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CSRC Director’s Report. Yehuda Bock and Susie Pike Humphrey CSRC Coordinating Council Spring Meeting PG&E Headquarters San Francisco May 16, 2003. California Spatial Reference Center. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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CSRC Director’s Report
Yehuda Bock
and
Susie Pike Humphrey
CSRC Coordinating Council Spring MeetingPG&E Headquarters
San FranciscoMay 16, 2003
Mandate
Building on Existing Science Infrastructure: Provide the necessary geodetic services to ensure
the availability of accurate, consistent, and timely spatial referencing data.
Monitor temporal changes in geodetic coordinates due to tectonic motion, volcanic deformation and land subsidence.
Establish the legal spatial reference system for California.
California Spatial Reference Center““Providing California’s geodetic framework for scientific, Providing California’s geodetic framework for scientific, surveying, engineering, and geographic information systems”surveying, engineering, and geographic information systems”
SOPAC/CSRC Operational Staff
Director: Yehuda Bock
Coordination and Administration: Susie Pike
System Administration: Brent Gilmore
Analysis: Peng Fang, Linette Prawirodirdjo
Web Development and Analysis: Paul Jamason
Programmers: Michael Scharber, David Malveaux*
InSAR: Karen Watson (part time)
Consultants*: Don D’Onofrio, Larry Fenske, Mike Potterfield
Professional Land Surveyors* :
Jim Swanson (Northern California)
Cecilia Whitaker (Southern California)
* CSRC Only
SOPAC/CSRC Data Center
Financial Report
Funds Received All Sources thru FY03
Spending History thru April 2003
Spending by Task – NGS/JIMO ’02-’03
Summary – JIMO/NGS FY02-03
Amount Requested
Spent thru 04/30/03
Balance
Salaries & Benefits
817,135
576,033
241,102
Supplies
135,545
137,152
(1,607)Subcontracts
&Professional
Services
615,958
265,766
350,192
Equipment
227,703
174,397
53,306
Travel
27,625
9,160
18,465
Indirect
Costs
172,034
119,396
52,638
TOTAL
1,996,000
1,281,90
4
714,096
Obligated
136,042
Balance
578,054
Work Plan
Work Plan
At the Fall Coordinating Council meeting a Work Plan Committee was formed. Members of the committee included Dave Stone (chair), Don D’Onofrio, Larry Fenske, Greg Helmer and Marti Ikehara. In late 2002, the Work Plan Committee requested that interested parties and groups help them develop a plan for FY03/04. Individuals were asked to fill out and submit a "Priority Survey" to the Committee with their ideas of CSRC goals and available funding. The individual responses were tallied and compiled into the "Priority Survey Summary", which was used to provide guidance and direction to the Council in prioritizing its goals for the upcoming year.
Work Plan
The summary is available for download at: http://csrc.ucsd.edu/input/csrc/workPlanPrioritySurveySummary.pdf
and the FY03/04 Work Plan is available at:http://csrc.ucsd.edu/input/csrc/csrcWorkPlan2003_04.pdf.
The Work Plan served as the basis for the CSRC FY04 (July 1, 2003 to June 30, 2004) funding proposal that was submitted to NGS on April 2, 2003.
Work Plan
Perform Outreach Perform User Assistance and Education Develop Orthmetric Adjustment Procedures Operate and Maintain CSRC CORS Establish NAVD88 on CSRC CORS Implement CSRC Master Plan
Some Highlights
CSRC Data Portal
CSRC Data Portal map with new map interface displaying all CORS and HPGN sites from 1998 and 2000 (post-Hector Mine earthquake) adjustments performed by the CSRC for Caltrans.
CSRC Data Portal
Example of the use of the new SOPAC map interface to locate CORS and GPS monument locations in Northern California within a 100 km radius of the map center. Map generated by SOPAC’s GSAC Center, which is accessible through the CSRC Data Portal. CSRC is the first major client of GSAC.
CSRC Data Portal
Location of height modernization monuments and CORS (CGPS stations) in Yolo County, Contra Costa County, and the San Francisco Bay Area. Map generated by SOPAC’s GSAC Map Interface.
CSRC Data Portal
In this example, a GSAC user locates all passive monuments and BARD sites in a 20 km radius about the map center (in Contra Costa County).
SECTOR
Ground Subsidence
CSRC Master Plan On March 12, 2003, CSRC received notice from NGS that the Master Plan for a Modern Geodetic Control Network is “fully acceptable to NGS”.
Copies of the final Master Plan are available on the CSRC website at http://csrc.ucsd.edu/input/csrc/csrcMasterPlan.pdf
Distribution of plan to new partners (e.g., Earthscope/PBO).
OCRTN Overview Streaming raw high-rate (1 sec) GPS data from 10 (soon 12) continuously
operating reference sites (CORS) to central facility in Santa Ana. These data are available to anyone in raw (MBEN) or RINEX formats for post-processing.
Generating and making available real-time data (1-2 s latency) via the wireless Internet to anyone at no cost (free) for real-time kinematic (RTK) surveying and various forms of dynamic positioning in Orange County.
Public and Private Surveying **
Precise GIS **
Emergency Response
Police Work
Intelligent Transportation **
Aircraft Navigation
Bridge and Dam Deformation **
Geophysics **
Weather Forecasting **
** Currently being used or evaluated
Some Uses
The End