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Thursday, May 21
 

8:30am PDT

Kayak-Based Citizen Science: Mapping Real-Time Water Temperature in Puget Sound with GIS
Thursday May 21, 2026 8:30am - 9:00am PDT
EcoTrackrs is a GIS-driven citizen science initiative by EarthViews Conservation Society designed to address a critical gap in nearshore monitoring: the lack of high-resolution, spatially distributed water temperature data in Puget Sound. Existing monitoring systems are often fixed or coarse in scale, limiting their ability to capture localized variability driven by climate change, shoreline complexity, and urban impacts.

This project uses kayaks as mobile data collection platforms, enabling access to shallow and complex nearshore environments that are difficult to monitor using traditional methods. Volunteer kayakers are equipped with temperature sensors and a custom mobile app to collect synchronized GPS and temperature data in real time. These data are processed and visualized using Esri tools, including ArcGIS Online and Experience Builder, creating an interactive and publicly accessible map.

As a proof of concept, the pilot generated over 4,600 geolocated temperature data points across multiple locations in Puget Sound, demonstrating both feasibility and scalability.

This presentation will outline the full workflow from kayak-based data collection to GIS visualization, as well as key lessons learned in sensor selection, app development, and volunteer engagement. It will also highlight how this approach complements existing agency monitoring by providing fine-scale, flexible datasets that can inform climate resilience and waterway management.

EcoTrackrs demonstrates how GIS-enabled, community-driven data collection can expand monitoring capacity, improve spatial resolution, and support more responsive environmental decision making.
Speakers
BF

Brian Footen

Director/Expedition Lead, EarthViews Conservation Society
Brian Footen is the Co-Founder and Executive Director of EarthViews Conservation Society, where he directs the application of GIS and immersive mapping technologies to protect waterways across Washington State and the Western U.S. With over 20 years of experience working with Tribal... Read More →
Thursday May 21, 2026 8:30am - 9:00am PDT
409

9:00am PDT

Using GIS to calculate geomorphological change in a river system over time
Thursday May 21, 2026 9:00am - 9:30am PDT
We used ArcGIS Pro to determine channel migration over time in a river system in North Dakota. The discipline of geomorphology has defined parameters that describe river migration, but there are no accepted methodologies for measuring these parameters in the real world. Using GIS, we came up with unique methodologies, some built on published papers and others built from scratch. The result is a suite of methodologies that are replicable across projects and multiple years of analysis. We used these methodologies to calculate the change over time in several geomorphological characteristics, including bend amplitude and wavelength, average river width, meander belt width, sinuosity, and meander migration. This presentation will describe these characteristics and the GIS methods used in our calculations. Of note is the method used to calculate meander migration, for which we successfully replicated a methodology written by Joon Heo et al. in 2009, using least squares regression analysis.
Speakers
KM

Katie Messick

GIS Analyst/Staff Scientist, WEST Consultants, Inc.
Katie Messick holds master’s degrees in GIS and Forestry from the University of Washington and has been using GIS in her work for 25 years. She has spent the last 10 years as a GIS Analyst and Staff Scientist at WEST Consultants, Inc., which is a small water resources engineering... Read More →
Thursday May 21, 2026 9:00am - 9:30am PDT
409

9:30am PDT

Spatial patterns of foraging activity in endangered killer whales shift with changes in Chinook salmon abundance
Thursday May 21, 2026 9:30am - 10:00am PDT
Critically endangered Southern Resident killer whales (SRKW) rely heavily on Chinook salmon as their primary food source. Declining salmon stocks, coupled with vessel noise and habitat degradation, are pushing the population towards an extinction vortex. By integrating 20 years of SRKW behavioral research with a regional Chinook salmon index, we developed spatial models to compare whale distribution and behavior in the waters of the U.S. San Juan Islands and Canadian Southern Gulf Islands during periods of varying prey abundance. GIS allowed us to harmonize disparate datasets and visualize habitat use relative to static management boundaries. We found that in low salmon years, foraging became more diffuse and shifted beyond their historical core summer habitat, highlighting potential mismatches between dynamic ecological processes and fixed conservation zones. Our approach demonstrates how GIS can inform adaptive, transboundary management. SRKW survival and recovery depends on international collaboration and safeguarding of habitat.
Speakers
avatar for Kimberly Nielsen

Kimberly Nielsen

Research Associate, Oceans Initiative
Kimberly is a marine ecologist driven by a deep commitment to using science to support conservation. Her work has taken her from the Northeast Pacific to Antarctica, studying how highly mobile species like cetaceans respond to environmental and anthropogenic change.

She is currently a Research Associate with the non-profit Oceans Initiative, where she contributes to a broad range of applied conservation research. Her work spans field-based data collection, spatial and statistical modeling, and scientific writing, with a focus on translating data... Read More →
Thursday May 21, 2026 9:30am - 10:00am PDT
409

10:30am PDT

Advancing Spatial Data Collaboration for Ecosystem Recovery: An Overview of the PSEMP Spatial Data Work Group
Thursday May 21, 2026 10:30am - 11:00am PDT
Spatial data is essential for understanding complex environmental systems, informing decisions, and coordinating actions across jurisdictions and organizations. The Puget Sound Ecosystem Monitoring Program (PSEMP) Spatial Data Work Group (SDWG) is a collaborative network of spatial data users, producers, and intermediaries dedicated to advancing the effective use of spatial data in support of ecosystem recovery and decision-making across the Puget Sound region.

In this session, we’ll provide an overview of the SDWG’s purpose, achievements, and opportunities for engagement. Attendees will learn how the SDWG fosters collaboration, improves understanding of available spatial data resources, and builds shared awareness of regional spatial data needs and challenges. The SDWG’s mission is to support ecosystem recovery by strengthening coordination around data standards, identifying critical gaps, and bridging technical experts with decision makers.

We’ll highlight key contributions and activities, including development of curated data recommendations, cross-partner workshops on priority topics (e.g., LiDAR processing workflows and wetland intrinsic potential), and the formation of Focus Teams - short-term collaborative groups tackling specific spatial data challenges such as riparian monitoring and stormwater data integration.

The presentation will also showcase how the SDWG serves as a platform for knowledge sharing, offering archived workshop materials, networking opportunities, and avenues for practitioners to influence regional spatial data priorities. Whether you’re a GIS analyst, data scientist, or resource manager, you’ll discover how participation in SDWG can enhance your spatial data practice, expand professional networks, and contribute to impactful environmental outcomes.

Join us to explore how this regional effort leverages GIS expertise to strengthen spatial data ecosystems, address data gaps, and drive collaborative solutions for Puget Sound’s most pressing environmental challenges.
Speakers
TZ

Tyson Z Waldo

North Sound SSHIAP Biologist, Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission
Tyson has been working as a regional salmon habitat biologist and GIS analyst for the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission (NWIFC) for over 20 years. He was integral in developing the Salmon and Steelhead Inventory and Assessment Project (SSHIAP) database at the Northwest Indian... Read More →
avatar for Mike Leech

Mike Leech

Technology Services Practice Leader, Environmental Science Associates (ESA)
Mike Leech is the Technology Services Practice Leader at Environmental Science Associates (ESA) and serves as Coordinator for the Puget Sound Ecosystem Monitoring Program (PSEMP) Spatial Data Work Group (SDWG). He brings over 20 years of experience leading geospatial, data management... Read More →
Thursday May 21, 2026 10:30am - 11:00am PDT
409

11:00am PDT

Estimating the Climate Resiliency of WA Dairy Farms
Thursday May 21, 2026 11:00am - 12:00pm PDT
According to climate models, northwest Washington will experience progressively wetter winters in the coming decades. Dairy farms collect and store manure in large ponds for later use as fertilizer, and the volume of those ponds is greatly influenced by precipitation. Do these ponds have the capacity to hold additional winter rainfall? Or will dairies need to adapt to prevent overflow events?

WSDA’s Nutrient Management Technical Services team has come up with winter storage preparedness estimates for over 30 dairies in Whatcom and Snohomish counties. This presentation will walk through the steps involved in completing this project, from collecting data to generating reports to sharing results with dairy farmers. Additionally, it will cover how Python was utilized to perform complex calculations and how reports were designed using HTML and CSS.
Speakers
avatar for Michael Lowry

Michael Lowry

GIS Analyst, Washington State Department of Agriculture
Michael Lowry is the GIS Analyst for WSDA’s Nutrient Management Technical Services, a program that works with dairy farmers to protect water quality. He has worked on a wide variety of projects that aim to provide the NMTS team with tools and data to get more done in less time... Read More →
Thursday May 21, 2026 11:00am - 12:00pm PDT
409

1:30pm PDT

Relationship Goals - Linking Construction Drawings to a Map
Thursday May 21, 2026 1:30pm - 2:00pm PDT
The City of Tacoma was retiring it's legacy document management system in 2025. The old system allowed users the ability to associate a list of related streets through an older Access database and SQL server backend. The solution worked, but it required several steps without any kind of data integrity checking.

After project stakeholders asked if there was a way to incorporate a map into the process, the wheels began turning and started with a humble site but blossomed into a full ArcGIS Experience Builder application, integrating a custom CSV generator to generate standardize lists of barcodes and work orders, a map for the user to select streets related to the documents as also an FME automation to smash them all together in a Snowflake table, accessible to the city for multiple platforms.

This presentation will begin with a demo of the finished product, then going on a tour behind the scenes to see how all the pieces work together.
Speakers
avatar for Steve Schunzel, GISP

Steve Schunzel, GISP

Enterprise GIS Technical Lead, City of Tacoma
Steve is the Enterprise GIS Technical Lead for the City of Tacoma.  He has been in the GIS field for over 30 years, the last 10+ years in various roles with Tacoma.  During his career, he has worked with most disciplines associated with local government including cadastral/survey... Read More →
Thursday May 21, 2026 1:30pm - 2:00pm PDT
409

2:00pm PDT

Taking GIS into the Well: Building a Replicable Condition Assessment Framework with Survey123
Thursday May 21, 2026 2:00pm - 2:30pm PDT
When Kitsap County needed to move from reactive maintenance to data-driven capital planning for its wastewater pump stations, the County was seeking not only a data collection process, but a repeatable framework that could be managed by staff and expanded across the entire system.
This presentation details how ArcGIS Survey123, ArcGIS Online, and ArcGIS Pro were used to develop and deploy a comprehensive condition assessment program across four pump stations spanning five decades of infrastructure. The project followed a structured progression: establishing asset management goals through workshops with County staff, building a hierarchical asset inventory from design drawings and institutional knowledge, developing a Survey123 form architecture with related tables for condition scoring and photo documentation, piloting the framework at the first station, refining it based on field experience, then deploying across the remaining three stations with County staff taking increasing ownership.
The Survey123 form design centered on using questions tailored to different asset classes. Questions are framed with discrete text descriptions easy for inspectors to understand. Responses convert from descriptive text to quantitative scores, enabling consistent, repeatable assessments even from different inspectors. The resulting condition scores directly support capital planning and prioritization with traceable justifications explaining values.
The presentation highlights real challenges encountered during implementation: managing limited existing records, balancing survey form flexibility with the specificity inspectors need in the field, reconciling data across multiple survey exports, and calibrating useful life values against industry standards. Attendees will see how the final deliverables, including visualizations and interactive dashboards, directly support renewal and replacement prioritization. Attendees will leave with a replicable framework they can adapt for their own utilities or organizations using standard Esri tools.
Speakers
MS

Max Sugarman

Senior GIS Analyst, Hazen and Sawyer
Max Sugarman is a Senior GIS Analyst at Hazen and Sawyer, a national engineering firm specializing in water and wastewater infrastructure. Based in Seattle, he focuses on helping water and wastewater utilities translate geospatial data into practical tools for asset management, capital... Read More →
Thursday May 21, 2026 2:00pm - 2:30pm PDT
409

2:30pm PDT

Bringing Branch Editing to PostGIS/QGIS
Thursday May 21, 2026 2:30pm - 2:45pm PDT
This short talk demonstrates a proof-of-concept, alpha-quality project designed to introduce versioned, branched editing capabilities to the PostgreSQL, PostGIS, and QGIS technology stack. It establishes a workflow directly analogous to standard version control software used in software development. The process begins by designating a feature layer as the trunk or main layer. While operating on their branch, users perform updates, inserts, and deletions. Concurrently, other team members may modify the trunk or their own independent branches. Once editing concludes, the user reconciles their branch against the trunk to identify and resolve conflicting edits. Finally, the approved branch edits are merged into the trunk, establishing a new authoritative version. If you are interested in FOSS GIS software, have a skill and the desire to contribute, please attend for more information.
Speakers
RH

Roma Hicks

Hobbyist Developer, Senior Application Analyst, City of Issaquah
Roma Hicks is a senior application analyst for the City of Issaquah focused on public works, ESRI Utility Network, asset management, and project management but moonlights as a hobbyist software developer for over 15 years with an interest in free and open-source software (FOSS). Using... Read More →
Thursday May 21, 2026 2:30pm - 2:45pm PDT
409

2:45pm PDT

Tree Canopy and Land Cover: Tacoma's GIS Approach
Thursday May 21, 2026 2:45pm - 3:00pm PDT
Many municipalities regularly collect land cover data using aerial imagery to support land use planning, track tree canopy, and inform city leadership. Building these workflows requires balancing accuracy, efficiency, and long-term maintainability, which becomes increasingly challenging as datasets grow and organizational needs evolve.

This presentation walks through how the City of Tacoma’s Environmental Services department developed a land cover workflow using ArcGIS Pro to process and analyze aerial data. Using real project examples, it will highlight the step-by-step approach used to generate land cover and tree canopy statistics, along with the challenges encountered around efficiency, consistency, and long-term maintainability.

Building on this foundation, the presentation will also explore opportunities to improve and automate the workflow using FME. It will outline where automation could reduce manual effort, improve documentation, and make the process more repeatable across teams.

Attendees will gain practical insight into building effective GIS workflows in ArcGIS Pro, identifying bottlenecks in manual processes, and taking the first steps toward automation with tools like FME.
Speakers
SL

Shawn Leonard

IT Analyst, City of Tacoma
Shawn Leonard is an IT Analyst with the City of Tacoma’s Environmental Services department, where he supports the GIS needs of stormwater, wastewater, and solid waste utilities. Over the past year and a half, he has worked at the intersection of data, infrastructure, and environmental... Read More →
Thursday May 21, 2026 2:45pm - 3:00pm PDT
409
 
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