Porterville Recorder

Program aims to cut down on drone intrusions over fires

Access to realtime fire location mapping given drone operators

- THE RECORDER recorder@portervill­erecorder.com

WASHINGTON — Building on recent initiative­s to prevent privately operated Unmanned Aircraft Systems (drones) from interferin­g with federal, state, and local wildland fire-fighting activity, the Department of the Interior announced Friday it was expanding and enhancing its wildfire location data-sharing program for 2017. The new service being offered is called “Current Wildland Fires” and is accessible through the Geoplatfor­m ARCGIS Online Organizati­on.

WASHINGTON — Building on recent initiative­s to prevent privately operated Unmanned Aircraft Systems (drones) from interferin­g with federal, state, and local wildland fire-fighting activity, the Department of the Interior announced Friday it was expanding and enhancing its wildfire location data-sharing program for 2017. The new service being offered is called “Current Wildland Fires” and is accessible through the Geoplatfor­m ARCGIS Online Organizati­on.

“By providing greater public access to a wider array of wildland fire location data, drone operators will Know Where Not To Go in near real-time,” said Mark Bathrick, director of Interior’s Office of Aviation Services. “As the 2017 wildland fire season gets underway, this improved service should greatly reduce the incidents of drone incursions on wildfires and enhance the safety of our firefighte­rs and the communitie­s they work so hard to protect.”

The 2017 program provides location data on any wildland fire reported in the last eight days, compared to last year, when the service only offered informatio­n on wildfires reported within the previous 72 hours. The 2016 program included wildland fires reported by Interior, the U.S. Forest Service, and two states, Alaska and Texas. This year’s program includes the addition of Wyoming, North Dakota, and Los Angeles County. The program plans to increase coverage to include more federal, state and local reported wildland fires.

On average, more than 73,000 wildfires are reported across the United States each year. About 98 percent of these fires are contained within the first 24 hours, before incident managers request the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to issue a Temporary Flight Restrictio­n. That meant that most of these fires were never plotted on dynamic aeronautic­al maps or available to drone operators before Interior launched its 2016 initiative to make fire location data available to commercial mapping services that support drone operations.

The wildfire location data-sharing initiative addresses a growing problem of private drone incursions over wildland fires. From 2014 to 2015, the number of intrusions over or near wildfires increased from two to more than 12. In 2016, there were 42 reported drone incursions on wildfires. Fire suppressio­n aviators were forced to take evasive actions to avoid disastrous collisions with drones on several occasions. Twelve incidents of drone intrusions forced fire suppressio­n managers to either delay or cease aerial support to firefighte­rs, placing their lives and the communitie­s they strive to protect, in greater danger.

In response, federal agencies instituted a number of initiative­s to address this critical public and firefighte­r safety issue. In 2015, Interior, working with partners at the Federal Aviation Administra­tion and the U.S. Forest Service, adopted a three prong-approach — to enhance public awareness, establish notificati­on protocols, and enforce penalties when violations occur.

To use the new expanded service, drone operators can create an account on the Geoplatfor­m ARCGIS Online Organizati­on at https://idp.geoplatfor­m.gov/registerus­er.html. After the account is created go to: https://geoplatfor­m.maps.arcgis.com/home/index.html and sign in using the Geoplatfor­m.gov account, then search for the group “Current Wildland Fires” and request to “Join this group” to gain access to wildland fire location data.

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