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AN OVERVIEW OF THE QUINAULT INDIAN NATION's ONGOING INVOLVEMENT WITH THE EXCHANGE NETWORK GRANT PROGRAM. NCAI Tribal Exchange Network Meeting Palm Springs, CA April 2008. - Reservation covers ~207,000 acres. Plus fishing and hunting rights outside
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AN OVERVIEW OF THE QUINAULT INDIAN NATION's ONGOING INVOLVEMENT WITHTHE EXCHANGE NETWORK GRANT PROGRAM NCAI Tribal Exchange Network Meeting Palm Springs, CA April 2008
- Reservation covers ~207,000 acres • Plus fishing and hunting rights outside • in the “Usual & Accustomed” Areas - Contains 600 plus miles of mapped rivers & streams - >25 water quality monitoring sites
Collect ph, dissolved oxygen, temperature, • turbidity, E-coli, & analytes for organic • compounds and metals, & tissue samples • One air quality monitoring site, to monitor the • effects of slash pile burningsfrom timber • harvests • Off-reservation the Nation has co-management • responsibilities of multiple fisheries with the • State of Washington: salmon, crab, razor clams, • amongst many
- The air and water quality programs have been ongoing for 7+ years – much data has been collected - Both programs are supported by EPA-funding • EPA funding of the water quality program comes • from several grants: - 106 funding - 319 funding - GAP funding
Past Activities: • Applied for and received an Exchange Network • Readiness Grantin FY2004 • This grant was primarily used to “beef up” • the tribal network’s infrastructure: - Purchased new server, GIS workstations • Built up principal network backbone to transmit • data at gigabit speed • Funded training for server administration and • intranet mapping capability development
The “Business” Drivers:: • The Quinault Nation has business needs to • consolidate the accumulated water quality • data into a unified database to make the • information more usable and accessible - • The EPA has mandated water quality data • reporting for its 106-funded grants since 2006, • prior to that it was voluntary • Application by the Nation for “treatment as a “state” • by the EPA with respect to water quality • standards
The Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission has • received an Exchange Network grant to establish • a WQX node, along with providing outreach • and technical support to its member tribes - • The Nation is a Commission member tribe, and • has been designated one of two pilots for testing • The Water Quality Exchange has “matured” with • regards to standards and developed schemas
The Future: • The Nation has submitted a grant proposal • for a second round of Exchange Network funding • This grant’s principal goals are: • Consolidate all water quality data into a • a single database • Map the existing water quality data to the • WQX schema and establish workflows to • incorporate future data
- Migrate this database to SQL Server 2005 to provide secure, managed, multi-user access to the data • establish a client node and test its connection to • the NWIFC WQX node, in anticipation of establishing • a production node • Provide for an additional server to allow for the • separation of applications server and the data • management server functions
- Support tribal participation in the Exchange Network’s governance structure, specifically the Network Technical Group (NTG) - Extend the network’s gigabit transmission to the tribal Planning department located in the lower village to enhance their data access capabilities
Some Issues & Concerns: • Tribal concern over the release of data into • the “public” domain – its uses and potential • adverse impacts - • The ability to attract and keep the IT personnel • necessary to operate and maintain the exchange • infrastructure, given the constant changes that arise • from ongoing changes in the associated technologies • The desire to see the incorporation of geospatial • capabilities to the Exchange Network. See the data • in the context of a “map” - like in Google Earth
What we wish to protect and sustain for the future
THANK YOU Questions: Please contact Tony Hartrich, QDNR GIS Program Manager Phone: 360-276-8215, ext. 479 e-mail: thartrich@quinault.org