- Joined
- Mar 31, 2019
- Messages
- 19
- Reaction score
- 14
- Age
- 47
Well, parks can be persuaded to change their regulations when given sufficient information and challenged as to why they restricted UAVs from the park. I previously tried to fly in a public park in Columbia, SC and was told that it was not allowed. This is a park that sells yearly passes to the park and requires you to sign an agreement that you will obey all posted rules. I asked where the rule was posted and nobody could tell me. It was not posted in the park, not posted on the web site, etc.
I suggested that an unposted rule was unenforceable since it was not really a rule and potentially left people wide open to discrimination. I started with the park manager, them went to the park supervisor's office, and said that I was ready to go to the Park Commission with the dispute. I also pointed out that the park assumed much more potential liability for other activities allowed in the park and asked if liability was their primary concern. I also suggested in writing how any potential liability could be mitigated.
I spent several weeks educating the park officials with current FAA regulations, drone operations, and provided a drone for them to actually see. I then got a request to meet with the park staff and work up some acceptable rules governing take off/landing in the park. I essentially wrote a general set of rules that were easy to understand as well as enforce and was told that they would be submitted to the Park Commission for action.
The entire process took close to three months, but I received a hone call last week telling me that I could now take off/land in the park at the site I initially suggested. I made my first legal flight last Saturday and nobody even challenged me even though the rules have not been officially posted.
Take offs/landings in a park can be accomplished if you are patient, have logic on your side, volunteer to help set location and rules. IMO, the effort was worth it and I can now fly in a very nice area near my home.
Nelson
This is excellent to hear!
This is the result i expected when I sent the first friendly email back in November.
Instead, I’ve spent almost 6 months sending emails, making phone calls, going to commission meetings, talking with reporters, trying to get the attorney general involved, I contacted the Michigan dot aeronautical commission, who contacted the county on my behalf informing them their rules are in direct violation of stars law etc....
I’ve never seen anything like this before. The county park commission does not care that they are violating state law.
I’ve done lots of contemplating and thinking as to why they are anti drone. The reality is that it is not about drones, it’s about power.
The commission publicly chastised me, a lowly citizen, for trying to tell them what they can do with their private property.
Clearly these public servants do not seem to understand how the system works.