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DHS Geospatial Management Office EPA GIS Workgroup

DHS Geospatial Management Office EPA GIS Workgroup. Tom McCarty Architect /Project Lead - SAIC April 13, 2005. Homeland Security Geospatial Directives and Legislation. Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 – DHS Homeland Security Geospatial Information (summary)

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DHS Geospatial Management Office EPA GIS Workgroup

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  1. DHS Geospatial Management OfficeEPA GIS Workgroup Tom McCarty Architect /Project Lead - SAIC April 13, 2005

  2. Homeland Security Geospatial Directives and Legislation • Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 – DHS Homeland Security Geospatial Information (summary) • Provides geospatial information necessary to implement the critical infrastructure protection programs • providing leadership and coordination of geospatial information requirements for planning, prevention, mitigation, assessment and response to emergencies, critical infrastructure protection, and other functions of the Department • coordinating with users of geospatial information within the Department to assure interoperability and prevent unnecessary duplication. • coordinating the geospatial information needs and activities of the Department; • implementing standards, as adopted by OMB to facilitate the interoperability of geospatial information • coordinating with the FGDC • DHS Management Directive 4030 (summary) • Formulates plans and provides overall oversight for the integration of geospatial information and technology Department-wide • Promotes standards-based geospatial information and technology architecture • Directs the establishment, monitoring, and evaluation of geospatial information technology performance in support of program accomplishments • Maintains the DHS Geospatial Working Group

  3. DHS Geospatial Management Office Secretary, DHS Office for State and Local Government Coordination and Preparedness Emergency Preparedness & Response Science & Technology US Secret Service US Coast Guard Management Border and Transportation Security Information Analysis Infrastructure Protection Citizenship and Immigration Services CIO, DHS CTO, DHS Geospatial Information Officer (GIO), DHS Senior Management Consultant Program Management Analyst Director GMO Chief, Geospatial Policy and Strategic Planning Chief, Geospatial Data and Information Services Chief, Geospatial Technical and Analytic Services Chief, Geospatial Liaison and Coordination Services Chief, Geospatial Service Center

  4. Current GMO Initiatives and Activities (1 of 3) • GeoWireless Program: Enabling wireless geospatial applications for homeland security. Delivering initial operational capabilities (IOC) for three Geospatial Enterprise Architecture (GEA) reference implementations. • Transportation Security Administration (TSA) Initial Operational Situational Awareness Capability (IOSAC) (June/July 2005) • Field an initial operational situational awareness capability for a high-visibility US port of entry; • Real-time wireless tracking of mobile GPS enabled devices. • Spatially Enabling the Enforcement Case Tracking System (ENFORCE) (Sept 2005) • ENFORCE is the system that tracks illegal crossing activities along the US national border; Spatially enabled system provides a map interface and geospatial referencing capabilities to accurately geo-locate crossing activities for pattern and trend analysis. • Geospatial Services Center (GSC) (May 2005) • Field a “next generation” DHS Community Outreach Web Portal that serves open standards based web mapping services and guidance on the Homeland Security (HLS) Geospatial Enterprise Architecture (GEA). • TCP/IP based services architecture built on Open GIS standards; • Enables access to geospatial data from wired and wireless network devices.

  5. Current GMO Initiatives and Activities (2 of 3) • Geospatial Enterprise Architecture (GEA) • Metadata/Data Modeling Community of Interest • GMO contributions/sponsorships/participations include: (not exhaustive) • Geospatial Working Group (GWG)/Geospatial Executive Steering Committee (GESC) (DHS GMO Oversight/FEMA Chair) • Office of Domestic Preparedness (ODP) grant program and state/local technology needs • Joint DHS – DOJ National Information Exchange Model pilot project • Geospatial One Stop II (OMB E-Gov/USGS host) • Project Homeland (NGA lead) • The National Map (USGS lead) • HIFLD - Homeland Infrastructure Foundation Level Database (OASD (HD) sponsorship) • GMO proves geospatial analysts supporting DHS ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement)/CBP (Customs and Border Protection)/HSOC (Homeland Security Operations Center) – rotations from USGS

  6. Current GMO Initiatives and Activities (3 of 3) Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) Executive Steering Committee National Positioning, Navigation, and Timing Policy (PNT) Executive Committee • Chair:DOI • Vice-Chair:OMB • DHS Voting Member: Geospatial Information Officer (GIO) • National geospatial policies and strategy • Developing geospatial metadata and standards • Establishing NSDI (National Spatial Data Infrastructure) Architecture • Chair: DOD • Vice-Chair: DOT • DHS Voting Member: Deputy Secretary • Setting policy for GPS access and use • Leading international cooperation on standards • Establishing technical U.S. and allied deployment Commercial Remote Sensing Space Policy (CRSSP) Senior Steering Committee Geospatial One Stop (GOS) Board of Directors • Co-Chair: DOI • Co-Chair: OMB • DHS Voting Member: Geospatial Information Officer (GIO) • Defining community policy on commercial remote sensing use and requirement management • Developing commercial remote sensing economic policy initiatives • Chair: DOI • DHS Voting Member: Geospatial Information Officer (GIO) • Establishing policy and best practices for data sharing • Developing national metadata repository standards

  7. HLS Geospatial Enterprise Architecture Challenge • Lack of Interoperability Standards • Data Visibility • Information Sharing • Redundancy • Governance • Inventory of Existing Capability

  8. HLS GEA Value Proposition • Provide a consistent framework that can be applied within and across agencies to identify the geospatial implications across lines of business • Define common geospatial service components • Define data (metadata) reference model to standardize commonly used geospatial information • Determine current geospatial capability of the HLS enterprise • Evaluate new geospatial IT investments for redundancy, mission performance, interoperability, cost avoidance • Support transition planning towards target architecture

  9. Target HLS GEA v1.0 Summary • Business • Common Geospatial Business Language Developed • HLS GEA Business Activities: 67 of 77 HLS EA Business • Geospatial used in 233 Roles in the Mission • Data • Geospatial Data Dictionary: 166 Data Classes • Geospatial Base Data Objects & Models • Geospatial Data Properties-Elements • Application • 67 Geospatial Applications (several specialized instances of each) • Technology • Geospatial Technical Reference Model • 69 Geospatial Components • Geospatial Technology Patterns • Geospatial Standards

  10. Geospatial View of the DHS Enterprise Architecture – Way Forward • Characterize state of current geospatial infrastructure • Stand-up and populate the GEA information/knowledge repository • Populate the DHS/HLS GEA View • Geospatially Enabled Business Processes • Data and Metadata Standards • Application and Component Identification • Technology Reference Model

  11. DHS Geospatial Metadata Community of Interest • Chartered by the DHS Data Management Working Group and Staffed through the DHS Geospatial Working Group • Objectives • Facilitate identification of DHS geospatial data and metadata standards • Support the creation an enterprise geospatial data model and high-level architecture • Provide geospatial data and metadata management policies • Identify requirements for new capabilities, service and content for Geospatial Community • Activities • Develop draft DHS Geospatial Metadata COI Charter – complete • Participate in National Information Exchange Model (NIEM) Project • Facilitate geospatial registry/repository content population and interoperability • Leverage Project Homeland and other geospatial data management lessons learned

  12. Governance • Integrated with Capital Planning and Investment Control (CPIC) Process • Enterprise Architecture Board reviewer for all Department Level and Geospatial related investments • Consolidated OMB 300 for major Geospatial Investments • Provide geospatial investment guidance throughout the Department

  13. GMO Support to HLS Grants • Information Technology and Evaluation Program (ITEP) Grants • GMO providing oversight and guidance to Geospatial Cluster Grants • Common Situation Display System (HI) • Emergency Geographic Information Network (MD) • Enterprise Geospatial Technology Data Program (PA) • Specific GMO/State of Pennsylvania Collaboration MOU • Fiscal Year 2005 Homeland Security Grant Program - Appendix I - Geospatial Guidance • Reference DHS Geospatial Enterprise Architecture • Adherence to National and Consensus Standards • Encourage State-wide GIS Investment Coordination • Refine guidance in FY06 to reflect HLS National Strategy for Geospatial Infrastructure

  14. Geospatial Preparedness Needs Assessment • Conducted a series of user needs assessment workshops • Kansas City, MO August 5-6, 2003 • Seattle, WA September 9-10, 2003 • Denver, CO November 5-6, 2003 • Maryland November 13, 2003 • Atlanta, GA January 13, 2004 • Developed a User Needs Assessment Report for the Office of Domestic Preparedness • Geospatial data does not exist or is not current or accurate enough for emergency use. • Data exists but is not available to emergency planning or response personnel • Data is vulnerable to loss through human error, natural disasters, and terrorist attacks. • Data may exist, but data is not local and data source is not immediately available. • Data exists across jurisdictional boundaries but cannot be integrated because of multiple data standards. • Lack of funding for geospatial applications and training for emergency personnel prohibits the use of geospatial technologies in emergency response. • Ad hoc event specific data is unavailable outside of the Emergency Operations Center (EOC) or across jurisdictions. • In order to create and share data, standards need to be put in place to ensure consistent data format. • There is no standard for data sharing mechanics. • Data created on the scene of an event is not immediately (if at all) available in the EOC or to other jurisdictions. • Lack of geospatial expertise limits geospatial involvement with Emergency Management. • Lack of understanding of technology and applications prohibits Emergency Management personnel from utilizing geospatial technology. • Lack of geospatial knowledge across the enterprise causes shortfalls in staffing, funding and coordination within the enterprise and with other jurisdictions. • Previous attempts to implement geospatial technologies have failed or remain unfunded.

  15. HLS National Strategy for Geospatial Infrastructure • Purpose • Identify geospatially enabled HLS mission needs derived from • National Strategy for HLS • National Response Plan • Homeland Security Presidential Directives • National Geospatial Needs Assessment for the HLS Stakeholder Community • National Incident Management System • Address gaps in geospatially enabled capabilities • Define and implement an effective and efficient framework for the use of geospatial data and technology in the HLS mission areas. • Schedule • Kick-off workshop – May 23-24, 2005 • Participants from NACo, NSGIC, NASCIO, DHS Operational Elements, NIMS, FGDC Agencies, GSA, USGS, NGA • Federal, State, Local Government Review – June 10 – July 22, 2005 • User and Industry Review – July 25 – August 26, 2005 • Final Draft - September 16, 2005

  16. PA Enterprise Geospatial TechnologyData Architecture Project

  17. ICD Integrated Architecture and Operating Context

  18. Follow-up Questions Tom McCarty DHS/Geospatial Management Office (202) 401-5435 mccartyt@saic.com Julio "Rick" Murphy DHS/Wireless Management Office (703) 279-2037 rick.murphy@dhs.gov

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