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  • 29
    Jan
    2013
    4:42am, EST

    Anticipating domestic boom, colleges rev up drone piloting programs

    Fly over the mock wreckage of Disaster City with a Texas A&M student drone pilot.

    By Isolde Raftery, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Randal Franzen was 53, unemployed and nearly broke when his brother, a tool designer at Boeing, mentioned that pilots for remotely piloted aircraft – more commonly known as drones – were in high demand. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Franzen, a former professional skier and trucking company owner who had flown planes as a hobby, started calling manufacturers and found three schools that offer bachelor’s degrees for would-be feet-on-the-ground fliers: Kansas State University, the University of North Dakota and the private Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Fla. 

    He landed at Kansas State, where he maintained a 4.0 grade point average for four years and accumulated $60,000 in student loan debt before graduating in 2011. It was a gamble, but one that paid off with an offer “well into the six figures” as a flight operator for a military contractor in Afghanistan.

    Franzen, who dreams of one day piloting drones over forest fires in the U.S., believes he is at the forefront of a watershed moment in aviation, one in which manned flight takes a jumpseat to the remote-controlled variety.


    Courtesy Randal Franzen

    Randal Franzen went from being unemployed to earning a six-figure salary as a drone flight operator in Afghanistan.

    While most jobs flying drones currently are military-related, universities and colleges expect that to change by 2015, when the Federal Aviation Administration is due to release regulations for unmanned aircraft in domestic airspace. Once those regulations are in place, the FAA predicts that 10,000 commercial drones will be operating in the U.S. within five years.

    Although just three schools currently offer degrees in piloting unmanned aircraft, many others – including community colleges – offer training for remote pilots. And those numbers figure are set to increase, with some aviation industry analysts predicting drones will eventually come to dominate the U.S. skies in terms of jobs.   

    At the moment, 358 public institutions – including 14 universities and colleges – have permits from the FAA to fly unmanned aircraft. Those permits became public last summer after the Electronic Frontier Foundation filed a request under the Freedom of Information Act.

    The government issues the permits mainly for research and border security. Police departments that have requested them to survey dense, high crime areas have been rejected.

    Some of the schools that have permits have been flying unmanned aircrafts for decades; others, like Sinclair Community College in Dayton, Ohio, received theirs recently to start programs to train future drone pilots.

    Alex Mirot, an assistant professor at Embry-Riddle who oversees the Unmanned Aircraft Systems Science program there, said this generation of students will pioneer how unmanned aircraft are used domestically, as the use of drones shifts from almost purely military to other applications.

    “We make it clear from the beginning that we are civilian-focused,” said Mirot, a former Air Force pilot who remotely piloted Predator and Reaper drones used to target suspected terrorists in Afghanistan, Pakistan and elsewhere for four years from a base in Nevada.

    “We want them to think about how to apply this military hardware to civilian applications.”

    Among the possible applications: Monitoring livestock and oil pipelines, spotting animal poachers, tracking down criminals fleeing crime scenes and delivering packages for UPS and FedEx.

    With U.S. military involvement in Afghanistan winding down, drone manufacturers also are eager to find new markets. AeroVironment, a California company that specializes in small, unmanned aircrafts for the military, recently unveiled the Qube, a drone designed for law enforcement surveillance.

    The FAA hasn’t allowed police agencies to fly drones over populated areas – because of concerns about airspace safety, as drones have crashed or collided with one another abroad. But that hasn’t stopped some agencies from buying them in anticipation of their eventual approval. The Seattle Police Department, for example, has two small aircraft, which two officers occasionally fly around a warehouse for practice. For now, a police spokesman said, federal rules are too restrictive to use them outside. 

    The domestic market is so nascent that there isn’t even agreement on what to call unmanned aircraft – “remotely piloted aircraft,” “unmanned aerial vehicles” – UAVs – or by the most mainstream term, “drones.” The latter makes many advocates bristle; they say the term confuses their aircraft with the dummy planes used for target practice – or with the controversial planes used to kill suspected terrorists abroad.

    Industry attracting engineers and pilots
    Students at Embry-Riddle train on flight simulators that closely resemble the Predator, an armed military drone with a 48-foot wingspan, because the FAA will not issue a drone license to a private institution.

    Without guidance from the FAA, Embry-Riddle has struggled with how to create a robust program that will turn out employable graduates.

    “As of now there aren’t rules on what an (unmanned aircraft) pilot qualification will be,” Mirot said. “You have to go to employer X and ask them, ‘What are you requiring?’ And that becomes the standard.”

    The bachelor’s degree program also includes 13 credits in engineering, so students understand the plane’s whole system, Mirot said.

    Embry-Riddle recently graduated its first student with a bachelor’s degree, but those who graduated earlier with minors in unmanned aircraft systems have fared well, Mirot said.

    “I had a kid who deployed right away and he was making $140,000,” Mirot said. “That’s more than I ever made. Yeah, he’s going into Afghanistan, but he had no previous military experience or security clearance.”

    Mirot said many of his students aspire to be airline pilots. But with salaries for commercial airline pilots starting as low as $17,000 in the first year, they plan to start in unmanned systems to pay off their loans, then maybe apply for an airline job, he said.

    The University of North Dakota, which launched its unmanned aircraft systems operations major in 2009, has similar success stories. Professor Alan Palmer, a retired brigadier general of the North Dakota National Guard, said 15 of the program’s 23 graduates now work for General Atomics in San Diego, which makes the Predator and Reaper drones used in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

    Engineering and computer science students, too, are in demand by the drone industry. At least 50 universities in the U.S. have centers, academic programs or clubs for drone engineering or flying. Many of the engineering students work on projects making the drones “smarter” – that is building more sensitive sensors – and studying how the robots interact with humans.

    George Huang, a professor at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio, who builds drones the size of hummingbirds, said nearly all his 20 students work as researchers for the Air Force. This means they’re earning between $60,000 and $80,000 a year while still enrolled, instead of the $15,000 stipend that graduate students typically receive from their schools.

    At the University of Colorado in Boulder, doctoral candidate Sibylle Walter said unmanned systems appeal to her because the results are immediate. In the past, she said, aerospace students typically ended up at Boeing or another big company and spent years working on one element of a project. Instead, she is working with her adviser to build a supersonic drone capable of flying up to 1,000 mph.

    “The link between education and application is much more compact,” Walter said of the unmanned aircraft. “That translates to this new boom. You can build them inexpensively – you don’t need $100 million to build one.”

    Ethical warfare?
    Despite the promise of numerous civilian applications, drones continue to be controversial because of their role as weapons of war.

    At Texas A&M University, which has an FAA permit to fly drones, computer science student Brittany Duncan is unusual among her peers: She’s a licensed pilot, a computer scientist and a woman. She probably could land a high-paying job for a military contractor, but she’s intent on staying in academia, studying robot-human relations, specifically how robots should approach victims of a natural disaster without scaring them.

    John Brecher / NBC News

    Doctoral candidate Brittany Duncan assembles an unmanned aerial vehicle in a lab at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas.

    On a recent hot, dusty morning, Duncan, 25, pulled a small aircraft from the back of a 4x4 pickup. Wearing black work boots and Dickies, she quickly assembled a remote-controlled aircraft that resembled a flying spider, then launched the aircraft – equipped with sensors and a video camera – over a pile of rubble to practice capturing footage.

    At her side was Professor Robin Murphy, her adviser and a veteran of real-world unmanned aircraft operations, having flown over the World Trade Center after 9/11, the Gulf Coast in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and the nuclear reactor in Fukushima, Japan, after the 2011 tsunami and nuclear disaster there (although she stayed in Tokyo). She believes drones could revolutionize public safety.

    “I could show you a photo of firefighters from today, and it could be a photo of firefighters from 1944,” Murphy said. “They haven’t had a lot of boost in technology. [Unmanned aircraft] could be a real game-changer.”

    Duncan knows there is resistance from communities where drones have been introduced. In Seattle, for example, the ACLU argued that drones could invade privacy. But as Duncan sees it, this makes her work even more relevant.

    “That’s the most important thing to me – that people understand good can come from drones,” Duncan said. “Every technology is scary at first. Cars, when they went only 6 mph, people thought there would be a rash of people getting run over. Well, no, it’s going slow enough for you to get out of the way. And it’ll change your life.”

    Duncan said she considers the implications of working on machines that are for now mostly used for war. Despite conflicting reports on civilian casualties in drone strikes, she’s convinced that unmanned aircraft offer a more-ethical battlefield alternative because they take the pilot’s “skin” out of the game. 

    Disaster City, a giant search-and-rescue training ground in College Station, Texas, is home to a destroyed strip mall, a mock-up movie theater and towering buildings all made to be torched in the name of emergency preparedness. Clint Arnett describes how Disaster City works.

    “If you’re flying a UH-60 Blackhawk Helicopter and look down and think someone has a surface-to-air missile, you’re going to shoot first and figure it out later because you’re a pilot and your life is in danger,” she said. But with drones, “(You) can afford to make sure that someone is a combatant before they engage – because you don’t have your life on the line. It takes your emotion out of the equation.”

    While that debate continues, the Department of Defense is showing no loss of appetite for drones, despite the drawdown in Afghanistan. This year, it plans to spend $4.2 billion on various versions of the unmanned aircraft, 15 times more than it did in 2000.

    For Professors Mirot and Palmer, that is evidence that their programs will stay relevant, no matter how the domestic deployment of drones plays out.

    Looking ahead
    There is an ironic twist to Randal Franzen’s move to climb aboard the cutting edge of aviation: When he went to Afghanistan, he learned that his assignment was to monitor surveillance video from a tethered balloon near the Afghanistan-Pakistan border – a military technology that – minus the cameras – dates to the Civil War.

    From the base miles away, he monitored the rural area for Taliban activity, but mostly watched Afghans going about their daily lives. The retrained drone pilot said he found it fascinating.

    “I grew up in Montana, swam in irrigation ditches, and they do the exact same thing – they’re just trying to make a living, raise some cattle and kids and do the exact same thing as everyone else,” Franzen said. There were moments that caught him by surprise – such as when he saw a man leading 10 camels through the desert while talking on a cellphone, walking several feet ahead of his wife, who was dressed in a full burqa.

    Now home in Colorado, Franzen figures he’ll take at least one more far-flung military assignment as he waits for the domestic drone market to open. This time, though, he’d like to put his newfound remote flying skills to better use. 

    “I had three offers yesterday to go back and do the same thing for three different companies,” he said. “I talked to them about flying. I’d rather pilot something. I’d like to go play with something cooler.”

    More from Open Channel:

    • Fiscal cliff, elections boost spending on lobbying
    • Gazing into 'dark pools,' the high-tech tool that enables insider stock trading
    • Dermatologists blast tanning industry campaign to play down skin cancer fears

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    363 comments

    The way these drones are progressing, becoming simpler to build, & are expected to start showing up more commonly in the sky, how long will it be before the 1st guy builds one in his garage, fills it with sufficient explosives, & remotely blows up something or someone? You can fly one of th …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: college, study, flight, students, aircraft, unmanned, featured, degree, flying, drones
  • 7
    Jun
    2012
    9:26am, EDT

    Thousands stranded after cancellations at Dallas airport

    By NBCDFW.com

    More than 3,000 travelers are stranded after severe storms caused flight cancellations at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.

    About 18 flights were cancelled Thursday morning alone. DFW Airport said the thunderstorms caused a total of 139 cancellations and more cancellations are expected as airlines get planes back in position.


    Most flights that are on-time are full, but more than 65 flights were diverted due to the severe weather conditions.

    Airlines tried to make the inconvenience comfortable for travelers by setting up cots in the airport and handing out blankets, pillows and toiletries.

    Airport restaurants stayed open late to accommodate hungry travelers.

    DFW Airport officials urge people with travel plans to call ahead to check on flight status before heading to the airport or visit DFWairport.com for flight information.

    This story originally appeared on NBCDFW.com.

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    58 comments

    Airport restaurants stayed open late to accommodate hungry travelers Great. Come on, kids, let's all get some $15 hot dogs.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, flying
  • 6
    Apr
    2012
    11:04am, EDT

    In-flight births highlight risks of flying while pregnant

    By Rob Lovitt, NBC News contributor

    Forget the stork. These days, it seems, newborns are being delivered by commercial aircraft. At least twice in the last two months, expectant mothers have given birth at 30,000 feet or higher.


    Follow @msnbc_travel

    Even more surprising than the unexpected deliveries? The incidents represent that rarest of situations: The presence of a crying baby on a plane elicits applause instead of angry glares.

    “A plane is not the best place to give birth to a baby but it does happen,” said Dr. Russell Rayman, a preventive medicine specialist and former executive director of the Aerospace Medical Association.

    In the latest incident, a woman on a Delta flight from Africa to Atlanta gave birth on March 23. According to news accounts, she went into labor three weeks early and her baby boy was delivered by an OB-GYN who happened to be on board.

    A Delta Airlines flight attendant helped deliver a baby 36,000 feet over Africa. WFLA's Jeff Patterson reports.

    Six weeks earlier, on Feb. 9, a woman on a Spirit Airlines flight from LAX to Fort Lauderdale gave birth in the plane’s forward galley. With no response to the crew’s “Is there a doctor on board?” request, the infant was delivered by flight attendants with assistance from MedAire, a company that helps airlines manage inflight medical events via telephone.

    While both incidents had happy outcomes, they also serve as cautionary tales, especially for women in the later stages of pregnancy. While well-trained to handle in-flight emergencies, flight attendants don’t typically receive training in delivering babies and there are no guarantees that a medical professional will be onboard.

    Nor do the airlines provide consistent guidance on how far into pregnancy they’ll allow women to fly. Delta, for example, has no restrictions while Spirit urges women in their ninth month to be examined by their doctor to determine whether it’s safe for them to fly.

    Other carriers offer stricter guidelines although all essentially operate on an honor system. At United, women in their ninth month must have an obstetrician’s certificate dated within 24 to 72 hours of departure showing they’ve been examined, along with the baby’s estimated birth date. JetBlue, US Air and Virgin America require passengers flying within seven days of delivery to have a doctor’s letter stating they’re fit to fly.

    Meanwhile, the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) suggests that pregnant women without obstetric or other medical conditions take the same precautions that other air travelers take. The group provides an excellent resource on the subject on its website. (According to Dr. George Macones, chair of ACOG’s Committee on Obstetric Practice, like other travelers, pregnant women should be aware of the risk of blood clots — a function of immobility and dehydration — and exposure to the radiation prevalent at high altitudes.

    Of the former, he recommends drinking plenty of water and walking around every hour or so. Of the latter, he says it’s of no concern for infrequent travelers but that people who fly a lot — flight attendants and frequent business travelers — can exceed national guidelines for exposure.

    Travelers concerned about the latter can calculate their in-flight exposure via a tool maintained by the FAA, which can be found here.

    It’s also a good idea to let the flight attendants know about your situation, said Sara Nelson, international vice president for the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA.

    “Flight attendants are really the first responders on a plane,” she told msnbc.com. “If you’re coming onboard and you’re advanced in your pregnancy, take a moment to say hello to the flight attendants and let them know where you’re sitting.”

    You never know -- you could find yourself suddenly needing seating for two.

    Rob Lovitt is a longtime travel writer who still believes the journey is as important as the destination. Follow him at Twitter.

    More from Overhead Bin:

    • Strip-search lawsuit exposes paradox of cruise ship passenger rights
    • Costa Concordia captain's blunders detailed in Vanity Fair
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    30 comments

    We can't turn a blind eye to people who try smuggling their children on board. I hope they charged those women for an extra seat - or at least an extra bag.

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  • 25
    Jan
    2012
    4:44pm, EST

    OMG! Alaska Airlines discontinues controversial prayer cards

    A collection of Alaska Airlines prayer cards, which will be discontinued on Feb. 1, 2012.

    By Harriet Baskas, NBC News contributor

    In a memo sent to its frequent fliers Wednesday, Alaska Airlines announced that the prayer cards it has been providing to passengers on meal trays for the past 30 years will be discontinued as of Feb. 1.


    Follow @msnbc_travel

    “A former marketing executive borrowed the idea from another airline and introduced the cards to our passengers in the late 1970s to differentiate our service,” the memo written by the company's chairman and president explained.

    But airline spokesperson Bobbie Egan told msnbc.com that over the years the airline has received letters and e-mails from customers for and against the card. Last fall the company decided to stop distributing the cards because, Egan said, “We believe it's the right thing to do in order to respect the diverse religious beliefs and cultural attitudes of all our customers and employees.”

    Meal tray service in the coach class ended six years ago, so the prayer cards have been provided only to passengers in the first class cabin. MVP Gold flier Roz Schatman gets the cards on her meal tray quite often. “In the spirit of diversity, I find them offensive,” she said.

    The Alaska Airline statement said that while some passengers enjoyed the cards, reactions like Schatman’s were not unusual.

    “…[W]e've heard from many of you who believe religion is inappropriate on an airplane, and some are offended when we hand out the cards. Religious beliefs are deeply personal and sharing them with others is an individual choice.”

    “It always seemed odd to me,” said George Hobica of the consumer travel website Airfarewatchdog.com. “Flying on a wing and prayer? I don’t think those two go together.”

    More stories:

    • Virgin names plane in honor of Steve Jobs
    • Princess ship rescues sailors in midnight mission 
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    Find more by Harriet Baskas on StuckatTheAirport.com and follow her on Twitter.

    723 comments

    Bravo to the airline for doing the right thing and scrapping those cards pushing a particular religious view.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: american-airlines, featured, flying, harriet-baskas
  • 22
    Dec
    2011
    1:28pm, EST

    Southwest mix-up leaves 9-year-old stranded for five hours

    Southwest Airlines had to re-route a plane due to bad weather, sending an unaccompanied 9-year-old girl to the wrong state without contacting her family. WVIT's Amanda Raus reports.

    By Harriet Baskas, NBC News contributor

    Southwest Airlines is apologizing to a Clarksville, Tenn., family and investigating how a 9-year-old girl flying as an unaccompanied minor from Nashville to New York on Tuesday ended up re-routed and delayed for five hours without the airline notifying the family.

    Chloe Boyce is fine and will be getting a special patch from her junior Girl Scout troop to mark her adventure, but her mom, Elena Kerr, is upset.

    “The flight arrived and my daughter didn’t get off,” Kerr told msnbc.com. “Someone went on the plane to see if she was there and my sister called me and said, ‘Where’s Chloe?’ The Southwest guys told her there were no unaccompanied minors on that flight.”

    Kerr had put Chloe on a flight in Nashville headed for New York’s LaGuardia Airport with scheduled stops in Columbus and Baltimore.

    Southwest's policy only allows unaccompanied children to be booked on itineraries that don’t include plane changes. Chloe's flight, however, made an extra stop in Cleveland due to weather, and upon arriving in Baltimore she was rebooked on another flight to New York.

    Unfortunately, no one from the airline called Kerr to inform her of the delay. The airline also did not contact Chloe’s aunt, who was waiting at the gate in New York.

    Kerr said she started frantically calling Southwest and that it took more than an hour for the airline to locate Chloe and even longer to explain what happened.

    “At BWI, the flight attendant took her off the plane, walked her to Hudson News to get her a drink and some snacks and the pilot bought her dinner,” Kerr told msnbc.com. “But while she was there no could tell us where she was.”

    Kerr said she understands delays. “We just don’t understand why we weren’t called, especially because the Southwest policy states that someone must be available to answer phone calls during the flight time in the event of a flight irregularity.”

    Southwest Airlines has apologized to Kerr and refunded the cost of Chloe’s ticket.

    “Our unaccompanied minor policy aims to minimize these kinds of situations ... by only ticketing them on itineraries that don't require an aircraft change,” said Southwest spokesperson Brad Hawkins in an email to msnbc.com. “In this case, the unscheduled change of planes resulted in the connection, a delay and distress for the family which we certainly regret and have apologized for in our conversation with the family of our customer.”

    Kerr is not convinced she should let Chloe fly alone again.

    “I’m going to be driving the 17 hours to New York to get her,” she said.

    Related stories:

    • When your child flies alone
    • Holiday travel: not so hellish after all?
    • Great gear for kids on the go

    Find more by Harriet Baskas on StuckatTheAirport.com and follow her on Twitter.

     

    315 comments

    She SHOULDN'T let Chloe fly alone again. Any responsible parent would travel with their children in this day and age. I know I would fly with mine, be them 9 or 19.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: southwest, featured, flying

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