Texas Government Code Chapter 423 preempts local commercial drone rules and FAA Part 107 governs commercial flight nationwide. Texas cities cannot require their own drone permits or fees for Part 107 operators delivering or surveying.
Commercial drone operations in Texas are dual-regulated. The FAA's 14 CFR Part 107 requires a Remote Pilot Certificate, registration, Remote ID, and adherence to airspace rules including LAANC authorizations near airports. On top of federal rules, Texas Government Code Chapter 423 preempts most local regulation while creating state offenses for unlawful surveillance, flight over correctional facilities, and operations near critical infrastructure. Section 423.009 prevents cities from imposing their own permitting schemes on commercial drone work. Cities retain limited authority to manage takeoff and landing on city-owned land and to enforce trespass, noise, and reckless-conduct laws of general applicability.
FAA violations include civil penalties up to $32,666 per violation. Texas surveillance offenses are Class B/A misdemeanors and capital-infrastructure offenses can be state-jail felonies.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Mission, TX
Mission Code Chapter 42, Article VI governs noise. Quiet hours generally enforced in the evenings and early mornings. Violations are Class C misdemeanors wit...
Mission, TX
Aircraft noise is federally regulated. Mission is in the Rio Grande Valley near McAllen-Miller International Airport. Local ordinances cannot override FAA au...
Mission, TX
Persistent barking is a nuisance violation under Mission's noise and animal ordinances. Officers may issue warnings before citations.
Mission, TX
Construction noise in Mission is governed by Chapter 42, Article VI. Standard South Texas practice allows construction during daytime hours. Verify current h...
Mission, TX
RV and boat storage is regulated under Mission's zoning code. Street parking of oversized vehicles may be time-limited. Verify with Mission Planning & Zoning.
Mission, TX
Abandoned and junked vehicles are regulated under TX Transportation Code Β§683 and Mission's nuisance ordinances. Inoperable vehicles on public streets are su...
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