Vernonia's voice. (Vernonia, OR) 2007-current, October 12, 2010, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
community
october12
2010
Vernonia GIS Ready To Take the Next Step
continued from front page
 
According  to  Pickner  and 
Fousek,  Vernonia  GIS  will  be  used 
by  the  city  to  assist  in  land  use  issues, 
including  code  and  permit  enforcement 
as  well  as  by  city  staff  for  property 
parcel  management.    It  will  also  be 
used  on  multiple  levels  by  the  Public 
Works  Department  to  map  utilities, 
track  and  schedule  maintenance,  and 
plan  street  repairs  and  improvements.  
It  is  already  being  used  for  flood  plain 
management and will be used as part of 
the Transportation Plan Update that the 
city has just begun.  Pickner has already 
begun  reorganizing  the  database  that 
the  city  already  has,  so  information  is 
easily accessible and can be more easily 
analyzed.   And  the  system  will  also  be 
used  to  catalogue  and  manage  assets 
that  are  valuable  to  the  city,  like  water 
meters. 
 
“For me, personally, it is a treat 
to see the GIS platform emerging,” says 
City  Administrator  Haack.    “I  cut  my 
teeth  in  college  learning  geology  and 
geography  using  pencils  and  paper  to 
create maps  that led to  a social science 
degree,  so  it  is  humbling  to  see  what 
changes are made in this field since the 
60’s  and  70’s  and  what  a  service  to  a 
community mapping still is.”   
 
Maybe  most  importantly, 
Vernonia GIS will give the City a way to 
document its “Institutional Memory”-- in 
other words, the recording of information 
that  is  often  lost  or  hard  to  recover  or 
locate  when  the  city  has  a  changeover 
in personnel, staff, committee members 
or elected officials.  “A key function of 
GIS,” says Fousek, “is that when things 
happen, the system is recording them and 
storing them forever.  So when the City 
wants to do something, they can have a 
realistic snapshot of what is really going 
on, and a clear understanding of how a 
project  or  issue  developed  to  a  certain 
point.” 
 
Fousek  and  Pickner  believe 
Vernonia  GIS  will  help  the  City  make 
better  decisions,  save  money,  and 
improve  efficiency  and  help  the  city 
manage  itself,  its  staff,  its  projects  and 
funding.  
 
“In  my  experience  with  GIS, 
that’s  what  it’s  always  been  about-- 
find  a  way  to  improve  systems  that  are 
already in place or to model information 
in a way that a computer can analyze it  
much more  effectively than individuals 
can,” says Pickner.
 
Pickner 
officially 
started 
working  on  the  project  on  September 
1st.  He is a 2005 graduate of Southern 
Oregon  University  with  a  Bachelor  of 
Science  Degree  in  Geography,  with  a 
Minor  in  Land  Use  Planning.    He  also 
holds  a  GIS  Graduate  Certificate  from 
Portland State University.
 
  Vernonia  GIS  will  be  looking 
at  past  records  and  data  sets  and 
analyzing project management methods.  
It’s  further  development  is  expected 
to  uncover  many  inefficiencies,  past 
mistakes  and  poor  decision-making  by 
the city.  “We’re obviously going to find 
issues,”  says  Pickner.    “But  the  idea  is 
that from this point forward, let’s try to 
improve how we are functioning.” 
 
“My  vision  is  to  find  major 
challenges  for  the  city,”  says  Pickner.  
“What  are  the  most  important  things 
that we can set up and help the city do 
for  long-term  use--  get  them  identified, 
developed and put in place.”
 
The use of data in a spatial format 
as opposed to rows and columns is what 
makes GIS so unique and functional in a 
public jurisdiction.  GIS often works in 
map formats and has the ability to place 
layers  of  data  over  those  maps  to  help 
analyze and show patterns and clusters.  
“I’m  really  taking  tools  that  have  been 
designed  for  other  municipalities  and 
just utilizing them,”  says Pickner.  “I’m 
not reinventing the wheel, I’m just taking 
the wheel and attaching it to Vernonia.”
 
Pickner  is  very  aware  of  the 
city’s current limited financial resources 
and will  focus on developing programs 
that  will  be  cost-effective  or  save  the 
city  money.    “I  know  the  city  has  a 
very  limited    budget,  so  my  goal  is  to 
find individual projects that will benefit 
the  city  and  hopefully  provide  extra 
funding,” says Pickner.  “That is a huge 
goal of mine-- find ways to save or make 
the city money.”  
“GIS  allows 
you  to  pinpoint  where  best  to  spend 
resources,”  says  Fousek.    “When  the 
city  makes  a  decision  to  spend  capital 
on projects, they and the citizens know, 
because  we  have  this  system  in  place, 
that the money is being spent in the best 
possible  way  and  are  getting  the  most 
improvement for the dollar.”
 
And  that’s  where,  according  to 
Fousek and Pickner, the rest of Vernonia 
citizens can play a role. 
 
“For  users  of  GIS,  it  is  often 
defined  as  ‘Hardware,  Software,  Data, 
and  People’--  and  ‘People’  is  the  most 
important  factor,”  says  Fousek.    “And 
it’s  not  just  GIS  People,  but  the  end-
users  and  the  people  who  benefit  from 
what the GIS system is doing.  In other 
words, the community as a whole.”
 
Fousek  and  Pickner  are  still 
developing  ideas  about  how  to  best 
communicate  with  the  Vernonia 
community  about  the  development  of 
the  GIS  system,  and  how  to  receive 
and integrate community input.  But for 
Vernonia GIS to be most effective, it will 
need citizen involvement on some level.
 
“The benefit of getting multiple 
inputs  is  that  it  allows  us  to  develop  it 
further,”  says  Pickner.    “Without  that 
input, there are the limitations of us not 
knowing what we are missing.  I really 
feel a major design piece for this project 
for  the  city  is  to  find  the  flaws  in  the 
system.  If we can set up a system that 
makes the city manage itself better, then 
it  will  really  provide  the  benefit  that  it 
initially set out to do.” 
 
Fousek believes that Vernonia is 
actually getting itself ahead of the curve 
by developing a GIS system early.  GIS 
will be the wave of the future as far as 
collecting,  recording  and  sharing  data 
and information.  The system that he and 
Pickner  are  envisioning  for  this  small 
community  of  2,370  people  will  be  the 
envy  of  small  communities  around  the 
state.    “This  will  be  as  good  or  better 
than any system that a town of this size 
has  anywhere  in  the  state  of  Oregon,” 
says Fousek.  “It’s pretty rare for a city 
of this size to have this kind of system,” 
adds Pickner.
 
Fousek  believes  a  good  GIS 
system  will  help  when  the  city  goes 
to  recruit  new  staff.    He  also  believes 
it  will  help  the  city  deal  with  future 
requirements  as  GIS  becomes  more 
mainstream  and  used  by  more  county 
and  state  agencies.    “The  state  will 
eventually  demand  that  every  public 
jurisdiction  have  a  GIS  system  and  be 
able to provide specific GIS data,” says 
Fousek.    “Some  of  these  systems  are 
already being built by the state.”
 
As Vernonia GIS develops, even 
more uses will hopefully be uncovered.  
Pickner  is  planning  to  write  a  monthly 
newspaper  column  that  will  be  printed 
in Vernonia’s Voice which will help keep 
the citizens of Vernonia informed about 
the progress of Vernonia GIS. 
If you have questions or would like more
information about Vernonia GIS, you can
contact Sean Pickner at vernoniagis@
gmail.com