The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) holds a three-day forum on the safety of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) April 29-30 in the NTSB Board Room and Conference Center in Washington. The forum will provide an opportunity for the Safety Board and interested parties to understand the safety implications presented by the growing use of UAS in the National Airspace System. Issues addressed will include: regulatory standards; integration with the NAS; perspectives of current UAS operators; design, certification and airworthiness; human factors; and, future UAS applications and perspectives of current users of the NAS. The forum is a result of the Safety Board's investigation into a Predator B unmanned aircraft that crashed near Nogales, AZ, in April 2006. The Board's October 2007 meeting on this accident resulted in 22 safety recommendations to address deficiencies associated with the civilian use of unmanned aircraft. "The Nogales accident surfaced a number of important questions that need to be addressed if UAS's are to operate safely in the National Air Space," said Board Member Kitty Higgins, who will chair the forum. "We are very interested in the military's experience with UAS's, training of pilots, maintenance of the aircraft, communication with Air Traffic Control and oversight of UAS operations by public use agencies and other operators." The forum will include representatives from the military, industry, the
FAA, and government agencies involved in UAS operations.