
KGW8 – Waymo driverless car caught illegally passing school bus
A woman recorded a driverless Waymo illegally passing a school bus letting off children in Atlanta.
Editors note: in short, Waymos are not programmed to follow important traffic laws. This is not an algorithmic mistake or a sensor failure. Instead, it is willful negligence on the part of Waymo.
See original article by Chase Houle at KGW8
ATLANTA — Georgia State Representative Clint Crowe said he was stunned after seeing video of a Waymo driverless car illegally passing a stopped school bus on Briarcliff Road in Atlanta on Monday afternoon.
“I’m a big fan of new technologies and emerging technologies and I think that driverless cars are going to become more prevalent, but we got to think about how they’re going to comply with the law,” Crowe said.
Crowe co-sponsored Addy’s Law in 2024. The legislation was named after 8-year-old Addy Pierce, who was killed in Henry County after being struck while crossing the street to get to her bus. The law stiffened penalties for illegally passing a stopped school bus, carrying penalties of up to $1,000 in fines and even jail time.
According to Crowe, those rules still apply to autonomous vehicles.
“The majority of our traffic laws, the penalty is usually a fine and or driver’s license suspension. These cars don’t have a driver, so they don’t have a driver’s license and so we’re really going to have to rethink who’s the responsible party, who’s going to be responsible for being in control of that vehicle and who’s going to be the operator of that vehicle,” he said.
Crowe believes manufacturers should face stronger consequences when their vehicles break the law, saying the $1,000 fine doesn’t go far enough.
Others at the Capitol share his concerns.
“Driverless cars should be stopped until it can be figured out. We should not have this on the road. It’s too dangerous for our children,” said State Senator Rick Williams, one of the authors of Addy’s Law.
Williams said he plans to introduce new legislation that would hold driverless car companies accountable with higher fines if their vehicles violate traffic laws.
In a statement from a Waymo spokesperson, they wrote:
“The trust and safety of the communities we serve is our top priority. We continuously refine our system’s performance to navigate complex scenarios and are looking into this further.”
No one was injured during the incident.
See original article by Chase Houle at KGW8