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From:
Angie Cope <[log in to unmask]>
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Wed, 18 Nov 2009 20:49:27 -0600
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---- Forwarded Message -----
From: "Ted Coltman" <[log in to unmask]>
To: "Air Photo & GIS Forum Maps" <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Wednesday, November 18, 2009 4:41:59 PM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central
Subject: RE:      Ordnance Survey maps to go free online

Am I reading this announcement too narrowly, or wouldn't it be described more accurately as "SOME Ordnance Survey maps (NOT, for example, the topographical ones) to go free online"?

The press release seems limit the scope to "its data relating to electoral and local authority boundaries, postcode areas and mid scale mapping information."  As I am not a professional cartographer, I may not grasp what is included in the term "mid scale mapping information", but the release seems to me to be quite limited in scope.

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-----Original Message-----
From: Maps, Air Photo & GIS Forum [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Angie Cope
Sent: Wednesday, November 18, 2009 4:22 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Ordnance Survey maps to go free online

-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Ordnance Survey maps to go free online
Date:   Wed, 18 Nov 2009 21:18:07 +0000
From:   Brendan Whyte <[log in to unmask]>
To:     AMC <[log in to unmask]>, mapsL <[log in to unmask]>
References:
<[log in to unmask]>,<[log in to unmask]>





Official UK government press release:

http://www.communities.gov.uk/news/corporate/1385429


Re-mapping the future for Ordnance Survey - making public data public

Published 17 November 2009

The Prime Minister and Communities Secretary John Denham will today announce that the public will have more access to Ordnance Survey maps from next year, as part of a Government drive to open up data to improve transparency.

Speaking at a seminar on Smarter Government in Downing Street later today, attended by Sir Tim Berners-Lee and Professor Nigel Shadbolt, the Prime Minister will set out how the Government and Ordnance Survey, Great Britain's national mapping agency, will open up its data relating to electoral and local authority boundaries, postcode areas and mid scale mapping information.

The Government will consult on proposals to make data from Ordnance Survey freely available so it can be used for digital innovation and to support democratic accountability.

The proposals will harness the world-class expertise that Ordnance Survey has in the production, maintenance and application of high-quality geospatial information. They build on reforms already delivered in the organisation and would ensure that it is right at the heart of digital innovation in Britain.

Freely available facts and figures are essential for driving improvements in public services. It puts information, and therefore power, in the hands of the public and the service providers to challenge or demand innovation in public services.

The Prime Minister has set out the importance of an open data policy as part of broader efforts to strengthen democracy - creating a culture in which Government information is accessible and useful to as many people as possible in order to increase transparency and accountability, improve public services and create new economic and social value.

The Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, said: "We live in exciting times; a digital age of high-speed communications and information just a click away that is transforming our daily routines. Technological advances and rising customer expectations are revolutionising how we all do things. Today's announcement responds to the demands for better use and access to data held by government. In this new world, smarter government is not an option but a necessity."

Communities Secretary, John Denham, said: "Any public service reforms must be open about what is going on so that those outside it can examine what is happening and to propose alternative ways of doing things if necessary.

"This can only happen if the necessary information and data about what is currently delivered is easily and readily available. Ordnance Survey is a world renowned mapping expert and making the data they hold about local areas, like council boundaries and postcodes, readily available is an important first step to a more open government.

"We want people to be able to compare the outcomes and the costs for their own local services with the services delivered elsewhere, and suggest means of improving and driving change that help cut out duplication and waste, and make sure that every pound of public money is working as hard as it can."

Minister for Digital Britain, Stephen Timms, who has responsibility for the 'Making Public Data Public' initiative, said:
"This is an important step in our public data strategy. About 80 per cent of public sector data mentions a place. Making Ordnance Survey data more freely available will encourage more effective exploitation of public data by businesses, individuals and community organisations."

Chairman of Ordnance SurveySir Rob Margetts said "As Chairman of Ordnance Survey, I am delighted that the Prime Minister and John Denham have today made these proposals about releasing for free some of Ordnance Survey's data to support innovation, accountability and growth. I  also very much welcome the commitment made by Government to contribute to the cost of this. This on-going commitment is fundamental to maintaining the sustained quality of Ordnance Survey's data that has made the organisation a world leader in its field.

The Board of Ordnance Survey will work very closely with Government, as well as our customers, partners and others to ensure that the proposals are fully developed for consultation and implementation next year."

Making public data available also enables people to reuse it in different and more imaginative ways than may have originally been intended. Estimates suggest that this could generate as much as a billion pounds for the UK economy.

For example developers might use this information alongside other Government data about transport, health or education, for services that generate economic and social value.

Openness of data is as important for local government as it is for national government - making people more connected to their community and giving them the tools to demand action on issues that matter. Releasing council records in re-usable form could mean that citizens can find out everything from the council accounts to the number of streetlights and community wardens, to when the rubbish is collected and the hedges trimmed.

John Denham is working with Stephen Timms and Sir Tim Berners-Lee and Nigel Shadbolt to ensure that their work embraces local government and local services and that local government responds quickly, consistently and effectively to the challenge.

Notes for editors

1. The Ordnance Survey is a Government Department with Executive Agency and Trading Fund status and reports to the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government

2. Data relating to electoral and local authority boundaries as well as postcode areas would be released for free re-use, including commercially. Mid-scale digital mapping information would also be released in the same way.

3. The proposals seek to ensure Ordnance Survey is at the heart of digital innovation in Britain. The Government will be running a public consultation on the proposals from December and any change would be implemented from April 2010.

4. The highest-specification Ordnance Survey products and services - such as those used by property developers or the utility companies - would be charged for on a cost-reflective basis.

5. This is part of the Government's wider programme of reform, following on from the "Operational Efficiency Programme: final report", published alongside the Budget in April 2009. It also draws on the work of Sir Tim Berners-Lee (the founder of the World Wide Web) and Professor Nigel Shadbolt who were asked by the Prime Minister in June this year to lead the Making Public Data Public project to drive the opening up of access to Government data. Nigel Shadbolt is Professor of Artificial Intelligence and Deputy Head (Research) of the School of Electronics and Computer Science at the University of Southampton.
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