Mike N writes:
>> If you consider an urban search and rescue team's mission, and a large
>> scale event, buildings on a map can be extremely helpful for planning
>> and operations where the accountability of many directed searches of
>> structures is imperative.
>
> That's good information - I
> On Feb 5, 2020, at 12:32 PM, Mike N wrote:
>
> On 2/5/2020 9:49 AM, Eric Christensen via Talk-us wrote:
>
>> For the record, my team(s) has many cartographic resources at our
>> fingertips that we can use for search and rescue including, but not
>> limited to: USGS 7.5' maps, National Park
On 2/5/2020 9:49 AM, Eric Christensen via Talk-us wrote:
For the record, my team(s) has many cartographic resources at our
fingertips that we can use for search and rescue including, but not
limited to: USGS 7.5' maps, National Park Service maps, OSM, Google
maps, state and local GIS data, and
On 2/3/20 9:57 AM, Mike Thompson wrote:
> The
> exception was a search and rescue group that used OSM to help locate
> missing people in the back country because OSM contains trails that no
> other source has.
I was just sitting down to discuss how I use OSM in wilderness search
and rescue
On 2/4/2020 9:57 AM, Paul Johnson wrote:
. Oddly enough, for the rural firefighters? Osmand with Microsoft
Earth imagery as the background is their most popular pick because it
works brilliantly offline and we have better map data than the state
itself does.
It is useful to learn what
Just a general remark: we have active fire fighters contributing and using OSM
in many places around the globe maybe it's time for a global exchange of ideas
and a common forum for that?
Simon
PS: unluckily HOT and FOSM are already taken so a acronym will need some work
:-)
Am 4. Februar
On Mon, Feb 3, 2020 at 8:58 AM Mike Thompson wrote:
> Mike,
>
> That is a very compelling story. Thanks to you and the other OSM folks
> involved for making it happen and to you for writing the diary entry. I
> have often thought that OSM would be a great resource emergency responders
>
That's a good point, but only if the surrounding areas are well mapped
in OSM. In my district of focus, I still encounter TIGER tangles as
soon as I cross the county border. I try to go a bit further knowing
that they answer partner district calls, and it's hard to stop when
there's so much
a major selling point can focus on out of district response; often
FDs know their own area well, but when they go to support other
companies they often don't know a whole lot about the place they're
responding to.
richard
On 2/3/20 6:59 PM, Mike N wrote:
> Mike,
> It is a rather unique set
Mike,
It is a rather unique set of circumstances that make this project
a good fit:
- The county does not map most driveways
- The degree of rural-ness, hills, and trees
- Most trees are deciduous, making the off-leaf imagery good for
locating hidden driveways.
- The region is
Mike,
That is a very compelling story. Thanks to you and the other OSM folks
involved for making it happen and to you for writing the diary entry. I
have often thought that OSM would be a great resource emergency responders
because in some areas it contains data that no one else has, but
Not an emergency, but still interesting when someone can use OSM data:
https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/MikeN/diary/392080
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