Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Drone joins team to monitor district

Conservati­on area is 1st to have one

- THOMAS SACCENTE

FORT SMITH — The Sebastian County Conservati­on District has a new asset that sets it apart from its counterpar­ts throughout the state: a drone.

The district acquired the drone earlier this year. Debbie Moreland, program administra­tor for the Arkansas Associatio­n of Conservati­on Districts, said the district is the only one she is aware of in Arkansas with a drone, trained and licensed people to use it, and is able to implement some of the associatio­n’s conservati­on practices.

Conaly Bedell, finance chairman for the Sebastian County Conservati­on District Board of Directors, said the district, which serves Sebastian, Crawford and Scott counties, will be able to provide a level of informatio­n that will help people make better decisions about conservati­on with the drone.

The district’s first project that utilized it took place Sept. 19 in Scott County, where the district completed a certificat­ion for a spray project to kill scrub brush and unwanted vegetation in a forest area, Bedell said.

“In the past, the soil conservati­on technician would’ve had to walk the 70 acres, would’ve taken three or four hours,” Bedell said. “We completed the entire process in 20 minutes.”

Karen Brazzeal, marketing

director for the district, said it acquired the DJI Inspire 2 Series drone Aug. 6. In addition to taking pictures, the drone can shoot 5.2K video at 30 frames per second and 4K video at 60 frames per second. It also comes with autonomous flight mapping software to allow technician­s to “live map” and create 3D maps for entire parcels of land. Among the types of projects the drone can be used for are streambank and watershed projects, dam inspection­s, forestry, pasture and forage surveys, and damage assessment­s.

The district’s new drone can also be used to market and promote its various projects, and it will be available for other conservati­on districts as well.

Bedell said he believes the Sebastian County district will get requests to carry out projects outside of its service area as other districts in the state learn about what it can do with its drone.

“In the state of Arkansas, which is hugely agricultur­al, that being the number one economic source ahead of tourism even, we have a diverse kind of agricultur­e,” Bedell said. “In the east part of the state, you’ve got all kinds of water management issues, you’ve got the large row crop farms, you’ve got wildlife management areas, and they have needs that would be different to what we have here where the drone would be highly applicable.”

Bedell said that the board and district staff began evaluating what a drone could do to enhance the district’s nutriment management planning in February. By May, the board discussed potential values with partner agencies in Little Rock, and then it decided to move forward. The board included the drone in the budget for the fiscal year that began July 1.

The district has spent a total of $19,649 so far on its drone project, Bedell said. Of this amount, $9,489 has been spent on “hard costs,” such as purchasing equipment, tuition for training, Federal Aviation Administra­tion and software licensing and a supply of rechargabl­e batteries to enable 90 minutes of flight for the drone at one time.

The remaining $10,160 has gone toward “soft costs,” Bedell said. This includes giving time for two conservati­on district employees, Harrison Sears and William Baggett, to research drone applicatio­ns, equipment and performanc­e specificat­ions, as well as time for acquiring the equipment, pilot training, licensing and test flights.

Sears and Baggett received the necessary certificat­ion to pilot the drone July 1, Brazzeal said, becoming licensed FAA commercial pilots with Part 107 certificat­ion. Sears is the district’s water quality technician while Baggett is its conservati­on technical assistant.

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