Woman Has Baby in Waymo Self-Driving Taxi in San Francisco

Company Detected 'Unusual Activity' Inside Vehicle, Called to Check on Rider and Alert 911; Mom and Baby Arrived Safely at Hospital

Waymo self-driving taxi in San Francisco
A Waymo robotaxi drives in San Francisco on Sept. 4. (Jeff Chiu/Associated Press, File)

Key Takeaways:Toggle View of Key Takeaways

  • A San Francisco woman gave birth in a Waymo robotaxi Dec. 8 while en route to a UCSF medical center, Waymo and a hospital spokesperson said.
  • Waymo said its support team noticed unusual activity, alerted 911 and confirmed the vehicle reached the hospital safely ahead of emergency services.
  • The company removed the car from service for cleaning and noted this was not its first in-vehicle delivery as its driverless taxis face growing public scrutiny.

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SAN FRANCISCO — Self-driving Waymo taxis have gone viral for negative reasons involving the death of a beloved San Francisco bodega cat and pulling anillegal U-turnin front of police who were unable to issue a ticket to a nonexistent driver.

But this week, theself-drivingtaxis are the bearer of happier news after a San Francisco woman gave birth in a Waymo.

The mother was on her way to the University of California, San Francisco, medical center Dec. 8 when she delivered inside the robotaxi, said a Waymo spokesperson in a statement Dec. 10. The company said its rider support team detected “unusual activity” inside the vehicle and called to check on the rider as well as alert 911.



Waymo, which is owned by Google’s parent company, Alphabet, declined to elaborate on how the vehicle knew something was amiss.

The company has said it has cameras and microphones inside as well as outside the cars.

The taxi and its passengers arrived safely at the hospital ahead of emergency services. Jess Berthold, a UCSF spokesperson, confirmed the mother and child were brought to the hospital. She said the mother was not available for interviews.

Waymo said the vehicle was taken out of service for cleaning after the ride. While still rare, this was not the first baby delivered in one of its taxis, the company said.

“We’re proud to be a trusted ride for moments big and small, serving riders from just seconds old to many years young,” the company said.

The driverless taxis have surged in popularity even as they court higher scrutiny. Riders can take them onfreeways and interstatesaround San Francisco, Silicon Valley, Los Angeles and Phoenix.

In September, a Waymo pulled a U-turn in front of a sign telling drivers not to do that, and social media users dumped on the San Bruno Police because state law prohibited officers from ticketing the car. In October, a popular tabby cat named Kit Kat known to pad around its Mission District neighborhood was crushed to death by a Waymo.

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