[It's not easy to find anything much out about the exemptions that CASA have built into Project Wings' licence to operate in a succession of (now 4) locations in Canberra.

[I've now found:
>Instrument number CASA EX82/18 dated 29 June 2018
>https://www.casa.gov.au/file/202721/download?token=vS8fUdXK
which wasn't located by previous searches using the same terms.

[It doesn't appear in archive.org, despite frequent snapshots, 6 of them in Jan 2019 alone, the most recent 6 days ago on 27 Jan. That suggests it's a very new posting, a good 7 months after being signed.

[Add to that:
-   searching on "Project Wing" at casa.gov.au finds *zero* hits
    (despite the phrase being in the Instrument on the web-site)
-   the Instrument does not refer to any prior exemptions

[So, given that Google Wings started the pilot in mid-2016, it appears that it was in breach of the law, unprosecuted, for 2 years to the end of June 2018. (But then does anyone seriously believe that Australia operates under the rule of law ??).

[It's also not easy to find out what the operational results have been.

[It's not easy to find out what opinion polling results have been, nor even whether the permits provided to the company included an obligation to commission and publish opinion surveys. Aren't such things fundamental to any technology impact assessment?

[Most of the scores of Canberra Times articles have been driven by Google media activities. They've included comments by enthusiasts, perhaps provided by Google, perhaps not; but they've also made reference to drone noise, and to general public disquiet about sound, surprise, safety and scope for observation.

[There are many very good applications of drones.  See:
http://rogerclarke.com/SOS/Drones-E.html#GA

[But it's unclear that 'good applications' includes the delivery of Cherry Ripes near Warwick (in 2014), or pizzas and pharmaceuticals in 5-acre-block zones on the fringe, and then in several suburbs, of a city (2016-19). And it's even less clear as to whether whatever benefits such activities offer outweigh the disbenefits.

[The Letter to the Editor below contains some assertions, about both noise and measured public opinion.]


Drone debate drags on as public anger drowned out
Letters to the editor
The Canberra Times
2 February 2019 — 12:00am
https://www.canberratimes.com.au/national/act/drone-debate-drags-on-as-public-anger-drowned-out-20190201-p50v7i.html

The ACT government and Project Wing can put whatever spin they like on its drone operations in the ACT.

The fact remains the people who have been subjected to these drone ‘‘trials’’ have rejected them. The fact is that anyone who hasn’t been subjected to the drones is not qualified to comment. The people of Royalla rejected the drones. The people of Bonython have rejected the drones (80 per cent).

The people of Gungahlin will decide for themselves about the drones.

The people of Bonython feel unsafe, violated and angry. They were not asked how they felt about this.

No one is responsible for regulation/compliance enforcement of the noise of the drones. Drone noise has been measured at 80 decibels during a neighbourhood delivery on a weekend.

EPA regulations disallow weekend residential noise over 35 decibels. There is documented evidence of regulatory loopholes and lack of proper government oversight and due diligence in regards to the Project Wing Bonython drone ‘‘trial’’.

The enabling of Project Wing suburban drone delivery operations in the ACT smacks of business and governments running roughshod over the people. Sound familiar?

We live in a democracy: ‘‘government in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised by them directly.’’

That is why there is now an ACT Legislative Assembly Inquiry into Drone Delivery Systems in the ACT. Because the people have spoken.

Robyn McIntyre, Bonython


--
Roger Clarke                            mailto:[email protected]
T: +61 2 6288 6916   http://www.xamax.com.au  http://www.rogerclarke.com

Xamax Consultancy Pty Ltd 78 Sidaway St, Chapman ACT 2611 AUSTRALIA
Visiting Professor in the Faculty of Law            University of N.S.W.
Visiting Professor in Computer Science    Australian National University
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