Ian Dees writes:
Increasing awareness through mapping parties/events seems to help a lot in urbanized areas, but we still haven't figured out how to apply that to the rest of the country. Tools like MapRoulette and fixme can guide existing mappers to areas that are probably in need of help. Are there methods of remote sensing (street-level imagery, data from other places on the internet) that could help us with the locality problem?

Any other ideas for how to make the rural US better?

I agree, I feel this pain of "the US is often an OSM desert" and I have for many years -- most of the history of this project. Concomitantly, I do what I can to promote "wider area" contributions to our data (as opposed to "more local" efforts like Mapping Parties). This includes national bicycle networks, large-scale (statewide and larger) rail improvements, better/newer national forest data, and other, similar wide area campaigns.

These are not always deeply successful (though they are frequently), and I and we have learned much along the way: wikis can help, follow Import Guidelines if importing, coordinate with a "divide and conquer" strategy -- usually state-at-a-time, do everything possible to keep quality high... and I'm sure there are many more. Key is to extend effort towards BOTH local (Mapping Parties...) and wider-area (statewide, regional, federal/national level) improvements. There really is an urban/rural divide in the USA (for purposes of this discussion) and once you "fall off the cliff" (of urban areas and mappers), we see a steep decline in data and participation. There ARE "things" which fill in these holes (like long-distance bicycling, state-to-state rail...) in more rural areas, and I believe it is both cool and a neat challenge to do them, and do them well. Especially when we ignite the passions of wider participation via a well-run, well-coordinated "project."

But often, (and I've gotten a number of "+1!" comments about this), when there are "projects on a shelf" that somebody who has a yen to map can just "reach up and grab a state's worth of work," we do see the checkerboard effect filling in blank spots. Yes, the USA is big, even huge, BUT: keep that up, (relentlessly, with coordination, over time...) and we'll simply improve our map as we need to. I know I'm saying obvious things here. Elephants are best eaten one fork at a time, and while it can seem overwhelming, we simply must keep chipping away at adding good quality data (as this sub-project, that sub-project...) with growing numbers of dedicated volunteers, over the medium- and longer-term -- ESPECIALLY in rural areas that "link" us. That's a vital method it will take as we get there.

I'm not just cheer-leading, I want to see better coordination of these ideas: efforts by OSM-US to take them to heart and leadership to get more people acting like this. There are dedicated, smart people who WANT to throw more shoulder (or two!) into OSM. Let's offer well-structured "projects" (for lack of a better word) for them to be a part of. This works, I can say from actual personal experience. It is part of a good future upon which to continue building our map.

SteveA
California

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