US Forest Service Clarifies Drone Use

No Drones Sign

In light of the increasing popularity of recreational drones, the U.S. Forest Service has released specific guidelines for recreational unmanned aircraft use over public lands:

– Avoid flying over federally-designated wilderness or primitive areas.

– As drones are considered both “motorized equipment” and “mechanical transport,” they cannot take off from, land in, or be operated from federally-designated wilderness areas.

– Avoid flying over noise-sensitive areas or populated sites, including rivers, campgrounds, trail heads and visitor centers.

– A drone may not be used to disturb or harass wildlife.

– No interference with official aerial activities over national forests, such as wildfire detection and suppression.

– Drone pilots must obey state privacy laws.

These guidelines only apply to hobby or recreation operations. Commercial operations include filming, still photography, survey, or any other endeavor for profit that involves use of a drone. These ventures may be allowable through a special use permit issued by the Forest Service.

Source:Ticker News

2 comments

  1. It’s now a federally regulated air space so with your FAA# you should be able to fly over federally protected lands in a safe and respectifull manner. FAA regersted airplanes fly over federal lands all day long. There can’t treat us different, isn’t that discrimination?

  2. No drones in wilderness area due to noise sensitivity, but take in all the barking dogs, guns, Piper Cubs, smart phones with blue tooth speakers, guitars, flutes, violins, harmonicas etc. you want. I don’t quite understand it. (oops… should not have mentioned barking dogs) No electric tooth brush, water purifier or motor driven 35mm cameras either. How many decibles does a Gopro Karma make anyway? Way more than an Aqua Partner water purifier I’m sure. Next thing to be outlawed will be LED head lamps.

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