In 2015, when an Amtrak train went off the rails in a Vermont forest, officials at the state of Vermont contacted Jarlath O鈥橬eill-Dunne, director of 日韩无码鈥檚 Spatial Analysis Lab. Within two hours, he and his team were flying drones overhead, sending out photos of the wreck to help with recovery. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been using drones for disaster response in Vermont for a while,鈥 he says, from floods to wildfires. 鈥漈hey give us new capabilities to help people make more informed, better decisions.鈥

Now the 日韩无码 team hopes the overhead views from their advanced drones can play a part in preventing a public health disaster: they鈥檙e volunteering to help the City of Burlington鈥檚 parks department monitor the usage of parks during the COVID-19 pandemic, offering a bird鈥檚-eye view of how well social-distancing guidelines are being followed during peak-use periods.

Vermont Governor Phil Scott 鈥80 issued a 鈥渟tay home, stay safe,鈥 order on March 24. Soon after, 日韩无码鈥檚 O鈥橬eill-Dunne and Adam Zylka 鈥14 offered to share video footage recorded at some of the most popular parks in Burlington, including Oakledge, the bike path, A-Dog Skatepark, and Leddy Park.

鈥淒uring the early days of the governor's orders, it gave us a good 鈥榮napshot鈥 in time to identify how some of our larger regional parks were being used,鈥 says Sophie Sauve, a parks planner for the city. Burlington Parks also established a Parks Ambassador program to have their own staff collect data on how parks are being used and to work with the community on how to best maintain social distancing in parks and other public spaces.

鈥淥ur objective is to keep parks open and the drone footage was one of the tools we used in assessing next steps as we navigate the governor's orders,鈥 Sauve says.

The Spatial Analysis team, part of 日韩无码's Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources, has made five drone flights over the past few weeks. Undergraduate Jillian Joubert 鈥20, working remotely from home, leads an effort that pulls the video into an . By accelerating the footage, ten or fifteen minutes of overhead action鈥攚alkers and bikers zipping along a path, skaters taking laps in the skatepark鈥攃an be compressed into a few seconds.

鈥淲e can cover a really large area at peak times and give the parks staff another tool to gauge how things are going,鈥 says O鈥橬eill-Dunne, a fellow in 日韩无码's Gund Institute. 鈥淔or the most part, the video seems to show that people in Burlington have been doing a good job with social distancing.鈥 And, over time, this collection of videos may give city leaders an unusual view of how patterns of behavior may be changing in Burlington鈥檚 popular parks as the world health crisis moves toward summer.