As part of the effort to increase safety, the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966 established a system of Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards that specify the design, construction, performance and durability requirements for motor vehicles.
The very first safety standards concerned seat belts and were adopted on March 1, 1967. Since then, an array of technological innovations have further enhanced vehicle safety. These safety improvements include antilock brakes, lane departure warnings, blind spot monitors, electronic stability control, adaptive cruise control, forward collision avoidance capability and much more.
Developed and enforced by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the safety standards process has worked fairly well, most of the time. But it did not anticipate today’s rapid pace of innovation.
When this federal regulatory regime was established, its creators could hardly imagine, for example, that NHTSA would ever be asked to permit vehicles that operate without steering wheels. Even the Jetsons’ flying family car had manual steering.
But today, fantasy is becoming reality. In January 2018, an auto company applied to NHTSA for a temporary exemption from 16 standards in the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards for the purpose of testing all-electric vehicles with automated driving systems. These vehicles would operate without steering wheels, a gear selection mechanism or foot pedals, among other things.