Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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Great picture Andrea.http://www.npr.org/templates/story/
story.php?storyId=5710986Crop Cops Take to the SkyThe USDA's Imaging Project
2006 NAIP Coverage
Morning Edition, August 28, 2006 · Farmers may seem like
trustworthy people, but the U.S. Department of Agriculture is
taking no chances. It's spending tens of millions of dollars to
create an enormous computerized map of every farmer's field
in America. The program is intended to make sure farmers are
doing what's required to earn their government subsidies.It's an enormous task, keeping track of those subsidies. They
add up to billions of dollars each year and they go to more
than half a million farmers, scattered from Maine to California.
Some farmers receive payments for protecting streams and
wetlands; others, for growing specific crops. In each case, the
payments depend on accurate information on the amount of
land involved. So the USDA has resorted to a program of
overhead reconnaissance -- something akin of spy flights.The company GE Geospatial, an aerial photography company,
carries out one small piece of this program. One of its
airplanes, a twin-engine Piper Navajo, spent six weeks this
summer flying back and forth over eastern Kansas. A
sophisticated digital camera in its belly captured pictures of
the ground below.In order to get the widest possible view, the airplane climbed
to 22,000 feet, twice its normal working altitude. The cabin
isn't pressurized, so pilots had to wear oxygen masks. Bob
Buttram, the company's chief pilot, used to fly jets for
commercial airlines, but he says this is some of the toughest
flying he's ever done. "The body just doesn't take the pressure
change that well," he says. "It's not uncommon for a guy to
get an ear infection after a week, two weeks, of flying like
that."GE Geospatial sends those photographs to Surdex
Corporation, in Chesterfield, Mo. Surdex is one of largest in a
team of ten companies that's assembling this atlas of
American agriculture for the USDA. This year, it will process
more than a hundred thousand images, covering ten states in
the Midwestern and Northwestern United States.Craig Molander, Senior Vice President of Surdex, peers over
the shoulder of one colleague, and sees an image filled with
craggy mountains. "That's got to be from the Northwest
somewhere. Idaho or something," he says. (It turned out to be
in South Dakota.) Molander has spent much of his life looking
down at the Earth from far overhead, but the pictures used to
be classified top secret. Before he went to work at Surdex, he
worked in military intelligence.Molander has watched the world of overhead imagery open up
in recent years. Access to images from commercial satellites
has become routine; everybody now gets to look down at the
world from the sky. "People got used to seeing it on the
news," he says. "And now you have Microsoft and Google
doing web-enabled services on it. Demand is going up and
up, and people are getting accustomed to finding that data."It's surprisingly complicated, though, to convert raw photos
into the kind of seamless tableau now available through
Google Earth or Microsoft's Local Live website. Pictures do lie.
Photographs taken from far overhead cover an area many
miles wide. Rivers or fields at the edge of each image look
smaller than they should, because they're farther from the
camera; Tops of mountains, being closer, look bigger than
they should.The computers at Surdex can correct those distortions,
though, and the company will deliver pictures of Kansas
farmland to the USDA that match, to within a few feet, the
geographic dimensions of the real world. That turns the
photos into a powerful tool for local USDA officials like Myron
Stroup, in Olathe, Kan. "We're actually just scratching the
surface of what this can do for us," he says.Stroup works for the USDA's Farm Service Agency. He's
responsible for monitoring several million dollars in federal
payments every year to about 1500 farmers in two counties in
Eastern Kansas. He displays one of those new aerial photos on
his computer. It shows one small corner of Johnson County.
But there's more here than just a photo. Laid out on top of the
checkerboard of green and brown fields are red lines. They
show the field boundaries. And when Stroup clicks inside the
lines, he uncovers a hidden storehouse of information."I've selected three different fields right here," he says. "I can
open the table and show the attributes -- or the data -- on
those three fields. I've got the acres, and two of those fields
are highly erodible land." (Farmers are required to take special
precautions to reduce soil erosion on such fields.)Another click, and the map shows what farmers promised to
plant on those fields. Stroup can see whether the picture in
front of him matches those promises. The other day, he says,
he was looking at a field that a farmer had enrolled in the
Conservation Reserve Program, or CRP. This program pays
farmers to convert cropland into grassland or forest, in order
to preserve soil and create more habitat for wildlife. He saw
"what appeared to me like a lot of big round hay bales out
there. And I thought, 'Hmm. That don't look quite right. Did
this person go out and hay their CRP [field] when they didn't
have authorization to do that?'" When he drove out to look,
though, those round shapes turned out to be newly planted
trees, which are permitted.Stroup, and other USDA officials, don't like to call this spying
on farmers, and they prefer not to talk about farmers
cheating. They say it's mostly just a way to keep their records
accurate; most farmers do obey the rules. The USDA's critics,
such as the congressional Government Accountability Office
(GAO), say the USDA is far too lenient in enforcing the rules
governing federal subsidies. According to a GAO report, tens
of millions of taxpayer dollars continue to flow to growers
who've broken the rules by plowing up native prairie, or
draining wetlands. The new system should help catch those
violations.And Scott Willbrant, a coordinator of the USDA's mapping
effort for the state of Kansas, says the new digital atlas will be
useful to a lot of other people, too. "This will be one of the
most sought-after datasets ever," he says.Let's say you wanted to stop soil from washing into a local
river. If you combine this map with others that already exist
-- such as those showing topography and soil types -- it
would show you which fields might be creating the problem. It
would also tell you who owns those fields so you'd know
whom to call. "It's unlimited what other industry; other
agencies can do with it. They probably have more use for it
than we do, actually," Willbrant says.For now, though, the USDA is keeping much of their
computerized atlas confidential. Officials say they're trying to
decide how much of their surveillance data they can share,
without violating the privacy of American farmers.
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
Great picture Andrea.http://www.npr.org/templates/story/
story.php?storyId=5710986Crop Cops Take to the SkyThe USDA's Imaging Project
2006 NAIP Coverage
Morning Edition, August 28, 2006 · Farmers may seem like
trustworthy people, but the U.S. Department of Agriculture is
taking no chances. It's spending tens of millions of dollars to
create an enormous computerized map of every farmer's field
in America. The program is intended to make sure farmers are
doing what's required to earn their government subsidies.It's an enormous task, keeping track of those subsidies. They
add up to billions of dollars each year and they go to more
than half a million farmers, scattered from Maine to California.
Some farmers receive payments for protecting streams and
wetlands; others, for growing specific crops. In each case, the
payments depend on accurate information on the amount of
land involved. So the USDA has resorted to a program of
overhead reconnaissance -- something akin of spy flights.The company GE Geospatial, an aerial photography company,
carries out one small piece of this program. One of its
airplanes, a twin-engine Piper Navajo, spent six weeks this
summer flying back and forth over eastern Kansas. A
sophisticated digital camera in its belly captured pictures of
the ground below.In order to get the widest possible view, the airplane climbed
to 22,000 feet, twice its normal working altitude. The cabin
isn't pressurized, so pilots had to wear oxygen masks. Bob
Buttram, the company's chief pilot, used to fly jets for
commercial airlines, but he says this is some of the toughest
flying he's ever done. "The body just doesn't take the pressure
change that well," he says. "It's not uncommon for a guy to
get an ear infection after a week, two weeks, of flying like
that."GE Geospatial sends those photographs to Surdex
Corporation, in Chesterfield, Mo. Surdex is one of largest in a
team of ten companies that's assembling this atlas of
American agriculture for the USDA. This year, it will process
more than a hundred thousand images, covering ten states in
the Midwestern and Northwestern United States.Craig Molander, Senior Vice President of Surdex, peers over
the shoulder of one colleague, and sees an image filled with
craggy mountains. "That's got to be from the Northwest
somewhere. Idaho or something," he says. (It turned out to be
in South Dakota.) Molander has spent much of his life looking
down at the Earth from far overhead, but the pictures used to
be classified top secret. Before he went to work at Surdex, he
worked in military intelligence.Molander has watched the world of overhead imagery open up
in recent years. Access to images from commercial satellites
has become routine; everybody now gets to look down at the
world from the sky. "People got used to seeing it on the
news," he says. "And now you have Microsoft and Google
doing web-enabled services on it. Demand is going up and
up, and people are getting accustomed to finding that data."It's surprisingly complicated, though, to convert raw photos
into the kind of seamless tableau now available through
Google Earth or Microsoft's Local Live website. Pictures do lie.
Photographs taken from far overhead cover an area many
miles wide. Rivers or fields at the edge of each image look
smaller than they should, because they're farther from the
camera; Tops of mountains, being closer, look bigger than
they should.The computers at Surdex can correct those distortions,
though, and the company will deliver pictures of Kansas
farmland to the USDA that match, to within a few feet, the
geographic dimensions of the real world. That turns the
photos into a powerful tool for local USDA officials like Myron
Stroup, in Olathe, Kan. "We're actually just scratching the
surface of what this can do for us," he says.Stroup works for the USDA's Farm Service Agency. He's
responsible for monitoring several million dollars in federal
payments every year to about 1500 farmers in two counties in
Eastern Kansas. He displays one of those new aerial photos on
his computer. It shows one small corner of Johnson County.
But there's more here than just a photo. Laid out on top of the
checkerboard of green and brown fields are red lines. They
show the field boundaries. And when Stroup clicks inside the
lines, he uncovers a hidden storehouse of information."I've selected three different fields right here," he says. "I can
open the table and show the attributes -- or the data -- on
those three fields. I've got the acres, and two of those fields
are highly erodible land." (Farmers are required to take special
precautions to reduce soil erosion on such fields.)Another click, and the map shows what farmers promised to
plant on those fields. Stroup can see whether the picture in
front of him matches those promises. The other day, he says,
he was looking at a field that a farmer had enrolled in the
Conservation Reserve Program, or CRP. This program pays
farmers to convert cropland into grassland or forest, in order
to preserve soil and create more habitat for wildlife. He saw
"what appeared to me like a lot of big round hay bales out
there. And I thought, 'Hmm. That don't look quite right. Did
this person go out and hay their CRP [field] when they didn't
have authorization to do that?'" When he drove out to look,
though, those round shapes turned out to be newly planted
trees, which are permitted.Stroup, and other USDA officials, don't like to call this spying
on farmers, and they prefer not to talk about farmers
cheating. They say it's mostly just a way to keep their records
accurate; most farmers do obey the rules. The USDA's critics,
such as the congressional Government Accountability Office
(GAO), say the USDA is far too lenient in enforcing the rules
governing federal subsidies. According to a GAO report, tens
of millions of taxpayer dollars continue to flow to growers
who've broken the rules by plowing up native prairie, or
draining wetlands. The new system should help catch those
violations.And Scott Willbrant, a coordinator of the USDA's mapping
effort for the state of Kansas, says the new digital atlas will be
useful to a lot of other people, too. "This will be one of the
most sought-after datasets ever," he says.Let's say you wanted to stop soil from washing into a local
river. If you combine this map with others that already exist
-- such as those showing topography and soil types -- it
would show you which fields might be creating the problem. It
would also tell you who owns those fields so you'd know
whom to call. "It's unlimited what other industry; other
agencies can do with it. They probably have more use for it
than we do, actually," Willbrant says.For now, though, the USDA is keeping much of their
computerized atlas confidential. Officials say they're trying to
decide how much of their surveillance data they can share,
without violating the privacy of American farmers.
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
