New Joint Effort Boosts Drone Standards for Public Safety Officials

The National Fire Protection Association and ASTM International are joining forces to help the growing number of public safety professionals who want to use drones — also known as unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) — to help protect and save lives.

NFPA and ASTM International signed a memorandum of understanding to support a joint working group of about two dozen top experts in public safety and drone technology.

This group, which first met Feb. 23, is working to create “use-case scenarios” to help meet the needs of law enforcement, search-and-rescue teams, emergency medical services personnel, and firefighters who want to use drones in various operations.

“Innovation in drone technology is driving the demand for technical standards, training, and certification for first responders,” said NFPA President and CEO Jim Pauley. “Through the experts in this new group, we hope to see new benchmarks, use-case scenarios, and performance criteria to help professionals use drones to be more effective in their jobs.”

I’ve seen first-hand how experts in unmanned aircraft systems and response robots could work with first responders to conduct lifesaving tasks,” said ASTM International President Katharine Morgan. “I’m excited about the potential for this new group to align efforts of various stakeholders and to build a technical foundation that empowers people on the front lines.”

The JWG comprises representatives from ASTM International’s unmanned aircraft systems (F38) committee, its search-and-rescue committee (F32), and its subcommittee on response robots (E54.09) as well as the committee that created NFPA 2400 (Standard for Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems (sUAS) Used for Public Safety Operations).

According to Morgan and Pauley, the group would serve as a key resource for various global efforts related to drone standardization.

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Issue Month
May/June
Issue Year
2018