National Business Center's Aviation Management Directorate
Completes Second Small UAS Training
The Department of the Interior (DOI) National Business
Center’s (NBC) Aviation Management Directorate (AMD), in
conjunction with U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and Aerodyne
Corporation, just completed the second ever Raven A Small UAS
(sUAS) training course for DOI employees in Las Cruces, New
Mexico.
Thirteen students from USGS, Bureau of Land Management (BLM),
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), and the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) completed the sUAS training hosted by New
Mexico State University, a recognized as a pioneer in the research
and application of UAS technology in the civilian sector. The two
week course included 22 classes spanning 80 hours, and was
conducted by U.S. Army RQ-11A (Raven) instructors. Each student
received instruction in basic and advanced flight skills, airspace
management, aviation safety, emergency procedures, crew
coordination, DOI aviation policy and procedures, and mission
planning. In addition, each received approximately 5 hours of
flight time as vehicle operator and 5 hours as mission operator.
The Raven A is a 4.2 pound aircraft with a 55 inch wing span and
has both color electro optical and infrared sensors.
AMD provided oversight for the training with its two previously
qualified Raven operators, Harry Kieling, Alaska Regional Director,
and Rod Russell, Aviation Safety Compliance Specialist. For the
past four years, AMD has led the effort to explore the intriguing
possibilities and complex requirements of integrating UAS’s
in support of DOI missions such as wildlife surveys, law
enforcement, search, and firefighting support and command and
control.
Raven UAV
“Unmanned Aerial Systems hold the promise of
increased resource mission flexibility, effectiveness, efficiency,
and safety. The collaborative and risk managed approach we’ve
adopted in integrating them into DOI, as evidenced by this course
is key to realizing these benefits and is consistent with
AMD’s mission "...to raise the safety standards, increase the
efficiency, and promote the economical operation of aircraft
activities in the Department of the Interior, said Mark Bathrick,
Associate Director, DOI Aviation Management." There are now 27
qualified Raven operators in four DOI Bureaus plus the two in AMD
and one in the USFS. Cooperative agreements are being finalized
with the US Army to afford DOI operators airspace to develop their
proficiency. In addition, a number of agreements are being reached
with the FAA to allow Unmanned Aircraft to operate in specially
designated airspace to enable select bureau missions.