USA TODAY International Edition

Navigation app steers car into Lake Champlain

- Jess Aloe

When Tara Guertin loaned her Jeep to three friends from Connecticu­t who were doing some sightseein­g in Burlington, she did not expect the car to end up at the bottom of Lake Champlain.

Guertin said they were following directions from Waze, a community-driven GPS navigation app owned by Google.

Waze pairs turn-by-turn GPS directions with user reports of accidents, traffic jams and police traps. Users can update roads and landmarks.

Waze users or “Wazers” can report accidents, traffic jams and speed and police traps. Using the online map editor, they can update road conditions, among other things. Waze sends anonymous informatio­n, including users’ speed and location, back to its database to improve the service as a whole.

Julie Mossler, a spokespers­on for Google, said it was glad to hear the passengers were all safe, but the company was unable to explain how the car ended up in the lake.

“It’s impossible to comment here without seeing the user’s driving file, and we haven’t received permission to do so — generally speaking, Waze maps are updated with millions of edits to adapt to realtime road conditions daily, often making them the most accurate available,” she said via email.

She said the company encourages “drivers to keep their eyes on the road and use all environmen­tal informatio­n available to them to make the best decisions as they drive.”

The app directed the drivers to turn onto a boat launch near a Coast Guard station. It was dark and foggy, Guertin said, and by the time they realized what was happening, the car had slid 100 feet onto the frozen lake. The three people in the car managed to climb out.

Guertin said she thought it was a fluke, but when she tried the app out after the car sank, she got the same results.

Burlington Police Chief Brandon del Pozo confirmed Monday the drivers had not been charged or cited by his officers. According to the incident report, the driver told officer Padric Hartnett he had a single beer at nearby Foam Brewery and willingly consented to field sobriety exercises.

Hartnett wrote that he did not believe the driver was intoxicate­d. The driver told police he had trouble seeing because of the weather. There was a “heavy fog and slight rain” at the time of the incident, and the boat launch was poorly lit, according to Hartnett’s report.

 ??  ?? Champlain Divers Internatio­nal inflates bags of air to raise Tara Guertin’s Jeep from the bottom of Lake Champlain. USA TODAY NETWORK
Champlain Divers Internatio­nal inflates bags of air to raise Tara Guertin’s Jeep from the bottom of Lake Champlain. USA TODAY NETWORK

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