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Geospatial Information Officer

Geospatial Information Officer. Brenda Smith. Office of Environmental Information Environmental Protection Agency Smith.Brenda@epa.gov. Today’s Topics. Where the GIO fits in at EPA GIO roles Background Experience as core enterprise geospatial issues Will NOT be ALL of them!

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Geospatial Information Officer

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  1. Geospatial Information Officer Brenda Smith Office of Environmental Information Environmental Protection Agency Smith.Brenda@epa.gov

  2. Today’s Topics • Where the GIO fits in at EPA • GIO roles • Background • Experience as core enterprise geospatial issues • Will NOT be ALL of them! • Questions from you

  3. Where the GIO fits in at EPA • Report to the CIO • In Headquarters • Working with individuals throughout OEI (and many other Federal and State communities)

  4. GIO Roles On Geospatial-related issues: • Build partnerships internally and externally • Provide leadership within OEI • Retain sense of how applicable various technologies are • In collaboration with you, work toenhance the GIS capabilities enabling all EPA offices to quickly generate and share necessary geospatial data

  5. Background • Education: • B.A. – Math/Computer Science, 1987 • M.S – Computer Science, 1995 • Employment: • 1987: Defense Intelligence Agency

  6. Background cont’d • 1987 to 1994: Directorate for Info Systems • Database Application Developer • System Administrator/Tech Support • 1990: Discovered GIS!

  7. Background cont’d • 1994 – 2004: Directorate for Analysis, GIS Division • Tech Support for GOTS GIS • Software installation • Help desk/Troubleshooting • End User (analysis) training • Live data feeds • Data Admin (GIS/non-GIS data formats) • Land Classification standards • Data loader specifications • System Admin Training

  8. Background cont’d • 1994 – 2004: Directorate for Analysis, GIS Division • GIS Analysis (GOTS) • Intelligence Preparation of the Battlespace (IPB) • Line Of Site (LOS), Cross Country Movement (CCM), Site Selection modeling, Movement Modeling, etc. • Time Critical Analysis (temporal) • GIS Application Development (GOTS & COTS) • GIS Enterprise Architecture for DoD Intel Community

  9. Experience with GIS Enterprise Architecture • Issues : • WHO • WHAT • WHERE • WHEN

  10. Experience with GIS Enterprise Architecture • WHO are the customers: • Non-GIS savvy professionals • Analysts/Warfighter/Policy • GIS professionals (ERDAS/ESRI) • Application Developers

  11. Experience with GIS Enterprise Architecture • WHAT (Data/Processes/Functions/Tools): • Common data sets (GIS/non-GIS formats) • Reduce Data Loading Redundancy where possible • Geospatial functions influence tools (Analysis <-> Visualization) • GIS Analysis • Interactive Web • Static Display geospatially

  12. Experience with GIS Enterprise Architecture • WHERE (People/Data/Tools): • Data stored • How close to the data are the users • Desktop • Local Server (LAN) • Remote Server (WAN) • Server Side vs Desktop • Applications costs • Functions/Tools needed • Technology COULD be used (GIS/non-GIS)

  13. Experience with GIS Enterprise Architecture • WHEN (temporal data, time to answer): • Performance • Minimum bandwidth • Infrastructure (network/processing power)

  14. Experience with GIS Enterprise Architecture • Lessons Learned: • May have SOME separation of production from dissemination (or at a minimum influence schema) • Accept that different “clients” are required, but they must share data • APIs are important • Starting the ‘Exploitation of Metadata’ • Resourcing/Staffing/Expertise • Hard to do this “on the cheap”

  15. Now, from you Questions?

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