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CREATED:20230623T195000Z
DESCRIPTION:6/29 10AM  STOP The Madness-Newsom's CPUC To Give Approval Of Hundreds of  
 24 hour Robo Taxis  In SF\nRally At 10AM At California PUC Building Van 
 Ness & McAllister St. San Francisco\n\n\nSTOP Newsom’s  Plan To Eliminate 
 Taxi Workers & UBER/LYFT Drivers\n\nThe Newsom’s hand picked California 
 Public Utility Commission are under orders to allow the introduction of 
 hundreds of Robo Taxis in San Francisco despite the fact that they are 
 dangerous to human beings and animals as well as their flagrant violations 
 of the Vehicular code. Mayor London Breed  and her police have refused to 
 impound these vehicles when they stop traffic and emergency vehicles and 
 put lives in danger in San Francisco. These AI vehicles are above the law 
 for Breed, Newsom and Biden’s Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg 
 which has allowed Elon Musk’s Tesla to kill drivers, passengers and 
 pedestrians while testing his AI on human beings. It is all about profiting 
 from AI even if you are murdering people on the roads.\n\nIt also also for 
 the end of environmental protection of our city since there is no control 
 of the number of vehicles in the road. This is the wild wild West to 
 benefit the billionaires and  the capitalist politicians take their orders 
 from.\n\nIt is time to say ENOUGH IS ENOUGH. \n\nWe must halt this AI 
 insane profit drive to destroy the lives of Taxi drivers, UBER-LYFT workers 
 and all delivery workers and make this a Amazon special zone for their plan 
 to eliminate millions of workers and their jobs while profiting the 
 billionaire class\n\nJoin Our Rally and Speak Out-Human Lives First!\n\nSan 
 Francisco Taxi Workers Alliance \nAlliance For Independent 
 Workers\nWorkWeek\nLaborNet\nUnited Front Committee For A Labor 
 Party\nwww.ufclp.org\nContact To Endorse & For 
 Information\ninfo@ufclp.org\n\n\nSelf-driving Waymo car kills dog amid 
 increasing concern over robotaxis\n\nCollision occurred as canine ran out 
 from behind another car, but autonomous vehicle could not stop in time to 
 avoid 
 contact\nhttps://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jun/07/waymo-car-kills-dog-self-driving-robotaxi-san-francisco\nWed 
 7 Jun 2023 16.17 EDT Rose Horowitch\n\nA Waymo self-driving car killed a 
 small dog in San Francisco while in “autonomous mode” last month, the 
 latest in a string of incidents that have led city officials to protest a 
 planned expansion of the company’s driverless taxi services.\n\nOther 
 incidents include autonomous vehicles trapping other cars at the curb, 
 entering construction zones and crime scenes and failing to follow 
 directions from traffic control officers. \nSan Francisco officials also 
 pointed to a lack of data transparency and adequate reporting and 
 monitoring as reasons for the commission to deny the companies’ 
 requests.\n\n“This approach is backwards and is inconsistent with the 
 commission’s power and duty to protect not only passenger safety but the 
 safety of the general public,” they wrote.\n\nA Waymo self-driving car 
 killed a small dog in San Francisco while in “autonomous mode” last 
 month, the latest in a string of incidents that have led city officials to 
 protest a planned expansion of the company’s driverless taxi 
 services.\n\nThe 21 May collision occurred just before 11am on Toland 
 Street in San Francisco as the car was in “autonomous mode” with a test 
 driver in the front seat. A Waymo spokesperson said that an initial review 
 showed that the system correctly identified the dog when it ran out from 
 behind a parked car, but “was not able to avoid contact” due to how 
 fast the canine was moving. The company said it was investigating the 
 matter.\n\n“We send our sincere condolences to the dog’s owner,” the 
 Waymo spokesperson said. “The trust and safety of the communities we are 
 in is the most important thing to us and we’re continuing to look into 
 this on our end.”\n\nThe car, a Jaguar, sustained minor damage, according 
 to a California DMV report.\n\nThe collision comes as Waymo, which is owned 
 by the Google parent company, Alphabet, and its competitor, Cruise, seek to 
 dramatically scale up their robotaxi operations throughout the city. 
 Cruise, operated by General Motors, currently has permission to charge 
 fares for driverless taxi rides between 10pm and 6am in some parts of the 
 city, but its cars must avoid the densest downtown areas. Waymo only has 
 authority to charge fares if a safety driver is present in the car.\n\nThe 
 California public utilities commission, which regulates the companies’ 
 robotaxi services, is on the cusp of approving the companies’ requests to 
 operate their self-driving taxis at all hours and throughout the entire 
 city. The commission is set to vote on 29 June on whether to approve draft 
 resolutions that would allow Waymo and Cruise to offer round-the-clock 
 robotaxi service.\n\nBut the resolutions have faced fierce opposition from 
 local officials. The San Francisco municipal transportation agency, San 
 Francisco county transportation authority and the mayor’s office of 
 disability authored a letter pushing back on the commission’s 
 plan.\n\nThe city has recorded “dozens – perhaps hundreds or thousands 
 – of incidents” in which autonomous vehicles were reported to drive 
 erratically, block traffic and interfere with emergency response 
 operations, officials wrote.\n\nLast year, a viral video showed police 
 stopping one of Cruise’s autonomous vehicles for driving without 
 headlights. When police pulled the car over, the driverless vehicle sped 
 away to the other side of the intersection. In another incident, nearly 20 
 of Cruise’s self-driving cars blocked traffic for more than two hours, 
 forcing the company’s employees to physically move the cars off the 
 street.\n\nSan Francisco doesn’t want driverless cars to offer 24-hour 
 taxi service. Here’s 
 why\n\nhttps://www.sfchronicle.com/.../cruise-waymo-18134103.php\nJohn 
 King\nJune 3, 2023 Updated: June 4, 2023 12:51 p.m.\n\nA Waymo driverless 
 taxi pulls up to a home during a demonstration ride in the Sunset District 
 of San Francisco in 2021. As driverless cars have become more ubiquitous in 
 San Francisco, incidents have risen, city officials say.\n\nA Waymo 
 driverless taxi pulls up to a home during a demonstration ride in the 
 Sunset District of San Francisco in 2021. As driverless cars have become 
 more ubiquitous in San Francisco, incidents have risen, city officials 
 say.\n\nJessica Christian/The Chronicle\n\nThe number of reported traffic 
 incidents involving self-driving taxis has surged this year in San 
 Francisco, according to city officials seeking to block the state from 
 giving a green light to such vehicles around the clock.\n\nThe climb 
 coincides with recent expansion of Cruise and Waymo service on city streets 
 and “is almost certainly a small minority of the total number of 
 incidents actually occurring,” said a pair of May 31 letters to the state 
 Public Utilities Commission.\n\nOverall, the number of reported incidents 
 climbed from 23 in January to a peak of 93 in March. The combined total for 
 the two companies dipped to 87 in April, the last full month in which 
 problems were tallied.\n\nAmong the more harrowing incidents: a case last 
 month where a Cruise driverless vehicle drove through police tape at an 
 active crime scene and a scene in January where a Waymo car entered an 
 active construction site and stopped at the edge of an open trench with 
 workers inside it.\n\nThe letters are the latest sign of City Hall’s 
 unease with potential dangers from driverless technology. They also come as 
 the commission apparently is poised to begin allowing both companies to 
 offer automated taxi service throughout nearly all the city, 24 hours a 
 day. That’s according to draft resolutions from early May allowing such 
 expansions. The commission’s next hearing is June 29.\n\nTwo 
 near-identical letters — one applying to Waymo, the other to Cruise — 
 were submitted to the commission on May 31 by the heads of San Francisco 
 Planning, the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency and the San 
 Francisco County Transportation Authority. Each opposes the “virtually 
 unlimited expansion” of “a developmental technology that is not yet 
 ready for unconstrained commercial deployment.”\n\nThe city’s latest 
 letters were first reported by the San Francisco Standard.\n\n“These 
 letters are a standard part of the regulatory process, and we have long 
 appreciated a healthy dialogue with city officials and government agencies 
 in California,” a Waymo spokesperson said. “We look forward to the 
 continued partnership with public stakeholders.”\n\nDrew Pusateri, a 
 spokesperson for Cruise, said: “We’re proud of our safety record, which 
 is publicly reported and includes millions of miles driven in an extremely 
 complex urban environment. We’ve received overwhelmingly supportive 
 comments as we have sought to expand our service –– including from 
 accessibility advocates, small businesses and local community groups –– 
 and look forward to working with them to make transportation safer and more 
 accessible.”\n\nSan Francisco has served in a sense as a test lab for the 
 new technology, but until now there have been constraints on the hours that 
 robotaxis can be deployed as well as the neighborhoods where they are 
 allowed. By contrast, Cruise wants to introduce a fleet of 100 vehicles 
 that would operate around the city and around the clock — including 
 downtown during commute hours. Waymo’s expansion would be similar.\n\nThe 
 city’s preference is that expansion be done with specified limits and and 
 only after full public review. But the draft decision from the state 
 commission says that the requests for wider service meet past guidelines 
 set up by the state Department of Motor Vehicles.\n\nThe draft decision by 
 the Public Utilities Commission does call for Waymo and Cruise to 
 collaborate with the city to find a “thoughtful” approach to expansion 
 that will “minimize any negative impacts.” But the three city 
 departments say such requests are likely to be irrelevant.\n“It is 
 unreasonable” for the state to allow expansions “before adopting 
 expanded reporting requirements and minimum performance standards,” 
 according to the three city departments. “This approach is 
 backwards.”\n\nSan Francisco Chronicle staff writer Jordan Parker 
 responded to this report.\n\nReach John King: jking@sfchronicle.com; 
 Twitter: @johnkingsfchron\n\nAI Ground Zero  In San Francisco As Tech, Auto 
 Bosses & Politicians Destroy Taxi & Uber Worker 
 Jobs\nhttps://youtu.be/Xn1X0Zo4Pto\n\nHundreds of Waymo and Cruiz robot 
 cars are set to destroy the jobs of thousands of taxi and Uber-Lyft drivers 
 in San Francisco. As a result of Governor Newsom's California Public 
 Utility Commission, the tech companies now have a free hand to introduce 
 these remote control cars without regulation and no enforcement for 
 violating the California vehicular code by local police 
 agencies.\n\nWorkWeek has a panel of experts including:\n\nSue Vauhan, 
 writer and San Francisco public transit activist\nMark Gruber, San 
 Francisco Taxi Workers Alliance chair\nEdward Escobar, Alliance For 
 Independent workers\nGord Magill is a commentator on the trucking industry, 
 having spent over 26 years on the road across 4 different countries. He 
 blogs at Autonomous Truckers dot Substack dot com \nWill Cook founder of 
 America Without Drivers, is an industry veteran with 34 years of experience 
 as a professional truck driver.\n\nThis program was produced on 
 6-7-23\n\nAdditional Media:\n\nUBER, Tech, Drivers & Capitalism With  
 Steven Hill\nhttps://youtu.be/IJQ-gBaSPTU\nSF Taxi Transit Workers On Tech, 
 UBER, Lyft And Deregulation\nhttps://youtu.be/MCrwoiYejWg\nUBER Stop Lying 
 And Cheating Us!  Drivers Protest At UBER World Headquarters In 
 SF\nhttps://youtu.be/LDeLO1Yr-pk\n\nWorkWeek\nhttps://soundcloud.com/workweek-radio\nworkweeknow@gmail.com\n#laborradionetwork 
  #LaborRadioPod  #1u  #unionstrong \nProduction of Labor Video 
 Project\nwww.labormedia.net\n\n4. Autonomous vehicles are not ready for 
 prime time, but at its June 29 meeting the California Public Utilities 
 Commission will vote on whether to authorize two AV companies, Cruise and 
 Waymo, to “offer passenger service in its autonomous vehicles without a 
 safety driver present throughout the city of San Francisco, at all hours of 
 day or night.” (See this June 10 article about autopilot Tesla crashes in 
 the Washington Post.) Local officials have objected to the approval, citing 
 safety concerns -- see the attached letter. The CPUC should hear from us 
 about our concerns. You can send a written comment or call in on the day of 
 the meeting. To send a written comment, fill out this form (note: as of 
 this date, there is no docket number).\n\nDate	06/29/2023 \nTime	11:00 
 AM\nLocation	Remote access only via webcast or phone\nCall-in-Number	(800) 
 857-1917\nParticipant PASSCODE	9899501#\nContact	email 
 VotingMeetingHelp@cpuc.ca.gov or call (415) 
 703-5263\nWebcast	http://www.adminmonitor.com/ca/cpuc\nThe California 
 Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) holds regularly scheduled public 
 meetings where at least three of the five Commissioners (a quorum) meet to 
 discuss and vote on proposed policies, rules, and other issues.\n\nThe CPUC 
 welcomes public comment at its business meetings. The public comment rules 
 outlined in Resolution ALJ-412, Adopting Rules For Public Comment At 
 Business Meetings, enable Californians to exercise their right to be heard 
 by the CPUC, and to allow the CPUC to conduct business in a timely manner. 
 Pursuant to Resolution ALJ-412, the Public Advisor's Office is providing 
 the following rules and guidelines that apply to public comment at the 
 CPUC’s Voting Meetings. \n\nTo watch CPUC public meetings only (no public 
 comment)\n\nWebcast: www.adminmonitor.com/ca/cpuc\n\nParticipants will have 
 audio and video but will not be able to make comments or ask questions. To 
 make comments or ask questions, please join via the phone line.\nFor 
 captions, after clicking on the name of the meeting, click the green button 
 below the video. Then select captions by clicking on the white icon next to 
 the word “live” at the bottom of the video.\nThe webcast will also be 
 recorded and archived for future viewing.\nTo make a public comment by 
 speaking\n\nIf you would like to speak during the public comment period at 
 the start of the meeting, you may comment in-person or participate by 
 phone. We encourage you to call in or sign-up by 11 a.m. however you may 
 make a public comment until the public comment period has ended. Reminder: 
 parties to a proceeding cannot speak to issues related to the proceeding to 
 which they are a party, nor can the public comment on matters outside the 
 CPUC’s jurisdiction or on adjudicatory matters.\n\nPhone line:\n\nEnglish 
 Phone: 1-800-857-1917, passcode: 9899501#\n\nSpanish Phone: 1-800-857-1917, 
 passcode: 3799627#\n\nInstructions:\n\nTo make a comment by phone, dial 
 1-800-857-1917 and enter the passcode for the English or Spanish phone 
 line, as indicated above. To make a public comment, unmute your phone, and 
 press *1 (star one) when prompted by the operator. Once you press *1 you 
 will be prompted to state your name and/or organization, please do so 
 slowly and clearly. The operator will call on you when it is your turn to 
 speak.\nWait times depend on the number of speakers in the public comment 
 queue. During times of high call volumes, wait times will be long.The 
 operator will call on you when it is your turn to speak.\nEach speaker will 
 have 1 minute to speak. Commenters requiring a translator will have at 
 least twice the amount of time allotted to English speakers.\nThe President 
 of the Commission maintains discretion on individual speaker time 
 allocations, depending on the number of speakers. A speaker may not cede 
 time to another speaker.\nIn-person comments will generally be taken first, 
 and the order of speakers will generally be based on the order in which 
 speakers sign-up or call-in. The President of the Commission maintains the 
 discretion to alter the order of speakers.\nAt the end of Public Comment 
 Session, the CPUC’s President will ask if there any additional 
 individuals who wish to speak. Anyone who has already made a public comment 
 may not comment again at the same meeting.\nIf you experience difficulty 
 calling into the Public Comment line, please send an email to 
 VotingMeetingHelp@cpuc.ca.gov or call (415) 703-1496.\n\nTo make a public 
 comment in writing\n\nThe CPUC also welcomes your written comments. Written 
 comments on a specific proceeding can be submitted via the CPUC’s docket 
 card. Please visit www.cpuc.ca.gov/docket, input the proceeding number, 
 then click on the public comment tab. You can also visit the Public 
 Advisor’s Office webpage at www.cpuc.ca.gov/pao for further 
 information.\n\nUseful Links\n\nCurrent Agenda\nHold List (Agenda 
 Changes)\nVoting Meeting Presentations\nReasonable Accommodations \n\nIf 
 special accommodations are needed to attend, such as non-English or sign 
 language interpreters, please contact the CPUC's Public Advisor's Office at 
 public.advisor@cpuc.ca.gov or toll free at 866-849-8390 at least five 
 business days in advance of the remote access meeting.\n\nVirtual Escutia 
 Room\n\nThe Commission is required by Public Utilities Code §311.5 to make 
 available copies of all relevant agenda items and revisions associated with 
 its Voting Meetings. When a Voting Meeting is held in a physical location, 
 these documents are typically made available in physical form in the 
 Escutia Room. The agenda items and their revisions are always available 
 online.\n\nEach time the agenda is published, it contains the links to the 
 most current version of each item on the agenda for the Commission's voting 
 meeting. When a revision to an agenda item is made, the revised agenda item 
 is published on the Commission's website. The link to the item on the 
 agenda is updated when that agenda item is revised. A revised agenda is 
 published once a day if any agenda item has been updated.\n\nAgendas: To 
 access each version of the agenda, go to the Agenda Search Form, which can 
 be found here: http://docs.cpuc.ca.gov/AgendaSearchForm.aspx and select the 
 desired meeting date in the Search By Meeting Date field, then click 
 Search.\n\nAgenda Items: To access the agenda item and any revisions, go to 
 the Agenda Decision Search Form, which can be found here: 
 http://docs.cpuc.ca.gov/aDecisionsSearchForm.aspx and select the desired 
 meeting date in the Search By Meeting Date field for copies of ALL items 
 and revisions for that Voting Meeting, then click Search. To narrow the 
 results, select the desired meeting date in the Search By Meeting Date 
 field and include the proceeding number associated with the relevant agenda 
 item in the Proceeding Number field, then click Search. *Note, not all 
 agenda items will have revisions.    \n\nIf you require a hard copy of a 
 specific revision, please contact the Process Office at 
 Process.Office@cpuc.ca.gov. \n\nMore info on the CPUC Voting Meeting 
 webpage\n\nNotice of Recording: This public meeting will be recorded and 
 may be posted online for subsequent viewing.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2023/06/23/18857002.php
SUMMARY:STOP The Madness-Newsom's CPUC To Give Approval Of Hundreds of 24 Hour Robo Taxis In SF
LOCATION:California Public Utility Commission\nVan Ness St. & McAllister St.\nSan 
 Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2023/06/23/18857002.php
DTSTART:20230629T170000Z
DTEND:20230629T183000Z
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