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Municipal GIS Applications JOHN C. CHLARSON, P.E. UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE MUNICIPAL TECHNICAL ADVISORY SERVICE FURE.

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Presentation on theme: "Municipal GIS Applications JOHN C. CHLARSON, P.E. UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE MUNICIPAL TECHNICAL ADVISORY SERVICE FURE."— Presentation transcript:

1 Municipal GIS Applications JOHN C. CHLARSON, P.E. UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE MUNICIPAL TECHNICAL ADVISORY SERVICE FURE

2 Municipal GIS Applications What are local governments doing with GIS?

3 Municipal GIS Applications What are local governments doing with GIS? Water/Sewer/Storm Asset Management Work Order Management Field Data Collection Capital Improvement Planning Workforce Management

4 Municipal GIS Applications What are local governments doing with GIS? Public Works Asset Management Work Order Management Field Data Collection Capital Improvement Planning Call Center Integration Tree Inventories

5 Municipal GIS Applications What are local governments doing with GIS? Emergency Management Ad-Hoc Map Production Incident Management System Integration Common Operational Picture Field Data Collection Public Safety/HLS Exercise & Evaluation Programs

6 Municipal GIS Applications What are local governments doing with GIS? Law Enforcement Crime Analysis & Reporting CAD/RMS Integration Common Operational Picture/ComStat Critical Infrastructure Protection and Planning (BZPP) Mobile Data Solutions (Mobile Data Terminals)

7 Municipal GIS Applications What are local governments doing with GIS? Land Records Management CAMA Integration Public Access Land Assessment & Analysis Mobile Data Collection

8 Cartography

9 Information Management Which parcels are within 50 feet of the road? Well type Drilled Building owner Smith Soil type Sandy ProximityProximity OverlayOverlay NetworkNetwork What Survey Control is within 1/2 mile of my project area?

10 Land Use and Transportation Transportation Regional Planning Urban Planning Sustainability

11 Infrastructure Electric Utilities Flood Control Storm Water Water Systems Cadastral Traffic Sewer

12 Natural Environment Geology Hydrology Marine Environmental

13 Public Safety Coastal Flooding Earthquakes Hurricanes Fire Crime Dam Rupture

14 HomelandSecurity Homeland Security Scenario Management Airborne Contaminants Disaster Assessment Security Maps on Demand

15 Engineering and Construction Surveying Site Engineering Facilities Management Asset Management Construction

16 Stormwater: GIS and TMDL Monitoring TMDL monitoring for the MS4s will be pendant on the specific type of TMDL. There are three protocols: Visual Stream Assessment and Inventory - based on EPA’s and NRCS’s visual assessment protocols and is being developed by Jimmy Smith and John Burr. The basics in the assessments will be the identification, documentation and prioritization of the sources of the pollution within the entire HUC 12 watersheds within a 5- year period. RBP3 protocol - strait from our SOP/QAPP and will include at least one sample per HUC 12 in a 5-year period. Chemical and biological - also from our SOPs/QAPP, utilizing the identified parameter lists and methodologies and will include 1 set of samples (12 monthly/4 during high flow) per 5-year period.

17 Stormwater: GIS and TMDL Monitoring The chart below is a summary of the requirements:

18 Stormwater: GIS and TMDL Monitoring

19 Stormwater: GIS Methodology

20 What is Low Impact Development? Comprehensive, landscape-based approach to sustainable development Set of strategies to maintain existing natural systems, hydrology, ecology Cost-effective, flexible approach based on a toolkit of simple techniques Collection of practices that have been implemented nationwide

21 WHY DO WE NEED LOW IMPACT DEVELOPMENT? Conventional strategies aren’t working Increased runoff & decreased recharge Loss of vegetation and wildlife habitat Loss of community character Polluted waterways Cost of development

22 Typical pre-development conditions: Runoff = 10% Infiltration = 50% WHY DO WE NEED LOW IMPACT DEVELOPMENT?

23 Typical post-development conditions: Runoff = 55% Infiltration = 15% WHY DO WE NEED LOW IMPACT DEVELOPMENT?

24 LID PRINCIPLES Use existing natural systems as the integrating framework for site planning Land use planning and watershed planning Identify environmentally sensitive resources: wetlands, mature trees, slopes, drainageways, permeable soils, waterway buffers Assess existing hydrology Define a development envelope

25 LID STRATEGIES Low Impact Site Design Conservation of natural hydrology, trees, vegetation Stream & wetland buffers Minimize impervious surfaces Stormwater micromanagement Ecological landscaping Typical Subdivision Conservation

26 LID STRATEGIES Low Impact Site Design Open Space Residential Design 1. Identify Conservation Areas

27 LID STRATEGIES Low Impact Site Design Open Space Residential Design 1. Identify Conservation Areas 2. Locate House Sites

28 LID STRATEGIES Low Impact Site Design Open Space Residential Design 1. Identify Conservation Areas 2. Locate House Sites 3. Align Roads & Trails

29 1. Identify Conservation Areas 2. Locate House Sites 3. Align Roads & Trails 4. Draw the Lot Lines Open Space Residential Design LID STRATEGIES Low Impact Site Design

30 Buildings and Roadways LID STRATEGIES Low Impact Site Design Cluster buildings within the development envelope Design buildings with smaller footprints Roadways should follow existing grades. Use parking structures Separate parking areas

31 Stormwater Management LID STRATEGIES Low Impact Site Design Minimize directly connected impervious area Create multiple sub-watersheds Increase time of concentration Use a “treatment train” of LID techniques to deal with frequent, low- intensity storms.

32 Stormwater Management LID STRATEGIES Low Impact Site Design Minimize directly connected impervious area Create multiple sub-watersheds Increase time of concentration Use a “treatment train” of LID techniques to deal with frequent, low- intensity storms.

33 LID STRATEGIES Low Impact Site Design

34 Municipal GIS Applications What GIS assistance would local governments like to have from the State? Among other things, an easily accessible clearing house entity that coordinates lists, locations, and links to the various GIS datasets, etc. that different groups within state government have produced. Without such a source, local governments don’t know “what they don’t know”. That is, they don’t know what is available, or who has it.


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