Last week I attended ESRI's User Conference here in San Diego. Although a lot of the concepts are above my head technically, I do enjoy reading and hearing about how various fire departments and public safety agencies are using GIS to improve processes.
This year I attended two sessions, one on the use of GIS for mapping predicted flood paths and planning a corresponding evacuation strategy, and the other on a specific GIS application that helps improve agency situational awareness by pulling together various real-time data (weather, impending threats, civilian mapping data, Flickr photo feeds, etc) on one map.
This last application is being used in the DHS Unified Incident Command and Decision Support (UICDS) project in an effort to help emergency response organizations share information more effectively. UICDS enables police, fire, emergency medical and other response organizations to use incident management technologies to share information and provide decision support to help prevent, protect, respond, and recover from natural, technological, and terrorist events. project. You can
read more about UICDS here.
So what's my question? Sitting in these seminars, it's easy to imagine a public safety world in which everything is just a click away and all the data you need to make the best informed decisions flows automatically to your fingertips. But I'd like to know how close to reality such things really are. Is your department using GIS and if so, for what? Do you use it for prevention, mitigation, disaster planning, resource allocation, incident analysis, creating map books? Do you share data with other county/city agencies? What role does GIS play in your position as an emergency responder?
Thanks!