What is your e-mail address?

My e-mail address is:

Do you have a password?

Forgot your password? Click here
close

Bill to expand geospatial imagery passes House

Bill would provide grants to states, tribes, schools to expand mapping capabilities

The House has passed a bill that would provide $10 million a year for a national grant program designed to make geospatial imagery more available and usable.

The bill would give that money to the Interior Department through fiscal 2019 to spend on grants to support geospatial imagery mapping projects. The bill passed by a vote of 379-33 on Oct. 27.

The bill seeks to expand the use of remote sensing data by state, local and tribal governments, educational institutions and industry. The measure is also designed to help states and Indian tribes build infrastructure to increase access to geospatial imagery for research and educational purposes.

According to the bill, as part of the outreach program Interior would:

  • Support education programs.
  • Identify new geospatial imagery needs.
  • Promote sharing of geospatial expertise between states.
  • Encourage more geospatial mapping education.
  • Provide a way for states and Indian tribes to transfer geospatial imagery and applications to the U.S. Geological Survey, which is part of Interior.

Similar legislation has been introduced in the Senate. However, the Congressional Budget Office estimated this bill would cost $148 million through fiscal 2014.

About the Author

Ben Bain is a reporter for Federal Computer Week.

Reader comments

Please post your comments here. Comments are moderated, so they may not appear immediately after submitting. We will not post comments that we consider abusive or off-topic.

Your Name:(optional)
Your Email:(optional)
Your Location:(optional)
Comment:
Please type the letters/numbers you see above

eSeminar

  • Where Cyberwarfare and Cybersecurity Meet

    We invite you to attend the third event in this three-part series on Cybersecurity. 1105 Government Information Group will present a panel of government and cybersecurity experts including Gregory T. Garcia, the nation's first presidentially-appointed Assistant Secretary for CyberSecurity and Communications with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, 2006-2008; and Jeffrey Carr, cyber strategies consultant and author of Inside Cyber Warfare, in this editorial webcast on Tuesday, April 13 at 11 a.m., where they will discuss the cyberwarfare threat to both industry and government, as well as strategies to consolidate the wider cybersecurity mission. Read more

Federal Computer Week eNewsletters

  • Subscribe to Newsletters Subscribe

    Federal Computer Week's eNewsletters deliver the latest policy and management news to your inbox.

Highlights from the current issue