U.S. auto safety regulators say they have taken the first step toward requiring devices in vehicles that prevent drunk or impaired driving.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration announced on Tuesday that it is starting the process to put a new federal safety standard in place requiring the technology in all new passenger vehicles.

Such devices were required in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law that was passed by Congress in 2021.

The agency says an advance notice of proposed rule making will help it gather information about the state of technology to detect impaired driving. The regulation would set standards for the devices once technology is mature, NHTSA said in a statement.

  • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    I used to work in an office that was next to a beer canning plant. Some days when the weather was just right the car park would reek of alcohol. Going to be interesting for the people currently working there when cars refuse to start under such conditions.

    • SoylentBlake@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      Hey looky that, humanities been here before. Back in the olden days they used to have problems with air quality around factories too, just like you’re saying, because that’s what it is.

      The robber barons were able to put up smokestacks, sometimes hundreds of feet high, so the town wouldn’t be buried and blackened under coal ash. Simple elegant solution, besides not polluting in the first place, I guess.

      Regardless, the hypothetical problem would exist today with blowers on cars yet those people seem to manage just fine. None of this is any kind of stretch, so I mean, it kind of feels like you’re throwing a disingenuous argument over on my side, like astroturfing for the police union trying to protect their main source of income (which, at least in my city, theyvr been caught red-handed doing, more than once)