Self-Driving Cars Are Interfering With First Responders. Feds Aren't Happy

WIRED 

Self-Driving Cars Are Interfering With First Responders. NHTSA administrator Jonathan Morris called reports that self-driving cars had driven into emergency scenes and blocked ambulances and firefighters "unacceptable." The head of the top US road safety agency cautioned autonomous vehicle developers in a letter Wednesday about what he called an "unacceptable" pattern of driverless cars interfering with the work of law enforcement and other first responders. "To state it bluntly: An AV that cannot safely interact with first responders is a danger to the general public," Jonathan Morrison, the administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), wrote in a letter that he described as a "call to action" for technology developers. Morrison wrote that NHTSA has documented a " clear pattern" of interference over the last few months, including incidents in which the vehicles drove into active emergency scenes, blocked ambulances and firefighters, and didn't respond in situations involving flashing lights, fire, and traffic cones.