Los Angeles Times

DRONE USERS TO FACE NEW RULES

As close calls multiply, U.S. regulators plan to require the remotecont­rolled aircraft to be registered.

- By Jim Puzzangher­a

WASHINGTON — Debris from a drone spilled from the September sky, injuring an 11-month-old girl in a stroller on a Pasadena street. A drone buzzing above a wildfire near Big Bear Lake this summer forced an air tanker to ditch plans to dump a load of fire retardant on the flames.

And more than 40 times since April 2014, pilots approachin­g Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport have reported dangerous encounters with the small, remotecont­rolled aircraft that have become increasing­ly popular — and dangerous.

Concerned about the growing number of incidents in Southern California and across the country, federal regulators said Monday that they planned to require most recreation­al drones to be registered.

The goal is to rush the rules into place before a Christmas season in which drones are expected to fly off store shelves.

“The signal we’re sending today is that when you enter the national airspace, it’s a very serious matter,” said Transporta­tion Secretary Anthony Foxx.

The requiremen­t would apply to new drone buyers, he said. Existing owners would have to register after a yet-to-be-determined grace period.

Foxx said the goal of registrati­on is to help educate consumers about how to fly their aircraft safely and to aid authoritie­s in tracing troublemak­ing drones back to their owners to face penalties.

The move is the latest attempt by government officials to wrestle with potentiall­y deadly problems caused by the popularity of remote-controlled drones.

The Consumer Electronic­s Assn. expects 2015 to be “a defining year for drones,” with sales approachin­g 700,000, a 63% increase from the previous year. Revenue will top $100 million this year, the trade group said.

Consumers are flying drones for fun, movie directors are angling for aerial shots and companies are considerin­g a variety of uses, such as monitoring pipelines in remote areas and delivering medicine to farflung communitie­s.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion already is working on rules governing commercial drones.

But with recreation­al drones straying more frequently near airplanes and drone malfunctio­ns risking injuries, the agency joined state and local government­s in trying to rein them in. The FAA has more limited authority over recreation­al use of drones.

“There’s no doubt there’s all kind of havoc being wrought in the sky at the moment with all these drones flying around,” said Scott Vernick, who has studied the legal issues surroundin­g drones as a lawyer at the law firm Fox Rothschild in Philadelph­ia.

He’s not sure that registerin­g drones alone would be enough to deter dangerous operations.

The Los Angeles City Council last week approved new regulation­s that could result in a six-month prison term or $1,000 fine for people f lying drones too close to airports or people. The ordinance is similar to existing federal rules that prohibit recreation­al drones from f lying above 400 feet, within five miles of airports without permission or out of the sight of the operator.

This fall, California Gov. Jerry Brown signed into law a bill designed to prevent paparazzi from flying drones over private property.

In 2012, Congress prohibited the FAA from enacting new regulation­s on small model aircraft flown for recreation­al or hobby purposes. But Foxx said a registrati­on requiremen­t would be allowed under the FAA’s power to ensure safety of the skies.

Foxx said he wanted to create a user-friendly registrati­on procedure. A task force of regulators and industry and recreation­al groups would turn in recommenda­tions for rules by Nov. 20, and the FAA would have the final rules in place by mid-December. Failure to register would lead to penalties, he said.

A major issue will be deciding which types of drones, such as model aircraft used by hobbyists, are such a low safety risk that they would be exempt from registrati­on. Rich Hanson, director of government affairs for the Academy of Model Aeronautic­s, noted that “hundreds of thousands of model aircraft have operated harmonious­ly within our communitie­s for decades.”

“These devices are virtually toys that pose little to no risk, have minimal capabiliti­es [and] have extremely short life spans,” Hanson said during the Monday news conference at the Department of Transporta­tion. “The challenge therefore will be striking the right balance in setting the criteria and threshold for registrati­on at an appropriat­e and effective level.”

The FAA said that it receives reports every day of potentiall­y unsafe drone operations and that sightings by pilots of drones doubled this year compared with last year.

Last month, the FAA said it would investigat­e an incident in which pieces from a small privately owned drone fell and injured the 11month-old girl in Pasadena. The girl was treated at a hospital for a large bruise on her forehead and a small cut to the side of her head and released, police said.

Police found the owner of the drone at the accident site, and he told police that he lost control of the aircraft.

But often it’s difficult to identify the owner of a drone, Foxx said.

“Finding the drone has not been as much of a problem as finding the person who was using the drone. The registrati­on is designed to close that loophole,” he said.

Vernick said he believed the FAA had the authority to require registrati­on, but he didn’t think that measure was enough to ensure the safety in the skies the agency is seeking. He wondered whether sales of drones between two individual­s would require registrati­on and questioned whether enough of a crashed drone would be left to determine its registrati­on number.

“It’s a good first step, but as a practical matter, I think there are questions about what it actually accomplish­es,” Vernick said.

 ?? Mark Wilson
Getty Images ?? TRANSPORTA­TION Secretary Anthony Foxx, left, listens as FAA Administra­tor Michael Huerta speaks during news conference on drones in Washington.
Mark Wilson Getty Images TRANSPORTA­TION Secretary Anthony Foxx, left, listens as FAA Administra­tor Michael Huerta speaks during news conference on drones in Washington.
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Moment Editorial/Getty Images ?? FOXX said registrati­on will help educate consumers and aid authoritie­s in tracing drones to their owners.
Guo Ping Moment Editorial/Getty Images FOXX said registrati­on will help educate consumers and aid authoritie­s in tracing drones to their owners.

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