Skyward granted waiver to conduct drone inspections near Big Hollow wildfire in Washington

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Skyward, a Verizon company, has been awarded a temporary waiver from the FAA that allows its pilots to fly the Percepto Sparrow drone from their homes to inspect critical communications infrastructure near the Big Hollow wildfire in Washington.

The waiver permits operations 24 hours a day, with less than three miles of visibility, and no pilot or observer on site.

“At a moment when we are facing dangerous consequences of climate change and coping with a global pandemic, maintaining the Verizon Network has never been more important,” says Rima Qureshi, chief strategy officer, Verizon.

“Innovations in airborne technology have enhanced our ability to inspect our sites without putting engineers in harm’s way, and provide our first responders with reliable communications. We appreciate the FAA’s swift action in granting the waiver, which allows us to deploy a network-connected drone and provide critical services, safely and effectively.”

Skyward notes that while the FAA can grant beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) waivers to businesses that prove they can fly safely, generally, an onsite pilot or visual observer has still been required.

Skyward spent nearly a year testing and proving it could safely fly without onsite personnel in preparation for crises such as the one occurring in the western U.S. The company says that the waiver itself is a milestone for remote deployment of drones in the U.S.

“We’ve built a BVLOS capability consisting of a remotely deployable drone system, weather monitoring systems like those used at airports, Skyward’s Aviation Management Platform, and state-of-the-art airborne safety systems that allow us to check the surrounding airspace for other aircraft,” says Skyward’s Director of Aviation Development Centers, whose name is X.

“Verizon’s 4G LTE network connected these systems, giving the team’s operations lead in Alaska a near real-time picture of the operation from 1,600 miles away.”

Granted through the FAA’s expedited Special Governmental Interest process, the waiver applies to drone support operations for critical infrastructure that maintain communications for emergency responders and extends until Friday, Sept. 25.

Over the last two-plus weeks, the Big Hollow Fire has burned more than 24,000 acres and caused mandatory evacuation orders in the area. The location of the critical communications infrastructure itself is within blocks of a Level 1 evacuation order and the air quality was unsafe for humans. Skyward says that this operation allowed Verizon engineers to confirm the integrity and operability of its infrastructure was not impacted, all while keeping people out of harm’s way.

Photo below: Fully remote operations over video conference. Percepto drone system screen (left), camera from Fortem SkyDome showing drone taking off (top middle), and Skyward aviation management platform (bottom middle). Skyward flight operations team (right) from top to bottom: Dave Newell, Operations Manager (observing from Alaska, 1600 miles from site); X, Director of Aviation Development Centers (25 miles from site), Jake Weber, Remote Pilot in Command and Skyward Co-Founder (23 miles from site); and, Dustin Schocken, Remote Navigator (18 miles from site). Photo: Skyward