City of Orting
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OPD UAS (Unmanned Aerial Systems) Program
The Orting Police Department operates an Unmanned Aerial Systems (Drone) program to support the departments overall public safety mission.
In 2019, the Orting Police Department applied for, and received a grant to purchase a UAS by the Department of Homeland Security. Following the acquisition, the Orting Police Department established governing policy documents that paved the way for the creation of the department's first Unmanned Aerial Systems program. OPD's UAS program is comprised of department staff that are trained, FAA-certified commercial remote pilots that utilize industry standard drone hardware and software solutions to ensure safe and efficient flight missions.
We utilize our drone only for the following authorized missions:
- Situational awareness: To assist decision makers in understanding the nature, scale, and scope of a critical incident such as a Hazmat Spill, Natural, or Man-Made Disaster.
- Search and Rescue: Assist with missing person investigations, Amber and Silver Alerts, and other search and rescue missions.
- Tactical Deployment: To help provide situational awareness to support the tactical deployment of officers and equipment during emergency situations.
- Crime Scene Investigation: To document, measure, locate, and/or assist in the investigation of crime scenes.
- Traffic Collision Investigation and Reconstruction: To document, measure, locate, and/ or assist in the investigation of vehicle collision scenes.
- Search Warrant: To collect evidence in a criminal investigation under an approved judicial search warrant.
- Mutual Aid: In response to a request for UAS assistance in support of Federal, State, local, tribal, or territorial government operations.
Our FAA-certified remote pilots operate under an approved set of standards and policy guidelines that are designed to achieve the Orting Police Department's mission to support overall public safety and emergency management missions while being as non-intrusive as possible. We recognize that drones, while an excellent tool to have at our disposal, may cause some of our residents concern in regards to how the technology is being used. Our program and it's governing policy documents were designed specifically to address these concerns which allow us to operate a drone program that is privacy aware, transparent, and mission based.
Our department UAS policy is located below along with a summary of the FAA's Part 107 rules and regulations which govern all commercial UAS operations throughout the country. We also post summaries of our monthly drone usage the end of each month.
If you have any questions about the program, feel free to reach out to Lieutenant Devon Gabreluk who over see's the department's UAS program.
Policy Documents
UAS Monthly Usage Reports
- May 2023 UAS
- March UAS
- June 2023 UAS
- July 2023 UAS
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - January 2023
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - February 2023
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - December 2022
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - November 2022
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - September 2022
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - August 2022
- OPD UAS Monthy Usage Report July 2022
- OPD UAS Monthy Usage Report May 2022
- OPD UAS Monthy Usage Report June 2022
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - April 2022
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - March 2022
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - February 2022
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - January 2022
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - December 2021
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - November 2021
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - October 2021
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - September 2021
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - August 2021
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - July 2021
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - June 2021
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - April 2021
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - February 2021
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - January 2021
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - March 2021
- OPD UAS Monthly Usage Report - May 2021