Random thought I've perhaps had before but not articulated, especially in the wake of Schmidt's departure.
JTA is seemingly about to embark on a campaign to request a Buy America Act waiver from the FTA for autonomous shuttles because none of the ones presently being hoped for are built in the US, or appear to plan to have US factories open in time for vehicle procurement.
However, there is a vehicle that JTA has had extensive time to test and learn from, and that maintenance crews have deep expertise working with, that is built in America: The
Gillig Low-Floor bus.
Most of the shuttles JTA has been testing for some time now are just various vehicles, such as a small 6-seat cart or the EV Star van, that have a "kit" from
Perrone Robotics strapped onto it. Despite that, these vehicles for the foreseeable future are going to require an "attendant" who has to know how to drive the vehicle anyway.
So I don't understand why JTA doesn't simply take a 29-foot Gillig bus (you can even get them as an EV!), strap a Perrone Robotics kit onto it, have the attendant sit in the drivers seat, and let everyone move on with their lives. They can call it an autonomous vehicle, it'd have more capacity, more doors, it's smaller than a 40-foot bus, it's ADA compliant, they can build it a lot sooner than 2025, everyone's happy.
I even went and checked whether the Gillig's
turning radius is less than the
Skyway's (it is, page 22), and
weighs less (it does, but the EV version might be heavier, although probably not heavier than the 3-car Skyway train). If the
RTA of Dayton, Ohio can get Gillig to collaborate with Kiepe Electric to build a Gillig Trolleybus, surely JTA can have them cooperate with Perrone to build what is essentially their own version of something
New Flyer already builds.
The only reasons I can think of to not do it like that are the ideological reasons Nat Ford suggested two years ago, that they simply don't like the idea of running a full-sized city bus when the dream of flexible small vehicles seems so attainable. Except obviously that isn't true, any more true than it was two years ago. Even if one were to argue that you'd have to turn around the vehicle if there was ever an expansion onto the Skyway infrastructure, that's something that'd have to be done anyway because many of the existing shuttles only have controls or doors on one side.