Near-Collision Between Drone and Helicopter Rattles
Pilots
Close call -- a drone and helicopter almost collide in
South Florida with a crowd below.
Helicopter pilot Paul Barth and his
camera operator saw a brightly colored object in the South Florida sky with them
just before sunrise.
"I didn't know what it was when I first saw it,"
Barth said.
They saw the object while they were airborne to document the
Wings for Life World Run charity race in May. Barth told NBC 6 he was worried
the flying object would hit them.
"We were on a collision course," Barth
said. "It was some kind of a drone, and it was approaching us at a high rate of
speed."
"It came right at us and went right underneath us," Barth said.
"If that drone had hit my tail rotor and taken me down, I would have come down
on 2,000 people in the street."
What happened, Barth said, is an example
of the growing conflict in the sky between airplanes, helicopters and what many
are flying for fun - drones.
Jeffrey Civitano, who was operating the
unmanned aircraft, said he was also worried.
"The full-sized helicopter
turned towards me and made a bee line for a direct intercept course for my
location," he said.
Civitano also holds a commercial pilot's license from
the Federal Aviation Administration and said he did his best to keep his
unmanned aircraft out of the helicopter's flight path, but said Barth followed
his drone.
"My objective was to yield the right of way to him as a
full-sized aircraft and to get back on the ground as quickly and safely as
possible. He made that difficult, I would say," Civitano told NBC 6.
Down
on the ground, runner Madeline Proano was oblivious to the potential for a
catastrophe to unfold above her.
"No signs, no clue," she
said.
But she said she did remember the helicopter.
"It was
hovering over the area," she recalled.
Barth and Civitano both contacted
the FAA, and Sunrise Police investigated too.
Florida is one of the top
spots in the U.S. for flying - only Texas and California have more aircraft
registered. And therefore, aviation experts say it's also is the perfect place
to see what the FAA is now officially calling an "unmanned aircraft system" take
to the sky.
"Regulation as it pertains to drones is like the Wild Wild
West in the United States," said Ft. Lauderdale aviation attorney Jonathan
Ewing. He said while the FAA tightly regulates drones companies would use for
business purposes, a person flying one just for fun has little
restriction.
"In essence, you have floating land mines in the way of
commercial aircraft," Ewing said.
Barth said he has found video on
YouTube that shows his helicopter, on another day, passing by while a different
drone was airborne near Barth's flight headquarters. Barth wants the FAA to act
quickly.
"They are trying to get rules in place. However, they are way
behind, and there needs to be some kind of stop-gap regulation," he
said.
The organization representing model aircraft owners said it's
developed rules for its members to avoid close calls with helicopters and
airplanes.
The FAA in late June did tell recreational drone pilots to
contact airport towers if flying within 5 miles of the airport and to use basic
flight rules existing for years to prevent trouble. It also warned that being
reckless with an unmanned aircraft could get you arrested.
A complete and
comprehensive rule covering these unmanned aircraft might be done before the end
of the year.
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