- | Is Your State Ready for Drone Commerce? The 2022 State-by-State Scorecard Is Your State Ready for Drone Commerce? The 2022 State-by-State Scorecard
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24 (Tied) | Wyoming
Score: 38/100
- Airspace Lease Law: 0/30
- Avigation Easement Law: 25/25
- Task Force or Program Office: 0/20
- Law Vesting Landowners with Air Rights: 10/10
- Sandbox: 0/10
- Jobs Estimate: 3/5
Factors Helping the State Score
- Avigation Easement Law: Wyoming law creates an avigation easement, which means drone operators are protected from nuisance and trespass laws as long as their drones do not disturb people on the ground.
- Law Vesting Landowners with Air Rights: Wyoming law expressly provides air rights to landowners, which reduces litigation risk for drone operators because landowners know the extent of their property rights.
- Jobs Estimate: Wyoming is in the middle quintile when it comes to the number of drone-related jobs per 100,000 people, receiving three out of five points.
Factors Hindering the State Score
- Airspace Lease Law: Wyoming law does not allow public authorities to lease low-altitude airspace above state and local roads. An airspace lease law would allow state or local officials to create drone highways above these roadways.
- Task Force or Program Office: State leaders should consider convening a statewide drone task force or creating a drone program office within the transportation department.
- Sandbox: Wyoming does not have a drone sandbox. State officials should consider dedicating state facilities and airspace to commercial drone testing and should have a prominent, open invitation for drone companies to test their hardware and services.
These factors make Wyoming tied (with Colorado) for the 24th most drone-friendly state in the country.