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Tagged: redistricting

Monday, March 19, 2012

After detailing how officials want citizen input on the new district proposal for Montana, there's a rather scary discussion of how ot access the maps in Google Map and Google Earth. That would be enough to put me off looking any further.

- Billings Gazette

An interactive map that is meant to make it more user-friendly for the residents of the RM [Rural Municipality] of East St. Paul [Manitoba, CA] to access municipal information is nearing completion after over two-years of hard work.

The recreation map looks like an ArcGIS.com template implementation.

- Selkirk Journal

From the City of Greenville, S.C. GIS Division with support from the City’s Parks and Recreation Department and the Greenville County Recreation District comes an interactive map and mobile app of the Swamp Rabbit Trail. The includes data on ATM's, bathrooms and parking places along the 13.5 mile route. It runs via ArcGIS.com and requires the download for use on mobile devices. The sources on the basemap read:

Sources: Esri, DeLorme, NAVTEQ, TomTom, Intermap, iPC, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN, GeoBase, IGN, Kadaster NL, Ordnance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), and the GIS User Community

I wonder how well the general public will take ot these ArcGIS.com based maps. 

- TrTribune.com

by Adena Schutzberg on 03/19 at 04:34 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Thursday, January 19, 2012

I think the online mapmakeing tool WorldMap is out of beta, but the article does not make that 100% clear. It's open source and developed by Harvard’s Center for Geographic Analysis

Harvard Gazette

The GeoTech Center has published its 2012 newsletter (pdf).

- GeoTech Center Blog

A team of students from the University at Buffalo Law School has been named a winner of the 2012 New York Redistricting Project, a national competition that challenged student teams to draw new congressional, state senate and state assembly district maps.

- UB News Center

by Adena Schutzberg on 01/19 at 06:03 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

Monday, October 24, 2011

Political reporter Chris Vanocur who covers the news in Salt Lake City, UT determined last week that the proposed new boundaries split at least a dozen houses in two. So, the TV station followed up as to why and got the scoop from policy analyst Joseph Wade. 

He attributes the problem to limitations on the computer program used to make the boundaries.  It's called the Geographic Information System or GIS.

"It's the nature of the GIS data we have to work with.  It's not as accurate as we'd like it, but unfortunately it's what we have to work with," said Joseph Wade.

The system uses census blocks to draw the political boundary lines.  A census block is a cluster of voters and it can't be split in Utah, so each home fits with an exact census block.

He says the lines through homes are the result of a computer program that can't perfectly place all the lines.

The Lieutenant Governor is responsible to explain where each split home really belongs.

So, is it the data or software? Perhaps both? I can't tell from this discussion. 

- ABC 4

by Adena Schutzberg on 10/24 at 04:24 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: errors, gis, redistricting, split houses, utah

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

GIS Users of Northern Ohio, "Creating Web Map Applications with Open Source Tools": 1:30 to 3 p.m. at the Cleveland Metroparks CanalWay Center, 4524 East 49th St., Cuyahoga Heights. Free. Go to lakegis.org for more information. [This Thursday8/25]

- Cleveland.com

Did you know Azavea's DistrictBuilder is open source? t's built on GeoServer and GeoWebCache.

- Azavea Blog

The second day keynote at the GIS in Public Transportation Conference is about an open source project.

The general session keynote address on September 15 is Open Trip Planner: Open Source Multimodal Trip Planner.

The OpenTripPlanner (OTP) project is an international effort to create a flagship open source platform for multimodal trip planning and analysis. As free and open source software, OTP can be freely downloaded, deployed, and modified by anyone, and is optimized for use with open data sources and standards such as OpenStreetMap for base network data and the General Transit Feed Specification (GTFS) for transit system data. OTP was established in the summer of 2009 to bring together a number of previously independent open source trip planning projects into a unified effort, and the project and its associated development community have since grown rapidly. In addition to the United States, there are now live OTP deployments in Canada, Poland, India, Spain, Ireland, and Israel. Later this fall, Portland's TriMet will formally launch a beta trip planning application built entirely on the OpenTripPlanner platform and open data sources, marking the first official deployment of a fully open source / open data trip planner by a major U.S. transit agency. This keynote session will provide an overview of OTP's history and current capabilities, including live demos, as well as a roadmap for development of the project going forward.

- press release

by Adena Schutzberg on 08/24 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

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