Practical Guide · For Public Safety Agencies

Drones for Public Safety

A practical guide for police departments, fire services, and search and rescue teams running — or planning — a drone program. Written by a Part 107 pilot who also writes the code. No vendor fluff.

What this guide covers.

Public safety drone programs have matured fast. Five years ago, most agencies with a drone were flying it because one patrol officer or firefighter happened to own a Part 107. Today, programs run with fleets, written SOPs, CAD integration, multi-agency mutual-aid protocols, and live video going to dispatch. The tooling has caught up to the mission — but the market is noisy, and most of the content agencies find online is either hardware-specific marketing (buy this drone) or legalese (get this waiver).

This guide is different. It focuses on the operational decisions that actually determine whether a drone program delivers value: who sees the video, how fast, on what hardware, with what access controls. We assume you already know you need a drone; the question is what happens after the drone is in the air.

In this guide

  1. Why live video is the defining capability
  2. Program components: aircraft, pilots, platform, policy
  3. Vertical-specific considerations (police, fire, SAR)
  4. Multi-agency sharing and mutual aid
  5. Common pitfalls in small-agency programs
  6. Where EyesOn fits

Live video is what makes a drone program operational.

Every public safety drone program eventually converges on the same realization: the point of the drone is not the drone. The point is the video — delivered to the person making the decision, in real time, at a quality they can act on. A drone that captures beautiful 4K footage the chief reviews after the operation is a recording device. A drone that puts a live feed in front of the incident commander mid-operation is a force multiplier.

The gap between those two outcomes is not the aircraft. It is the video delivery pipeline: how video moves from the controller to the person who needs to see it. Most agencies stumble here because the major platforms treat live video as a secondary feature, bolted onto systems designed for fleet management, flight planning, or compliance.

EyesOn is the live video delivery layer. It does not replace DJI FlightHub 2, Aloft, DroneSense, or whatever you are already using for ops. It sits next to them and does one thing well: sub-second video to every viewer that needs it, without account friction, without installing apps, without per-seat licensing.

The four pieces of a working drone program.

1. Aircraft

For most agencies, the enterprise DJI fleet is the default — Matrice 30T and 350 RTK for heavy duty, Mavic 3 Enterprise/Thermal for patrol, Mini 5 Pro for quick-deploy scenarios. Parrot and Skydio are viable for specific mission profiles (NDAA-compliant hardware requirements, indoor tactical). Aircraft selection is often over-weighted in procurement; the hardware choice matters less than the operational workflow you build around it.

2. Pilots

FAA Part 107 is the baseline. Public safety agencies can also operate under a Certificate of Authorization (COA) or a Part 107 waiver, especially for tactical BVLOS and night operations. Recurrent training — including in-agency scenario training — matters more than whichever certification framework you operate under. Volunteer SAR teams often run the strongest training pipelines in public safety, not because they have the most budget, but because they drill constantly.

3. Platform

"Platform" is the software layer — flight planning, airspace management, flight logging, fleet oversight, and live video. DJI FlightHub 2, Aloft, Skyward, and DroneSense all live here. Most agencies need two platforms: one for flight ops (FlightHub 2, for DJI-heavy fleets) and one for live video distribution (EyesOn). Trying to force a single vendor to do both ends up compromising one or the other.

4. Policy

Written SOPs, retention policy, privacy policy, records-management integration, and multi-agency sharing agreements. This is where most programs are weakest and most litigated. Policy should be written before the first operational flight, not after the first records request.

Agency-specific considerations.

Every public safety vertical has different operational priorities, budget cycles, and records requirements. The right drone program for a rural volunteer fire district is not the same as the right program for a 200-officer municipal police department. Use the guides below as a starting point for your vertical.

The problem nobody writes about until they hit it.

A drone program always graduates to a multi-agency moment. Fire calls for LE perimeter. LE calls for fire standby on a high-risk entry. SAR calls on state resources. County dispatch loops in state emergency management. The drone is up, the video is flowing — and now three to five agencies need to see it, and nobody has an account on anybody else's system.

The traditional answers all break:

Time-limited, signed guest links solve this cleanly. The drone is up, the pilot generates a link scoped to the incident, every partner agency gets the same feed in a browser, and when the operation ends the links expire. No procurement, no accounts, no exposure. This is what EyesOn was built for — read For Police, For Fire, or For SAR for vertical-specific examples.

Mistakes most small-agency programs make.

Over-investing in aircraft, under-investing in workflow

An agency buys a $20,000 enterprise drone and then cannot get the video off the pilot's tablet. The hardware is not the problem. Spend proportionally on the platform stack.

Single point of failure: one pilot

Programs built around a single certified pilot fail the moment that pilot is out, transferred, or pulled for other duties. Budget for three certified pilots minimum — even in a small department.

No policy until the first records request

Write the retention policy, privacy policy, and public-records response procedure before the first operational flight. Every drone program eventually gets a records request; agencies that wrote their policy reactively have a bad time.

Treating drone video as a consumer-grade capability

If your IC relies on the feed to make decisions, the feed is life-safety-critical. Pick a stack you can support, harden, and operate with the same rigor you use for any other operational system.

Ignoring the network

Most drone programs live on someone else's network — a hotspot, a cellular modem, a hastily-configured VLAN. Test your entire video pipeline under the network conditions you will actually operate under. LTE-only, congested Wi-Fi, VPN over flaky uplink. Test it, or it will fail the moment you need it.

Live video delivery for every public safety vertical.

EyesOn is sub-second WebRTC live drone video, built specifically for public safety workflows. It runs self-hosted at the station or department, or fully managed on dedicated hardware. Four tiers — $39/mo to $499/mo — priced to fit volunteer districts through multi-battalion municipal departments.

Core capabilities relevant to every public safety program:

Read the vertical-specific guides: Police · Fire · Search & Rescue.

Talk Through Your Program

Whether you are starting from zero or evaluating the next upgrade, a pre-sales conversation is straight pilot-to-pilot. No qualification call, no salesperson. Discuss your vertical, your deployment constraints, your multi-agency posture, and what would actually help.