The federal government has enacted several motor vehicle laws and standards to ensure the safety and health of the population. The first piece of national legislation was signed in 1966 and was called the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act. The most influential part of this bill was the creation of National Highway Safety Bureau which is now known as the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). The sole purpose and responsibility of this bureaucratic entity was to enact laws to protect the population and to prevent deaths and minimize injuries from motor vehicle accidents and malfunctions. The most influential regulation that the NHTSA created was in 1968 when it required automobile workers to install seat belts for all cars. Since then the NHTSA has created a set of conventions that are required with every new vehicle that is manufactured for use in the United States, these are called the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards and there are over a hundred different standards. Although the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act is a type of legislative law, the regulations created by the NHTSA are administrative laws because they were created by an administrative agency.
All of the fifty states in the U.S. including the state of Nevada have quite a few different laws that regulate motor vehicle safety. However these laws affect the drivers of the vehicles rather than the manufacturers. Some examples of these laws include the Move Over law which