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Tagged: grant

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Cheyenne County’s Board of Commissioners [NE] will pursue a grant that will fund a new on-line venture into the county’s General Information System (GIS).

Following a Power-Point presentation from GIS Workshop Sales Manager Brenda Wilson, the board chose Monday to use the Lincoln-based company to prepare and submit a state grant that will seek up to $25,000 per project.

Do I understand that the county is paying the GIS consultant to write the grant proposal? I wonder how much is set aside for that work? I suspect the grant could not be used to pay for prepping the grant? 

- Sun Telegraph

The Center for American Progress offers a map that shows the state-by-state impact of a potental 10 percent reduction in spending for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, once knowns as "food stamps." Not only will it mean fewer meals, but also nearly 100,000 job losses, per the analysis.

- Center for American Progress

SeeClickFix and a local Patch news website, Kirkwood, are prompting change at Missouri DOT.

We took Meg’s comment to the Missouri Department of Transportation (MODOT), who says they will give the light a second look. Over the next week, MODOT will study the traffic flow at Kirkwood and Big Bend roads and decide how to adjust the light to improve morning congestion.

- Kirkwood Patch

by Adena Schutzberg on 03/21 at 04:03 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Monday, March 12, 2012

Videos from February's Assoication of American Geographers Conference in New York are starting to appear on the Association's YouTube channel.

via @theaag

Tom Baker of Esri announced a new Education GIS search tool at Edgis.org (a domain he owns). It seems to be a Google custom search on a number of education and career GIS websites.

- blog post at Trbaker.com via @trbaker

Douglas Hurt, associate professor of geography at the University of Central Oklahoma and a member of the steering committee of the Oklahoma Alliance for Geographic Education, wrote an op-ed/letter to editor after the state removed funding for geographic education for k-12 teachers.

Stephanie Kemmerer teaches AP human geography at Fletcher High School, which makes her an expert at transforming ninth graders into high performing college sophomores.
 
She's a teacher of the year candidate from northeast Florida. That odd intro above seems to relate to the use of a college geography textbook that her freshmen students find hard to use. There's no mention of GIS, but the students do go on field trips.
 
 
Professor Michael DeMers of New Mexico State University plans to use a $32,000 grant from the National Geographic Society's education foundation to build a State Geography Alliance and bring educators to the school that "teach the teachers" to teach GIS, including on iPads. The university announced the grant Wednesday.

- AP

- News 22 (includes video)

by Adena Schutzberg on 03/12 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Monday, January 16, 2012

Phillip K. Mol of G-1 Aerial Surveys has offered to replace a 1978 aerial mosaic that hangs in the Bureau County, IL Court House. He does such work for about $1000 but will give the county a new one for free. No, there will be no new pics - he'll assemble it from IDNR and USGS orthoquads that date to 2005. But, he does want his company to get credit on the image.

- News Tribune

The City of Indio [CA] has been approved to receive grant funding in the amount of $47,000 from the California Office of Traffic Safety to implement an automated traffic collision and tracking program with Geographic Information System (GIS) capabilities. "This is a significant upgrade and modernization of how we'll be able to prevent collisions and make Indio's roads safer. This program will greatly assist the city in proactively reducing the number of reported traffic collisions city wide, said Indio's Mayor Glenn Miller.

- My Desert

As many as 56 medical marijuana facilities in Colorado are located within 1,000 feet of a school, according to an I-News analysis of school addresses and licenses issued to more than 700 medical marijuana facilities statewide.

Federal and state laws require a 1000 foot buffer. So, the feds are cracking down as they recently did in California. GIS was part of the analysis.

- Inewsnetwork.org

Forget OSM and Google Maps, Hillsborough, NJ is using GreenMap.org for its community mapping efforts.

- Hillsborough Patch

by Adena Schutzberg on 01/16 at 05:15 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Wednesday, January 04, 2012

Professor Nagarjuna G from the Gnowledge lab of the Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education and hist team are mapping nine villages in Raigad district of Maharashtra Statea in India and adding the data to OpenStreetMap The project grew out of a "one laptop per child" effort in the remote villiages, areas G and his colleague regularly visit. But how to gain access to GPS devices?

It was a year ago that a team led by set out to map these villages in Khalapur taluka of the district bordering Mumbai. With some basic engineering, transparent spectacle cases were turned into Global Positioning System (GPS) devices at a cost of Rs 6,000 each; the contraptions are cheaper than GPS trackers available in the market at Rs 25,000 upwards.

Teachers are developing wikipages about their villages and students are recording stories told by parents and grandparents to document their hometowns.

- India Express

The Mapping Montana lecture series will take place in Helena at 6:30 p.m. on four Thursdays in January and February. Topics run from the historical to the current.

DAT/EM Systems International donated 16 licenses of their SUMMIT EVOLUTION Professional digital stereoplotter to the Geomatics Department in the University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA) School of Engineering. Valued at over $300,000, this gift forms part of DAT/EM’s on-going initiative to sponsor higher education through software, software support, student training and consultation to the faculty.

press release

The Geospatial Information Research Center opened in Beijing in early December. It's  a partnership between the Chinese Academy of Surveying and Mapping and the U.K. University of Nottingham.

This new joint venture will promote innovation and technology transfer, leadership training, and staff and student exchange. It will explore funding opportunities and new project work, integrating resources to support long-term collaboration; and it will act as a world-leading incubation centre to realise beneficial combinations of research and development, production and commercialisation.

press release

[Matthew] Huffine, 53, of Victorville [CA] has been teaching for 24 years, including nine years at Hesperia Junior High and the past 11 years at AAE, the Apple Valley charter school run by the Lewis Center for Educational Research. He has three children, ages 26, 22 and 14 — the youngest now an AAE student.

He started his career in the Forest Service and USGS and come to teaching later. Nows he's being honored as a local person who made a difference in 2011 and a great teacher who brings education beyond the walls. Among his students is one studying GIS at the University of Redlands. Lesson learned: we need GIS users to go into teaching to grow more GIS users.

Victorville Daily Press

by Adena Schutzberg on 01/04 at 04:24 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Tuesday, January 03, 2012

Nottingham seems to have turned a "first place finish" in the energy price increase rankings into a GIS services aimed at saving government and residents on electricity bills.

Nottingham was identified as the UK city most sensitive to rising electricity prices in a study by GIS specialist Esri UK and the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR). The study applied the technology to socio-economic data to map which areas of the UK will be hardest hit by rising energy prices this winter.

That turned into a grant.

The council won £200,000 in funding from the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) and is working with the Nottingham Energy Partnership and Esri to develop and deliver the maps, which go beyond standard static maps of energy flows. Dynamic mapping will comprise layers of information that may be updated to inform decisions on energy generation, development and reducing its carbon footprint.

The system, already in use internally, will be made available to the public. It's not clear how residents will use the dymnamic mapping but they can use it to find if their house might be a fit for solar panels and how much they'd save with new windows. The article is not clear on if the city has full 3D model of residences for calculating savings.

- The Guardian

A shoutout is due to a father and son team who are helping Washington state get its redistricting done fairly.

Vancouver resident John Milem was dubbed the “ultimate redistricting geek” in a tweet Friday by Seattle Times politics writer Jim Brunner. On Sunday, the state Redistricting Commission passed a resolution recognizing Milem as the equivalent of the redistricting volunteer of the year. Milem describes himself as an “advocate for redistricting in the public interest.”

Without pay or position, the 75-year-old resident of Vancouver’s Fircrest Neighborhood attended all of the commission’s 18 public forums around the state and all of the commission’s other regular and special meetings in Olympia, with the exception of three. (He missed two meetings because he was taking part in Clark County’s redistricting process for county commissioner seats). His son, Mark, customized open-source software on which Milem developed independent state maps, suggestions and corrections that would streamline the election process and represent the character of communities. 

Thank you for your service!

- The Columbian

The Greater Bridgeport Regional Council (GBRC) is asking the state of Connecticut for a $1.4M grant to develop GIS mapping system to be shared by several towns.

GIS is designed to capture, store, manipulate, analyze, manage and present all types of geographically referenced data. It's the merging of cartography, statistical analysis, and database technology — a layering of up to 100 maps pinpointing waterways, septic systems, roads, wetlands and wells. A GIS integrates, stores, edits, analyzes, shares and displays geographic information for informed decision making.

I'm not aware of any systems that have a 100 layer limitation.

Monroe Patch

The Boston Biz Journal did a map of the wealthiest ZIP Codes in Massachusetts. (I don't live in any of them, but bike and run in many of them!) The data is from Esri; the map Google. I'm confident Esri is working to better integrate its data business with ArcGIS Online to enable just such maps.

BBJ

by Adena Schutzberg on 01/03 at 06:01 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

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