The FAA Finds Commercial Drone Flights Hard to
Police
By Alan Levin
It came from the sky. One
moment, Eileen Peskoff was enjoying a hot dog at a Spanish-style
running-of-the-bulls festival last August in Petersburg, Va. The next, she was
on her back, knocked down when a 4-foot-wide helicopter drone filming the event
lost control and dove into the grandstands. "You sign up for something called
running the bulls, you think the only thing you'll get hurt by is a 1,200-pound
bull," Peskoff says.
Commercial drones such as the one that left her and
two friends with bruises are prohibited in the U.S. That hasn't stopped a
proliferation of flights nationwide that's far beyond the policing ability of
the Federal Aviation Administration, which is laboring to write long-awaited
rules governing flights of unmanned aircraft. Drones, which are available online
and at hobby shops, have been used to film scenes in The Wolf of Wall Street and
to deliver flowers. They've been sent aloft to inspect oil-field equipment,
capture sporting events, map farmland, and snap aerial photographs for real
estate ads.
Some operators plead ignorance of the law. Others claim their
flights are permitted under exemptions for hobbyists. Flying model aircraft
below 400 feet and away from populated areas is generally permitted, provided
it's for recreation only. There's not much the FAA can do to stop people from
flouting the rules. The agency tells them to stop when it learns about illegal
flights, it said in an e-mail. According to FAA data, it did so 17 times in the
13 months that ended in July.
But for every time the FAA orders an
operator to stand down-as it did when a Michigan florist staged a delivery by
drone on Feb. 8 as a promotional stunt-untold others fly below the radar, says
Patrick Egan, who organizes an annual unmanned aircraft expo in San Francisco.
The FBI opened an investigation on March 4, 2013, after the pilots of an
Alitalia flight nearing New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport spotted
a multirotor copter that came within 200 feet of their Boeing 777. At least six
other pilots or airline crews have reported close calls since September 2011
with what they say were small unmanned aircraft, according to NASA's Aviation
Safety Reporting System. Doug Davis, who ran the FAA's unmanned aircraft office
in the mid-2000s, says the agency doesn't have the resources to go after
everyone who's breaking the law. "The reality is, there is no way to patrol it,"
he says.
Some businesses that fly drones make no attempt to hide it.
Freefly Cinema, an aerial photography company in Los Angeles and Seattle, has
photos on its website of helicopter drones it says it used to film scenes for
The Wolf of Wall Street and a commercial for Honda Motor (HMC). Freefly
President Tabb Firchau declined to comment. A Freefly drone also shot footage
for a documentary about the Battle of Gettysburg that aired on PBS in November,
says the filmmaker, Jake Boritt. He says he got permission from the U.S.
National Park Service: "It's not something that we did a whole lot of research
into." The Park Service didn't check with the FAA about aviation regulations
either, Katie Lawhon, a spokeswoman, wrote in an e-mail.
For Hollywood
the benefits of using drones are worth the minuscule risk of being caught, says
an operator who films scenes for TV shows and commercials and who asked not to
be identified because the practice isn't permitted. An unmanned aircraft system
costing a few thousand dollars or less can replace dollies, booms, and
stabilization equipment costing tens of thousands, he says.
"The longer
the FAA takes to write the safety rules for small unmanned aircraft, the more
difficult it will become to regulate this industry," says Ben Gielow, general
counsel of the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International, a trade
group that represents drone makers. The FAA had planned to propose rules by 2011
allowing commercial flights of drones weighing less than 55 pounds. The agency
now doesn't expect to release the proposal until November. It will also likely
miss a Congress-imposed deadline to spell out rules for safely integrating
drones into the nation's airspace by 2015, the U.S. Department of
Transportation's inspector general said in a report on Feb. 5.
Even
without those regulations, the FAA says it has the authority to prohibit
commercial unmanned aircraft operations and "careless or reckless" flights. The
copter drone that hit Peskoff was owned by a local filmmaker hired to produce
aerial views of the event for a promotional video. The drone crashed when its
batteries died. The FAA says it spoke with the operator and explained the rules.
"It was kind of lucky," Peskoff says. "It hit three adults instead of a child."
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