AIRT Building World’s Largest Air Force of Georeferenced Emergency Response Remote Pilots and Drones
DRONERESPONDERS program will utilize Esri location-based intelligence software to track public safety UAS program development and growth
MIAMI, FL – May 4, 2021 – The Airborne International Response Team (AIRT), the leading 501(c)3 organization supporting Drones For Good™ for emergencies and disaster response – and official home of DRONERESPONDERS, today announced a combined initiative to develop a global, geo-referenced database of public safety unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) programs and emergency response remote pilots.
Unveiled during AUVSI’s XPONENTIAL (Online), the virtual edition of the world’s largest unmanned systems conference, the AIRT project offers two separate tracks for UAS resources to be registered:
Public safety agencies and emergency services organizations who are either developing, or have an active UAS program, can register via teams.droneresponders.org
Individual remote pilots who have the skills and capabilities to respond in complex emergencies should sign up at disasterpilots.org
U.S-based public safety UAS teams and individual remote pilots who register under the AIRT/DRONERSPONDERS program will have the option of requesting inclusion in the Incident Resource Inventory System (IRIS), the inventory resource tool distributed by FEMA and used by emergency managers for identifying potential resources for incident response. IRIS submissions will be pre-qualified to assess whether they meet FEMA sUAS Resource Typing requirements for (1) Unmanned Aircraft Systems Team (2-508-1246) or (2) Technical Specialist – Unmanned Aircraft Systems (2-509-1382).
The project, conducted in direct partnership with Esri, the global market leader in location intelligence, will expand upon work previously started by Brandon Karr, a national sUAS subject matter expert for public safety applications from Pearland, Texas.
In 2020, Karr started the project after identifying the need to map the locations of law enforcement, fire/EMS, industry, non-governmental organizations, and federal programs that could provide mutual assistance to other jurisdictions. Karr has now transferred the project over to DRONERESPONDERS, where he will serve as the project manager overseeing the initiative. Jeff Alexander, a GIS Specialist from Pearland will assist Karr in expanding the public safety UAS program mapping project on a larger scale.
“There is an incredible need for a comprehensive geo-referenced directory of public safety drone programs to help facilitate information sharing, training, and mutual assistance,” said Karr. “Working with AIRT, DRONERESPONDERS, and the Esri public safety team will help us increase the reach of this initiative around the globe.”
Karr says the ability of GIS to capture, analyze and display data makes it an ideal platform for identifying where public safety drone programs are located, and which geographic locations they can service. But not every public safety agency has an active drone program, and those that do may not always have resources available for deployment. For that reason, AIRT is simultaneously launching a second initiative that will identify the location of individual remote pilots who possess the ability to respond to emergencies and disasters.
“DRONERESPONDERS will mark the home base and capabilities of the public safety UAS teams, and our AIRT GIS team will track the location of individual remote pilots with the proper experience and equipment to assist during emergencies,” said Christopher Todd, Executive Director, AIRT. “Within a few months, I expect we should have a database highlighting the World’s Largest Air Force® of geo-referenced, unmanned aviation assets for emergency response operations.”
The organization will soon deploy Esri ArcGIS Dashboards and geo-referenced ArcGIS StoryMaps that illustrate the quantity and location of registered emergency drone assets around the world. Todd credits the close working relationship that AIRT and DRONERESPONDERS have developed with the Esri Partner and Public Safety teams for enabling the expansion of Karr and Alexander’s original project, along with the rapid deployment of the new remote pilot tracking component that AIRT is launching.
DRONERESPONDERS also worked with interns on loan from the NASA Ames Research Institute to help transition the project. AIRT coordinated with the National Alliance for Public Safety GIS (NAPSG) on how best to integrate the UAS resource component into FEMA’s IRIS.
“This initiative is a combined team effort to make positive impacts and ultimately save lives,” said Todd. “We invite other partners to join this project and help us illustrate the true potential of Drones For Good™ on a global scale.”
About AIRT
AIRT® (Airborne International Response Team) is a Miami, Florida-based 501(c)3 non-profit organization that facilitates Drones For Good™ for complex emergencies and major disasters. AIRT is the official home of DRONERESPONDERS, the world’s fastest growing non-profit program supporting public safety UAS. Our global remote pilot network is ready to #getup whenever disaster strikes. For more information, visit: http://airt.ngo or http://droneresponders.org