Close Menu
Modern Life Today
  • Tech
  • Smart Home
  • Energy
  • Home Security
  • Kitchen & Household
  • Outdoor
  • Home Internet
  • More Articles
Trending Now

Sennheiser Momentum 5 Wireless Headphones Review: One Big Crucial Upgrade

May 28, 2026

Xreal’s New $299 ‘xbx’ Smart Glasses Channel Xbox Vibes

May 28, 2026

Hands-On With HoverAir Aqua, a Drone That Isn’t Afraid of the Water

May 28, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Modern Life Today
  • Tech
  • Smart Home
  • Energy
  • Home Security
  • Kitchen & Household
  • Outdoor
  • Home Internet
  • More Articles
Subscribe
Modern Life Today
Home»Tech»A School District Tried to Help Train Waymos to Stop for School Buses. It Didn’t Work
Tech

A School District Tried to Help Train Waymos to Stop for School Buses. It Didn’t Work

Press RoomBy Press RoomMarch 29, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email

One of the purported advantages of self-driving car tech is that every car can learn from one vehicle’s mistakes. Here’s how Waymo puts it on its website: “The Waymo Driver learns from the collective experiences gathered across our fleet, including previous hardware generations.”

But in Austin, Waymo’s vehicles struggled for months to learn how to stop for school buses as drivers picked up and dropped off children. An official with the Austin Independent School District (AISD) alleged that the vehicles had, in at least 19 instances, “illegally and dangerously” passed the district’s school buses while their red lights were flashing and their stop arms were extended rather than coming to complete stops, as the law requires.

In early December, Waymo even issued a federal recall related to the incidents, acknowledging at least 12 of them to federal regulators at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), which oversees road safety. According to federal filings, engineers with the self-driving vehicle company had “developed software changes to address the behavior” weeks before.

But even after the recall, the school-bus-passing incidents continued, according to school officials and a report from the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), an independent federal safety watchdog that’s also investigating the situation.

Now, email and text messages between school officials and Waymo representatives, obtained by WIRED through a public records request, show the lengths that the Austin public school district and Waymo went to try to solve the problem. AISD even hosted a half-day “data collection” event in a school parking lot in mid-December, the documents show, with several employees pulling together school buses and stop-arm signals from across the fleet so the self-driving car company could collect information related to vehicles and their flashing lights.

Still, by mid-January, over a month later, the school district reported at least four more school-bus-passing incidents had taken place in Austin. “The data we collected from the beginning of the school year to the end of the semester shows that about 98 percent of people that receive one violation do not receive another,” an official with the school’s police department told the local NBC affiliate that month. “That tells us that the person is learning, but it does not appear the Waymo automated driver system is learning through its software updates, its recall, what have you, because we are still having violations.”

The situation raises questions about the self-driving technologies’ curious blind spots and the industry’s ability to compensate for them even after they’ve been spotted.

Self-driving software has long struggled with recognizing flashing emergency lights and road safety devices with long, thin arms, including gates and stop-arms, says Missy Cummings, who researches autonomous vehicles at George Mason University and served as a safety adviser to the NHTSA during the Biden administration. “If [the company] didn’t fix this a few years ago, the more they drive, the more it’s going to be a problem,” she says. “That’s exactly what’s happening here.”

Waymo did not respond to WIRED’s requests for comment. A spokesperson for the Austin Independent School District referred WIRED to the NTSB while the incidents are under investigation. A spokesperson for the NTSB declined to answer WIRED’s questions while its investigation continues.

Illegal Passing

By midwinter of 2025, AISD officials were frustrated. In one of the 19 incidents alleged by a lawyer for the district in a letter later released by federal road safety regulators, a Waymo passed a school bus letting off children “only moments after a student crossed in front of the vehicle, and while the student was still in the road.”

“Alarmingly,” the lawyer wrote, five of the alleged incidents had occurred after Waymo had assured the district that it had updated its software to fix the problem. Federal regulators with the NHTSA had already launched a probe into the behavior. “Austin ISD is evaluating all potential legal remedies at its disposal and intends to take whatever action is necessary to protect the safety of its students, if required,” the lawyer warned.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Xreal’s New $299 ‘xbx’ Smart Glasses Channel Xbox Vibes

May 28, 2026

Hands-On With HoverAir Aqua, a Drone That Isn’t Afraid of the Water

May 28, 2026

The Best Printers for Every Home-Office Need

May 28, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top Articles

Garmin Forerunner 70 and Forerunner 170 Add New Training Tools and Better Screen

May 12, 2026

OpenAI Beefs Up ChatGPT’s Image Generation Model

April 24, 2026

Starlink Hikes Prices for Nearly 3 Million US Customers. Just One Plan Escaped

May 19, 2026

LG’s New Ultralight Gram Laptops Just Dropped (With Special Service Plan Pricing)

May 1, 2026
Don't Miss

The Best Printers for Every Home-Office Need

By Press RoomMay 28, 20260

Before anything else, you’ll have to decide between ink and laser. I’ll get into the…

Best Home Security Cameras of 2026: Surveillance on Your Terms

May 28, 2026

Waymo Takes Its Self-Driving Cars to Virginia

May 28, 2026

This Dolphin Robot Vacuum Has Kept My Pool Spotless For 2 Years With No Issues

May 28, 2026
About Us
About Us

Modern Life Today is your one-stop website for the latest gadget and technology news and updates, follow us now for the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube
Featured News

Your Vape Wants to Know How Old You Are

March 28, 2026

The Best Large TVs (Over 75 Inches) for Sports, Movies, and More

March 28, 2026

28 Best Headphone and Speaker Deals at Amazon’s Spring Sale 2026

March 28, 2026
Trending Now

A School District Tried to Help Train Waymos to Stop for School Buses. It Didn’t Work

March 29, 2026

My Complete Guide to a Smart Home: What It Is and How It Works

March 29, 2026

Why Most Quantum Computers Need to Be Colder Than Space

March 29, 2026
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.