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Yesterday, protesters in Washington, D.C. told the Federal Aviation Administration in no uncertain terms that they were very, very unhappy with the proposed rules for Remote ID for Drones (and model R/C aircraft). A large number of people braved the cold weather and made it out to the FAA’s headquarters with signs saying: “If we build it, let it fly.”
Protesters tell FAA “if we build it, let it fly”
The protests had been announced weeks in advance and was mostly driven by the model aircraft and FPV drone communities. A large number of people showed up the FAA’s head offices in Washington, D.C. with signs saying
if you, like many R/C and drone pilots are not happy with the newly proposed rules from the FAA be sure to submit your comments before the 11:59 pm deadline on March 2nd. Yes, that is tomorrow! See below for more information and guides as to how to submit your comments to the FAA.
DroneDJ’s take
DroneDJ is pro Remote ID for drones, but not in the way it’s currently proposed by the Department of Transportation and the FAA. The FAA’s NPRM for Remote ID for drones is overly restrictive, expensive, and invades the privacy of the drone pilot.
If you want to learn more about the FAA’s NPRM for Remote ID for drones, be sure to read these articles here as well as this Drone Advocacy Kit that has been developed by Drone U and FPV FC.
And lastly, please be sure to submit your own original comments to the FAA on the Federal Register’s website. Explain to them how these new rules negatively impact your drone hobby and/or drone business before or on March 2, 2020, at the latest!
Protesters tell FAA “if we build it, let it fly”
The protests had been announced weeks in advance and was mostly driven by the model aircraft and FPV drone communities. A large number of people showed up the FAA’s head offices in Washington, D.C. with signs saying
In one of the videos, you can hear one of the protest organizers say that the FAA has apparently shut their offices down on Friday and told their employees that nobody had to come in for work that day. We are trying to confirm this but if true it goes to show that we are reaching the FAA with our concerns, feedback, and protests.
- “If we build it, let it fly”
- “No fees, No data plans, No way, No how”
- “Help save our hobby.”
- “Save RC model Aviation from the FAA”
if you, like many R/C and drone pilots are not happy with the newly proposed rules from the FAA be sure to submit your comments before the 11:59 pm deadline on March 2nd. Yes, that is tomorrow! See below for more information and guides as to how to submit your comments to the FAA.
DroneDJ’s take
DroneDJ is pro Remote ID for drones, but not in the way it’s currently proposed by the Department of Transportation and the FAA. The FAA’s NPRM for Remote ID for drones is overly restrictive, expensive, and invades the privacy of the drone pilot.
If you want to learn more about the FAA’s NPRM for Remote ID for drones, be sure to read these articles here as well as this Drone Advocacy Kit that has been developed by Drone U and FPV FC.
And lastly, please be sure to submit your own original comments to the FAA on the Federal Register’s website. Explain to them how these new rules negatively impact your drone hobby and/or drone business before or on March 2, 2020, at the latest!