| | April 201519CIOReviewwould the decisions or outcomes be affected? Some examples:· Is there a relationship between 911 calls for service relating to domestic vio-lence as a precursor to property values? Domestic violence incidents increase in distressed neighborhoods before delin-quent taxes, before foreclosures. Which then in turn lead to property value de-clines when primary residences become rental units, which may foreshadow fu-ture areas of increased crime and need for revitalization. Could understanding of this cause/effect relationship alter the timing or type of assistance provided by communities? Either way, there is an in-creased potential cost that will be born by the communities.· From a mental health standpoint, would there be value in knowing that a current resident of Texas or Florida had lived in Louisiana or coastal Mississippi in 2005? If, at the time of completing a patient history, previous addresses were geocoded and related to tragedies (Katrina, Columbine, Boston Marathon Bombing) could that information enhance the treatment process or provide critical background information?Additionally, while we understand to some degree the relevance of the past to the present and future, we need be visionary to current events and question the potential societal changes and be prepared for the results. For example:· The legalization of marijuana in a number of states will have what future impacts? Proponents put forth estimates on employment, tax revenues and potentially a boom in population growth in the states where it is now legal. The challenge is to assess what is or what will be the impact to border states? Using Colorado as an example, what will be the impact to Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, and New Mexico. In these border states what, if any, will be the impact to unemployment, traffic stops or truancy. These border states may now have issues to address, but will not have access to the increased revenue stream as Colorado, to pay for the situations that may arise.CIOs must embrace the technology of GIS. It should no longer be that stepchild in some other department(s) that consumes bandwidth from standalone servers. It is not just a planners tool kit or a local gov-ernment toolset. The benefits of the data should open discussions on access to that data. Somewhere in most every organi-zation GIS exists and as Chief Informa-tion Officers remember it is geographic INFORMATION. CIO's are faced with security issues, mobility, virtual, cloud, hardware, software refresh and rapidly changing technology requirements of busi-ness units within the organization. In most organizations CIOs, (depending on or-ganization size and complexities) are sup-ported by CISO's, Infrastructure Manag-ers, Line of Business support engineers, programmers, and help desk support. As part of the cadre of professionals, CIOs should be supported by a GIO, Geographic Information Officer. Organizations that take this ap-proach will find themselves positioned to provide their businesses the most pow-erful tools available, to not only sustain business today, but be prepared for the future. A visionary team of CIO and GIO together can take an organization into the next generation.CIOs must embrace the technology of GIS. It should no longer be that stepchild in some other department(s) that consumes bandwidth from standalone servers
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