Posted on 03/18/2015 3:31:31 PM PDT by Kaslin
Amateur drone hobbyists, beware! If you happen to make one red cent from any video filmed with your small drone or if Uncle Sam thinks you are -- you might soon receive an unwelcome notice in the mail or an ominous visitor at your door. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is cracking down on what it deems to be commercial use of drones or Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), as it prefers to call them. The agency is turning amateur hobbyists and small business owners into potential outlaws should they ignore the FAAs demands to cease and desist from operating any drone in what its regulators deem to be a commercial manner.
Founded in 1958, the FAAs primary and extremely important responsibility is to keep the airspace safe and navigable for aircraft. Indeed, in recent years the FAA has done a commendable job at this important task. However, in the finest of bureaucratic fashions, it always searches for new areas in which it can meddle, and for which of course it can justify larger budgets. Its latest target: small drones.
Small UAVs -- those under 55-pounds -- are becoming increasingly popular among hobbyists and small businesses. Rather than embracing this new technology and developing safety regulations that foster innovation while protecting public safety, the FAA apparently has instead decided simply to do whatever it can to stifle development and innovation of this emerging and exciting technology. The regulatory fog thus created has caught amateur drone enthusiasts and small businesses in an untenable situation.
Consider Jayson Hanes who, since 2013, has flown drones as a hobby; capturing stunning views from Tampa and surrounding areas, which he then posts to his popular YouTube channel (his most popular video has nearly 100,000 views). However, without any evidence that Hanes had received one thin dime for his drone videos, the FAA sent him a formal letter accusing him of operating a drone for commercial purposes, which would place him in the same regulatory class as commercial jumbo jets.
Hanes story is similar to that of Maine drone hobbyist, Steve Girard, who was contacted by the FAA nannies earlier this month and told to take down his website, which sold drone-shot aerial footage. We just want to do a small business, Girard told his local news. We know how to fly it and respect peoples privacy. We do it safely.
The FAA claims it is looking further into how, and why, both these citizens were contacted, but these are far from the only incidents in which the agency has used scare tactics, such as cease and desist letters and legal threats, to force hobbyists and small businesses to stop using drones. Notably, the FAAs demands are being made without any evidence whatsoever that these commercial drones pose any danger to life or property.
As Vice.com technology reporter Jason Koebler noted last year, more than a dozen businesses have received threatening letters from the FAA about their drone use. This bureaucratic harassment is particularly troubling given that the FAAs supposed ban on commercial use of drones is itself legally dubious, and has been virtually unenforceable since it was first concocted in 2007.
Troubling also is the impact of such tactics on the overall development and growth of the drone industry. One UAV industry report released in 2013 estimated that drone integration in the US economy could create more than 70,000 jobs in the first few years, with an economic impact in the tens of billions of dollars. Proposed uses for UAVs include everything from inspecting farm crops and cattle ranches, to inspecting buildings, bridges and pipelines; all at far lesser cost in dollars and risk to humans.
To be fair, the benefits of UAV use are not completely lost on the FAA. Last month, after more than half a decade of inaction, the agency finally released its proposed rulemaking on the use of small UAVs for commercial use. While the proposed rules constitute an important step forward in providing at least some clarity and notice for current and future private drone users, the underlying desire to control by the FAA remains obvious in its regulatory outline, and presents serious challenges for future economic development and deployment of UAVs.
It is not a question of whether the FAA has a role to play in ensuring that drones are deployed with due regard for public safety; and the agency should in fact be moving more expeditiously in that regard so drone users are properly are on notice as to the legitimate safety regulations with which they must comply. But the FAA should keep its regulatory mitts away from questions of why citizens use drones, especially when constitutional rights such as those protected by the First Amendment are concerned.
The public comment period for the FAAs proposed rulemaking on small UAVs closes April 24th, so those concerned with this issue must hurry to make their voice heard.
One commercial use of drones is for videography. Great, dynamic shots can be had by the use of drones that are either impossible or cost prohibitive by helicopter.
When one of these things causes an injury or death, the same people writing articles like this will then do a 180 and want to know, “why wasn't the FAA doing something about this?”
If you are going to get the blame one way or the other, might was well get out the hammer. Better to be hung for a wolf than for a sheep.
The FAA - The only thing standing between us and Air Safety.
The FAA - The only thing standing between us and progress.
The FAA - They’re not happy, til you’re not happy.
If someone is negligent and harms someone, they will either be prosecuted or sued into oblivion under existing laws. Just because a drone is involved shouldn’t change anything, and it’s no reason to regulate and stifle the growth of a new technology. I can indeed see a market for drone insurance(similar to liability auto insurance) if people are using them often or for commercial purposes.
The FAA should play a very minimal role in this, outside of safety concerns.
Being a recovering aerospace engineer I have a fairly good opinion of the FAA. You won’t find many creative types in the FAA and there is ZERO tolerance for common sense. If the book says “commercial use” then they will enforce “commercial use.” This will likely change but lobbyists will need to be employed to change the rules.
I was looking at getting one with a go pro 4k and do some stock footage submissions.
Everybody get your drones & meet ya at the airport!
Yes.
This is a failure of congress, not the FAA.
I understand they turn down requests from the Forestry people who want to use drones to search for lost hikers, etc. ???
I thought airspace below a certain altitude over your property was not under the FAAs jurisdiction - anyone know for sure?
Private drones aren’t going to be around long anyway. Somebody is going to use one for a political assassination or load one with a few ounces of nitro and collide it with a jet taking off and that will be the end of them, along with just about any new tech gadgets. Imagine driverless car bombs. The future is over and you can point to this post.
what is getting me is the use over residential homes.
you will have newscrews bleating “public has right to know”
perv will be peeping.
r/c model airplanes will be hurt as a hobby.
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