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Integration of Automated Staking and GIS. Types of Software. Stakeout 2 seats for stakers ArcEditor GIS Coordinator Right-of-Way Agent ArcView Manager of Engineering Dispatch Coordinator ArcReader All other BEC employees Locators ArcPad 9 seats for line trucks
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Types of Software • Stakeout • 2 seats for stakers • ArcEditor • GIS Coordinator • Right-of-Way Agent • ArcView • Manager of Engineering • Dispatch Coordinator • ArcReader • All other BEC employees • Locators • ArcPad • 9 seats for line trucks • Powel’s MxGIS • GIS Coordinator
Old notes on how to bring staking sheets from Stakeout into ArcEditor • and how to get shapefiles back to Stakeout • Put shapefiles in Stakeout folder on network and the individual machines • will get the updates when they sync
New notes on how to bring staking sheets from Stakeout into ArcEditor and how to get shapefiles back to Stakeout
MxGIS Pros & Cons • Pros • Saves time both bringing in Staking sheets and exporting out • shapefiles • Now maps are updated on average once a week instead • of once a year • Has already paid for itself many times over • Easy to operate • Happier GIS Coordinator = happier co-workers/boss • Reduction in errors • Things can be missed when manually recreating • staking sheets • Cons • Retirement comes in as stations • Relies heavily on stakers creating perfect sheets • Expensive • Not 100% set up exactly like I want it • Large staking sheets can be cumbersome and hard • to work with
Select the Post Work Order From StakeOut button. • These boxes pop up. • Select Search by Work Order (or the option youwant).
This box shows you the • progression of the how • the staking sheet is being brought into the geodatabase. • Sometimes you will get • an error, but if you run • through the steps again, • it usually works. • I have the settings set to • move the work order to • our closed status if this • process properly posted • the job. • When it is done, select • OK. • The map will auto- • maticallyzoom to the • extent of the job.
The yellow diamond is a point MxGIS brought in as a station. If I wouldn’t already have a GPS point for this location, I would use this placement for 63-31-111. See blow-up below
MxGIS brings in any new feature (63-31- • 344 is a new meter and it comes in as a • new meter), along with any new line • features (the red solid line is new • secondary underground). • The staker must not have used the • location for the transformer 63-31-110 • because it came in at a different location – • I will move it to the new location as it • looks like a better placement. • The location for the pedestal 63-31-231 • was used, so I can just delete that station • (the yellow diamond).
To finish posting the • job, I had to give the • new underground line • a phase (the place- • ment – OH or URD – • did come through, • but because a phase • wasn’t assigned yet, it • was solid red). • I also copied the • station (the yellow • diamond) over to my • GPS feature class to • show this location • position was from • StakeOut. • After I make sure the • flow is correct, I save • my edits. • The final step is to • select the 2ndMxGIS • tool to export shape- • files out of the GIS.
When you select this button, we • have it set up to put all the • shapefiles into a folder on the • hard drive. • Then a script grabs those files and • copies them to the Stakeout • server. • When the StakeOut users sync, • they will get the updates. • It is set to run once a week. • This functionality could have been • built in house using model builder.
MxGIS Tips • You can either have MxGIS configured for your data model or to • Powel’s data model • We kept our data model • This was more expensive, but worth it • See it in action before you decide what you want • Have patience • If you want something different than what is suggested, • be persistent
For more information, feel free to contact me: Michelle Anderson GIS Coordinator (218) 444-3685 manderson@beltramielectric.com