NTSB says Waymo robotaxis illegally passed stopped school buses in new incidents

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – The National Transportation Safety Board said Tuesday it is investigating a new incident in ​January of Waymo self-driving vehicles passing a stopped school bus with its ‌lights activated in violation of Texas state law.

The Alphabet unit in December recalled its self-driving vehicles after Texas officials said they had illegally passed school buses at least 19 times since the start of ​the school year.

A new incident occurred in Austin, Texas, on Jan. 12 while a ​school bus was loading passengers and is under investigation, NTSB said, adding ⁠it is also aware of a Jan. 14 incident that involved a Waymo and ​a 2023 international school bus operating on a special-needs route.

The NTSB said the Waymo stopped ​for the bus but then other vehicles passed the bus, which prompted the Waymo to ask a human remote assistance operator if it was “a school bus with active signals?” and the agent said ​no, and then Waymo passed the bus.

The NTSB plans to issue safety recommendations to ​prevent similar incidents.

Waymo said it appreciates the work of the NTSB.

Waymo said in December a software issue ‌contributed ⁠to self-driving vehicles initially slowing or stopping for a school bus and then proceeding.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration first opened a probe in October into Waymo vehicles near school buses.

The Austin Independent School District said in November five incidents occurred in November after ​Waymo issued an earlier ​software update to ⁠resolve the issue.

The school system last year asked the company to halt operations around schools during pick-up and drop-off times until it ​could ensure the vehicles would not violate the law but Waymo ​refused.

Both NHTSA ⁠and the NTSB are also investigating the Jan. 23 collision of a self-driving Waymo that struck a nine-year-old girl in a school zone in Santa Monica, California who ran across the ⁠street from ​behind a double-parked SUV toward the school.

Waymo said the ​self-driving vehicle immediately detected the girl, braking hard and reducing speed from approximately 17 mph to under 6 ​mph before contact was made.

Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Nick Zieminski