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Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Update: 2/18/09 The county will still not pay to use the assessor’s maps, but Warren County Joint Communications officials have agreed to use them. Local emergency response organizations will pay the $5,000 fee. Among those stepping up to contribute: Warrenton and Wright City fire protection districts and Marthasville Volunteer Fire District. The Warren County Sheriff and Ambulance District have expressed interest. All emergency responders will have access to the data, whether they contribute or not, per Mike Owenby, chief of the Warrenton Fire Protection District.

Note: In this article Carol Sexton is identified as Joint Communications Director Carol Sexton, while below she is Dispatch Director. She may well be both; it’s not clear.

- Suburban Journal

—- original post (with state updated per comment) 2/11/09————

“[The state of Missouri’s free map is] the one we want to use because it’s going to be effective for seeing driveways. Do you need to see the license plate on the car in the driveway when you’re trying to get to an address? No. It’s overkill on the resolution.”

- Warren County Missouri Dispatch Director Carol Sexton on why the county does not pay the $5000 to use the assessor’s maps for 911 response in the Suburban Journal. [That URL is dead. The original article I believe, is here. - ABS]

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/18 at 06:34 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Recovery.gov promises to map money spent from the just signed “stimulus bill,” officially the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. For now, there’s a map of estimates how many jobs will be saved/created in each state over the next two years. The technology? Flash.

Kiplinger sent out reports in the two weeks prior to passage of the bill to get a sense of the projects each state is likely to pitch to the US DOT for funding, which has final say. There’s a map of that data at the Kiplinger site.

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/18 at 06:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Oregon Public Radio reports on a transportation planner, Jeff Selle, who has worked with Spokane and Coeur d’Alene to find economically depressed areas where stimulus money might be spent.

I’ve got our G-I-S people looking at the census tracts to determine what areas are considered economically depressed in Spokane County and we’ll weed our projects down using those criteria.

 

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/18 at 06:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Years ago I was a “regular” with the Red Cross. The pheresis donation center was not far from ESRI and I managed to donate quite regularly. Pheresis takes out just some of the blood components and puts everything else “back.” That makes it really efficient for the Red Cross and not as challenging to the person donating. (I never got woozy afterward, unlike whole blood donation experiences.) The only downside? It take about 2 hours. The upside? They show you movies! I was most pleased when I got a call one afternoon - an emergency. They needed someone with B+ blood who had had chicken pox. I fit the bill and was able to be there in 20 minutes to meet the need. It felt really good to have what someone needed and to be able to share it.

In the recent past, I couldn’t donate due to a trip to South Africa. But, now I’m good to go. So, the day after Thanksgiving, when everyone else was shopping, I saw a sign for a drive in Porter Square. My donation put me back on the Red Cross radar and just two weeks after I was eligible to donate again (regular blood) I received a card about another drive in Cambridge and then a call about one in Somerville. They were both on the same day, but within walking distance of my house. Well done Red Cross! You make it easy to donate!

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/18 at 06:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

“Google makes maps the same way the supermarket makes eggs.”

Dr. David Coleman of the Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering department at the University of New Brunswick made that comment in a presentation about trends in mapping on the Web. The talk was part of a workshop on SDI in Fredericton, NB hosted by the Land Information Secretariat of Service New Brunswick back on December 9th, 2008.

Reader Bernie Connors, P.Eng, Manager - Spatial Data Infrastructure, Land Information Secretariat Service, New Brunswick, who sent this in followed up: “Several people in the audience made note of the comment. I later asked him about the quote and Dr. Coleman said it was an original.”

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/18 at 06:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
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