September-October 2007

The New World of GIS Technology

GIS software can track everything from size and age of the water-distribution pipes to the work orders crews tackled three months ago.

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By Dan Rafter

1 Comments

As a consultant with the New Jersey office of CDM, a national consulting, engineering, and construction firm, Bill Cesanek is spending an increasing amount of his time helping municipalities install geographic information systems—systems that are better known by the acronym GIS.

And Cesanek doesn’t expect this to change anytime soon.

After all, by using GIS software, municipal officials can track everything from the size and age of the water-distribution pipes running throughout their system to the work orders their crews tackled three months ago.

GIS are such powerful management tools, Cesanek says, it’s little wonder that municipalities are turning to them to help run their wastewater and drinking-water treatment systems more efficiently.” The beauty of GIS is that they have mapping combined with database information,” Cesanek says. “You can have the software track the date pipes were installed, the frequency of repairs made at different points in the system. You can connect that to a line on a map that represents the pipe on a specific block.

“It makes it so much easier to retrieve that information geographically than always having to type in an address,” Cesanek adds. “I mean, how do you spell ‘Smith Street?’ You might type it in wrong. With GIS, though, you can find all the data you need connected to a map of your system.”

Cesanek is far from alone in praising GIS. And he, along with other engineers and consultants, says GIS software can help water officials more efficiently manage their water-treatment systems. Sure, municipalities will have to pay what can be steep upfront costs to equip their systems properly with GIS capability. But GIS, when used properly, provides municipal officials with more than enough benefits to outweigh these costs.

Just look at what water pros can rely on GIS for: They can use GIS to tackle customer complaints more efficiently; keep better track of repairs; guarantee that they will send out work crews only when absolutely necessary; and, perhaps most importantly, clearly identify the proper pipes and equipment they will need to serve new homeowners and businesses as their cities and towns grow.

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A Tool to Rely On
Of course, GIS technology is growing in importance for several industries, not only those focusing on water treatment. The US Department of Labor issued a report in 2004 stating that the world market for geospatial technologies—estimated at $5 billion in 2001—would have grown to $30 billion by 2005.

The labor department also reported that its employment group that includes surveyors, cartographers, and surveying technicians, all of whom work in the geospatial industry, is expected to grow by 220,000 jobs by 2012. This ranks it as one of the 10 fastest-growing occupational groups. Next Page >

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mhc

October 15th, 2008 1:53 PM PT

Very interesting and thorough article. As a newcomer to the world of GIS technology, I am not only impressed by its many uses but by the author's ability to convey this information to a non-technical person such as me. Nice job!

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