Biden’s highway safety pick vows to reduce US traffic deaths
By HOPE YEN and TOM KRISHER
Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden’s pick to run the nation’s highway safety agency is pledging to attack a crisis of fatal car crashes by implementing safety rules to deter impaired driving. He also is promising to scrutinize fast-emerging “self-driving” technologies, such as in Tesla vehicles, that could put people at risk. Steven Cliff, a former California pollution regulator, addressed a Senate panel Thursday. He says he’s “gravely concerned” about a rise in deaths due to reckless driving. Cliff says if confirmed as head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, he will be fully “committed to turning this around.” He says the new infrastructure law will help by increasing NHTSA’s budget by 50%.