Transcript Document

• Day:
• Session:
• Coordinators:
Thursday 10th November
14.30am - 15.30
Ian Williamson & Stig
Enemark
• Topic:
Components of the
vision- break out groups
Day 1 – Wednesday Nov 9th
Welcome & Research
Vision
Presentations - European
Perspective of Paradigm
Australian Group
Coordinator: Stig Enemark
Rapporteur: Steve Jacoby
Evaluate – Components of
the vision
Report Back - Discussion
European Lessons Learnt
European Group
Coordinator: Ian Williamson
Rapporteur: Paul van der Molen
Day 2 – Thursday Nov 10th
Presentations - Australian
Perspective of Paradigm
Australian Group
Coordinator: Stig Enemark
Rapporteur: Grahame Searle
Evaluate – Components of
the vision
Report Back - Discussion
Australian Lessons Learnt
European Group
Coordinator: Ian Williamson
Rapporteur: Daniel Steudler
Day 3 – Friday Nov 11th
Presentation – Spatially
Enabling Government
Group 1
(based on Australian &
European Perspectives)
Evaluate – Issues in
Designing a New
Generation of LAS
Rapporteur: Warwick Watkins
Group 2
(based on Australian &
European Perspectives)
Rapporteur: Holger Magel
Report Back - Discussion
Final Presentation
Next Generation of LAS
Ian Williamson, Stig Enemark,
Jude Wallace
The Paradigm
1. What is the vision for an ICT enabled
LAS to support sustainable
development?
2. Is a common understanding possible?
3. Is this “land management” or “land
information management”?
The Paradigm/framework/model
1.
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Summary
People dimension to the paradigm
Process aspect – two way interaction e.g. two way arrows,
interaction between policy and land information
Outcome related model – need to try and capture outcomes in the
model
Capacity building at society, institutional, data process and
individual level – renewable self sustaining cycle
What sort of society, quality of life, personally and as a community
do you want and hence what are the systems/infrastructure
needed to deliver this ie. Distribution of wealth, identification an
protection of assets, protection and enhancement of the
environment. All of this requires core information (including land)
to underpin decision making and the outcomes
How do you quantify the linkages between the land information
systems and outcomes
Need to take into account culture and value systems
Key Drivers
1. Rank in importance the key drivers
2. Is tax (in all its forms) a driver?
Key Drivers
1.
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Summary
Remaining responsive to user needs at a whole of
government level
Productivity as a result of IT application
Environmental needs – monitoring
Security
Revenue raising through tax
Image/pride
Knowledge – how do we unpack the knowledge capital –
intangibles (systems, processes, people) within an
organisation
Meeting public expectation – servicing the citizen
The drivers we have now are a natural extension of
the data collection effort to meet public expectation
Key Components and Tools
1.
2.
3.
4.
Authentic registers?
The IT architecture to deliver the vision?
The spatial dimension- SDI?
Infrastructure to support trading in complex
commodities?
Key Components and Tools
- Will we feel confident about the quality of our
registers/datasets that we will guarantee them
- Quality assurance framework
- Strong engagement of local government needed –
missing from the model
- Built environment is an element that we are not
capturing information on as well as natural
environment - local government could have a
greater impact here
- Must be a spatial dimension to LAS
1.
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Key Components and Tools
Summary
Core business
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Spatial dimension
RRR dimension
Tax and valuation
Land development
Modern planning is a value adding user of our information
which should lead to sustainable development
Role of providing information to land users that want to
make decisions about the use of land
Land management will be more sustainably practised as a
result of land information
Interoperability – connectivity between the user and the
need – taking into account the needs of the future
We are in the business of land information management for
the plethora of user needs and land management outcomes
Future Challenges, Issues & Improvements
1.
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3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Achieving a national system in a federated
country
Achieving spatially enabled government
Should the land registry system contribute to
SD? How?
Relationship between the land registry and
spatial cadastre
Can international comparative monitoring be
established?
Administration of restrictions and
responsibilities
Is the land parcel still central to LA?
The role of buildings in land administration
Future Challengers, Issues & Improvements
1.
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Summary
Engagement and interaction between all levels of government
Shared vision, values and systems within a federated system that facilitates
interoperability
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Find catalyst (such as counter terrorism) to accelerate achievements of a
national significance e.g. increased tax and more functional property
markets through e-conveyancing
Heading towards national systems
Marketing and presentation – recognising the client
Remember SDI is an infrastructure and enabling platform for data
integration, data sharing, data access – not an end in itself
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Need for unified data models, semantics and structures to support this – progressed
to a greater extent in Europe
Data to data and data to people
Bundling / unbundling of rights – does this service sustainable development
– recognising that we still need to identify RRR of which some will have a
value
Value of property street address – this is what people use, not Lot/Plan
number