A Chrysler Pacifica test car outfitted with technology from Google’s self-driving car unit Waymo crashed into a median back in June after the operator meant to be monitoring the system in the driver’s seat reportedly fell asleep and inadvertently disabled the self-driving system, The Information reports.



Recent Video This browser does not support the video element. Here's The Video Finale Of My Battle With The City That Gave Me Six Weeks To Fix My Fleet Of Cars

The crash occurred on a freeway in Mountain View, California, not far from Waymo’s self-driving headquarters . Sources who claim to have seen video of the car claim the human driver appeared to doze off after about an hour on the road. Others familiar with the incident’s details claim the self-driving system was turned off after the driver’s foot hit the gas pedal.

The driver failed to respond to warnings to take control of the wheel and didn’t acknowledged the alerts that the self-driving mode was disengaged, and the car drove into the highway median. Luckily, nobody was injured in the crash, and the driver was able to return the Pacifica to headquarters with damage to a wheel and the front bumper.

Save Hundreds on Furniture and Kitchen Gear During Wayfair’s Way... Read on The Inventory


The Information reports that a mandatory incident report filed with California regulators backs up these claims:

The person’s account of the incident is supported by a three-sentence description of the crash that Waymo filed with California regulators. Waymo’s report, which it is required to submit anytime a prototype has a collision on public roads, said the “driver disengaged from autonomous mode and let the vehicle drift out of its lane.” It added that the vehicle sustained “moderate damage to its tire and bumper.” A Waymo spokesman said in a statement: “We have a strong culture of safety at Waymo. We’ve been testing in Mountain View for nearly 10 years, and we are constantly improving our best practices, including those for driver attentiveness, because the safe and responsible testing of our technology is integral to everything we do.”﻿




The Information also reported in August that Waymo’s self-driving cars often struggle with even basic, everyday driving maneuvers including stopping in intersections during turns, holding at stop signs for over three seconds, and merging into heavy traffic.

Waymo’s June crash followed a much more severe self-driving crash back in March, where a pedestrian was struck and killed by a self-driving Volvo XC90 operated by Uber’s self-driving unit in Tempe, Arizona, while the human driver watched a television show on her phone. The crash caused Uber to considerably scale back its self-driving program, shutting down its Arizona operation completely.


It’s unclear if Waymo disabled the Chrysler Pacifica’s standard safety features, which includes a forward collision warning and emergency braking system, but Uber had disabled the car’s standard safety features on the XC90 involved in the Arizona crash, presumably to avoid conflict with its own systems.

In both the Uber and Waymo incidents, the companies had recently scaled down from two self-driving car operators monitoring the car’s driving to just one, making it increasingly likely that the human driver could become distracted or fall asleep and fail to adequately control the vehicle in the event of the self-driving system being deactivated or failing. In neither case did the car actively monitor the driver’s awareness.


For Waymo, scaling down to just one person monitoring the system was likely seemingly justified by the amount of testing the system had been through, and a necessary step toward a truly driverless system which could manage itself on the road. It sounds like they may be getting ahead of themselves, and The Information touched on this:

Waymo has been trying to remove human safety drivers from its prototype cars as quickly as possible. By the end of this year, Waymo has said it will publicly launch fully automated Pacifica robo-taxis, without human drivers behind the wheel, starting in Phoenix’s southeastern suburbs. But that process has been slower and more challenging than anticipated, say people with knowledge of the matter.﻿




The Information also reports that someone expressed concerns over contracted drivers being on the road too long in a meeting following the June crash, who was told that drivers are free to stop whenever they feel the need. Of course, being in a contracted position, drivers may be hesitant to take breaks, though Waymo claims it does not judge individual drivers on average mileage.

The driver who fell asleep at the wheel and caused the June crash no longer works for Waymo, the report claims. Jalopnik has reached out to Waymo and we’ll let you know if we hear anything.


Considering Waymo is trying to roll-out a self-driving car-sharing service in Arizona later this year, skipping the gradual increase of semi-autonomous technologies employed by most other automakers. This incident doesn’t make me confident that Waymo has worked out redundancies in having human operators remain alert and aware to take over, should things go even slightly wrong.