Las Vegas Review-Journal

DRONES

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drone.

“Flight planning is what’s going to keep you out of trouble,” AviSight Director of Training Gary Buzel said to a class of seven aspiring drone operators on Tuesday. “Flight planning is going to keep you out of airspace that you shouldn’t be in; it’s also going to keep you out of weather conditions that you’re not supposed to be in.”

He and AviSight’s vice president of technology, William O’Donnell, told students to prepare for pushback. As commercial drone operators get approved to fly, for example, more Realtors may begin using drones to do real-estate photograph­y and neighbors may not like or understand what drones are doing above their homes, they said.

“You, as drone pilots, you will have to do the due diligence,” O’Donnell said. “If you know you’re in the right and you’ve done everything legally and you’re flying legally and safely you might have to do the extra leg work of making sure you’re not just getting pushback because people don’t understand the laws.”

The test will not be easy, O’Donnell told the Review-Journal.

“The FAA is changing the landscape from what they have been used to for the past 60 years, with having an actual qualified pilot and the x mount of hours that you have to have to normally fly a plane,” he said.

Since commercial drone operators are sharing airspace with manned aircraft, albeit under 400 feet, drone operators have to carry the same responsibl­y as a manned aircraft pilot, Buzel said.

Upon passing the knowledge test, Rabinowitz will get a certificat­e of successful completion of examinatio­n and then have up to one year to take that CSCE to be verified by a certified flight instructor, an FAA field office, or designated pilot examiner. After getting his CSCE verified, Rabinowitz then must submit his paperwork to a local FAA field office to get a license, which the FAA calls a remote airman certificat­e with a small UAS (unmanned aerial system) rating, that will be valid for two years. He and others will have to pass knowledge tests every two years in order to renew that certificat­ion.

Rabinowitz came from Reno to Las Vegas for AviSight’s four-day test prep class and said he has had no previous aviation training. He is learning how to operate a drone for his employer, a casino that he did not want to name. He plans to use the drone to take exterior photograph­s of the building and “maybe for some of the video art that we do,” he said.

The FAA will begin issuing the knowledge tests on Monday at six FAA-approved testing centers in Nevada.

“There are only a handful of FAA-approved testing centers here in Las Vegas so there’s going to be a backlog,” Buzel said. “We are urging our students to make their (test-taking) appointmen­ts now.” Contact Nicole Raz at nraz@reviewjour­nal.com or 702380-4512. Find @Journalist­Nikki on Twitter.

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