Live stream for the DOT/FAA press conference on drone registrations; starts in 5 minutes:
U.A.S. Registration Announcement Livestream
U.A.S. Registration Announcement Livestream
They think registration will help them identify those that fly unsafely.
Q. How many of the hundreds of reports in the FAA incident database would they be able to identify with registration?
A. Almost Zero
That touched on Meta4's great question; kudos to that reporter!I don't think he wanted to answer the last question. How will they obtain owner information if it is seen in restricted air space? Seeing it will not provide the information. They would either have to bring it down or have the info transmitted to them. Which is it?
Probably have to pay a fee each year just so they can recover dollars spent on this task force.Its the same argument that gun haters use. They think a person that is a legal and safe thinking person is the same as a criminal unsafe person and need to be watched. If I am a unsafe drone operator, I am not, why would I get registered. I will buy a unregistered or home built or secondary market drone to get by the law. This just makes it harder for average safe operator to enjoy the hobby. I would agree with volunteer education classes for new operators or an online coarse before you order a drone, something educational and informative. Watch the next regulation will be insurance.
He said that in most cases they have seen the drone but the problem was that they couldn't find the operator but registration will fix that.
If the hundreds of "near miss" incidents in the FAA database is the "problem " that needs a solution, good luck to the task force trying to work out how registration would make any difference.
From 33 mins in the video
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