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Oregon | 2023 State Drone Scorecard
Oregon ranks 30th in its readiness for commercial drone services
Rank: 30 (tied)
Oregon tied with West Virginia for 30th place in the 2023 State Drone Commerce Scorecard rankings. The state scored 35 out of 100 possible points in how prepared it is for commercial drone services.
The Six Factors Contributing to the Overall Score
A Score in Gray Indicates a Score Below the Median of All States
30 / 30
Airspace Lease Law
Oregon law allows public authorities to lease airspace above state and local roads, which allows state or local officials to create drone highways above these roadways.
0 / 25
Avigation Easement Law
Oregon law does not create an avigation easement, which means drone operators may be subject to nuisance and trespass laws, even if their drones do not disturb people on the ground.
0 / 20
Task Force or Program Office
State leaders should consider convening a statewide drone task force or creating a drone program office.
0 / 10
Sandbox
Oregon does not have a drone sandbox. State officials should consider dedicating state facilities and airspace to commercial drone testing.
0 / 10
Law Vesting Landowners with Air Rights
Oregon law does not expressly provide air rights to landowners, which raises litigation risk for drone operators.
5 / 5
Jobs Estimate
Oregon is in the top quintile when it comes to the number of drone-related jobs per 100,000 people.
How Oregon Scored Relative to Its Peers
Commercial drone-readiness scores vary across the nation. To give state leaders and residents insight into how their state compares, we have provided the scores of four state peers. In this case, these peers are selected because of their geographic and political similarities.