Yuma Sun

Emails show Gov. Doug Ducey’s tight connection with Uber

-

PHOENIX — Emails released Wednesday between Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey’s staff and Uber executives shed new light on a cozy relationsh­ip between the first-term Republican and the company whose autonomous vehicle recently was involved in a fatal crash.

The previously unseen emails released by the governor’s office were first reported by The Guardian newspaper. They show that Ducey’s staff worked closely with the company as it began experiment­ing with autonomous vehicles that the company began testing on public roads in August 2016 without informing the public.

The governor’s staff pushed back, saying Ducey’s embrace of Uber and autonomous vehicles was one of his administra­tion’s most visible and public initiative­s and that there was no secret testing.

“Allegation­s that any company has secretly tested self-driving cars in Arizona is 100 percent false,” Ducey spokesman Patrick Ptak said. “From the beginning we’ve been very public about the testing and operation of self-driving vehicles, and it has been anything but secret.”

The email exchanges fill in the gaps between what Ducey was saying publicly since taking office in early 2015 and what was happening behind the scenes as his administra­tion helped Uber set up shop in the state and then launch its driverless car testing program.

Over the years since taking office, Ducey took frequent opportunit­ies to boost Uber’s operations, tweeting about the company’s services and welcoming them after they pulled their self-driving cars from California in a dispute with that state’s regulators in December 2016 and shipped them to Arizona.

“California may not want you, but Arizona does,” Ducey said when he took the first ride as a passenger in Uber’s self-driving cars in April 2017.

Behind the scenes, Ducey’s staff worked closely with Uber as he championed its regular service and its self-driving vehicles, allowing them to operate without permits and encouragin­g their testing and operation on public roads.

His staff set up meetings, helped steer Uber executives to Phoenix city officials as they tried to lift an airport ban, and got the governor’s office to tweet its suggested message about a new service called “Uber eats” when it rolled out.

The emails show a top Ducey staffer was invited to use Uber offices for work while in San Francisco, but he didn’t take the company up on the offer. The governor’s office said it provided the emails to the newspaper in September.

Ptak, Ducey’s spokesman, defended the tweet and other efforts to promote the company.

“We are proud to welcome innovation to Arizona,” he said. “We often promote news of the thousands of jobs and opportunit­ies coming to Arizona. That’s nothing new.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS MARCH 1, 2017, FILE PHOTO, people enter the headquarte­rs of Uber in San Francisco. Uber suspended all of its self-driving testing Monday, after what is believed to be the first fatal pedestrian crash involving the vehicles.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS MARCH 1, 2017, FILE PHOTO, people enter the headquarte­rs of Uber in San Francisco. Uber suspended all of its self-driving testing Monday, after what is believed to be the first fatal pedestrian crash involving the vehicles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States