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Senator Asks FAA About State and Local Counterdrone Testing

By Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
A U.S. senator is asking the FAA to explain how counterdrone testing would work at the state and local level.

Massachusetts Democrat Sen. Edward Markey, a ranking member of the Senate Commerce Subcommittee on Security, this month sent a letter to the FAA on the heels of a hearing in the Security Subcommittee. The hearing reportedly explored the “safety challenges of unmanned aerial systems,” according to a press release. “During this hearing, a representative of the FAA maintained that current federal law prevents state and local authorities from testing counter-drone technology, as well as some critical detection tools,” the statement noted.

Markey specifically expressed concerns about alleged airport sighting of drones in years past – many of which turned out to not be drones at all.

“The FAA’s position on counter-UAS testing is concerning because state and local authorities are now on the front-lines of drone security and have an integral role to play in defending against threats posed by this emerging technology,” Markey wrote in the letter to FAA Administrator Stephen Dickson.

“Consequently, state and local authorities must be able to test counter-UAS technology alongside the FAA or we will likely face delays in the technology’s implementation, thus preventing public safety officials from being able to better protect their communities.”

Markey asked four questions in the letter:

Last year, the Blue Ribbon Task Force, a joint effort between AUVSI and Airports Council International published a report on drone mitigation and airports. The report stated:

“The BRTF takes the position that airports should not be burdened with undertaking this operation alone. Instead, as with many other operations at airports, such as airport security, UAS detection should be a shared responsibility between airports and federal governments.”

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