The U.S. auto safety regulator documented multiple instances of autonomous vehicles driving into active emergency scenes and blocking ambulances and firefighters.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on Wednesday ordered self-driving car operators to address a "clear pattern" of driverless vehicles interfering with first responders, giving companies until the end of July to submit solutions.
"NHTSA has identified a clear pattern of driverless AVs interfering with law enforcement and other first responders," Jonathan Morrison, the agency's administrator, said in a letter to the industry. "The agency has documented multiple instances in which AVs drove directly into active emergency scenes, blocked the paths of ambulances and firefighters, or failed to recognize and respond to basic safety conditions like flashing lights, flares, smoke, fire, and traffic cones."
The warning follows a meeting earlier this year between NHTSA and emergency responders who reported recurring problems with autonomous vehicles near their operations. The agency said it expects operators to respond with solutions by the end of July and will schedule follow-up meetings with vehicle developers this month. NHTSA did not disclose the total number of documented incidents or specify which companies' vehicles were involved.
The regulatory pressure threatens to slow deployment timelines for companies including Waymo, Cruise, and Tesla, which have been expanding driverless operations across U.S. cities. NHTSA's rare public warning signals the agency may impose operational restrictions or mandatory recalls if the industry fails to demonstrate adequate fixes. The last time NHTSA issued a similar industry-wide alert on autonomous vehicle safety was in 2021, when it opened a formal investigation into Tesla's driver-assistance system after a series of crashes with emergency vehicles.
A Pattern of Interference
The documented incidents cover a range of scenarios that autonomous vehicles have struggled to handle. NHTSA said driverless cars drove directly into active emergency scenes, blocked the paths of ambulances and firefighters, and failed to recognize basic safety cues such as flashing lights, flares, smoke, fire, and traffic cones. The agency described the trend as "disturbing" and said it had become more frequent over the past several months.
The federal action comes as states pursue their own autonomous-vehicle rules. New Jersey's S1677 bill, expected for a vote later this year, would require fully driverless operators to use cameras plus two distinct sensing modalities and complete 50,000 miles of in-state supervised testing before commercial service. The proposal could exclude Tesla's camera-only robotaxi approach unless the company changes hardware or lawmakers amend the language, according to The Verge.
Regulatory Pressure Mounts
For autonomous-vehicle developers, the converging federal and state requirements mean validation evidence must now cover sensor redundancy, incident reporting, data retention, and first-responder handling — not just lane-keeping or object-detection accuracy. Companies that rely on camera-only perception stacks face the most direct commercial constraint if New Jersey's bill becomes law.
NHTSA said it will schedule meetings with vehicle developers by the end of this month to hear their proposed solutions. The agency did not specify what enforcement actions it could take if companies fail to address the concerns, but the warning letter carries the weight of potential recall authority. Autonomous-vehicle operators now face a compressed timeline to demonstrate that their systems can reliably detect and respond to emergency scenes — a capability that, until now, has largely been tested in simulation rather than real-world conditions.
The NHTSA directive and state-level bills create a compliance patchwork that could fragment robotaxi deployment strategies across markets. Operators may need to maintain different hardware configurations and validation packages for each jurisdiction, raising costs and extending timelines for nationwide expansion.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.