UAV047 FAA! We’re Going to Need a Stiff Drink!

FAA defines Model Aircraft, UAV’s banned from US National Parks, fourth UAS test site operational, Washington Post study of crashing UAVs, a prize for your drone video, the latest news on UAVs in Brazil and Australia, and CNN wants to prove news drones are safe. The News FAA Claims Authority Over Unsafe Model Aircraft Flights The FAA has published a policy notice stating that the FAA Modernization and Reform Act of 2012 gives the FAA authority to regulate model aircraft as unmanned aircraft if the model is flown in an unsafe manner. According to the FAA press release, this guidance “comes after recent incidents involving the reckless use of unmanned model aircraft near airports and involving large crowds of people.” The Interpretation of the Special Rule for Model Aircraft says: “This action provides interested persons with the opportunity to comment on the FAA’s interpretation of the special rule for model aircraft established by Congress in the FAA Modernization and Reform Act of 2012. In this interpretation, the FAA clarifies that: model aircraft must satisfy the criteria in the Act to qualify as model aircraft and to be exempt from future FAA rulemaking action; and consistent with the Act, if a model aircraft operator endangers the safety of the National Airspace System, the FAA has the authority to take enforcement action against those operators for those safety violations.” Provide your comments to FAA by visiting the Federal eRulemaking Portal and searching for docket number FAA-2014-0396. FAA Interpretive Rule addressing "Special Rule for Model Aircraft" Academy of Model Aeronautics response The Academy of Model Aeronautics (AMA) is not happy. They point out that they have managed model aircraft for 77 years. Furthermore, the Special Rule for Model Aircraft established by Congress exempts model aircraft from regulation as long as the activity "is conducted in accordance with and within the safety programing of a community-based organization," that being the AMA. US officials move to ban drones from national parks Because it believes unmanned aircraft annoy visitors, harass wildlife and threaten safety, the U.S. National Park Service is banning unmanned aircraft. In its press release, Prohibition of Unmanned Aircraft in National Parks, the NPS says the policy memorandum “directs superintendents nationwide to prohibit launching, landing, or operating unmanned aircraft on lands and waters administered by the National Park Service.” US ban for national park drones contrasts to AU indifference The Australian Civil Aviation Safety Authority is proposing that UAVs weighing less than two kg should not be regulated. Writer Ben Sandilands says that he expects "that CASA and the Minister will embrace the chaos, and the maiming, damaging and even loss of life that is expected to ensue as the popularity of light weight drones costing small change takes off." FAA Announces Texas UAS Test Site Now Operational The FAA has issued a two-year Certificate of Waiver or Authorization (COA) to the Texas A&M University - Corpus Christi UAS test site, making it the fourth of six to become operational. The COA allows the Texas site to use an American Aerospace Advisors RS-16 UAS. This test site will concentrate on: safety of operations and data gathering in authorized airspace, UAS airworthiness standards, command and control link technologies, human-factors issues for UAS control-station layout, detect-and-avoid technologies. When Drones Fall from the Sky A Washington Post investigation reveals that since 2001, more than 400 large U.S. military drones have crashed around the world. The causes for the crashes are things like mechanical breakdowns, human error, and bad weather. The Washington Post call this “a record of calamity that exposes the potential dangers of throwing open American skies to drone traffic.” Drone Prize 2014 Sponsored by the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems Inter...

2356 232