Apple Magazine

UBER WANTS TO RESUME SELF-DRIVING CAR TESTS ON PUBLIC ROADS

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Nearly eight months after one of its autonomous test vehicles hit and killed an Arizona pedestrian, Uber wants to resume testing on public roads.

The company has filed an applicatio­n on with the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Transporta­tion to test in Pittsburgh, and it has issued a lengthy safety report pledging to put two human backup drivers in each vehicle and take a raft of other precaution­s to make the vehicles safe.

Company officials acknowledg­e they have a long way to go to regain public trust after the March 18 crash in Tempe, Arizona, that killed Elaine Herzberg, 49, as she crossed a darkened road outside the lines of a crosswalk.

Police said Uber’s backup driver in the autonomous Volvo SUV was streaming the television show “The Voice” on her phone and looking downward before the crash. The National Transporta­tion Safety Board said the autonomous driving system on the Volvo spotted Herzberg about six seconds before hitting her, but did not

stop because the system used to automatica­lly apply brakes in potentiall­y dangerous situations had been disabled. A Volvo emergency braking system also had been turned off. “Our goal is to really work to regain that trust and to work to help move the entire industry forward,” Noah Zych, Uber’s head of system safety for self-driving cars, said in an interview. “We think the right thing to do is to be open and transparen­t about the things that we are doing.” Among the other precaution­s, San Franciscob­ased Uber will keep the autonomous vehicle system engaged at all times and activating the Volvo’s automatic emergency braking system as a backup. In addition, Uber is requiring more technical training and expertise of employees sitting behind the wheel of the vehicles, according to a 70-page safety report the company released. The report comes after the ride-hailing company shut down autonomous vehicle testing to do an internal review of its safety procedures, as well as an outside review by risk management firm LeClairRya­n. Although the report covered all the main bases, Uber should have gone even further given its self-driving car killed Herzberg, said Bryant Walker Smith, an assistant law professor at the University of South Carolina who has been studying the issues affecting autonomous vehicles. In its most glaring omission, Uber didn’t accept responsibi­lity for Herzberg’s death — the first involving a fully autonomous vehicle, he said. “Frankly, I’m looking for more from Uber than from other companies, and I suspect that government­s may be as well,” Walker Smith said.

Under Pennsylvan­ia’s voluntary autonomous guidelines, the Transporta­tion Department has until Nov. 13 to approve or deny Uber’s applicatio­n, or to ask further questions. Pennsylvan­ia law at present doesn’t allow testing of autonomous vehicles without human backup drivers. Google’s Waymo already is carrying passengers in the Phoenix area without human drivers, and General Motors’ Cruise Automation expects to do that next year. Pittsburgh officials can’t legally prevent testing, but they are in safety talks with Uber and four other entities that have permits to test autonomous vehicles, said Karina Ricks, the city’s director of the Department of Mobility and Infrastruc­ture. For instance, the city wants to limit self-driving vehicle speeds to 25 miles per hour in urban settings, even if the posted speed is higher. “Lower rates of speed give more time for the vehicle and the safety driver to react and prevent a crash,” said Ricks, who characteri­zed the talks as fruitful. Pittsburgh is home to Uber’s autonomous vehicle developmen­t center, making it a logical choice for the resumption of robotic car tests. “We are engaging with the city, with the officials, and are very eager, I think, to ensure that we make a return to the road in self-driving mode in consultati­on and close partnershi­p with them,” said Miriam Chaum, head of public policy for Uber’s self-driving vehicles. Later it will discuss bringing its self-driving cars back to Arizona, California and Toronto, Ontario, its other test sites. Arizona suspended the company’s permission to test after the crash.

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