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Tagged: west virginia

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

An interactive map launched Feb. 14 by the nonprofit iLoveMountains.org plots county-level data on indicators of health and quality of life in relation to mountaintop mining sites.

"The Human Cost of Coal" is a map centered on the mountaintop mining region of southern West Virginia and eastern Kentucky.

- State Journal

And in other mining news comes a Yale study suggesting mining may not be the culprit for all the disease in Appalachia.

A new study out of Yale University offers evidence that coal mining isn’t directly to blame for Appalachia’s health problems—but it could play a part.

For years, researchers have tried to figure out why people in Appalachia contract diabetes, heart disease and various cancers at higher rates than most of the country. Several studies out of West Virginia University found links between some of those maladies and coal mining. The new study, from researchers at Yale’s School of Public Health, suggests the causes are more complicated.

- WFPL

A century ago it was the pioneering 'poverty' map which charted starvation and deprivation across London and the squalor of Victorian Britain.

Now a modern-day version of social researcher Charles Booth's influential health map has painted a similar picture of sickness and disease, but with very different 21st Century causes.

While many of the poor in London 100 years ago were suffering from starvation, the same areas in the capital today are rife with deadly Type 2 diabetes, caused not by malnutrition but by an excess of junk food.

The new maps are from Dr Douglas Noble and were published in the British Medical Journal. Booth maps were based on observation; Noble's use electronic medical records

- Daily Mail

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/22 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

The National Land Survey of Finland will open its topographic data on May 1st.

- SDI Magazine via @Christophe_ESRI) 

The head of St. Joseph County’s Transportation Authority [Michigan] wanted its latest vehicle to stand out...

A “vehicle-wrap” that covers the van’s exterior features a large-scale map of St. Joseph County. Although not suitable for actual map use, the design features most communities in the county and many major roads.

The "wrap" cost about $1000 and is considered a good advertising investement. 

- Sturgis Journal

The city of Safford, Arizona

 has cut three full-time employees from its Geographic Informations Systems Department, including administrator Raymond Brunner, who was the Arizona Professional Land Surveyors Association's Geospatial Professional of the Year for 2008. Safford is finalizing discussions with Graham County to disseminate information captured at the city's facility. A data collector was the only position retained in the city's GIS department.

The responsibilities will be merged into the county to save money.

[City Manager David] Kincaid said the GIS Department cost the city about $1.2 million over the past four years and $365,000 in the last year alone. The cost to keep systems running with only a data collector is estimated to be about $75,000, and the pending contract with the county is expected to be about $200,000 per year.

- East Arizona Courier

Oak Hill, West Virginia claims first in the county status on its planned GIS.

“This is the way of the future,” says [Town Manager Bill] Hannabass. “The county got on board with it a while back. I’m proud to follow them as the first municipality in the county, and one of the only ones in the state with GIS.”

The GIS administrator will be a police officer.

- Register Herald

by Adena Schutzberg on 01/31 at 05:31 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

York County, PA feels the locations of 200 cell towers provided by wireless companies are not accurate. So it's ground truthing them for more access E911 locations. The funding is from the wirelss fund and runs about $84,000.

- GovTech

Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz introduced an updated version of the county's "My Neighborhood" application Friday, an easily accessible web-based map tool that allows citizens and county employees to access zoning information, property maps and dozens of other features in one online location.

It's an ArcGIS Server SliverLight app which I'm confident my parents would fine challenging to use.

Baltimore Sun

Raleigh County, WV's GIS is getting more funding so it can grow beyond what was built with state homeland security money.

Toward that goal, Metro Geographic Information System (GIS) landed a $13,281 outlay Tuesday from the Raleigh County Commission, matching a like amount to be put up by the city of Beckley, as the program inches deeper into the 21st century.

The money will push the group to move from individual licenses to an Esri enterprise license.

ESRI, the California-based mapping firm, uses an approach that is nearly standard across the nation, and a key attraction is that it offers the freedom to proceed with unlimited licensing of participants, Kelly said.

- Register-Herald

by Adena Schutzberg on 07/27 at 03:39 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

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