different. There may be a real a reason for that particular situation. But if the manufacturer cannot remediate that particular situation, that is when our enforcement tools kinda come come up.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    And and for each of you, how have we had a lot of incidents where we have been getting complaints, from the various, public safety agencies or whatever regarding incidents with, autonomous vehicles?

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    Yes. We've, developed great relationship with locals. We meet, frequently with, LADOT, San Francisco, Santa Monica. You know, for a period of time, we are meeting very frequently with SF Fire, to understand some of these incidents. We would actually obtain they had reporting these types of situations that we would review.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    They'd send them to us. We'd review them. We talk with the fire department to understand them better and then we'd meet with the actual manufacturer, and go over those particular situations. So, we we had a a pipeline in place, to hear from both parties and to try to make sure that these issues are being resolved.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    And I would just add as well, I don't have exact figures, on those numbers of, complaints or outreach we have. But what I would say is that, we have a process like the DMV to review every single complaint that a member of the public reports to the commission. And that is a contact information that's available to the public on our website. In addition, we we when we see incidents, reported to us or through news media or other means, those are also issues that we follow-up on.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    We we inquire for more information from the providers. So I'm sorry I don't have the exact .

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    I was gonna say would you class clarify the volume as light, moderate, or or all the time? Yeah. In other words, you gotta hire three people to answer all the calls.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    Yeah. Well, I do appreciate that, in the past, we have requested staff resources related to our oversight of AV and been granted, one or two analysts over the past six years, I believe. So, that has happened concurrently with the growth in the industry. And so it's not it's not an overwhelming amount for our staff capacity at this time.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Same same Yeah.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    I would say the same thing.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Okay. Alright. At this time, what we'll do is we'll take public testimony. If you guys wanna line up at the microphone there and get your, all of your comments, organized in your mind into about a one minute sound bite, that'd be great. We're gonna try and get you out of here by 04:00 ish.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Hopefully, the chair will get back here by then. If not, you guys are trapped until he gets back. Go ahead with your, comments. You got Oh, try to take about a minute or so. You don't have to take a whole minute.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    I just wanna make sure you knew that. Okay.

  • Marc Vukcevich

    Person

    Good afternoon, committee. Marc Vukcevich from Streets for All. I wanna first and foremost appreciate this hearing for happening. I think this is an important topic. I also wanna stress that we do not have an adopted AV policy framework, but there are some things that we do believe, and I wanna share those.

  • Marc Vukcevich

    Person

    We do believe that AVs as a whole are very safe and could potentially bring a new age of street safety. We also believe that companies like Tesla, who are in the ADAS level two system, have flagrantly lied to the consumer, and that has led to death and destruction on our roadway. We think that agencies like DMV and CPUC are not necessarily adequate for regulating these, the topics of AVs and building the public trust that these topics deserve.

  • Marc Vukcevich

    Person

    We think AVs are not necessarily the future of cities because we think geometrically cities still require public transportation walking and biking, but we think they could be more of the future for suburbs and suburban transportation. Lastly, there are substantial questions that arise when it comes to questions of parking, congestion, and land use.

  • Marc Vukcevich

    Person

    If I go to a city and wanna go get ice cream and tell my AV to go circle the block for 20 times while I go get ice cream, what does that do to our downtowns and to our cities and to our urban places when everyone is doing that? I think that leads to questions of congestion pricing and parking pricing to deal with the negative externalities. Appreciate the committee for taking my taking the time. Thank you.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Thank you. Next speaker, please.

  • Janice Jackson

    Person

    Hello, everybody. Can you hear me? Yes. Hi, everybody. My name is Janice Jackson, and I thank you guys for listening to our concerns.

  • Janice Jackson

    Person

    Once again, my name is Janice Jackson. I'm a member of the California Gig Workers Union. I live in Sacramento, and I've been driving for ten years. I'm here because of my concern about a v's. A v's haven't been yet started in Sacramento, but I see them on our streets and now soon to start operation.

  • Janice Jackson

    Person

    And what concern what concerns me is all that I have heard from other drivers from the Bay Area and how they have ran lights, blocked traffic, and caused accidents and hitting animals. I haven't experienced any of these any of this. But AVs AV companies need to be held to a higher responsibility for all of the things that that I've just mentioned. And as drivers, we have we are held responsible for those so they should be as well. Thank you.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Thank you very much, ma'am.

  • Peter Munoz

    Person

    Thanks, speaker. Good afternoon. I'm Peter Lorraine Munoz with the Bay Area Council. We are here today to strongly support the continued safe deployment of autonomous vehicles as a critical pillar of our state's economic and transportation infrastructure. And this innovation comes with greater safety for drivers, pedestrians, and others along our streets and roads.

  • Peter Munoz

    Person

    AVs are the only vehicles on the road that provide a 100% data transparency. And in light of the committee's rightful recent attention to traffic fatalities, Golden State companies are stepping in to lead the way on solutions to road safety. While the state struggles with repeat offenders on the road, the AV industry is continuing to provide a safer alternative for Californians to get around. But if we move to a patchwork regulatory environment, we risk a fragmented system that isn't just a hurdle, it's a de facto ban.

  • Peter Munoz

    Person

    We believe the DMV and CPUC are the appropriate bodies to maintain rigorous uniform safety standards.

  • Peter Munoz

    Person

    We need one rule of the road for the entire state to ensure this technology can scale, operate reliably, and safely serve our residents. It is also important to differentiate AVs from the driver assist industry. There is a substantial difference in safety performance, operations, legal liability, and insurance between SAE levels two and or three vehicles and fully autonomous driverless vehicles. Level four or fully driverless vehicles are very different from the operations technology and functionality of driver assist vehicles.

  • Peter Munoz

    Person

    Policymakers should not conflate the performance of one with the other.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Can you wrap it up pretty soon?

  • Peter Munoz

    Person

    Yes.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Thank you.

  • Peter Munoz

    Person

    Just to remain a global leader in innovation, California must choose a unified statewide path forward that prioritizes both safety and growth. Thank you.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Thank you very much. Next speaker. You have ten seconds. He used most of it. No, I'm just kidding. You you go Ten seconds. You go do what you need.

  • Vikash Shankar

    Person

    Good afternoon. My name is Vikash Shankar and I'm a member of the California Gig Workers Union. I'm a resident of Fresno, and I've been driving for Uber and Lyft for the past ten years on and off. I'm here today because I'm concerned about how AVs are gonna affect my community and my fellow drivers even though they're not there yet. As a driver in the Central Valley and also as a former journalist, I've seen firsthand the impact of red light crashes and unsafe driving in our communities.

  • Vikash Shankar

    Person

    Virtually none of which were the fault of the professional safe and sober drivers that AVs are actually seeking to replace. As a as a driver, there are already too many makeshift memorials on our busy intersections, too many families affected by inattentive and unsafe driving. I mean, even one of our intersections has a YouTube channel dedicated to footage of red light crashes and and, and, you know, people running red lights. AVs are coming to our communities. We know this.

  • Vikash Shankar

    Person

    And as a driver who takes pride in getting residents and visitors to their destination safely, we ensure that the nightmares of AVs that we are seeing all we're seeing in other places don't become our stories as well. Don't allow the replacement of safe professional drivers with unaccountable and incomplete AVs.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Thank you. Thank you, sir.

  • Mustafa Amin

    Person

    Alright. My name is Mustafa El Amin. I'm also a I'm representing the I'm with the California Gig Workers Union. I am also from Fresno, California. I've been a rideshare driver for going on ten years now.

  • Mustafa Amin

    Person

    So as a member of the California Gig Workers Union, as a Ricer driver, you know, I take pride in transporting my passengers in a safe manner, providing an excellent service that I can provide for them as well. And AVs, you know, they're not been in my re released in our area as of yet, but it's coming. And I already know that, you know, I'm not against innovation, but, you know, right now, innovation is kind of outpacing the legislation.

  • Mustafa Amin

    Person

    So there has to be a framework for things to roll out in a safe manner. As a riser driver myself, there's a certain criteria that I have to abide by.

  • Mustafa Amin

    Person

    I have to meet the legal framework that that's that's put on myself and I have consequences if I violate any of these types of rules. So just we just wanna make sure that AVs, as they get rolled out, they have the same considerations in mind, you know, especially if it comes to we're operating in the same space that I operate in as well.

  • Mustafa Amin

    Person

    So we wanna make sure that, you know, the supporting bills that are gonna create a legal framework so that AVs have the same accountability as the human drivers.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Great. Thank you. Thank you so much.

  • Alicia Priego

    Person

    Chair members, Alicia Priego here on behalf of the Chamber of Progress. Thank you for this important hearing. AVs are a part of a broader mobility ecosystem that augments and expands good jobs across our economy. With smart, safety first policy and intentional workforce development, California can capture these benefits for working families across the state and continue to lead with policies that support forward thinking innovation. This shift won't happen overnight, and rollout is expected to unfold over a decade or so, giving time for this transition.

  • Alicia Priego

    Person

    AVs create indirect employment across infrastructure and construction, energy and utilities, local services, and expanded logistics and retail activity. I did wanna touch on, one issue that hasn't been covered today, is that AVs can help transform paratransit offering flexible curb to curb service that suggests, that could help as many as four point four million people with disabilities access jobs nationwide.

  • Alicia Priego

    Person

    The Public Policy Institute of California has emphasized that reducing transportation barriers, expanding job training, and strengthening employer employer supports are central to improving labor market access for Californians with disabilities. And these are goals that AVs can help advance. Thank you for your time and, appreciate the ability to comment.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Thank you very much. Next speaker.

  • Ashante Smith

    Person

    Thank you, vice chair and members. My name is Ashante. I'm the director of state policy here at the Silicon Valley Leadership Group. SBLG represents Silicon Valley's most innovative companies, including leaders in autonomous vehicles.

  • Ashante Smith

    Person

    We're here today to urge the committee to recognize the distinction between fully autonomous vehicles and driver assist systems. The this distinction matters. By the state's own determination, vehicles with level two driver assist technology are not classified as autonomous vehicles and conflating them with level four. Fully dryer driverless vehicles misrepresents the technology, the safety record, and the regulatory framework. The safety data is clear, published from Waymo.

  • Ashante Smith

    Person

    Published data from Waymo shows that across San Francisco, Los Angeles, Phoenix, and Austin, and across all crash types, fully autonomous vehicles are delivering 80 to a 100% less reductions, caused by distraction, impairment, and speeding, leading causes which are the leading causes of death for roughly 40,000 traffic deaths. Americans suffer each year. These results were consistent across all four cities and all severity levels. This is not a localized advantage. It is something that is a systemic gain.

  • Ashante Smith

    Person

    We believe that this represents the most significant advancement in road safety in recent memory. The regulatory framework matches, that promise. California is building the most rigorous AV oversight in the country with the DMV finalizing autonomous truck regulations that go above above and beyond what the legislature had previously required. At a time where the legislature is Please. Rightly focused on road safety, Silicon Valley is delivering real measurable solutions.

  • Ashante Smith

    Person

    We ask the committee to let the data guide the policy and protect California's role as a global leader in autonomous vehicle.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Alright. Thank you. We are rapidly running out of time. So if we can, get your comments in, I appreciate it and keep them synced. Thank you.

  • Elmer Lizardi

    Person

    Thank you. Elmer Lizardi here on behalf the California Federation of Labor Unions. Just wanna state, you know, that there are over half a million workers who drive for living in California, especially in delivery, freight, passenger service, public transit, etcetera. And commercial drivers have the expertise and training to navigate the complexities of California's roads because they're licensed to do so. And yet companies are looking to increase profits with AVs at the expense of those workers by attempting to eliminate jobs entirely.

  • Elmer Lizardi

    Person

    Driverless vehicle deployment has been expanding in very visible ways, as has been mentioned throughout today, and we want to ensure that as aviation technology is expanding into more industries and more heavy duty uses, people are aware of the threat of the job loss and economic displacement that is becoming more pressing, especially, you know, industries like heavy duty delivery, agriculture, and construction.

  • Elmer Lizardi

    Person

    We at the labor fed wanna ensure that we are updating our laws to meet the challenges of our twenty first century, especially as they relate to workers' technology rights and how those, technology and technological advancements are changing the scope of work, and AVs are no different. So we just want to ensure that workers remain at the forefront of these discussions, and that we relate that technological advancements are not new.

  • Elmer Lizardi

    Person

    We've heard about the, you know, advancements of so called innovation, but it is the workers who are gonna be bearing the brunt of these changes, and we wanna make sure that if we care about protecting workers and their dignity, that they are at the forefront of these discussions.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    Thank you very much. Next and last speaker.

  • Matt Hedich

    Person

    Good afternoon. Matt Hedich with the Transport Workers Union. Thank you for an opportunity to discuss, AV policy in California. The Transport Workers Union represents bus operators and dispatchers and other transit safety professionals at SF Muni. While the transport workers union is not opposed to driver technology that aid a driver in the performance of their jobs, we, you know, we welcome blind spot monitoring, lane departure, and auto breaking technologies. We are opposed to technologies, that replace, a human operator, a well qualified human operator.

  • Matt Hedich

    Person

    Bus and transit operators provide critical safety component in our city buses in San Francisco. These are good middle class and union jobs and our members wish to continue in these roles as safety professionals for the future. We thank you for your time.

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    And thank you very much. That exhausts our speaker role. So I've been asked to go and put the committee in recess until the chair returns. So he could potentially Whoops. Is he here?

  • Kelly Seyarto

    Legislator

    There he is. And here's the chair to ask you questions. Thank you very much, for your guys' attention and and your patience today in, testifying on this. And with that, Chair Cortese will be, finishing up. We've already gone through public testimony.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I'm at a disadvantage of the legislature's own making here not having heard your presentations. I apologize for that. I'll go over them afterwards digitally because they are important to me. I do I wanna ask you kind of a question that is really general and it's you could know is a perfectly fine answer.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    But you heard some of my questions if not all of them at least, you know, by sort of the osmosis of being in this room to the previous panels in terms of things like response times and those kind of regulatory issues.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Is there anything there that you would comment on either from the d DMV side or CPUC side? I guess what I'm saying is I would certainly welcome your thoughts on on any of those questions that I brought up in terms of, you know, the need for uniform standards, regulation of backroom operations, you know, response time issues and whether there should be affirmative. I guess I was implying there might maybe there should be some sort of affirmative dispatch communications.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Has any of that been, you know, come to your attention in your own agencies?

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    I can start on there. Yeah. Well, I can I can certainly start, mister chair? And then Miguel can provide some of the details. But we are we are aware of the incidents that have occurred and Miguel can go into the actions that we have taken.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    I will say that I'd like to point out that, you know, we're not adverse to pulling the levers that are available to us as far as enforcement. For example, you know, we we took action against Cruz when it was appropriate to to do so. We took action against other companies as well. So it's not something that we take lightly. We take our responsibility very seriously to ensure that the motoring public is safe and we feel like the regulations provide that vehicle for us to do so.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    That being said, these incidents that have occurred are very much on an operational level. And we also have looked into those incidents and worked with the companies, worked with the first responders, worked with the people who are affected by them so that we get a clear understanding about what had happened. And then that helps us helps inform us moving forward. So Neil?

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    Yeah. I would just like to add that the new regulations that we're going to be, we've developed and we're we're looking to to actually adopt, have additional enforcement tools. So currently, right now, we have the enforcement tool of suspension or revocation of a permit to the operating authority. We're actually looking for additional enforcement tools that would allow us to actually potentially restrict.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    So give us a little bit more ability to target potentially certain areas of an operational design domain or geographic location, and and give us again more tools to enforce incidents occurring in in a variety of ways.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    And thank you for the question. I think the only other thing that I would add is and and and you had missed the the earlier presentation but appreciate the question and the opportunity to clarify the commission's regulatory role over, autonomous vehicle passenger services specifically. I would say that a lot of the the issues and topics that came up in the discussion earlier today are issues that we have, that we have heard from the public as well.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    And so, I thank you again for the opportunity to kind of clarify our role, and and the DMV's role, over those types of topics.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Just a couple more specific questions and and I appreciate the two. Like I said, I'll go over here your prior comments. The my my own observation, and I alluded to it earlier is that since the days of Henry Ford, there was this combination and it probably didn't go to exactly back to that date.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    But, generally speaking, going back to the time of the mass production of the automobile, pre autonomous vehicles, obviously, there was this always been this blend as far as I know of of state agency regulatory control, especially over licensing and registration, the ability to revoke licensing and registration, which still exists today. We've had DMV here and talked about those things recently.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And yet there's still, despite the state agencies occupying so much of the field, that there's still this local regulatory process that basically seems more operational in in many ways. Right? Can you, you know, what do you do? Can you make a right turn from somebody was talking about seeing an a seeing an AV making a a left turn or right turn from the center lane.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Typically, you know, those may or may not be state motor vehicle code issues, but typically the enforcement and, you know, the local ordinance making around whether you do that in the airport approach, whether you do that on a on a particular frontage road or street, it it my experience is, you know, in in a stack of of local ordinances that have been adopted, you know, by many cities within the framework that the DMV allows and and perhaps the CPUC on things like taxi service and things like that.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Is there is are in are your agencies themselves opposed to some level of complimentary, you know, local ordinance making, rule making, regulatory process on on just day to day congestion and driving issues. And I I I I I get it. You may not be able to speak on behalf of the entire. I'm gonna ask you to speak on behalf of the executive branch being executive agency here.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I'm really just asking is is there would there be a fundamental reason with autonomous vehicles, you know, to not have the that state slash local blend of of control?

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Is there something, you know, I'm sort of missing there?

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    You're right. It's it's it's a question that's difficult for for us here to answer on behalf of the the executive branch. And from the from the standpoint of what we are responsible for is ensuring that those vehicles are safe to be operated on California's roadways. All California roadways. And so we have to ensure that what we put down in a regulatory fashion does exactly that.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    And so we look at things such as obeying all of the rules of the road and at a state level. So if there are some items that are at a local level that also need to be conformed to. You know, that would be an expectation that we would also have because it encompasses the safe operation of those vehicles. No different than us licensing Miguel, myself, yourself. Right.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    And the expectation that we would have that you would obey the rules of the road regardless of where you are in the state.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Right. And it's we were having a little sidebar a couple of us over here just before the hearing started that this is one of the few areas of machine learning, you know, AI related stuff if if not completely, you know, AI driven technology that's coming along emerging and already on our streets. But but it's also an area that we've regulated before. So much of what we encounter, again, speaking as one legislator these days is, you know, falls into the category.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I've never seen it before and we really have to start with a a blank slate.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Maybe like everybody did when Henry in Henry Ford's day. How are we gonna deal with this? But we have this experience with motor vehicles, in terms of the regulatory side of it where we've, you know, we've had that blend. It seems to have worked well. It seems even even with us very deficient, less than 92% safer human drivers.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    When I pull over on Highway 5 into Stockton, I know there are different rules, local rules, than when I pull off in Tracy or eventually make it all the way to San Jose. I mean, my brain is capable of computing at least that far.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    You know, I know the basic rules that the DMV is promulgated and I don't have to worry too much about CPUC, but I I also know what to look for as soon as I come into a a local town or city or a rural road, a scenic highway, I know what to look for. It seems to me autonomous vehicles can adapt to, you know, local nuances as well.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    But I I was if you disagree with that, and that's more of a technical question not a philosophical question about the administration of the executive branch or your agency that there's a place that sounds like what you were saying is that there may be a place for, you know, for local rule making of some kind to complement the the larger process that you're in charge of.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    Yeah. I I mister chair, I I don't disagree with you at all. I'm I'm certainly not a AI expert but I would anticipate that through machine learning and different AI technologies that that learned behavior, that learned methodology that you and I go through would be transferable in the machine world. Not sure exactly when that would happen but I can envision that that would be the case.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Alright. We'd love to certainly have a cooperative relationship with your your agencies. I think I could speak on behalf of the committee at least here, you know, in terms of, flushing out those kinds of issues going forward. Much easier and much quicker to to work collaboratively than and that that was the nature of my question.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    You know, is there potential for collaboration there with the DMV, for example, on on trying to to get there as opposed to the legislature itself post some kind of a tragedy or or, you know, based on some of the the fact patterns that we have just putting legislation out there that may or may not align with with your thinking as to what should happen in terms of local the local side of things.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And, you know, I I haven't come from local government. I'm very confident in the city's and county's ability to to deal with the nuance of of their own congestion management, you know, where taxi stands should be, where ride share should show up or not show up is it seems to be very difficult for us to either either you or legislature to to rule make or to legislate from this level, you know, from a singular capital in Sacramento. Any any further comments on that? No.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    I I would say we would welcome any discussions that you would wanna have.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Alright. That's appreciated. Very much appreciated. Have there been the last thing is in I mentioned it in my first broad question, but have you had discussions specifically about maybe what should happen in terms of of uniform dispatch and response standards when it comes to first responders. We had a lot of first responder testimony.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I'm just wondering if that's come up in either of your agencies as as something to look at.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    We we have we have had discussions with several first responder organizations. Miguel, if you wanna go into some of the details with, the ones we've

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I apologize if you've already testified on that.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    Yeah. Okay. No. That's fine.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    No. We've hosted, in the development regulations. We've, facilitated, two statewide workshops with first responders. First in Northern California and then some in Southern California listening to some of those exact concerns. In addition, in the development of our regulations, you were mentioning best practices, what kind of standards.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    And so in in addition to hearing input from all stakeholders, we took a look at what industry best practices are available for those kinds of interactions, particularly when there's no driver in the vehicle and how to interact with remote assistance.

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    So so again, I think our our approach was to to not only hear from the first responders on the ground who are dealing with those in the cities, but also to the stakeholders who are developing the technology and seeing the best practices across the industry as well.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And and any plan yet for for how to deal with the the actual individual this comes back to the local side of things. The actual individual dispatch centers, meaning, obviously, first responders are are dispatched now from when these get sort of centralized, especially in the urban areas, but centralized dispatch centers that are getting police and fire and ambulance out on a 911 call. Any any thoughts yet or developed yet in terms of how you might or how we might interact with them?

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    You know, is it is it again, does it come into the area of they know what they're doing, they should be empowered to work within a framework that we set up or we'll tell them exactly what we need and and and put that in our regulations or none of the above?

  • Miguel Acosta

    Person

    You know, I think, you know, one of the things is we're we're hoping to get some more some more data on that. Okay. And as these AV scale in cities like San Francisco and Los Angeles, trying to see the impact and and we're gonna continue to to learn and and adopt regulations that are gonna continue to grow with the industry and also the needs of the first responders. Okay. Last

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    question. The the the different nomenclature that I was questioning before, I was hoping by the end of this committee hearing to understand it all better. I think I accomplished that much. Has there been any discussion about just getting the nomenclature on the CMPG? I understand about the Tesla, the modification to FSD and and making sure it's it's it's labeled as unsupervised or or super either supervised.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    But it it seems like at some point, this should all be consolidated into basically a couple of of definitions, a couple of glossary terms in terms of what we're dealing with out there because there's a lot of redundancy in the four or five terms that we heard. Is that something that you're working on?

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    It certainly is something that is an area that needs to be looked at. We have to be also mindful about coming up with definitions that may not comport with other jurisdictions throughout the country. And so, it's the definitions that exist came from very much an engineering background because of the way that the the systems were being developed. Not necessarily most consumable terms for the general public.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    And and as such, as as the technology develops, I think there is a need to have a standardized nomenclature that is easily understandable, consumable and one that most people would understand and it makes sense when you hear it.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yeah. The CPCs dealt with a lot of that a lot of nomenclature around other areas of utility regulation and and so forth. Is is that is that is that something that would, find a home at CPUC? Type a, type b, type c and that's it? That's that's what we have out there?

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    Yeah. I appreciate the question. I think when it comes to classifying autonomous vehicles, specifically in California, you know, we look to the existing, the existing law and the DMV's regulations, primarily. Aye, I I will say, I think one of the terms that was used quite a lot today was, robo taxi. And I think that is colloquially used to refer to passenger service and AVs, though it's not, a regulatory term.

  • Terra Curtis

    Person

    And so, that is something that when we get inquiries from the public, from the press, from others, we try to clarify and use the standard regulatory terms. But agree with Bernard, they're not always the most clearly understandable for the public.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yeah. Just an example of that anecdotally is, you know, during the interim recess, kind of in trying to do some homework before we started up this new year. I paid a lot of visits to manufacturers and without naming names, you know, one of one of the things that I I was told during one of those visits was we, manufacturer x, are gonna see this they point to a vehicle.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    We'll be using this as a robotaxi in conjunction with another firm, you know, that's already in the passenger service. So we're, you know, we're entering not a merger but a contract to deploy what we manufacture to a company that's in the service delivery side.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    They refer to it as a robo taxi even though the the car already has a name, a model, and everything else. That can be confusing from a consumer protection standpoint, especially given if a company's taking what you guys would call level two in referring to that. And I I know again that that's been a problem as we just talked about. How much of a problem is sorry about this is being the the last last question.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    But how much of a problem with all of this is it's important to honor manufacturers terminology but it's even more important to utilize consumer, you know, protection against marketing something that isn't really what it is.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    And I mean, if you can if you can adopt those rules, there's plenty of attorneys out there, you know, who will enforce them under consumer protection laws. But we haven't seen much of that. I guess that's what I'm asking for asking about. Does that come from our side? Does that come from your side?

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Legislative or agency side?

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    Right. Mister chair, you are you are aware of the actions that we've taken against Tesla

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yep.

  • Bernard Soriano

    Person

    Because of the nomenclature that was being used. You know that is an example of one where you know we felt that you know the words matter and the way that someone labels their product may not be indicative of what their product is capable of doing. So again, it feeds into what you had just mentioned. The the the need to have some sort of nomenclature that would be consumable by everyone.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Yeah. And editorial comment before we close, you know, so often it's been the case in California when it comes to motor vehicle regulation of any kind including air quality issues that we we can't wait for a national uniform policy nomenclature. We we we have to be the ones to establish that basically by our own our own actions. So hopefully hopefully, you know, that kind of thinking prevails here and we're not both on the agency side and the legislative side. Thank you very much for being here.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    Thank you to the folks who, stuck around. I understand public comments already done. Again, apologize for the delay that I fell into running over to vote on on four audits in the other building. But all that's done now, and we appreciate your time. And I hope everybody enjoys the rest of the day.

  • Dave Cortese

    Legislator

    I wanna thank our committee staff for organizing all of this. I think it it was useful and will help people very much here down the road on the policy side. Thank you for your help. Thank you.

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