Close air support technology helps in fire suppression

The demonstration took place near where nineteen firefighters from the Prescott Fire Department’s Granite Mountain Hot Shots unit gave their lives on June 30, 2013, battling the Yarnell Hill wildfire.

“We chose Prescott for the demo to honor the memory of the firefighters who gave their lives serving others,” said Chuck Wolf, deputy director of DARPA’s Adaptive Execution Office, which helped modify PCAS technology to fight wildfires. “We want to get this technology into the hands of firefighters already battling wildfires this year, to hopefully prevent a tragedy like Yarnell Hill from ever happening again.”

Participants in the exercise were quite impressed with the FLASH prototype’s capabilities.

“This technology has great potential to increase situational awareness as well as personnel accountability, two things paramount to a successful and safe wildfire operation,” said Kevin Keith, fire captain in the Prescott Fire Department.

Mike Worrell, fire captain in the City of Phoenix Fire Department and member of the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s Incident Support Team/Arizona Task Force-1, attended the training and agreed that FLASH could have a big impact on fire ground safety and efficiency.

“The ability for incident commanders to have voice communications, monitor position and mission progress, and exchange data in real time has been non-existent,” Worrell said. “For the first time, we were able to do wide-area searches and send search data immediately, instead of taking hours to collect and process data from the field before returning it to the people who need it.”

DARPA notes that FLASH could help address smaller-scale incidents as well, such as search and rescue in difficult terrain. A separate but related demonstration included a live simulation of finding and retrieving an injured hiker in the nearby mountains. Triangulating from the person’s 911 call, the FLASH-equipped team found the person within fifteen minutes — a task that currently can take hours or even days.

“I can only imagine the usefulness of equipment like this, from simple emergencies all the way to large-scale wildfires and other all-risk incidents,” said Ralph Lucas III, battalion chief for the City of Prescott Fire/Medical Department, whose team participated in the rescue demonstration.

  • Several DARPA performers participated and made the demonstration and training possible:
  • Persistent Systems LLC developed the tactical radio
  • Juggernaut Defense developed the case for the tablet, radio/tablet cabling and vest to hold the equipment
  • AvWatch provided the aircraft with mounted sensors for the training
  • The Digital Precision Strike Suite team from Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division at China Lake, California, provided the FLASH software and integrated the various systems

The Prescott Fire Department plans to continue testing the FLASH prototype systems. DARPA is producing training materials on how to use the equipment, so additional firefighters can continue evaluating its usefulness.