Uber announced on Wednesday that it was permanently shutting down self-driving car testing in Arizona, laying off hundreds of workers in the state. The decision comes two months after an Uber self-driving car killed pedestrian Elaine Herzberg in Tempe. But the company insisted that it wasn’t shutting down its self-driving car program as a whole. In an internal email obtained by Ars Technica, Uber said that it had a “goal of resuming operations in Pittsburgh this summer.”
Hours later, Pittsburgh Mayor William Peduto released a press release blasting the plan. “Uber did not tell me of today’s announcement, and I was forced to learn about it through social media reports,” the mayor wrote. “This is not the way to rebuild a constructive working relationship with local government, especially when facing a public safety matter.”
It’s not clear if Peduto has the legal power to block Uber’s return to Pittsburgh. But the mayor could certainly make Uber’s life miserable if they decided to return to the city over Peduto’s objections.
And Peduto’s angry response points to a larger problem Uber now faces: if Uber wants to restart its self-driving car program, it’s going to have to start testing somewhere. But even formerly friendly jurisdictions—like Pittsburgh, where Peduto once welcomed Uber with open arms—have soured on the company.
Uber was unable to convince Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, one of the nation’s most enthusiastic advocates of self-driving cars generally, to remove a March ban on Uber’s testing in the state. And while Uber has talked of returning to testing in San Francisco, the company let its license to test driverless cars in California lapse days after the Tempe crash. So when Uber is ready to resume testing its cars later this year, it might find it has nowhere to do it.




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