-

Amy Witherite Says Transparency Is Essential to Public Trust in Autonomous Vehicles

DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--As autonomous vehicles expand onto public roadways, transparency from the companies developing and operating this technology is critical to maintaining public trust and ensuring safety, according to traffic safety expert and attorney Amy Witherite.

Recent reports that Waymo declined to provide information requested by the California Public Utilities Commission following a major power outage and service disruption raise concerns about accountability in the rapidly growing autonomous vehicle industry.

“Autonomous vehicle companies are asking the public to trust their technology with human lives,” said Witherite. “That trust can only be built through openness, cooperation with regulators, and a willingness to provide clear answers when problems occur. Refusing to share information requested by oversight agencies undermines public confidence.”

The California Public Utilities Commission sought details after a widespread blackout reportedly caused multiple autonomous vehicles to stop or stall in traffic, potentially blocking intersections and affecting emergency response. Waymo cited trade secret protections in declining to provide certain data, prompting criticism from regulators and safety advocates.

“There is no doubt that autonomous vehicles represent a potentially multi-billion-dollar industry,” Witherite said. “Companies will do everything possible to protect what they consider proprietary technology. However, protecting trade secrets must not come at the expense of accountability when technology failures impact thousands of people using public roads.”

Witherite emphasized that regulatory oversight exists to ensure innovation does not outpace safety and that resistance to transparency raises broader questions about preparedness and public responsibility.

“Public acceptance of autonomous vehicles depends on confidence that issues will be acknowledged, investigated, and corrected,” she said. “Silence or selective disclosure erodes trust at a time when trust is essential.”

As deployment accelerates nationwide, Witherite urged companies to view transparency as a responsibility rather than a liability and encouraged regulators to continue demanding meaningful disclosures.

“In this case,” Witherite added, “silence isn’t golden. Accountability is what will determine whether this technology earns lasting public trust for the public.”

About Amy Witherite

Amy Witherite is a nationally recognized attorney, transportation-safety advocate, and founder of Witherite Law Group. She has spent more than two decades representing victims of commercial and roadway negligence and is a leading voice in highlighting the safety, regulatory, and civil-rights implications of autonomous-vehicle deployment.

Contacts

Margulies Communications Group (MCG)
(214) 914-1275 | mediainquiries@prexperts.net

Witherite Law Group


Release Versions

Contacts

Margulies Communications Group (MCG)
(214) 914-1275 | mediainquiries@prexperts.net

More News From Witherite Law Group

New DDOT Report Validates Warnings from Amy Witherite and Safety Advocates: Autonomous Vehicles Not Ready for Unrestricted Urban Deployment

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A new research report commissioned by the District Department of Transportation reinforces what traffic expert Amy Witherite and other safety advocates have been warning: autonomous vehicles are not yet ready for unrestricted deployment in complex urban environments in complex urban environments, and a cautious, accountability-driven approach is essential. Amy Witherite, a leading advocate for roadway safety, highlighted the report’s findings as validation of ongoin...

Witherite Law Group Founder Attorney Amy Witherite Asks – Is TxDOT I-35 Survey Asking the Right Questions?

DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Traffic safety expert and found of Witherite Law Group, Amy Witherite, is calling attention to a critical gap in the conversation as the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) seeks public input on the future of Interstate 35 through its newly launched I-35 Texas Corridor Study: A Path to 2050 survey (open April 6–May 6, 2025). One of the most timely and pressing safety issues facing Texas highways isn’t being directly addressed: What role, if any, should autonomous...

Witherite Law Group Founder Says Senator Markey Report Pulls Back the Curtain on Robotaxi Industry’s Hidden Safety Failures

DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Like the man behind the curtain in the Wizard of Oz, autonomous vehicle companies have been hiding an uncomfortable truth: their “self-driving” cars still depend heavily on human operators, and they have refused to say how often. That is the finding of a new Senate report , “Remote Backseat Operators: Revealing the Autonomous Vehicle Industry’s Reliance on Human Remote Assistance Operators,” by Sen. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), and it is exactly what traffic safety attor...
Back to Newsroom