Texas Search Group, FAA, At Odds Over Drone Use
An unmanned surveillance
drone.
SOUTH TEXAS (AP) - A Texas-based group involved in
searches for missing persons around the nation has run afoul of federal aviation
authorities who are prohibiting the non-profit organization from employing
drones in its work.
A fleet of four unmanned aircraft used by Texas
EquuSearch is grounded by the Federal Aviation Administration while the agency
develops rules that would allow for the commercial use of unmanned
aircraft.
But with that plan still more than a year away, the volunteer group
that has participated in such high-profile cases as Natalee Holloway and Caylee
Anthony is facing an extended wait before it can resume using an aerial tool
credited with nearly a dozen successful finds.
"It's a resource we've had
success with and one we can't use," said Tim Miller, who founded Texas
EquuSearch after his own daughter went missing in the 1980s. "We're volunteers.
And for being a volunteer organization, they're making it impossible for us to
help with this."
The FAA advised Texas EquuSearch in February that use of
drones must stop immediately because rules do not yet allow for commercial use
of such devices. But Miller's search volunteers, who began as a group on
horseback in 2000, claim their drones are not used for commercial purposes and
therefore should not be subject to the restrictions.
This is the latest
in a series of skirmishes between the search organization and the agency that up
until now did not include an outright order to ground all its drones.
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