Morning Sun

GM to run robot cars without human backups

- By Tomkrisher

DETROIT » General Motors’ Cruise autonomous vehicle unit says it will pull the human backup drivers from its vehicles in San Francisco by the end of the year.

Cruise CEO Dan Ammann said in a statement that the company got a permit Thursday fromcalifo­rnia’s Department of Motor Vehicles to let the cars travel on their own.

The move follows last week’s announceme­nt from Waymo that it would open its autonomous ride-hailing service to the public in the Phoenix area in vehicles without human drivers.

Waymo, a unit of Google parent Alphabet Inc., is hoping to eventually expand the service into California, where it already has a permit to runwithout human backups.

Cruise has reached the point where it’s confident that it can safely operate without humans in the cars, spokesman Ray Wert said. There’s no date for starting a ride service, which would require further government permission, he said.

Cruise will go neighborho­od- by-neighborho­od in San Francisco and launch the driverless vehicles slowly before spreading to the entire city, he said. It will hold neighborho­od meetings to answer people’s questions, he said.

The moves by Waymo and Cruise, which are considered among the leaders in autonomous vehicle technology, are important steps in the march toward proliferat­ion of self- driving cars.

Progress toward autonomous vehicles slowedmark­edly after an Uber autonomous test SUV ran down a pedestrian in Tempe, Arizona, in 2018.

Steven Shladover, a research engineer at the University of California, Berkeley, who has studied autonomous driving for 40 years, said themoves are the next logical steps by both companies in a gradual progressio­n.

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