EAA AVIATION CENTER, OSHKOSH, Wisconsin — The FAA’s proposed rules for integrating drones into the National Airspace System “is an overreaching answer and threatens traditional pathways into manned aviation,” according to the Experimental Aircraft Association.
As part of its official comments submitted on March 2, 2020, to the FAA’s Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) docket about the requirement for remote identification of drones, EAA noted that in the agency’s attempt to come up with regulations to keep pace with burgeoning Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) technology, it “has harmed the freedoms and longstanding safe operations maintained by the traditional model aviation community.”
“That community has little in common with the UAS operations that the FAA seeks to regulate, especially in such areas as non-line-of-sight operations and within controlled airspace,” EAA officials note.
“EAA fully understands the need to regulate UAS operations for public safety while safely integrating them into the national airspace,” said Sean Elliott, EAA’s vice president of advocacy and safety. “This FAA proposal, however, simply issues blanket regulations for all unmanned aerial operations, regardless of safety or compliance history. It threatens a long-successful pathway for people to engage in flight.”
EAA offered several alternatives to the proposed regulations, including:
- Registration requirements for multiple traditional model aircraft owned by a specific operator can remain as a single registration, not separate registrations for each aircraft
- Creation of a notification system not reliant on immediate, on-site internet connectivity
- Establishment of FAA-recognized identification areas, such as model aircraft flying fields, directly with the FAA via a time-proven system such as FAA’s Web-based Operations Safety System
In January, EAA and other general aviation organizations had asked for a 30- to 60-day extension to the comment period, to allow all stakeholders to thoroughly review the 300-plus page NPRM and offer additional well-researched comments. The FAA rejected that request, stating that an extension was not in the public interest. Still, more than 44,000 comments were posted to the FAA docket, which is an extraordinary number considering most FAA NPRMs draw fewer than 1,000 comments, EAA officials said.
“The unusually fast turnaround for this comment period has consequences that may include having to go back and fix bad decisions that were made in haste, while not using risk-based criteria,” Elliott said. “EAA is also concerned that rushed regulations set precedents that may eventually affect manned recreational aircraft operations, which is unacceptable.”
David says
Drones are addressed under 14 CFR Part 107.
Is there are “Part” for RC airplanes in 14 CFR? If not, maybe there should be in order to different
(and separate) drones from RC airplanes. Drones and RC airplanes are worlds apart, and perhaps
they need to be addressed separately.
It should also be noted that RC airplanes, are, for the most part, hobby airplanes, and not business
aircraft. That is a clear distinction that needs to be made and that distinction should clearly address
RC airplanes including defining what an RC aircraft is v/v category, class and type. This is necessary
to keep them from being erroneously identified or categorized as “drones”. This is (also) because
RC aircraft are long and well established whereas drones are a relatively new addition to the national
air space system and the drone technology (and regulations) are still evolving.
David says
The UAS rules should apply to DRONES only and leave the RC airplanes alone,
because the RC planes always fly in designated areas, usually far from airports.
RC planes are not drones in the way we think of them, nor are they addressed
14 CFR part 107 (drones).
Drones, particularly individually owned, non-industrial, recreational models,
go anywhere they want, and that is the problem. Those are the ones that need
to be regulated, along with their operators who do not know the regs and often
appear not to care.
Painting RC planes with the same punitive regs amounts to mass punishment!
Ted luebbers says
If these rules go into effect they threaten to shut off a major.pathway to aviation, modeling.
gbigs says
Anything in the air needs to be seen by other aircraft where human life is at stake. If exceptions are made for RC then the drone guys will claim to be RC to escape.