Self-driving Uber car kills Arizona woman crossing
street
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[March 20, 2018]
By Sydney Maki and Alexandria Sage
TEMPE, Ariz./SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - An
Uber self-driving car hit and killed a woman crossing the street in
Arizona, police said on Monday, marking the first fatality involving an
autonomous vehicle and a potential blow to the technology expected to
transform transportation.
The ride services company said it was suspending North American tests of
its self-driving vehicles, which are currently going on in Arizona,
Pittsburgh and Toronto.
So-called robot cars, when fully developed by companies including Uber,
Alphabet Inc and General Motors Co, are expected to drastically cut down
on motor vehicle fatalities and create billion-dollar businesses. But
Monday's accident underscored the possible challenges ahead for the
promising technology as the cars confront real-world situations
involving real people.
U.S. lawmakers have been debating legislation that would speed
introduction of self-driving cars.
"This tragic accident underscores why we need to be exceptionally
cautious when testing and deploying autonomous vehicle technologies on
public roads," said Democratic Senator Edward Markey, a member of the
transportation committee, in a statement.
Elaine Herzberg, 49, was walking her bicycle outside the crosswalk on a
four-lane road in the Phoenix suburb of Tempe about 10 p.m. MST Sunday
(0400 GMT Monday) when she was struck by the Uber vehicle traveling at
about 40 miles per hour (65 km per hour), police said. The Volvo XC90
SUV was in autonomous mode with an operator behind the wheel.
Herzberg later died from her injuries in a hospital, police said.
"The pedestrian was outside of the crosswalk. As soon as she walked into
the lane of traffic she was struck," Tempe Police Sergeant Ronald Elcock
told reporters at a news conference. He said he did not yet know how
close Herzberg was to the vehicle when she stepped into the lane.
Elcock said he believed Herzberg may have been homeless.
The San Francisco Chronicle late Monday reported that Tempe Police Chief
Sylvia Moir said that from viewing videos taken from the vehicle “it’s
very clear it would have been difficult to avoid this collision in any
kind of mode (autonomous or human-driven) based on how she came from the
shadows right into the roadway." (http://bit.ly/2IADRUF)
Moir told the Chronicle, "I suspect preliminarily it appears that the
Uber would likely not be at fault in this accident," but she did not
rule out that charges could be filed against the operator in the Uber
vehicle, the paper reported.
The "Tempe Police Department does not determine fault in vehicular
collisions," the department said in a statement late Monday, in reply to
questions from Reuters about the chief's comments. "Ultimately the
investigation will be submitted to the Maricopa County Attorney's Office
for review and any potential charges."
Tempe authorities and federal officials are still investigating the
incident. Canada's transportation ministry in Ontario, where Uber
conducts testing, also said it was reviewing the accident.
Volvo, the Swedish car brand owned by China's Geely, said the software
controlling the car in the crash was not its own.
Video footage will aid the ongoing investigation, and the case would be
submitted to the district attorney, Elcock said.
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Tempe Police Sergeant Ronald Elcock speaks to the media after a
female pedestrian was struck and killed by an Uber self-driving
sport utility vehicle in Tempe, Arizona, U.S., March 19, 2018.
REUTERS/Rick Scuteri
"Our investigators have that information, and they will be using that in their
investigation as well as the Maricopa County Attorney's Office as part of their
investigation," said Elcock. "They are going to attempt to try to find who was
possibly at fault and how we can better be safe, whether it's pedestrians or
whether it's the vehicle itself."
WILD WEST
Uber and Waymo on Friday urged Congress to pass sweeping legislation to speed
the introduction of self-driving cars into the United States. Some congressional
Democrats have blocked the legislation over safety concerns, and Monday's
fatality could hamper passage of the bill, congressional aides said Monday.
Safety advocates called for a national moratorium on all robot car testing on
public roads.
"Arizona has been the wild west of robot car testing with virtually no
regulations in place," said Consumer Watchdog, a non-profit consumer advocacy
group, in a statement. "That's why Uber and Waymo test there. When there's no
sheriff in town, people get killed."
Arizona has opened its arms to companies testing self-driving vehicles as a
means to economic growth and jobs. Republican Governor Doug Ducey reached out to
Uber in 2016 after California regulators cracked down on the company over its
failure to obtain testing permits.
Self-driving cars being tested routinely get into fender-benders with other
vehicles. Last week, a self-driving Uber crashed with another vehicle in
Pittsburgh, local news reported. There were no injuries.
A year ago, Uber temporarily grounded its self-driving cars for a few days
following a crash with another car in Tempe. The company has been the subject of
a number of complaints about its autonomous vehicles, but the company has said
the cars were being driven by a human driver at the time of the incidents.
ESSENTIAL TO UBER'S SUCCESS
Uber has said its ability to build autonomous cars is essential to its success
in the rapidly changing transportation industry. The company envisions a network
of autonomous cars that would be summoned through the Uber app that would
supplement - and eventually replace - human-driven cars.
Uber has logged 2 million self-driving miles (3.2 million km) through December.
The company has more than 100 autonomous cars testing on the roads of the
greater Phoenix area, the company's prime testing ground due to the state's
loose regulations and hospitable weather. Rain, snow and ice are particularly
challenging for autonomous cars. The company also tests in Pittsburgh and
Toronto.
Concerns over the safety of autonomous vehicles flared after a July 2016
fatality involving a Tesla Inc automobile with a partially autonomous system
that required human supervision. Safety regulators later determined Tesla was
not at fault.
(Reporting by Sydney Maki and Alexandria Sage; Additional reporting by Dave
Shepardson in Washington, Tina Bellon in New York, Heather Somerville in San
Francisco, David Schwartz and Andres Guerra Luz in Phoenix, and Allison Lampert
in Montreal; Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Lisa Shumaker)
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