Anticipating domestic boom, colleges rev up drone piloting programs
Fly over the mock wreckage of Disaster City with a Texas A&M student drone pilot.
By
Isolde Raftery, NBC News
Randal Franzen was 53, unemployed and nearly broke when his brother, a tool designer at Boeing, mentioned that pilots for remotely piloted aircraft - more commonly known as drones - were in high demand.
Franzen, a
former professional skier and trucking company owner who had flown planes as a
hobby, started calling manufacturers and found three schools that offer
bachelor's degrees for would-be feet-on-the-ground fliers: Kansas State
University, the University of North Dakota and the private Embry-Riddle
Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Fla.
He landed at
Kansas State, where he maintained a 4.0 grade point average for four years and
accumulated $60,000 in student loan debt before graduating in 2011. It was a
gamble, but one that paid off with an offer "well into the six figures" as a
flight operator for a military contractor in Afghanistan.
Franzen, who
dreams of one day piloting drones over forest fires in the U.S., believes he is
at the forefront of a watershed moment in aviation, one in which manned flight
takes a jumpseat to the remote-controlled variety.
Randal Franzen went from being unemployed to earning a
six-figure salary as a drone flight operator in
Afghanistan.
While most jobs
flying drones currently are military-related, universities and colleges expect
that to change by 2015, when the Federal Aviation Administration is due to
release regulations for unmanned aircraft in domestic airspace. Once those
regulations are in place, the FAA predicts that 10,000 commercial drones will be
operating in the U.S. within five years.
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