Lack of Training, Certification Standards Ranked Top Challenge Facing Public Safety Drone Operations11/5/2019 New, double-vetted research from DRONERESPONDERS names top challenges for drones, safety and first responders while also exploring commercial UAS vendor landscape MIAMI, FL – The lack of standardized training and certification is the top challenges for drones and public safety drone operations, according to DRONERESPONDERS – the world’s fastest growing non-profit organization supporting public safety UAS. The determination stems from a double-validated research initiative based on survey data, as well as live focus group feedback conducted during last week’s U.S. Public Safety UAS Summit held at Commercial UAV Expo Americas in Las Vegas. Released on Monday, the new DRONERESPONDERS report Commercial Vendors and the Public Safety UAS Sector highlights the top five most important issues affecting the public safety drone sector as: airspace authorizations and COA’s; beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) operations, training; standards, procedures and certifications; and program budgeting. These findings were based on the DRONERESPONDERS Public Safety UAS Survey conducted between August 25 and September 16, 2019. DRONERESPONDERS then conducted focus group testing with attendees of the U.S. Public Safety UAS Summit to additionally validate the research findings. These results pointed to the lack of UAS training and certification standards as being the most pressing issue facing first responders operating drones. Rounding out the top five were: tactical BVLOS waivers; public outreach and education of drone operations; budgeting and grant funding; and data management. “Up until now there has been widespread speculation that the lack of standards surrounding drone training and operating certification could be impacting the progression of public safety UAS programs,” says Chief Charles Werner (ret.), Director of DRONERESPONDERS. “We now have double-validated research that proves that hypothesis.” Werner says that without formalized standards, the UAS training and certification landscape is like a “patchwork quilt of home-grown training solutions” which threatens the ability of public safety agencies to build consistent operating practices between jurisdictions. Gene Robinson, a Texas-based drone search and rescue subject matter expert, agrees. “The end result is that you might have drone teams from two separate agencies, trained in two entirely different protocols, showing up and trying to operate together at an incident scene,” claims Robinson. “Without common standards, flight operations can become extremely difficult while threatening to create a potentially unproductive and unsafe environment.” Other key findings from the Commercial Vendors and the Public Safety UAS Sector report include:
“The DRONERESPONDERS public safety UAS summit really illustrated how far law enforcement, fire service, and other first responders have come in adopting unmanned aerial systems for a wide variety of missions,” said Robinson. “DRONERESPONDERS has set a new standard on what a public safety drone conference should be.” To download a complimentary copy of the DRONERESPONDERS Commercial Vendors and the Public Safety UAS Sector report, visit: http://research.droneresponders.org About DRONERESPONDERS Public Safety Alliance DRONERESPONDERS is the world’s fastest growing non-profit program supporting public safety UAS. The DRONERESPONDERS mission is to facilitate preparedness, response and resilience using unmanned aircraft systems and related technologies operated by public safety, emergency management, and non-governmental volunteer organizations around the world. The DRONERESPONDERS Public Safety Alliance is a 501(c)3 non-profit operating program of AIRT, Inc. For more information on DRONERESPONDERS, please visit: http://droneresponders.org
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