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The West Virginia GIS Program: A Decade of Progress, A Future of Promise. Craig A. Neidig WV State GIS Coordinator WV Geological & Economic Survey Chairman, WVSAMB. Ad Hoc GIS User Group (1989) State GIS Development Plan (1992) Executive Order No. 4-93 H.B. 2222 (1995)
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The West Virginia GIS Program:A Decade of Progress, A Future of Promise Craig A. Neidig WV State GIS Coordinator WV Geological & Economic Survey Chairman, WVSAMB
Ad Hoc GIS User Group (1989) State GIS Development Plan (1992) Executive Order No. 4-93 H.B. 2222 (1995) Mineral Lands Mapping Program (1996) Information Technology Committee (1997) State Information Technology Plan (1998) Statewide Addressing and Mapping Board (2001) WV GIS Program History
Mineral Lands Mapping Program Statewide Digital Orthophotography Program Digital Line Graph Project National Hydrographic Database Statewide Addressing and Mapping Project Digital Flood Insurance Rate Maps High-Resolution Satellite Imagery Enhanced Digital Elevation Model Major State GIS Initiatives
Creation of framework geospatial data layers Moved from 1:24000 to 1:4800 scale < 10 yrs USGS "quad" sheets to 1"-400' local data Paper maps to digital coverages Model for other states and feds History of cooperation and cost-sharing Growing in-state expertise Maturing GIS community (state, local, private sector, NGOs) State GIS Accomplishments
Division of Environmental Protection Division of Natural Resources Dept. of Health and Human Resources Geological & Economic Survey Tax Department Division of Highways Legislative Services Agriculture Main State Agency GIS Users(see 2004 WV GIS Agency Roll Call for complete list)
West Virginia University Rahall Appalachian Transportation Institute Canaan Valley Institute Glenville, Concord, Shepherd, etc. Miss Utility of West Virginia "Call Before You Dig" WV Society of Land Surveyors Other Major GIS Contributors
US Geological Survey US Department of Agriculture NRCS, FSA, Forest Service US Environmental Protection Agency Office of Surface Mines, MHSA Dept. of Homeland Security (ODP) FEMA Census Bureau Major Federal GIS Cooperators
Planning and Zoning ("Smart Growth") Environmental Compliance Infrastructure Development Disaster Management Public Safety and Homeland Security Redistricting, voting, and boundary issues Revenue (e.g., Streamline Sales Tax) Cost savings (via standards and interoperability) Jobs (high-tech surveying and engineering) How GIS benefits the State
Renew Executive Order 4-93 Issue new updated Executive Order Propose legislation "legitimating" GIS Update GIS Strategic Plan Formalize GIS Council at Executive Level Elevate GIS in state IT organization Provide core funding to GIS Coordinator Maintain base funding in agency GIS offices Make GIS a mission critical agency function Create Land Records Modernization Program Future Steps for GIS Program
Tax Map sales TIFF Tax parcel maps (currently $8.00/each) Price structure for shapefiles and custom maps eCommerce - Internet sales (credit card) Permits and Legal notices Modest surcharge for map maintenance 9-1-1 fees Split with counties and SAMB for long-term 9-1-1 addressing maintenance Licensing e.g., royalties from sale of commercial GIS products using WV data (DeLorme, etc.) Possible GIS cost recovery models
Build on existing IT capabilities (e.g., Oracle, ESRI) Provide usable products and services at minimal cost Identify mapping and GIS as "mission critical" Invest in geospatial data as a "capital" asset Implement and enforce standards Tie to regulatory requirements (i.e., permitting) Water Resources Protection Act (2005) Recruit and employ in-state GIS technical workforce Educate decision makers and political leaders Make GIS part of everyday state business Strategies for State GIS Success
The West Virginia GIS Program:A Decade of Progress, A Future of Opportunity Craig A. NeidigWV GIS CoordinatorGreenbrooke Bldg.1124 Smith St., Rm LM-10Charleston, WV 25301 Phone: (304) 558-4218Fax: (304) 558-4963cneidig@gis.state.wv.us