New York To Allow Self-Driving Vehicle Testing: Governor

- New York is accepting applications for testing driverless vehicles
- The program requires manufacturers to adhere to a number of restrictions
- Interested companies must have a $5 million insurance policy
"We are taking a careful yet balanced approach to incorporating autonomous vehicles on our roads to reduce dangerous driving habits, decrease the number of accidents and save lives on New York roadways," Cuomo said in a statement.
New York is accepting applications from companies interested in testing the vehicles through a year-long pilot program.
The crowded race to develop self-driving technology has sped ahead despite controversy caused by a handful of accidents, the idea of not having humans controlling vehicles physically, and new infrastructure needs.
Supporters say it can reduce driver error and make roads safer and more efficient. Thirteen states and the District of Columbia have passed legislation related to autonomous vehicles, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
New York's program requires manufacturers to adhere to a number of oversight measures and restrictions that could raise objections from an industry that prefers private, real-world testing.
Companies in New York must have a $5 million insurance policy, submit reports to the state, be overseen by the state police and pay the state police for supervising each test.
Testing also cannot take place in construction or school zones - which take up huge swaths of land in New York City - and must adhere to a predesignated route shared in advance with the state.
California's autonomous vehicle testing regulations went into effect in September 2014, but the road to a full rollout has not always been smooth.
Companies developing self-driving car technology, including Apple Inc, Tesla Inc, Ford Motor Co, Uber Technologies Inc, Toyota Motor Corp and Waymo, the self-driving car unit of Google parent company Alphabet Inc, have all suggested changes to California's latest proposed policy to allow real-world use and testing of vehicles without steering wheels.
Last year, New York City said it was moving forward with a federally managed program to design and test so-called connected car technology, a key building block of autonomous technology.
The city is installing special traffic lights, which can connect to vehicles wirelessly, throughout midtown Manhattan and parts of Brooklyn.
Up to 8,000 vehicles, including taxis, trucks, cars and buses, are also being outfitted with technology that will let them communicate with each other.
(Reporting by Hilary Russ; Additional reporting by Alexandria Sage in San Francisco and David Shepardson in Washington; Editing by Tom Brown)
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