Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Japanese CyberCafe


In anticipation of the Regional Incident Management Team (RIMT) exercise this week, demonstration of Groove and other tools to Ruapehu District Council, and the EM Conference next week, we've had the mobile office all set up and tested, downloaded all those updates that seem to arrive between activities and reminded ourselves how things work. Comments were made about it looking like a Japanese cybercafe!

The RIMT exercise is based at Landguard Bluff in Wanganui on Thursday and Friday and will involve 40-50 staff mostly from across the region. The team will be running through their response to large scale rural fires.

The Ruapehu District Council will be looking at the use of Groove in their EOC and figuring out just what they need to do to get on the Group-wide system.

The conference presentation is on Technology in Action and will be a song and dance routine between Rosco, Evan and me.

Finally, the Inmarsat BGAN hardware will be here on Thursday with expected service available from March. This means we can keep communicating when all the phones (landline and cellular) are down.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Hunting for a PRFO

Ross Fothergill will be leaving the team on the 3rd December for a role back in the NZ Army. Ross has spent the off season getting us ready for the fire season, pulling together training packages and preparing for the NRFA audit.

This means though that the hunt is on again for a qualified person to meet the demands of PRFO for two rural fire districts (Manawatu and Rangitikei). The role is based in Palmerston North, with an office in Marton, and goes as far north as Taihape. The details of the job and how to apply can be found here. I've posted a few things on the blog in the past about rural fire, they can be found here.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Near real-time snaps


At last we have solved the challenge of transmitting photos from the field to the decision makers in the Group Emergency Co-ordination Centre. We've had the components for a while now but have finally put them together. Here's how it works...

The Ricoh Caplio 500SE camera has a GPS unit mounted on the hot shoe. This means that when we take photos outside we get a GPS fix embedded in the photo tag. The camera has bluetooth capability and can send the photos as they are taken to a computer that is nearby.

We've partnered the camera with an Asus eeePC which is a very small, lightweight, solid state laptop. We've connected a vodem to the laptop to get us on the internet whilst in the field. The laptop has Microsoft Groove 2007 running on it (as do all our EM PCs).

So... as we take a photo, we press OK to send a copy of the photo by bluetooth to the laptop. The folder that the photo ends up in has been set up to synchronise via Groove. You can invite as many Groove contacts as you like to share the folder but I would limit that list. At the moment we only use one other computer in the ECC to receive images.

Once in the ECC we copy the images out to another folder (to prevent circular synchronisation) and then process the photos using the software that comes with the camera. GPS Photolink takes each photo with a GPS location embedded in it and creates a number of user determined outputs including GIS, web and Google Earth outputs as well as watermarked photos (like that above). This means that within a few minutes of the photos being taken, we can see where it was taken plus the photo itself.

We'll be demonstrating this process at the conference next month in Rotorua along with some more info on Groove as an ECC/EOC collaboration tool.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Group Plan... a work in progress

At yesterday's CEG meeting I presented a 'warts and all' version of the Group Plan. This is very much a work in progress but given the nature of the material to date and the fact that it doesn't sit neatly in a single chapter, it was just as easy to give members the whole document. Now this might come back to haunt me but ces't la vie. Clearly we haven't addressed some areas yet and really we've only workshopped our strategic direction and management & governance material. I'm currently working on readiness and response but haven't quite finished these yet (another workshop next week).

The CEG signed off on the Management & Governance chapter and the Background, recognising that we will see the entire Plan again before fully endorsing it before the Joint Standing Committee puts it out for public consultation and Ministerial comment. We may tweek the background a bit but we are confident in the M&G chapter.

If you'd like to have a sneaky peek, here it is.

A rainbow of rainfall for the region

Here is the link to a recently completed science report that provides some detailed maps of annual rainfall for the region. The maps provide at a 500m2 resolution, the rainfall for region based on interpolation between Horizons and NIWA long term rainfall sites. It is suggested that this information be used in place of previously generated rainfall isohyets for the region. The data is available as a GIS dataset.

Funded via Envirolink the report was generated as a part of the One Plan development process to provide rainfall inputs for nutrient management. However, the data has already been put to use by Jeff Watson in the flood modelling project.

This project was made possible through the efforts of many in the organisation, in particular Raelene Hurndell and Brent Watson have worked hard to coordinate this project with the NIWA climate team. If you have any questions about this project please do not hesitate to contact Raelene, Brent or Jon Roygard at Horizons Regional Council.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Group web site

Work has begun on the development of a CDEM Group web site. At the last EMO meeting, we talked about what this might look like. I outlined some of my ideas for a site, received some feedback and ideas from the EMOs, and told the team that we have some in-house expertise working on how we can achieve this.

Typically, web sites push information to people... we want to get clever and provide a push/pull element to the Group site. This means that regular visitors to the site can set up pages with information that they want to see. Hopefully this will help create site loyalty to the CDEM Group site. Users of Google homepages will be familiar with the pull features provided by Google. We are pretty confident we can do this for minimal cost.

We've had a bit of a look around at the other sites in New Zealand and... to be honest, they're really boring!!! (ours included). Now I might be a somewhat frustrated designer but I'm sure we can do better. First up, the address: ours is www.mwcdemg.govt.nz (WOW) and several of the local councils sites have emergency management pages too. How about some feedback on the following options:
  • www.EMNet.govt.nz
  • www.EM.govt.nz
  • www.CDNet.govt.nz, or
  • www.reallygoodemergencyinformation.govt.nz (said with a Jeremy Clarkson tone), or...
  • www.EMIntelligence.govt.nz
So gone on... post some feedback.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Staff in the field


It is really good to know that staff in the field think to call in when there are issues that might have an impact on others. Blair Sowman called in this morning with news that the Gorge was closed due to a slip. This was soon followed by by a message via the Police e-mail notification system. If you are intersted in subscribing to the Police notification system, go here. Here is a picture that Blair sent through to us... good on you mate!

Monday, November 3, 2008

Open day - Feilding Fire


The team from Horizons were loud and proud at the Feilding Fire Brigade this past Saturday (but not as loud as the Fire Service). The Green RIG and earthquake cubes were staffed by the two Ross' and Environmental Education team. Emergency services, including fire, police, ambulance and the recsue helicopter were the main attraction but Vector, the Air Force and HeliPro were also present.

The open day was well attended by members of the public with displays of Fire Service skills and equiment. The weather packed it in later in the day but not before a lot of visitors to the site. As the wind picked up we were lucky not to see a big orange dome become airborne over Feilding.

Another good example of the services working together... thanks to Peter and the team at Feilding Fire for the invitation to be involved.