Drones with Matt Rowland

Drones with Matt Rowland

Update: 2025-08-20
Share

Description

Send us a text

Police Helicopters are quickly becoming a thing of the past. When the helicopters themselves cost anywhere from 500,000 to 3 Million dollars to purchase and have operating costs around 400 bucks per hour to fly nobody can afford them anymore. Not that anyone outside of a handful of major metropolitan police departments ever could. 

But that doesn’t take away the fact that having eyes in the sky can and does offer incredible advantages when it comes to public safety.

In 2025 that means drones.

Over the last decade we have seen drone use increase among police department across the US. Starting with search and rescue functions the use of drones has continued to grow just as the technology has improved and today we have full time drone pilots in agencies all over the US.

I had the pleasure to speak with Matt Rowland. Since 2017 Matt has been a member of the Unmanned Air Support Unit with the City of Fort Wayne, Indiana. He is currently a full-time drone pilot and an advocate of the technology.

Comments 
loading
In Channel
The Wooden Policeman

The Wooden Policeman

2025-11-1211:43

The Hollow Call

The Hollow Call

2025-10-2906:01

They Pull Me Back In

They Pull Me Back In

2025-09-0312:27

Road School

Road School

2025-07-0914:37

Financial Cop

Financial Cop

2025-06-2530:38

The Gold Watch

The Gold Watch

2025-06-1114:04

Friends

Friends

2024-11-2008:00

Possessed

Possessed

2024-10-2306:21

Leading in the Jails

Leading in the Jails

2024-10-0946:20

Chief of Police

Chief of Police

2024-09-2536:24

9/11

9/11

2024-09-1114:01

Ethics in Leadership

Ethics in Leadership

2024-08-2814:41

Objectively Reasonable

Objectively Reasonable

2024-08-1446:18

loading
00:00
00:00
1.0x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

Drones with Matt Rowland

Drones with Matt Rowland

Steve Kellams