Street & Addressing Tools for NG911 - Don’t Be Left Behind Ed Farrell, Chris Klaube, Pat McDonald NJ NENA Conference Thursday, April 7 th 2016 Harrah’s Casino Resort, Atlantic City NJ Office of GIS, http:// njgin.state.nj.us https:// njgin.state.nj.us/oit/gis/NJ_NJGINExplorer/docs/OGIS_NENA_2016.pdf
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Street & Addressing Tools for NG911 - Don’t Be Left Behind
• Support NJDOT’s Highway Network, Straight Line Diagrams, national reporting requirements.
• Support NJDOT and local government’s asset management tracking, traffic regulation tracking, snow plow tracking, and other event tracking.
• Support statewide road centerline geocoding.
• Support current and next generation 911 and CAD systems.
• Integration with US Census information
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Purpose of Statewide Address Points
• Support current and next generation 9-1-1 and CAD systems.
• Allow municipal government to assign and manage addresses
• Integrate address data with various database systems
• Address based analysis
• Megan’s Law notifications
• Integration with US Census information
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What is a Road?
A road in the NJ road data model consists of the following:
• Highways (Highway Authority Route, Interstate Route, US Route, State Route, County 500 Route, Other County Route)
• Local Public Roads
• Local Private Roads
• Alleys
• Parking lots that are also a named road
• Driveways/parking lot circulation for important facilities (schools, hospitals, government offices, shopping centers, office complexes…)
• Emergency access lanes/easements
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Where did the road information come from?
• Originally generated from the NJDOT highway network
• Enhanced by NJDOT consultant based on updated aerial photography and US Census Bureau TIGER road centerline data
• Available road centerline data from local government sources
• Address ranges came from US Census Bureau TIGER road centerline data and local government sources
• Road Names came from US Census Bureau TIGER road centerline data, NJDOT Straight Line Diagrams, Municipal tax maps and MODIV Tax Assessor data, and local government sources and field observations
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How is the road data maintained?
• NJDOT consultant gathers information from field observations and GPS
• NJOGIS adds or revises roads based on updated aerial photography
• User notification to NJOGIS
• Local government partners working together with us
• Adjacent state GIS agencies
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How is updated data submitted to NJOGIS?
• Email from users and other agencies
• Direct submission of road centerline data from local government partners to NJOGIS
• NJDOT consultant and local government partners working in desktop GIS software with a connected version of the statewide road centerlines maintenance model. Updates are periodically synchronized up to NJOGIS
• The NJ Road Web Editor application
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Road Publication
• All approved edits will be published by OGIS on a monthly basis.
• The published roads data will be available for download from the NJGIN website.
• The published roads data can be imported into various CAD systems. OGIS also publishes a shapefile in Tritech (formerly Tiburon) format.
• The published roads data supports geocoding with multiple road names per road segment.
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Purpose of the NJ Road Editor
• Web interface to the NJ Road Centerlines Database
• Users can view up-to-date roads (ahead of the publication data)
• Users can add new roads based on local knowledge
• Users can edit the attributes of existing roads (names, addresses, etc.)
• Users can suggest deleting/updating existing roads
• Only open to “trusted” users
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Demonstration
1. Navigate to the NJ Road Editor application page
2. Sign in through MyNJ Portal
3. Take tour of the functionality
4. Start Editing
5. Add a new road
6. Suggest deleting an existing road
7. View current edits
8. Save edits
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1. Navigate to the NJ Road Editor
You will be prompted to sign in through MyNJ Portal
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2. Sign in through MyNJ Portal
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3. Take a Tour of the Functionality
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4. Start Editing
• Click the “Start Editing” button .This will start an edit session.
• You can perform up to 5 edits in each edit session.
• Edits are not saved until the “Stop Editing” button is clicked.
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5. Add a New Road
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0 edits in the “Active Edits”“Stop Editing” button
indicates “edit session”
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New Roads
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Click the New Road Button
and use mouse clicks to
create the road
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Upon completion, a
window appears for
entering attributes
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1 edit in the “Active Edits”
6. Suggest deleting an Existing Road
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Delete Van Horne Road
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2 edits in the “Active Edits”
Both road segments are red, indicating
that they are flagged as “Incoming”
7. View Current Edits
• Click the Active Edits button.
• Use the dropdowns to view edits and/or delete them.
• Maximum of 5 edits per edit session.
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8. Save Edits
• Click the Stop Editing button
• Either “Cancel”, “Discard Edits”, or “Save Edits”
AGRI = AgricultureINDU = IndustryCOMM = Commercial and RetailEDUC = EducationEMER = Emergency Response & LawEnfRESI = ResidentialMEDI = Health and MedicalTRAN = TransportationPUBL = Public Attractions and LandmarksLGOV = Local GovernmentSGOV = State GovernmentFGOV = Federal GovernmentMILI = MilitaryWORS = Places of WorshipNONP = Non Profit OPEN = Parks and Open SpaceUTIL = UtilitiesUNKN = Unknown