Oklahoma City Fire Department’s drones big help in fighting fires

Drones are used every day for several professions, and that includes firefighters. Theyโ€™ve embraced pretty much any tool they can to help them fight fires over the past century, and now that includes a tool with an eye in the sky.

The Oklahoma City Fire Department has nearly a couple of dozen of them to send information to responding crews before they even reach the scene.

โ€œHaving eyes in the sky is pretty important to us,โ€ Scott Douglas with the Oklahoma City Fire Dept. said. โ€œKnowing what tools to take, seeing, you know, where the fire may be located, and thereโ€™s actually thermal, thermal capabilities, too. So we can actually see the hottest parts of the structure.โ€

The drones they use are operated by dispatchers. Theyโ€™ll send them into the air while crews respond to scenes like structure or grass fires and even car wrecks.

โ€œIf we can get a drone launch to get a visual of the vehicle accident, our crews can arrive there much quicker,โ€ Douglas said.

Theyโ€™re always good for ensuring accurate and pertinent information after they get a call. They are placed across the city in weatherproof boxes.

โ€œTheyโ€™re up within a matter of seconds,โ€ Douglas said. From there, crews get video from them before they arrive on scene. Matter of fact, it helped crews respond to a three-alarm fire early Sunday morning at a motel that was being renovated.

โ€œIt allows you to plan ahead when weโ€™re going to need more; we need more rigs,โ€ Amanda McDonald with the OKC Fire Dept. said on the scene of that early Sunday morning fire.

Theyโ€™re not an everyday use, with weather playing a factor, of course. But if it helps locate and quickly knock down fires or find wrecks, itโ€™s a game-changer.

โ€œJust having that visual information, eyes in the sky, is really helpful for our first responding crews,โ€ Douglas said.

Police use drones as well. Douglas said they can stay in the sky for as long as a dispatcher needs. The goal is to have 50 total drones across the city over the next few years.

KFOR-TV NBC 4 Oklahoma City

Share the Post:
FREE QUICK SUBSCRIBE

Sign up to subscribe to custom state
Daily Dispatch emails for free

Select list(s):