Stock Markets March 3, 2026 04:00 PM

NTSB Opens Probe After New Incidents of Waymo Vehicles Passing Stopped School Buses in Texas

Federal investigators look into January events following December recall as regulators and school districts press for answers

By Jordan Park GOOGL
NTSB Opens Probe After New Incidents of Waymo Vehicles Passing Stopped School Buses in Texas
GOOGL

The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating multiple incidents in January involving Waymo self-driving vehicles that passed stopped school buses with activated lights in Texas, adding to a cluster of prior events that led to a December recall. Federal and local authorities, as well as the company, are examining circumstances surrounding the encounters, while separate agencies investigate a Jan. 23 collision in California.

Key Points

  • NTSB is investigating a Jan. 12 incident in Austin where a Waymo vehicle passed a stopped school bus with lights activated in violation of Texas law, and is also aware of a Jan. 14 incident involving a special-needs school bus.
  • Waymo recalled vehicles in December after Texas officials reported at least 19 illegal passes since the start of the school year; company cited a software issue that caused vehicles to slow or stop and then proceed.
  • NHTSA opened a probe in October; both NHTSA and NTSB are also investigating a Jan. 23 collision in Santa Monica where a Waymo vehicle struck a nine-year-old girl.

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said on Tuesday it is investigating a newly reported January incident in which Waymo self-driving vehicles passed a stopped school bus with its lights activated, an action that would violate Texas law.

The unit of Alphabet previously recalled its self-driving fleet in December after Texas authorities reported that Waymo vehicles had illegally passed school buses at least 19 times since the start of the school year. The NTSB statement identified an incident that occurred in Austin, Texas, on Jan. 12 while a school bus was loading passengers; that incident is under investigation.

The NTSB also said it is aware of a Jan. 14 encounter that involved a Waymo vehicle and a 2023 International school bus operating on a special-needs route. According to the NTSB, in that Jan. 14 case the Waymo initially stopped for the school bus, but then other vehicles passed the bus. The Waymo system subsequently asked a human remote assistance operator, "a school bus with active signals?" The operator replied no, and the Waymo vehicle then proceeded to pass the stopped bus. The NTSB said it plans to issue safety recommendations intended to prevent similar events.

Waymo said it appreciates the work of the NTSB. The company has previously attributed part of the December incidents to a software issue that contributed to the self-driving vehicles first slowing or stopping for a school bus and then proceeding.

Federal scrutiny of the matter is not new. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) opened a probe in October into Waymo vehicles operating near school buses. The Austin Independent School District reported that five incidents occurred in November after Waymo issued an earlier software update intended to address the problem. The school district had requested last year that Waymo suspend operations around schools during pick-up and drop-off times until the company could ensure its vehicles would not violate state law; Waymo did not comply with that request, the school system said.

Separately, both NHTSA and the NTSB are investigating a Jan. 23 collision in Santa Monica, California, in which a Waymo self-driving vehicle struck a nine-year-old girl who ran across the street from behind a double-parked SUV toward the school. Waymo reported that the vehicle immediately detected the child and applied hard braking, reducing speed from approximately 17 mph to under 6 mph before contact was made.

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Context and current status

The investigations by the NTSB and NHTSA are ongoing. The NTSB has signaled its intent to make safety recommendations following its review of the incidents. Waymo has acknowledged a software-related contribution to prior December behaviors and has expressed appreciation for the NTSB's investigative work. Local school authorities in Austin have reported multiple incidents and requested operational limits that Waymo did not adopt, according to the school district.

Risks

  • Regulatory and investigative scrutiny from federal agencies (NTSB and NHTSA) could lead to safety recommendations or further oversight affecting autonomous vehicle operations and deployment.
  • Operational constraints or demands from local school districts, such as requests to halt service during pick-up and drop-off times, could impact service availability and local deployment strategies.
  • Public safety incidents, including the Jan. 23 collision in Santa Monica and repeated bus-pass events, pose reputational and liability risks for autonomous vehicle operators and their parent companies.

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