I wanted to share some extremely disappointing news that I received
today. The National Address Register project has been terminated.
This
project had the intention of providing a single national authoritative
dataset for roads, addresses and placename information. The potential
of this project was to deliver a free dataset that all organisations
and individuals in New Zealand were free to use. This would have made a
fantastic resource, and had the potential to consolidate a number of
mapping projects, and could have greatly simplified the work associated
with project such as the NZ Open GPS Maps project, as the NAR would
have provided a single national focal point for feedback and correction
of road and address information.
The cynic in me says that the
reason this project failed was because of the commercial interests in
existing roading datasets. Currently there are multiple roading
datasets from different providers, and they are making very good money
from these. Some roading datasets sell for six figure sums on an annual
basis. Naturally, very few organisations can afford these prices, so
only large Government agencies tend to be able to purchase them.
Suffice to say, these datasets are different, and there is not a single
authoritative dataset amongst them.
The NAR had the potential to
create a single, free and authoritative road, address and placename
dataset. Tenders were invited for the project, and there was going to
be only one organisation to win the tender. As a result, all but one of
the current commercial providers stood to lose their revenue streams
from their roading datasets. As you will see in the notification below,
the tenders were too expensive. I believe that it was in all the
commercial vendors interests to put in high tender prices to ensure
that the NAR did not go ahead, and that they could protect their
existing revenue streams rather than risk missing the tender and losing
it all.
The upshot of this is that my faith in the Government to
provide geospatial information to its citizens is now close to zero. If
they are not capable of producing a single authoritative roading
dataset (arguably one of the most important sets of spatial information
as it defines most of our physical connectivity) then there is little
hope of them being able to deliver any useful spatial information to
citizens.
As the
NZ Open GPS Maps,
Zenbu and
NZ Open Street Map
projects have shown us, a volunteer community can develop products
faster and cheaper than commercial or government organisations, and
over time they will have better quality as well.
I believe the
time has come for us to build more volunteer communities to provide
spatial information that our Government is failing to provide to us. No
longer can we wait upon them, rather we must build it ourselves. There
are four key areas that we need to focus on.
1. Raw data
collection - taking our GPS units out into the real world and
collecting and sharing data. Collecting track logs and uploading these
to the OpenStreetMap or NZ Open GPS Maps projects. Providing waypoints
to OSM and Zenbu. Please - if you haven't already, consider donating
some time and information to these projects so that they have raw data
to work with. This 'field survey' work is essential to creating our own
spatial information resources. (I would particularly encourage
geocachers to contribute their tracklogs if at all possible as we tend
to travel a little more than others

)
2.
Mapping - converting the data collected in the field to information.
Creating vectors for road lines, adding street name, directions,
speeds. Using your local knowledge to map the community around you.
3.
End products - converting the spatial information into a form suitable
for others to use, for example the NZ Open GPS Maps project producing
Garmin map files that can be loaded into GPS units.
4.
Distribution - due to the large quantities of information involved, we
may need to look at creating an ad-hoc network of individuals and
websites to share the vast quantities of information about our country
via torrents or similar P2P mechanism.
I
believe the time has come for all those that want better access to
spatial information to go out there and be a part of collecting, and
building it. We can't wait for Government to build it for us, so we
will have to do it ourselves.
Let's get started.SUBJECT: NAR PROJECT TERMINATED
The
National Address Register (NAR) project is a cross-government
initiative set up to develop infrastructure to improve the provision of
address, road and place name information for government agencies,
businesses and the wider community.
The project is over-seen by
a Steering Committee comprised of representatives of key stakeholders
from central government, local government and emergency services
agencies.
An integral part of developing a business model and
business case for the National Address Register (NAR) was to assess
whether there was a supplier able to provide the relevant services and
to identify the likely costs. An RFP process was chosen as the most
effective way of identifying both of these.
Following assessment
of the tender proposals, the Steering Committee has decided to
terminate the project. Despite the project showing considerable
potential to reduce duplication across government and reduce costs, it
is too expensive to proceed with in its current form.
Further
investigation into the need for, and the most cost-effective way of
providing address, road and place information, will be led by the New
Zealand Geospatial Office, within their mandate under the NZ Geospatial
Strategy. This work will include determining the optimal role for the
Crown, local government and the private sector. Brendon Whiteman,
Director New Zealand Geospatial Office -
brendon....@linz.govt.nz;
will be happy to answer any queries that you may have in relation to
these activities in the context of the overall work programme of the
Geospatial Office.
It is expected that agencies will continue
with existing arrangements they have for the purchase of this location
data, from the commercial sector.
Nancy McBeth of the State
Services Commission, is preparing a Lessons Learnt report on the NAR
project. If you have some views that you would like considered in that
report, please contact her at
nancy....@ssc.govt.nz by 31 May 2008.
On
his return from Annual Leave next week, Laurence Millar, Chair of the
NAR Steering Committee will formally write to your Chief Executive to
advise of the decision.
Regards
Jill Barclay
Operational Owner NAR project
NZ Police
Received from a public email list I subscribe to.
Cheers Gav
PS Originally posted at
http://forums.gps.org.nz/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=4103