SF4381
Advisory board establishment to study impacts of commercial autonomous vehicle operations implementation
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
Related bill: HF4216
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- Establish a framework to study the impacts of commercial autonomous vehicle operations in Minnesota and create a permit process for such operations.
- Add minimum requirements for operating commercial autonomous vehicles and codify the rules into Minnesota law.
Key definitions (as used in the bill)
- Autonomous vehicle: a vehicle with technology meeting Level 3, 4, or 5 per SAE J3016 (April 2021 revision).
- Commercial autonomous vehicle operations: using autonomous vehicles for business purposes (e.g., transporting passengers or goods).
- Advisory board: a group to study impacts and advise on permits.
- Human safety operator: a licensed person who sits in the driver seat and can monitor and intervene if needed.
- Transportation network company (TNC): as defined by existing Minnesota law.
- Rideshare driver, disability rights, municipal government, consumer rights, autonomous vehicle company: stakeholders included in the advisory board.
Prohibition on operations
- Commercial autonomous vehicle operations are not allowed in Minnesota until the required study is completed and a permit process is established.
- No company may start commercial autonomous vehicle operations without a state-issued permit.
Permit process
- The commissioner must create a permit process based on the study and recommendations.
- Each permit applicant must undergo an individual evaluation conducted by the advisory board.
Advisory board
- The Commercial Autonomous Vehicle Operations Labor and Small Business Impact Advisory Board is created to review permit applications and advise the commissioner.
- Members include: the relevant state commissioners, a member from the House, a member from the Senate, driver workforce representatives (private and public sectors), one rideshare driver, a representative from the disability rights community, a municipal government representative, a consumer rights advocate, and an autonomous vehicle company representative.
- The commissioners or their designees serve as cochairs.
- The Department of Transportation provides staff support.
Study and reporting requirements
- The advisory board must hire an independent research institution with rideshare labor economics expertise to conduct a comprehensive review of commercial autonomous vehicle operations and their deployment in Minnesota.
- Topics to study include:
- Economic and employment impacts on rideshare drivers, commercial drivers, and displaced workers; reemployment pathways.
- Impacts on businesses serving drivers and on state tax revenues.
- Accessibility for people with disabilities; liability in collisions.
- Algorithmic management and the need for public notification about algorithm changes.
- Financial, infrastructure, and congestion impacts; potential interference with first responders.
- Ability of autonomous vehicles to navigate city streets; city- and state-level impacts.
- Development of a non-industry-certified (public) certification process.
- The advisory board must hold public hearings under Open Meeting Law and accept public comment for at least 30 days after preliminary findings.
- By February 1, 2027, the advisory board must publish a final report on the Department of Transportation’s website, including recommendations on whether commercial autonomous vehicle operations should be allowed and what a permit process should require.
- Subdivision details expire February 1, 2027 or when the final report is published, whichever is later.
Permit applicant evaluations
- For each applicant and region, the advisory board must evaluate:
- Economic impacts on TNC drivers and displaced workers.
- Reemployment options and impacts on businesses serving drivers.
- Financial effects, including tax revenue changes.
- Accessibility supports for people with disabilities.
- Liability in collisions.
- Algorithmic management with public notification requirements for changes affecting interactions with other vehicles or pedestrians.
- Financial and infrastructure impacts; potential interference with first responders.
- Ability of autonomous vehicles to navigate; congestion impacts.
- The board may provide a nonbinding recommendation to approve or deny the permit based on these evaluations.
Human safety operator requirements
- Any commercial autonomous vehicle permit must require a human safety operator to be physically present in the vehicle, able to monitor performance and intervene (including taking over control or shutting down the vehicle) at any time.
- Autonomous vehicles and human safety operators must meet all applicable local, state, and federal requirements.
Other provisions
- If any part of the section is found invalid by a court, the rest of the section remains in effect (severability).
Timeline highlights
- The advisory board must publish its final findings by February 1, 2027, and the process includes public hearings and a final report.
- The permit system and prohibitions come into effect only after the study and the permit process are established.
Summary of anticipated changes
- Creates a staged approach to autonomous vehicle deployment: study first, then a statewide permit system, with strict human safety operator requirements and ongoing evaluation of impacts on workers, businesses, and communities.
- Elevates consumer, worker, and disability perspectives in decision-making through a broad advisory board.
- Introduces explicit public participation and transparency requirements, including open hearings and public comment.
Potential implications for Minnesotans
- Drivers and workers in the transportation and delivery sectors may face new opportunities and displacement, depending on study outcomes.
- Businesses serving rideshare and commercial drivers could see economic effects.
- Communities could experience changes in traffic, accessibility options, and emergency response dynamics.
- Any future deployment would require compliance with the new permit framework and live in a regulated environment with ongoing oversight.
Relevant Terms autonomous vehicle; Level 3; Level 4; Level 5; SAE J3016; commercial autonomous vehicle operations; advisory board; Commercial Autonomous Vehicle Operations Labor and Small Business Impact Advisory Board; human safety operator; rideshare; transportation network company; permit process; permit applicant; economic impacts; reemployment; displacement; accessibility; disabilities; liability; algorithmic management; public notification; first responders; congestion; infrastructure; independent research institution; Open Meeting Law; Minnesota Department of Transportation; public hearings; final report.
Past committee meetings
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Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 11, 2026 | Senate | Action | Introduction and first reading | ||
| March 11, 2026 | Senate | Action | Referred to | Transportation | |
| March 23, 2026 | Senate | Action | Author added | ||
| Showing the 5 most recent stages. This bill has 3 stages in total. Log in to view all stages | |||||
Citations
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Progress through the legislative process
Sponsors
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