Strategic Plan - Westchester County GIS
Transcription
Strategic Plan - Westchester County GIS
Westchester County Department of Information Technology Geographic Information Systems 2012 Strategic Plan Table of Contents 2012 GIS Mission........................................................................................................3 GIS Vision .....................................................................................................................3 GIS Program ................................................................................................................3 I. Data .................................................................................................................4 II. Growth ............................................................................................................5 III. System Infrastructure ...............................................................................6 GIS Staff Resources...................................................................................................7 2012 Westchester County GIS Program Goals ............................................... 10 I. Administrative ............................................................................................ 10 II. Applications and Software ...................................................................... 11 III. Data Management..................................................................................... 12 Westchester County GIS User Group ................................................................. 14 GIS Projects, Applications and Services ........................................................... 16 Westchester County GIS on the Web................................................................. 25 Shared Services: Local Government and School Districts .......................... 26 Program Metrics ........................................................................................................ 28 Geospatial Data Layers ........................................................................................... 32 GIS System Architecture........................................................................................ 35 ON THE COVER: Digital Surface Model (DSM) of White Plain/Harrison area. Page 2 2012 GIS Mission The Department of Information Technology (DoIT) Geographic Information Systems (GIS) program helps County departments and government agencies improve service delivery to the citizens of Westchester County by coordinating, designing and implementing cost-effective geospatial technologies and services. Program activities and resource allocation are aligned with County government priority areas of fiscal responsibility, public health and safety, and the environment. Of growing importance in 2012 will be the use of GIS technology in the continued inventory and mapping of the County’s critical infrastructure including water supply, storm water, and sanitary sewer systems. GIS Vision In the rapidly evolving and expanding field of geospatial technology, Westchester County GIS works to provide and support state-of-the-art GIS and mapping services and applications. As part of this commitment, GIS staff will be proactive in leveraging new geospatial solutions based on enterprise Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) software (www.esri.com), while exploring opportunities to integrate innovative open source technologies for broad and cost-effective deployment in County and local government, and the business community. Increased collaborative work with County school districts as part of the Shared Services program offers many new opportunities in geospatial data sharing, research and analysis support, and GIS mapping applications. GIS Program The success of the County’s GIS program, since its inception in 1988, is due to many factors. The program has maintained active support of both the office of the County Executive and the Board of Legislators and is now strategically integrated into several County enterprise systems. Considered a critical County asset, GIS technology is used as a tool to save time, money and lives and is leveraged on a day-to-day basis throughout County and local government. Page 3 As an enterprise technology, the program continues to take a holistic view of GIS infrastructure, data, applications, and processes with the intent of cost–effectively leveraging resources across the County. As user and system demands for improved functionality, availability and reliability continue to escalate in several computing environments (i.e., Web, desktop, mobile), an increased complexity in GIS infrastructure and services will be required. These demands will be even more challenging in 2012 as both County and local governments face ongoing funding and budgetary challenges. Operational needs, combined with new technology opportunities built around ESRI’s world-leading GIS software, will continue to drive the GIS business plan. Geospatial professionals, including the growing number of users in professional engineering and business disciplines, will continue to rely on ArcGIS desktop client software while non-technical staff and County residents will access enterprise GIS content through ESRI web mapping applications and easy-to-use viewers such as ArcGIS Explorer and Google Earth. integrate County GIS published Business and industry will leverage and authoritative map services into business applications. Building on the highly successful GIS Day event at Westchester Community College on November 16, 2011, it is anticipated GIS user meetings for Westchester County staff will continue to be held in 2012. In a similar context, GIS staff administers the Westchester County GIS User Group, where several dozen municipal GIS practitioners normally meet twice each year. This group has proven to be an excellent forum to keep users across all disciplines (industry, academia, non-profit and government) informed about the services and programs offered by Westchester County GIS, as well as GIS events, training and education opportunities, and technology in general. In 2012, GIS will focus in the following areas: I. Data – Priority geospatial data development projects scheduled for 2012 include a photogrammetric update of the countywide base map including planimetric features such as building footprints, edge of pavement, sideways and street centerlines. Last updated Spring 2004, this project is anticipated to be a coordinated through the New York State Digital Orthoimagery Page 4 Program (NYSDOP). Critical infrastructure geospatial datasets, which include water and sanitary sewer systems that support a wide range of County and local government business needs, will continue to be prioritized for automation and mapping. The ongoing efforts of fire hydrant mapping for local fire departments and the mapping of all public water supply systems are also illustrative of this effort. The County GIS program will continue to advance its effort to promote “Data as a Service” (DaaS) to both governments and business partners. DaaS map services provide software developers with reduced data development and integration costs and often decrease the overall cost of application development. Additionally, work will continue in building datasets on the location of service providers to improve and optimize service delivery in the areas of protection services. senior programs and child Geospatial data projects were completed in 2011, most notably derivative products from the countywide LiDAR dataset obtained from NYC Department of Environmental Protection and delivery of the Pictometry oblique imagery and street-level photography. In 2012, staff will continue to improve and implement methods to measure enterprise data accuracy and completeness. While a comprehensive planimetric update is scheduled for core base map data layers, other critical enterprise GIS datasets (which have not been updated in several years) will be the focus of update efforts, pending resource availability. Assistance will be provided to “authenticate” databases owned or maintained by user departments. Proper tools and business processes will continue be adopted by individual departments as this data stewardship approach becomes more fully realized across the enterprise. II. Growth – Expanding GIS services and applications in strategic and regulatory County program areas including Social Services, Health, and Environmental Facilities. Updating mission critical applications in the areas of Public Safety and Emergency Services, Homeseeker (housing settlement), and transportation systems with new software components and GIS datasets will also remain a priority. Where cost savings are clearly measureable, County GIS will collaborate with local governments and school districts to design and support geospatial programs and activities through cost-effective server and internet based systems. Web based automated mapping routines Page 5 for the production of hardcopy maps will also be reviewed. Geospatial applications are also anticipated to expand on mobile platforms initially with RIM Blackberry and later with Androids and iPhones. GIS staff will continue to monitor opportunities to provide solutions for MS4 regulatory programs for both County and local governments. III. System Infrastructure – Focused efforts will continue to strengthen GIS enterprise system stability and reliability, bringing infrastructure components up to current software releases, developing and maintaining staff expertise in core ESRI software components and database management software (Oracle and SQL Server), GIS application development environments (JavaScript, Microsoft Silverlight, HTML5) and building capacity to support vendordeveloped systems. Responding to a series of cost-reducing hardware infrastructure redesign issues in 2011, work is now on schedule to complete migration of the enterprise ESRI software environment to ArcGIS 10.0 by mid-2012. The enterprise GIS infrastructure includes six GIS database servers and 14 application servers (nine physical servers and five virtual servers) to support production, standby and development environments. Six GIS database servers are used for three Oracle Real Application Clusters with each Oracle cluster having three databases (vector, raster and publishing) and two terabytes of disk storage. Fourteen GIS application servers will be used for a wide range of GIS applications including enterprise geocoding services, emergency services, internet and intranet programs, and various departmental applications. County GIS staff anticipates offering “Software as a Service” (SaaS) to local governments over the County’s secure network which will provide cost savings to municipalities in context of reducing the need to develop GIS applications and related components. The publication of industry standard and Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) compliant map services will be the focus and foundation of this effort. Page 6 GIS Staff Resources County GIS staff is dedicated to maintaining core GIS services such as base layer maintenance, GIS application hosting, system administration, data management, imagery acquisition, training, and GIS availability / access at the enterprise level. Staff provides geospatial support services to all county departments, including customer assistance, mapping, spatial analysis, data integration, application development, and project management. GIS staff also supports the Emergency Operations Center for special events and activations. To build GIS capacity throughout county departments, GIS staff encourages departments to take responsibility for the creation and maintenance of agency spatial datasets which can be used for enterprise applications. Data development is also provided through agreements to departments that may lack the specific technical expertise or prefer to have this function tasked to GIS staff. Departments such as Health, Planning, PRC, Transportation and Public Works, Board of Elections, Emergency Services, Probation, Environmental Facilities, and the District Attorney’s office all have internal staff performing various levels of GIS work. All county departments are included in the enterprise licensing agreement (ELA) with ESRI which GIS staff administers and manages. Desktop support is currently extended to 88 ArcGIS client software users in 16 departments and offices. In 2011, an additional 61 staff were provided training in Pictometry’s Electronic Field Study and Facet’s Parcel Van View software. The County negotiated perpetual licensing for both of these software programs, extending to every city, town and village in the County. Pending available funding, GIS staff will attempt to be scheduled for software training to meet changing GIS technology needs. Annual events such as the ESRI User Conference, Northeast Arc Users Conference, the New York State GIS Conference, and the Annual NYCArc User Symposium provide excellent and affordable opportunities for GIS staff to be exposed to new state-of-the-art advancements and to learn new skills. GIS staff continues to analyze metrics on GIS system access and use (software licensing, desktop usage, intranet and internet application access, data downloads, Page 7 etc.) as a means to track resource demand and plan for GIS resources in the future. During 2011, increased demand for GIS staff services was evidenced in the areas of emergency services (Hurricane Irene mapping support), a web-based housing settlement application, social and senior services, infrastructure mapping, and shared services. GIS usage is anticipated to continue to expand as mobile devices become more common in government business applications and used as a means to access enterprise GIS content. In addition to County departments, the demand for County GIS staff services remains strong throughout local governments where the county continues to be recognized as providing a leadership role and responsible for establishing several cost-effective and successful GIS programs. In many respects the County’s built GIS infrastructure serves as a “GIS Cloud” to local governments providing consumable map services, spatial data downloads, and interactive online web mapping applications which contain authoritative local datasets. In 2011, GIS outreach to local governments extended to nearly three dozen municipalities. Central to the collaborative work between County GIS and local governments is data sharing in program areas such as tax mapping, police and fire departments, critical infrastructure, and land use planning, all of which routinely integrate the County’s GIS data resources and mapping services. Page 8 Westchester County school districts use GIS technology on a daily basis in program areas such as bus routing, facilities and campus management, demographic and statistical analysis, and in classroom teaching. Though requiring further analysis and discussion, there appears to be many areas where school districts can collaborate with the County GIS staff in data sharing, GIS technical support, and accessing web services. Such an alliance could produce cost savings in several school district geospatial-based program areas. This countywide leadership role is anticipated to expand to both user communities in 2012 as highlighted at the Westchester County Shared Services Day held at the County Center on October 11, 2011. Page 9 2012 Westchester County GIS Program Goals Program goals have been initially identified and will be pursued in several critical areas: I. Administrative Maintain administrative and management procedures which evaluate staff resource allocations and productivity relative to the annual goals of the County Executive’s office and DoIT. Prioritize cost-effective geospatial systems which promote the public good in the areas of health and public safety, infrastructure management, economic development and tourism, environmental and land use planning, and the overall general welfare of the residents of the County. Remain committed to maintain Geographic Information System Westchester County governments. geospatial programs will continue possible. a reliable and cost-effective enterprise which supports the business needs of Integration with individual school district to be reviewed and implemented where Continue to review opportunities for cost savings in the consolidation of a single GIS vendor (i.e., products/software and professional services) contracts. Improve and expand countywide GIS coordination and projects through Shared Services focusing on GIS solutions based on common business needs and industry standards. Promote Westchester County GIS programs through local, regional, state, and federal geospatial initiatives. Expand GIS marketing and business communications via: o Social networking technologies such as Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube to reach the broad GIS community with timely and pertinent information on Westchester County GIS products and services. o Proactive email communications with both Westchester County staff and local government GIS users. o Posting of GIS updates, data development efforts, advancements in data viewers, web mapping applications, and related activities to NYS GIS, GISMO, and NEARC listservs as well as websites for professional organizations such as the Westchester/Putnam Chapter of the NYS Society of Professional Engineers, Westchester Water Works Conference, Westchester County Association of Municipal Public Works Page 10 Administrators, County. and Federated Conservationists of Westchester o Promote GIS Day 2012 in partnership with the Westchester County GIS Users Group and Westchester Community College. One of the signature events associated with GIS Day are maps and posters submitted by GIS users in government, industry, and academia. o Publication of the GIS newsletter, now in its fourteenth year of circulation, two to three times with particular focus on the new Online Express Version. Maintain a proactive commitment to pursue non-tax levy sources of funding such as grants to support County GIS projects. Such funding sources include NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation (http://www.dec.ny.gov/pubs/grants.html), NYS Dept. of State (http://www.dos.state.ny.us/grants.html), and federal grants (www.grants.gov). On request, deliver educational presentations on the benefits of geospatial technologies for County Executive staff, Board of Legislators, professional societies and organizations, elected officials, schools, and community groups. II. Applications and Software Aggressively lead research and development of mobile geospatial solutions for County business applications with a focus in the fields of emergency response and public safety, inspections, and environmental monitoring. Maintain a focused program to develop scalable, server-based GIS solutions for County business functions. This technology offers customizable costeffective solutions to a broader range of users while reducing the need for more costly client-based software systems. Advocate the use and distribution of free and easy-to-use data viewers such as ArcGIS Explorer, Google Earth, and GeoPDF (Adobe) integrated with Westchester County GIS (and local) geospatial content. These viewers are excellent tools for non-technical users and include the use of shapefiles, KML and connections to live map services. With available staff resources, maintain and support geospatial components of all mission critical services with particular focus on public safety mapping programs at the Emergency Operations Center. Promote the use of GIS-based applications in the areas of health and human services for improved service delivery. Efforts in County programs such as Child Protection Services, Senior Programs and Services (Livable Communities), and Homeless Shelter assistance are already under review. Migrate and expand the existing Dept. of Environmental Facilities (DEF) ASMI Page 11 application to a new ArcGIS 10.0 solution. The new viewer should provide both improved access and functionality and include a larger number of DEF geospatial datasets. Having worked through redesign issues associated with the new GIS enterprise hardware and software architecture plan proposed by ESRI, finalize the migration of all enterprise GIS components to ArcGIS Server 10.0. Continue development of “Software as a Service” (SaaS) for local governments and school districts providing online access to County geospatial applications. In the first quarter 2012, make available an ArcGIS Server map service in Spanish (Mapa de Westchester County) which can be consumed and used with the ArcGIS Explorer Spanish client. The combination of both the software and data will be accessible through the County GIS website. Review application development opportunities with the Office of Tourism. Evaluate existing vendor data and software subscription contracts for cost effectiveness as well in context of alternative solutions. Manage the ESRI Enterprise Licensing Agreement (ELA) with ESRI which includes: o Maintenance of all existing licenses for County staff; unlimited access to all core ESRI software. o Annual technology update, enterprise system planning session, and quarterly system on-site support from ESRI. o ArcSDE Administration support direct from ESRI – Boston staff. III. Data Management Contract for Phase 1 of the countywide base map update with the acquisition of orthophotography through the NYS Digital Orthoimagery Program (NYSDOP). After delivery of the countywide imagery in early 2013, work will begin on planimetric feature mapping by a selected contractor. Countywide color orthophotography captured through these efforts is integrated in nearly every County and local government mapping applications. Focus on the continued acquisition and development of critical infrastructure datasets including public water distribution, storm water, and sanitary sewer systems. Important to a range of infrastructure management and public safety programs, much of this work requires coordination with local governments which have jurisdictional and maintenance responsibilities over these systems. Such efforts also support the goals of the Mid-Hudson Regional Economic Development Council Strategic Plan. Page 12 Complete and finalize delivery of LiDAR-based products including countywide one-meter Digital Elevation and Surface Models (DEM and DSM), an ‘Intensity’ image, and updated elevation contours. The datasets will be used in numerous programs, to perform hydraulic and terrain modeling, watershed analysis, flood studies, impervious surface classification, and for 3D visualization. Finalize the inventory and mapping of public water distribution systems as part of a program funded through the Department of Emergency Services. Initiated in 2011, data acquisition and development work associated through this project will provide critical infrastructure data to DES and Department of Health staff. Continue data development efforts to support GIS-based applications in the Department of Social Services and Westchester County Tourism Office. Continue proactive efforts to secure high-accuracy local government funded spatial datasets (tax parcel boundaries and public infrastructure datasets) through cost-effective data sharing agreements. Broaden the maintenance plan for enterprise GIS data which as of December 2011 contains approximately 500 datasets. Spatial datasets are updated in a variety of ways including: (1) scheduled/ on-demand maintenance, (2) obtained from authoritative outside sources (i.e., local, state or federal agencies), or (3) updated as part of a supported business (departmental) process. Representing 20 years of investment, geospatial data continues to be one of the County’s most valuable assets. Complete delivery and storage of countywide Pictometry imagery and street level photography which is available to all County and local government employees. Discussions are scheduled to review options for integration of this project data into other enterprise applications and viewers. Continue to support on-demand County GIS data distribution through download services via the Data Warehouse and from Mapping Westchester County. Downloaded data is accompanied with FGDC (www.fgdc.gov) compliant metadata. Page 13 Westchester County GIS User Group The GIS User Group establishes a medium to collaboratively maximize the effective use of GIS resources throughout County government. The User Group, which meets annually, draws participants from County and local government, as well as from local businesses and industries involved in geospatial data development and related services. The 2011 User Group meeting was sponsored by and held on the campus of Westchester Community College on GIS Day, November 16th. The meeting was highly successful and well attended. The User Group serves as an advisory forum for issues that cross department and government boundaries, providing implementation of GIS services. input to the planning, development, Attendees observe software and technical presentations which facilitates knowledge transfer and communication between GIS users. Topics and subject matter from recent user group meetings include: ESRI software updates Advancements in new geospatial technologies (Web services, and/or services GIS dataset ownership and maintenance GPS, viewers, Open Source, etc.) Acquisition of data, imagery, Vendor presentations GIS training and education In addition to the many local governments participating in the GIS User Group during 2011, several Westchester County departments are often represented as well including: Environmental Facilities Office for the Disabled Health Traffic Engineering Emergency Services Consumer Affairs Parks, Recreation & Conservation Transportation Planning Corrections Public Safety Family Court Probation District Attorney Senior Services County Clerk Page 14 In 2012, County GIS staff will be hosting a series of informal sessions and demonstrations on topics such as “What’s new at ArcGIS 10.0”, leveraging map services geocoding services, new viewing clients, and updates to the Spatial Data Warehouse. These sessions will be held in the GIS map room and open to all County staff. Page 15 GIS Projects, Applications and Services Mapping Westchester County Internet Mapping Westchester County is the primary public facing interactive mapping application from Westchester County GIS. The application provides residents with a variety of functions to locate an address, find nearby facilities, and access to hundreds of GIS datasets. New features in the ArcGIS 10 version include 1960 historical aerial photos, updated street network, DEM data, and integration of new tax parcel data. Municipal Critical Infrastructure Systems Data Development An infrastructure base map series has been created for distribution to local governments. Hardcopy maps are being provided to engineering and public works departments to support maintenance and long range system planning. Critical infrastructure systems include, public water, sanitary sewers, and storm water components. Page 16 Data Distribution with GeoPDF Data Development This project involves the production of GeoPDF files by County GIS staff for distribution to local governments and non-GIS users. Users can turn on/off layers depending on user needs as well as “markup” and edit images. The use of GeoPDF is popular in many government program areas as the files can be distributed freely and loaded and viewed on many types of devices. The only software required is Adobe Acrobat Reader. Surface Model (DSM) Data Development In 2011, GIS developed new datasets from LiDAR data. Along with an updated elevation model, this effort resulted in a first-ever countywide 1-meter Surface Model (DSM), representing the uppermost surfaces: rooftops, treetops, bridges, pavement, and other features of the Westchester landscape. The DSM is used in land use planning, delineation of land cover types, and 3D visualization. Page 17 LiDAR Data Download (.LAS files) Internet In 2011, GIS made available to the public nearly 130 GB of highaccuracy data for direct download from Mapping Westchester County online. Any 1,000-meter-square LAS file contains X, Y, and Z coordinates for millions of points, coded for ‘bare ground’ and other categories. LAS files can be read directly in or converted for several software programs, including CAD and other free viewing utilities for 3D modeling and visualization. Bathymetric Data (Water Depth) Data Development Two new data types were acquired in 2011 representing water depths in the Hudson River and Long Island Sound. Two 1-meter interval contour datasets were obtained from NOAA and the U.S Geological Survey, while depth rasters, which are 30-meter grids, were created by SUNY Stony Brook and NOAA. Such datasets are useful in many public safety applications. Page 18 ArcGIS for AutoCAD Desktop AutoCAD (Computer Aided Design) software is used by many engineers and landscape architects. The ArcGIS for AutoCAD extension bridges the gap for AutoCAD users making it easier to connect to GIS datasets. High resolution aerial photography, two-foot contours, parcel data, and other planimetric datasets can be accessed for use in the AutoCAD design process. GIS for Child Protection Services (CPS) Intranet GIS has initiated work with the Department of Social Services (DSS) in building a mapping application for the Child Protective Services (CPS) program. In addition to containing data on community facilities and area demographics, the application is intended to improve service delivery among DSS service providers. The application will be modified for use in other County program areas. Page 19 Municipal Tax Parcel Viewer Internet This application leverages tax parcel and assessment data, providing tools to query data by address, print key or owner name. Users can print maps, export query results, or generate mailing labels needed for an ‘abutters’ notice. Currently, the viewer is made available to over 30 municipalities and is anticipated to expand in 2012. This popular application was first deployed in 2010. Crowd Sourcing Data Collection Internet This application allows internet users to locate incident data on a “map” using only a Web browser. Users can also add attribute data and attach photos or documents (PDF, Word and videos, etc). Incident data collected can be distributed to other enterprise applications. Increasingly popular in many government program areas, the application is scheduled to be used initially in Emergency Services. Page 20 Homeseeker Interactive Mapping Internet As part of the County’s initiative to provide affordable housing, GIS staff developed the Homeseeker application which shows the locations of housing units associated with the County program. The application shows units in context of local resources, public transportation, hospitals, parks, school districts, post offices, schools, and other facilities. Data on floor plans and housing costs is also provided. Police District Locator Intranet This application was originally developed for staff in Family Court to determine appropriate police district jurisdiction relative to issuance of Orders of Protection. It is also used by the Dept. of Public Safety and is anticipated to be made available to local agencies in 2012. The new upgraded version using new ArcGIS Server technology has enhanced features and improved performance. Page 21 Public Water Distribution System Inventory Data Development GIS staff is directing the inventory and mapping of all public water distribution systems in the County. The project is being coordinated with the Dept. of Emergency Services, and will provide detailed information on key water system components and district boundaries. Data will support responses to incidents or threats to public water systems. Environmental Facilities (DEF) Geospatial Viewer Intranet Currently in progress, this application will provide access to spatially accurate and attributed datasets representing facilities and infrastructure maintained by DEF. ‘Find’ tools can be used to zoom to any address or intersection. Both managers and field crew will be able to view DEF assets, respond to emergencies, and review both CallBefore-You-Dig requests and recent inspection data. Page 22 Enterprise Geocoding Service (EGS) Web Client Intranet This online service uses the latest GIS technology and is made accessible to all County departments and agencies. The program cleans and standardizes address-based records and is imbeded in many County government intranet and internet web mapping applications including Mapping Westchester County. EGS is also central to several public safety and emergency response applications, including the Criminal Data Warehouse. Oblique Aerial and Street Level Photography Data Development During 2011, GIS staff managed the development of two types of imagery products (aerial obliques and street level photography). The project supports local assessment activities and includes added return-oninvestment in the areas of public safety and local planning. The oblique imagery is scheduled to be integrated with the County’s E-911 system. Page 23 Hurricane Inundation Zones Data Development Using the County’s LiDAR data, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers updated flood zones for each of four hurricane categories, and added first-ever maps of flood depths for each storm category. Using complex GIS spatial analyst tools, worst-case storm surge values were generated to derive “estimated” depth of water in areas expected to be flooded. Data is of particular importance in municipalities along the Long Island Sound. Spatial Data Warehouse Internet Westchester County provides public access to hundreds of important datasets online, both directly from the interactive maps or via categorical search. Ongoing work and enhancements to the County’s GIS website also includes documentation and instructions on how to access data through map services being published via ArcGIS Server. Page 24 Westchester County GIS on the Web The Westchester County GIS website offers a number of services to the public including GIS mapping applications and datasets available for download in both ESRI and Google Earth file formats. The Service Center provides access to available mapping tools, websites and other geospatial resources. Users can view current and past projects, GIS newsletters, maps, and posters. Contact information relative to GIS Shared Services with local governments is also provided. In 2011, the website was viewed in 119 countries or territories and in 77 languages. Page 25 Shared Services: Local Government and School Districts Beginning in the early 1990’s, Westchester County was one of the first counties in New York State to establish and implement geospatial programs which provided GIS outreach to local governments. Since then, Westchester County GIS has been successful in assisting local governments in building geospatial capacity through a variety of Shared Services initiatives which is being expanded in 2012 to also include collaborative work with school districts. Early efforts by GIS staff under the Shared Services program focused on conducting user needs studies, data collection, providing assistance with desktop applications, and “start-up” implementation efforts. While many of these early efforts remain relative today, 2012 collaborative programs with local governments focus on strategic geospatial data and application development efforts. Priority data development efforts focus on critical infrastructure mapping, tax parcel mapping, and the delivery of authoritative base map datasets from the proposed Spring 2012 photogrammetric base map update. Leveraging the county’s built GIS hardware and software infrastructure, local governments and school districts can gain access to cost-effective web enabled GIS solutions for data access and viewing. GIS staff also continues to advocate at both the state and federal level for local government funded GIS grant programs. County GIS staff proactively represents local geospatial technology interests as part of the New York State GIS Coordinating Body, and the New York State GIS Association (www.nysgis.org). Staff routinely work in concert with consultants and software vendors, particularly ESRI, on behalf of local governments in providing seminars and demonstrations. Scheduled for 2012 are training opportunities for school districts and local government GIS personnel, greater access to Westchester County published map services, Software as a Service (SaaS), and countywide base map data updates. Through the Shared Services program, Westchester County GIS staff is available to local governments and school districts to provide: • Geospatial data and map services for business applications • Desktop GIS support • GIS Project Management Page 26 • Data development and conversion • Tax mapping support and maintenance strategies • Data hosting (County GIS Data Warehouse) • User Needs Assessments • GIS training and education • Consultant coordination and recommendations Local government assistance is provided to nearly all 43 municipalities in Westchester County. Page 27 Program Metrics GIS system metrics provide a means to periodically measure various components of the County's GIS program. Such metrics are also commonly referred to as "key performance indicators". Within the GIS program, quantitative indicators focusing on web activity, data downloads, software licensing, user training, internal application usage, annual data maintenance activities, and outreach to local governments, all provide key statistics and measurements assuring the program's accountability and demonstrating its value to county government and residents. For the purpose of establishing baseline metrics to which future assessments can be compared, key 2011 GIS program metrics include the following: WEB SERVICES (Intranet and Internet) GIS Web GIS Web Pages # of Visits Website has been accessed from 119 different countries around the world in 77 different languages 2011 Data Downloads 2011 # of Downloads Countywide Download Base Map Download Municipal Tax Parcel Download Total Downloads GIS INTERNET Applications # of Views Municipal Tax Parcel Viewer Homeseeker Map GIS INTRANET Applications # of Views Optimal Routing Application PD (Police District) Locator Sex Offender Address Verification Spatial Analysis for Public Health Historic Aerial Photos Bee-Line Bus Stops & Bus Routes Viewer Points of Distribution System (PODS) DOH Septic Management System Environmental Facilities Geospatial Viewer 100,083 2,764 2,827 7,047 12,638 2011 16,800 669 2011 656 5,761 567 843 440 297 26 346 232 Page 28 PROGRAM SUPPORT 2011 Geo Utilities Enterprise Geocoding Service (Function calls) GeoWebcast (Calls placed) Septic Management Program (Records) Human Resources Examination Notification Application Special Needs Registration (Number of registrants) Criminal Justice Data Warehouse (Records processed) Municipal Government GIS Development 169,724 1,570,547 15,600 4,084 415 865,696 2011 Tax Parcel Viewers (Municipalities) Municipal GIS Meetings ArcReader Projects (Updated) On-site ArcReader Training Municipal Websites linked to Mapping Westchester County AVL (Vehicle Tracking) Program Support Public Safety, Corrections and Probation Vehicles TrimWeb application (User logins) Position Records Stored (Per month, approx) 77 228 103,000 76 89 (Edit requests) Historic Aerial Photos Georeferencing 1925-26 2011 2011 Emergency Services (60 Control) Map Correction Requests (MCRs) Map Requests 35 33 6 1 21 2011 409 (Number of images registered) GIS Training 2011 Mapping with Google Earth (Municipal) Mapping with ArcGIS Explorer (Municipal) Pictometry Software (Municipal) Pictometry Software (County) GIS User Group Meetings Spring User Group Meeting Fall User Group Meeting @ WCC 25 24 106 61 2011 70 105 Page 29 PROGRAM SUPPORT Systems Integration # of Users GIS Desktop Software by County Departments Board of Elections County Airport District Attorney Emergency Services/Emergency Operations Center Environmental Facilities Information Technology – GIS Health Network group Parks, Recreation and Conservation Planning Probation Public Works – Engineering & Traffic Divisions Public Safety Telecom Tax Commission Transportation AutoCAD (DPW & Planning) (approx # of users) Total Geospatial Desktop Users 84 2 1 2 10 5 14 6 1 7 12 1 11 4 2 1 5 25 109 GIS DATABASE User Usage Statistics This number indicates how many times and how long computers were connected to the GIS Database Number of Connection Computers Connections length (hours) GIS Servers 148,479 3,435,424 GIS Desktops 22,751 350,956 Total Connections 171,230 3,786,380 GIS Database Storage Space GIS Databases in ArcSDE and Oracle Vector Data and 2004 Aerial Photos 2009, 2007 Aerial Photos and DEF Scanned Images GIS Standby Database for Emergency GIS Test Database Total Disk Space Allocated Disk Space (GB) 303.21 Used Disk Space (GB) 197.48 404 310.87 272.71 246.22 1,226.14 168.26 167.27 843.88 Page 30 ENTERPRISE DEPLOYMENT System Components GIS Software Licenses ArcInfo for IT/GIS, Planning, Emergency Operations and Departmental Users ArcView for Health, Planning, Traffic and Departmental Users ArcGIS Spatial Analyst ArcGIS 3D Analyst ArcGIS Publisher ArcGIS Network Analyst ArcGIS Schematics Geostatistic Analyst ArcPad for Departmental Users ArcPad Licenses 2011 Unlimited Unlimited Unlimited Unlimited Unlimited Unlimited Unlimited Unlimited 7 ArcGIS Engine Runtime Developments and Extensions Unlimited Server Licenses ArcGIS Server (Advanced, Standard, Basic-Workgroup Enterprise) ArcGIS Mobile Unlimited Unlimited Software/Database Licenses NavTeq Data Pitney Bowes AddressBroker Licenses Oracle Real Application Clusters New Atlanta ServerExec GeoExpress & Express Server (LizardTech) LiDAR Compressor software Terra Go (GeoPDF) Pictometry Software Installs 1 2 12 6 1 1 3 29 System Hardware Servers Plotters with large format scanner PC’s, laptops, PDA’s GPS units and GPS Camera 41 1 33 7 Page 31 Geospatial Data Layers Page 32 Geospatial Data Layers (Continued) Page 33 Geospatial Data Layers (Continued) Page 34 GIS System Architecture Page 35 Westchester County GIS White Plains, New York Sam Wear Xiaobo Cui Dongming Tang Cindy Marx Deborah Parker Zhenglu Zhang Ilir Tota Connor Lynch http://giswww.westchestergov.com facebook:WestchesterCountyGIS twitter:WCGIS Page 36