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Improving Access to California’s Water and Environmental Data

Improving Access to California’s Water and Environmental Data. Many data collectors in California, including multiple agencies, academic, private, and stakeholder entities collect large amounts of environmental data.

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Improving Access to California’s Water and Environmental Data

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  1. Improving Access toCalifornia’s Water and Environmental Data • Many data collectors in California, including multiple agencies, academic, private, and stakeholder entities collect large amounts of environmental data. • These data currently exist in diverse formats, in many different data systems with differing formats and attributes, and in some cases, become lost or are difficult to access. • The goal of this workshop is to: • Provide information on systems that do provide access to data. • Update the group on efforts to improve access to data. • Inform the group of new opportunities to improve access to California’s environmental data.

  2. Improving Access to California’s Water and Environmental Data • New Precedence For Interagency Data Systems • Legislation-SB 1070, AB 1404… • IT Architecture: CEDEN, BDAT, EPA Exchange Network … • Metadata: CERES… • Standards: SWAMP… • State of CA SOA

  3. Improving Access to California’s Water and Environmental Data

  4. Improving Access to California’s Water and Environmental Data • Saves on IT budget • Provides more data • Reduces data loss • Saves on monitoring budget • Greatly improves on the ability to perform key business functions • Integrates standards, metadata and architecture • Federated distributed approach

  5. Components of Data & Information Sharing Systems • Data Sharing • & • Management Architecture Standards MetaData

  6. Components of Data & Information Sharing Systems • Data Sharing • & • Management Dissemination Monitoring Feedback

  7. Improving Access to California’s Water and Environmental Data • Many new Tools, Systems, Standards and Legislation Are Available to Promote Interagency Data Systems • Infrastructure • How Do Move Forward?

  8. Improving Access toCalifornia’s Water and Environmental DataAGENDA 9:00 a.m. Welcome/Introduction to Data Integration Issues in Statewide “Ambient” Data Collection –Karl Jacobs (California Department of Water Resources) 9:15 a.m. Real Time Monitoring-Current Access and Future Plans for CDEC (California Data Exchange Center) Data Collection and Presentation Dave Parker (California Department of Water Resources-CDEC Program Manager) 10:00 a.m. CERES (California Environmental Resources Evaluation System): A Multi-Database Portal John Ellison (Resources Agency) 10:45 a.m. SWAMP (Surface Water Ambient Monitoring Program): California's Surface Water Monitoring Statewide Data Management System Cassandra Lamerdin (State Water Resources Control Board) 11:30 a.m. BDAT's (Bay-Delta and Tributaries) Future Role in the CEDEN (California Environmental Data Exchange Network) Distributed Network –Karl Jacobs (CA Dept. of Water Resources) 12:15 p.m. Lunch 1:15 p.m. Data and Metadata Standards – John Ellison (Resources Agency) 2:00 p.m. Panel Discussion:Legislating Data Access, Standards and Data Quality: How Will SB-1070 Affect The Sharing And Integration Of Monitoring Data – Terry Fleming EPA (SWRCB SWAMP Program Manager), John Ellison Resources Agency 1. What will be the practical consequences of SB-1070? 2. Integrated data systems - will they work for the users? 3. What is a practical time frame for seeing results? 3:30 p.m. Adjourn

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