• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Lifestyle
Why spy agency used during hurricanes... thumbnail

Why spy agency used during hurricanes…

January 5, 2023
Trump Pushes for a Credit Card Policy That Researchers Say Could Save Americans $100 Billion thumbnail

Trump Pushes for a Credit Card Policy That Researchers Say Could Save Americans $100 Billion

January 12, 2026
Patriots vs. Chargers Prediction, Odds, Picks for NFL Wild Card thumbnail

Patriots vs. Chargers Prediction, Odds, Picks for NFL Wild Card

January 11, 2026
Trump’s immigration crackdown turns deadly in Minneapolis thumbnail

Trump’s immigration crackdown turns deadly in Minneapolis

January 10, 2026
House Passes Three-Year Extension of Enhanced Obamacare Subsidies thumbnail

House Passes Three-Year Extension of Enhanced Obamacare Subsidies

January 10, 2026
NFL Wild Card weather report: Bears-Packers snow game, plus Steelers and Patriots forecasts thumbnail

NFL Wild Card weather report: Bears-Packers snow game, plus Steelers and Patriots forecasts

January 10, 2026
Hochul and Mamdani announce plan to launch free NYC child care plan thumbnail

Hochul and Mamdani announce plan to launch free NYC child care plan

January 9, 2026
Trump Fumes as Five Republicans Vote to Block Him on Venezuela thumbnail

Trump Fumes as Five Republicans Vote to Block Him on Venezuela

January 9, 2026
Injury Report: Patriots vs. Chargers thumbnail

Injury Report: Patriots vs. Chargers

January 8, 2026
4 reasons Chargers should feel good about facing Patriots in playoffs thumbnail

4 reasons Chargers should feel good about facing Patriots in playoffs

January 8, 2026
New England Revolution advance $500M soccer stadium project thumbnail

New England Revolution advance $500M soccer stadium project

January 8, 2026
Crude oil prices rise after Maduro ouster as Wall Street braces for a big week that will put the U.S. economy back on Trump’s radar thumbnail

Crude oil prices rise after Maduro ouster as Wall Street braces for a big week that will put the U.S. economy back on Trump’s radar

January 7, 2026
Is the AI boom a bubble waiting to pop? Here’s what history says thumbnail

Is the AI boom a bubble waiting to pop? Here’s what history says

January 7, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Donate
Monday, January 12, 2026
66 °f
Wellfleet
58 ° Tue
63 ° Wed
68 ° Thu
61 ° Fri
  • Login
  • Register
FREE Cape Cod News
DONATE
  • FREE Cape Cod News
  • Cape Cod News
  • News
    • News
    • Massachusetts
    • Breaking News
    • Cape Cod Weather
    • Storm Watch
    • Environment
  • Politics
    • democrats
    • republicans
  • Business
    • business
    • cryptocurrency
    • economy
    • money
    • Real Estate
    • Tech
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Photos
    • Orleans
    • Eastham
    • Wellfleet
    • Truro
    • Provincetown
    • Brewster
    • Chatham
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Free Cape Cod News
No Result
View All Result
  • FREE Cape Cod News
  • Cape Cod News
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Photos
  • Videos
Home News

Why spy agency used during hurricanes…

FREE Cape Cod News by FREE Cape Cod News
January 5, 2023
in News, Storm Watch, Weather
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Donate
0
Why spy agency used during hurricanes... thumbnail
638
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on TwitterShare on Facebook

A flag flies at a mobile home park on San Carlos Island in the Fort Myers area days after Hurricane Ian hit Florida in late September 2022.

A flag flies at a mobile home park on San Carlos Island in the Fort Myers area days after Hurricane Ian hit Florida in late September 2022. (Octavio Jones/for The Washington Post)

Corry Robb’s colleagues at the U.S. National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency use powerful satellites to monitor protests in Iran, missile launches in North Korea and Russian strikes on Ukraine. This fall, Robb and a team from the agency were deployed under far different circumstances: to Florida, in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian.

With climate change driving more frequent and powerful natural disasters, the intelligence agency, part of the Department of Defense, is contending with new needs closer to home. Charged with mapping and analyzing the physical world, it’s turning skills sharpened in the world’s danger spots toward helping people inside U.S. borders. And within days of Ian’s landfall on the Florida coast, Robb and his team of analysts were processing tens of thousands of drone and satellite images per day to help direct rescuers in the Fort Myers area to their most important targets.

The week-long effort was one of the latest examples of public agencies and companies repurposing advanced technology toward improving the speed and efficacy of rescues, as more people stand in the pathway of climate-driven disasters. Now, U.S. intelligence officials are experimenting with ways to get involved, taking a small step toward an area they have often avoided: domestic deployments.

“Geospatial data is really layered data,” said Robb, who helps run a team at the geospatial intelligence agency that deploys to locations around the world. “We’re that foundational layer that you build everything on top of.”

The deployment came after President Joe Biden declared Hurricane Ian a major disaster on Sept. 29, giving the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) the power to request help from across the federal government in response to one of the most powerful hurricanes ever to hit the United States.

The intelligence officials could accumulate drone and satellite photos of the hurricane-hit areas, plug them into their systems, and come up with a list of areas that were the likeliest to be in need of search-and-rescue teams. They could figure out which boat docks were still likely to be functional, making it easier to get around by water. They could plot quicker and safer routes for rescuers as they zipped around a torn-up and waterlogged landscape no longer navigable with Google Maps. More than 100 people died in the hurricane. Far more needed help from emergency workers.

At the peak, the analysts’ system was processing about 60,000 images per day, Robb said, helping to produce rich information about the geography of the damage that made rescue efforts more effective. The agency has deployed to natural disasters for years, but it hadn’t previously used drones, which meant it didn’t have as rich or as many low-altitude images to work with.

The agency doesn’t use classified images for emergency situations such as Hurricane Ian, since most of the people who would need access to them don’t have security clearances, Robb said. But the analysts are still able to do powerful work with commercial, unclassified satellite images and pictures taken from small quadcopter drones, the kind with four spinning rotors, he said.

The data “tells us where some vulnerable communities could be,” he said.

The team worked out of a parking lot in a cramped, nondescript white trailer that was small enough to be towed around by pickup truck. Sitting on black folding chairs as they stared at their computer screens, they tried to pinpoint rescue targets that people on the ground wouldn’t otherwise have been able to see.

Analysts brought special large-format printers that could create detailed, waterproof maps on the spot. And they could feed data into an online portal that emergency personnel could access on their phones, helping to spread the information widely and quickly.

The effort was responsible for at least one human rescue, Robb said. After receiving a tip that a person might be stranded in a stand of mangrove trees, which can be difficult to search because of their thick root structures, an analyst pored over drone imagery and found a possible target for a rescue team. The analyst was right.

The emergency responders “were getting the information that they needed to be able to turn the power back on. Find the people still trapped in debris. All that kind of stuff,” Robb said.

Analysts such as Robb aren’t the only national security personnel finding themselves pulled more into a different kind of fight, one that is driven by climate change rather than human enemies. Across the globe, armed forces are also increasingly being seen as the emergency responders of last resort, as wildfires, floods and other disasters start to strain the civilian safety net.

The result can be complicated: officials who are accustomed to fighting foreign adversaries sometimes say that natural disasters are an unwanted distraction. And in societies in which attitudes toward the military are mixed or in which armies have occasionally subverted civilian leaders, widespread domestic deployments can cause tension.

That’s true in the United States as well, where intelligence agencies restrain their activities domestically.

That’s why the team deployed under the control of FEMA, a civilian nonmilitary agency, he said.

“There are some very strong sensitivities and some hot-button issues,” Robb said. But, he said, “we’re helping fellow Americans, which is kind of neat.”

Read More

Tags: hurricanestormweather

FREE Digital Newspaper Subscription!
Sign up for your free digital subscription. The FREE Cape Cod News

Unsubscribe
FREE Cape Cod News

FREE Cape Cod News

Free Cape Cod News is what's happening in the Cape Cod, U.S and World & what people are talking about right now. Local newspaper. Stay in the know. Subscribe to get notified about our latest news.

Related Posts

Trump Pushes for a Credit Card Policy That Researchers Say Could Save Americans $100 Billion thumbnail
News

Trump Pushes for a Credit Card Policy That Researchers Say Could Save Americans $100 Billion

by FREE Cape Cod News
January 12, 2026
Patriots vs. Chargers Prediction, Odds, Picks for NFL Wild Card thumbnail
News

Patriots vs. Chargers Prediction, Odds, Picks for NFL Wild Card

by FREE Cape Cod News
January 11, 2026
Trump’s immigration crackdown turns deadly in Minneapolis thumbnail
News

Trump’s immigration crackdown turns deadly in Minneapolis

by FREE Cape Cod News
January 10, 2026
House Passes Three-Year Extension of Enhanced Obamacare Subsidies thumbnail
News

House Passes Three-Year Extension of Enhanced Obamacare Subsidies

by FREE Cape Cod News
January 10, 2026
Load More
Please login to join discussion

Follow Us on Twitter

FREE Cape Cod News - Your source for local Cape Cod news, latest breaking U.S. and World news. Every day, all day. Subscribe for your favorite categories.

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Why Massachusetts loves Nibi the beaver and is fighting to keep her out of the wild thumbnail

Why Massachusetts loves Nibi the beaver and is fighting to keep her out of the wild

October 7, 2024
Suspect In Murders of 76-Year-Old Massachusetts Woman and Her Daughter Caught in New York City thumbnail

Suspect In Murders of 76-Year-Old Massachusetts Woman and Her Daughter Caught in New York City

September 2, 2024
PAAM. Provincetown Art Association And Art Museum.

Unlocking Cape Cod’s Museum Marvels: Your Must-Visit Guide for an Unforgettable Weekend!

June 28, 2023
Patriots vs. Chargers Prediction, Odds, Picks for NFL Wild Card thumbnail

Patriots vs. Chargers Prediction, Odds, Picks for NFL Wild Card

0
Trump Pushes for a Credit Card Policy That Researchers Say Could Save Americans $100 Billion thumbnail

Trump Pushes for a Credit Card Policy That Researchers Say Could Save Americans $100 Billion

0
NFL Wild Card weather report: Bears-Packers snow game, plus Steelers and Patriots forecasts thumbnail

NFL Wild Card weather report: Bears-Packers snow game, plus Steelers and Patriots forecasts

0
Trump Pushes for a Credit Card Policy That Researchers Say Could Save Americans $100 Billion thumbnail

Trump Pushes for a Credit Card Policy That Researchers Say Could Save Americans $100 Billion

January 12, 2026
Patriots vs. Chargers Prediction, Odds, Picks for NFL Wild Card thumbnail

Patriots vs. Chargers Prediction, Odds, Picks for NFL Wild Card

January 11, 2026
Trump’s immigration crackdown turns deadly in Minneapolis thumbnail

Trump’s immigration crackdown turns deadly in Minneapolis

January 10, 2026

FREE Cape Cod News On Twitter

Today’s News

  • Trump Pushes for a Credit Card Policy That Researchers Say Could Save Americans $100 Billion January 12, 2026
  • Patriots vs. Chargers Prediction, Odds, Picks for NFL Wild Card January 11, 2026
  • Trump’s immigration crackdown turns deadly in Minneapolis January 10, 2026
  • House Passes Three-Year Extension of Enhanced Obamacare Subsidies January 10, 2026
  • NFL Wild Card weather report: Bears-Packers snow game, plus Steelers and Patriots forecasts January 10, 2026
FREE Cape Cod News

Copyright © 2024 Free Cape Cod News

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Donate

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • FREE Cape Cod News
  • Cape Cod News
  • News
    • News
    • Massachusetts
    • Breaking News
    • Cape Cod Weather
    • Storm Watch
    • Environment
  • Politics
    • democrats
    • republicans
  • Business
    • business
    • cryptocurrency
    • economy
    • money
    • Real Estate
    • Tech
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Photos
    • Orleans
    • Eastham
    • Wellfleet
    • Truro
    • Provincetown
    • Brewster
    • Chatham
  • Videos
  • Login
  • Sign Up

Copyright © 2024 Free Cape Cod News