Current:Home > MySelf-driving taxis get 24/7 access in San Francisco. What historic vote means for the city. -Stellar Wealth Sphere
Self-driving taxis get 24/7 access in San Francisco. What historic vote means for the city.
View
Date:2025-04-16 13:35:33
SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco is the first city in the world where two separate self-driving taxi companies can offer paid rides after a historic – and contentious – vote by the California Public Utilities Commission Thursday.
The vote means Waymo, owned by Google parent company Alphabet, and Cruise, owned by General Motors, can now open up the entire city to paid ridership in their fleets of robot cars.
“Today’s permit marks the true beginning of our commercial operations in San Francisco,” Tekedra Mawakana, co-CEO of Waymo, said in a statement.
“Offering a commercial, 24/7 driverless ride-hail service across San Francisco is a historic industry milestone –– putting Cruise in a position to compete with traditional ride-hail," Prashanthi Raman, Cruise vice president of global government affairs, said in a statement.
Autonomous vehicle taxis also are operating in other cities, though in some areas only for testers, not paying customers. In Phoenix, Waymo offers ride-hailing in its cars across a 40-square mile area in downtown Phoenix and a 50-square mile area in Chandler, Arizona, though not on freeways. Earlier this month it announced plans to offer rides in Austin as well and has plans for Los Angeles.
Cruise offers rides in Austin and Phoenix and plans to expand into Houston and Dallas, Raman said.
In San Francisco, self-driving electric vehicles already are a common sight in many parts of the city. Waymo has been doing driverless test drives since 2018; Cruise began in 2022. Approximately 500 self-driving cars are on the streets of San Francisco each day.
Until the vote, Cruise was allowed to offer paid rides in portions of the city between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m., while Waymo offered free trips to about 1,000 people who had signed up for the service. Now both companies will be able to offer paid trips 24 hours a day. Freeways are still off-limits.
The 3-to-1 vote came after seven hours of public testimony and despite protests by San Francisco city officials, who have said the self-driving cars pose safety hazards when they become confused in emergency situations such as fires or downed power lines.
Supporters say the self-driving cars are safer than human drivers.
Most of the self-driving cars seen on the streets of San Francisco at this point are empty, as the cars do a seemingly endless series of test drives – to the amusement, annoyance and sometimes anger of local residents.
In San Francisco, the cars are driverless, the humans are baffled and future is uncertain
veryGood! (56954)
Related
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Missouri’s pro sports teams push to get legal sports gambling on 2024 ballot
- University of Alabama condemns racist, homophobic slurs hurled at football game
- North Korea and Russia may both benefit by striking trade deal: ANALYSIS
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- When do the Jewish High Holidays start? The 10-day season begins this week with Rosh Hashana
- Ukrainian pilots could be flying F-16s in three months, Air National Guard head says
- Woman nearly gifts ex-father-in-law winning $75,000 scratch off ticket
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Ed Sheeran crashes couple's Las Vegas wedding, surprising them with new song
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- 5 former Memphis officers indicted by federal grand jury in Tyre Nichols' death
- Apple event reveals new iPhone 15. Here are the biggest changes — and its surprising new price.
- US poverty rate jumped in 2022, child poverty more than doubled: Census
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Carmakers doing little to protect the vast amounts of data that vehicles collect, study shows
- Flooding evacuates residents in northern Massachusetts; waters recede showing damage
- 'Felt the life leave the stadium': Jets bound from Aaron Rodgers' nightmare to Xavier Gipson's joy
Recommendation
Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
CDC panel recommends updated COVID vaccines. Shots could be ready this week
A Russian warplane crashes on a training mission. The fate of the crew is unknown
NFL power rankings Week 2: Are Jets cooked after Aaron Rodgers' injury?
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Dominican president suspends visas for Haitians and threatens to close border with its neighbor
Serial killer and former police officer Anthony Sully dies on death row at a California prison
McDonald's plans to transition away from self-serve beverage stations in US by 2032