Albrecht leading effort to open doors for drone use by emergency responders

marcalbrecht

By JOSH MOODY Hub Staff Writer

KEARNEY — Grounded — that’s where professors at the University of Nebraska at Kearney find their research into unmanned aerial vehicles.

“What we’re proposing is to create a system of drone use and drone training by emergency responders in Nebraska,” UNK biology professor Marc Albrecht said. Federal Aviation Association regulations are keeping UNK’s three drones on the ground.

Better known as drones, unmanned aerial vehicles, are being used in agriculture, construction, weather prediction, warfare and in other ways.

One way that Albrecht sees drones being used in the future is by first responders in emergency management situations. Albrecht said drones could be used to examine fires, floods and other dangerous situations.

The proposed training would take place at UNK’s Nebraska Safety Center, which offers training classes and certification courses for specialized licenses.

Albrecht said that the training would be a complete package, teaching the hardware, software and regulations guiding the use of drones.

“A private citizen may not be worried about flying a drone legally, especially if they’re on their land. But if you’re an emergency responder, you are going to be flying over other people’s property, potentially in dangerous situations, and there’s going to be people around probably, if not equipment and power lines. So, you actually have to be more aware of the regulations than just a hobbyist or even a rancher on his own land,” Albrecht said.

UNK’s drones — a DJI Phantom 3, a DJI Inspire and a 3DRobotics Solo — were purchased along with other support equipment with an $18,624 research grant.

“The FAA regulations are changing very rapidly. They’re changing as to where and when and how you can use drones all the time,” Albrecht said.

Terry Gibbs, director of UNK’s aviation systems management program, also is part of the research team and is lending his expertise on FAA regulations.

“What I’m doing primarily is helping individuals — faculty members and (the University of Nebraska) systemwide — navigate how to use this tool legally,” Gibbs said. He is working with the university to determine and mitigate risks in drone operations.

“I believe there is a tremendous amount of potential,” Gibbs said. “I don’t think it’s going to take away from manned aviation. I think it’s going to add another layer of aviation and just change the whole paradigm of how we do things. I’d like to be part of discovering that process.”

Though operating drones for university research is not permitted by the FAA, Albrecht said the research project will continue with the goal of establishing a training system for emergency responders. However, the researchers won’t have a chance to learn hands-on with the equipment.

“These are certainly interesting devices. They certainly open up new possibilities for research. They are being used today by agencies and by people, so it’s a little frustrating to physically have them and not be able to do that. But it doesn’t stop our effort. It doesn’t halt it,” Albrecht said.

Gibbs said the FAA’s primary concern about drones is to protect manned aircraft pilots from danger caused by drones.

He is concerned for the safety of pilots in the agricultural industry — an area in which drones are beginning to creep into.

“When people are putting these things up over their fields — I believe it’s a valid use, but remember, I want to caution them that where these things (drones) are flying is exactly where the ag pilots are flying,” Gibbs said.

Gibbs said while the collision between a drone and an airplane would likely cause minimal damage, a startled pilot could lose control in air.

“What will a 5-pound drone do to an airplane? Probably not a lot. But in the event of the ag person who’s flying along at 15-20 feet off the ground at 140 knots and he sees this thing all of a sudden pop up, what is his reaction going to be?”

Though barred from operating drones, the research into providing a training system for emergency personnel continues.

“It’s a little disappointing because I would like to work with them. They seem like an interesting tool. But these things happen. I guess that’s part of the price of trying the new tools and trying to keep up with the times. Sometimes, as a person who is working in an institution, you have to wait for legal frameworks and regulation to catch up,” Albrecht said.

According to Albrecht, the research will likely take one year of learning and preparation and another year for review and implementation.

Drones in the classroom

Another area off-limits to Albrecht is using drones in the classroom.

“I like technology. I think bringing something new to the classroom is engaging for students,” he said. “I had hoped to use drones in teaching, simply to keep up with the technology, interest students and introduce them to this new tool.”

As a biologist and ecologist, Albrecht sees the potential field use for drones.

That potential for drones has been recognized by the U.S. Department of the Interior, the Bureau of Land Management and the United States Geological Service. All use drones for tasks such as mapping remote areas, land management and monitoring wildlife populations.

The Section 333 exemption

One option for researchers is to apply for a Section 333 exemption, which would allow them to operate drones with FAA permission.

The problem, Gibbs said, is that these exemptions are rare.

To date, the FAA has granted 1,008 Section 333 exemptions.

Those exemptions have largely gone to real estate agencies, insurance companies, and organizations conducting aerial photography and videography.

Entities granted exemptions include Amazon.com, BNSF Railway, CNN, Liberty Mutual Insurance, State Farm, Union Pacific Railroad and Yamaha Motor Co. Hobbyists are not required to obtain a Section 333 exemption.

“You as a private citizen, for your own hobbyist use, can go out and fly them around all you want to,” Gibbs said.

The rule-making process

In February, the FAA announced a proposed regulatory framework for drones less than 55 pounds. Rules for larger drones will be considered in the future.

Following the proposal, the FAA accepted public comments for 60 days. The comment period ended in April, and the review process continues.

Included in the proposed rules are a number of safety measures designed to keep drones from interfering with manned aircraft in shared airspace.

“This is a transformative technology,” Gibbs said. “The problem is, literally, that the technology is moving faster than the rules.”

Albrecht said it is important that the university be part of the discussion about drone regulations.

“It’s law lagging behind technology,” Albrecht said. “I hope that the FAA and insurance companies allow space for education to get into the mix.”

http://www.kearneyhub.com/unk-today/albrecht-leading-effort-to-open-doors-for-drone-use-by/article_21a87bd8-48ee-11e5-97bb-ff2a99cd06a6.html

Drone Flies Over Brooklyn in NYC’s First FAA-Approved Launch

By SIMONE WILSON

Aerobo, formerly named Aerocine, is one of the biggest players in the burgeoning U.S. drone industry — but until this Thursday afternoon, the Brooklynites who run it had never been approved by the FAA to fly a drone through home skies.

The drone was launched at 5 p.m. near the company’s offices.

“It was right here in Brooklyn — in Industry City,” Jon Ollwerther, head of communications at Aerobo, says in a brief phone interview on Thursday evening, over the roar of a nearby drone.

In an article on the company’s record-breaking flight, the New York Business Journalcalls Aerobo’s co-founders, NYU alumni Brian Streem and Jeff Brink, “Brooklyn’s Wright brothers.”

From the Journal:

The commercial flight is historic in that the company, Aerobo, is the first to be approved by the Federal Aviation Administration, marking the beginning, in a lot of ways, of a whole new industry.

“Though we have conducted many test flights on this airframe and others in our fleet, today is not a test flight, it is for a commercial client,” wrote Jon Ollwerther, vice president of marketing and operations, in an email today to the New York Business Journal. He called commercial drones a potential $20 billion industry.

The drone that Aerobo sent up on Thursday is an Aerobo X8 (approved by the FAA in June) equipped with a camera called RED Epic.

And the ”commercial client” in question is a production company making a film about Brooklyn tech companies, Ollwerther tells Patch.

Aerobo’s drones have completed plenty of FAA-approved flights in other parts of the country, Ollwerther says, but fighting for FAA approval in NYC was another mission entirely.

That’s because drones aren’t allowed fly higher than 200 feet, yet must maintain a 500-foot distance from all buildings (unless building owners give permission) and a five-mile distance from all airports. In a city as tightly packed — and as padded by airports — as NYC, those rules make for a tricky flight path.

But according to Ollwerther, Industry City was perfectly situated, and sufficiently nonresidential, to fit the bill.

Elsewhere in Brooklyn, around exactly the same time as Aerobo’s historic flight, a decidedly less legit drone operation spooked office workers in Brooklyn Heights.

According to the Brooklyn Eagle, a drone was spotted hovering outside 16 Court Street as its on-board camera peeped through office windows on mutiple floors. The drone operator was then reportedly seen “standing on the roof of 189 Montague Street, an office building owned by the Treeline Companies.”

We’ve contacted the FAA about the latter incident, as it appears to break multiple rules in the FAA’s new 2015 guidelines.

In fact, it almost serves as a counter-stunt to Aerobo’s — a ”what not to do” to offset NYC’s first-ever “what to do” in the wild, hard-to-tame arena of personal and commercial drones.

Just one day before, the FAA revealed that pilot sightings of unmanned aircraft (aka, drones) have “increased dramatically over the past year, from a total of 238 sightings in all of 2014, to more than 650 by August 9 of this year.”

http://patch.com/new-york/windsorterrace/drone-flies-over-brooklyn-nycs-first-faa-approved-launch