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SCERP Nodes on a Network – Starting Point for “ La Red Integrada de los Bancos de Datos”

SCERP Nodes on a Network – Starting Point for “ La Red Integrada de los Bancos de Datos”. Dr. Christopher Brown New Mexico State University Department of Geography 2006 SCERP/USGS GIS Summit UTEP – 10 April 2006. Some Background.

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SCERP Nodes on a Network – Starting Point for “ La Red Integrada de los Bancos de Datos”

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  1. SCERP Nodes on a Network – Starting Point for “La Red Integrada de los Bancos de Datos” Dr. Christopher Brown New Mexico State University Department of Geography 2006 SCERP/USGS GIS Summit UTEP – 10 April 2006

  2. Some Background • United States - Mexico Border Governors invitation to SCERP in 2003 to explore binational GIS capability • Recognition of the experience SCERP had in the area • Potential to capitalize on the existing network of SCERP institutions • Development of early proposal to tap experience of SCERP researchers • More recent efforts that lead to USGS/SCERP Binational GIS Summit

  3. Background to the Summit • NMSU, SDSU, UTEP, and ASU submitted linked GIS projects to SCERP • NMSU, SDSU, ASU, and UTEP funded for specific projects and to advance overall effort • We have seen pieces of these projects at Summit. • Each asks specific questions in area of interest. • Each generates specific regional data • Goal of the overall SCERP funding is to link a set of projects to advance a border-wide GIS effort • NMSU was funded to develop a “work plan” to advance a sustained and coordinated effort

  4. Research Plan • Development of Advisory Committee to drive project and our “happy accident” with USGS • Recent efforts by USGS and others to develop geo-spatial datasets along the border • Supporting efforts for USGS/SCERP MOU • Project partners and Advisory Committee collaborated on Binational GIS Summit • User Needs Assessment of major GIS users along the border will inventory efforts to date • Binational GIS Summit will broaden discussion beyond USGS and SCERP

  5. Major focii of this Summit • Review of successful past projects, with special interest in compiling lessons learned • Identification of major research questions concerning binational water resource management and data needed to advance • Supporting development of a workplan by which comprehensive GIS capability can be advanced • Working towards a commitment by attendees to help advance coordinated effort

  6. Details of Entities Involved • USGS, SCERP and other universities will be coordinating efforts • Important role of state and federal agencies in the US and Mexico • Regional planning & research agencies in border are key (IMIP, IMPLAN, SANDAG, TWDB, etc) • Work being done in urban areas provides important urban input (PdNMAPA) • Important to bring NGO/ONG players into the mix (Pacific Institute, Environmental Defense, PDNWTF, and PDNWC are examples)

  7. Concept of SCERP/USGS Nodes • Extensive work of SCERP institutions provides useful framework • Specific projects yield applied research and detailed data sets at local/regional scale • Also yields technically capable network on which to build • Collaboration with USGS broadens range of participation greatly • SCERP/USGS sponsoring of the Summit and MOU advance a broader discussion

  8. Draft Outline of Border-wide GIS Network USGS Environmental Health Work LRG Physical Assessment

  9. SCERP/USGS Commitments to Date • SCERP and USGS co-hosting the Summit and signing MOU on further cooperation • SCERP universities have agreed to build the prototype network with existing projects/data • ASU land use/cover assessment • NMSU and SDSU water resource vulnerability work • ITESM & UACJ contributing regional project data • UTEP working in Paso del Norte urban area

  10. Prototype NMSU SCERP Data Nodehttp://mapper.nmsu.edu/SCERP

  11. Anticipated Outcomes • User Needs Assessment will provide outline on needs, assets, and gaps • Structure of a border-wide network to emerge from the Summit • Web-presence will share results with larger audience and provide portal for future work • Final project report will be work plan for future project development

  12. Closing Comments • Much work in border region provides strong foundation for our work • Wide range of GIS-xperts are assisting in ongoing and future project work • Goal is to harness all the disconnected pieces and link them into the outline for a wider integrated effort • Next steps will explore funding for future project development – afternoon session • Project outcomes will drive much of SCERP Border Institute on Transboundary Watershed Management held at Rio Rica, AZ in May

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