North Carolina Geographic Information Coordinating Council
Report on Achievements 1995-2001


Mission: To Improve the quality, access, cost-effectiveness and utility of NC's geographic information and promote geographic information as a strategic resource for the State.


Authority
Executive Order 16, Governor James B. Hunt (amendments include Executive Order 124, Executive Order 142, and Executive Order 166 that expires December 31, 2001)

Membership
The 25 members of the Geographic Information Coordinating Council include several Council of State members, nine cabinet officials, and the President of the University of North Carolina. Local governments and lead regional organizations are represented, as is the federal government and the non-government sector. Two user committees elect a representative to the Council from their groups.

Standing committees include separate user committees for state, local, and federal government GIS technology users. On-going business as it relates to technical standards is conducted by the GIS Technical Advisory Committee. The Statewide Mapping Advisory Committee makes recommendations for data acquisition and funding partnerships, and is the liaison with US Geological Survey, National Mapping Division.

Strategic Plan for Geographic Information Coordination in North Carolina
Adopted in 1994, the comprehensive Strategic Plan focuses on nine strategies and three outcomes to help North Carolina realize the full potential of a coordinated approach for the use of geographic information technology within the state. The three measurable strategic outcomes have been achieved: the North Carolina Geographic Data Clearinghouse, the Community Data Sharing Program with local governments and other agencies, and the Corporate Geographic Database, although a funding mechanism to guarantee long-term storage, archiving and maintenance remains an unresolved issue.

Partnerships
The Council fosters collaboration between all governments, universities and the public to achieve the best use of these data and the most efficient use of taxpayer dollars.
  • Data Sharing. The GICC initially focused on data sharing partnerships among state agencies relative to creating the Corporate Geographic Database. Increased local government representation on the GICC has resulted in new data sharing partnerships with county and municipal governments throughout North Carolina.
  • Federal/State. The GICC established one of the first cooperating partnerships with the Federal Geographic Data Committee (April 1995). The importance of this partnership plays out on numerous fronts involving the National Spatial Data Infrastructure and the Global Spatial Data Infrastructure.
  • Federal Grants. The GICC has partnered on numerous successful federal grant applications with the Center for Geographic Information and Analysis, the Secretary of State's Office, the Department of Community Colleges, Appalachian State University and various county governments, such as Johnston, Wake, Moore, Guilford. Since 1995 the annual grant awards have helped create the North Carolina Geographic Data Clearinghouse and assisted extensive data documentation by state agencies and more than 30 counties. Grants have also provided a means to conduct statewide surveys, a feasibility study for a GIS Technician certification program, and a delineation of public land boundaries in the state.
  • GIS in K-12 Education. The Office of Environmental Education requested GICC support to promote use of GIS in classrooms with K-12 teachers through con-ferences and Science Teachers Association meetings. Summer GIS workshops have been conducted for teachers since 1995.
  • Consolidated Survey of Local Government. The Council coordinated a 1997 comprehensive survey of local government GIS that combined requests from many state agencies and the NC Property Mappers Association into a single form.

Significant Issues
The Geographic Information Coordinating Council was always at the forefront of issues confronting local and state agencies, and was routinely involved in national and international discussions about policy, standards and future direction of this technology. Issues included Public Records legislation relative to the collection and dissemination of geographic information; privacy of an individual's records; North Carolina's seaward boundary; personnel classifications for GIS workers; requirements for using the Qualifications Based Selection process in local government procurement of aerial photography; and changes in state law relative to certification of photogrammetrists and its impact on local government GIS operations.


Outreach and Actions
  • Video teleconferencing. Used extensively to reach large statewide audiences for issue-oriented meetings, such as the Digital Content Standards for Spatial Meta-data and Public Records Law as it pertains to GIS in local government. (1995 forward)
  • North Carolina State Fair, Cyberspace Exhibit. Showcase for citizens to see and access state and local government GIS data. Internet mapping capabilities and hands-on demonstrations change each year. (1995 forward)
  • Exhibitor at League of Municipalities annual conventions. (1996 forward)
  • North Carolina Geographic Information Systems Conferences. One of the nation's largest and most respected state conferences, the North Carolina conference attracts almost 1,000 participants to the biennial two-day event in Winston-Salem. The poster session, open to all governments, non-profits and universities, remains one of the most popular features. Local governments com-pete to win the prestigious G. Herbert Stout Award for Exemplary Use of GIS.
      1996 Award winners: Johnston County, the Town of Garner
      1999 Award winner: City of Winston-Salem
      2001 Award winner: Mecklenburg County

  • National GIS Day. Educational events are developed by local and state government agencies and promoted through the Internet to introduce children and the public to GIS. Events include a wide range of activities from the City of Raleigh's demonstration in Exploris Museum that maps the Governor's route to buy a Krispy Kreme donut to a GIS teach-in for 200 middle- and high-school students using the North Carolina Information Highway. (1999, 2000)

Official Policies
  • Corporate Geographic Database Access Policy Adopted November 1995 -- Main provisions include on-line access, cooperative agreements, metadata [data about the data] for each data layer, linkage to North Carolina Geographic Data Clearinghouse, user fees when applicable, access compliant with NC Public Records Law G.S. 132
  • Statement of Direction for North Carolina Corporate Geographic Database: Horizontal Reference, Datum and Unit of Measure Adopted March 1998 -- Main provisions include the adoption of the North American Datum, 1983, North Carolina State Plane Coordinate System, metric units as the official horizontal positioning reference for state geographic data.
  • Statement of Direction for Digital Orthoimagery Adopted October 1994, revised 1996 -- Main provisions emphasize that statewide digital orthoimagery [aerial photography] can provide a uniform base map for the state if it reflects a single time period and meets certain mapping requirements. This statement supports the completion of the processing of the 1993 black and white photography and the acquisition of 1998 color infrared photography.

Standards Adopted
"A Standard Classification System for the Mapping of Land Use and Land Cover," Published 1994

"Statewide Global Position System (GPS) Data Collection and Documentation Standards," Adopted October 1994, revised 2000

"Federal Geographic Data Committee Content Standards for Digital Geospatial Metadata," Adopted February 1996

"Geographic Data Content Standard for Water Distribution and Sanitary Sewer Systems," Adopted December 1997 (This standard was applied to a $1.3 million statewide project to inventory and map 2,624 public water and sewer systems in rural NC.)


A Strategic Resource: The Corporate Geographic Database
The Corporate Geographic Database has been evolving for many years and is one of the richest data resources in the nation. The following adaptations and data acquisitions were influenced by the work of the Geographic Information Coordinating Council.
  • 1993-Black and white digital orthoimagery (aerial photography) was purchased through a cost-share initiative between the State of North Carolina, USGS, Natural Resource Conservation Service, and various state and federal partnerships. Legislative Appropriation covered a portion of the cost and provided the hardware acquisition for the Center for Geographic Information and Analysis to serve the large data files on-line.
  • 1997-Conversion of the entire Corporate Geographic Database from horizontal controls datum NAD27 to NAD83, and to the North American vertical controls datum, NAVD88, per Council policy. The conversion also included a change of measurement system from English (feet) to metric (meters).
  • 1997 forward-Focus on the completion of seven statewide data themes in the database: transportation, surface waters, geodetic controls, cadastral (property ownership), digital orthoimagery (aerial photography), elevation, and governmental units (boundaries). These base data layers (Framework) will be pieced together across the state using the best data available, which can be derived from local, state, or federal sources.
  • 1998-Rural water systems and sanitary sewer inventory data from 75 counties is added to the GIS database. Based on the inventory, the NC Rural Center readjusted the upgrade costs to these systems at $11.3 billion. Long-term maintenance and custodial responsibility of this database is an outstanding issue.
  • 1998-Color Infrared digital orthoimagery (aerial photography) was purchased through a cost-share initiative between the State of North Carolina and US Geological Survey. Several state agencies, as well as the City of Greensboro, are contributing funds to digitally process the photography.
NC Geographic Data Clearinghouse
One of the first states to build an Internet-based clearinghouse (1995), North Carolina received grant extensions to support work on a robust search mechanism to help people find geographic data about specific locations within the state. Several additional grants added new capabilities, and new local government data providers as they constructed metadata required for their inclusion in the Clearinghouse. Internet-based tutorials on how to construct metadata are on the Clearinghouse web site.

NC Geographic Information Coordinating Council
Part of the North Carolina Geographic Information Coordinating Council
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