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GIS at the Adirondack Park Agency
The Adirondack Park Agency has over 27 years of experience using
Geographic Information Systems and the development and analysis
of spatial data.
Cooperative efforts with diverse groups concerned with the Adirondacks
have been essential to the rich data resources now available. Consistent
commitment to basic cartographic standards, maintaining a high
level of staff skill, and investment in cutting-edge technology,
are the hallmarks of the Agency’s GIS development efforts.
The Agency cooperates in the New York State GIS Clearinghouse
and is a member of the Data Cooperative sponsored by the Office
of Cyber Security and Critical Infrastructure Coodination.
In State Geographic Information Activities Compendium, 1992,
Lisa Warnecke writes:
"The Adirondack Park Agency (APA), created in 1971, was the first state
natural resource agency to make a commitment to GIS. Beginning in 1980, with
one of the first sites of ERDAS software [third installation, first out-of-state
commercial], APA initiated the system to monitor vegetative change and create
a one-acre scale baseline of geographic information for the park. Data in the
system included park zoning, land cover from Landsat imagery, and soils data
from aerial photos. This data was used to create a master plan. Work conducted
through the 1980s included efforts with the State University of New York (SUNY)
at Plattsburgh's remote sensing laboratory. Two important projects conducted
during this time included an Essex County Forest Productivity Study conducted
with SUNY's College of Environmental Science and Forestry in Syracuse, and the
Lake George Basin study conducted to monitor and evaluate erosion control using
high resolution raster data. In 1987, APA began working with E&A [NYS Department
of Equalization and Assessment, now Office of Real Property Services] to plot
the characteristics of county tax roles onto the existing raster data. E&A
had been using Arc/Info software since 1983, and with a consultant's recommendations,
APA decided to purchase the same software in addition to its image processing
capabilities. Implementation began in 1989, and APA'S old microcomputer
system was given to SUNY Plattsburgh where it has been used for wetlands
data development
and analysis in the park."
Today, the APA GIS provides mapped jurisdictional information required
daily by 40 staff in a customized "lookup
system".
Data development initiatives have focused on creating 1:24,000
scale base layers including roads, surface water, and municipal
boundaries. Agency jurisdictional layers such as zoning, regulatory
wetlands, designated rivers, the park boundary, and various administrative
data have been developed for staff as well.
The Agency has also been involved in major projects such as the
US Forest Service Northern Forest Lands Resource Inventory; the
Lake Champlain Basin Program; and the Center for Technology in
Government (CTG) at SUNY Albany.
During the past decade, several US EPA funded grants have been
awarded to the APA to study wetlands
and watersheds in the Adirondack
Park. These projects are adding significantly to the catalog of
geographic data and analysis of information by many interested
parties in and around the Adirondack Park.
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Additional information...
APA GIS CD-ROM's Available
the NYS
GIS Clearinghouse
Cornell University Geospatial Information Repository (CUGIR)
Center for Technology in Government report: Using Technology
to Change Work: Technical Results from the APA Prototype October
1995 Abstract
and link to full report.
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