International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B2. Istanbul 2004
meetings, meeting outputs, public input, and project
related documents can be accessed in the virtual space.
More importantly, the public can access and review
project documents, and provide input online anytime from
anywhere, with the capability to explore GIS-based
environmental impact analysis results.
2. A public meeting is held for interested citizens and
agencies to input on an ongoing EA study of a newly
planned development (e.g. a road expansion project),
using a large interactive display system to facilitate the
meeting. Simultaneously, the display and meeting
conversations are shared by those citizens, who are not
able to physically attend, from their homes and offices
using a Web browser or a handheld display. A group of
specialists may respond to questions from citizens and
interact with the shared display of the meeting using their
desktop PCs which possess powerful GIS capabilities.
The interconnection between these two use cases are reflected
by the underlying information flows, decision-making, and
participation workflows. Obviously, the public who is planning
to attend public meetings at different stages of class EA study
sufficiently understands the alternatives prior attending meeting
by exploring the information in virtual space. The materials
presented and public inputs collected through the virtual space
are also synthesized for being used in the public meetings. This
two-way information transfer between online public notice
system and public meeting system 1s transparent and, ideally,
should be automatic with little human intervention. The
decision-making and participation workflows are a set of
decision rules, actions, and predefined or ad-hoc procedures.
Their roles are mainly to improve and automate existing
decision-making processes with respect to public participation.
While research is undergoing to develop GIS-based solutions
for the two cases described above, the primary objective of the
research reported here is to design and develop methods,
software tools, and workflows to provide an online GIS-
enabled virtual space for public participation in conducting
class EA. Specific objectives of the research are to:
e identify the most useful forms of geospatial data (e.g. 2D or
3D) in relation to other types of information that would help
the public participants to participate in EA study;
identify the most important functional features of online GIS-
enabled public notice systems for supporting easy access to
and retrieval of EA study data; and
develop the required methods, software tools, and workflows,
and determine if their provision. would result in quality
improvement and cost/time savings in consulting public input
3.2 Design of GIS-enabled Public Notices
Online GIS-enabled public notice systems, hereafter called
GeoNotice, play two important roles: (1) notifying the public of
upcoming public meetings and allowing the interested citizens
to explore project information and become prepared for the
public mecting; and (2) providing a platform for continuous
soliciting of the public input and presentation of the final
results. Comparing with time-limited public meeting sessions,
this online notice system enables more citizens to participate in
decision making process at a flexible period of time.
À preliminary user requirement analysis, based on the literature
review and initial contact with parities involved, indicates that
GeoNotice needs to be accessed by city staff (proponents),
consultants, citizens, and agency staff (Figure 3). In addition to
Do
LD
other requirements, the system must at least be capable of
supporting the following four groups of public participation
activities:
e Notify: online public notices and automatic generation of
the first-class mails and mailing
e View and Exploration: exploring project documents and
visualizing impacts on 2D/3D maps,
perhaps with orthophoto or images overlaid , as well as
interactively proposing new alternatives
e Prioritization and Decision-making: prioritizing decision
criteria, preferably multi-criteria, and making decisions
accordingly
e [nput and synthesis: collecting and summarizing public
input in structured or unstructured formats.
environmental
3 = - 3
4 X Ü 1
—, mere A L
€ 3 pe —- eL E oir muet
GU EL. create notice create presentations
+ 5 Cu an TT :
City Staff { 1 s
i EN
— m
——
[^ E ' eynthsize input
F ——
X.
Froje dc
Consultant TES ms
results _—7 :
nad BA results ara notice
——
mI
f 3 M T.
LESE. =
T ae, 4 =
Public — browser notice list = A
Participant 7 vieu El& maps
Sin A 2 EE e ER
4 hA MM a 5] pe]
A, T x 7A —MM mr,
X Em ee y sU "€
x N t. 1 > |
An review documents mt ae”
MA % à SUO T brmwer alternatives
un OR capi
1 = i Ll -— RR
p s ^ ei» = ae x a
Eu on X DE Y 1
Agency ^ explore alternatives nae
DM T RS ^ +
Participant MUR pre pose alternative
A ee
f. qe 3
reviews others input post comment
Figure 3 À use-case model for user requirements
GeoNotice is designed to manage multiple class EA study
projects; hence raising the problem of managing documents
and public input of different projects. One way to solve this
problem is to organize all documents in different categories,
including: (1) documents common to all projects (e.g. legal
documents such as by-laws, EA acts, and general statistics); (2)
documents common to a project (e.g., official plan in the area);
(3) documents related to a particular phase of class EA study;
and (4) documents containing public input (e.g., threaded
comments, photos, and videos). Such organization allows casy
management, sharing. and integration to class EA workflows.
Ideally, each public participant should have his/her own
workspace in GeoNotice systems which manages individual
views, comments, added data (e.g., photos and documents), and
output generated. Materials stored in individual workspace may
be customized to generate individualized presentations (e.g.
PPT presentation) that can be presented during public meetings
by individual citizens for discussion. However, the realization
of this capacity requires extensive computing resources of the
system, and may ask for extra design effort to make sure it does
not degrade citizen's empowerment with respect to the
familiarity of technology and geography.
Interne
In ter
enviro
maps
option
and p
follow
public
analys
the fir:
any pr
The la
some |
needs |
driven
33 F
As me
two ty
inform
each s
access
partici
assessn
identifi
Acts, E
the imp
Às an €
Notices
are to E
as indi
[OAGR
Notice
Ontario
and Ap
study r
comple:
30 days
rules ari
until
Fi
Workflo
generati
These w
manager
Our rese:
The evo
adopted
approach
and then