Chief Press Concerned About New Self-Driving Car Law

Illustration of car driving itself (Adobe)

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Self-driving vehicles will be able to operate in Florida without a human on board under a bill signed by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis.

DeSantis signed the measure on Thursday at a test track for autonomous vehicles in Auburndale. The governor says he wants companies testing the vehicles to move to Florida.

The new law takes effect July 1. It will allow self-driving cars without humans on all roads as long as the vehicles meet insurance and safety requirements outlined in the new legislation.

In Key Biscayne, Police Chief Charles Press says it’s too early to allow the cars to operate on local roads. “It’s an unproven commodity,” he said. “It’s dangerous enough out there.” He said so far, he has not yet seen driverless cars operate in the island. “If a car breaks a law, who do we give a ticket to?” he asked.

Current law allows self-driving vehicles if a person is in the car as backup. The new law also exempts operators inside self-driving cars from laws that ban texting while driving and other potentially distracting activities.

Key News’ Tony Winton contributed to this report.