
WASHINGTON, D.C. — A mobility solution provider is no longer running an autonomous shuttle to transport students in a new community in Florida after a federal authority directed it to cease operations on Wednesday.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) issued a letter to Transdev North America telling it to immediately stop transporting schoolchildren in the Babcock Ranch community in Punta Gorda, Florida, on its EasyMile EZ10 Generation II driverless shuttle. Transdev’s use of the autonomous shuttle to transport schoolchildren is “unlawful and in violation of the company’s temporary importation authorization,” according to a news release from NHTSA.
NHTSA also stated in the news release that its direction to Transdev falls in line with the U.S. Department of Transportation’s guidance related to automated vehicles, most recently detailed on Oct. 4. The new guidance can be found here.
"Innovation must not come at the risk of public safety," said Heidi King, deputy administrator for NHTSA. "Using a non-compliant test vehicle to transport children is irresponsible, inappropriate, and in direct violation of the terms of Transdev’s approved test project."
In March 2018, NHTSA granted Transdev permission to temporarily import the driverless shuttle for testing and demonstration purposes. Transdev requested permission to use the shuttle for a specific demonstration project, and failed to disclose or receive approval for use “as a school bus,” according to NHTSA.
In its letter to Transdev, NHTSA noted that federal regulations define a “school bus” as a bus that “is likely to be used significantly to transport preprimary, primary, or secondary students to or from school or related events.”
NHTSA added that school buses are subject to Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards that take into account their unique purpose of transporting children, a vulnerable population.
If Transdev had specified that it planned to use the vehicle in student transportation, NHTSA wrote that it would have considered factors such as “whether the vehicle complied with applicable school bus and bus regulation, and whether additional conditions were necessary to ensure the safety of children.”
Transdev responded to School Bus Fleet with a statement in which it said it discussed the six-week pilot last week with NHTSA and elected to stop operation of it one week earlier than it had planned to "out of deference to NHTSA."











