To prepare for natural disasters, Verizon maintains a fleet of more than 550 portable assets, an industry-leading 200 satellite-based assets and more than 1,000 mobile generators to assist communities in rapid recovery efforts. These assets include fully functional, generator-powered portable cell towers that can replace or enhance network coverage and capacity in a given area, as well as drones and a fixed-wing aircraft to provide service and situational awareness from the sky above.
Verizon deployed tethered, fixed-wing and rotary-wing drones for the PATRIOT 24 exercise. The large tethered drones were used for network restoration, while the rotary-wing drones acted as search and rescue drones—helping to document the training exercise and to monitor the night drills and assess progress of the search and rescue operations. The fixed-wing drones were used to map the disaster area to provide high-resolution imagery to the onsite participants.
“Our drones provide live, real-time streaming of both electro-optical and thermal imagery to our public safety agencies via our robust network,” said Chris Sanders, Verizon Frontline senior manager, Crisis Response, who operated the flight drones during PATRIOT 24.
Thanks to the Verizon drones, the U.S. Air Force and other teams gained their first-ever access to thermal imaging for emergency response exercises. The drones also streamed feeds live inside the Joint Operation Center, enabling the exercise’s ranking officers to view what was happening in the field.
In addition to the drones, other Verizon assets helped maintain emergency responders’ situational awareness (SA). The connected sensors in these assets are able to deliver those SA capabilities, however, only with reliable connectivity—which the Verizon network also delivered for the exercise.
During the PATRIOT 24 exercise, Verizon deployed 46 separate network recovery assets that included: