thank you very muchFlying a drone or an unmanned air vehicle (UAV) for work or research - Transport Canada
Look at apply for a Special Flight Operations Certificate
Outline of info to include in your Application SFOC staff instruction.
See also this form underneath the staff instruction paragraph
Notification form - exemption for UAVs from 2 kg up to and including 25 kg
You can see why companies have sprung up that charge 1400 loonies for an application submittal.
It is really irritating when people do not properly convey tc rules... Please refer to the Transport Canada Website here: Flying a drone recreationally - Transport Canada
Recreationally you must stay 9km from airports, heliport or aerodrome. You also must not fly within 150 metres of people, animals, building, structures or vehicles.
There is so much misinformation out there and as a company you should really check your facts better.
Thank you for taking the time to write that. Too many people think it's under 2kg and you are ok. Which is NOT the case in 95% of instances. If anyone takes the time to talk to TC they will realize any commercial or seemingly commercial flights need an sfoc permit. Plus insurance. Plus procedures in talking to your local flight region to submit you flight plans. Plus in some cases file NOTAMS. There is alot more to flying legally than many think and I applaud those who are taking the legal path.If you would like a little help...A little note on exemptions!!
Don't be misled that the weight and or size of your drone automatically means you can go where you want.
For recreational users its very tight and commercially within the exemptions (Phantoms etc. based on weight) it is illegal to fly a drone within 5 MILES of any town and or built up area in Ontario. That means there actually has to be 10 miles or more between 2 towns to legally fly recreationally or under exemptions without an SFOC from TC (Transport Canada).(The law actually states "built up area". What actually is a built up area? Ontario defines a built up area as a crossroads, hamlet, 10 buildings within a 500 meter distance or 4 buildings within 1 hectare. All the best trying to fly under the exemptions with that!)
So really, even cottage country still won't cut it for most.
Such flyers are also prohibited from flying within 5 miles of any airport and or aerodrome. Ad that to the 5 mile restriction outside of a built up area and you have to even go further!
Under exemptions you can't fly over streets, people or vehicles, buildings AND animals that are not in direct relation to the place you're shooting.
Under exemptions, if flown commercially, liability insurance is still required. Here's a kicker - if you have insurance, have a collision that needs reporting, and it is found out by the insurance company that you weren't flying legally as per TC guidelines either with an SFOC or under exemptions, they won't cover you. Can you say "lawsuit and fines?"
I've heard guys say "I don't need an SFOC because I fly under the exemptions".
Read the actual exemptions. Unless you're pretty much somewhere up in the North West Territories with nothing else around, (including moose lol), you can't really fly under the exemptions in Ontario. This is why most legitimate flyers apply for SFOC's. TC is doing this to make sure that airways and towns are safe. If people apply for SFOC's TC has a better chance of monitoring it.
On top of that, you'd actually have to look into other restricted airspaces.
There's a ton of illegal flying in Ontario...and those flyers are playing Russian Roulette. The laws are clear, they're clearly posted on TC's site...and it's the flyers responsibility to know those laws.
I wouldn't want to be a real estate agent and or any other company using illegal flyers for that day that something goes wrong, or even if someone calls in a complaint. They also could be held liable using an illegal flyer. They should be asking to SEE a flyers SFOC before hiring them for their services.
Still want to fly a drone in Ontario?![]()
If you in to fact checking. Check your local city bylaws as well. If you are flying recreationally it's a model aircraft. Not a uav in TC terminology. Example for Calgary: is there is no RC flying in the city parks. And no where else but a large Park would you be 150m from stuff. So add all that together is there is no flying in the city of Calgary. Or the NW corner because of springbok airport. Or the SE corner because of the airport and hospital helipad down there. You have to basically go the 9km outside of the city. Away from highways. Not sure about other cities but they likely have similar bylaws.It is really irritating when people do not properly convey tc rules... Please refer to the Transport Canada Website here: Flying a drone recreationally - Transport Canada
Recreationally you must stay 9km from airports, heliport or aerodrome. You also must not fly within 150 metres of people, animals, building, structures or vehicles.
There is so much misinformation out there and as a company you should really check your facts better.
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