News in 2023
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"Howdy" - FIG Working Week 2023 report
28 May - 1 June 2023, Orlando, Florida, USA
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The national host from US National Society of
Professional Surveyors (NSPS) together with the local
association Florida Surveying and Mapping Society (FSMS)
were looking forward to welcoming all attendees from near and
far to this Working Week that took place at the Signia by Hilton
Orlando Bonnet Creek/Waldorf Astoria Orlando. The conference
centre was located right between and directly connected with the
two hotels. Situated in the Disney World area, however not
directly part of the Disney World since the land is owned by
Hilton and not Disney.
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It was the first time in over 20 years that the main FIG
event was held in the entire Americas region, and it was a good
opportunity to be in this region welcoming delegates from US and
Canada as well as from South America and the Carribean area. To
help the Latin American participants, the plenary sessions
offered translation into Spanish, and there were special
sessions in Spanish as well as a new initiative, establishing a
FIG Regional Network in the Americas Region. Having the
conference in the US did however come with some challenges... It
turned out to be very difficult to get visa, especially from
Africa and Asia. As a result the participation from Africa, and
especially from Nigeria was limited compared to other FIG
events. At the General Assembly and in the Opening Ceremony, FIG
President Diane Dumashie was sad that it was so difficult for
deletages to attend the Working Week and not being able to enter
the US despite intense efforts from both the local organisers
and FIG.
Pre events
The first activities started already on 26 May with a FIG Council
meeting and at the same time as the last preparations were done to get
ready for the Working Week. From 27 May 2023 there was a lively
atmosphere at the Conference Centre.
At the RFIP Workshop |
Werner Lienhardt, Multisensor Workshop
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On Saturday 27 and Sunday 28 May three different pre-events
took place. The technical seminar on Reference Frames in
Practice was organised in cooperation with United Nations Office
for Outer Space Affairs (UN-OOSA), UN-GGIM sub committee on
Geodesy and Education, Training and Capacity Building Working
Group and IAG organised by Daniel R. Roman who is the current
chair for the UN-GGIM Working Group on Education, Training and
Capacity Building and former chair of FIG Commission 5 on
Positioning and Measurement. A second pre event was a Scientific
Workshop on Uncertainty and Quality of Multi-Sensor Systems,
primarily organised by Prof. Volker Schwieger, also a former
chair of FIG Commission 5 and the current chair of FIG
Commission 6 on Engineering Surveys, Werner Lienhart.
Being in the Americas region APPAT - the Pan American
Association of Surveying and Topography Professionals held an
extraordinary assembly on Saturday 27 May
The programme for the 1st Young Surveyors Americas Meeting was an
exciting mixture between presentation and discussion sessions with
prominent speakers such as Bryn Fosburgh Vice President of Trimble and
Craig Hill from Leica speaking over Leveraging Technology to Move Beyond
Boundaries, Brent Jones, Esri, giving an overview of GIS, and Simon
Ironside presenting the FIG Mapping the Plastics Working Group
activities. FIG President Diane Dumashie came for a special talk with
the attendees and all FIG Commission and Network Chairs who were having
their own ACCO meeting during the day came by for a short presentation
of their commissions. A Charity Bingo event was held which was a big
success especially because for some participants it was a new
experience. The evening offered both a game of Bowling a nice dinner. A
Surveyor Sudoku competition co-saponsored by GeoMax and Turning Point
kept the young surveyors active throughout the conference days.
Opening Ceremony and Welcome Reception
The Opening Ceremony was held after the first General Assembly
session in the late afternoon of Sunday 28 May. The programme was
competently led by Master of Ceremony Tim Burch, CEO of the main host of
the event, NSPS. A video set all attendees in a real US atmosphere which
together with a Native American Culture presentation with dancing and
storytelling about the tribes and culture led no one in doubt where they
were. After this festive and colourful element Richard Allen who is City
of Orlando and Orange County Surveyor said a few welcome words to greet
everyone to Orange County and to Orlando. Associate Director for the
Geomatics programme at the University of Florida Bon A. Dewitt announced
that their geomatics programme celebrated the 50th anniversary this year
which was nice to celebrate with surveyors and geospatial experts from
in total 86 countries. Finally, before the keynote speakers, John Hohol,
Co-conference director pointed out that he was glad that the main FIG
event was again on US soil after more than 20 years and that he hoped to
see more surveyors from the US affiliated with FIG.
Being in the Disney World area it was exciting to learn more about
“Project X” which was the name of the development of Disney World area
when it was established between 1964 and 1971 when it opened to the
public. Beverly Hart-Jones, daughter of the lead surveyor of “Project X”
and 4th generation educated surveyor, gave a lively introduction to the
time when the land was surveyed and developed by her father William C.
“Bill” Hart. No-one in the family or around knew what “Project X”
covered, being the area that Walt Disney saw from the air, fell in love
with and immediately knew that this was the right spot for a second
Disney area after Disney Land in California. The surveying was both
dangerous, wet and difficult being a very large area and construction
site in the wetlands, but the result is more than astonishing. Hopefully
many attendees managed to find time to explore more of Disney World.
Handouts of the presentation
This remarkable presentation was followed by a greeting by NSPS
President Robert Akins, teaching all how to greet each other properly in
“American” and the variations around the large country. Many different
variations of “howdy’s” were hereafter heard throughout the conference…
FIG President Diane Dumashie was the second keynote speaker, elaborating
over her work plan and visions for FIG for the coming four years. Her
presentation ended with the FIG Fanfare marking the opening of the
Working Week.
Handouts of the presentation
Tim Burch invited all to the Welcome Reception that took place
outside the conference centre at the “Signia Island” where it was
possible to meet and greet and also to get yet another American
experience. Gatorland had been invited with several animals such as an
alligator, snake and spider, and it was possible for participants to
learn more about the animals – and for the bravest to also hold one.
Special historic collection
NSPS had managed to invite Lisa and Les Van Horn who has the most
impressive collection of historic surveying material. They exhibited in
the main hallway and this was a special attration not only to surveyors
of all ages but also for regular guests at the hotel who were astonished
to see this magnificent collection. There were instruments, books,
pictures, maps, markers, ... A real special feature at this Working
Week, and most impressive was the collectors Lisa and Les tirelessly
being at the exhibition and having a lot of talks with the many
interested attendees throughout the days. Some nostalgic over
instruments and material that they remember, some more astonished and
fascinated. A very good learning experience.
Technical Programme
Plenary sessions
Each morning of the three conference days started with a plenary
session with nothing else in parallel to set the scene of the day. FIG
Council and the local organisers had decided that this Working Week
should be an "in-person event" with focus on the physical attendance and
the advantages of this such as networking and being together. However,
due to the fact that she did not get visa to attend, the very first
plenary speaker, Clarissa Augustinus, UNCCD, had to prepare a video
presentation that was shown. Not the best start of the conference, but
was soon forgotten by the splendid presentation on the
Global land trends and future scenarios and the role of surveyors in
protecting our planet. Clarissa is co-chairing the new FIG Task Force on
Climate Compass. The other two speakers in this plenary session,
Victoria Stanley, World Bank and Brent Jones, Esri were physically
present and both made remarkable presentations under the headline of "Protecting
our World" in which especially the relationship between climate
change and sustainable development was on the agenda. "Humans are
problem solvers... but there is more to do" said Brent Jones. The
session ended with a round of good and tough questions from the audience
which kept the speakers busy.
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Handouts of presentation by Clarissa Augustinus
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Handouts of presentation by Victoria Stanley
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Handouts of presentation by Brent Jones
The plenary session on day two had "conquering new frontiers" as main
topic. The first speaker Russel Romanella, Nasa, managed to put the
earth into perspective. The second sepaker Bryn Fosburgh, Trimble talked
among other things about the changing jobs with the deveopment of
technology which however does not mean that the jobs are being
unnecessary, but instead that a different set of skills are required.
Mickey Ng Nok Hang talked about being a young surveyor today, and how to
"unlock the X, Y and Z value". After an interesting Q&A session a new
concept was introduced by Tim Burch, NSPS. He was challenged to give a
5-minute presentation based on the Ignite-presentation concept style (20
slides of each 15 seconds) talking about "Get Kids into Survey" of which
he is a dynamic and committed ambassador.
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Handouts of presentation by Russel Romanella
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Handouts of presentation by Mickey Ng Nok Hang
The final plenary session on day three with the headline Tackling
the Global Challenges had as first speaker Juliana Blackwell from
NOAA. A special National Geodetic Survey's Day - NGS track was organised
for the full Wednesday with this plenary session introducing this
special track. US has worked on a modernised geospatial data system
keeping in mind that data must be interoperationable, inclusive and
accessible. On the two first conference days four special "Small Island
Developing States" (SIDS) sessions were held. Small Island Developing
States (SIDS) face many distinct challenges on their ongoing path
towards strong sustainable economic development and getting the most
from their rich socio-cultural heritage and being in Florida it was
obvious to bring togetgher representatives from the Carribean, from
Pacific Islands and other states that are facing the same challenges.
Simone Lloyd, Jamaica, talked in the plenary session about the land
administration and land management role in tackling disaster management
and sea level rise with a special focus on the sustainability of island
states. Dustin Parkman, Bentley talked about Infrastructure Data
Challenges - lots of data is available, however changing the complexity
out of the data and get useful information is the challenge. "A map is
like a poem" said Andrew Hurley, Leica in his presentation on"EGS" -
Environmental, Social and Governance, assessing sustainability and
ethical performances.
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Handouts of presentation by Juliana Blackwell
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Handouts of presentation by Simone Lloyd
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Handouts of presentation by Dustin Parkman
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Handouts of presentation by Andrew Hurley
Technical sessions - and World Premiere
A lot of activities were going on during the three conference days,
technical sessions, special sessions, partner sessions, meetings etc.
There was a lively in the hallways and session rooms. A special and new
feature was the "FIG Cinema" designed to serve as a unique and engaging space for conference
attendees. Through the power of storytelling, this Cinema aimed to
inspire and empower and offered a one-of-a-kind opportunity for conference attendees to sit
back, relax and be inspired by the incredible work of their peers.
Several session slots were dedicated to video presentations, a new and
different way of presenting a paper, there was a special cinema slot
showcasing the work plans of the 10 FIG Commisisons, longer films by our
main sponsers etc. However most spectacular was the World Premier of the
"Surveying Superstar Movie Mini-Marathon" created and conducted by John
Brock. With the title Cinematic Superstar Surveying
Spectacular!!! attendees could enjoy this amazing World
Premiere compilation of over 50 movies, TV shows and TV commercials
masterly webbed together by Surveying Movie Mogul John Brock, who has
collected his eclectic mix of Hollywood style productions featuring
all-things surveying. We do hope that we can repeat this movie in future
FIG events.
Credits system
The local organisers had managed to ensure that attending Workshops,
seminars, technical tours, and paper presentations during FIG Working
Week 2023 would qualify for Continuing Education Units of
Professional Development Hours (CEU/PDH) as authorized by the
Florida Board of Professional Surveyors and Mappers (the Florida’s
Surveying and Mapping licensing entity) through Florida Surveying and
Mapping Society’s (FSMS) Florida Continuing Education provider status.
Sponsors and Exhibition
One thing is very clear - there would be no Working Week without the
sponsors and exhibitors. It is therefore in place to send a very big
thanks to all sponsors and exhibitors for their attendance and
contributions to the Working Week.
The exhibition was opened by FIG President Diane Dumashie together
with NSPS President Robert Akins and CEO Tim Burch right after the first
plenary session. The exhibition included both a collection of pictures
from the time when Dinesy World was built "Surveying Walt Disney World",
a special University Row, the Connect+reflect lounge - a first of its
kind FIG Working Week initiative being a safe space for conference
attendees to seek individual support, share diverse stories and build
the basis for a sustainable workforce. Informal and interactive sessions
were hosted throughout the working week covering topics spanning mental
health, podcasting, coaching, yoga and meditation, building your
business, what is inclusion and building your brand. The FSMS stand
included a "sand box" that opened up for creativity.
ESRI combined its sponsorship with a special session room dedicated
to an "Esri Hands-On Learning Lab" in which attendees could come by and
get a lesson on a variety of GIS and ArcGIS topics learning tools
with instructors.
Special GNSS/GPS/LIDAR/UAV demonstrations by exhibitors were held on
Signature Island, a large 973m² (10,473 ft²) island with picturesque
views of the resort’s waterways and golf course, with live
demonstrations of the latest GPS/GNSS/UAV/LIDAR technology.
Special events
Memorial day
The Working Week took place over the Memorial Weekend and Memorial
Day on Monday 29 May. This tradition should of course be marked. The
Memorial Day is a celebration for those who gave their lives while in
military service. A military honor guard stood ready on Signature
Island, and the President of NSPS, Robert Akins held a touching speech
in which he first of all informed about this special celebration for the
international guests, and told his own story of what it was like to be
far away from home at the front with no access to communication media
that we know of today. At that time they waited 3-4 weeks for a letter
to arrive. Thanks to NSPS for arranging this special happening.
Technical tours
Three different technical tours were offered and seen from the
interest these tours could have been repeated several times. One
technical tour visited the Aircraft Operations Center of National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NOAA, which serves as the main
base for NOAA's fleet of nine specialized environmental data-gathering
aircrafts, including three "hurricane hunter" planes. The second went to
the Southeastern Surveying and Mapping Coorporation, an independent
employee-owned firm working with surveying and mapping, subsurface
utility engineering and geographic information systems. The third tour
went to the Orlando Wetlands Park - a man-made wetland designed to
provide advanced treatment for reclaimed water from Orlando and other
local cities.
Cornhole event and Golf Outing
Another very American element was a Cornhole event - also a
first-timer for most international participants who had signed up for
this. This event took place on Thursday 1 June after the General
Assembly and closing. Pictures will tell better than words what this is
about... A very joyful way of finalising the Working Week.
On Friday 2 June Golf enthusiasts had the opportunity to stay for a
game of golf at the beautiful Signia Hilton golf court.
Conference dinner
Right after the last session slot on Wednesday 31 May, buses were
waiting for guests who had signed up for the conference dinner to take
them to "Mangos Tropical Cafe in Orlando where a true American
experience awaited. During the following 4 hours the guests were
enjoying a dinner and taken through a live show spanning from Brazilian
Samba, Cuban Conga, 80s, 90s and today’s hits. The dinner was supporting
FIG Foundation through the dinner tickets together with a special
donation from Trimble .
General Assembly and closing
As part of the Working Week the FIG General Assembly is held on Sunday
28 May and Thursday 1 June including the business of FIG. This Working
Week and General Assembly was the first of the current council which
meant that all Working Plans showing the direction for the coming four
years were presented. Member Assoications elected the destination for
FIG Working Week 2027 to be held in Stavanger, Norway.
In her closing remarks, FIG President Diane Dumashie thanked all who
had come to Orlando, Florida to make this Working Week come through. The
days were packed with activities - sessions to learn from, contributions
to FIG projects, business and activities, sessions co-hosted with UN
organisations such as UN-Habitat/GLTN, UN-OOSA, UN-CCD and UN-GGIM,
sessions with partners and sponsors.
Finally, and before the FIG Fanfare marked the closing of the Working
Week, Diane Dumashie thanked NSPS, the host from the US, the local hosts
from Florida and all who had been involved in the preparations of all
the many both big and small things that brought together this Working
Week. A special thanks to the NSPS staff competently led by Tim Burch:
Trish, Sarah and Christina as well as the FSMS representatives, who
ended up being so occupied that they did not even make it to the closing
ceremony and to come to the stage.
At the very end the FIG flag was handed over by Tim Burch to the next
host epresented by Honourable Benito Owusu Bioh, Deputy Minister
for Lands and Natural Resources accompanied by Honourable Manu Adabor,
Chairman of the Parliamentary Select Committee on Lands and Forestry
together with the 68 delegates from Ghana to mark the upcoming Working
Week in Accra, Ghana 19-24 May 2024.
THANKS TO ALL WHO WERE INVOLVED IN MAKING THIS WORKING WEEK A
SUCCESS!
A special thanks to all sponsors
Commission and Network Chairs at their annual meeting
Louise Friis-Hansen
July 2023