UAV regulation: is the FAA warming up to users?

UAV regulation: is the FAA warming up to users?

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FAA unveils 2 drone programs to gauge UAV use

The U.S Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is testing the skies with more drones. It has allowed three private companies to fly UAVs on data gathering missions and is launching an application that would tell amateur drone operators how not to break the law.

At a UAV conference in Atlanta, Georgia, FAA Director Michael Huerta announced that his office has begun partnerships with three private sector companies who will soon fly drone missions with the agency’s approval.

According to Huerta, the launching of the FAA’s Pathfinder Program will give government regulators an idea of what to expect as drones become more prevalent in US airspace. CNN will test the use of UAVs in news gathering purposes, PrecisionHawk, a North Carolina-based manufacturer, will test drones with regard to surveying crop fields and BNSF Railroad will examine how unmanned aircraft may be used to inspect infrastructure in isolated areas.

“We anticipate receiving valuable data from each of these trials that could result in FAA-approved operations in the next few years. They will also give insight into how unmanned aircraft can be used to transform the way certain industries do business – whether that means making sure trains run on time, checking on the health of crops or reporting on a natural disaster,” Huerta said.
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AUS&R2015_728x90“Government has some the best and brightest minds in aviation, but we can’t operate in a vacuum,” US Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx added in a statement. “This is a big job, and we’ll get to our goal of safe, widespread UAS integration more quickly by leveraging the resources and expertise of the industry.”

According to RT, Huerta announced at the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International’s conference this week that the FAA is rolling-out a new smartphone application that gives users the ability to check on whether or not they’re near restricted airspace.

The “B4UFLY” app, which the FAA plans to have made available to around 1,000 beta testers with Apple devices by this summer, is a “simple, easy-to-use app that answers a very basic safety question: is it safe and legal to fly my unmanned aircraft at a particular location?” Huerta said.