Home > State Government > GIS Implementation Planning
GIS Implementation Planning
VGIN Road Centerline Transition Project Editing Toolkit Virginia Department o...
Road Inventory Management System (RIMS) Thin Client Virginia Department o...
On-call Statewide and Metropolitan Travel Demand Modeling (TDM) Virginia Department o...
Ecosystem Enhancement Program Mapping North Carolina State ...
BMP Tracking Application VA Department of Cons...
Municipal Storm Water Best Management Practices (BMP) Application VA Department of Cons...
Enterprise Web Editing VA Department of Envi...
Interactive Stream Assessment Resource VA Department of Envi...
TMDL Data Conversion VA Department of Envi...
Silverlight Redistricting Application Virginia Division of ...
Statewide Aerial Map Caching VA Geographic Informa...
GIS Migration Implementation Planning University of Virginia
Demographic Analysis and Planning J. Sargeant Reynolds ...
TurboTank Self Certification Site VA Commonwealth Unive...
Pollution Response Program Application (PReP) VA Commonwealth Unive...
Coastal GEMS VA Coastal Zone Manag...
Northwest PA Parcel Training/Map Automation Northwest Pennsylvani...
GIS Database Partnership Virginia Economic Dev...
VirginiaScan VA Economic Developme...
Client: VA Marine Resource Commission
Summary
WorldView created a GIS implementation plan for the Virginia Marine Resources Commission that provided a framework for implementing an enterprise GIS for the Oyster Restoration, Habitat Management, Law Enforcement, Statistics and Administration departments at the agency. The plan addressed GIS database design, oyster ground leasing data integration, GIS software deployment and training, and external and internal tabular data integration strategies.The goal of the Commission’s GIS implementation plan was to address the problems associated with developing GIS in the past by providing a vision to guide the shifting of resources and thinking to support mapping throughout the organization. The document provided guidance for the implementation of GIS throughout the Commission and was broken into seven sections. The first section outlined the purpose, objectives and goals of the implementation plan. The next three sections addressed all of the elements necessary for a GIS: hardware, software, data, people, and training. Sections five and six estimated the costs and recommended a timeline for implementation. The last section, organized as appendices, included a number of documents related to the development of GIS at the Commission.