Bill Text: FL S0712 | 2018 | Regular Session | Comm Sub
Bill Title: Autonomous Vehicles
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Failed) 2018-03-10 - Died in Banking and Insurance [S0712 Detail]
Download: Florida-2018-S0712-Comm_Sub.html
Florida Senate - 2018 CS for SB 712 By the Committee on Transportation; and Senator Brandes 596-02448-18 2018712c1 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to autonomous vehicles; amending s. 3 316.003, F.S.; defining, revising, and deleting terms; 4 amending ss. 316.062, 316.063, 316.065, and 316.1975, 5 F.S.; providing applicability; amending s. 316.303, 6 F.S.; exempting an autonomous vehicle being operated 7 in autonomous mode from a certain prohibition on the 8 operation of a motor vehicle if the vehicle is 9 actively displaying certain content that is visible 10 from the driver’s seat while the vehicle is in motion; 11 revising construction; amending s. 316.305, F.S.; 12 exempting a motor vehicle operator who is operating an 13 autonomous vehicle from a specified provision; 14 amending s. 316.85, F.S.; providing that a licensed 15 human operator is not required to operate a fully 16 autonomous vehicle; authorizing a fully autonomous 17 vehicle to operate in this state regardless of whether 18 a licensed human operator is physically present in the 19 vehicle; requiring the automated driving system to be 20 deemed to be the operator of an autonomous vehicle 21 operating in autonomous mode, regardless of whether a 22 person is physically present in the vehicle while the 23 vehicle is operating in autonomous mode; providing 24 construction; authorizing the Florida Turnpike 25 Enterprise to fund, construct, and operate test 26 facilities for the advancement of autonomous, 27 connected, and innovative transportation technology 28 solutions for specified purposes; amending s. 319.145, 29 F.S.; revising requirements for autonomous vehicles 30 registered in this state; specifying requirements for 31 autonomous vehicles that are not fully autonomous and 32 vehicles that are fully autonomous; creating s. 33 322.015, F.S.; providing applicability; creating s. 34 324.033, F.S.; providing insurance requirements for 35 all fully autonomous vehicles; authorizing the owner 36 or operator of an autonomous vehicle used for certain 37 purposes to prove financial responsibility by 38 furnishing satisfactory evidence of having certain 39 automobile insurance; amending s. 339.175, F.S.; 40 requiring a long-range transportation plan to consider 41 infrastructure and technological improvements 42 necessary to accommodate advances in vehicle 43 technology, such as automated driving systems; 44 amending s. 339.64, F.S.; requiring the Department of 45 Transportation to coordinate with certain partners and 46 industry representatives to consider infrastructure 47 and technological improvements necessary to 48 accommodate advances in vehicle technology, such as 49 automated driving systems, in Strategic Intermodal 50 System facilities; conforming a provision to changes 51 made by the act; amending s. 339.83, F.S.; authorizing 52 the Secretary of Transportation to enroll the state in 53 any federal pilot program or project for the 54 collection and study of data for the review of 55 automated driving systems; amending s. 627.0653, F.S.; 56 authorizing the Office of Insurance Regulation to 57 approve a certain premium discount for the liability, 58 personal injury protection, and collision coverages of 59 a motor vehicle insurance policy if the insured 60 vehicle is equipped with an automated driving system; 61 amending s. 627.748, F.S.; deleting an obsolete 62 provision; beginning on a specified date, providing 63 that specified insurance requirements apply to all 64 autonomous vehicles used by a transportation network 65 company (TNC) during prearranged rides while the 66 vehicles are being driven by an automated driving 67 system; providing an effective date. 68 69 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 70 71 Section 1. Subsection (2) of section 316.003, Florida 72 Statutes, is amended to read: 73 316.003 Definitions.—The following words and phrases, when 74 used in this chapter, shall have the meanings respectively 75 ascribed to them in this section, except where the context 76 otherwise requires: 77 (2) AUTOMATED DRIVING SYSTEM.—The hardware and software 78 that are collectively capable of performing the entire dynamic 79 driving task of an autonomous vehicle on a sustained basis, 80 regardless of whether it is limited to a specific operational 81 design domain, as specified in SAE International Standard J3016 82 (Revised September 2016). The term “autonomous vehicle” means 83AUTONOMOUS VEHICLE.—any vehicle equipped with an automated 84 driving system designed to function at a level of driving 85 automation of Level 3, 4, or 5, as specified in SAE 86 International Standard J3016 (Revised September 2016). The term 87 “fully autonomous vehicle” means a vehicle equipped with an 88 automated driving system designed to function at a level of 89 driving automation of Level 4 or 5, as specified in SAE 90 International Standard J3016 (Revised September 2016)autonomous91technology. The term “autonomous technology” means technology92installed on a motor vehicle that has the capability to drive93the vehicle on which the technology is installed without the94active control or monitoring by a human operator.The term95excludesa motor vehicle enabled with active safety systems or96driver assistance systems, including, without limitation, a97system to provide electronic blind spot assistance, crash98avoidance, emergency braking, parking assistance, adaptive99cruise control, lane keep assistance, lane departure warning, or100traffic jam and queuing assistant, unless any such system alone101or in combination with other systems enables the vehicle on102which the technology is installed to drive without active103control or monitoring by a human operator. 104 Section 2. Subsection (5) is added to section 316.062, 105 Florida Statutes, to read: 106 316.062 Duty to give information and render aid.— 107 (5) This section does not apply to a fully autonomous 108 vehicle operating in autonomous mode in the event of a crash 109 involving the vehicle if the vehicle owner, or a person on 110 behalf of the vehicle owner, promptly contacts a law enforcement 111 agency to report the crash or if the autonomous vehicle has the 112 capability of alerting a law enforcement agency to the crash. 113 Section 3. Subsection (4) is added to section 316.063, 114 Florida Statutes, to read: 115 316.063 Duty upon damaging unattended vehicle or other 116 property.— 117 (4) This section does not apply to a fully autonomous 118 vehicle operating in autonomous mode in the event of a crash 119 involving the vehicle if the vehicle owner, or a person on 120 behalf of the vehicle owner, promptly contacts a law enforcement 121 agency to report the crash or if the autonomous vehicle has the 122 capability of alerting a law enforcement agency to the crash. 123 Section 4. Subsection (5) is added to section 316.065, 124 Florida Statutes, to read: 125 316.065 Crashes; reports; penalties.— 126 (5) Subsection (1) does not apply to a fully autonomous 127 vehicle operating in autonomous mode in the event of a crash 128 involving the vehicle if the vehicle owner, or a person on 129 behalf of the vehicle owner, promptly contacts a law enforcement 130 agency to report the crash or if the autonomous vehicle has the 131 capability of alerting a law enforcement agency to the crash. 132 Section 5. Subsection (3) is added to section 316.1975, 133 Florida Statutes, to read: 134 316.1975 Unattended motor vehicle.— 135 (3) This section does not apply to a fully autonomous 136 vehicle operating in autonomous mode. 137 Section 6. Section 316.303, Florida Statutes, is amended to 138 read: 139 316.303 Television receivers.— 140 (1) No motor vehicle may be operated on the highways of 141 this state if the vehicle is actively displaying moving 142 television broadcast or pre-recorded video entertainment content 143 that is visible from the driver’s seat while the vehicle is in 144 motion, unless the vehicle is an autonomous vehicleequipped145with autonomous technology, as defined in s. 316.003(2), and is 146 being operated in autonomous mode, as provided in s. 316.85(2). 147 (2) This section does not prohibit the use of television 148 type receiving equipment used exclusively for safety or law 149 enforcement purposes, provided such use is approved by the 150 department. 151 (3) This section does not prohibit the use of an electronic 152 display used in conjunction with a vehicle navigation system; an 153 electronic display used by an operator of an autonomous vehicle 154a vehicle equipped with autonomous technology, as defined in s. 155 316.003(2)s. 316.003; or an electronic display used by an 156 operator of a vehicle equipped and operating with driver 157 assistive truck platooning technology, as defined in s. 316.003. 158 (4) A violation of this section is a noncriminal traffic 159 infraction, punishable as a nonmoving violation as provided in 160 chapter 318. 161 Section 7. Paragraph (b) of subsection (3) of section 162 316.305, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 163 316.305 Wireless communications devices; prohibition.— 164 (3) 165 (b) Paragraph (a) does not apply to a motor vehicle 166 operator who is: 167 1. Performing official duties as an operator of an 168 authorized emergency vehicle as defined in s. 322.01, a law 169 enforcement or fire service professional, or an emergency 170 medical services professional. 171 2. Reporting an emergency or criminal or suspicious 172 activity to law enforcement authorities. 173 3. Receiving messages that are: 174 a. Related to the operation or navigation of the motor 175 vehicle; 176 b. Safety-related information, including emergency, 177 traffic, or weather alerts; 178 c. Data used primarily by the motor vehicle; or 179 d. Radio broadcasts. 180 4. Using a device or system for navigation purposes. 181 5. Conducting wireless interpersonal communication that 182 does not require manual entry of multiple letters, numbers, or 183 symbols, except to activate, deactivate, or initiate a feature 184 or function. 185 6. Conducting wireless interpersonal communication that 186 does not require reading text messages, except to activate, 187 deactivate, or initiate a feature or function. 188 7. Operating an autonomous vehicle, as defined in s. 189 316.003(2)s. 316.003, in autonomous mode. 190 Section 8. Section 316.85, Florida Statutes, is amended to 191 read: 192 316.85 Autonomous vehicles; operation; compliance with 193 traffic and motor vehicle laws.— 194 (1) Notwithstanding any other law, a licensed human 195 operator is not required to operate a fully autonomous vehicleA196person who possesses a valid driver license may operate an197autonomous vehicle in autonomous mode on roads in this state if198the vehicle is equipped with autonomous technology, as defined 199 in s. 316.003(2)s. 316.003. 200 (2) A fully autonomous vehicle may operate in this state 201 regardless of whether a licensed human operator is physically 202 present in the vehicle. 203 (3)(a) For purposes of this chapter, unless the context 204 otherwise requires, the automated driving systema personshall 205 be deemed to be the operator of an autonomous vehicle operating 206 in autonomous modewhen the person causes the vehicle’s207autonomous technology to engage, regardless of whether athe208 person is physically present in the vehicle while the vehicle is 209 operating in autonomous mode. 210 (b) Unless otherwise provided by law, applicable traffic or 211 motor vehicle laws of this state may not be construed to: 212 1. Prohibit the automated driving system from being deemed 213 the operator of an autonomous vehicle operating in autonomous 214 mode. 215 2. Require a licensed human operator to operate a fully 216 autonomous vehicle. 217 (4) The Florida Turnpike Enterprise may fund, construct, 218 and operate test facilities for the advancement of autonomous, 219 connected, and innovative transportation technology solutions 220 for the purposes of improving safety and decreasing congestion 221 for the travelling public and to otherwise advance the 222 enterprise’s objectives under chapter 338. 223 Section 9. Section 319.145, Florida Statutes, is amended to 224 read: 225 319.145 Autonomous vehicles.— 226 (1) An autonomous vehicle registered in this state must 227 meet all of the following requirements: 228 (a) Have been certified by the vehicle manufacturer as 229 meetingcontinue to meetapplicable federal standards and 230 regulations for such motor vehicle at the time of its 231 manufacture. 232 (b) Be capable of being operated in compliance with the 233 applicable traffic and motor vehicle laws of this state, whether 234 or not the vehicle is operating in autonomous mode. 235 (c) Have a means, inside the vehicle, to visually indicate 236 when the vehicle is operating in autonomous mode. 237 (2) If the autonomous vehicle is not fully autonomous, the 238 vehicle must:239(a)have a system to safely alert a licensed humanthe240 operator physically present in the vehicle if an automated 241 driving systemautonomous technologyfailure is detected while 242 the automated driving systemautonomous technologyis engaged. 243 When an alert is given, the system must:2441.require the licensed human operator to take control of 245 the autonomous vehicle; or2462. If the operator does not, or is not able to, take247control of the autonomous vehicle, be capable of bringing the248vehicle to acomplete stop.249(b) Have a means, inside the vehicle, to visually indicate250when the vehicle is operating in autonomous mode.251(c) Be capable of being operated in compliance with the252applicable traffic and motor vehicle laws of this state. 253 (3) If the vehicle is a fully autonomous vehicle, the 254 automated driving system must be capable of bringing the vehicle 255 to a complete stop if a failure of the system occurs. 256 (4)(2)Federal regulations promulgated by the National 257 Highway Traffic Safety Administration shall supersede this 258 section when found to be in conflict with this section. 259 Section 10. Section 322.015, Florida Statutes, is created 260 to read: 261 322.015 Exemption.—The requirements of this chapter do not 262 apply when a fully autonomous vehicle is operated in autonomous 263 mode without a licensed human operator physically present in the 264 vehicle. 265 Section 11. Section 324.033, Florida Statutes, is created 266 to read: 267 324.033 Manner of proving financial responsibility; 268 autonomous vehicles.— 269 (1) All fully autonomous vehicles must have uninsured and 270 underinsured vehicle coverage as required by s. 627.727, 271 personal injury protection coverage as required by s. 627.736, 272 and liability coverage in the amount of at least $500,000 for 273 combined bodily injury liability and property damage liability 274 or at least: 275 (a) One hundred thousand for bodily injury to, or the death 276 of, one person in any one accident; 277 (b) Subject to such limits for one person, $300,000 for 278 bodily injury to, or the death of, two or more persons in any 279 one accident; and 280 (c) Fifty thousand for damage to, or destruction of, the 281 property of others in any one accident. 282 (2) Notwithstanding subsection (1), the owner or operator 283 of an autonomous vehicle, as defined in s. 316.003(2), used 284 commercially for the pickup or delivery of passengers or goods 285 or for providing other services for compensation, except in the 286 circumstance of a digital network connecting a user to a driver 287 or an autonomous vehicle, may prove financial responsibility by 288 furnishing satisfactory evidence of having automobile insurance 289 that provides all of the following: 290 (a) Primary automobile liability coverage of at least $2 291 million for death, bodily injury, and property damage. 292 (b) Personal injury protection benefits that meet the 293 minimum coverage required under ss. 627.730-627.7405. 294 (c) Uninsured and underinsured vehicle coverage as required 295 by s. 627.727. 296 Section 12. Paragraph (c) of subsection (7) of section 297 339.175, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 298 339.175 Metropolitan planning organization.— 299 (7) LONG-RANGE TRANSPORTATION PLAN.—Each M.P.O. must 300 develop a long-range transportation plan that addresses at least 301 a 20-year planning horizon. The plan must include both long 302 range and short-range strategies and must comply with all other 303 state and federal requirements. The prevailing principles to be 304 considered in the long-range transportation plan are: preserving 305 the existing transportation infrastructure; enhancing Florida’s 306 economic competitiveness; and improving travel choices to ensure 307 mobility. The long-range transportation plan must be consistent, 308 to the maximum extent feasible, with future land use elements 309 and the goals, objectives, and policies of the approved local 310 government comprehensive plans of the units of local government 311 located within the jurisdiction of the M.P.O. Each M.P.O. is 312 encouraged to consider strategies that integrate transportation 313 and land use planning to provide for sustainable development and 314 reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The approved long-range 315 transportation plan must be considered by local governments in 316 the development of the transportation elements in local 317 government comprehensive plans and any amendments thereto. The 318 long-range transportation plan must, at a minimum: 319 (c) Assess capital investment and other measures necessary 320 to: 321 1. Ensure the preservation of the existing metropolitan 322 transportation system including requirements for the operation, 323 resurfacing, restoration, and rehabilitation of major roadways 324 and requirements for the operation, maintenance, modernization, 325 and rehabilitation of public transportation facilities; and 326 2. Make the most efficient use of existing transportation 327 facilities to relieve vehicular congestion, improve safety, and 328 maximize the mobility of people and goods. Such efforts must 329 include, but are not limited to, consideration of infrastructure 330 and technological improvements necessary to accommodate advances 331 in vehicle technology, such as automated driving systems 332autonomous technologyand other developments. 333 334 In the development of its long-range transportation plan, each 335 M.P.O. must provide the public, affected public agencies, 336 representatives of transportation agency employees, freight 337 shippers, providers of freight transportation services, private 338 providers of transportation, representatives of users of public 339 transit, and other interested parties with a reasonable 340 opportunity to comment on the long-range transportation plan. 341 The long-range transportation plan must be approved by the 342 M.P.O. 343 Section 13. Paragraph (c) of subsection (3) and paragraph 344 (a) of subsection (4) of section 339.64, Florida Statutes, are 345 amended to read: 346 339.64 Strategic Intermodal System Plan.— 347 (3) 348 (c) The department shall coordinate with federal, regional, 349 and local partners, as well as industry representatives, to 350 consider infrastructure and technological improvements necessary 351 to accommodate advances in vehicle technology, such as automated 352 driving systemsautonomous technologyand other developments, in 353 Strategic Intermodal System facilities. 354 (4) The Strategic Intermodal System Plan shall include the 355 following: 356 (a) A needs assessment that must include, but is not 357 limited to, consideration of infrastructure and technological 358 improvements necessary to accommodate advances in vehicle 359 technology, such as automated driving systemsautonomous360technologyand other developments. 361 Section 14. Section 339.83, Florida Statutes, is amended to 362 read: 363 339.83 Enrollment in federal pilot programs.—The Secretary 364 of Transportation may enroll the State of Florida in any federal 365 pilot program or project for the collection and study of data 366 for the review of federal or state roadway safety, 367 infrastructure sustainability, congestion mitigation, 368 transportation system efficiency, automated driving systems 369autonomous vehicle technology, or capacity challenges. 370 Section 15. Subsection (6) of section 627.0653, Florida 371 Statutes, is amended to read: 372 627.0653 Insurance discounts for specified motor vehicle 373 equipment.— 374 (6) The Office of Insurance Regulation may approve a 375 premium discount to any rates, rating schedules, or rating 376 manuals for the liability, personal injury protection, and 377 collision coverages of a motor vehicle insurance policy filed 378 with the office if the insured vehicle is equipped with an 379 automated driving systemautonomous driving technologyor 380 electronic vehicle collision avoidance technology that is 381 factory installed or a retrofitted system and that complies with 382 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration standards. 383 Section 16. Subsection (7) of section 627.748, Florida 384 Statutes, is amended to read: 385 627.748 Transportation network companies.— 386 (7) TRANSPORTATION NETWORK COMPANY AND TNC DRIVER INSURANCE 387 REQUIREMENTS.— 388 (a)Beginning July 1, 2017,A TNC driver or a TNC on behalf 389 of the TNC driver shall maintain primary automobile insurance 390 that: 391 1. Recognizes that the TNC driver is a TNC driver or 392 otherwise uses a vehicle to transport riders for compensation; 393 and 394 2. Covers the TNC driver while the TNC driver is logged on 395 to the digital network of the TNC or while the TNC driver is 396 engaged in a prearranged ride. 397 (b) The following automobile insurance requirements apply 398 while a participating TNC driver is logged on to the digital 399 network but is not engaged in a prearranged ride: 400 1. Automobile insurance that provides: 401 a. A primary automobile liability coverage of at least 402 $50,000 for death and bodily injury per person, $100,000 for 403 death and bodily injury per incident, and $25,000 for property 404 damage; 405 b. Personal injury protection benefits that meet the 406 minimum coverage amounts required under ss. 627.730-627.7405; 407 and 408 c. Uninsured and underinsured vehicle coverage as required 409 by s. 627.727. 410 2. The coverage requirements of this paragraph may be 411 satisfied by any of the following: 412 a. Automobile insurance maintained by the TNC driver; 413 b. Automobile insurance maintained by the TNC; or 414 c. A combination of sub-subparagraphs a. and b. 415 (c) The following automobile insurance requirements apply 416 while a TNC driver is engaged in a prearranged ride: 417 1. Automobile insurance that provides: 418 a. A primary automobile liability coverage of at least $1 419 million for death, bodily injury, and property damage; 420 b. Personal injury protection benefits that meet the 421 minimum coverage amounts required of a limousine under ss. 422 627.730-627.7405; and 423 c. Uninsured and underinsured vehicle coverage as required 424 by s. 627.727. 425 2. The coverage requirements of this paragraph may be 426 satisfied by any of the following: 427 a. Automobile insurance maintained by the TNC driver; 428 b. Automobile insurance maintained by the TNC; or 429 c. A combination of sub-subparagraphs a. and b. 430 (d) Beginning July 1, 2018, the following insurance 431 requirements apply to all autonomous vehicles, as defined in s. 432 316.003(2), used by a TNC during prearranged rides while the 433 vehicles are being driven by an automated driving system: 434 1. Primary automobile liability coverage of at least $1 435 million for death, bodily injury, and property damage; 436 2. Personal injury protection benefits that meet the 437 minimum coverage amounts required of a limousine under ss. 438 627.730-627.7405; and 439 3. Uninsured and underinsured vehicle coverage as required 440 by s. 627.727. 441 (e)(d)If the TNC driver’s insurance under paragraph (b) or 442 paragraph (c) has lapsed or does not provide the required 443 coverage, the insurance maintained by the TNC must provide the 444 coverage required under this subsection, beginning with the 445 first dollar of a claim, and have the duty to defend such claim. 446 (f)(e)Coverage under an automobile insurance policy 447 maintained by the TNC must not be dependent on a personal 448 automobile insurer first denying a claim, and a personal 449 automobile insurance policy is not required to first deny a 450 claim. 451 (g)(f)Insurance required under this subsection must be 452 provided by an insurer authorized to do business in this state 453 which is a member of the Florida Insurance Guaranty Association 454 or an eligible surplus lines insurer that has a superior, 455 excellent, exceptional, or equivalent financial strength rating 456 by a rating agency acceptable to the Office of Insurance 457 Regulation of the Financial Services Commission. 458 (h)(g)Insurance satisfying the requirements under this 459 subsection is deemed to satisfy the financial responsibility 460 requirement for a motor vehicle under chapter 324 and the 461 security required under s. 627.733 for any period when the TNC 462 driver is logged onto the digital network or engaged in a 463 prearranged ride. 464 (i)(h)A TNC driver shall carry proof of coverage 465 satisfying paragraphs (b) and (c) with him or her at all times 466 during his or her use of a TNC vehicle in connection with a 467 digital network. In the event of an accident, a TNC driver shall 468 provide this insurance coverage information to any party 469 directly involved in the accident or the party’s designated 470 representative, automobile insurers, and investigating police 471 officers. Proof of financial responsibility may be presented 472 through an electronic device, such as a digital phone 473 application, under s. 316.646. Upon request, a TNC driver shall 474 also disclose to any party directly involved in the accident or 475 the party’s designated representative, automobile insurers, and 476 investigating police officers whether he or she was logged on to 477 a digital network or was engaged in a prearranged ride at the 478 time of the accident. 479 (j)(i)If a TNC’s insurer makes a payment for a claim 480 covered under comprehensive coverage or collision coverage, the 481 TNC shall cause its insurer to issue the payment directly to the 482 business repairing the vehicle or jointly to the owner of the 483 vehicle and the primary lienholder on the covered vehicle. 484 Section 17. This act shall take effect July 1, 2018.