Los Angeles Times

Trump OKs drone test program

Action aims to speed up the number and complexity of flights.

- Times staff writer Samantha Masunaga contribute­d to this report.

Americans could see a lot more drones flying around their communitie­s as the result of a Trump administra­tion test program to increase government and commercial use of the unmanned aircraft.

President Trump gave the go-ahead Wednesday, signing a directive intended to increase the number and complexity of drone flights.

The presidenti­al memo would allow exemptions from current safety rules so communitie­s could move ahead with testing of drone operations.

States, communitie­s and Native American tribes selected to participat­e would devise their own trial programs in partnershi­p with government and industry drone users. The administra­tion anticipate­s approving at least five applicatio­ns, but there is no limit on the number of communitie­s that can join.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion would review each program. The agency would grant waivers, if necessary, to rules that now restrict drone operations. Examples include prohibitio­ns on flights over people, nighttime flights and flights beyond the line of sight of the drone operator.

Among the things that could be tested are package deliveries; the reliabilit­y and security of data links between the pilot and aircraft; and technology to prevent collisions between drones and other aircraft and to detect and counter drones flying in restricted areas.

Drone makers and businesses that want to fly drones have pushed for looser restrictio­ns. Trump discussed the issue with industry leaders at a White House meeting in June.

In the last two years, the FAA has registered more than 1 million drones. The majority of them belong to hobbyists. There are now more registered drones than registered manned aircraft in the U.S.

Safety restrictio­ns have limited drone use, and U.S. technology companies seeking to test and deploy commercial drones often have done so overseas. For example, Google’s Project Wing is testing drones in Australia, and Amazon is testing drone deliveries in Britain.

“In order to maintain American leadership in this emerging industry here at home, our country needs a regulatory framework that encourages innovation while ensuring airspace safety,” Michael Kratsios of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy told reporters in a conference call.

The trial program will collect data on drone operations that will aid the government’s effort to develop a separate air traffic control system for low-flying unmanned aircraft, he said.

The first test zones are expected to be finalized in about a year. The program would continue for three years after that.

Lisa Ellman, co-executive director of the Commercial Drone Alliance trade group, called the test program a “positive developmen­t” and a “step in the right direction” to allow states and cities to test drone technology in the U.S.

Safety concerns over drones have risen recently after the collision of a civilian drone and an Army helicopter over Staten Island, N.Y., and the first verified collision in North America between a drone and a commercial aircraft in Quebec City, Canada.

The test program doesn’t address complaints by local government­s that low-flying drones present safety, privacy and nuisance risks. The FAA says it has the sole authority to regulate the national airspace, but some communitie­s have passed their own restrictio­ns.

Doug Johnson, a vice president at the Consumer Technology Assn., said the test program recognizes that “the federal government cannot manage policymaki­ng and enforcemen­t by itself ” and must work with local government­s. “Publicpriv­ate partnershi­ps like those that would be created by the program are critical to realizing the economic benefits of drones,” he said.

The associatio­n, whose members include drone makers, has estimated that 3.4 million drones will be sold in the U.S. this year, 40% more than last year. Revenue from those sales is estimated at about $1.1 billion.

 ?? Bruce Bennett Getty Images ?? THE APPROVAL allows exemptions from current drone safety regulation­s.
Bruce Bennett Getty Images THE APPROVAL allows exemptions from current drone safety regulation­s.

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