Safety Sky
ByCBS NEWS December 24, 2014,
7:13 PM
As droneas are gifted,
the FAA issues a warning
Manufacturers say
they've sold 200,000 new unmanned aerial vehicles. While hobbyists are
thrilled, the FAA is worried about a burgeoning fleet of personal drones flying
into increasingly crowded skies.
So, the FAA
and the drone industry have launched a safety campaign making sure
novice remote-control pilots take precautions.
The video includes
guidelines such as: "Do fly your unmanned aircraft below 400 feet"
and "Don't fly your aircraft beyond your line of sight."
Guidelines from the
FAA's safety video on drones
FAA
In addition, drone
operators are warned not to fly their aircraft near crowds or within five miles
of an airport without notifying air traffic controllers.
While there are no
reports of collisions with planes, there have been some close calls. The FAA
receives 25 reports each month from pilots encountering nearby drones.
"These aircraft
are small, and they have very high performance characteristics, and so it's
very difficult for another pilot to see so they need to not be in airspace
around major airports," said Michael Huerta, the FAA's administrator.
But, there's no way
regulators can keep track of the estimated half million robotic aircraft flying
across America. So no new drone should be given as a gift without a note about
personal responsibility, according to former FAA official Scott Brenner.
"It's like giving
your 12-year-old the keys to your car and saying go drive on the beltway,
you'll be fine, I hope everybody else is okay too," said Brenner.
The FAA is getting
ready to propose regulations governing the
use of drones for commercial purposes. A handful of
Hollywood filmmakers are already flying drones with the FAA's permission.
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