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Nima Northern Ireland Mapping Agreement

The population on the Isle of Wight of England is 140,000, during the summer months when holidaymakers arrive, to 200,000. A large proportion of this population is made up of retirees with complex health needs. The NHS (National Health Service) Trust, which manages emergency services on the island, has struggled to find a few patients due to the rural geography of the island. They worked with outdated and inaccurate information on the location of addresses and landscape features. The mapping data and OSGB addresses provided via PSMA allowed them to use more accurate and up-to-date location information. Control centre staff can now quickly locate a patient on the map, identify the nearest address or next address feature, and then send the ambulance to those coordinates. More information about the address, z.B. « Gas available » or « dangerous dogs at accommodation » are now also available to staff. With the new data, emergency services are able to meet their goal of an eight-minute response time, and it suffers from lower overheads as they no longer need to manually update its address database. The one Scotland Mapping Agreement (OSMA), launched by the OSGB, came into force in 2009 and has significantly increased the use of geographic data in the Scottish public sector. The initial agreement was so successful that a revised 10-year contract was signed in 2013. About 100 organizations are members of the OSMA.

Like NIMA, the reported benefits of OSMA include management savings and the ease with which members can share data. The seamless exchange of data has fostered successful partnerships. B, such as boards, schools and the NHS working together to tackle issues such as childhood obesity. Like psma, the high quality of data provided through THE OSMA helps save lives, for example by using paramedics to determine the best ways to avoid incidents. The Northern Ireland Mapping Agreement (NIMA) was established in 2006. As part of NIMA, the organization that oversees the Ordnance Survey Northern Ireland (OSNI), known as Land – Property Services (LPS), provides access to its mapping products to any member of the public service. LPS also offers free GI advice for the public sector. NIMA is revalued every two years and, for 2017-2022, each member of the Federation of Public Employees has unanimously adopted it. The fact that policy makers are unquestionably extending the life of NIMA shows the value of this agreement for the provision of public services in Northern Ireland. The Public Sector Mapping Agreement (PSMA) is a 10-year agreement launched in 2011 by Ordnance Survey Great Britain (OSGB) to provide detailed and accurate public facilities in England and Wales. NIMA has well integrated the use of GIs in the public sector, as it is free for the user. Prior to NIMA, any public sector organization, both central and local, had to pay for product mapping.

The use was sporadic because some organizations could collect a business case for the purchase of the products and others not. When NIMA was created in 2006, all of a sudden, every public servant, about 30,000 people, had access to LPS products.

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