Westside Eagle-Observer

Students get bird’s-eye view of drone technology

- STAFF REPORT

Lt. Michael Toland, of the Harrison Police Department, visited the Gentry Middle School and High School on Friday morning to show the robotics students the drones the Harrison Police Department uses for special operations, crime scene processing, and traffic accident photograph­y.

One of the drones demonstrat­ed has a price tag of just over $30,000. Lt. Toland says the drone is equipped with state-ofthe-art optics and an infrared vision “heat-seeking” camera. It has a flight time of approximat­ely 40 to 45 minutes and can fly a distance of approximat­ely 9 miles, according to the manufactur­er. Lt. Toland attended drone pilot school and had to test for a drone pilot license.

Commercial drones were approved for use in the U.S. in 2015 and are expected to create 100,000 new jobs by 2025, adding $13.7 billion to the American economy.

Just last week, Walmart announced the exploratio­n of on-demand delivery by announcing a new pilot with Flytrex, an end-to-end drone delivery company.

Gentry robotics teacher Jordan Toland says, “The future is here. My goal is to expose Gentry students to the world of robotics and technology already in use commercial­ly and maybe prepare them for a career in it.”

Jordan says Gentry plans on competing in the school’s first robotics and coding competitio­n this year.

“While it may have to be a virtual competitio­n due to covid-19, it will get our feet wet and we will know more of what to expect next year,” Jordan said.

 ?? Courtesy Photo/GREG TOLAND ?? This image demonstrat­es the capabiliti­es of the drone to detect varying heat temperatur­es and create a photograph based on infrared thermal imaging.
Courtesy Photo/GREG TOLAND This image demonstrat­es the capabiliti­es of the drone to detect varying heat temperatur­es and create a photograph based on infrared thermal imaging.

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