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sUAV Rules & Regulations
Who owns the airspace?
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<blockquote data-quote="Northwood Mediaworks" data-source="post: 101218" data-attributes="member: 6411"><p>In Canada its public unless in some sort of controlled/classified airspace. (similar designations like those of the FAA)</p><p></p><p>This below was written in 2017... <a href="http://www.mondaq.com/canada/x/614602/agriculture+land+law/Clearing+the+air+around+air+space+rights" target="_blank">Clearing The Air Around Air Space Rights - Real Estate and Construction - Canada</a></p><p></p><p><em>The law in Canada is that a property owner owns only so much of the air space that can be reasonably occupied or used in connection with the land below. Practically speaking that means a landowner has no remedy at law for the occasional use of the airspace over the landowner's property by planes, drones, or helicopters using the airspace fleetingly and far above the property. However, with respect to the interference caused by overhanging tower cranes, and in particular the swinging of crane booms through adjacent landowner's airspace, there have traditionally been two legal remedies for impacted landowners – an action for trespass and an action for nuisance.</em></p><p></p><p>So remaining at a reasonable altitude so as not to be a nuisance makes sense.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Northwood Mediaworks, post: 101218, member: 6411"] In Canada its public unless in some sort of controlled/classified airspace. (similar designations like those of the FAA) This below was written in 2017... [URL="http://www.mondaq.com/canada/x/614602/agriculture+land+law/Clearing+the+air+around+air+space+rights"]Clearing The Air Around Air Space Rights - Real Estate and Construction - Canada[/URL] [I]The law in Canada is that a property owner owns only so much of the air space that can be reasonably occupied or used in connection with the land below. Practically speaking that means a landowner has no remedy at law for the occasional use of the airspace over the landowner's property by planes, drones, or helicopters using the airspace fleetingly and far above the property. However, with respect to the interference caused by overhanging tower cranes, and in particular the swinging of crane booms through adjacent landowner's airspace, there have traditionally been two legal remedies for impacted landowners – an action for trespass and an action for nuisance.[/I] So remaining at a reasonable altitude so as not to be a nuisance makes sense. [/QUOTE]
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sUAV Rules & Regulations
Who owns the airspace?