fsa geospatial support kevin clarke usda-fsa-apfo usda planning meeting dec 11-13, 2007
DESCRIPTION
FSA Geospatial Support Kevin Clarke USDA-FSA-APFO USDA Planning Meeting Dec 11-13, 2007. Topics. How the GDW Supports the FSA Geospatial Enterprise Current GDW Environment/Operations Supporting FSA Centralization Efforts NAIP Data Management Changes CLU Replication to the GDW. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
FSA Geospatial Support
Kevin ClarkeUSDA-FSA-APFO
USDA Planning MeetingDec 11-13, 2007
Topics
• How the GDW Supports the FSA Geospatial Enterprise
• Current GDW Environment/Operations
• Supporting FSA Centralization Efforts• NAIP Data Management Changes• CLU Replication to the GDW
How the GDW Supports FSA Farm Programs
• NAIP web services:• Provide the ortho base for maintaining CLU boundaries and farm
records• Provide an intuitive base map for interacting with customers in
the county offices• Provides a means for identifying current crop growing conditions • Assist with disaster assessment
• Supporting FSA’s efforts with centralizing the CLU dataset
• Development of CLU topological and attribute based data integrity checks
What the GDW Provides:
• Web services and light weight web applications providing access to national MDOQ and NAIP imagery for county offices and the public
• Hosting services for a national CLU layer via replication of the CLU from the field service centers
• Support for APFO NAIP Quality Assurance process via web services
• Internal APFO web mapping applications (Flight Planning, NAIP Film Search, NRI Status, etc)
GDW Data Resources Integrate with USDA Geospatial
Infrastructure
http://gos2.geodata.gov/wps/portal/gos
http://datagateway.nrcs.usda.gov/
APFO Provisioning System http://customerstatement.usda.gov/
ARCIMS Services gdw.apfo.usda.gov
Current Operations
• FSA’s geospatial activities are primarily county based• CLU managed locally in ArcSDE• NAIP CCM primary source of imagery • Desktop based applications
• GDW NAIP web services are also utilized extensively by the county office staff within Desktop environment
• NAIP web services are UTM based
• ArcSDE and ArcIMS application architecture for both raster and vector datasets with the GDW
NAIP UTM Based Web Services
Role of GDW within FSA• Role is not to develop enterprise GIS applications for
FSA • FSA GIS Office is tasked with GIS application
development and Enterprise GIS Architecture definition
• Responsible for providing hosting services and associated data maintenance for NAIP and CLU datasets
• Deployment of web services and related web based mapping applications for gaining access to those web services
Role of GDW within FSA
• GDW has been “aligned” with FSA GIS requirements but not necessarily “integrated” within the FSA GIS Enterprise
• Have been working closely with FSA GIS Office on CLU Replication effort
• Server architecture is at EOM/EOL
FSA Centralization
• FSA GIS Office has been engaging APFO as a fundamental participant in the centralization efforts
• The GDW is becoming “integrated” into the FSA Geospatial Enterprise
• NAIP must continue to be provided to the new FSA application environment
• “Cleaner” CLU is needed for FSA Enterprise/eGov applications such as Customer Statement
Aligning GDW with FSA Business Needs
• State based web services instead of UTM based• Multiple years of imagery available• Leverage 4-Band data (CIR and NC services)• Utilize Image Server and ArcGIS Server • Move away from our large (14TB) ArcSDE
raster environment• Work with GIS Office to integrate NAIP web
services into new application architecture• Utilize IS and GS within GDW for QA purposes
Demo
• NAIP web services• Image Server based• Multi year data (Indiana)• 4-Band sample (Arizona 2007)
• Using Image Server and ArcGIS Server for QA of GDW data management processes
CLU Replication to GDW
• Concept is to replicate CLU edits on a weekly basis from each of the 2,350 county offices to the GDW for aggregation into UTM based datasets
• Each county office replicates edits once per week on a given day
• Current replication model utilizes file transfer mechanisms
• When FSA moves to ArcSDE 9.2, a more robust geodatabase replication architecture can be implemented
CLU Replication to GDW
• Private (eAuth) web services for integration into USDA applications
• Public facing web services (no attributes)
CLU Replication Pilot
• Pilot of 21 counties occurring before end of December
• Pilot to run for 3 weeks
• National Deployment if pilot is successful
CLU Value Added Services
• Topological Analysis • County based CLU data is merged in UTM extents• Perform topological analysis of CLU line work along
adjacent county boundaries to detect overlaps, etc • Perform same checks for “out of county polygons”• Catalog errors inside a data mart and pass datasets to
KC for inclusion into web based reporting application• State and county personnel review reports and make
required CLU updates• Over time topological issues between counties are
reduced
CLU Value Added Services• Feature and Attribute Reconciliation
• Compare CLU data ingested in the GDW to the peer tabular data in the Farm Records database located in KC
• Eliminate “dead” features in each data source• Reconcile attribute values (calc-acres) between
geospatial layer and the tabular database• Catalog errors inside a data mart and pass datasets to
KC for inclusion into web based reporting application• FSA personnel review reports and make required
updates• Positions FSA to deploy applications which update
both data sets (geospatial and tabular) simultaneously
CLU Value Added Services
• Enhanced CLU Delivery via Gateway• FSA in some cases merges or splits counties into FSA
Locations (AK, PR, CONUS)• Example: Nye County, NV – FIPS 32023
• Split into two “locations” with distinct FIPS Codes• 32023 – Northwest Nye, 32035 - Southeast Nye• Extracted shapefiles are placed on Gateway and named as per
GDMT naming standards• Gateway only recognizes valid FIPS 32023 resulting in
“Southeast” CLU shapefile not being delivered to customer• GDW CLU data management process has built in
translation mechanisms to handle all FSA special cases