Nevada Governor Wants Officials to Support Self-Driving Cars

By | June 10, 2015

Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval said this week he wants state transportation officials to consider adding support for self-driving cars as part of a multimillion-dollar highway widening and expansion project in Las Vegas.

The Republican governor, who referenced a self-driving semitruck that Daimler Trucks unveiled last month, said he wants Nevada to be at the forefront of the emerging self-driving vehicle industry.

“No one would have ever imagined this iPhone a few years ago, and I feel the same way about these autonomous vehicles,” Sandoval said.

Google's Driverless Cars
Google’s Driverless Cars

He also said he wants Nevada to host a conference centered on self-driving car manufacturers by the end of the year.

Tom Skancke, a member of the state Department of Transportation’s board of directors, supported the idea and said it could help foster an emerging technology industry in Nevada.

“We could become the pilot as opposed to San Diego or Orange County, who always gets the first bite of the apple,” he said.

Board members were updated on Project Neon, a multiyear project to widen and improve a 3.7-mile stretch of Interstate 15 between Sahara Avenue and the Spaghetti Bowl connection with U.S. 95 near downtown Las Vegas.

Transportation officials said that the project is six to eight months from beginning initial construction and the state has spent more than $102 million in acquiring land to expand the highway.

Topics Personal Auto Nevada

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