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Transportation Government United States

Feds Shut Down Self-Driving School Bus Pilot In Florida 91

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on Friday ordered the French transportation company Transdev to stop transporting schoolchildren in a self-driving vehicle in Florida. Ars Technica reports: Transdev's pilot project in Babcock Ranch, a planned community, was quite modest. On Fridays, Transdev's electric shuttle would take a group of elementary-aged children to school, then take them home later in the day. The vehicle had a safety driver on board. The route was short enough that kids walked or rode their bikes to school the other four days of the week, according to a spokeswoman for Babcock Ranch. "The shuttle travels at a top speed of 8mph, with the potential to reach speeds of 30mph once the necessary infrastructure is complete," an August press release stated.

So why did the feds shut down this project while allowing lots of others to continue with minimal oversight? NHTSA points to two factors. One is that Transdev is a French company. Different countries have different safety standards, so vehicles designed overseas often can't be used in the U.S. without special permission from U.S. regulators. NHTSA granted Transdev a temporary importation authorization to test its driverless shuttle in the United States. "Transdev requested permission to use the shuttle for a specific demonstration project, not as a school bus," NHTSA said in its Friday statement. "Transdev failed to disclose or receive approval for this use." The other issue, of course, is that the project involves kids. For obvious reasons, federal regulators are going to be extra wary of testing experimental technology on schoolchildren.
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Feds Shut Down Self-Driving School Bus Pilot In Florida

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  • "So why did the feds shut down this project while allowing lots of others to continue...?"

    Why are the feds even involved? This isn't a issue regarding interstate commerce, which is the most disingenuous excuse they have.
    • and you think the Feds aren't involved in international commerce?

      hint, they are

      • by msauve ( 701917 )
        You obviously don't understand the difference between "interstate" (i.e. US states, and the Constitutional role of the Federal government) and nations (e.g. "international").

        Please STFU until you do, unless you want to continue embarrassing yourself.
        • Re:Feds? (Score:5, Informative)

          by Waffle Iron ( 339739 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @09:58PM (#57521585)

          If you'd bother to read the summary, this experiment was being run by a foreign company, making it an international affair; states do not have jurisdiction over international commerce. The foreign company apparently didn't adhere to the rules for the special driver's permit granted by the Federal Government to let their foreign software drive on US roads, so they got shut down.

        • my point was the Dept. of Commerce deals with BOTH, which seems to be lost on you. Until you learn what authority the Department of Commerce and the Federal government have in both realms, I suggest you keep your ignorant uniformed spew to yourself

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by BitterOak ( 537666 )

      "So why did the feds shut down this project while allowing lots of others to continue...?" Why are the feds even involved? This isn't a issue regarding interstate commerce, which is the most disingenuous excuse they have.

      Interstate commerce has generally been considered by the courts to include international commerce, and this is a French company doing business in Florida. If this were a Florida based company, I would agree, the feds would have no jurisdiction.

    • Because when the people who headed this project wondered: "what would be a perfect test bed for a new and untested technology?", They came up with the only logical answer: "a bus full of children, of course!"

      What the duck?

  • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @08:57PM (#57521329)
    The testing of self driving buses, shuttles, etc should only be conducted with the employee buses/shuttles to the google and facebook campuses
  • There is no way something like this is going to get off the ground if it takes jobs from SEIU members.

  • by magzteel ( 5013587 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @09:21PM (#57521427)

    Kids will be running for the bus, crossing streets in front of it, etc. .

    Part of the school bus driver's job is to keep kids safe both inside and outside the bus. This takes experience and awareness. I have no doubt the self driving bus can drive from point A to B. I have no confidence in it's ability to anticipate all the dumb things kids do.

    • by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @09:38PM (#57521491)

      Kids do less damage to the expensive sensors on the front of the bus when they're hit, due to their smaller size.

    • by HornWumpus ( 783565 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @09:56PM (#57521559)

      What is the right automated driver response to back window 'mooning'/'pressed fruit bowls' of passing traffic? Lighting up a doobie? Getting in a fight? Bailing from the bus on a later stop? Setting off fireworks? Hanging classmate out window?

      That was just first grade, first week.

      Lane following etc will help the zookeeper, but the real solution is many various sized straight jackets and Lecter racks in place of seats.

    • There was still a driver sitting up front in the project.
      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        The point is that for a school bus, they will never not need adult supervision, so schoolbus is a poor target for automation in any case.

        • I would draw the opposite conclusion. Self-driving school buses seem like what is needed. The vehicle drives itself while the "driver" can spend his full attention on the passengers rather than having to potentially split it.

    • Kids will be running for the bus, crossing streets in front of it, etc.

      All the more reason to have this be handled by a computer system with a instantaneous 360degree view of obstructions rather than some dude driving a truck which by design severely limits his field of vision.

    • This is where you add in a Boston Dynamics style robot for the last 100 feet. Have them use robots to pickup/deliver kids right at their doorstep. Make it look a little intimidating and you can probably keep kids from goofing off on the bus too!

    • I'll always remember my bus driver when I was in elementary school. He always kept a giant yard stick on the bus. If kids got too loud, he'd slam it into the floor as loud as possible and tell everyone to quiet down.

      He later lost his bus driving license due to getting a ticket for driving his motorcycle at 120mph.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Being Trump admin I'm surprised it wasn't shut down due to the bus not being the oldest and most polluting bus available.

  • by Frank Burly ( 4247955 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @10:02PM (#57521605)
    A gasoline tanker with a cab full of renaissance paintings and panda cubs.
  • LOL, right, then kids should be walking or cycling to school. If it's planned to be environmentally sound, ample space for pedestrians and cyclists should be designed in.
  • Self driving is in its infancy (no pun intended) - too early to use school children as test subjects. NHTSA probably doesn't want headlines which some politicians and social outrage leaders could use to stir up public paranoia to get votes for fear-driven legislature in the name of "think of the children!".

  • NASA opposed fueling rockets with people on board. Now it is ok with them. And using kids as guinea pigs for self driving vehicles is not ok, then it will be when the processes of corruption get their game on. Your life and the lives of your children mean nothing when it comes to business. Don't be fooled. They will kill you and your kids to make a buck. Can't people see the lines we are crossing as a society?
  • WCPGW: As the feds dug into it, the What Could Possibly Go Wrong operating system was found to be inadequate.
  • BeauHD included a link to a TransDev press release, https://globenewswire.com/news... [globenewswire.com] ,which evidently took the NHTSA two months to read. It clearly states, "Transdev is starting the autonomous school shuttle service this fall to transport students living within the new community to Babcock Neighborhood School." What am I missing here? I have not seen the "agreement" between NHTSA & TransDev. Without viewing the agreement, all this noise is simply bureaucratic posturing. Fred
  • Throughout the entire second half of the 20th Century, we were promised "picture phones" -- you'd be able to SEE the person you were talking to! Self-driving cars are going to be the same way. It's going to take 50 years for it to truly arrive in a usable fashion, and when it does, it's not going to look anything like they predicted.
  • by PPH ( 736903 )

    The bus in that picture looks mighty short to me. If you get my meaning.

    I don't know if I'd want my kids riding on that thing because of the stigma.

Never test for an error condition you don't know how to handle. -- Steinbach

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