Patrick Geraghty, a National Transportation Safety Board administrative law judge, said in his order dismissing the USD 10,000 fine that the FAA has no regulations governing model aircraft flights or for classifying model aircraft as an unmanned aircraft.
FAA officials said they were reviewing the decision and had no further comment. The agency can appeal the decision to the full five-member safety board.
FAA officials have long taken the position that the agency regulates access to the national airspace, and therefore it has the power to bar drone flights, even when the drone weighs no more than a few pounds.
"There are no shades of gray in FAA regulations," the agency says on its website. "Anyone who wants to fly an aircraft, manned or unmanned, in US airspace needs some level of FAA approval."
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However, it's clear the agency won't meet that deadline. Regulations that would permit greater use of drones weighing less than 55 pounds have been repeatedly delayed, and are not expected to be proposed until November.
It takes at least months, and often years, before proposed regulations are made final.