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Delivery robot company temporarily pulls devices off Toronto sidewalks as City considers ban

Click to play video: 'City council to vote on future of delivery robots in Toronto'
City council to vote on future of delivery robots in Toronto
WATCH ABOVE: Tiny Mile has been operating in Toronto since 2019 delivering food, medication and other items to people in the city. But as Erica Vella reports, councillors are set to vote on the future of these robots after some disability advocates have voices safety concerns – Dec 14, 2021

TORONTO — A technology company says it will temporarily take its food delivery robots off Toronto’s streets as the city considers whether to ban such devices from sidewalks.

Tiny Mile, the company behind a series of pink, heart-eyed robots named Geoffrey, says it is making the temporary move because it wants to collaborate with authorities and the accessibility community.

Toronto’s city council will vote next week on whether to ban devices that run on anything but muscle power from bike lanes, sidewalks and pedestrian ways.

The ban was put forward by the Toronto Accessibility Advisory Committee, which felt the robots are a hazards for people with low mobility or vision, as well as seniors and children.

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The ban cleared its first hurdle last week, when it was approved by the city’s Infrastructure and Environment Committee, but Tiny Mile vowed to fight the move and circulated a petition on its social media pages.

The company now says on Instagram that it will seek feedback from the public and people with disabilities while it pauses public use of its robots.

“Tiny Mile is keenly interested in working with the accessibility community, hence we are calling out people who will be interested in shaping our technology with their immediate expertise and experience to help us not only make our robots safer for our community, but also greatly benefit people with disabilities,” the company said.

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