The legislation, signed Thursday, says camera-carrying surveillance drones can only be used in cases of “imminent danger to life or serious damage to property” or when “credible intelligence” from the federal Department of Homeland Security points to “a high risk of a terrorist attack.”
-
UAVS IN THE NEWS
- Kansas DOT Notches Milestone BVLOS Flight November 13, 2019
- Ag Policy Blog: Senators Introduce Drone Bill November 13, 2019
- 50-Mile Drone Driveway Receives First Approval from FAA November 13, 2019
- In NYC, drones fly in a legal limbo November 13, 2019
- Dolphins to Drones: Beat It, Bozo November 6, 2019
- Drones could do more to help farmers, with help from Congress and the FAA November 6, 2019
- NRC Decision Leaves U.S. Nuclear Plants Vulnerable to Terrorist Drones November 6, 2019
- The U.S. Interior Department Has Grounded Its Fleet of 800 Drones, Fearing Chinese Surveillance November 6, 2019
- Drones have revolutionized the way we track wildfires, count wildlife and map plants October 30, 2019
- NASA wants city skies filled with drones delivering packages and people October 30, 2019
- Bill would ban use of drones in hunting October 30, 2019
- Research tests speed of drones in responding to medical emergency scenarios October 30, 2019
- Threat From Above: How to Stop Hostile Drones October 24, 2019
- FAA falling behind EASA on UAV integration, expert warns October 24, 2019
- UPS, CVS Team Up to Deliver Prescriptions Via Drone October 24, 2019
- Covington beats out California, Florida for drone command, control center October 9, 2019
- Why The Skies Aren’t Filled With Delivery Drones … Yet October 9, 2019
- Ohio lawmaker files bill proposing ban on drone package deliveries October 9, 2019
- Journalists Sue Texas Over Ban on Drone Photography October 1, 2019
- CBP to Deploy Anti-Drone Bubbles Along U.S.-Mexico Border October 1, 2019