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About socalgovgis - Michael Carson

Michael Carson, GIS Manager (retired) for the City of Burbank and President of Southern California Government GIS User Group. Currently teaching GIS at College of the Canyons in Santa Clarita.

Report: California Needs GIS Officer

A government watchdog agency recommended that Gov. Gavin Newsom and the state Legislature create the position of state Geospatial Information Officer to coordinate and advance the use of GIS technology across all departments.

The Little Hoover Commission’s report on geographic information systems technology, called Mapping a Strategy for GIS, follows a study of whether the state government is using GIS to its full capacity and in a cost-efficient manner. The report concludes that overall, the state’s use of GIS is “inconsistent and lacks centralization and coordination.” The 18-page document recommends that the governor and Legislature take three specific steps:

  • Designate a full-time state Geospatial Information Officer
  • Create a GIS Advisory Council, whose members would come from the public sector, the IT industry and nonprofits
  • Use GIS technology to evaluate regional disparities in funding and the delivery of state services.

Click here to read the Techwire article.  Click here to read the report.

Fire Operations Technology Summit

ESRI is hosting a Fire Operations Technology Summit at their headquarters in Redlands on January 22-23, 2020.

The Fire Operations Technology Summit is a two-day exclusive event that will bring together fire operations chiefs from across the state and emerging technology partners servicing fire and EMS industries with the goal of improving daily operations and firefighter safety.  Learn about real world tech being developed for the fire service of tomorrow and used by the fire service of today.

The summit is free, click here for more details and to register.

GIS Courses at Rio Hondo

Rio Hondo College offers several GIS courses starting January 25th https://gisteacher.wixsite.com/riohondo/spring2020

Available courses include hybrid Introduction to GIS (GIS 120) on Thursday 7pm at Rio Hondo College, also offering on Wednesday morning 8am.  We have a new course Small Unmanned Aircraft System (GIS 150) for survey mapping and preparation for the FAA107 on Saturday 9am.  At the LA County DPW in Alhambra we have the Intermediate GIS (GIS 220) on Thursday 6pm.  Friday on campus, we have Cartography (GIS 221) at 9am.   Environmental GIS (GIS 230) is offered Monday & Wednesday 7:00pm.  Tuesday we have the Geospatial Programming (Python) & Web Services  (GIS 280) at 7pm.

Did you know you can apply for admission and register for classes entirely online and should be done as early as possible.  Waivers are available if you meet prerequisites with experience or attended an introductory course elsewhere. Contact wroberts@riohondo.edu for support. For more information on the courses you can view here and you can follow the steps here to register

P.S. Did you know select Rio Hondo GIS now offers the GIS AS Degree in addition to the CA state approved GIS Certificate and includes courses that are transferable courses to CSU and other universities?

SoCal Was Almost Colorado

Not too long, in the 1800’s, the south half of California almost became a state named Colorado!

southcalifornia

The proposal was authored by Andres Pico, a wealthy landowner.  Pico was a Californio, part of the Spanish culture that had first settled in the region in the 1700’s.

Long before Americans arrived in the far West, Californio agriculture and trade were thriving.  Their problem was the lure of gold.  Once the first nugget was discovered in the region in 1848, hordes of settlers rushed to northern California.  The Californios were quickly outnumbered, and that’s what led Pico to push for separation.  Of course, Pico’s plan would not be the last attempt to split California.  California has been the subject of more than 220 proposals to divide it into multiple states since its admission to the union in 1850, including at least 27 significant proposals in the first 150 years of statehood.  Pico brought California the closest to separation and never again would a plan have such widespread support.  The state legislature, the governor, and the residents were all on board for this one!

Pico’s proposal suggested calling the new state “Colorado”, which by the way ranks among the most coveted state names ever.  Votes were taken and the matter was sent to Washington, D.C., for final approval.

BUT … Congress was not listening because they were preoccupied with a tiny matter called the Civil War.  It did not happen yet, the year was 1859, but tensions were rising.  The folks in Washington just were not interested in California’s plan to slice itself in half.

After southern California’s rebranding attempt failed, the Arizona territory laid its plans to rename itself “Colorado”, however the rectangular state to the north beat them to the prize!

61hdx2kt19lThis piece of trivia was taken from the book, An Astounding Atlas of Altered States: The Real Stories of the States That Never Came To Be.  Could be a great gift for someone you know!

 

Today: Drone Usage Webinar

SoCal URISA is hosting a Webinar on Drone Usage.  The webinar is today at noon.  It is hosted by Professor Warren Roberts.  Prof Roberts teaches GIS at Rio Hondo Community College and has completed his certification for the FAA 107 License for sUAV Drone Pilot.

In the webinar, Warren will share with you the many growth areas including surveying, public safety, biology, and other industries.

We’ll explore: how you prepare for the FAA 107 to enable you to commercially perform services, using the sUAV, best practices for survey mapping, and processing to capture accurate orthomosaics and surface models for inputs into GIS.

Click here for more info and to register.