GIS in the Oval Office?
The Associated Press is reporting that Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani has said that, if elected, he would use a version of the CompStat program that he used as Mayor of New York in addressing issues as president.
I doubt that this would really be the first use of GIS in an Oval Office, but this story does suggest to me that the next president might be the first to consciously use GIS as an every day information tool.
That reinforces the need to build an accurate National Spatial Data infrastructure and suggests a need for an interNational Spatial Data infrastructure.
"What I'm going to do when I become president is I'm going to use that program to secure our borders," he said during a speech at the Police Officers Association of Michigan's annual convention. "If we did the same thing with our borders that we did with crime in New York City, we could stop people from coming into this country illegally by having a 'BorderStat' program." (via the Chicago Tribune)Setting aside the political and policy questions (not grist for this particular mill), I note that CompStat is built on a GIS platform, using the geospatial element to organize, analyze, and present crime information.
I doubt that this would really be the first use of GIS in an Oval Office, but this story does suggest to me that the next president might be the first to consciously use GIS as an every day information tool.
That reinforces the need to build an accurate National Spatial Data infrastructure and suggests a need for an interNational Spatial Data infrastructure.




2 Comments:
http://www.gsdi.org/
Of course! The Global Spatial Data Infrastructure. I should have know that.
Thank you, unknown commenter.
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