Pacifica Cops Launch Drone War On Rogue Fireworks

Pacifica police took to the streets and the skies today, cruising neighborhoods and flying drones in a push to track down illegal fireworks and the people setting them off. The department said it was answering a flurry of calls about loud, repeated blasts and big devices lighting up the hills, warning that the chaos can terrify pets, re-trigger veterans and other residents with PTSD, and raise the risk of brush or structure fires in the dry terrain. Neighbors shared videos of nighttime explosions and smoke, and officers responded with a tougher enforcement stance.

In a Facebook post, the Pacifica Police Department said officers are enforcing fireworks laws across the city, leaning on drone technology to spot active violations and encouraging residents to call in what they see. “We said we would be out, and we meant it,” the department wrote, according to the Pacifica Police Department on Facebook. The post noted that community members had been reporting active violations and urged neighbors to keep phoning in locations so officers can respond. The update did not include totals for arrests or citations.

Drone Patrols And How They Work

The department maintains a public unmanned aircraft (UAS) policy and a transparency portal that spell out when officers can send drones into the air, according to the City of Pacifica transparency portal. Authorized uses include hazard monitoring, scene security and tactical support, and the documents specify that only licensed, trained operators can fly the drones. The policy says the aircraft were acquired to improve officer safety and situational awareness, and that their use is limited to defined public safety purposes. Within that framework, officers can zero in on repeat violators from above without deploying large squads into residential streets.

Why Neighbors Are Worried

Advocates and health professionals say the sudden, booming blasts from illegal fireworks do more than annoy light sleepers. They can re-traumatize people living with PTSD and cause serious distress for pets and wildlife. KQED has reported on veterans and trauma survivors who are triggered by random fireworks, and outlets including the San Francisco Chronicle have warned that fireworks can ignite wildfires in the region’s dry summer conditions. The extra smoke and surge in emergency calls during holiday weekends also put added strain on first responders…

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