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SECTION 1. The legislature notes that Act 74, Session Laws of Hawaii 2020, established, among other things, the class C felony offense of manufacturing, purchasing, or obtaining firearm parts to assemble a firearm having no serial number. This offense is now codified in section 134-10.2, Hawaii Revised Statutes. However, according to law enforcement agencies, persons found to be in possession of firearms having no serial number, which are also known as 'ghost guns' because they are untraceable, claim that their actions do not violate the law because the parts used to assemble the firearm were acquired prior to the September 15, 2020, effective date of section 134‑10.2, Hawaii Revised Statutes.

Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to:

(1)Amend the offense of manufacturing, purchasing, or obtaining firearm parts to assemble a firearm having no serial number to also prohibit possession of those firearm parts; and

(2)Amend Act 74, Session Laws of Hawaii 2020, to repeal language that specified the prospective application of that Act.

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SECTION 2.Section 134-10.2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:

'(a)A person who is not licensed to manufacture a firearm under section 134-31, or who is not a dealer licensed by the United States Department of Justice, shall not, for the purpose of assembling a firearm, possess, purchase, produce with a three-dimensional printer, or otherwise obtain separately, or as part of a kit:

(1)A firearm receiver that is not imprinted with a serial number registered with a federally licensed manufacturer;

(2)A firearm receiver that has not been provided a serial number that may be registered in accordance with section 134-3(c); or

(3)Any combination of parts from which a firearm having no serial number may be readily assembled; provided that the parts do not have the capacity to function as a firearm unless assembled.'

SECTION 3.Act 74, Session Laws of Hawaii 2020, is amended by repealing section 6.

['SECTION 6.This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.']

SECTION 4.Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken.New statutory material is underscored.

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SECTION 5.This Act, upon its approval, shall take effect retroactive to September 15, 2020.

INTRODUCED BY:

_____________________________

UAS Remote Identification

Drones or unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) are fundamentally changing aviation, and the FAA is committed to working to fully integrate drones into the National Airspace System (NAS). Safety and security are top priorities for the FAA and remote identification (remote ID) of drones is crucial to our integration efforts.

What is Remote ID?

Remote ID is the ability of a drone in flight to provide identification and location information that can be received by other parties.

Why Do We Need Remote ID?

Remote ID helps the FAA, law enforcement, and other federal agencies find the control station when a drone appears to be flying in an unsafe manner or where it is not allowed to fly. Remote ID also lays the foundation of the safety and security groundwork needed for more complex drone operations.

Final Rule on Remote ID

The final rule on remote ID will require most drones operating in US airspace to have remote ID capability. Remote ID will provide information about drones in flight, such as the identity, location, and altitude of the drone and its control station or take-off location. Authorized individuals from public safety organizations may request identity of the drone's owner from the FAA.

The FAA's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) on Remote Identification of Unmanned Aircraft Systems was published on December 31, 2019. The FAA received over 53,000 comments on the NPRM during the 60-day comment period following publication. The FAA reviewed all of the comments and considered them when writing the final rule. The final rule(PDF) was published in the Federal Register on January 15, 2021. Corrections made to the rule and published in the Federal Register on March 10, 2021 delayed the effective date to April 21, 2021.

There are three ways drone pilots can meet the identification requirements of the remote ID rule:

  • Operate a Standard Remote ID Drone(PDF) that broadcasts identification and location information of the drone and control station. A standard remote ID drone is one that is produced with built-in remote ID broadcast capabilities.
  • Operate a drone with a remote ID broadcast module(PDF) giving the drone's identification, location, and take-off information. A broadcast module is a device that can be attached to a drone, or a feature (such as a software upgrade) integrated with the drone. Persons operating a drone with a remote ID broadcast module must be able to see their drone at all times during flight.
  • Operate (without remote ID equipment)(PDF) at FAA-recognized identification areas (FRIAs) sponsored by community-based organizations or schools. FRIAs are the only locations unmanned aircraft (drones and radio-controlled airplanes) may operate without broadcasting remote ID message elements.

Drone Remote Identification

Standard Remote
ID Drones

Drone Broadcasts Remote ID
Info. Via Radio Frequency.
e.g. Wifi & Bluetooth

  • Remote ID capability is built into the drone
  • From takeoff to shutdown, drone broadcasts:
    • Drone ID
    • Drone location and altitude
    • Drone velocity
    • Control station location and elevation
    • Time mark
    • Emergency status

Drone Remote Identification

Drones With Remote ID
Broadcast Module

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Drone Broadcasts Remote ID
Info. Via Radio Frequency.
e.g. Wifi & Bluetooth

  • Remote ID capability through module attached to drone
  • Limited to visual line of sight operations
  • From takeoff to shutdown, drone broadcasts:
    • Drone ID
    • Drone location and altitude
    • Drone velocity
    • Takeoff location and elevation
    • Time mark

FAA-Recognized Identification Area (FRIA)

Drones Without Remote ID

  • Drones without Remote ID can operate without broadcasting
  • Drones without Remote ID must operate within visual line of sight and within the FRIA
  • Anyone can fly there, but FRIAs can only be requested by community-based organizations and educational institutions

Following public comments and technical challenges, the FAA decided to eliminate the NPRM 'Limited Remote Identification UAS' category to transmit remote ID messages through an internet connection to a third-party service provider remote ID UAS Service Supplier. This option has been replaced by the remote ID broadcast module option that allows for retrofit of existing drones.

Changes From the NPRM

In addition to elimination of the Limited Remote Identification UAS category and creation of the remote ID broadcast module, other changes from the NPRM to the final rule include:

  • Compliance dates –
    • The compliance date for manufacturers was reduced from 24 months to 18 months after the rule's original effective date (March 16, 2021). See below for details.
    • The compliance date for operators was shortened from 36 months to 30 months after the rule's original effective date (March 16, 2021). See below for details.
  • Registration – Under the NPRM, recreational flyers had to have a unique registration number for each of their aircraft. Under the final rule, recreational flyers may continue to register once and apply that unique registration number to multiple aircraft. See below for details.

Changes From the NPRM for FRIAS

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Another set of changes from the NPRM applies to FRIAs. After the operational compliance date (September 16, 2023), FRIAs are the only locations where someone may fly an unmanned aircraft (drone or model airplane) without remote ID capability. The chart below provides some examples of changes from the NPRM to the final rule. For more information, visit the FRIA page.

FRIAsNPRMFinal Rule
Who can request to establish a FRIA?Only FAA-recognized Community-Based Organizations (CBOs)CBOs, educational institutions
When can someone apply for a FRIA?12-month period beginning on rule effective dateNo deadline to apply; applications starting 20 months after rule publication date (January 15, 2021)
Where can a FRIA be established?Locations based on 4 criteria in NPRM 89.215Updated criteria (similar to proposed criteria) in 89.215

Effective Dates

Most of the final rule on remote identification becomes effective on April 21, 2021.

Next, there are compliance dates:

  • September 16, 2022:
    • Manufacturers and producers of UAS must comply with the final rule's requirements for them.
  • September 16, 2023:
    • Commercial and recreational UAS drone pilots must meet one of the three ways to comply with the rule when flying their drone.

Which Drone Pilots Must Comply With the Rule?

All drone pilots required to register, including those who fly for fun, for business, or for public safety, must operate their drone in accordance with the final rule on remote ID beginning September 16, 2023, which gives drone owners sufficient time to upgrade their aircraft.

Registering Drones

Another change from the NPRM concerns registration of drones. Under the NPRM, recreational drone pilots had to obtain a unique registration number for each of their aircraft.

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Under the final rule, recreational drone pilots may register once and apply that unique registration number to multiple aircraft. During registration, they have to list the serial number of any Standard Remote ID Unmanned Aircraft (including drones and model aircraft) they register. If they use a remote ID broadcast module, the module's serial number must be listed on their registration which will permit them to move the module from unmanned aircraft to unmanned aircraft so long as the unmanned aircraft are on the same registration number.

What Information Will be Broadcast?

Whether using a Standard Remote ID Drone or a remote ID broadcast module, nearly all of the message elements are the same and they must be broadcast from take-off to shutdown.

A Standard Remote ID Drone must broadcast the following message elements:

  • A unique identifier for the drone. Operators of a Standard Remote ID Drone may choose whether to use the drone's serial number or a session ID (an alternative form of identification discussed below that provides additional privacy to the operator) as the unique identifier;
  • An indication of the drone's latitude, longitude, geometric altitude, and velocity;
  • An indication of the control station's latitude, longitude, and geometric altitude;
  • A time mark; and
  • An emergency status indication.

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A drone with a remote ID broadcast module must broadcast the following message elements:

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  • The serial number of the broadcast module;
  • An indication of the drone's latitude, longitude, geometric altitude, and velocity;
  • An indication of the latitude, longitude, and geometric altitude of the drone's take-off location; and
  • A time mark.

Again, the deadline for operational compliance is September 16, 2023.

Session ID

As mentioned above, operators of Standard Remote ID Drones are free to choose between broadcasting their drone's serial number or a session ID. Note: some Standard Remote ID Drones may not offer the session ID option. The session ID will be uniquely identifiable such that law enforcement and the FAA can correlate each session ID to a specific drone's serial number, but this ability will not be publicly available.

The FAA is developing a strategy for assignment of session ID to drone pilots and will consider existing policies when developing the session ID policy. In addition, the FAA will seek public comment on the session ID policy prior to finalizing it.

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