Crossing the Barrier: Integrating GIS beyond the Land Records Arena Ken Curry Land Records...

Preview:

Citation preview

Crossing the Barrier:Crossing the Barrier:Integrating GIS beyond the Integrating GIS beyond the

Land Records ArenaLand Records ArenaKen Curry

Land Records CoordinatorLand Records DepartmentTrempealeau County

Greg LeonardSoil & Water ConservationistLand Conservation Dept.Division of Land ManagementTrempealeau County

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier Trempealeau County experienced a complete Land Records staff

turnover in Fall 2000 Trempealeau County replaced both coordinator and technician

positions in the spring of 2001 Current priority for Land Records involves completion of parcel

mapping in unincorporated areas Land Records time is limited in regard to developing data for

other departments County financial resources are limited in terms of contracting

data development However, other departments have expressed a need for specific

data to be developed beyond parcels

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

• Objective became establishing an environment conductive for data development beyond the Land Records Department

• Three mechanisms exist that facilitate data development objective

1. Encourage staff involvement in Land Records (GIS) activities through participation in a Technical Advisory Committee (TAC)

• TAC environment promotes education of and awareness of existing GIS technologies and potential uses throughout the county

• TAC provides the opportunity to integrate GIS technologies into other departments work flow and promote data development in these departments

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

2. Land Records staff facilitate data development by contributing targeted resources that do not severely limit parcel mapping tasks

• Land Records staff involved in planning and developing data collection methodologies

• Land Records staff develop applications to facilitate data collection and insure adequate level of QA\QC

• Land Records staff review the design and development of databases for structural elements, functionality and usability

• Land Records staff integrate newly developed data with existing data model (accessibility)

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

3. Land Records Department developed and now teaching GIS training courses

• Classes involve introduction to software and data models used in Trempealeau County (ArcView 3.x)

• Team taught with Division of Land Management GIS staff, which further promotes integration and cooperation between departments

• Future courses to be developed include advanced GIS techniques and transitioning to ArcGIS environment

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

• The Land Records Department continues to maintain parcel mapping at a consistent pace, while . . .

• Data Development Projects in other departments include:

1. E 911 Address locations

2. Mine Locations

3. Wells ( planning stage )

• Trempealeau County’s land information program relies on an environment that promotes data development internally through the combination of resources, varying expertise levels and a great deal of cooperation.

• Getting others actively involved.Getting others actively involved.

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the BarrierWhere we are going with you…

Point A

Point B

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the BarrierLand Conservation Department“Soil and Water Conservation”

– Erosion Control Cropland Site Specific

– Manure Management Cropland Site Specific

– Technical Assistance– Financial Assistance– Referral and coordinating with other agencies

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

Oct 1938 Beaver Creek Soil Cons. District (first in the state of Wis.)

Tremp. Co. Soil & Water Cons. District form by County Board March 15, 1940

5 DNR non-point watershed projects2 DATCP funded projectsFLP (most contracts in the state)First county in the state to pass a metallic mining

ordinance

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

Creation of Division of Land Management– Structured Coordination– Avoid duplication of services or overlap– Stability– Automation

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

Automation…. where do we start?– Conservation plans (cropland erosion)– Nutrient management plans (cropland manure mgt.)– Structure designs (site specific erosion and manure

mgt.)

All dressed up and no place to go… yet

Priorities

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the BarrierReasons we picked NR-135

Non metallic & metallic mines

New

Get going before we are behind

“The Challenge”

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

“What is a mine?” – Under 1 acre to 320 acres– Multiple landowners– Multiple mines under one landowner or operator– All need C.U.P. even less than 1 ac.– Only if over 1 acre need reclamation plan– operator is responsible for reclamation, and not

owner… most are leased with leases not recorded.– Access road is considered part of the mine also… this

could involve additional leases

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

Active vs. Inactive vs. Reclaimed portion of a mine

– DNR and NR-135 only for active portion of a mine– Zoning and C.U.P. for all portions of the mine– Access Roads

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

Active mines change through the yearUse this to track the progress of a mine

through its lifeA spatial change that can occur, but not

necessarily a change in data.A very dynamic dataset - not staticWe will also be doing compliance checks

through the year.

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

That is a little background

Point A

Point B

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement Crossing the BarrierCrossing the Barrier

What is next?

– Erosion Control Cropland Site Specific

– Manure Management Cropland Site Specific

– Technical Assistance– Financial Assistance

DL

M

ivision

of and

anagement

Recommended