California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SB915 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Senate May 16, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 11, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 01, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 915Introduced by Senator Cortese(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Rodriguez)January 09, 2024An act to add Section 53075.1 to the Government Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 38760) to, and to add the heading of Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 38750) to, Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code, relating to local government. autonomous vehicles.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 915, as amended, Cortese. Local government: autonomous vehicles. vehicle service.Existing law authorizes an autonomous vehicle, as defined, to be operated on public roads for testing purposes by a driver who possesses the proper class of license for the type of vehicle being operated if certain requirements are met, including that the vehicle is being operated solely by employees, contractors, or other persons designated by the manufacturer. Existing law prohibits an autonomous vehicle from being operated on public roads until the manufacturer submits an application to the Department of Motor Vehicles containing certain certifications regarding safety and other technological requirements and the department approves that application pursuant to adopted regulations. Existing law, commencing January 1, 2030, and to the extent authorized by federal law, prohibits the operation of certain new autonomous vehicles that are not zero-emission vehicles, as defined. Existing law provides for the local regulation of certain types of transportation services, including taxicab companies. Existing law requires each city or county in which a taxicab company is substantially located to adopt an ordinance or resolution in regards to taxicab transportation service, that includes provisions for a permitting program for taxicab drivers. Under existing law, it is unlawful to operate a taxicab company without a valid permit to operate issued by each city or county in which the taxicab company is substantially located. This bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county in which a city with a population of 250,000 or greater that an autonomous vehicle service, as defined, has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, to protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance in regard to autonomous vehicle services within that jurisdiction. The bill would require each city, county, or city and county city that enacts an ordinance to include certain provisions within that ordinance. These would include a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services including a permitting program that includes, among other things, the establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions. The bill would authorize a city with a population of less than 250,000 that shares a border or is contiguous to a city that has enacted an autonomous vehicle services ordinance to enact an ordinance substantially consistent with that autonomous vehicle services ordinance.The bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county city to levy service charges, fees, or assessments in the amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services. The bill would require a permitted prohibit an ordinance enacted pursuant to this bill from banning the safe operation of autonomous vehicle services.This bill would require an autonomous vehicle service to include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles, as specified, and provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The bill would require an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service to take various actions, including maintaining reasonable financial responsibility and keeping its vehicles in safe operating condition, as specified. The bill would also authorize a city, county, or city and county to enter into an agreement with another city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority or into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services within jurisdictional boundaries.The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has witnessed the growth and expansion of autonomous vehicle services in urban areas across the state, including the bay area and Los Angeles.(b) The approval and deployment of autonomous vehicle services in California is governed entirely by the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Public Utilities Commission, and currently allows for minimal local control or public input.(c) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services, over the objections of local government, the general public, law enforcement, and emergency responders, has led to numerous accidents, injuries, and traffic congestion.(d) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services without requirements to ensure that the services are fully accessible to people with disabilities has resulted in disabled Californians being unfairly and unlawfully excluded from those services.(e) Given the localized nature of transportation, the deployment and regulation of autonomous vehicle services requires local approval and local control.(f) This act shall be known as the Autonomous Vehicle Service Deployment and Data Transparency Act (AVS-DDTA).(g) The purpose of this act is to prioritize local control in the decision to deploy autonomous vehicle services, where an entity has already received any deployment approval by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.SEC. 2. The heading of Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 38750) is added to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code, to read: CHAPTER 1. GeneralSEC. 2.Section 53075.1 is added to the Government Code, to read:53075.1.SEC. 3. Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 38760) is added to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code, to read: CHAPTER 2. Autonomous Vehicle Service38760. For purposes of this chapter:(a) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.(b) City means a city or city and county.(c) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.38761. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which a city with a population of 250,000 or greater that an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county. that city.(b)(2) Each city, county, or city and county city that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section subdivision shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:(1)(A) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:(A)(i) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county city may set a maximum rate.(B)(ii) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.(C)(iii) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.(2)(B) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions.(3)(C) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service.(b) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, a city with a population of less than 250,000 that shares a border or is contiguous to a city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a) may enact an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services that are substantially consistent with the ordinance or ordinances of the city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) Each city, county, or city and county city may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.(d)A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(d) An ordinance enacted pursuant to this section shall not ban the safe operation of autonomous vehicle services.38762. (a) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service shall do both of the following:(1) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(2) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(b) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.(2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.(ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.(iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.(3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.(A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.(B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.(C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.(4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.(A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.(B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.(5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county Department of Motor Vehicles, the California Public Utilities Commission, or the city that has issued a permit under this section pursuant to Section 38761 an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county. city.(7)(A)Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(B)Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(8)(7) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.(9)Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(e)A city or county may do any of the following:(1)Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.(2)Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.(f)For purposes of this section:(1)Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.(2)Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.(g)38763. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, chapter, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.(h)(b) Nothing in this section chapter shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements.SEC. 3.SEC. 4. The Legislature finds and declares that ensuring the safe operation of autonomous vehicles across the state is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, Section 2 3 of this act adding Section 53075.1 to the Government Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 38760) to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code applies to all cities, including charter cities.
1+Amended IN Senate April 11, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 01, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 915Introduced by Senator Cortese(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Rodriguez)January 09, 2024An act to add Section 53075.1 to the Government Code, relating to local government. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 915, as amended, Cortese. Local government: autonomous vehicles.Existing law authorizes an autonomous vehicle, as defined, to be operated on public roads for testing purposes by a driver who possesses the proper class of license for the type of vehicle being operated if certain requirements are met, including that the vehicle is being operated solely by employees, contractors, or other persons designated by the manufacturer. Existing law prohibits an autonomous vehicle from being operated on public roads until the manufacturer submits an application to the Department of Motor Vehicles containing certain certifications regarding safety and other technological requirements and the department approves that application pursuant to adopted regulations. Existing law, commencing January 1, 2030, and to the extent authorized by federal law, prohibits the operation of certain new autonomous vehicles that are not zero-emission vehicles, as defined. Existing law provides for the local regulation of certain types of transportation services, including taxicab companies. Existing law requires each city or county in which a taxicab company is substantially located to adopt an ordinance or resolution in regards to taxicab transportation service, that includes provisions for a permitting program for taxicab drivers. Under existing law, it is unlawful to operate a taxicab company without a valid permit to operate issued by each city or county in which the taxicab company is substantially located. This bill would prohibit an autonomous vehicle service, that has received approval to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or another state agency, from commencing operation within a local jurisdiction until authorized by a local ordinance enacted pursuant to the bills provisions. The bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county in which an autonomous vehicle has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, to protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance in regard to autonomous vehicle services within that jurisdiction. The bill would require each city, county, or city and county that enacts an ordinance to include certain provisions within that ordinance. These would include a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services including a permitting program that includes, among other things, the establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions.The bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county to levy service charges, fees, or assessments in the amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services. The bill would require a permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service to take various actions, including maintaining reasonable financial responsibility and keeping its vehicles in safe operating condition, as specified. The bill would make it unlawful to operate an autonomous vehicle service without a valid permit to operate issued by the local jurisdiction in which the service operates, with violations subject to administrative fines. The bill would also authorize a city, county, or city and county to enter into an agreement with another city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority or into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services within jurisdictional boundaries. To the extent the bill would impose new duties on local jurisdictions, it would create a state-mandated local program.The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YESNO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has witnessed the growth and expansion of autonomous vehicle services in urban areas across the state, including the bay area and Los Angeles.(b) The approval and deployment of autonomous vehicle services in California is governed entirely by the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Public Utilities Commission, and currently allows for minimal local control or public input.(c) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services, over the objections of local government, the general public, law enforcement, and emergency responders, has led to numerous accidents, injuries, and traffic congestion.(d) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services without requirements to ensure that the services are fully accessible to people with disabilities has resulted in disabled Californians being unfairly and unlawfully excluded from those services.(d)(e) Given the localized nature of transportation, the deployment and regulation of autonomous vehicle services requires local approval and local control.(e)(f) This act shall be known as the Autonomous Vehicle Service Deployment and Data Transparency Act (AVS-DDTA).(f)(g) The purpose of this act is to prioritize local control in the decision to deploy autonomous vehicle services, where an entity has already received any deployment approval by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.SEC. 2. Section 53075.1 is added to the Government Code, to read:53075.1.(a)Upon receiving approval to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency, an autonomous vehicle service shall not commence operation within a local jurisdiction until authorized by a local ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(b)53075.1. (a) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county.(c)(b) Each city, county, or city and county that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:(1) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:(A) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county may set a maximum rate. (B) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.(C) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.(2) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions. (3) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service. (d)(c) Each city, county, or city and county may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.(e)(d) A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws, including making clear that it is illegal to decline to serve a person with a disability or who has a service animal. laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.(ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.(iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.(3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.(A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.(B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.(C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.(4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.(A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.(B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.(3)(5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.(4)(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county that has issued a permit under this section an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county.(5)(7) (A) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(B) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(6)(8) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(7)(9) Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(f)(1)It shall be unlawful to operate an autonomous vehicle service without a valid permit to operate issued by each city, county, or city and county in which the service operates.(2)The minimum fine for violation of paragraph (1) shall be five thousand dollars ($5,000) and may be imposed administratively by the permitting city, county, or city and county.(g) (e) A city or county may do any of the following:(1) Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.(2) Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.(h)(f) For purposes of this section:(1) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency. (2) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency. (i)(g) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.(j)(h) Nothing in this section shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements. SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that ensuring the safe operation of autonomous vehicles across the state is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, Section 2 of this act adding Section 53075.1 to the Government Code applies to all cities, including charter cities.SEC. 4.No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because a local agency or school district has the authority to levy service charges, fees, or assessments sufficient to pay for the program or level of service mandated by this act, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code.
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3- Amended IN Senate May 16, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 11, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 01, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 915Introduced by Senator Cortese(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Rodriguez)January 09, 2024An act to add Section 53075.1 to the Government Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 38760) to, and to add the heading of Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 38750) to, Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code, relating to local government. autonomous vehicles.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 915, as amended, Cortese. Local government: autonomous vehicles. vehicle service.Existing law authorizes an autonomous vehicle, as defined, to be operated on public roads for testing purposes by a driver who possesses the proper class of license for the type of vehicle being operated if certain requirements are met, including that the vehicle is being operated solely by employees, contractors, or other persons designated by the manufacturer. Existing law prohibits an autonomous vehicle from being operated on public roads until the manufacturer submits an application to the Department of Motor Vehicles containing certain certifications regarding safety and other technological requirements and the department approves that application pursuant to adopted regulations. Existing law, commencing January 1, 2030, and to the extent authorized by federal law, prohibits the operation of certain new autonomous vehicles that are not zero-emission vehicles, as defined. Existing law provides for the local regulation of certain types of transportation services, including taxicab companies. Existing law requires each city or county in which a taxicab company is substantially located to adopt an ordinance or resolution in regards to taxicab transportation service, that includes provisions for a permitting program for taxicab drivers. Under existing law, it is unlawful to operate a taxicab company without a valid permit to operate issued by each city or county in which the taxicab company is substantially located. This bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county in which a city with a population of 250,000 or greater that an autonomous vehicle service, as defined, has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, to protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance in regard to autonomous vehicle services within that jurisdiction. The bill would require each city, county, or city and county city that enacts an ordinance to include certain provisions within that ordinance. These would include a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services including a permitting program that includes, among other things, the establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions. The bill would authorize a city with a population of less than 250,000 that shares a border or is contiguous to a city that has enacted an autonomous vehicle services ordinance to enact an ordinance substantially consistent with that autonomous vehicle services ordinance.The bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county city to levy service charges, fees, or assessments in the amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services. The bill would require a permitted prohibit an ordinance enacted pursuant to this bill from banning the safe operation of autonomous vehicle services.This bill would require an autonomous vehicle service to include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles, as specified, and provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The bill would require an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service to take various actions, including maintaining reasonable financial responsibility and keeping its vehicles in safe operating condition, as specified. The bill would also authorize a city, county, or city and county to enter into an agreement with another city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority or into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services within jurisdictional boundaries.The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Senate April 11, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 01, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 915Introduced by Senator Cortese(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Rodriguez)January 09, 2024An act to add Section 53075.1 to the Government Code, relating to local government. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 915, as amended, Cortese. Local government: autonomous vehicles.Existing law authorizes an autonomous vehicle, as defined, to be operated on public roads for testing purposes by a driver who possesses the proper class of license for the type of vehicle being operated if certain requirements are met, including that the vehicle is being operated solely by employees, contractors, or other persons designated by the manufacturer. Existing law prohibits an autonomous vehicle from being operated on public roads until the manufacturer submits an application to the Department of Motor Vehicles containing certain certifications regarding safety and other technological requirements and the department approves that application pursuant to adopted regulations. Existing law, commencing January 1, 2030, and to the extent authorized by federal law, prohibits the operation of certain new autonomous vehicles that are not zero-emission vehicles, as defined. Existing law provides for the local regulation of certain types of transportation services, including taxicab companies. Existing law requires each city or county in which a taxicab company is substantially located to adopt an ordinance or resolution in regards to taxicab transportation service, that includes provisions for a permitting program for taxicab drivers. Under existing law, it is unlawful to operate a taxicab company without a valid permit to operate issued by each city or county in which the taxicab company is substantially located. This bill would prohibit an autonomous vehicle service, that has received approval to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or another state agency, from commencing operation within a local jurisdiction until authorized by a local ordinance enacted pursuant to the bills provisions. The bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county in which an autonomous vehicle has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, to protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance in regard to autonomous vehicle services within that jurisdiction. The bill would require each city, county, or city and county that enacts an ordinance to include certain provisions within that ordinance. These would include a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services including a permitting program that includes, among other things, the establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions.The bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county to levy service charges, fees, or assessments in the amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services. The bill would require a permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service to take various actions, including maintaining reasonable financial responsibility and keeping its vehicles in safe operating condition, as specified. The bill would make it unlawful to operate an autonomous vehicle service without a valid permit to operate issued by the local jurisdiction in which the service operates, with violations subject to administrative fines. The bill would also authorize a city, county, or city and county to enter into an agreement with another city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority or into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services within jurisdictional boundaries. To the extent the bill would impose new duties on local jurisdictions, it would create a state-mandated local program.The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YESNO
44
5- Amended IN Senate May 16, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 11, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 01, 2024
5+ Amended IN Senate April 11, 2024 Amended IN Senate April 01, 2024
66
7-Amended IN Senate May 16, 2024
87 Amended IN Senate April 11, 2024
98 Amended IN Senate April 01, 2024
109
1110 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
1211
1312 Senate Bill
1413
1514 No. 915
1615
1716 Introduced by Senator Cortese(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Rodriguez)January 09, 2024
1817
1918 Introduced by Senator Cortese(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Rodriguez)
2019 January 09, 2024
2120
22-An act to add Section 53075.1 to the Government Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 38760) to, and to add the heading of Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 38750) to, Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code, relating to local government. autonomous vehicles.
21+An act to add Section 53075.1 to the Government Code, relating to local government.
2322
2423 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2524
2625 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2726
28-SB 915, as amended, Cortese. Local government: autonomous vehicles. vehicle service.
27+SB 915, as amended, Cortese. Local government: autonomous vehicles.
2928
30-Existing law authorizes an autonomous vehicle, as defined, to be operated on public roads for testing purposes by a driver who possesses the proper class of license for the type of vehicle being operated if certain requirements are met, including that the vehicle is being operated solely by employees, contractors, or other persons designated by the manufacturer. Existing law prohibits an autonomous vehicle from being operated on public roads until the manufacturer submits an application to the Department of Motor Vehicles containing certain certifications regarding safety and other technological requirements and the department approves that application pursuant to adopted regulations. Existing law, commencing January 1, 2030, and to the extent authorized by federal law, prohibits the operation of certain new autonomous vehicles that are not zero-emission vehicles, as defined. Existing law provides for the local regulation of certain types of transportation services, including taxicab companies. Existing law requires each city or county in which a taxicab company is substantially located to adopt an ordinance or resolution in regards to taxicab transportation service, that includes provisions for a permitting program for taxicab drivers. Under existing law, it is unlawful to operate a taxicab company without a valid permit to operate issued by each city or county in which the taxicab company is substantially located. This bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county in which a city with a population of 250,000 or greater that an autonomous vehicle service, as defined, has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, to protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance in regard to autonomous vehicle services within that jurisdiction. The bill would require each city, county, or city and county city that enacts an ordinance to include certain provisions within that ordinance. These would include a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services including a permitting program that includes, among other things, the establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions. The bill would authorize a city with a population of less than 250,000 that shares a border or is contiguous to a city that has enacted an autonomous vehicle services ordinance to enact an ordinance substantially consistent with that autonomous vehicle services ordinance.The bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county city to levy service charges, fees, or assessments in the amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services. The bill would require a permitted prohibit an ordinance enacted pursuant to this bill from banning the safe operation of autonomous vehicle services.This bill would require an autonomous vehicle service to include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles, as specified, and provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The bill would require an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service to take various actions, including maintaining reasonable financial responsibility and keeping its vehicles in safe operating condition, as specified. The bill would also authorize a city, county, or city and county to enter into an agreement with another city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority or into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services within jurisdictional boundaries.The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.
29+Existing law authorizes an autonomous vehicle, as defined, to be operated on public roads for testing purposes by a driver who possesses the proper class of license for the type of vehicle being operated if certain requirements are met, including that the vehicle is being operated solely by employees, contractors, or other persons designated by the manufacturer. Existing law prohibits an autonomous vehicle from being operated on public roads until the manufacturer submits an application to the Department of Motor Vehicles containing certain certifications regarding safety and other technological requirements and the department approves that application pursuant to adopted regulations. Existing law, commencing January 1, 2030, and to the extent authorized by federal law, prohibits the operation of certain new autonomous vehicles that are not zero-emission vehicles, as defined. Existing law provides for the local regulation of certain types of transportation services, including taxicab companies. Existing law requires each city or county in which a taxicab company is substantially located to adopt an ordinance or resolution in regards to taxicab transportation service, that includes provisions for a permitting program for taxicab drivers. Under existing law, it is unlawful to operate a taxicab company without a valid permit to operate issued by each city or county in which the taxicab company is substantially located. This bill would prohibit an autonomous vehicle service, that has received approval to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or another state agency, from commencing operation within a local jurisdiction until authorized by a local ordinance enacted pursuant to the bills provisions. The bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county in which an autonomous vehicle has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, to protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance in regard to autonomous vehicle services within that jurisdiction. The bill would require each city, county, or city and county that enacts an ordinance to include certain provisions within that ordinance. These would include a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services including a permitting program that includes, among other things, the establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions.The bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county to levy service charges, fees, or assessments in the amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services. The bill would require a permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service to take various actions, including maintaining reasonable financial responsibility and keeping its vehicles in safe operating condition, as specified. The bill would make it unlawful to operate an autonomous vehicle service without a valid permit to operate issued by the local jurisdiction in which the service operates, with violations subject to administrative fines. The bill would also authorize a city, county, or city and county to enter into an agreement with another city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority or into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services within jurisdictional boundaries. To the extent the bill would impose new duties on local jurisdictions, it would create a state-mandated local program.The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
3130
3231 Existing law authorizes an autonomous vehicle, as defined, to be operated on public roads for testing purposes by a driver who possesses the proper class of license for the type of vehicle being operated if certain requirements are met, including that the vehicle is being operated solely by employees, contractors, or other persons designated by the manufacturer. Existing law prohibits an autonomous vehicle from being operated on public roads until the manufacturer submits an application to the Department of Motor Vehicles containing certain certifications regarding safety and other technological requirements and the department approves that application pursuant to adopted regulations. Existing law, commencing January 1, 2030, and to the extent authorized by federal law, prohibits the operation of certain new autonomous vehicles that are not zero-emission vehicles, as defined.
3332
3433 Existing law provides for the local regulation of certain types of transportation services, including taxicab companies. Existing law requires each city or county in which a taxicab company is substantially located to adopt an ordinance or resolution in regards to taxicab transportation service, that includes provisions for a permitting program for taxicab drivers. Under existing law, it is unlawful to operate a taxicab company without a valid permit to operate issued by each city or county in which the taxicab company is substantially located.
3534
36-This bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county in which a city with a population of 250,000 or greater that an autonomous vehicle service, as defined, has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, to protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance in regard to autonomous vehicle services within that jurisdiction. The bill would require each city, county, or city and county city that enacts an ordinance to include certain provisions within that ordinance. These would include a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services including a permitting program that includes, among other things, the establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions. The bill would authorize a city with a population of less than 250,000 that shares a border or is contiguous to a city that has enacted an autonomous vehicle services ordinance to enact an ordinance substantially consistent with that autonomous vehicle services ordinance.
35+This bill would prohibit an autonomous vehicle service, that has received approval to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or another state agency, from commencing operation within a local jurisdiction until authorized by a local ordinance enacted pursuant to the bills provisions. The bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county in which an autonomous vehicle has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, to protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance in regard to autonomous vehicle services within that jurisdiction. The bill would require each city, county, or city and county that enacts an ordinance to include certain provisions within that ordinance. These would include a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services including a permitting program that includes, among other things, the establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions.
3736
38-The bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county city to levy service charges, fees, or assessments in the amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services. The bill would require a permitted prohibit an ordinance enacted pursuant to this bill from banning the safe operation of autonomous vehicle services.
39-
40-This bill would require an autonomous vehicle service to include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles, as specified, and provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The bill would require an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service to take various actions, including maintaining reasonable financial responsibility and keeping its vehicles in safe operating condition, as specified. The bill would also authorize a city, county, or city and county to enter into an agreement with another city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority or into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services within jurisdictional boundaries.
37+The bill would authorize each city, county, or city and county to levy service charges, fees, or assessments in the amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services. The bill would require a permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service to take various actions, including maintaining reasonable financial responsibility and keeping its vehicles in safe operating condition, as specified. The bill would make it unlawful to operate an autonomous vehicle service without a valid permit to operate issued by the local jurisdiction in which the service operates, with violations subject to administrative fines. The bill would also authorize a city, county, or city and county to enter into an agreement with another city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority or into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services within jurisdictional boundaries. To the extent the bill would impose new duties on local jurisdictions, it would create a state-mandated local program.
4138
4239 The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.
40+
41+The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
42+
43+
44+
45+This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
46+
47+
4348
4449 ## Digest Key
4550
4651 ## Bill Text
4752
48-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has witnessed the growth and expansion of autonomous vehicle services in urban areas across the state, including the bay area and Los Angeles.(b) The approval and deployment of autonomous vehicle services in California is governed entirely by the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Public Utilities Commission, and currently allows for minimal local control or public input.(c) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services, over the objections of local government, the general public, law enforcement, and emergency responders, has led to numerous accidents, injuries, and traffic congestion.(d) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services without requirements to ensure that the services are fully accessible to people with disabilities has resulted in disabled Californians being unfairly and unlawfully excluded from those services.(e) Given the localized nature of transportation, the deployment and regulation of autonomous vehicle services requires local approval and local control.(f) This act shall be known as the Autonomous Vehicle Service Deployment and Data Transparency Act (AVS-DDTA).(g) The purpose of this act is to prioritize local control in the decision to deploy autonomous vehicle services, where an entity has already received any deployment approval by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.SEC. 2. The heading of Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 38750) is added to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code, to read: CHAPTER 1. GeneralSEC. 2.Section 53075.1 is added to the Government Code, to read:53075.1.SEC. 3. Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 38760) is added to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code, to read: CHAPTER 2. Autonomous Vehicle Service38760. For purposes of this chapter:(a) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.(b) City means a city or city and county.(c) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.38761. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which a city with a population of 250,000 or greater that an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county. that city.(b)(2) Each city, county, or city and county city that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section subdivision shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:(1)(A) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:(A)(i) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county city may set a maximum rate.(B)(ii) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.(C)(iii) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.(2)(B) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions.(3)(C) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service.(b) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, a city with a population of less than 250,000 that shares a border or is contiguous to a city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a) may enact an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services that are substantially consistent with the ordinance or ordinances of the city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) Each city, county, or city and county city may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.(d)A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(d) An ordinance enacted pursuant to this section shall not ban the safe operation of autonomous vehicle services.38762. (a) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service shall do both of the following:(1) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(2) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(b) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.(2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.(ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.(iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.(3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.(A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.(B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.(C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.(4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.(A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.(B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.(5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county Department of Motor Vehicles, the California Public Utilities Commission, or the city that has issued a permit under this section pursuant to Section 38761 an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county. city.(7)(A)Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(B)Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(8)(7) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.(9)Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(e)A city or county may do any of the following:(1)Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.(2)Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.(f)For purposes of this section:(1)Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.(2)Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.(g)38763. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, chapter, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.(h)(b) Nothing in this section chapter shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements.SEC. 3.SEC. 4. The Legislature finds and declares that ensuring the safe operation of autonomous vehicles across the state is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, Section 2 3 of this act adding Section 53075.1 to the Government Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 38760) to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code applies to all cities, including charter cities.
53+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has witnessed the growth and expansion of autonomous vehicle services in urban areas across the state, including the bay area and Los Angeles.(b) The approval and deployment of autonomous vehicle services in California is governed entirely by the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Public Utilities Commission, and currently allows for minimal local control or public input.(c) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services, over the objections of local government, the general public, law enforcement, and emergency responders, has led to numerous accidents, injuries, and traffic congestion.(d) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services without requirements to ensure that the services are fully accessible to people with disabilities has resulted in disabled Californians being unfairly and unlawfully excluded from those services.(d)(e) Given the localized nature of transportation, the deployment and regulation of autonomous vehicle services requires local approval and local control.(e)(f) This act shall be known as the Autonomous Vehicle Service Deployment and Data Transparency Act (AVS-DDTA).(f)(g) The purpose of this act is to prioritize local control in the decision to deploy autonomous vehicle services, where an entity has already received any deployment approval by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.SEC. 2. Section 53075.1 is added to the Government Code, to read:53075.1.(a)Upon receiving approval to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency, an autonomous vehicle service shall not commence operation within a local jurisdiction until authorized by a local ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(b)53075.1. (a) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county.(c)(b) Each city, county, or city and county that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:(1) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:(A) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county may set a maximum rate. (B) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.(C) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.(2) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions. (3) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service. (d)(c) Each city, county, or city and county may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.(e)(d) A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws, including making clear that it is illegal to decline to serve a person with a disability or who has a service animal. laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.(ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.(iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.(3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.(A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.(B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.(C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.(4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.(A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.(B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.(3)(5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.(4)(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county that has issued a permit under this section an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county.(5)(7) (A) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(B) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(6)(8) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(7)(9) Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(f)(1)It shall be unlawful to operate an autonomous vehicle service without a valid permit to operate issued by each city, county, or city and county in which the service operates.(2)The minimum fine for violation of paragraph (1) shall be five thousand dollars ($5,000) and may be imposed administratively by the permitting city, county, or city and county.(g) (e) A city or county may do any of the following:(1) Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.(2) Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.(h)(f) For purposes of this section:(1) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency. (2) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency. (i)(g) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.(j)(h) Nothing in this section shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements. SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that ensuring the safe operation of autonomous vehicles across the state is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, Section 2 of this act adding Section 53075.1 to the Government Code applies to all cities, including charter cities.SEC. 4.No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because a local agency or school district has the authority to levy service charges, fees, or assessments sufficient to pay for the program or level of service mandated by this act, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code.
4954
5055 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5156
5257 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5358
54-SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has witnessed the growth and expansion of autonomous vehicle services in urban areas across the state, including the bay area and Los Angeles.(b) The approval and deployment of autonomous vehicle services in California is governed entirely by the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Public Utilities Commission, and currently allows for minimal local control or public input.(c) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services, over the objections of local government, the general public, law enforcement, and emergency responders, has led to numerous accidents, injuries, and traffic congestion.(d) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services without requirements to ensure that the services are fully accessible to people with disabilities has resulted in disabled Californians being unfairly and unlawfully excluded from those services.(e) Given the localized nature of transportation, the deployment and regulation of autonomous vehicle services requires local approval and local control.(f) This act shall be known as the Autonomous Vehicle Service Deployment and Data Transparency Act (AVS-DDTA).(g) The purpose of this act is to prioritize local control in the decision to deploy autonomous vehicle services, where an entity has already received any deployment approval by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.
59+SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has witnessed the growth and expansion of autonomous vehicle services in urban areas across the state, including the bay area and Los Angeles.(b) The approval and deployment of autonomous vehicle services in California is governed entirely by the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Public Utilities Commission, and currently allows for minimal local control or public input.(c) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services, over the objections of local government, the general public, law enforcement, and emergency responders, has led to numerous accidents, injuries, and traffic congestion.(d) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services without requirements to ensure that the services are fully accessible to people with disabilities has resulted in disabled Californians being unfairly and unlawfully excluded from those services.(d)(e) Given the localized nature of transportation, the deployment and regulation of autonomous vehicle services requires local approval and local control.(e)(f) This act shall be known as the Autonomous Vehicle Service Deployment and Data Transparency Act (AVS-DDTA).(f)(g) The purpose of this act is to prioritize local control in the decision to deploy autonomous vehicle services, where an entity has already received any deployment approval by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.
5560
56-SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has witnessed the growth and expansion of autonomous vehicle services in urban areas across the state, including the bay area and Los Angeles.(b) The approval and deployment of autonomous vehicle services in California is governed entirely by the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Public Utilities Commission, and currently allows for minimal local control or public input.(c) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services, over the objections of local government, the general public, law enforcement, and emergency responders, has led to numerous accidents, injuries, and traffic congestion.(d) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services without requirements to ensure that the services are fully accessible to people with disabilities has resulted in disabled Californians being unfairly and unlawfully excluded from those services.(e) Given the localized nature of transportation, the deployment and regulation of autonomous vehicle services requires local approval and local control.(f) This act shall be known as the Autonomous Vehicle Service Deployment and Data Transparency Act (AVS-DDTA).(g) The purpose of this act is to prioritize local control in the decision to deploy autonomous vehicle services, where an entity has already received any deployment approval by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.
61+SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has witnessed the growth and expansion of autonomous vehicle services in urban areas across the state, including the bay area and Los Angeles.(b) The approval and deployment of autonomous vehicle services in California is governed entirely by the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Public Utilities Commission, and currently allows for minimal local control or public input.(c) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services, over the objections of local government, the general public, law enforcement, and emergency responders, has led to numerous accidents, injuries, and traffic congestion.(d) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services without requirements to ensure that the services are fully accessible to people with disabilities has resulted in disabled Californians being unfairly and unlawfully excluded from those services.(d)(e) Given the localized nature of transportation, the deployment and regulation of autonomous vehicle services requires local approval and local control.(e)(f) This act shall be known as the Autonomous Vehicle Service Deployment and Data Transparency Act (AVS-DDTA).(f)(g) The purpose of this act is to prioritize local control in the decision to deploy autonomous vehicle services, where an entity has already received any deployment approval by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.
5762
5863 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
5964
6065 ### SECTION 1.
6166
6267 (a) California has witnessed the growth and expansion of autonomous vehicle services in urban areas across the state, including the bay area and Los Angeles.
6368
6469 (b) The approval and deployment of autonomous vehicle services in California is governed entirely by the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Public Utilities Commission, and currently allows for minimal local control or public input.
6570
6671 (c) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services, over the objections of local government, the general public, law enforcement, and emergency responders, has led to numerous accidents, injuries, and traffic congestion.
6772
6873 (d) The deployment of autonomous vehicle services without requirements to ensure that the services are fully accessible to people with disabilities has resulted in disabled Californians being unfairly and unlawfully excluded from those services.
6974
75+(d)
76+
77+
78+
7079 (e) Given the localized nature of transportation, the deployment and regulation of autonomous vehicle services requires local approval and local control.
80+
81+(e)
82+
83+
7184
7285 (f) This act shall be known as the Autonomous Vehicle Service Deployment and Data Transparency Act (AVS-DDTA).
7386
87+(f)
88+
89+
90+
7491 (g) The purpose of this act is to prioritize local control in the decision to deploy autonomous vehicle services, where an entity has already received any deployment approval by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.
7592
76-SEC. 2. The heading of Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 38750) is added to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code, to read: CHAPTER 1. General
93+SEC. 2. Section 53075.1 is added to the Government Code, to read:53075.1.(a)Upon receiving approval to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency, an autonomous vehicle service shall not commence operation within a local jurisdiction until authorized by a local ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(b)53075.1. (a) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county.(c)(b) Each city, county, or city and county that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:(1) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:(A) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county may set a maximum rate. (B) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.(C) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.(2) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions. (3) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service. (d)(c) Each city, county, or city and county may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.(e)(d) A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws, including making clear that it is illegal to decline to serve a person with a disability or who has a service animal. laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.(ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.(iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.(3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.(A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.(B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.(C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.(4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.(A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.(B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.(3)(5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.(4)(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county that has issued a permit under this section an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county.(5)(7) (A) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(B) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(6)(8) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(7)(9) Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(f)(1)It shall be unlawful to operate an autonomous vehicle service without a valid permit to operate issued by each city, county, or city and county in which the service operates.(2)The minimum fine for violation of paragraph (1) shall be five thousand dollars ($5,000) and may be imposed administratively by the permitting city, county, or city and county.(g) (e) A city or county may do any of the following:(1) Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.(2) Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.(h)(f) For purposes of this section:(1) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency. (2) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency. (i)(g) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.(j)(h) Nothing in this section shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements.
7794
78-SEC. 2. The heading of Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 38750) is added to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code, to read:
95+SEC. 2. Section 53075.1 is added to the Government Code, to read:
7996
8097 ### SEC. 2.
8198
82- CHAPTER 1. General
83-
84- CHAPTER 1. General
85-
86- CHAPTER 1. General
87-
88- CHAPTER 1. General
99+53075.1.(a)Upon receiving approval to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency, an autonomous vehicle service shall not commence operation within a local jurisdiction until authorized by a local ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(b)53075.1. (a) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county.(c)(b) Each city, county, or city and county that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:(1) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:(A) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county may set a maximum rate. (B) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.(C) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.(2) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions. (3) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service. (d)(c) Each city, county, or city and county may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.(e)(d) A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws, including making clear that it is illegal to decline to serve a person with a disability or who has a service animal. laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.(ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.(iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.(3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.(A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.(B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.(C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.(4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.(A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.(B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.(3)(5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.(4)(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county that has issued a permit under this section an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county.(5)(7) (A) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(B) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(6)(8) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(7)(9) Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(f)(1)It shall be unlawful to operate an autonomous vehicle service without a valid permit to operate issued by each city, county, or city and county in which the service operates.(2)The minimum fine for violation of paragraph (1) shall be five thousand dollars ($5,000) and may be imposed administratively by the permitting city, county, or city and county.(g) (e) A city or county may do any of the following:(1) Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.(2) Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.(h)(f) For purposes of this section:(1) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency. (2) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency. (i)(g) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.(j)(h) Nothing in this section shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements.
89100
90101
91102
103+(a)Upon receiving approval to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency, an autonomous vehicle service shall not commence operation within a local jurisdiction until authorized by a local ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.
92104
93105
94-SEC. 3. Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 38760) is added to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code, to read: CHAPTER 2. Autonomous Vehicle Service38760. For purposes of this chapter:(a) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.(b) City means a city or city and county.(c) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.38761. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which a city with a population of 250,000 or greater that an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county. that city.(b)(2) Each city, county, or city and county city that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section subdivision shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:(1)(A) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:(A)(i) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county city may set a maximum rate.(B)(ii) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.(C)(iii) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.(2)(B) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions.(3)(C) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service.(b) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, a city with a population of less than 250,000 that shares a border or is contiguous to a city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a) may enact an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services that are substantially consistent with the ordinance or ordinances of the city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) Each city, county, or city and county city may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.(d)A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(d) An ordinance enacted pursuant to this section shall not ban the safe operation of autonomous vehicle services.38762. (a) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service shall do both of the following:(1) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(2) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(b) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.(2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.(ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.(iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.(3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.(A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.(B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.(C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.(4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.(A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.(B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.(5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county Department of Motor Vehicles, the California Public Utilities Commission, or the city that has issued a permit under this section pursuant to Section 38761 an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county. city.(7)(A)Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(B)Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(8)(7) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.(9)Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(e)A city or county may do any of the following:(1)Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.(2)Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.(f)For purposes of this section:(1)Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.(2)Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.(g)38763. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, chapter, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.(h)(b) Nothing in this section chapter shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements.
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96-SEC. 3. Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 38760) is added to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code, to read:
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98-### SEC. 3.
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100- CHAPTER 2. Autonomous Vehicle Service38760. For purposes of this chapter:(a) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.(b) City means a city or city and county.(c) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.38761. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which a city with a population of 250,000 or greater that an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county. that city.(b)(2) Each city, county, or city and county city that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section subdivision shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:(1)(A) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:(A)(i) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county city may set a maximum rate.(B)(ii) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.(C)(iii) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.(2)(B) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions.(3)(C) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service.(b) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, a city with a population of less than 250,000 that shares a border or is contiguous to a city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a) may enact an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services that are substantially consistent with the ordinance or ordinances of the city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) Each city, county, or city and county city may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.(d)A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(d) An ordinance enacted pursuant to this section shall not ban the safe operation of autonomous vehicle services.38762. (a) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service shall do both of the following:(1) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(2) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(b) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.(2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.(ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.(iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.(3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.(A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.(B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.(C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.(4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.(A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.(B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.(5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county Department of Motor Vehicles, the California Public Utilities Commission, or the city that has issued a permit under this section pursuant to Section 38761 an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county. city.(7)(A)Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(B)Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(8)(7) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.(9)Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(e)A city or county may do any of the following:(1)Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.(2)Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.(f)For purposes of this section:(1)Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.(2)Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.(g)38763. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, chapter, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.(h)(b) Nothing in this section chapter shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements.
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102- CHAPTER 2. Autonomous Vehicle Service38760. For purposes of this chapter:(a) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.(b) City means a city or city and county.(c) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.38761. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which a city with a population of 250,000 or greater that an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county. that city.(b)(2) Each city, county, or city and county city that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section subdivision shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:(1)(A) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:(A)(i) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county city may set a maximum rate.(B)(ii) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.(C)(iii) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.(2)(B) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions.(3)(C) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service.(b) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, a city with a population of less than 250,000 that shares a border or is contiguous to a city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a) may enact an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services that are substantially consistent with the ordinance or ordinances of the city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) Each city, county, or city and county city may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.(d)A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(d) An ordinance enacted pursuant to this section shall not ban the safe operation of autonomous vehicle services.38762. (a) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service shall do both of the following:(1) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(2) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(b) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.(2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.(ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.(iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.(3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.(A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.(B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.(C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.(4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.(A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.(B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.(5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county Department of Motor Vehicles, the California Public Utilities Commission, or the city that has issued a permit under this section pursuant to Section 38761 an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county. city.(7)(A)Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(B)Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(8)(7) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.(9)Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(e)A city or county may do any of the following:(1)Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.(2)Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.(f)For purposes of this section:(1)Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.(2)Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.(g)38763. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, chapter, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.(h)(b) Nothing in this section chapter shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements.
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104- CHAPTER 2. Autonomous Vehicle Service
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106- CHAPTER 2. Autonomous Vehicle Service
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108-38760. For purposes of this chapter:(a) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.(b) City means a city or city and county.(c) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.
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112-38760. For purposes of this chapter:
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114-(a) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.
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116-(b) City means a city or city and county.
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118-(c) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.
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120-38761. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which a city with a population of 250,000 or greater that an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county. that city.(b)(2) Each city, county, or city and county city that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section subdivision shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:(1)(A) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:(A)(i) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county city may set a maximum rate.(B)(ii) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.(C)(iii) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.(2)(B) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions.(3)(C) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service.(b) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, a city with a population of less than 250,000 that shares a border or is contiguous to a city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a) may enact an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services that are substantially consistent with the ordinance or ordinances of the city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) Each city, county, or city and county city may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.(d)A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(d) An ordinance enacted pursuant to this section shall not ban the safe operation of autonomous vehicle services.
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124-38761. (a) (1) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which a city with a population of 250,000 or greater that an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county. that city.
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126107 (b)
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130-(2) Each city, county, or city and county city that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section subdivision shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:
111+53075.1. (a) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county.(c)(b) Each city, county, or city and county that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:(1) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:(A) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county may set a maximum rate. (B) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.(C) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.(2) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions. (3) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service. (d)(c) Each city, county, or city and county may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.(e)(d) A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws, including making clear that it is illegal to decline to serve a person with a disability or who has a service animal. laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.(ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.(iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.(3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.(A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.(B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.(C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.(4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.(A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.(B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.(3)(5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.(4)(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county that has issued a permit under this section an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county.(5)(7) (A) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(B) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(6)(8) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(7)(9) Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(f)(1)It shall be unlawful to operate an autonomous vehicle service without a valid permit to operate issued by each city, county, or city and county in which the service operates.(2)The minimum fine for violation of paragraph (1) shall be five thousand dollars ($5,000) and may be imposed administratively by the permitting city, county, or city and county.(g) (e) A city or county may do any of the following:(1) Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.(2) Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.(h)(f) For purposes of this section:(1) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency. (2) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency. (i)(g) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.(j)(h) Nothing in this section shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements.
131112
132-(1)
113+53075.1. (a) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county.(c)(b) Each city, county, or city and county that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:(1) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:(A) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county may set a maximum rate. (B) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.(C) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.(2) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions. (3) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service. (d)(c) Each city, county, or city and county may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.(e)(d) A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws, including making clear that it is illegal to decline to serve a person with a disability or who has a service animal. laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.(ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.(iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.(3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.(A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.(B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.(C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.(4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.(A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.(B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.(3)(5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.(4)(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county that has issued a permit under this section an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county.(5)(7) (A) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(B) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(6)(8) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(7)(9) Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(f)(1)It shall be unlawful to operate an autonomous vehicle service without a valid permit to operate issued by each city, county, or city and county in which the service operates.(2)The minimum fine for violation of paragraph (1) shall be five thousand dollars ($5,000) and may be imposed administratively by the permitting city, county, or city and county.(g) (e) A city or county may do any of the following:(1) Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.(2) Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.(h)(f) For purposes of this section:(1) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency. (2) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency. (i)(g) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.(j)(h) Nothing in this section shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements.
133114
134115
135116
136-(A) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:
137-
138-(A)
139-
140-
141-
142-(i) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county city may set a maximum rate.
143-
144-(B)
145-
146-
147-
148-(ii) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.
117+53075.1. (a) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, every city, county, or city and county in which an autonomous vehicle service has received authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, may protect the public health, safety, and welfare by enacting an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services within the jurisdiction of the city, county, or city and county.
149118
150119 (c)
151120
152121
153122
154-(iii) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.
123+(b) Each city, county, or city and county that enacts an ordinance pursuant to this section shall provide, at a minimum, a policy for entry into the business of providing autonomous vehicle services in that ordinance. The policy shall include, but not be limited to, a permitting program for autonomous vehicle services that includes all of the following provisions:
155124
156-(2)
125+(1) The establishment or registration of rates for the provision of an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service that meets the following requirements:
126+
127+(A) The autonomous vehicle service may set fares or charge a flat rate. However, the city, county, or city and county may set a maximum rate.
128+
129+(B) The autonomous vehicle service may use any type of device or technology approved by the Division of Measurement Standards to calculate fares, including the use of Global Positioning System metering, provided that the device or technology complies with Section 12500.5 of the Business and Professions Code and with all regulations established pursuant to Section 12107 of the Business and Professions Code.
130+
131+(C) The autonomous vehicle service shall disclose fares, fees, or rates to the customer. A permitted autonomous vehicle service may satisfy this requirement by disclosing fares, fees, or rates on its internet website, mobile telephone application, or telephone orders upon request by the customer. The rate may also be provided on the exterior of the vehicle or be clearly visible in either print or electronic form inside the vehicle.
132+
133+(2) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions.
134+
135+(3) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service.
136+
137+(d)
157138
158139
159140
160-(B) The establishment of reasonable vehicle caps and hours of service restrictions.
141+(c) Each city, county, or city and county may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.
161142
162-(3)
143+(e)
163144
164145
165146
166-(C) The establishment of a fee schedule and disciplinary process for any moving violations or traffic obstruction caused during the operation of a vehicle by an autonomous vehicle service.
167-
168-(b) Notwithstanding Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 5351) of Division 2 of the Public Utilities Code, a city with a population of less than 250,000 that shares a border or is contiguous to a city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a) may enact an ordinance or ordinances in regard to autonomous vehicle services that are substantially consistent with the ordinance or ordinances of the city that has enacted an ordinance pursuant to subdivision (a).
169-
170-(c) Each city, county, or city and county city may levy service charges, fees, or assessments in an amount sufficient to pay for the costs of carrying out an ordinance enacted in regard to autonomous vehicle services pursuant to this section.
171-
172147 (d) A permitted autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:
173148
174-
175-
176-(d) An ordinance enacted pursuant to this section shall not ban the safe operation of autonomous vehicle services.
177-
178-38762. (a) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service shall do both of the following:(1) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(2) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(b) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.(2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.(ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.(iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.(3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.(A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.(B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.(C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.(4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.(A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.(B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.(5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county Department of Motor Vehicles, the California Public Utilities Commission, or the city that has issued a permit under this section pursuant to Section 38761 an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county. city.(7)(A)Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(B)Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(8)(7) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.(9)Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.(e)A city or county may do any of the following:(1)Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.(2)Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.(f)For purposes of this section:(1)Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.(2)Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.(g)
179-
180-38762. (a) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service shall do both of the following:(1) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.(2) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.(b) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:
181-
182-38762. (a) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service shall do both of the following:
183-
184-(1) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.
185-
186-(2) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.
187-
188-(b) Upon receiving authorization by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other applicable state agency to operate, an autonomous vehicle service conducting commercial passenger service shall do all of the following:
189-
190-(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.
149+(1) Maintain reasonable financial responsibility to conduct passenger transportation services in accordance with the requirements of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.
191150
192151 (2) (A) Ensure that its service complies with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.), the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Section 51 of the Civil Code), the Disabled Persons Act (Part 2.5 (commencing with Section 54) of Division 1 of the Civil Code), and all other applicable state and federal disability access laws.
193152
194-(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:
153+(B) Maintain a disabled access education and training program to instruct its employees on compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.) and amendments thereto, and state disability rights laws, including making clear that it is illegal to decline to serve a person with a disability or who has a service animal. laws and regulations. The education and training program shall include instruction on the duty to provide equal access to passengers with various disabilities, including, but not limited to, all of the following:
195154
196155 (i) The obligation to provide service to those with service animals.
197156
198157 (ii) Providing effective communication, including the right to alternative formats and auxiliary aids and services.
199158
200159 (iii) Making reasonable accommodations or modifications to rules, policies, and practices where necessary to provide equal access to the autonomous vehicle service for a person with a disability.
201160
202161 (3) Use wheelchair-accessible vehicles or, if an autonomous vehicle service uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles, the autonomous vehicle service must demonstrate that it is providing wheelchair-accessible service that is equivalent to nonwheelchair-accessible service in terms of service area, response time, availability, and wait time.
203162
204163 (A) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles may provide wheelchair-accessible service by supplementing its fleet with its own wheelchair-accessible vehicles or by contracting with a third party to provide wheelchair-accessible service.
205164
206165 (B) An autonomous vehicle service that uses nonwheelchair-accessible vehicles shall collect and maintain records and data on trips provided, trips declined, trips canceled, wait times, response times, and service availability for rides requested by users needing wheelchair-accessible vehicles and for other users to establish that its wheelchair-accessible service is equivalent to its nonwheelchair-accessible service.
207166
208167 (C) An autonomous vehicle service shall maintain the records and data required by this paragraph for a minimum of five years and make anonymized data available to the public.
209168
210169 (4) Ensure that the autonomous vehicle services internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and all other public-facing technologies are readily apparent and accessible to people with disabilities.
211170
212171 (A) All information provided on the autonomous vehicles internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, and public-facing technologies must be in plain language.
213172
214173 (B) The method for requesting a wheelchair-accessible vehicle shall be readily apparent on any internet website, mobile application, customer service platforms, human-machine interface, public-facing technologies, screens, or other interface where users may request a ride.
215174
175+(3)
176+
177+
178+
216179 (5) Maintain its motor vehicles used in passenger transportation services in a safe operating condition, and in compliance with the Vehicle Code, subject to annual inspection by the city, county, or city and county in which it operates, at a facility that is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence or a facility registered with the Bureau of Automotive Repair.
217180
218-(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county Department of Motor Vehicles, the California Public Utilities Commission, or the city that has issued a permit under this section pursuant to Section 38761 an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county. city.
181+(4)
182+
183+
184+
185+(6) Provide the city, county, or city and county that has issued a permit under this section an address of an office or terminal where documents supporting the factual matters specified in the showing required by this subdivision may be inspected by the permitting city, county, or city and county.
186+
187+(5)
188+
189+
219190
220191 (7) (A) Include an interoperability or override system in each of its vehicles accessible by first responders in case of an emergency.
221192
193+(B) Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.
222194
223-
224-(B)Provide training for first responders on how to interact with the vehicles and the use of the override system. The training shall be updated when electronic updates that affect how the interoperability or override system operates are pushed to the vehicles.
195+(6)
225196
226197
227198
228-(8)
199+(8) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.
200+
201+(7)
229202
230203
231204
232-(7) Establish data transparency sharing agreements necessary to administer or carry out an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section. Section 38761.
205+(9) Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.
233206
234-(9)Comply with all provisions of an ordinance enacted pursuant to this section.
207+(f)(1)It shall be unlawful to operate an autonomous vehicle service without a valid permit to operate issued by each city, county, or city and county in which the service operates.
235208
236209
237210
238-(e)A city or county may do any of the following:
239-
240-
241-
242-(1)Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.
243-
244-
245-
246-(2)Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.
247-
248-
249-
250-(f)For purposes of this section:
251-
252-
253-
254-(1)Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.
255-
256-
257-
258-(2)Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.
211+(2)The minimum fine for violation of paragraph (1) shall be five thousand dollars ($5,000) and may be imposed administratively by the permitting city, county, or city and county.
259212
260213
261214
262215 (g)
263216
264217
265218
266-38763. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, chapter, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.(h)(b) Nothing in this section chapter shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements.
219+(e) A city or county may do any of the following:
267220
221+(1) Enter into an agreement with any other city, county, or city and county to form a joint powers authority for the purpose of regulating or administering autonomous vehicle services that operate within the jurisdictional boundaries of the joint powers authority.
268222
269-
270-38763. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, chapter, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.
223+(2) Enter into an agreement with a transit agency for the purpose of regulating or administering the autonomous vehicle service that operates within the jurisdictional boundaries of the transit agency. The transit agency may exercise all powers granted to the city or county that is a party to the agreement by this section in order to regulate or administer autonomous vehicle services within those boundaries.
271224
272225 (h)
273226
274227
275228
276-(b) Nothing in this section chapter shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements.
229+(f) For purposes of this section:
277230
278-SEC. 3.SEC. 4. The Legislature finds and declares that ensuring the safe operation of autonomous vehicles across the state is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, Section 2 3 of this act adding Section 53075.1 to the Government Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 38760) to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code applies to all cities, including charter cities.
231+(1) Autonomous vehicle service means any entity that has received authority to conduct commercial passenger service or engage in commercial activity using driverless vehicles by the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Public Utilities Commission, or any other state agency.
279232
280-SEC. 3.SEC. 4. The Legislature finds and declares that ensuring the safe operation of autonomous vehicles across the state is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, Section 2 3 of this act adding Section 53075.1 to the Government Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 38760) to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code applies to all cities, including charter cities.
233+(2) Reasonable vehicle caps shall mean that the allowable number of vehicles does not contribute to a significant and measurable increase in traffic congestion as determined by the local jurisdictions appropriate transportation agency.
281234
282-SEC. 3.SEC. 4. The Legislature finds and declares that ensuring the safe operation of autonomous vehicles across the state is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, Section 2 3 of this act adding Section 53075.1 to the Government Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 38760) to Division 16.6 of the Vehicle Code applies to all cities, including charter cities.
235+(i)
283236
284-### SEC. 3.SEC. 4.
237+
238+
239+(g) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, an airport operator shall have separate and ultimate authority to regulate autonomous vehicle service access to the airport and set access fees for autonomous vehicles at the airport.
240+
241+(j)
242+
243+
244+
245+(h) Nothing in this section shall affect the authority of a jurisdiction to regulate autonomous vehicle service to an airport it owns or operates and to set access fees or requirements.
246+
247+SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that ensuring the safe operation of autonomous vehicles across the state is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, Section 2 of this act adding Section 53075.1 to the Government Code applies to all cities, including charter cities.
248+
249+SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that ensuring the safe operation of autonomous vehicles across the state is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, Section 2 of this act adding Section 53075.1 to the Government Code applies to all cities, including charter cities.
250+
251+SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that ensuring the safe operation of autonomous vehicles across the state is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, Section 2 of this act adding Section 53075.1 to the Government Code applies to all cities, including charter cities.
252+
253+### SEC. 3.
254+
255+
256+
257+No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because a local agency or school district has the authority to levy service charges, fees, or assessments sufficient to pay for the program or level of service mandated by this act, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code.