Waymo’s robotaxi expansion plan for Peninsula delayed by regulator

A plan by robotaxi company Waymo to expand its driverless service down the Peninsula has hit a four-month regulatory delay.

The Mountain View-based Google spinoff ran into controversy in San Francisco, where robotaxis have snarled traffic, blocked emergency vehicles and been involved in accidents. Waymo rival Cruise has been blamed for the majority of the mayhem.

In January, Waymo, now a subsidiary of Google parent firm Alphabet, applied to the California Public Utilities Commission, which regulates robotaxis along with the DMV, to begin taking paid fares down the Peninsula to the Sunnyvale city line

The plan drew support from a variety of business organizations, including the Silicon Valley Leadership Group, the Mountain View and Palo Alto chambers of commerce, and some advocacy non-profits, including those for disabled people and bicyclists. Opponents included San Mateo County, which in a letter to the commission cited “public safety incidents involving Waymo and Cruise,” and demanded a more substantial regulatory review of the expansion. South San Francisco made a similar demand.

The commission on Friday issued a notice that Waymo’s Peninsula application — and its proposal to take paid fares in Los Angeles — would be suspended for 120 days to allow “further staff review.”

San Mateo Supervisor David Canepa said the delay would “provide the opportunity to fully engage the autonomous vehicle maker on our very real public safety concerns that have caused all kinds of dangerous situations for firefighters and police in neighboring San Francisco.”

Waymo said it was not surprised at the suspension, as it is standard practice at the utilities commission to suspend applications that are not decided within 30 days. The company noted that its bid to offer paid robotaxi service in San Francisco had also been suspended before it was later approved.

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