California Considers Union-Backed Bill Requiring Driverless Trucks To Have a Driver in Them
The state's labor groups have explicitly said their policy is about protecting jobs from new technology.

California legislators and their union allies are pushing a bill that would preemptively ban the use of autonomous trucks on California's roads that don't have a human safety operator.
Working its way through the Legislature is A.B. 316, which would require that vehicles weighing 10,001 pounds or more have a human in the cab.
Sponsored by Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D–Winters), the bill has the enthusiastic support of unionized truck drivers whoare explicit about their desire to protect jobs as well as public safety.
A.B. 316 is critical to "ensuring safety on California's roads and freeways, as well as the protection of thousands of truck-driving jobs in our state," said Jason Rabinowitz, president of the Teamsters Joint Council 7, in a press release when the bill passed the California Assembly's Transportation Committee.
Currently, 22 states allow heavier autonomous trucks to be tested on state roads, reports Commercial Carrier Journal. California isn't one of them, despite hosting the headquarters of a number of autonomous truck companies. For instance, the company TuSimple is headquartered in San Diego but tests its autonomous truck technology in Tucson, Arizona, and Fort Worth, Texas.
Earlier this year, the California Department of Motor Vehicles started to workshop the idea of letting heavy-duty trucks on the road via their own regulatory initiative. The DMV used a similar process to allow tests of lighter autonomous trucks weighing less than 10,001 in 2019.
The department's effort sent labor unions and legislators scrambling to prevent any testing of autonomous semis without a human operator.
"You don't create a safer environment if you have a 10,000-pound vehicle out there without a human safety net," said Lorena Gonzalez, head of the California Labor Federation and a former state lawmaker who championed the controversial, union-backed A.B. 5, which made it much more difficult for workers to be classified as independent contractors (often to the chagrin of the contractors themselves).
The California Labor Federation is co-sponsoring A.B. 316.
Critics of A.B. 316 include the autonomous vehicle industry and trade associations representing tech and business. They've argued that driverless trucks will enhance safety by cutting down on accidents caused by human error and grow the economy generally by cutting down on freight costs.
"Contrary to misconceptions, autonomous trucks will enhance safety on California's roads while supporting existing jobs and creating new ones," said Jeff Farrah, executive director of the Autonomous Vehicle Industry Association, in a statement.
In an email, the association cites data compiled by the U.S. Department of Transportation showing that autonomous vehicles have driven millions of miles over the past two years and have only witnessed one serious injury.
An April 2022 report from the Silicon Valley Leadership Group predicts that under "slow" and "medium" adoption scenarios for autonomous trucks, there will be slow attrition of long-haul trucker jobs as existing drivers retire and are not replaced. Under a "fast" adoption scenario, the report predicts there will be layoffs.
Autonomous trucks would also likely help make up for the estimated 78,000 trucker jobs that are currently unfilled, per the American Trucking Associations.
The aggregate benefits of autonomous trucks to growth and employment have some groups criticizing California's unions for trying to preserve their jobs at the expense of everyone else's.
"AB 316 is yet another example of unions trying to get back in control of the economy and new technologies—and putting their own self interests ahead of the wider public interest," wrote Krista Chavez from NetChoice, a tech policy group.
The Teamster's union for its part is pretty explicit that it doesn't want to see new technology threaten its members' jobs.
"Introducing technology with the sole purpose of eliminating jobs is not new or innovative. If the AVs are all about road safety, then AB 316 is a no brainer," said the California Teamsters Twitter account back in February.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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If you didn't see this coming, you were born after 1990.
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Or you don't have a knowledge of The Simpsons so deep that psychiatrists are concerned about you.
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Nothing new. It's why there's always 12-15 guys with shovels standing around watching one guy run a backhoe.
Democrat = Unions. Period. This is very well known, and has been true my entire life.
So, who did the author vote for?
Ah, science!
I suspect that the 10,001 breakpoint is as "correct" as the six foot rule of Communist Chinese Virus fame. That is, pulled from a well know body orifice.
I am sure I can devise a series of tests that will prove a driverless truck weighing 9,999 pounds is perfectly safe, but add a five pound bag of flour and it becomes a deadly threat to all of humanity.
That's what the driver is for. If he sees a crash coming, he heaves the bag of flour out the window and saves the day.
Seriously, this bill will create scenarios where the loaded part of a trip needs a driver but the unloaded part doesn't.
I can't wait for the scenario where the truck reaches the state line, stops, and tells the human 'get out, your job is done'. There will be a parking lot that ferries Cali safety drivers back into Cali for their next stint beside the wheel of an autonomous truck.
It will all work fine until the autonomous bus's safety driver crashes killing all on board because they were watching porn on their tablet and not the road.
Unlikely. Not that I'm in favor of this, but unloaded, my truck weighed 32k lbs.
As a computer jock who also spent a year driving trucks (midlife crisis) I don't see this as necessary, because I don;t see any autonomous vehicle program actually being successful without having a human around to deal with the random shit that's going to come up in the course of driving on roads that exist in the real world.
Construction zones, if nothing else, are going to absolutely scupper autonomous trucking.
I don’t understand why you say that.
An autonomous truck with an artificial intelligence will react just the same to a construction site as you do.
It will see the traffic ahead, will apply the brakes and come to a slow crawl or stop just like all the other traffic.
It will calculate on the map whether r it’s better to wait or attempt to take another route around the obstruction.
I would think it would be based on GVWR, not actual loaded/unloaded weight.
And the transformation of the real world into The Simpsons continues apace.
Soon:
California requires all adding and subtracting be done on hand cranked mechanical tabulators.
Abacus. Or do you want abacus makers to go out of business?
THOSE ARE MADE IN CHINER!
ChatGPT requires a human to type in the question.
No no no. This is not the California / Union way.
The adding and subtracting can be done automatically. There just need to be a separate union member available and present for each function (an adder and a subtracter) to ensure the excel sheet is proceeding as planned (with a 15 minute break every hour for a union smoke/coffee break).
These workers will have oversight by a supervisor from the department of Basic Spreadsheet (BS) functions as well.
All 3 above salaried employees will have weekends, federal holidays, and full benefits with pension. That is how you bureaucracy!
Not forgetting the three union members who do nothing but lean on shovels all day.
That's the multiplier, divider, and percentage-maker. They don't have as much to do but their jobs are just as important.
The perfect union job.
I would be for this only because I don’t trust a self driving anything ; except maybe a freight train that can’t move faster than 30 mph.
Didn’t Tesla run over baby carriage in testing because it didn’t look like a person ? Or am I Mandela effecting ?
Would you prefer it ran over a baby because it was texting?
Autonomous vehicles don't have to be better than the best human driver to be a net gain for society. They only need to be better than the worst human driver.
And given the number of people who still drive drunk, exhausted or while texting, that's a really low bar.
Yes, accidents will happen. You cannot ever stop them. The proper goal is to reduce them.
If we are talking about universal adoption they need to be better than the *average* human driver, which is still a pretty low bar.
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Automated vehicles of any kind--let alone over five tons--on public roads is a completely dumbassed idea. If some moron had never proposed it, the union would have nothing to say.
That technology might be ready for prime time in another twenty years or so.
I think the climate change BS ran more truck drivers out of CA than anything else. This is just MORE BS to make up for past BS.
OK, no firemen on diesel engine; pure feather-bedding.; boo.
However, living in an area where autonomous vehicles are constantly tested and proving the tech to be not ready for prime time, how do I square the circle of heading west on 80 from Truckee and seeing diverless semi off to my right (I'm in the fast lane) and hoping it won't do something stupid absent a government reg?
How about we require the developers of the tech to prove it to be above some level to allow them on the streets? Like, say making them take out insurance after the actuaries have a look?
If this human safety operator sits in the cab all day, will he have the skills to take over if there is a problem? Or maybe, instead of waking Leroy he'll just call 911 before the accident happens!
https://www.reddit.com/r/Jokes/comments/62xnhe/leroy_the_swamper/
Reminiscent: In the 1960's in New York City most office and apartment buildings were converting from attendant operated elevators to the 'new' self-service push button elevators in use today. The unions demanded that there still must be a (paid) attendant on each elevator so as not to lose a good union job. Of course, everybody saw the absurdity of this, but that didn't stop them from making fools of themselves.
Fearther-bedding.
This only makes sense for now until they prove that the trucks are 99.999% accident free.
They don't say anything about a "live" human though. I can already smell a workaround...
The technology is a long, long way from working well enough that driverless vehicles are practical on the street with both other cars and trucks, and things that aren't cars and trucks. Make a new road with only driverless vehicles, and pedestrians, dogs, and tumbleweeds fenced out, and they'll work great and be safer than with a human steering. But when it leaves that artificial, tightly controlled world, it needs a human operator, because AI is NOT intelligent.
Remember a few years ago, when a driverless car ran over a woman walking a bicycle across the road? It failed to sort out the the image it was seeing into "pedestrian" plus "bicycle", and the required human operator wasn't paying attention, so it went ahead and ran over the unknown object. The manufacturer's publicity agent talked a lot of bull, but I think what they meant was the car was stopping too often for unidentified objects. Finally they changed the program to only stop for identified items. That is, they set it to fail _unsafe_.
More work will reduce the number of unidentified objects, but it won't eliminate them. You can write the program to be fail safe, and every time there's a clump of bushes on the side of the road that its algorithm can't sort out, it will stop and wait for a human to decide what to do - with no one on board, it will often be stopped and blocking traffic until someone comes out and gets it past the problem. Or you can write the program to sometimes go ahead and run over the unknown. What's the acceptable number of vehicular murders?
"Make a new road with only driverless vehicles, and pedestrians, dogs, and tumbleweeds fenced out, and they’ll work great and be safer than with a human steering. "
I too was thinking that driverless vehicles will require driverless roads to make sense. In that case, the more efficient solution is to go with driverless rail transport. Automated train systems are well established around the globe and have been for several decades.