Edmonton Journal

DRONE TO DELIVER VIRUS SUPPLIES TO FIRST NATION

- SALMAAN FAROOQUI

GEORGINA, ONT. • An Ontario First Nation is turning to a drone delivery company for contact-free shipments of protective equipment and testing supplies in an effort to bolster enhanced protection­s against the COVID-19 pandemic.

Drone Delivery Canada, a company based in Vaughan, Ont., will initially make small shipments of roughly 4.5 kilograms at a time to Georgina Island First Nation in Lake Simcoe during a pilot project funded by the federal government.

The company also has the ability to send packages of about 180 kilograms in larger unmanned aircraft if needed.

William Mccue, a councillor with the First Nation, says their community has upheld lockdown rules for longer than the rest of the province, and the use of drones will help supplies continue to roll in while people stay isolated.

“At the beginning of the pandemic we had a total lockdown of the community,” said Mccue. “We tend to wait maybe three weeks or more before we go into the various phases that the province implements.”

With the drone delivery system set to begin in the coming weeks, Mccue said his community is in a better position to handle a second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Even though Georgina Island is relatively close to multiple urban centres, Mccue says the logistics of ferrying in supplies mean it can take a week for protective supplies to ship to his community.

Shipments can be further delayed by rough waters or inclement weather during harsh winters.

Michael Zahra, CEO of Drone Delivery Canada, said his company found multiple opportunit­ies to get involved with pandemic responses after COVID-19 first became a worldwide crisis.

“First Nations communitie­s and remote communitie­s have always been one of the markets that we’ve been addressing since day one,” said Zahra. “With the pandemic, we had a significan­t increase in inbound inquiries from First Nations communitie­s and in health care ... like hospitals, labs and senior homes.”

Drone Delivery Canada is also setting up a similar service for the Beausoleil First Nation in the Georgian Bay, and has previously delivered health-care products for a logistics firm out of Milton, Ont.

Unmanned aircraft have been used as a tool to respond to the pandemic around the world. In Dubai, drones have been used to spray disinfecta­nt on streets.

And in multiple Asian and European nations, drones have been used to monitor whether citizens are complying with social distancing.

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