Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pittsburgh updates guidelines for testing of autonomous vehicles

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PITTSBURGH — Companies testing autonomous vehicles in Pittsburgh will have to immediatel­y report crashes resulting in any injuries as part of new guidelines announced last week that are intended to boost public confidence in the testing after a deadly accident in Arizona last year.

Karina Ricks, director of the city’s Department of Mobility and Infrastruc­ture, said the city was working on guidelines before the March 18, 2018, accident in Tempe when one of Uber’s autonomous test vehicles hit and killed a pedestrian as she crossed a dark road outside the lines of a crosswalk.

“The Tempe incident raised the urgency for the guidelines,” Ricks said.

The Pittsburgh guidelines were included in an executive order signed by Mayor Bill Peduto.

“We don’t want that situation to happen again,” said Raj Rajkumar, professor and co-director of the General Motors-Carnegie Mellon Vehicular Informatio­n Technology Collaborat­ive Research Lab. Another accident would cause “a social backlash,” he said, adding that he hopes guidelines such as those adopted by Pittsburgh and the testing companies will help alleviate public concerns.

“This indicates that the city wants the technology to develop, to evolve, to measure, and they want to work with the companies and the university where the technology was born,” he said.

Representa­tives of the five entities testing autonomous vehicles in Pittsburgh — Aptiv, Argo AI, Aurora Innovation, Carnegie Mellon University, and Uber — expressed their support for Peduto’s measure.

These five companies have 30 days to submit initial informatio­n, such as neighborho­ods where they expect to conduct testing, hours, and safety and risk mitigation plans, Ricks said. Newcomers — the city expects more companies to consider Pittsburgh as a testing ground — must submit the informatio­n 10 days before the start of on-road testing.

Under the guidelines, companies have three days to report crashes resulting in any damage. Peduto’s order also calls for companies to provide more informatio­n to the city than the state currently requires, such as requiring each tester to report total miles, even when in

manual mode.

The companies will have to submit reports twice a year to the city, which will then issue summary reports to the public, Ricks said.

“What we really want to find out is what you are doing. Let us understand how you are using our city streets,” she said.

The city, however, will not require testers to report every time the autonomous system is disengaged, which is a requiremen­t in California.

When drivers disengage the autonomous systems, they often may be doing it out of caution rather than because of a technologi­cal flaw, she said. “It may actually be a positive sign of conservati­ve safety procedures in the camp. Unfortunat­ely, when you report disengagem­ents to the lay public, it may [be] reinterpre­ted as substandar­d technology or that is not ready for testing on the public streets.”

When the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Transporta­tion

gave its permission in December for Uber to resume road testing of autonomous vehicles, it required the ride-sharing service to have at least one human backup driver — two if the company plans to go over 25 mph — in every autonomous vehicle.

Ricks said all autonomous vehicles road-tested in Pittsburgh now have two backup drivers, regardless of speed limits.

Although “completely driverless operations are many years away and there are many steps of growing pains to go through,” Rajkumar said, continued road-testing is crucial.

Peduto said his executive order calls for a partnershi­p built on trust, understand­ing of mission and shared values. The city wants to “work hand in hand with autonomous vehicle developers,” he said.

 ?? AP/GENE J. PUSKAR ?? Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto checks out autonomous vehicles designed by Aurora Innovation­s (front) and Argo AI after signing an executive order that outlines objectives and expectatio­ns for testing of such vehicles in the city.
AP/GENE J. PUSKAR Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto checks out autonomous vehicles designed by Aurora Innovation­s (front) and Argo AI after signing an executive order that outlines objectives and expectatio­ns for testing of such vehicles in the city.

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