San Francisco Chronicle

Uber to help cities see traffic patterns

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Uber is offering a helping hand to some of the same city leaders it sometimes antagonize­s with the aggressive way it runs its popular ridehailin­g service.

The assistance will come in the form of a free website, called “Movement,” expected to be available to the public in mid-February. Uber announced the new website Sunday, on the eve of a transporta­tion-planning conference in Washington.

Although anyone can use the website, Uber says it believes its main audience will be city officials dealing with congestion in their streets and transit systems.

The website draws upon data Uber gathers from its ride-hailing service showing average travel times on specific routes at any day or time. The San Francisco company believes that informatio­n will enable city officials to make better planning decisions about road closures and transporta­tion improvemen­ts.

The site won’t be comprehens­ive because Uber acknowledg­es its service hasn’t provided enough rides on some routes to give reliable estimates on typical travel times. But it remains confident that the service will be a popular tool for city planners who currently have to pay for similar data from a variety of vendors.

The website will start with private tests covering Washington, Sydney and Manila, Philippine­s. Once the website opens to the public, Uber hopes to gradually provide travel-time data on maps covering most of the hundreds of cities where its service operates.

Uber’s goodwill gesture is a bit of a departure for a company that has tussled with cities around the world about whether its service needs to follow the same rules as taxis.

And just last month, Uber upset city leaders in its hometown by rolling out a small fleet of self-driving cars without the permits that California state regulators said were needed to cruise the streets, even with a human prepared to take control of the vehicle. The state revoked the registrati­ons for Uber’s self-driving cars, prompting the company to move the testing of the vehicles to Arizona.

 ?? Jeff Swensen / New York Times 2016 ?? Uber’s new website Movement will allow outsiders to study traffic patterns with informatio­n collected by Uber vehicles that the company says will enable city officials to make transporta­tion improvemen­ts.
Jeff Swensen / New York Times 2016 Uber’s new website Movement will allow outsiders to study traffic patterns with informatio­n collected by Uber vehicles that the company says will enable city officials to make transporta­tion improvemen­ts.

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