Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Governor touts benefits of $1.2M mapping effort

- BILL BOWDEN AND EMILY WALKENHORS­T

HUNTSVILLE — For 19 days in January and February, five airplanes flew 19,000 feet above Arkansas, shooting 30,066 digital images of the entire state’s terrain.

Those images, which encoded latitudina­l and longitudin­al coordinate­s, have been woven into a detailed digital map of the state.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced completion of the yearlong, $1.2 million mapping project Wednesday in the hallway of the Madison County Courthouse in Huntsville.

He said the benefits are at least two-pronged: Emergency responders will have more up-to-date informatio­n, and accurate digital mapping is essential for economic developmen­t.

“The face of Arkansas is changing rapidly,” Hutchin- son said in a news release. “Counties all over the state are building new roads, widening existing highways, adding businesses, homes and developing entirely new neighborho­ods. Having an up-to-date detailed map of our state is a key tool for

economic developmen­t and expanding infrastruc­ture as our state continues to grow.”

“If we do not have accurate informatio­n, then we’re not going to be competitiv­e in economic developmen­t,” Hutchinson said during the news conference.

The project was initiated by the Arkansas Geographic Informatio­n Systems in late 2016. The digital maps are available online at gis.arkansas.gov. The public can access “2017 aerial imagery” by first going to “maps,” then clicking on “map viewer.”

Shelby Johnson, the state’s geographic informatio­n officer, said the news conference was held in Huntsville because Madison County was the last of Arkansas’ 75 counties to be digitally mapped. It also happens to be his home county.

Johnson said the new maps provide better resolution and are more current than others.

This is the fourth iteration of the Geographic Informatio­n Systems project. It’s done every few years to help update first responders and others. What makes this year’s different is that the resolution is 1 foot, instead of 1 meter, providing a better image.

Johnson said Arkansas worked with the Sanborn Map Co. of Colorado Springs, Colo., on the project. He said the digital maps will be updated every three to five years.

The images, gathered in 19 days of north-south plane flying, were taken in the winter because fewer leaves were on the trees.

The 30,066 images are used to create 16,398 state map “tiles,” each 3,000-by3,000 meters, Johnson said.

He said the images turned up a few surprises this year.

“We found a few forest fires that were burning,” he said.

On Wednesday, Hutchinson presented a thumb drive containing Madison County’s digital maps to Sheriff Rick Evans.

After the news conference, Evans said Madison County couldn’t afford to create similar maps on its own. He said the Arkansas Geographic Informatio­n Systems maps will be more valuable than Google maps because the state maps have addresses for houses out in the county. Google doesn’t.

Also, if the Internet is down, dispatcher­s can’t use Google, Evans said.

“You cannot download Google imagery into your own software,” Johnson said. “The product we procured is public so it can be downloaded.” He said the maps are valuable for secure systems like 911, also.

Evans said the new maps could be helpful in a hostage situation, when police need current informatio­n about nearby buildings and topography. It’s important to have that informatio­n before first responders arrive at the scene, he said.

With the new digital maps, dispatcher­s will be able to tell emergency personnel to turn at a particular barn in rural areas, said Sgt. Lola Mitchell with the Madison County sheriff’s office.

Mitchell, a dispatcher and jail administra­tor, showed Hutchinson some of the benefits of the maps on computers in the basement of the courthouse after the news conference.

In addition to showing roads and buildings, the images are the foundation for maps that pinpoint the location of water, power and gas lines, and administra­tive boundaries such as school districts or city boundaries, according to the news release.

That informatio­n can be layered on the Geographic Informatio­n Systems map.

At the Arkansas Department of Emergency Management, fire services coordinato­r Kendall Snyder said he’s in the process of mapping the resources of every fire district and fire station to help with emergency response.

The map already notes every fire district and fire station, but when Snyder is done, it will note how many trucks and other resources each district and station has.

The state’s Geographic Informatio­n Systems maps are also used in court, Johnson said. Attorneys have used them in vehicle accident reconstruc­tion. Johnson recalled an instance in which a state map was used to show that acres of forest had been removed during a dispute over someone cutting down trees on another person’s property.

The project’s price has dropped every year because of advancemen­ts in technology and the more ubiquitous nature of it, Johnson said. The cost for the 2000-01 map done by the Geographic Informatio­n Office was $2.1 million. The cost dropped to $1.98 million in 2006.

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/BILL BOWDEN ?? Madison County sheriff’s office Sgt. Lola Mitchell on Wednesday in Huntsville shows Gov. Asa Hutchinson how the digital mapping program will help with law enforcemen­t and emergency calls.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/BILL BOWDEN Madison County sheriff’s office Sgt. Lola Mitchell on Wednesday in Huntsville shows Gov. Asa Hutchinson how the digital mapping program will help with law enforcemen­t and emergency calls.
 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/BILL BOWDEN ?? Gov. Asa Hutchinson announces at a news conference Wednesday at the Madison County Courthouse in Huntsville the completion of the yearlong, $1.2 million project to produce a detailed digital map of Arkansas. The map, which includes latitude and...
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/BILL BOWDEN Gov. Asa Hutchinson announces at a news conference Wednesday at the Madison County Courthouse in Huntsville the completion of the yearlong, $1.2 million project to produce a detailed digital map of Arkansas. The map, which includes latitude and...

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