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Integration of Automated Staking and GIS

Integration of Automated Staking and GIS. Types of Software. Stakeout 2 seats for stakers ArcEditor GIS Coordinator Right-of-Way Agent ArcView Manager of Engineering Dispatch Coordinator ArcReader All other BEC employees Locators ArcPad 9 seats for line trucks

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Integration of Automated Staking and GIS

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  1. Integration of Automated Staking and GIS

  2. Types of Software • Stakeout • 2 seats for stakers • ArcEditor • GIS Coordinator • Right-of-Way Agent • ArcView • Manager of Engineering • Dispatch Coordinator • ArcReader • All other BEC employees • Locators • ArcPad • 9 seats for line trucks • Powel’s MxGIS • GIS Coordinator

  3. Old notes on how to bring staking sheets from Stakeout into ArcEditor • and how to get shapefiles back to Stakeout • Put shapefiles in Stakeout folder on network and the individual machines • will get the updates when they sync

  4. New notes on how to bring staking sheets from Stakeout into ArcEditor and how to get shapefiles back to Stakeout

  5. MxGIS Pros & Cons • Pros • Saves time both bringing in Staking sheets and exporting out • shapefiles • Now maps are updated on average once a week instead • of once a year • Has already paid for itself many times over • Easy to operate • Happier GIS Coordinator = happier co-workers/boss • Reduction in errors • Things can be missed when manually recreating • staking sheets • Cons • Retirement comes in as stations • Relies heavily on stakers creating perfect sheets • Expensive • Not 100% set up exactly like I want it • Large staking sheets can be cumbersome and hard • to work with

  6. The two tools used for MxGIS.

  7. Select the Post Work Order From StakeOut button. • These boxes pop up. • Select Search by Work Order (or the option youwant).

  8. Once work order comes up, highlight it and select • OK.

  9. This box shows you the • progression of the how • the staking sheet is being brought into the geodatabase. • Sometimes you will get • an error, but if you run • through the steps again, • it usually works. • I have the settings set to • move the work order to • our closed status if this • process properly posted • the job. • When it is done, select • OK. • The map will auto- • maticallyzoom to the • extent of the job.

  10. The yellow diamond is a point MxGIS brought in as a station. If I wouldn’t already have a GPS point for this location, I would use this placement for 63-31-111. See blow-up below

  11. MxGIS brings in any new feature (63-31- • 344 is a new meter and it comes in as a • new meter), along with any new line • features (the red solid line is new • secondary underground). • The staker must not have used the • location for the transformer 63-31-110 • because it came in at a different location – • I will move it to the new location as it • looks like a better placement. • The location for the pedestal 63-31-231 • was used, so I can just delete that station • (the yellow diamond).

  12. To finish posting the • job, I had to give the • new underground line • a phase (the place- • ment – OH or URD – • did come through, • but because a phase • wasn’t assigned yet, it • was solid red). • I also copied the • station (the yellow • diamond) over to my • GPS feature class to • show this location • position was from • StakeOut. • After I make sure the • flow is correct, I save • my edits. • The final step is to • select the 2ndMxGIS • tool to export shape- • files out of the GIS.

  13. When you select this button, we • have it set up to put all the • shapefiles into a folder on the • hard drive. • Then a script grabs those files and • copies them to the Stakeout • server. • When the StakeOut users sync, • they will get the updates. • It is set to run once a week. • This functionality could have been • built in house using model builder.

  14. MxGIS Tips • You can either have MxGIS configured for your data model or to • Powel’s data model • We kept our data model • This was more expensive, but worth it • See it in action before you decide what you want • Have patience • If you want something different than what is suggested, • be persistent

  15. For more information, feel free to contact me: Michelle Anderson GIS Coordinator (218) 444-3685 manderson@beltramielectric.com

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