MSU’s Brooks appears before U.S. Senate committee, testifies on future of UAS research
May 8, 2019
Dallas Brooks
Photo by Russ Houston
Challenges surrounding the integration of emerging unmanned technologies into the National
Airspace System led one Mississippi State University administrator to Capitol Hill today
[May 8].
Dallas Brooks, director of the university’s Raspet Flight Research Laboratory,
joined an elite group of national experts and officials who testified before the U.S.
Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation at a hearing titled “New
Entrants in the National Airspace: Policy, Technology and Security Issues for
Congress.” The focus was the current state of the NAS, status of integration efforts
by the Federal Aviation Administration for these new entrants into the NAS, and questions
that remain.
Convened by U.S. Senator Roger Wicker, R-Miss., chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee,
the morning hearing held a recurring theme as each panelist discussed current successes, but
also their suggestions for future enhancements as regulators make decisions about the safety
of the nation’s airspace.
“To understand and mitigate safety risks and to improve the performance of systems and
operators it is important to fund research and development,” Wicker said. “In
partnership with the Federal Aviation Administration, our research universities are helping
to improve air traffic control interoperability, safety, pilot training, and drone traffic
management systems.”
Addressing the senate committee, Brooks testified that it is these members’ leadership
that can make a difference in the speed in which research is conducted to gather innovative
data to continue UAS safety improvements and integration into the atmosphere.
Wicker thanked Brooks for his praise of congressional mandates that have moved progress
forward, but then asked him to explain “where research delays exist” in expanding
opportunities for drone usage and in improving performance of systems and operations.
Brooks pointed to a recent FAA policy change that now mandates department-level review,
making the timeframe six times longer for approval of UAS Center of Excellence research.
“Such reviews add no discernable value, add complexity to the grant process, and
slow the timeframe of approval from a few weeks to many months,” Brooks explained.
Stating that “focus breeds success,” Brooks said that by following the model of
the UAS Center of Excellence and the UAS Science and Research Panel “our nation’s
government can achieve more in less time—and more safely—than ever
before.”
U.S. Senator and MSU alumnus Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., a committee member, praised Brooks
and the work of the UAS Center of Excellence.
“Thank you for working to protect our coasts, our borders and our military,” she
said.
Others testifying along with Brooks were Jay Merkle, executive director, UAS Integration
Office, FAA;
Wayne Monteith, associate administrator, Office of Commercial Space Transportation, FAA;
Zach Lovering, vice president, Urban Air Mobility Systems, Airbus; and Eric Stallmer,
president Commercial Spaceflight Federation.