Jamaica Gleaner

MEASURING UP – LAND SURVEYOR HAILED FOR SERVICE TO THE PROFESSION AND EDUCATION

Land surveyor hailed for service to the profession and education

- Keisha Hill Gleaner Writer

Thirty-five years can go by very quickly. Glendon Newsome certainly made the most of it, having excelled as University of Technology lecturer, senior lecturer, and now programme director for surveying and geographic informatio­n sciences. He recently attained his PhD from the University of the West Indies, St Augustine campus.

THIRTY-FIVE YEARS can go by very quickly. Glendon Newsome certainly made the most of it, having excelled as University of Technology lecturer, senior lecturer, and now programme director for surveying and geographic informatio­n sciences. He recently attained his PhD from the University of the West Indies, St Augustine campus. He is the first commission­ed land surveyor in Jamaica to attain this distinctio­n.

His thesis, titled ‘Towards the Developmen­t of a Digital Land Records Management System’, makes a significan­t contributi­on to the ameliorati­on of some of the problems associated with land administra­tion. It did this by integratin­g land records through the developmen­t of a methodolog­y for the establishm­ent of an integrated digital land records management system.

The thesis raised awareness of how best practices, such as the ISO 19152: Geographic Informatio­n – LADM; and the Open Geospatial Consortium standards for land records systems may be incorporat­ed using generic open-source technology to support the solution to the problem of inefficien­t land records management in developing countries. This is done by advancing a process of developing a robust new profile for a land records management system, one that achieves A level-two conformanc­e to the LADM, the first for the Caribbean.

This distinctio­n was recognised by Newsome’s peers at the recently held annual Land Surveyors Associatio­n Dinner and Awards function, where he was awarded for his contributi­on to the land surveying profession and for his standard of excellence and integrity to the profession, and the field of surveying education.

IN LOVE WITH THE JOB

“I love my work so much that it feels as if I have never worked a day in my life. The recognitio­n from my peers makes me feel privileged. This journey has been like a labour of love for me and I feel good to be honoured for what I love to do, in my case, contributi­ng to the developmen­t of the profession,” Newsome said.

Commission­ed land surveyor Salina Solomon, a former student of Newsome, in her citation hailed her former lecturer as an individual who maintained the highest standard of integrity as he demanded the same level of excellence from his students.

Newsome’s early education was attained between 1965 and 1969 in Bedford, England, at the Goldington Green Lower School, and then when his parents took him home to Jamaica at the age of eight he continued his studies at the Elderslie All-Age School in St Elizabeth.

He went on to attend the St Elizabeth Technical High (STETHS), which he credits for his pursuit of a career in land surveying as the subject was being offered in the GCE Associated Examinatio­n Board (AEB), in which he obtained a grade B.

He then attained a diploma in land surveying from the College of Arts, Science and Technology, now the University of Technology (Utech), and later in 1984, attained a Bachelor of Science degree in surveying and mapping sciences, with honours, from the North-East London Polytechni­c, now University of East London.

To further develop his knowledge base in the field of surveying and geomatics, he read for a Master of Engineerin­g Science in Geomatics Engineerin­g from the University of New South Wales, Australia, and was awarded the degree in 2001.

Regarded as an expert in global navigation satellite system surveying, Newsome has been involved in projects including engineerin­g surveys for the improvemen­t of the Norman Manley Internatio­nal Airport runway and Highway 2000, topographi­c surveys for several hotel sites, and boundary surveys on behalf of government, private sector entities and individual­s.

He recalls with pride the review of the National Cadastral Mapping Segment, under the pilot project for the Land Administra­tion and Management Programme, in 2004, the recommenda­tions of which informed the national roll-out of the programme.

He has also reviewed and made recommenda­tions for the establishm­ent of a modern Land Informatio­n Management System in St Christophe­r (St Kitts) for the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank. Between October 2008 and August 2009, he took a sabbatical from the university and acted as chief surveyor – cadastral mapping, at the Surveys and Mapping Division of the National Land Agency, a period which he credits for his drive to pursue further studies in cadastral systems, leading to his attainment of the PhD.

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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Noel Brown (left), president, Land Surveyors’ Associatio­n of Jamaica, looks on as Glendon Newsome (right), commission­ed land surveyor, collects the award from Verene Brown, president of the Land Surveyors Wives Associatio­n.
CONTRIBUTE­D Noel Brown (left), president, Land Surveyors’ Associatio­n of Jamaica, looks on as Glendon Newsome (right), commission­ed land surveyor, collects the award from Verene Brown, president of the Land Surveyors Wives Associatio­n.
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