The Arizona Republic

Waymo vehicles will return to Arizona roads on Monday

- Ryan Randazzo COURTESY OF WAYMO Reach reporter Ryan Randazzo at ryan.randazzo@arizonarep­ublic.com or 602-444-4331. Follow him on Twitter @UtilityRep­orter. Subscribe to azcen tral.com today.

Self-driving car company Waymo plans to relaunch its Arizona test fleet Monday with its autonomous rideshare service to follow after shutting down in March to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s.

“We’re beginning to restart our driving operations in the metro Phoenix area after careful considerat­ion and active conversati­ons with our teams, partners, and local and state authoritie­s,” the company said in a statement Thursday. “The health and safety of our riders, team, and partners are our number one priority as we begin driving again.”

Operations in San Francisco, Los Angeles and Detroit will follow in the days and weeks ahead, the company said.

Waymo, formerly known as the Google Self Driving Car Project, has its largest public testing operations based in Chandler and cities east of Phoenix, where dozens of its autonomous minvans can usually be found quietly, slowly, cruising public roads.

Initially, Waymo will only run vehicles with its own employees, but the company plans to resume carrying passengers in the days and weeks ahead as well, Waymo Director of Safety Operations Tracy Murrell said Thursday.

“We’ve spent the last several weeks as many in this area have looking at how we can come back on line safely,” Murrell said. “We are ramping up slowly.”

The company has a test fleet of about 600 vehicles, most of them operating in Arizona, where Waymo has “hundreds” of employees.

Waymo has continued to pay all Arizona workers during the shutdown and has not laid off or furloughed anyone, Murrell said.

The tests, as well as the ride-share service called Waymo One, stopped in March as the coronaviru­s pandemic spread across the nation.

As part of a phased-in approach, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey has lifted restrictio­ns on in-store retail operations starting Friday and is allowing restaurant­s to resume dine-in service Monday, with certain precaution­s.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also has guidelines for businesses resuming operations during the pandemic.

“We feel our plans meet or exceed what has been put out by those authoritie­s,” Murrell said.

Changes in operations due to virus

Waymo has made several operationa­l changes, like other businesses that are reopening during the pandemic. They include providing enough space for office workers to stay the recommende­d six feet apart to prevent spreading the virus at work, according to Waymo.

The company also is limiting capacity at its facilities and altering how common areas are shared by workers.

“In line with Arizona guidance, our team will wear face masks in Waymo facilities or vehicles (unless a person is driving alone in the vehicle),” the company said.

The vehicles also are getting multiple cleanings daily, the company said, and Waymo is working with a healthcare company to screen workers and visitors entering Waymo facilities.

Murrell said changes at the Waymo facilities in Chandler and Mesa include moving furniture to separate workers, separating work spaces, creating oneway areas so workers don’t walk past each other where they take breaks, and supplying the offices with a variety of cleaning products and sanitizers.

 ??  ?? Self-driving car company Waymo plans to relaunch its Arizona test fleet on Monday.
Self-driving car company Waymo plans to relaunch its Arizona test fleet on Monday.

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