Uber removed the second backup driver from its self-driving cars ahead of the crash that killed an Arizona pedestrian
- Uber used to have two safety drivers in its self-driving cars: one to monitor the driving and one for inputting data into an iPad.
- Before a crash that killed a pedestrian in March, the company began testing with just one driver.
- The revelation comes as part of a Business Insider investigation into the death of an Arizona pedestrian who was hit by an Uber autonomous vehicle in March.
- Also read: Uber insiders describe infighting and questionable decisions before its self-driving car killed a pedestrian
After one of the Uber's self-driving test cars struck and killed a pedestrian in Arizona in March, some employees blamed the safety driver because she was streaming Hulu while operating the vehicle.
But behind the scenes, a number of things were happening that may have contributed to the crash, current and former Uber employees told Business Insider's Julie Bort. One thing workers said changed before the accident was that Uber removed a second driver from the test vehicles.
The second driver used to be responsible for logging the car's issues on an iPad app and dealing with the car's requests to identify objects on the road, but employees told Business Insider that the entire job now fell to one person.
It was like distracted driving, "like watching their cellphone 10 to 15% of the time," said one software engineer.
Read more: Uber lost nearly $1 billion last quarter as the ride-hailing giant's growth slows
The decision helped Uber double the number of miles it could log with a single pair of drivers, but it also led to a concerned email from a safety driver to the company's Advanced Technologies Group leader Eric Meyhofer.
"The drivers felt they were not being utilized well. That they were being asked to drive around in circles but that their feedback was not changing anything," said one former engineer of Uber's self-driving-car unit who was familiar with the driver program.
Uber now has said the self-driving-car unit plans to return to the two-driver system when it sends its cars on the road again.