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Public Safety Tech Is Stuck. BRINC Drones’ New Program BRINC Beyond Is Moving It Forward.

Jennifer Ross by Jennifer Ross
February 20, 2025
in Business
Reading Time: 10 mins read

Technology moves at two speeds in the world of public safety: private companies push forward, and government agencies try to catch up. The latest example? Drones. While consumer drones have become as ubiquitous as iPhones in the tech world, many public safety agencies are still flying the equivalent of a Motorola Razr. Seattle-based drone maker BRINC Drones is stepping in with BRINC Beyond, a new program that aims to fast-track police and fire departments out of their tech rut and into the future—no trade-ins required.

For years, public safety agencies have been making do with whatever drone tech they could get their hands on. More often than not, that meant off-the-shelf enterprise drones, the kind designed for commercial use or hobbyists looking for high-end gear. The logic was simple: they were available, relatively affordable, and good enough. But “good enough” is no longer cutting it.

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Despite the need for tools built for the complexities of emergency response, public safety agencies don’t have the luxury of scrapping their entire drone fleets overnight, and BRINC Drones knows it. That’s why BRINC Beyond not focused on an all-or-nothing switch,  rather aiding a seamless transition. Through the program, agencies can receive credit for drones they already own—no matter the brand or origin—to be used toward integrating BRINC’s purpose-built drones into their existing workflow, scaling up at a pace that keeps operations running without disruption. 

It’s a smart strategy, both for BRINC and for the agencies it serves. Many departments have been hesitant to adopt specialized drones because the cost and logistics of replacing an entire fleet all at once felt impossible. BRINC Beyond removes that friction. With new regulations and security concerns mounting, generic, off-the-shelf drones won’t be viable for public safety much longer. BRINC isn’t waiting for agencies to hit a crisis point before making a switch. Instead, it’s laying out a clear, low-risk path toward the future of emergency response. 

The Structural Challenges of Public Safety Tech Adoption

Digital Transformation Hurdles and Inflexible Core Systems

Public safety agencies don’t have the luxury of prioritizing digital transformation the way a Silicon Valley startup might. Their primary focus—responding to emergencies—means that tech adoption often happens in bursts, dictated by urgent needs rather than long-term strategy. The result is usually piecemeal, as departments try to improve community safety with consumer products that were never meant to integrate with their infrastructure.

This can create major issues with interoperability and compliance, especially as governments push for new regulatory standards like NG911. A drone might be able to reach a crisis scene faster than a human, but if it can’t communicate seamlessly with existing CAD or digital evidence systems it’s more of a workaround than a true solution.

BRINC is cutting through the red tape of outdated public safety tech with drones that actually work the way first responders need them to. Their drones integrate with existing public safety infrastructure, including computer-aided dispatch (CAD), digital evidence management systems (DEMS), and 911 call systems, helping agencies sidestep the usual tech growing pains and move toward systems that are actually built for the job.

Regulatory Hurdles

Drones are supposed to make public safety operations faster and more efficient, but in reality getting one off the ground is often an exercise in government paperwork. The FAA has altitude restrictions, no-fly zones, and pilot certification requirements, and that’s before you even get into the mess of local regulations that change depending on where you are. One city lets drones assist in emergency response with barely a second thought, while departments are drowning in waiver applications just to use them at all the next county over. 

BRINC is tackling the issue by making sure its drones are already compliant with current and upcoming regulations, so agencies don’t have to play catch-up. They also offer guidance on FAA waivers and Certificates of Authorization (COA), making sure first responders can actually use the tech they invest in. 

Budgetary Constraints

Running a public safety drone program isn’t cheap, and most agencies aren’t exactly working with blank checks. Between the upfront cost of new drones, the software to manage them, the training to actually use them, and the ongoing maintenance to keep them operational, the numbers start looking less like an investment and more like a financial headache. And when the budget conversation rolls around, drones are competing with everything from new squad cars to essential equipment upgrades. 

BRINC gets that, which is why its BRINC Beyond program is structured like a giant financial lifeline. Instead of forcing agencies to ditch their old drones and start from scratch, it’s offering up to $15,000 in credits per drone, no trade-ins required. And because cost is always a sticking point, BRINC is also matching competitor discounts, making it impossible to justify sticking with outdated tech just to save money.

Data Management and Integration

Drones are great at collecting data. So great in fact, that most public safety agencies don’t have the infrastructure to handle it all. Footage, thermal scans, real-time mapping—without a system built to process and integrate all that information it’s just a digital pileup waiting to happen. Agencies already deal with clunky legacy software that struggles to talk to modern tools, and when you throw in concerns about data security and compatibility, it’s easy to see why some departments avoid upgrading altogether.

BRINC’s software is CJIS-compliant, meaning it meets FBI-level security standards for storing and transferring criminal justice information. No sketchy third-party servers, no overseas data transfers, no surprise vulnerabilities. Everything stays within the U.S., and every line of code is built without foreign influence. 

Risk Aversion

For federal agencies, the stakes are always high. When your job is saving lives, taking a gamble on new technology isn’t exactly appealing. If something goes wrong, it’s not just a glitch—it’s a liability, a lawsuit, or worse. That kind of pressure makes public safety one of the slowest industries to adopt cutting-edge tech, even when the benefits are obvious. Instead of upgrading to tools designed for real-world emergencies, agencies often stick with what’s familiar, even if it’s outdated.

BRINC knows agencies won’t swap out their entire drone fleets overnight, so it doesn’t ask them to. It’s BRINC Beyond program is built for slow, structured transitions, allowing agencies to introduce purpose-built drones without disrupting their current systems. It’s the kind of approach that makes new tech feel less like a leap of faith and more like an inevitability, because at the end of the day, the real risk is sticking with drones that weren’t built for the job in the first place.The Future of Emergency Response Technology

Public safety technology is at an inflection point. For years, emergency responders have worked with tools that weren’t designed for the complexities of real-world crises, adapting off-the-shelf drones to do what they were never intended to. But as purpose-built systems like BRINC’s Responder and Lemur 2 become more accessible, the definition of what a public safety drone is should be shifting. 

With BRINC taking the lead in designing mission-specific solutions, it’s clear that innovation isn’t waiting on government mandates. Instead, private companies are proactively filling the gaps left by slow-moving procurement cycles and outdated equipment. The result may be a more capable and better-equipped public safety sector—but it also underscores the growing role of corporate-driven technological shifts in shaping the future of emergency response.

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Jennifer Ross

Jennifer Ross

Jennifer has been a part of the journey ever since The American Reporter started. As a strong learner and passionate writer, she contributes her editing skills for the news agency. She also jots down intellectual pieces from health category.

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