from the Federal Geographic Data Committee in 1994.
The grant provided partial funding for the development of
the Clearinghouse and initiated the migration of the North
Carolina Corporate Geographic Database metadata from
an existing "data summary" report format to a format
compliant with the Content Standards for Digital
Geospatial Metadata. The grant was later modified to
include the development and testing of the Isite suite of
products (web, index, search, and retrieval software).
The application is now a registered Isite indexed
Clearinghouse, part of the National Spatial Data
Infrastructure.
In a strategic effort to extend the application to local
government, the FGDC, GICC, CGIA, and Wake County,
NC and it's entities (cities and town) is developing the first
local serving node of the Clearingshouse in the state.
The County hopes to provide strategic data (parcels, land
use, topography) with compliant metadata for direct
Internet access through the Clearinghouse.
ACCESS AND POLICY
North Carolina Public Records Law
North Carolina is noted to have one of the most liberal
state policies for open records. The State's public
records law, in place since 1935, has been amended
several times this century. Several items of the law (and
subsequent amendments) pertain to the dissemination of
computer data, including geospatial data. These are
worthy to note and are described in the following.
It is stated in the area of the law pertaining to electronic
data processing records, that no public agency shall
purchase, lease, create, or otherwise acquire any
electronic data processing system for storage,
manipulation, or retrieval, of public records unless it first
determines that the system will not impair or impede the
agency's ability to permit the public inspection and
examination, and to provide electronic copies of such
records (Institute, 1995).
In another area of the law, it is stated that local
government must make available geographic information
systems records at a reasonable cost, but only if the
recipient agrees in writing not to resell or otherwise use
the information for trade or commercial purposes
(publication or broadcast by the news media is stated as
not being for trade or commercial purposes, as is use of
the information, without resale, by a licensed professional
in the course of his or her work) If someone wishes to
resell the information or otherwise use it for trade or
commercial purposes, the agency may charge whatever
fee it wishes (Institute, 1995).
The Public Records law has recently been amended to
require state, county and local governments to index their
digital databases with specific elements. These required
elements can be mapped to elements of the geospatial
metadata standard. A task group is established to
educate practitioners in the "Content Standards for Digital
Geospatial Metadata" and the required indexing
elements. This group, part of the Wake County project
described in the previous section of this manuscript, will
develop guidelines that agencies can follow to ensure
that metadata developed to the content standard also
meet the indexing requirements of the Public Records
law. The resultant guidelines will be presented for
approval to the GICC and to the Division of Archives and
History, the agency in the Department of Cultural
Resources with statutory responsibility for database
indexing. An approved guideline will result in strong
support for local level implementation of the metadata
standard. CGIA will create an on-line program guide
based on the successful methodologies to assist these
metadata efforts.
Access Policy Statement
Stimulated by the 1995 amendment of the Public Records
Law, in November of 1995 the GICC adopted a set of
policy statements for access of data held in the
Corporate Geographic Database. The following items are
contained in the policy statement:
* |n order to support fundamental data management
and systems delivery functions for "on-line" access
to the Corporate Geographic Database (e.g.
computer storage devices; systems maintenance;
data archives; documentation; clearinghouse; and
cataloging), a funding mechanism through state
appropriations will be established and maintained. A
user fee may be charged for "on-line" access to
supplement the funding mechanism.
* Information (metadata) about Corporate Geographic
Data will be published “on-line” in the North Carolina
Geographic Data Clearinghouse.
* Corporate Geographic Data will be provided “on-line”
using at least one non-propriety data exchange
format, such as the Spatial Data Transfer Standard,
and an operational “ready-to-use” data format;
e Broad Band telecommunications technology, such
as the North Carolina Information Highway, will be the
primary conduit for access to the Corporate
Geographic Database. Other technology, such as
CD-ROM, will be pursued to accommodate “off-line
access;
* In order to achieve the most effective and universal
access to the geographic data and services,
cooperative agreements will be established among
geographic information users, service providers, and
data producers through the GIS Partnership
Program;
e The Center for Geographic Information and Analysis
is the primary state government distributor for
Corporate Geographic Data, in “off-line” or in “non-
standard formats." A reasonable fee will be charged
for off-line and nonstandard format data orders;
* Access rights to the Corporate Geographic Database
will comply with the North Carolina Public Records
Law (North Carolina General Statute 132, Effective
October 1, 1995) and subsequent amendments, with
the exception of specific data that are protected by
statute such as information about the location of
endangered species under the Natural Heritage
Program (North Carolina General Statute 113A-
164.4(3).
140 Intemational Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXII, Part 7, Budapest, 1998
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