How Waymo and Waze are pitching in to help solve L.A.'s pothole problem

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Waze and Waymo are teaming up to help combat Los Angeles’ growing pothole problem.The companies announced a program that will use Waymo’s self-driving cars to better detect potholes in the city.

The data will be available to city officials through Waze’s traffic data-sharing platform, according to a news release last week.The number of potholes in L.A.

jumped early this year after an intense rainy season soaked the city.Residents reported over 6,700 potholes in January and nearly 5,000 reports were submitted in February and again in March, according to data from the city’s 311 tip line analyzed by the nonprofit newsroom Crosstown L.A.

The partnership is the most recent effort in Waymo’s long-standing commitment to making roads safer, Arielle Fleisher, the company’s policy development and research manager, said in the release.The Waze navigation app will also use the data to warn users as they approach a pothole, the company said.

Drivers will then be able to verify the Waymo-identified pothole in real time.L.A.

has been slow to repair pavement issues on its 23,000 miles of streets in recent years.The city repaired 310 miles of road in fiscal year 2025, which ended in June — a nosedive from the 850 miles it paved a decade before in 2015, according to Crosstown.

Only 216 miles of street lanes were paved in fiscal year 2024.The Bureau of Street Services, the department in charge of paving the city’s streets, is in communication with Waymo regarding the pilot program, said Dan Halden, a spokesperson for the city department.“The bureau proactively manages the city’s streets, ensuring roadways are treated not only for repair but also to strengthen the street network and prevent future potholes,” he said.Many cities, including L.A., rely on residents to report potholes through the nonemergency 311 service.

The process provides an incomplete picture of road he...

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Publisher: Los Angeles Times

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