An email inquiry from eWEEK to the Heart of the City was not immediately returned on 10 December.
“Advocates of the buses say they ease traffic on already clogged highways as workers give up driving individual cars for the convenience of riding in the buses, which usually come with plush seats and Wi-Fi,” Reuters reported. “Foes say the buses jam up municipal bus stops and remove potential customers from cash-strapped public transportation systems, including regional rail service, that could use their revenue.”
In a reply to an eWEEK inquiry about the incident, a Google spokesperson wrote in an email, “We certainly don’t want to cause any inconvenience to SF residents and we and others in our industry are working with SFMTA to agree to a policy on shuttles in the city.”
The Google workers who were sitting on the bus during Monday’s protest apparently sat in the bus and sent tweets and other messages out about the protest, Reuters reported.
This was the second time recently that Google activities were in San Francisco’s local headlines with some controversy.
Since late October, when the presence of two Google barges at opposite ends of the nation was first reported all over the Internet, the company has been very quiet about their intent. That, of course, inspired a flurry of attention and guesswork by pundits, news reporters and local officials about the barges.
In early November, Google finally issued a brief and vague description of what was going on. “Google Barge … A floating data centre? A wild party boat? A barge housing the last remaining dinosaur? Sadly, none of the above,” according to a statement sent to eWEEK by a Google spokesperson in response to an email inquiry. “Although it’s still early days and things may change, we’re exploring using the barge as an interactive space where people can learn about new technology.”
The barge Google is referring to in its statement is in San Francisco Bay, while a second barge in Maine’s Portland Harbour apparently is not being discussed so far by Google.
Since Google’s statement to eWEEK, news reports indicate that the development of the project has essentially been put on hold while local governmental and marine agencies determine if the floating barge meets legal requirements and other regulatory concerns. Permits that are needed for such a project apparently have not been secured, so the review process will likely delay Google’s plans to open the barge until later in 2014, the reports state.
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Originally published on eWeek.
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