Alabama
Related: About this forumDrones help police pollution in Alabama. Lawmakers want to make that a crime.
This is the sort of picture coal lobbyists in Alabama dont want you to see. This is the sort of picture a bill before the Alabama Legislature would make it a crime to take.
We look down on a patch of woods by a river. In the midst of evergreen trees and dormant hardwoods is a gray swath of land lined with sickly yellow veins creeping toward the water.
There by the water is what well call the Triangle of Death, at least the size of a football field where nothing grows. On one end is the Maxine Mine owned by the Drummond Company. And at the other is the Locust Fork River, just a few miles upstream from where the Warrior River Water Authority and Bessemer Utilities pull drinking water.
When a granddad takes his grandchildren fishing, this is the sort of thing that keeps them from eating the fish.
This picture was taken by a drone.
The folks who made that mess down there want to make pictures like this one illegal. And the Alabama Legislature is ready to help them. A bill sponsored by state Sen. Cam Ward and state Rep. Chip Brown would severely restrict where drones can fly to almost nowhere theres people or roads or power lines or running water. /snip
More at https://www.al.com/news/2020/03/drones-help-police-pollution-in-alabama-lawmakers-want-to-make-that-a-crime.html
JDC
(10,489 posts)It's mind boggling that this is our world now.
bobbieinok
(12,858 posts)Mersky
(5,272 posts)Really? Somebody that documents polluters with a drone could be charged with the same level of offense as assault in the third degree?
Cannot believe two politicians actually attached their name to any such proposal. Ridiculously stupid and blatantly corrupt.
Looks really bad, even for Alabama.
Mersky
(5,272 posts)The public comments close tomorrow, March 2. The new rule would require drones over half a pound to broadcast their flying location over the internet. Is another instance where Im forced to question whos safety and privacy theyre truly protecting when the proposal fails tests of practicality, reality, and proportionality.
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2020/02/new-faa-drone-rule-is-a-giant-middle-finger-to-aviation-hobbyists/
groundloop
(12,270 posts)HOWEVER, states have no business attempting to regulate aviation. This is a horrible abuse of power in an attempt to protect criminal behavior by a corporation.
Karadeniz
(23,423 posts)Cut of the fines.