Planes, trains, autos all on one site
A new World Wide Web site being launched this fall will bring together information about planes, trains and automobiles, helping people ranging from the general public to expert researchers obtain data that would normally require visiting multiple Transportation Department offices and Web sites.
Bureau of Transportation Statistics
A new World Wide Web site being launched this fall will bring together
information about planes, trains and automobiles, helping people ranging
from the general public to expert researchers obtain data that would normally
require visiting multiple Transportation Department offices and Web sites.
The Intermodal Transportation Data Base (ITDB), which will be available
through the Bureau of Transportation Statistics' Web site (www.bts.gov),
will provide a data mining portal for transportation data from all of the
department's operating units, which generally act independently and maintain
their own data sets, said Peg Young, a mathematical statistician at BTS.
Because of the independent nature of DOT's units — which include the
Federal Highway Administration, the Federal Aviation Administration, the
Coast Guard and the Federal Railroad Administration — one of the concerns
of Congress and President Clinton was the difficulty in pulling data together
to make transportation funding and strategic decisions, Young said.
As part of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century, DOT was
required to put together the Web-based ITDB to provide information about
safety, demographic, economic and travel statistics collected by various
department agencies.
The database will facilitate the department's move to e-government and
will promote the involvement of a well-informed public in transportation
policy, according to DOT.
The department eventually plans to make the database available via any
DOT unit's home page, said Terry Klein, program manager for BTS' Office
of Information Technology, created in early June.
Klein also hopes ITDB will drive the creation of departmentwide records
to replace the current system, in which different DOT operating units sometimes
maintain overlapping or redundant data.
Other agencies — such as intelligence agencies throughout government
that are part of a classified network and the various federal, state and
local agencies that collect geographic data — also are trying to coordinate
the collection and storage of data into centralized centers. Intelink, the
classified intranet for intelligence agencies, is moving toward the idea
of a data center to centralize the collection and maintenance of information
produced by different agencies.
Young expects that the largest group of users for ITDB will be the general
public, accounting for about 40 percent of the database's transactions.
Those users will require the simplest interface and a phone help desk, she
said. About 35 percent of the users will be analysts. They will require
complicated statistical information as well as more sophisticated technical
assistance. Another 20 percent will include congressional staff, and expert
users such as statisticians will probably make up about 5 percent, she said.
A team of contractors from Advanced Management Technology Inc., Indus
Corp. and Vistronix Inc. has been working on the database for the past six
months. The Web-based application will have the ability to store, retrieve
and update queries and will be equipped with help screens. Some of the most
useful information will be in the form of geographic information systems,
in which information can be viewed as maps and tabular or graphical presentations.
The site will first be available in the next few weeks with some early
query functions, but the official launch will not be until fall, Young said.
The system will run on its own Oracle Corp. database, populated with
data extracted from other systems within DOT, Klein said. By creating a
new database that contains the files, Klein expects users to get quicker
responses than if BTS had just built pointers to the data and left it in
the constituent databases.
Updating the database will be a "management challenge," Klein said,
but plans are already under way to improve communication between BTS' and
DOT's operating units. BTS is recruiting more staff to help with the outreach
effort and will create a working group that will be kept in the loop when
a DOT unit's data is updated.
"We want to make certain we're doing well not only for DOT but for the federal
government as a whole," Young said. "The hardest part is getting data from
individual agencies."
Another issue that needs to be addressed in the future is how to notify
users that data has been updated, she said.
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