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![A Waymo vehicle driving in San Francisco.](https://www.therobotreport.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/waymo-featured.jpg)
This lawsuit places Waymo’s last allow in San Francisco in jeopardy. | Supply: Waymo
Robotaxis have had a bumpy trip in San Francisco since corporations first started giving public rides in February 2022. Now, town of San Francisco has filed a lawsuit towards the California Public Utilities Fee (CPUC), the group liable for regulating autonomous automobiles within the state, to drastically scale back the variety of robotaxis on town’s roads, in response to The Washington Put up.
The lawsuit facilities across the CPUC’s choice in August 2023 to grant each GM’s Cruise and Alphabet’s Waymo their last permits within the state. These permits allowed the businesses to cost for rides, broaden the hours of operation and repair space, and add as many robotaxis to their fleets as they wished. The lawsuit is asking the CPUC to rethink its choice and whether or not it was compliant with the legislation, in response to The Washington Put up.
San Francisco metropolis lawyer David Chiu filed an administrative movement after the August choice in an try and delay Cruise and Waymo from ramping up operations and get one other listening to with the CPUC. In December, the Metropolis Lawyer’s workplace filed a lawsuit with the California Appellate Court docket to request the CPUC evaluation its August choice and revoke Waymo’s allow.
“As driverless AVs expanded in San Francisco, members of the general public and metropolis officers recognized tons of of security incidents, together with interference with first responders,” the lawsuit stated. “Regardless of these critical security incidents, and over the objections of San Francisco, the fee accepted requests by Cruise and Waymo to function.”
The lawsuit additionally asks the CPUC to develop reporting necessities, security benchmarks, and different public security laws to deal with incidents which have concerned first responders, created site visitors, and disrupted public transportation.
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What does this lawsuit imply?
This lawsuit doesn’t have any affect on Cruise because it already misplaced its California permits. It does, nonetheless, probably affect Waymo, which nonetheless operates in San Francisco. Whereas Waymo hasn’t prompted as many high-profile incidents as Cruise, San Francisco officers nonetheless have considerations about letting the corporate have full reign within the metropolis.
Waymo presently has 250 registered vehicles in its San Francisco fleet, a Waymo spokesperson advised The Washington Put up, and never all of these are in service on the identical time. The corporate’s means to extend these numbers every time it desires is a trigger for concern for metropolis officers, in response to the lawsuit.
“We’re upset that town has chosen to enchantment the CPUC’s earlier choice, nonetheless, we stay assured in our means to proceed safely serving San Francisco’s guests and residents,” Waymo spokesperson Julia Ilina advised The Robotic Report. “We have now regularly demonstrated our deep willingness and longtime dedication to work in partnership with California state regulators, SF metropolis officers and first responders and proceed to face by that method.
Waymo rolling out robotaxis new cities
Waymo introduced on January 19, 2024 that it filed paperwork with the CPUC to “lengthen our driverless deployment service to incorporate LA.” Waymo has been testing its robotaxis in LA since February 2023. And in October 2023, Waymo began giving free robotaxi rides via areas in Santa Monica, Century Metropolis, WeHo, Mid Metropolis, Ok-City, and eventually downtown LA (DTLA). The tour will finish in DTLA on March 3, 2024.
On the time, LA was the corporate’s third metropolis, becoming a member of Phoenix and San Francisco. Waymo has had a robotaxi service operating in Phoenix since October 2022. And it lately began testing on Phoenix’s highways. So even when the door closes on Waymo in San Francisco, the corporate is actively increasing to different areas. Waymo advised NBC Information lately that it already greater than 50,000 folks on its Los Angeles waitlist for these free rides.
Waymo and the CPUC have till Feb. 16 to file an opposition transient to the December 11 submitting. Chiu additionally filed a lawsuit with California’s Supreme Court docket. On this lawsuit, Chiu argued the CPUC skirted laws set by the California Environmental High quality Act by refusing to conduct a evaluation of the environmental affect of its choice to grant Cruise and Waymo their last permits.
Robotaxis hit main milestones and tough occasions
The CPUC’s choice in August was a serious win for Waymo, Cruise, and the AV trade as a complete. It was the primary time a robotaxi firm acquired the inexperienced mild for virtually limitless operations in a U.S. metropolis. Regardless of this win, AV corporations would start to hit highway bumps quickly after, significantly Cruise.
Even earlier than its last allow was granted, Cruise had already issued a voluntary recall of 300 of its automobiles with the Nationwide Freeway Transportation Security Administration (NHTSA). The recall was in response to a minor collision the place a Cruise robotaxi hit the again of a San Francisco bus. Cruise’s autonomous driving system can be being investigated by NHTSA.
Cruise’s largest issues began in October, when California officers stated Cruise withheld footage of the October 2 incident that reveals Cruise’s robotaxi trying to drag over whereas the pedestrian was underneath the car. This maneuver dragged the lady for round 20 ft at a pace of seven MPH earlier than stopping. Cruise disputes that it withheld footage or data from the DMV, nevertheless it paused all of its operations nationwide to reestablish belief with the general public.
Following this incident, the California Division of Motor Autos (DMV) suspended Cruise’s autonomous car deployment and driverless testing permits. Since this suspension, Cruise’s co-founder and CEO Kyle Vogt resigned, and the corporate laid off 900 staff, or 24% of its workforce.