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John H.[_5_] December 17th 15 03:35 PM

And so it starts...
 
Letter to all members of Prince Georges RC club:

PGRC Members,

In case you haven't heard, the FAA is requiring all UAS owners (including AMA members
who fly RC) to register with the FAA before 19 February. See AMA District IV VP Jay
Marsh's e-mail below. Also see the included links to the FAA press release and AMA's
response. Registration requires only your name, address, and e-mail address; and can
be done on-line.

This was all discussed at the meeting Tuesday night but, if you missed it, here is
the gist:
1. The AMA, and we at PGRC, think the FAA's inclusion of AMA members in the
registration program is an unnecessary imposition.
2. Nevertheless, we are requiring all PGRC members (and visiting flyers) to
register before 19 February, in order to fly at our field.
3. You can register at the FAA website (www.faa.gov/uas/registration) starting
21 December. Registration is free for 30 days after 21 December, and $5 thereafter.
Registration is good for 3 years.
4. We will be required to put the FAA registration number on ALL our models that
we plan to fly.
5. Because of our proximity to DC, FAA personnel are likely to visit our field
to verify that all flyers are registered. Hence, we should carry a copy of the
certificate to the field (e.g., in our flight boxes), as well as imprinting the
number on all our models.

This registration process may or may not be the last infringement of the FAA on our
hobby and on us at PGRC, but anyone failing to comply will certainly be jeopardizing
the hobby and our continued existence at PGRC Field. After 19 February, only
FAA-registered RC pilots will be permitted to fly at PGRC Field.

Sometimes, a period of whining can be good for the psyche - there was certainly a
good measure of it at the meeting on Tuesday. So go ahead and whine, and get it out
of your system. Then register.

Regards,

(Secretary)
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

Keyser Söze December 17th 15 03:52 PM

And so it starts...
 
John H. wrote:
Letter to all members of Prince Georges RC club:

PGRC Members,

In case you haven't heard, the FAA is requiring all UAS owners (including AMA members
who fly RC) to register with the FAA before 19 February. See AMA District IV VP Jay
Marsh's e-mail below. Also see the included links to the FAA press release and AMA's
response. Registration requires only your name, address, and e-mail address; and can
be done on-line.

This was all discussed at the meeting Tuesday night but, if you missed it, here is
the gist:
1. The AMA, and we at PGRC, think the FAA's inclusion of AMA members in the
registration program is an unnecessary imposition.
2. Nevertheless, we are requiring all PGRC members (and visiting flyers) to
register before 19 February, in order to fly at our field.
3. You can register at the FAA website (www.faa.gov/uas/registration) starting
21 December. Registration is free for 30 days after 21 December, and $5 thereafter.
Registration is good for 3 years.
4. We will be required to put the FAA registration number on ALL our models that
we plan to fly.
5. Because of our proximity to DC, FAA personnel are likely to visit our field
to verify that all flyers are registered. Hence, we should carry a copy of the
certificate to the field (e.g., in our flight boxes), as well as imprinting the
number on all our models.

This registration process may or may not be the last infringement of the FAA on our
hobby and on us at PGRC, but anyone failing to comply will certainly be jeopardizing
the hobby and our continued existence at PGRC Field. After 19 February, only
FAA-registered RC pilots will be permitted to fly at PGRC Field.

Sometimes, a period of whining can be good for the psyche - there was certainly a
good measure of it at the meeting on Tuesday. So go ahead and whine, and get it out
of your system. Then register.

Regards,

(Secretary)
--

Ban idiots, not guns!


Whine, whine, whine

--
Sent from my iPhone 6+

[email protected] December 17th 15 09:15 PM

And so it starts...
 
On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 10:35:06 -0500, John H.
wrote:

Registration requires only your name, address, and e-mail address; and can
be done on-line.


I wonder how many people could register as "John Smith, 1600
Pennsylvania avenue Washington DC and Noneofurbizxxxx@hotmail or some
other free server"

Are they really going to do any kind of background check or
verification on the application? Mo money, Mo money

John H.[_5_] December 17th 15 09:19 PM

And so it starts...
 
On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 16:15:42 -0500, wrote:

On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 10:35:06 -0500, John H.
wrote:

Registration requires only your name, address, and e-mail address; and can
be done on-line.


I wonder how many people could register as "John Smith, 1600
Pennsylvania avenue Washington DC and Noneofurbizxxxx@hotmail or some
other free server"

Are they really going to do any kind of background check or
verification on the application? Mo money, Mo money


If they are folks who want to fly irresponsibly, why bother to register at all? All
registration can do, if done honestly, is get one into trouble for irresponsible
flying. Registering would be even more stupid than stupid flying.

Bigger guv'mint, bigger guv'mint.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

[email protected] December 17th 15 10:23 PM

And so it starts...
 
On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 16:19:10 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 16:15:42 -0500, wrote:

On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 10:35:06 -0500, John H.
wrote:

Registration requires only your name, address, and e-mail address; and can
be done on-line.


I wonder how many people could register as "John Smith, 1600
Pennsylvania avenue Washington DC and Noneofurbizxxxx@hotmail or some
other free server"

Are they really going to do any kind of background check or
verification on the application? Mo money, Mo money


If they are folks who want to fly irresponsibly, why bother to register at all? All
registration can do, if done honestly, is get one into trouble for irresponsible
flying. Registering would be even more stupid than stupid flying.

Bigger guv'mint, bigger guv'mint.


It kind of reminds me of the whole licensing thing. We license
contractors but the only ones who get in trouble are those with
licenses because all of the penalties are aimed at the license.

[email protected] December 17th 15 10:57 PM

And so it starts...
 
On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 16:15:42 -0500, wrote:

On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 10:35:06 -0500, John H.
wrote:

Registration requires only your name, address, and e-mail address; and can
be done on-line.


I wonder how many people could register as "John Smith, 1600
Pennsylvania avenue Washington DC and Noneofurbizxxxx@hotmail or some
other free server"

Are they really going to do any kind of background check or
verification on the application? Mo money, Mo money


===

Being untruthful with the government is probably not a good idea. The
penalties for that can be far worse than those for flying an
unregistered plane.

[email protected] December 17th 15 11:16 PM

And so it starts...
 
On Thursday, December 17, 2015 at 10:34:48 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
Letter to all members of Prince Georges RC club:

PGRC Members,

In case you haven't heard, the FAA is requiring all UAS owners (including AMA members
who fly RC) to register with the FAA before 19 February. See AMA District IV VP Jay
Marsh's e-mail below. Also see the included links to the FAA press release and AMA's
response. Registration requires only your name, address, and e-mail address; and can
be done on-line.

This was all discussed at the meeting Tuesday night but, if you missed it, here is
the gist:
1. The AMA, and we at PGRC, think the FAA's inclusion of AMA members in the
registration program is an unnecessary imposition.
2. Nevertheless, we are requiring all PGRC members (and visiting flyers) to
register before 19 February, in order to fly at our field.
3. You can register at the FAA website (www.faa.gov/uas/registration) starting
21 December. Registration is free for 30 days after 21 December, and $5 thereafter.
Registration is good for 3 years.
4. We will be required to put the FAA registration number on ALL our models that
we plan to fly.
5. Because of our proximity to DC, FAA personnel are likely to visit our field
to verify that all flyers are registered. Hence, we should carry a copy of the
certificate to the field (e.g., in our flight boxes), as well as imprinting the
number on all our models.

This registration process may or may not be the last infringement of the FAA on our
hobby and on us at PGRC, but anyone failing to comply will certainly be jeopardizing
the hobby and our continued existence at PGRC Field. After 19 February, only
FAA-registered RC pilots will be permitted to fly at PGRC Field.

Sometimes, a period of whining can be good for the psyche - there was certainly a
good measure of it at the meeting on Tuesday. So go ahead and whine, and get it out
of your system. Then register.

Regards,

(Secretary)
--

Ban idiots, not guns!


From the AMA today:
As we proceed with this process, we suggest AMA members hold off on registering their model aircraft with the FAA until advised by the AMA or until February 19, the FAA's legal deadline for registering existing model aircraft.

[email protected] December 18th 15 02:51 AM

And so it starts...
 
On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 17:57:38 -0500,
wrote:

On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 16:15:42 -0500,
wrote:

On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 10:35:06 -0500, John H.
wrote:

Registration requires only your name, address, and e-mail address; and can
be done on-line.


I wonder how many people could register as "John Smith, 1600
Pennsylvania avenue Washington DC and Noneofurbizxxxx@hotmail or some
other free server"

Are they really going to do any kind of background check or
verification on the application? Mo money, Mo money


===

Being untruthful with the government is probably not a good idea. The
penalties for that can be far worse than those for flying an
unregistered plane.


Again, how many people would it take to catch anyone?
Anonymous Email accounts, public hot spots etc.
We are having trouble tracking terrorists with virtually unlimited
resources being thrown at the hunt

Mo money Mo money

Again what was wrong with the idea of just filing criminal charges
against anyone who interferes with aircraft?
That should already be something they can do within the current
infrastructure. If they don't actually catch the guy with the
controller in his hand, they don't have much anyway.

A decent lawyer will blow away any case built on a number scratched on
a drone that you can deny ever seeing if they can't place you at the
scene. (not my drone, lost that drone last year, sold it on craigs
list a year ago, threw it in the trash etc)
Bear in mind, the drone itself is not even registered.

[email protected] December 18th 15 03:04 AM

And so it starts...
 
On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 21:51:21 -0500, wrote:

On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 17:57:38 -0500,

wrote:

On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 16:15:42 -0500,
wrote:

On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 10:35:06 -0500, John H.
wrote:

Registration requires only your name, address, and e-mail address; and can
be done on-line.

I wonder how many people could register as "John Smith, 1600
Pennsylvania avenue Washington DC and Noneofurbizxxxx@hotmail or some
other free server"

Are they really going to do any kind of background check or
verification on the application? Mo money, Mo money


===

Being untruthful with the government is probably not a good idea. The
penalties for that can be far worse than those for flying an
unregistered plane.


Again, how many people would it take to catch anyone?
Anonymous Email accounts, public hot spots etc.
We are having trouble tracking terrorists with virtually unlimited
resources being thrown at the hunt

Mo money Mo money

Again what was wrong with the idea of just filing criminal charges
against anyone who interferes with aircraft?
That should already be something they can do within the current
infrastructure. If they don't actually catch the guy with the
controller in his hand, they don't have much anyway.

A decent lawyer will blow away any case built on a number scratched on
a drone that you can deny ever seeing if they can't place you at the
scene. (not my drone, lost that drone last year, sold it on craigs
list a year ago, threw it in the trash etc)
Bear in mind, the drone itself is not even registered.


===

I view the whole thing as a make work excercise to appease the
complaining pilots who have not yet seen an actual threat, nor are
they likely to.

Lying to the feds is always a bad idea however. That's how they turn
suspects into real criminals.

[email protected] December 18th 15 04:53 AM

And so it starts...
 
On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 22:04:28 -0500,
wrote:

Lying to the feds is always a bad idea however. That's how they turn
suspects into real criminals.


That kind of fear is certainly how they turn citizens into sheep.



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