Donnie Frank
Well-Known Member
Hence the old adage, "Stick and stones may break my drones..."
HA!
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HA!
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Technically they can not control the air above the ground that’s FFA job
I think you handled it perfectly! Those pictures are great...talk about getting caught red handed.Flying over my property, I was taking pics of my HOA's pond today, and heard some kids yelling.
Then I heard something hit the side of the house.
The little brats were trying to throw stones at my Mavic Air...WTF?!
When they came closer to the fence, I asked them "Are you kids okay?" Twice.
Translation: stop throwing stones at my drone little (expletive removed)s!
After landing, I realized I had caught a five-shot AEB of the kid throwing the stone.
I then shamed them on Nextdoor - with pictures.
Nice throw, kid!
Looking at the flight logs, I never left my property.
Anyone have any thoughts about this situation?
I think you handled it perfectly! Those pictures are great...talk about getting caught red handed.
The state and federal laws always trump HOA laws. This became clear during the beginning of the DBS satellite revolution (Dish, DirecTV, etc.). Prior to this, many HOAs had passed laws banning the original satellite dishes which were more than six feet in diameter. However, the DBS industry, in order to make sure they could be viable before they spent a fortune launching their satellites, lobbied Congress to pass laws exempting DBS dishes from HOA laws.Correct, but they do control the ground inside the HOA, so they can legally restrict the operation of drone from any property in HOA. Even if your state has preemption drone laws, HOA are not a governmental or even quasi-government agency. They are private and have the final say in what's allowed in the HOA. Read your HOA CC&R's to find out just what you signed away when you agreed to live there. LOL.
The same principle applies to drone operation.
in Australia, you cannot fly within 30m of any person, full stop. CASA (our authority) told me to just think of it as a 60m dia cylinder around your drone.
What happens when you're flying over your property, someone comes within 30m of the ground your drone over, but you don't know that they're there? That is the case here -- the pilot didn't see the kid until he looked at the captured photos later. Are you in bad trouble now, "full stop", or can you claim that you had no knowledge of someone on the other side of the hedge and therefore are not liable for any infractions?
For that matter, what happens if you're doing the same thing, and someone approaches outside of your property line, but within the 30m and you then see them there. Are you in bad trouble now, "full stop", or are you given a reasonable period of time to move or land your craft?
Because 30 meters is a lot, if they can be right up against your property line, but not on your property. Technically, you could run from the back of your house to the front, and they could run around your property as well to now be still within 30 meters.
It seems like murky law to me, especially when call it "full stop" as if there are NO legal remedies or exceptions. And if that's the case, I would guess that a proper case hasn't hit the courts yet enough to change it, because such a silly, binary law will eventually be challenged.
I was replying to / asking Assie Oldtimer, who is in Australia. Please see the attribution in my post.Need more info. What country are you in?
my post stated that it was Australia! A small country well south of the US west and nowhere Austria.Need more info. What country are you in? If in the US, what state? (so I can look up the penalty). Also, recreational or 107? Would this be your third felony? Really need a COMPLETE picture of your situation to give you an accurate answer. Take the weekend to pull it all together and then update us Monday. I have some legal guys ready to go Monday 8am.
If someone walks into that 30m range, simply move away or just land
my post stated that it was Australia! A small country well south of the US west and nowhere Austria.
And I was talking to Aussie -- you're the odd man out here.No I was talking to Cereal.
If only life were actually that simple.
Oh well, there goes my vacation to Australia.
Chris
so you would prefer to be able to fly above people than to travel to [...]
I'm not a lawyer, so I guess I can't comment any further on this. My layman's reading of what you quoted is that the FAA doesn't want to get involved in things like sound abatement laws; disputes over where to put buildings near airports; design of airports, etc. However, it sure looks to me -- even after reading the things you posted -- that the FAA is still in firm control about anything having to do with what happens to an aircraft once it is in the air, and they are extending their authority to drones. Thus, I think whatever rules they make will be what will apply, and no lower level authority, including HOAs, will be able to override the FAA laws and rulings.No it doesn't. In the case of dishes, the FAA passed a rule that included them in the OTARD rule. In the case of drones, the FAA specifically gave control over take-off and landing areas to local authorities. <snip>
I'm not a lawyer, so I guess I can't comment any further on this. My layman's reading of what you quoted is that the FAA doesn't want to get involved in things like sound abatement laws; disputes over where to put buildings near airports; design of airports, etc. However, it sure looks to me -- even after reading the things you posted -- that the FAA is still in firm control about anything having to do with what happens to an aircraft once it is in the air, and they are extending their authority to drones. Thus, I think whatever rules they make will be what will apply, and no lower level authority, including HOAs, will be able to override the FAA laws and rulings.
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