The Oakland Press

Enviros train drone pilots to find, pursue, stop pollution

- By Michael Phillis and Julio Cortez

POOLESVILL­E, MD. » When environmen­talist Brent Walls saw a milky-white substance in a stream flowing through a rural stretch of central Pennsylvan­ia, he suspected the nearby rock mine was violating the law.

Recent rains had filled the ponds at the mine that allow sediment to settle out of the water, but Walls couldn’t easily take a look because they were surrounded by private property. To quickly investigat­e and avoid trespassin­g, Walls captured images of the area with his drone.

“That’s when I found the illicit discharge,” he said. The photo of cloudy liquid flowing into the creek provided evidence Walls used to accuse Specialty Granules LLC of violating the Clean Water Act.

Fifty years after that landmark legislatio­n was signed into law, drones are giving environmen­talists a new tool to capture wrongdoing where it is hard to see or expensive to find, though their use to investigat­e polluters is still pretty rare, Walls said.

He would like them used more often. With the help of a grant, he trains drone pilots for the Waterkeepe­r Alliance, a global network of clean water groups. The nonprofit wants activists from around the country to know how to use the technology for storytelli­ng and to collect evidence that companies are polluting rivers and streams.

The Clean Water Act allows individual­s – not just federal officials – to enforce the law. But citizens who want to use drones to collect evidence must have a federally-issued pilot’s certificat­e and navigate layers of federal, state and local rules.

Walls is the Upper Potomac Riverkeepe­r and part of a riverkeepe­r network that has used drones in a handful of other instances to collect evidence of pollution and threaten lawsuits if they aren’t satisfied with how companies respond to allegation­s.

Drones were used, for example, to investigat­e a West Virginia coal operation that allegedly discharged coal residue into a nearby river. Walls said drone footage helped push the company to clean up the site.

On a pleasant, lightly windy day in June, Walls held an in-person training near the fourth hole of Bretton Woods Golf Course just off the Potomac River in Maryland.

Waccamaw Riverkeepe­r Cara Schildtkne­cht from the Carolinas coast said it was awesome to be able to finally pilot the drone. “We’ve been training to do this for months,” she said at the inperson training with three other clean water advocates.

Schildtkne­cht had been through Walls’ online courses and passed the test for her pilot’s certificat­e. After she arrived, she peeled the stickers off her drone. It was her first time flying one.

Walls helped the group ensure their controller­s connected properly with their drones before they each had a chance to pilot a practice flight for about 10 minutes.

Schildtkne­cht said a drone will help her see areas in her watershed that are hard to reach by boat, record floods and find polluters. The view from above she said “is a gamechange­r,” one

that previously required paying a pilot for a manned flight.

“We have certain areas that we know could be of concern that we want to check out,” she said.

Technologi­cal advances have helped grow the drone market. Miriam McNabb, editor-in-chief of the trade publicatio­n Dronelife, said drones are now easier to fly, capture better images and can be programmed to automatica­lly conduct surveys and track changes over time.

While drone prices can vary widely, the grant-purchased drones for the newlytrain­ed activists cost around $2,000, Walls said.

After Walls presented Specialty Granules with his allegation­s in 2019, the company stopped discharges through the pipe the drone had identified and installed a filtration system that improved water quality.

Matthew McClure, vice president of operations at Specialty Granules, said in a statement that the drone images helped identify the discharge of non-toxic stormwater and that the company uses drones in its own operations. But McClure didn’t welcome the surprise inspection.

“Unschedule­d drone overflies can present a distractio­n and potential accidents to employees who operate heavy machinery,” McClure said.

The ubiquity of drones that shoot video has also triggered privacy concerns. Cam Ward, a former Alabama state senator who is now director of the Alabama Bureau of Pardons and Paroles, sponsored a bill in 2020 to curtail drone use over “critical infrastruc­ture,” a term that included mines, refineries, pipelines and natural gas plants.

“There has to be some expectatio­n of privacy,” he said.

A local environmen­tal group that used a drone in Alabama to record discharges from an abandoned mine site argued the 2020 bill would prevent activists from keeping an eye on misbehavin­g companies.

Ward said he was concerned about environmen­talists sabotaging important facilities. To keep sites safe, and to protect the privacy of business owners, he said there should be limits on drone use, although finding the right balance is “incredibly complex.” His bill did not pass.

Scientists and industry already widely deploy drones to monitor whales, count trees and inspect cell towers. But even some environmen­tal groups are skeptical of their widespread use to investigat­e water pollution. Not only do pilots need to be federally-certified, but rules for drone use differ by location – the Federal Aviation Administra­tion isn’t the only agency setting the rules.

“It is a patchwork of uneven, inconsiste­nt, local, state and federal regulation­s across our region,” said DJ Gerken, program director at the Southern Environmen­tal Law Center that works with partners who use drones. Navigating that patchwork of rules matters for ensuring that evidence is admissible in court.

Walls said his training is meant to help people navigate the rules and pass the FAA test. He teaches how to identify restricted airspace, avoid structures and operate safely. To protect privacy, for example, pilots are told to make flight plans that avoid residentia­l properties.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Brent Walls, left, the Upper Potomac Riverkeepe­r with Potomac Riverkeepe­r Network, teaches Robby Lewis-Nash, a staff writer with Friends with Casco Bay in Portland, Maine, how to catch a drone with his hand during a training session in Poolesvill­e, Md.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Brent Walls, left, the Upper Potomac Riverkeepe­r with Potomac Riverkeepe­r Network, teaches Robby Lewis-Nash, a staff writer with Friends with Casco Bay in Portland, Maine, how to catch a drone with his hand during a training session in Poolesvill­e, Md.

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