States Pass Drone Laws in Droves

Drones fly at the Autel booth during the International CES Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2015, in Las Vegas.

Drones fly at the Autel booth during the International CES Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2015, in Las Vegas. John Locher/AP

Three years after it was tasked with de­vel­op­ing a set of rules for com­mer­cial drone op­er­at­ors, the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment still has not fi­nal­ized drone reg­u­la­tions, in­stead dol­ing out more than 1,000 ex­emp­tions to al­low busi­nesses to fly drones in the mean­time.

Tired of wait­ing on Wash­ing­ton, states are mov­ing to de­vel­op their own drone rules. But many of the laws that states are pro­pos­ing and passing may end up con­flict­ing with what the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment even­tu­ally comes up with.

Ac­cord­ing to the Na­tion­al Con­fer­ence of State Le­gis­latures, the past two years have seen 26 states pass le­gis­la­tion con­cern­ing drones. The laws range widely in their treat­ment of drones, from the mildly lim­it­ing to the ex­tremely re­strict­ive.

On one end of the spec­trum is Cali­for­nia, a state of­ten at the van­guard of de­vel­op­ing civil-liber­ties and con­sumer-pro­tec­tion rules. Cali­for­nia’s state le­gis­lature last week sent a bill to the gov­ernor that would make it il­leg­al to fly a drone with­in 350 feet of the ground over private prop­erty without con­sent, a rule op­posed by tech­no­logy com­pan­ies such as Amazon and Google, which have plans for de­liv­er­ing goods and In­ter­net ac­cess by drone.

But most of the state-passed drone laws to date have been less re­strict­ive. Some states look­ing to cre­ate pri­vacy safe­guards have taken smal­ler steps to­ward fight­ing drone-equipped peep­ing Toms. Oth­er states tar­get spe­cif­ic in­dus­tries or use-cases: Louisi­ana’s drone law con­cerns ag­ri­cul­ture, while Ten­ness­ee’s gov­erns drone flights over pris­ons. And a hand­ful of states have passed le­gis­la­tion to out­law us­ing drones for hunt­ing or in­ter­fer­ing with hunters.

The patch­work of drone laws makes com­mer­cial users nervous.

“The fed­er­al gov­ern­ment needs a frame­work that al­lows ro­bust in­nov­a­tion and re­search. If loc­al law­makers move first and cre­ate ar­ti­fi­cial stat­utory re­stric­tions, ill-con­sidered laws like the Cali­for­nia bill may drive jobs and in­nov­a­tion over the bor­der and over­seas,” said Gary Sha­piro, CEO of the Con­sumer Elec­tron­ics As­so­ci­ation, which rep­res­ents thou­sands of tech com­pan­ies.

Hope­ful com­mer­cial drone users such as Amazon have also railed against the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment for mak­ing it dif­fi­cult for them to de­vel­op and test drone sys­tems in the United States. Earli­er this year, The Guard­i­an re­por­ted on a secret Amazon drone-test­ing site in Canada that the com­pany turned to for lack of op­por­tun­ity at home.

As the pro­lif­er­a­tion of drones con­tin­ues to ac­cel­er­ate this year, al­most every state has con­sidered le­gis­la­tion to gov­ern how they can be used, wheth­er by law en­force­ment, busi­nesses, or the pub­lic. Forty-five states have con­sidered more than 150 drone-re­lated bills in 2015, ac­cord­ing to data from the Na­tion­al Con­fer­ence of State Le­gis­latures.

Mean­while, the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment is in the midst of par­al­lel pro­cesses to come up with na­tion­al drone reg­u­la­tions.

The main over­seer of the na­tion’s air­space, the Fed­er­al Avi­ation Ad­min­is­tra­tion, is in charge of study­ing safety as­pects of com­mer­cial drone flights and is fi­nal­iz­ing a set of safety rules for com­mer­cial users. A draft of its pro­posed rules was an­nounced in Feb­ru­ary, and FAA of­fi­cials have said they ex­pect to be fin­ished by mid-2016.

But the FAA says its man­date stops at safety and se­cur­ity. It claims pri­vacy is­sues, which have dogged the idea of wide­spread drone flights, re­main the pur­view of the Na­tion­al Tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions and In­form­a­tion Ad­min­is­tra­tion, an agency in the Com­merce De­part­ment.

NTIA re­cently began a series of meet­ings that will bring to­geth­er stake­hold­ers in fed­er­al drone rule­mak­ing to settle on vol­un­tary drone pri­vacy guidelines. But a pri­vacy ad­vocacy or­gan­iz­a­tion filed suit against the FAA soon after the agency an­nounced its safety rules, ar­guing that the FAA’s man­date to come up with a “com­pre­hens­ive” set of drone reg­u­la­tions re­quires it to draw up pri­vacy reg­u­la­tions as well.

Some mem­bers of Con­gress have also wandered in­to the fray, with pro­pos­als to re­strict where drones can fly for safety reas­ons, re­quire geofen­cing tech­no­logy to keep drones away from sens­it­ive sites like air­ports, and even tem­por­ar­ily cre­ate a full set of rules for drones that would gov­ern their use un­til fed­er­al agen­cies fi­nal­ize their reg­u­la­tions.

Re­cent data from the FAA that re­vealed a grow­ing num­ber of “close calls” between drones and com­mer­cial air­liners has ad­ded to the ur­gency of law­makers in state­houses and in Wash­ing­ton. Ac­cord­ing to the agency, there have been nearly 700 pi­lot sight­ings of drones so far this year, about three times the total num­ber of sight­ings in 2014.