Drones for Monitoring Levee and Dam Safety After Heavy Rains
When heavy rainfall saturates earthen embankments and pushes water levels toward design limits, the window for early detection of seepage, erosion, and structural compromise is narrow and critical. Drone inspection programs give emergency management coordinators rapid, actionable aerial intelligence across entire levee systems and dam faces within hours of a triggering event, before conditions escalate beyond recovery. Struction Solutions deploys Blue UAS and NDAA-compliant drone teams within 24 to 48 hours of a catastrophic weather event, compared to the 3 to 5 day industry standard, providing incident commanders with the situational awareness they need at the moment decisions matter most.
For a broader understanding of how drone technology operates across every phase of emergency management, from initial rapid assessment through extended recovery documentation, visit the Struction Solutions guide to drones in disaster relief and emergency management.
What types of drones are most effective for levee and dam safety monitoring after heavy rainfall?
The most effective programs combine two distinct platform types. Autonomous free-flying drones cover wide areas rapidly to assess the full scope of a levee system or reservoir shoreline. Tethered drones provide persistent, continuous overhead coverage at the highest-risk structural segment while water levels are still rising. Neither platform alone is sufficient for a complete operational response.
Free-flying platforms such as the Skydio X10, which carries a thermal payload with less than 30 mK sensitivity and 640×512 radiometric resolution, can cover miles of levee crest and detect seepage pathways, slope saturation, and erosion scarps in a single sortie. Tethered systems including the Hoverfly LiveSky SENTRY and SPECTRE platforms remain airborne for extended operational periods without battery interruptions, maintaining unbroken overhead coverage during the most dynamic phase of a flood event.
Both platform types must meet Blue UAS and NDAA compliance standards for deployment at federally regulated water infrastructure. Struction Solutions operates a fleet that includes Skydio X10 units and maintains a partnership with Hoverfly Technologies, whose tethered systems are designed specifically for public safety and defense missions.
How quickly can a drone team be deployed to assess flood risk at a dam or levee after a major rain event?
Deployment speed determines the value of the assessment. An inspection completed three days after peak water levels have already begun to recede tells incident commanders far less than aerial data collected during the critical rising-water phase. Struction Solutions mobilizes drone inspection teams within 24 to 48 hours of a triggering event, against a 3 to 5 day industry standard for traditional inspection crews.
This compressed mobilization window depends on pre-positioned equipment, weather-tracking-informed staging, and a roster of more than 1,000 pre-vetted certified professionals available for immediate deployment. For emergency management coordinators operating under FEMA Public Assistance or FEMA Individual Assistance frameworks, this response speed directly determines how quickly actionable situational awareness reaches the incident command structure.
What sensor payloads detect seepage, erosion, and structural compromise in levees and dams?
Thermal imaging is the primary sensor for post-rain levee inspection. When water migrates through an earthen embankment at elevated rates following heavy rainfall, it creates measurable temperature differentials in the structure. These anomalies are invisible to optical cameras and unaided ground observers, but clearly visible to a properly calibrated thermal payload operated by a certified thermographer.
The Skydio X10 thermal payload, with less than 30 mK sensitivity and 640×512 radiometric resolution, captures these indicators from safe operational altitude. ITC Level I Thermographers on the Struction Solutions team interpret the thermal data in context, distinguishing genuine seepage signatures from normal thermal variation caused by surface moisture, vegetation cover, or recent sun exposure. High-resolution optical imagery collected in the same flight documents visible conditions including slope erosion, settlement cracking, wave scour, and toe seepage.
When AI-powered analysis processes both data streams together, emergency managers receive a prioritized risk map rather than a raw collection of imagery, allowing ground inspection resources to be directed toward the highest-risk zones first.
Are tethered drones better than free-flying drones for persistent levee monitoring during an active flood event?
For continuous surveillance of a specific high-risk structure during an active event, tethered systems have clear operational advantages. Because they draw power from a ground source through the tether, platforms like the Hoverfly LiveSky SENTRY maintain airborne position for extended periods without interruption, providing unbroken overhead coverage while water levels are still rising and risk is still evolving. The physical tether also provides a secured data link in environments where cellular infrastructure may be degraded after a major rain event.
Free-flying platforms remain essential for covering the full linear extent of a levee system or the drainage area upstream of a dam, tasks that exceed the fixed-position coverage radius of a tethered system. The most operationally sound model deploys both: a tethered platform stationed at the highest-risk structure segment and autonomous drones conducting wider reconnaissance passes.
The 2024 FAA Reauthorization Act expanded operational flexibility for tethered systems used by public safety organizations, exempting qualifying operations from certain remote pilot certification and pre-flight authorization requirements while maintaining altitude and overflight safety limits. This regulatory development significantly improves the cost and speed of tethered drone deployment for emergency management agencies.
How do drone inspection programs fit within tight budgets for county and municipal emergency management offices?
Budget constraints are a consistent barrier for public safety directors evaluating drone programs. Drone as a Service models address this directly by eliminating capital expenditure on hardware, pilot training, maintenance, and regulatory compliance. Agencies contract for specific mission outcomes and pay only for the inspection coverage and reports they need when conditions warrant.
Struction Solutions offers a Drone as a Service structure that gives municipalities, county emergency management offices, and state agencies access to a Blue UAS and NDAA-compliant fleet, including Skydio X10 and Hoverfly tethered platforms, without the overhead of internal program ownership. AI-powered quality assurance has reduced reinspection costs by 50% according to company metrics, and workflow automation through the VCA Software platform has reduced administrative tasks by 70% according to internal data from the Struction Solutions Deep Research analysis. Both figures contribute directly to lower per-inspection program costs.
For agencies that do need to justify expenditure through a federal cost recovery process, drone-collected data integrates directly into FEMA Public Assistance documentation and Substantial Damage Estimating workflows, making inspection costs eligible for reimbursement consideration under applicable program guidelines.
What regulatory requirements apply to operating drones over levees and dams during emergency response?
FAA Part 107 certification is the baseline operational requirement for commercial drone operations over critical water infrastructure. Remote pilots must hold a current certificate, comply with airspace authorization requirements, and in most cases operate within visual line of sight unless a specific waiver covers the mission profile.
For deployments at federally regulated water infrastructure or under government contracts, Blue UAS and NDAA compliance adds another layer of requirements. Platforms must exclude components from adversarial nations, and operators must be able to document compliance for procurement review. Struction Solutions holds FAA Part 107 certification and operates exclusively Blue UAS and NDAA-compliant platforms, ensuring that inspections at sensitive infrastructure meet applicable procurement and security standards.
The 2024 FAA Reauthorization Act introduced meaningful new flexibility specifically for tethered drone operations by public safety organizations. Qualifying operations may be exempted from certain pre-flight authorization requirements, which reduces the administrative burden during time-sensitive flood response scenarios. Altitude limits and overflight safety requirements remain in effect.
How does drone-collected data from levee inspections integrate into FEMA reporting and incident command systems?
Aerial data has no operational value until it reaches the decision makers who need it in a format they can act on. Raw imagery files are not what incident commanders or FEMA program managers require. Structured inspection reports with georeferenced damage documentation, severity classification, and prioritized action items are. The Struction Solutions reporting workflow delivers annotated imagery, thermograms, and assessment summaries within defined turnaround windows, formatted to support FEMA Public Assistance and FEMA Individual Assistance documentation requirements.
The company has provided government disaster recovery support including FEMA PA and IA programs, Substantial Damage Estimating, Cost Estimating, and Housing Habitability Inspections. That direct operational experience with federal program documentation standards informs how drone-collected field data is packaged and delivered rather than simply collected and archived.
For agencies looking to build drone data into their broader emergency response and recovery operations, the Struction Solutions pillar page on drones in emergency management covers how aerial data flows from initial rapid assessment through long-term recovery documentation and FEMA compliance workflows.
For more information about implementing comprehensive drone inspection solutions that reduce fraud while improving claim processing efficiency, contact our team to understand how rapid response protocols enhance both fraud detection capabilities and legitimate claim processing speeds.






Struction Solutions’ Vice President of Field Operations, Tina Rodriguez, oversees and maintains claim life-cycle metrics in XactAnalysis and claim handling and estimating best practices in Xactimate for Struction Solutions.
Struction Solutions’ Chief Operating Officer, Wayne Guillot, is a results-driven and customer-focused operations manager with over 20 years of experience in the insurance industry.
Brady Dugan is a dynamic and visionary adjuster with over 23 years of progressive leadership in the construction and insurance industries.