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• Solicit input from users of raster data in the community through a letter asking
for review of the raster form as it is currently written. Additional information
is needed because the raster form has not received as extensive testing as the
vector form.
• Rework the standard in order to comply with requirements of NIST and to
simplify the documentation by restructuring the format and renumbering.
Completion of the above tasks and consideration of the remaining recommendations re
ceived from phase 2 testing required significant revision of the standard. The Board
recognized that in order to make these major modifications, submission of the standard to
the NIST had to be delayed; however, the rework was deemed necessary and worthwhile in
the long term. The changes simplify the documentation, decoding tasks, and encoding of
attributes, and create a more understandable and usable document. Based on peer reviews,
additional simplification measures were undertaken by the Technical Review Board.
The Board met again in July 1989 to review progress of the working groups established in
May and to discuss remaining issues. One outstanding issue considered was that of
conformance. The Board established a working group to review this topic and determine
conformance statements that should be included in SDTS. A representative from the NIST
is assisting in this effort.
A meeting of the Board in December 1989 resolved most of the outstanding issues of
content. Editorial revisions prior to final reformatting and renumbering was the primary
agenda item when the Board met again in March 1990; and identification and correction of
ambiguities, discontinuities, and misstatements was undertaken at the final meeting of the
Board in May 1990. The standard was finalized and submitted to the NIST in June 1990.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology provided technical assistance to support
the final phase of preparing the proposed standard for FIPS processing. Support was
provided in evaluating the standard in terms of FIPS standards and guidelines for data
administration, data base management, graphics, and related items; in preparing a strategy
for successful finalization of the standard, including the identification of potential problems
and issues and recommendations for resolving them; and in initiating the planning, develop
ment, and implementation of a conformance testing program for the standard. This coordi
nation was undertaken to ensure that potential problems were identified before the standard
was finalized, in order to avoid extended delays and rework during the FIPS approval
process.
To make the standards development process an open process, NIST follows rulemaking
procedures modeled after those established by the Administrative Procedures Act. When
technical development of a standard is complete or stable enough to allow for commercial
implementation, NIST prepares a Federal Register notice announcing the proposed FIPS for
public review and comment. The Federal Register notice and proposed FIPS are reviewed
by the Department of Commerce (DoC) and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
prior to publication in the Federal Register.
A 90-day period is provided for review and submission of comments on the proposed
FIPS. At the same time that the proposed FIPS is announced in the Federal Register,