San Francisco Mayor Pushes for Stricter Autonomous Vehicle Rules
San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie seeks tougher regulations on autonomous vehicles after a Waymo traffic fiasco caused a citywide gridlock.

San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie, who once championed the city as a testbed for emerging tech, is now pushing for stricter rules on autonomous vehicles. This shift in stance comes after a massive traffic jam caused by Waymo robotaxis that became immobile in heavy July 4 traffic, leaving thousands stranded. Lurie has asked state regulators to bolster rules for autonomous vehicles nearly two weeks after the incident.
In his letter to the state Department of Transportation, he pointed to two events — a widespread power outage in December and the Golden Gate Bridge fireworks show on July 4 that attracted 100,000 spectators — both of which led to dozens of stranded Waymo vehicles and paralyzed traffic. The San Francisco Chronicle first reported on the letter. The events, he said in the letter, "demonstrated that California's current regulatory framework does not adequately address how autonomous vehicles operate during major incidents, planned or not.
California's challenge now is not just whether autonomous vehicles can operate safely under normal conditions, but also whether they can perform reliably during extraordinary ones." Lurie proposed that autonomous vehicle manufacturers should be able to demonstrate four "core operational capabilities" and asked the California Department of Transportation to establish statewide standards to prevent future problems like the July 4 gridlock incident. Under Lurie's vision, companies would be required to immediately remove or relocate robotaxis from active travel lanes to keep people moving and be required to be able to adapt in real time, adjusting their routes, service area, and pickup and drop-off locations. Companies would also have to share real-time operations data with local agencies, including service disruptions, the locations of immobile robotaxis, and recovery efforts as well as demonstrate through testing that they can handle large influxes of people and traffic.
TechCrunch has reached out to Waymo for comment. The article will be updated once the company responds. Any company that wants to operate a robotaxi service in California has to successfully navigate two testing and deployment permit processes, one administered by the state's Department of Motor Vehicles and the other by the Public Utilities Commission.
California's existing regulatory framework is stricter than that of other states like Texas and Arizona, but that hasn't dissuaded companies from trying to operate there. San Francisco and the wider area that stretches south into Silicon Valley have long been a testbed for autonomous vehicle technology. Six companies, including Nuro, Waymo, and Zoox, hold driverless testing permits, which allow the vehicles to drive without a human safety operator behind the wheel.
But the area has also become the launch point for commercial services, which requires other permits from the DMV and CPUC. Waymo is the largest, with an estimated 1,000 robotaxis operating in the Bay Area today. But there are plenty of others either testing or poised to launch commercial operations, including Amazon-owned Zoox as well as a premium robotaxi service that will be operated by Uber.
Source: TechCrunch