TMetzinger
Final Approach
... I actually read the letter....
Well THAT certainly takes all the fun out of it!
... I actually read the letter....
None. LEOs are not being asked to enforce any FAA regulations. I actually read the letter. It's asking that they please collect evidence if it appears unsafe UAS activities are taking place - i.e. field investigators. It notes:"...most violations of the FAA’s regulations may be addressed through administrative enforcement measures. As with any other civil or criminal adjudication, successful enforcement will depend on development of a complete and accurate factual report contemporaneous with the event"
"However, other law enforcement processes, such as arrest and detention or non-consensual searches almost always fall outside of the allowable methods to pursue administrative enforcement actions by the FAA unless they are truly a by - product of a state criminal investigation. We do not mean to discourage use of these methods and procedures where there is an independent basis for them under state or local law. We simply wish to emphasize that work products intended for FAA use generally should involve conventional administrative measures such as witness interviews, “stop and talk” sessions with suspected violators, consensual examination of vehicles and equipment, and other methods that do not involve court orders or the potential use of force by law enforcement personnel."
...The FAA has no on-the-ground enforcement arm and it has no regs administratively permitting the use of UAS for non-hobby purposes, so it wishes to get LEAs to do its legwork when it encounters (somehow) these unauthorized commercial operators.
...That is, if the FAA didn't say you can then you can't....
I'm still waiting for someone to cite a regulation that requires commercial UAS operators to be authorized...
That's not the way laws and regulations work in this country.
I'm still waiting for someone to cite a regulation that requires commercial UAS operators to be authorized...
The FAA is claiming that commercial UAS fall under Part 91 because 91.1 makes that part applicable to all aircraft not otherwise excluded, and UAS are not excluded; presumably if it weren't for the congressional carve-out for amateur aircraft, the FAA would no doubt say that they too fall under at least Part 103.
Does Part 91 prohibit aircraft from being flown for commercial purposes?
Normally commercial operation under Part 91 would depend on what certificate is held by the UAS pilot, right?
And normally all aircraft flying under Part 91 must be registered and be airworthy and have appropriate flight instruments, regardless of certificate the pilot holds. I think, but am not sure, that it is the granting of waivers allowing use of unregistered (UAS) aircraft that the FAA is using as basis for controlling commercial flights.
So it is OK for local LEOs to enforce some federal laws but not others (immigration for example)!!!
Does the FAA have it's own Law Enforcement Officers?
There was a recent FAA document which used as an example that a farmer could fly a UAS over his private flower garden which he raised as a hobby legally but he could not use the same UAS to fly over his corn field to scout for pests if the corn is to be sold commercially. I think there is a gray area if the corn is used for feed for his cattle which are sold commercially.I've heard that the FAA says a farmer can't use a UAV to inspect his own ranch without FAA permission. However, a private pilot farmer could do so in a manned aircraft no problem.
No, that would be criminal law. The FAA is Administrative.
But, if a farmer flew his plane over his field for crop scouting or fertilizer on his private certificate and the FAA wanted to violate him for some reason, it seems logical to me that they could.
(b) A private pilot may, for compensation or hire, act as pilot in command of an aircraft in connection with any business or employment if:
(1) The flight is only incidental to that business or employment; and
(2) The aircraft does not carry passengers or property for compensation or hire.
We remember the cops who held up the Kings because of an administrative issue with their N number.
There was a recent FAA document which used as an example that a farmer could fly a UAS over his private flower garden which he raised as a hobby legally but he could not use the same UAS to fly over his corn field to scout for pests if the corn is to be sold commercially. I think there is a gray area if the corn is used for feed for his cattle which are sold commercially.
I don't see any difference between UAS and manned aircraft in the above example. My suspicion is the question wouldn't have arisen in the past as we didn't have inexpensive camera and other sensor technology and not so many farmers have their own plane suitable for such flying any more. But, if a farmer flew his plane over his field for crop scouting or fertilizer on his private certificate and the FAA wanted to violate him for some reason, it seems logical to me that they could.
As a farmer, I don't see the immediate utility for most farmers of UAS as they are now configured, but the future may hold realistic ability for aerial pesticide application. Crop scouting sounds neat but at present I don't think it's sufficiently advanced to have a significant advantage over the present method of walking the crop. How do you get a quad copter to turn over the bottom leaves on a soybean plant that has already canopied to count soybean aphids and see if their number has reached the economic threshold for spraying? I will concede that the bigger you get the more capitol can trump labor, so a big, big farmer could maybe employ a sophisticated UAS rather than walk the ground, but a medium or small farmer might not be able to afford one or even make money hiring the service done. My own feeling is the potential for UAS to make a significant affect on agriculture is a bit over hyped at this point. Maybe in the future.
I was at a farm demonstration a few years ago where the UAS guy said the reason that agriculture was being touted as the next big application area was because the UAS community was reacting to the publics reaction to every cop having a drone and to privacy issues; that farms got away from those concerns. We now see a lot of police back to wanting UAS after a period where they laid low.
Utopia requires anarchy and a population that decides to do the right thing.
The FAA publication gave a specific example that showed a farmer using a UAS for crop scouting of his own farm was illegal. This doesn't seem to be a case of flying your Cub over your field to scout crops (unless you are flying it as a Sport Pilot, which is illegal). The reference was only to UAS.What regulation prohibits a private pilot from flying his own manned aircraft in furtherance of his business, as long as his product is not air transportation? I was under the impression that this was allowed. That is the question that the FAA would have to answer at an enforcement hearing. I don't think "it seems logical" would impress a judge.
The issue is not farming in particular. That is just an example. The issue is use of an aircraft in furtherance of a business. Another example is corporate aircraft. As I understand it, they have to use commercial pilots, but each corporation doesn't have to get specific permission from the FAA in order to fly them, as the FAA seems to want business UAS operators to do.
I certainly don't object to the adoption of well thought-out regulations, but is the FAA pretending that existing regulations say something other than what they do?
We pretty much had that. So is insurrection required to gainanarchyutopia?
The FAA publication gave a specific example that showed a farmer using a UAS for crop scouting of his own farm was illegal. This doesn't seem to be a case of flying your Cub over your field to scout crops (unless you are flying it as a Sport Pilot, which is illegal). The reference was only to UAS.
Now that small UASes have been deemed to be aircraft, it apparently doesn't make any difference whether it's a UAS or a manned aircraft. Someone posted a waiver application for commercial UAS use, and it was all stuff that would apply equally to a manned aircraft - lack of an airworthiness certificate, for example.