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As Drones Spot Sharks, New York Beaches Are Shut Down

New York|As Drones Spot Sharks, New York Beaches Are Shut Down

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/06/nyregion/shark-sightings-new-york-beaches-drones.html

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Drone technology seemed to contribute to an unusual number of shark sightings along Rockaway Beach in recent days. Each time swimmers were ordered out of the ocean.

Beachgoers shield themselves from the wind at Rockaway Beach.
Parts of Rockaway Beach in Queens have been closed repeatedly in the past week.Credit...Lanna Apisukh for The New York Times

Maia ColemanNate Schweber

July 6, 2025, 12:48 p.m. ET

A series of shark sightings has forced officials to repeatedly close parts of Rockaway Beach in recent days, leaving New Yorker beachgoers temporarily land-bound at the height of the Fourth of July weekend, officials said.

The sightings, which began on Tuesday, arrived as city and state officials stepped up use of technology to locate and track sharks on beaches in Queens and on Long Island.

As visitors descended for the holiday, traditionally one of the busiest periods of the year, the technology helped to keep swimmers safe, city officials said. But it also seemed to contribute to an unusual number of shark sightings: at least six in less than a week. Under city and state protocol, the beaches were closed each time, making for a halting and occasionally stressful weekend at the shore, swimmers said.

“We’ve always surfed in harmony with them,” said Kate Leddington, a longtime surfer who recently moved to Charlottesville, Va., after years in Brooklyn and was on the beach at Rockaway on Saturday. “There’s sharks out there always — it’s just now they’re using drones to see them.”

On Wednesday, in preparation for the holiday, Gov. Kathy Hochul announced that state agencies now have 28 camera-equipped drones to search for sharks, as well as 48 trained drone operators. Under the state and city protocol, when shark sightings are confirmed, swimming cannot resume until at least one hour after the sighting.

The city, which oversees Rockaway Beach, has a fleet of its own operated by the Police and Fire Departments and the emergency management office. And drones, once an alien sight at the beach, have become nearly as commonplace as Jet Skis.


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