Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Google spinoff wins FAA approval for drone deliveries

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

An offshoot of Alphabet Inc.’s Google has become the first drone operator to receive government approval as an airline, a step that gives it the legal authority to begin dropping products to customers.

The subsidiary, Wing Aviation LLC, now has the same certificat­ions that smaller airlines receive from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion and the Department of Transporta­tion. It plans to begin routine deliveries of small consumer items in two rural communitie­s in Virginia within months, the company said.

“It’s an exciting moment for us to have earned the FAA’s approval to actually run a business with our technology,” Wing Chief Executive Officer James Ryan Burgess said. He called it “pivotal” both for his company and the drone industry in general.

Drone regulation­s still don’t permit most flights over crowds and urban areas, limiting where Wing can operate. But the approvals signed by the FAA on Friday and Monday give the company the ability to charge for deliveries of clients’ goods in Virginia and apply for permission to expand to other regions.

While scores of companies working in test programs have gotten FAA waivers to perform demonstrat­ion flights or to make deliveries over short distances, there has never been a drone company approved under the regulation­s designed to ensure safety at traditiona­l charter airlines or smaller aircargo haulers.

It required Wing to create extensive manuals, training routines and a safety hierarchy — just as any air carrier must do.

Companies receiving permission must also be majority

owned by U.S. citizens under long-standing restrictio­ns imposed by the Transporta­tion Department.

Wing plans to begin deliveries in the Blacksburg and Christians­burg areas. The company has been conducting research at nearby Virginia Tech.

The plan has received unanimous approval from local elected officials in mountainou­s southwest Virginia, according to Montgomery County Administra­tor Craig Meadows.

“Our community is very excited to be the birthplace of drone delivery in the United States,” Meadows said in a statement.

Because the idea of drones flying over people’s homes is so new, the company plans to conduct extensive outreach to local government leaders and the public, Burgess added. Deliveries are expected to start within several months.

Wing has had to deal with concerns over noise and privacy issues in previous tests. The delivery drone uses video to help it navigate, but the company says that the images aren’t archived and can’t be used except for technical analysis. But how that stated intent would be overseen or enforced isn’t clear.

The company has also demonstrat­ed identifica­tion technology to help residents and law enforcemen­t agencies track some of the drones that would be flying over their communitie­s. U.S. national security officials have raised concerns about whether some of the large number of drones already in use could be used as weapons or to steal business or other secrets.

Mark Blanks, director of the Virginia Tech Mid-Atlantic Aviation Partnershi­p, which has been working with Wing on tests of the deliveries, said, “We’ll be working with the community a lot more as we prepare to roll this out.”

The people living in the neighborho­ods where tests

Drone regulation­s still don’t permit most flights over crowds and urban areas, limiting where Wing can operate. But the approvals signed by the FAA on Friday and Monday give the company the ability to charge for deliveries of clients’ goods in Virginia and apply for permission to expand to other regions.

were conducted ranged from academics at the university to farm hands, Blanks said. Wing and university representa­tives have contacted many of them to ensure they were comfortabl­e.

“Across the board everybody we’ve spoken to has been pretty excited,” he said.

Wing provided extensive documentat­ion to support its applicatio­n, including records of thousands of safe flights conducted in Australia in recent years, according to the FAA.

“This is an important step forward for the safe testing and integratio­n of drones into our economy,” Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao said in the release.

Some drone companies have complained that the process of obtaining air-carrier certificat­ion was too onerous. Many of the requiremen­ts that made sense for a charter airline — like flight attendants and seat belts for the crew — didn’t apply to them.

The FAA’s air-carrier certificat­ion was needed because existing rules created strictly for drones don’t allow the kind of flights Wing envisioned, he said.

According to regulation­s issued in 2016, for example, drone operators are allowed to fly for hire but have to do so within strict rules prohibitin­g flights outside of a ground operator’s eyesight. Similarly, the FAA has allowed automated flights over longer distances, but they are only demonstrat­ions and companies can’t accept payment.

In order for Wing to operate over longer ranges and actually charge for the service, it needed to become a fullfledge­d air carrier. The FAA confirmed the air-carrier certificat­ion was signed but didn’t offer additional comment.

Unlike Amazon.com Inc.’s Prime Air, another would-be drone delivery company, Wing will sell items from local merchants. Now that it has gotten FAA approvals, it will begin finding business partners in the two towns, Burgess said.

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