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Local Government GIS
Center for Spatial Analysis personnel have worked for or with the City of Norman, City of Midwest City, City of Savannah (Georgia), Metropolitan Planning Commission (Georgia), Cleveland County, Garfield County, Grady County, Chatham County (Georgia), and the Osage Nation in various aspects of integrating GIS into their organizations. Projects have ranged in scope from simple enhancements to 3rd party GIS tools (such as a button in ArcView to hot-link an image to a parcel) to using coordinate geometry (COGO) to create parcel layers in ArcINFO to performing needs analysis and integrating GIS operations for three entirely separate local government agencies (MPC, City of Savannah, and Chatham County).
Data Conversion
Center for Spatial Analysis personnel have a broad range of experience both in widely used data formats (ESRI Coverages and Shapefiles, DGN, DXF, DBF, DWG, TIF, SID, etc.) and in less commonly used formats (OpenGIS, SATLOC, and a variety of proprietary data formats). Projects have ranged in complexity from straightforward data conversion to "data format discovery" efforts.
Data Warehousing and Distribution / Database Management
Center for Spatial Analysis personnel currently manage several enterprise scale databases including the Natural Resources Information System (NRIS) database and the Oklahoma Boll Weevil Eradication Organization's (OBWEO) database. The NRIS database is a statewide holding of oil and gas production and drilling information having both tabular and spatial elements, spanning multiple MS SQL Servers, serving both internal and external (Internet) requests, and is available 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. The OBWEO database, which is described in greater detail below, provides the organization with mission critical operations information as well as triggering events and notifying OBWEO staff of duties resulting from these events.
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