New approach needed for recreational drone rules.

AuthorTadjdeh, Yasmin

* A lack of concrete rules to regulate recreational unmanned aerial vehicles across the United States is leading to chaos and many dangerous close-call collisions, said one drone expert.

There are safety, privacy and economic issues because of this lack of rules, said Hans Mumm, an unmanned aerial vehicle expert and the author of the book, "Applying Complexity Leadership Theory to Drone Airspace Integration."

The Federal Aviation Administration is tasked with integrating unmanned aerial systems in the national airspace. Earlier this year, the agency released a set of proposed rules to control the commercial use of drones, but recreational use is still largely ungoverned.

The FAA has said that recreational drone users must fly below 400 feet, be able to see the UAV and not interfere with manned aircraft. However, this is largely unpoliced and relies on the user to be responsible, Mumm said.

The FAA has a very authoritarian and linear approach to its thought process that clashes with the sensibilities of the majority of young users who fly drones, he said.

"When you say, 'OK, let's put some rules out there'... I think you have to look at your user base, and your user base is a younger user base," he said.

Members of the millennial generation --those born between 1980 and 2000 --want a non-authoritarian set of rules and to be part of the drafting process, he said.

"They're not saying that they won't follow the rules; they're not saying that they just want to be rebels," he said. "What they want is some sort of a say. They want to be part of the solution."

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