A  new web portal being put together by the Agriculture Department  aims  to reduce duplication in the agency's mapping work and make   high-quality maps more accessible to the public.
More  than half the department's 29 divisions are involved in  geospatial  work, Geospatial Information Officer Stephen Lowe said,  either mashing  satellite and aerial imagery with survey data or  on-the-ground research  about crop yields, ground chemicals or farm  subsidies, or using other  divisions' maps in their own research and  programs.
USDA-produced  maps and images generally are available to the public  for free or for a  nominal fee, and frequently crop up in paid data  services and even in  Google Maps, he said.
At the moment, though, there's no central repository for all the department's GIS maps and the largest repository   for publicly available maps requires users to fill out a complex order   form for specific data before they get a look at the map itself.
The  result is USDA researchers and outsiders often don't even know  that a  map of, say, all the farmers' markets in Kentucky or all the farm   subsidies recipients in Arkansas already exists, and they either end up   duplicating work that's already been done or relying on an inferior   product.
The portal will  provide researchers and other Agriculture staff with a  better ability  to create their own GIS products, Lowe said, by mapping  new information  onto base maps created elsewhere in the department or by  using basic  USDA-produced templates.
"This  extends mapping capabilities out to economists, policy people,   financial people and [human resources] people," he said. "It's sort of a   transformation from the lone GIS professional sitting at his desk to   really pushing 60 percent to 80 percent of map making out to other   disciplines. Then the GIS professional transitions to the role of a   strategic adviser and focuses skills on the other 20 percent of policy   and program management issues that cause the major headaches."
The  new portal, which is hosted in Amazon's public EC2 computer  cloud, is  already available to a few divisions within Agriculture and  will be  launched departmentwide in the next couple of months, Lowe said.  The  site should be available to the public about six to eight months  after  that.
The Agriculture  Department portal was designed by Esri, the  geographic information  system company that developed the ArcGIS software  suite. It was built  using a specialized version of Esri's software  called Portal for  ArcGIS, which gives users more freedom to customize  what they produce,  said Victoria Kouyoumjian, an Esri information  technology strategies  architect.
Esri  previously worked with the department's Food and Nutrition  Service on  the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, a geo-locator  that  pinpoints retailers that accept federal food assistance cards.
Lowe  envisions the portal serving as a meeting ground for the  department's  mapping experts, spread across different divisions, where  they can  figure out whose maps can be tweaked to save work elsewhere and  develop  best practices.
The  portal also requires each map to carry a collection of metadata,   descriptions of when and how the data was gathered that other mappers   can use to determine whether the map meets their needs.
The Agriculture Department isn't alone in trying to mix crowdsourcing approaches with GIS technology.
The U.S. Agency for International Development is standing up a Washington-based "geocenter" to assist map-making specialists and nonspecialists at its missions around the globe. The Defense Information Systems Agency launched   a portal to pull together GIS maps, rapidly uploaded YouTube videos  and  Web chats to help aid workers respond to the 2010 Haiti earthquake.
As  GIS technology is adopted more broadly, Kouyoumjian said, Esri's   portal or similar products could have multiple uses inside government at   the federal, state or local level. As one example, she said, state   redistricting commissions could use GIS maps to create more dynamic   cost-benefit analyses of moving district lines. GIS maps also could be   used to analyze the long-term effects of stimulus spending in different   states and districts, she said.
Courtesy: http://www.nextgov.com/nextgov/ng_20110817_6767.php?oref=topstory

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