Houston Chronicle

Hobbyist’s drone case falls back to earth

Panel of judges says no to request to invalidate rules

- By Alan Levin and Andrew Harris

The U.S. government’s ability to police hobbyist drone use was upheld by an appellate court Friday in a ruling that helps set the stage for a series of new restrictio­ns and requiremen­ts aviation regulators hope to enact soon.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit on Friday rejected arguments by drone hobbyist John Taylor, who last year had successful­ly overturned the Federal Aviation Administra­tion’s system for registerin­g unmanned aircraft.

While the three-judge panel said Congress intended to exempt some hobbyists from regulation — provided they weren’t creating a safety hazard — they denied Taylor’s request to invalidate the rules.

“Because the rule is within the agency’s statutory authority and is neither arbitrary nor capricious, the petition for review is denied,” wrote Judge Merrick Garland, who authored the opinion for the panel.

Congress in 2012 passed a law that gave FAA authority over the new class of remotely piloted aircraft known as drones while also saying certain model aircraft flown by hobbyists who already followed safety rules by a “nationwide community-based organizati­on” were exempt.

That has led some to argue that FAA can’t set regulation­s over drone flights by hobbyists. Taylor argued in this case that all hobbyists, not just those exempted by Congress, should be exempt from the law. Last year he successful­ly used the 2012 law to argue that the FAA’s drone registrati­on system wasn’t legal, though Congress reinstated the registry months later.

Friday’s ruling is at least a partial win for companies including Alphabet’s Project Wing and Amazon’s Prime Air, which have urged regulators and lawmakers to impose additional standards on the millions who fly hobbyist drones. Such requiremen­ts are needed to ensure that it’s safe to operate the autonomous delivery systems they are developing, the companies say.

The FAA plans to release proposed new regulation­s later this year that will begin allowing drone flights over crowds and will require most or all of the devices to begin identifyin­g themselves with radio beacons. The beacons are needed to satisfy security and law enforcemen­t agencies, which fear criminals or terrorists will use the devices.

 ?? Kin Man Hui / San Antonio Express-News file ?? Drone pilot Robert Youens, left, of Austin chats with Stef Hendrik about drone flying at the 2018 San Antonio Winterfest Drone Fly-in earlier this year. A drone owner who wanted FAA rules for hobbyists invalidate­d has lost his case.
Kin Man Hui / San Antonio Express-News file Drone pilot Robert Youens, left, of Austin chats with Stef Hendrik about drone flying at the 2018 San Antonio Winterfest Drone Fly-in earlier this year. A drone owner who wanted FAA rules for hobbyists invalidate­d has lost his case.

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