Minutes for October 10, 2024
Call to Order – 10:01am
Approval of Minutes – Motion made and seconded to approve meeting minutes from the September meeting. Motion approved unanimously.
Attendees
Ex-Officio Members
MSDIS – Thomas Vought – p
OA-ITSD/OGI/NSGIC – Tracy Schloss – p
USGS – David Nail – p
State Members
MDA – Jacque Walters – p
MDC – Tim Bixler – pp
DNR – Zackary Becker – p
MOARNG – Kaleb Bauer – p
MoDOT – Colin Duewell – p
SEMA – Sydney Roberts – p
Cooperating Members
All State Consultants – Katilin Belk – p
BCFPD – Jason Warzinik – p
City of Columbia – Calvin Patterson – p
City of Jefferson – Buster Schrage – p
Cole County – Melissa Johnson – p
Mid-MO RPC – Jennifer Bowden – p
MO 911 Board – Shawn Penman – p
MU Extension/CARES – Chris Barnett – pp
Northwest MO State – Ming-Chih Hung – p
Sanborn – Brad Arshat – p
SEMO RPC – Jeremy Tanz – p
Southeast MO State – Indi Braden – p
Surdex – Steve Kasten – p
GISCI – Tony Spicci – pp
US ACE St Louis – Jennifer Backer – p
USDA-NRCS – Katie Philbrick – p
Washington University – Mollie Webb – p
Wilson & Co – Derek Smith – p
City of Brason – Curtis Copeland – p
Other Attendees
Dustin Goodwin
Dan R
Travis Tomson
Joe Eckman
Rick Staudinger
Administration
OGI Report – Working on Enterprise Agreement and Master Agreement. Currently under a 60-day extension that is about to run out. GIS Day event at Truman Building November 13th from 1-4pm. Notices going out soon.
MSDIS – September
Updated Data
– MoDOT July 2024 Update
These data will be rolled out slower than MoDOT updates normally are. I have handed the data over to MSDIS undergraduate intern Rachel Riley to review and prepare for distribution. This will be her first time helping with data deployment (and hopefully not her last), so it will take a little extra time to make sure everything is properly accounted for. As always, I am grateful for your patience.
MSDIS General News
A New Image Server
On 24 September 2024, I requested a new virtual server be created by the University of Missouri Division of IT to host the upcoming statewide data. This generation of this new machine is the result of the funds transferred to MSDIS earlier this year by the Missouri 911 Advisory Board. The machine had been created, was internally accessible via Remote Desktop, and was ready to have the necessary ESRI components installed by the end of that same day. While we could race through this process to get the new server instance deployed as quickly as possible, I am inclined to take this very slowly. For one thing, the new server will need a URL that identifies it as being reserved just for Missouri’s statewide imagery. I also want to take my time with the process of fine tuning the resources available to the new VM since it will be handling much more complex data than the existing MSDIS imagery server.
Donate Directly to MSDIS
After working with the Mizzou University Advancement office for several months, I received confirmation on 27 September 2024 that a crowdfunding account for MSDIS, named the MSDIS Excellence Fund, is open to the public and able to accept donations. Please see Appendix I for more details (some of which may, or may not, conflict with the next item in this section).
AWS Open Data
I am actively investigating the possibility and requirements for transferring the entire MSDIS data catalog to Amazon Web Services storage via the Open Data Sponsorship Program. If the MGISAC approves of the move and MSDIS’ application is accepted, the Open Data Sponsorship program would provide the clearinghouse with free AWS storage on the condition that the data we store there are made available to the public (which seems like a fairly low bar if you consider that the data in-question are already being made available to the public). Please see Appendix II for more details.
MSDIS Downtime
No downtime was reported during September 2024.
Image Server Statistics
I continue to search for a reliable option for parsing the server usage. The raw server logs are still being saved if anyone requires them. Should anyone need a rough estimate of usage for certain specific services, we are more than happy to run those numbers via Server Manager.
Appendix I – The MSDIS Excellent Fund
The Funny Version
Do you have a fabulously wealthy relative who happens to be a little eccentric, really loves GIS data, and is looking for a moderately good cause to throw money at? Great news! After working with the Mizzou University Advancement office for several months, I received confirmation on 27 September 2024 that a crowdfunding account for MSDIS, named the MSDIS Excellence Fund, is open to the public. Now your favorite aunt, uncle, grandparent, or highly successful for-profit company can ensure their money is used to make a real difference in the world by helping to pay for server space, undergraduate awards, and whatever other expenses start to pop up as MSDIS balances more and more spinning plates.
The Short Version
Financial donations can now be made directly to MSDIS via the Mizzou Give Direct Program.
The Narrative Version
On 01 March 2024, well before the Missouri state budget was approved or I was made aware of the AWS Open Data Program, I reached out to one of Mizzou Geography’s fiscal officers about the feasibility of setting up a charitable giving account for MSDIS. My primary interest was in setting up an account that could be used to fund small monetary awards for MSDIS student interns and, in the off chance that there was enough interest, help cover the increasing cost of data storage. That request was the start of a monthslong chain of emails with the fine folks of the Mizzou University Advancement office. While MSDIS was quickly included as a potential candidate for the Mizzou Give Direct Program, the entire process of getting final approval, choosing the details, creating the necessary account, and setting up the public-facing page took quite a while. On 27 September 2024, the MSDIS Excellence Fund was finally added to the Mizzou Give Direct Program website and opened to the public.
I want to emphasize that, if the timing of this announcement seems questionable, this crowdfunding account was initially imagined months ago. At the time, the state budget had not been passed, the GIS Expansion funds had not been approved, and the AWS Open Data Program had not been brought to my attention. Now that all those things have taken place, though, I understand why this account may seem superfluous. If I can just hand Jeff Bezos all our data for free, for example, why would I still need to drum up funding for storage?
While these various developments have changed our funding landscape, I have no plans to request that the account be removed from the Mizzou Give Direct page. For one thing, the AWS storage is still just theoretical. MSDIS may be a good candidate for the program, but I have not made any moves towards completing an application and we do not yet understand the exact terms of the agreement (such as whether or not we can freely add new data to the AWS storage after the initial setup). Additionally, while the proposed funding from OGI will be transformative for MSDIS, I believe it is still necessary for me to explore all possible avenues for keeping the clearinghouse financially stable. Most importantly, I would like to raise funds for undergraduate awards. Brennan and Rachel, in particular, are being asked to do more work than any of their predecessors and I would like to be able to provide them with more compensation than a gift card and a nice note.
As the situation regarding funding and costs develops, I will reevaluate the necessity of this account.
Appendix II
I was made aware of the Amazon Web Services Open Data Sponsorship Program during the 2024 MAGIC Clearinghouse Summit in August 2024. On the surface, the program aims to provide free AWS storage for open-source data as long as those data remain available to the public. As I was already engaged in on-again-off-again discussions with the Mizzou AWS customer rep, I asked about the program in mid-September 2024. Our rep recognized the program and took my inquiry directly to the Open Data team. I was informed in late September 2024 that, on discussion, the data hosted by MSDIS would be ideal for this program.
My initial thought is that this program would be a huge boon for MSDIS. Not only would it eliminate our storage costs, but it would allow us to utilize what has become the industry standard platform for storing large amounts of data. While I am still unsure of how we would connect to the data to keep our services running, my suspicion is that this move would also improve performance.
While I was under the impression that no clearinghouse had applied for this program yet, I have recently been made aware, through Tracy’s excellent recon work at NSGIC, that at least one state is already using this Open Data platform to store some amount of aerial imagery. That eliminates one of the most significant red flags I had about this program. MSDIS has acted as something of a testbed for new platforms in the past, which has not always worked to our benefit. This program, no matter how beneficial it might turn out to be, was not a coal mine that I wanted to play canary to.
I do worry about the longevity of the offer. According to the documentation I have already read, we would need to reapply for the program every two years. I’m not sure what scenario might result in us being approved one year and rejected two years later, but I feel it necessary to acknowledge that the possibility of that happening does exist. Likewise, Amazon could simply eliminate the program altogether, as was made abundantly clear by the major changes to Amazon Drive last year. While the terms and conditions clearly state that we would be warned ahead of time if the program were discontinued, we would still have a limited amount of time to restructure a significant amount of data.
This is not a decision that I can, or ever would, make in isolation. I am just the data steward, and a move of this magnitude must be something that MGISAC agrees to. The University of Missouri would likely need to approve the change, too, though I am skeptical that they would reject the proposal given how much money it could potentially free up. Fortunately, we have several months to consider how to proceed. I am currently reading the relevant literature, and assigning two of my interns to the same task in case my increasingly tired eyes miss something important. Once we have a better understanding of the program, we will report back to MGISAC.
Treasurer’s Report – $33,362.53 total. Reimbursement travel for SEMO Symposium only expense coming. Reminder to committee chairs that there is money in the budget for their committee projects.
Membership Report – Kaleb taking over for Wiley this year while he is deployed. 35 members. 3 vacancies (OA, SEMA, Lee’s Summit), 18 quorum. SEMA being filled next month.
By-Laws Report – No Report.
Presentation
MoHIC – Started after 2019 flooding. FRAWG was formed to create flooding action plan. MoHiC formed from ARPA funding of $10.4m. Will monitor surface water, prediction mapping, etc. 3-person team. Many things monitored through stream gage network. First gage installed on Joachim Creek by MoHIC. Working with University of Missouri Science and Tech, Rolla S&T and SLU to identify most valuable site to install gages and figure out the best way to do outreach. Goal 1 – long-term soil and temp monitoring. Goal 2 – develop state-wide soil map with station data. MO moving forward with National Water Model. Another goal is to expand aquifer mapping that was done in the 1950s that looked for buried glacial channels to use during times of extreme drought. Have also co-oped on EDH with MDC. The end product is a dashboard loaded with information the inform users.
Committee Reports
Data Development – No meeting due to hurricane deployment. Working on survey and getting it circulated for statewide imagery.
911 – Got proposed tiling for mosaics. Reviewed the edits and addressed actual problems. There were a lot of geese in pictures. Continuing to administer grants. Funds almost running out. Must be fully allocated by the end of the year. Data for validations continuing to hit portal. Next training set for top 10 largest jurisdiction on October 22nd since they often have different setups and needs than smaller communities.
Legislative – Met last week. Almost done editing to simplify language. Looking to finish and send to CIO in the next couple weeks.
Conference – Website has mostly been updated. Prices for registration, vendors, and workshops have been set. Call for workshops is going out today. As soon as we have workshops set then we can open early bird registration. Trying to get everything open and setup so folks on the committee can be in the groove of seeing what’s coming in and working the abstracts into an agenda while I’m out on maternity leave.
Outreach – New Linkdin is up. It’s a public group now which is less babysitting. Anyone who wants to be able to post to it let Katilin know so she can add you as a contributor instead of having to approve every post to it.
Liaison Reports
MAGIC – No report
NSGIC – Conference was 3rd week of September in San Antonio. Katilin went and presented and did great. Most presentations were on 3DHP and Lidar. Slide deck will be available from conference. Next is mid-year. Useful for Tom to go to that one potentially. It’s end of February in Colorado Springs.
Agency Reports
USGS – 11 counties processing. Delivery by January 30th. Kickoff call for MDC and MoHIC EDH project tomorrow. Geophysical project on Ozark Plateau.
NRCS – Request for more 2017 data. Waiting for response.
Open Discussion
Zack went to SEMO Symposium and gave update on MGISAC. NGA was there. MGISAC gave $400 toward meal. Other MGISAC members went and presented as well. May swap to every other year on MAGIC years.
Adjourned – 11:43am.