Title: Public Safety
1Public Safety SecurityStandards
SpecificationPresentation to Seminar on
Canadian and International Standards
inGeographic Information / GeomaticsJanuary
24th, 2008
- Mike Power Powerscourt, C. Douglas
O'Brien - IDON Technologies Inc, - Philip Dawe - GeoConnections
2Presentation Outline
- Context for Public Safety Security
- GeoConnections Strategy of Evolving the Canadian
Geospatial Data Infrastructure (CGDI) to support
National Situational Awareness - Public Safety Canadas GeoInfoExchange Project
- Key focus areas for standards and specifications
work
3Recent Global Trends of Disasters
(Source Munich Re Group (2006) Topics Geo
Annual review Natural catastrophes 2005.
Knowledge Series, Munich.)
4Recent Global Trends of Disasters
(Source Centre for Research on the Epidemiology
of Disasters (CRED) (2008) EM-DAT 2007 Disasters
in Numbers, Geneva)
5Whole of Government Response
6GeoConnections Strategy Location-Information in
Support of National Situational Awareness
7Public Safetys Canada GeoInfoExchange (GIX)
Project
- Three main components to the overall project
- The sharing of data and information between the
participating government organizations - The development of a common situation picture
between the participating organizations that will
enable data visualization and creation of a
"National Incident Map within each agencys
operational environment and - The proposal of a draft standard for specifying
the interfaces for sharing data and services
among the community through adoption and
profiling of existing CGDI, OGC and OASIS
standards.
8Example Information Flow in GeoInfoExchange
PHAC
EC
GOC
9- Public safety information resource (PSIR) types
Requirement Analysis indicated that public safety
information resource (PSIR) types need to include
Alerts, Events, Situations, Maps, and
Unstructured Information Products. No existing
standards for information resource types for
public safety applications had been located
therefore the taxonomy of public safety
information resource types was develped.
10Public safety information resource (PSIR)
Metadata Model
Objective of PSIR metadata is to maintain
simplicity in order to provide enough metadata
elements to identify PSIRs so that these
resources can be discovered, their history can be
tracked, and their usefulness, applicability, and
restrictions in use can be indicated. Profile is
based on OGC Core, GOC Core and ISO 19115.
11Common Alerting Protocol
12Analysis of OASIS CAP
- ltareagt element has a specific geographic target
area for a particular ltalertgt block that may be
based on existing alerting zones, municipal
boundaries, etc. - Or may be completely unique targeting based on
hazard (e.g., hazmat plume model) - Requirements were identified to enhance the
location-based aspects of CAP. - Through Canadian General Standards Board
Committee on Geomatics, established formal
liaison with Industry Canada CAP WG and acquired
a membership seat on this WG. - Ad hoc group on geospatial component established
with Canadian CAP WG.
13Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds with
location information
Simple GeoRSS Example ltgeorsspointgt40.533203
-105.0712lt/georsspointgt GeoRSS GML
Example ltGeoRSSwheregt ltgmlPointgt ltgmlposgt40.53
3203 -105.0712lt/gmlposgt lt/gmlPointgt ltGeoRSSwher
egt
14GML GeoRSS Analysis
- Determined how standard can be implemented for
- Tagging incidents with geospatial information and
transporting geospatial datasets - Providing user profiled feeds on information
resources. Search repositories of feeds. Receive
notification of new feeds. - Contributing geo-enabled information resources to
a common operational picture. - Recommended
- The creation of a standard dictionary, perhaps
through code lists, for the Feature Type and
Relationship tags in GeoRSS for application in
Canadian public safety community. - That GeoRSS support multiple geometries of any
kind (i.e. point list, line list, area list).
15Standard Symbology Importance
- Large-scale incidents often cross jurisdictional
and geographic boundaries. Personnel from
different agencies are often brought together
under a single command structure and need to be
able to absorb information quickly. - Support for developing a common operational
picture - emergency management requires a to have a common
understanding of how a map is visualized and
labelled. - provide immediate and general understanding of
the situation. - new features reflecting the emergency status need
to be inserted into maps consistently.
- Ambulance A vehicle for taking sick or wounded
people to and from a hospital.
16What exists now?
- US Federal Geographic Data Committee- Homeland
Security Working Group (comprehensive review and
evaluation of existing symbology was performed
prior to the development of the symbols. (Lead
Department of Homeland Security) - US Department of Defense Common Warfighting
Symbology (and related DGIWG and NATO
Specifications) - Public Safety Canada Canadian Disaster Database
(FGDC Hybrid) - Forest Fire Domain (ICS standard operating
procedures) - Australasian All-Hazards Symbology (FGDC Hybrid)
Wildfire An uncontrolled fire in a wooded area.
17Project Approach
- GeoConnections advisory committee has recommended
creating and endorsing a Canadian profile of the
US FGDC HSWG symbology standard and submit to
CGSB COG - Advisory committee indicated importance of
raising the profile of the existing FGDC standard
and the community should be provided the
opportunity to provide comments in the 3-4 month
time frame - Project should have a duration of 6-8 months
- Bomb Explosion A violent outburst resulting from
detonation of a chemical or nuclear explosive or
from the loss of a high pressure vessel's
integrity.
18Closing Thoughts
- Threats and hazards that have the potential to
undermine the security and safety of Canadians.
In managing threats and hazards, there is an
increasing need for inter-jurisdictional
co-operation and information sharing. - Location-based information is a key resource for
coordinating and assisting agencies from all
levels, in making crucial decisions related to
public safety and security. - Evolving Public Safety/Security Standards and
Specifications is key to addressing national
situational awareness.