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“The Present and Future of GIS Integration”. Jeff Lovin. 2006 West Virginia GIS Forum and Workshops. Environmental. CAMA/Tax. Emergency Services. Reporting/Collecting. Utilities. Transportation. Tool or Solution. Single-point access to all relevant data. Traditional Hard Copy Workflow.
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“The Present and Future of GIS Integration” Jeff Lovin 2006 West Virginia GIS Forum and Workshops
Environmental CAMA/Tax Emergency Services Reporting/Collecting Utilities Transportation Tool or Solution Single-point access to all relevant data
Traditional Hard Copy Workflow • Manual effort – Sort Data • Wastes paper • Redundant • Inefficient • Time consuming
GIS “Tool” Enhanced Workflow • Eliminates external data collection outside office • Still Redundant • Still requires printing of paper • Improvement over manual workflow but still somewhat inefficient
Enterprise GIS Workflow Eliminates • External data collection • Duplicate data • Duplicate data entry
Evolution of CAMA Systems • Non-ODBC compliant CAMA systems • Inefficient • time consuming • ODBC compliant CAMA/Tax systems • Views - customizable • Batch processes to create exportable tables • Latest versions of CAMA/Tax Systems • GIS connectivity should be transparent to the user
Sidwell Parcel BuilderTM CAMA Integration Create the parcel on the map… CAMA sees it !
CAMA GIS Viewer – Sketch Tool for Change Detection • Sketches typically do not match reality of orthophotos • Within Enterprise GIS CAMA System • Create sketch overlaying the ortho within SDE • Provides georeferenced data to better assess data quality • Change detection tool for next overflight
County “X” Summary • GIS/CAMA Technology continues to evolve to the benefit of county government • Latest versions of CAMA systems are “GIS oriented” • Counties with existing GIS systems should continue to evolve “Think Enterprise”