I agree, we have to do things we do not like. I would like nothing more than to have the capacity, expertise and local authority contacts to be able to coordinate or sponsor UAV missions. That is what I would like.
I would love to be able to somehow make them happen, but I and HOT as an organization just do not have that capacity so we can not do that. There is an organization that has that capacity, expertise and organizational contacts, that is UAviators. It would be the height of irresponsibility for myself or HOT as an organization to attempt coordinate or launch UAV operations, as much as I wish we could, especially when there is a professional organization that is already doing that. Non-professionally coordinated UAV operations in a disaster airspace can ground fleets of full scale aircraft providing relief and reconnaissance operations and cost lives. Air operations in a disaster area are serious business and not for amateurs to just do because they have a drone and 3 batteries. Fred as a professional UAV pilot recognizes this, unfortunately, we are not the organization responsible for those activities. UAviators is. Again, Fred and Nico are the professionals in this area, they are the natural folks to take this on and work with UAviators to get Fred flying his missions. There just is not any more HOT can do as it relates to this issue. Continued discussion of it is a distraction to what HOT can do, which is organize and support remote mapping in response to requests from responding organizations. Regards Blake On Sat, Oct 8, 2016 at 8:12 PM, François-Xavier Lamure Tardieu <[email protected]> wrote: > Bonjour, > > ceci est une page pour les créolophones et les francophones d’Haiti, les > messages doivent être traduits aussi dans une de ces 2 langues. > Après, permettez moi de ne pas être d’accord avec ce que vous écrivez. > Même si le conseil d’administration de HOT s’occupe de la stratégie et > considère ne pas devoir s’impliquer dans tout ce qui concerne les drones, la > situation dans les urgences appelle à plus de retenue car on est souvent > amené à faire des choses que l’on aime pas faire. > De plus, il ne s’agit pas ici d’une organisation avec qui vous pourriez > être partenaire mais d’un membre actif de votre organisation, qui demande un > soutien. > Par ailleurs, jusqu’à présent, pour autant que je connaisse, jamais nos vols > drone n’ont reçu un quelconque écho défavorable en Haïti que ce soit du > gouvernement ou des organisations nationales ou internationales qui nous > soutiennent. > > > This is a page for the Haitian Creole and French of Haiti, so the messages > must be translated too into one of these two languages. > After, let me not agree with what you write. > Although the HOT board of directors is responsible for the strategy and > considers it inappropriate to get involved in everything concerning the UAV, > the situation in emergencies calls for more restraint. Often in emergency > time, we are compulsory to do things we don’t like to do. > Moreover, it is not a question here of an organization with which you > might be partner, but an active member of your organization, which ask you > for your support. > Moreover, until now, as far as I know, never our drone flights did receive > any negative echo in Haiti either government or national or international > organizations that support us. > Sorry for my english > > Bien à vous > Xavier Tardieu _______________________________________________ Talk-ht mailing list [email protected] https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-ht Notez! Vous pouvez utiliser Google Translate (http://translate.google.com) pour traduire les messages.
