Surveying, Mapping and GIS

Exploring all aspects of mapping and geography, from field data collection, to mapping and analysis, to integration, applications development and enterprise architecture...

  • Geospatial Technology, End to End...

    Exploring all aspects of mapping and geography, from field data collection, to mapping and analysis, to integration, applications development, enterprise architecture and policy
Showing posts with label employment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label employment. Show all posts

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency...

Posted by Dave Smith On 4/05/2010 05:52:00 PM 4 comments


My big news to report:  After 6 years at Synergist Technology Group, Inc., I am changing directions.  I have accepted a position at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Office of Environmental Information.  I will be starting at USEPA the week of April 26th, 2010.

I greatly enjoyed the work I was doing at Synergist, having been involved in everything from business development to writing code and everything in between, supporting geospatial, mapping and integration efforts to support diverse business areas from environmental protection to emergency response to transportation to military and intelligence applications.  I enjoyed the diversity.

I have worked in private sector, consulting for over 20 years, but all throughout this, have always been solutions-focused, and have always had a keen interest in supporting the core mission of the agencies that I worked with - though, the downside of private sector consulting is always in the vagaries of its' occasionally fragmentary nature, with competetive bidding and teaming arrangements often dynamic and changing.

So, coming into Federal service brings a whole gamut of new things.  In some ways, I will get to dig deep into some of my core passions of environmental protection, geospatial technology and integration - and I look forward to this. However, it will surely bring many other challenges along with it - but I am up for any challenge.

My new role will, among other things, involve support to EPA's Facility Registry System (FRS), which is a repository for facilities data for 2.5 million unique facilities regulated under a variety of environmental laws and statutes. Herein, I see opportunity for further geo-enablement of Agency business processes, along with continued integration potential, to put hooks and eyes into a variety of other processes for ever-improving analytical, reporting and querying capabilities, cross-media, cross-agency, cross-domain, cross-dimension, as well as facilitating further partnership-building, between local, state, and federal government, tribes, academia, industry and the public, and supporting data publishing, OGI and transparency initiatives.

I anticipate I will also be pulled into a variety of other geospatial efforts across EPA as well... In many ways, I will essentially continue to do many of the things I already did - only, from the other side of the fence. In terms of physical logistics, I have already essentially been commuting to Washington DC for 6 years - though, now having a permanent duty station there, I can now consider getting a place to stay, as opposed to living out of hotels and bouncing between various locales as I have been.

So - mixed emotions - I will certainly miss working with Synergist, but likewise, there is a great team at EPA, and I am sure I will have a great time there.

Seeking Web GIS Applications Developers...

Posted by Dave Smith On 8/08/2007 09:18:00 AM 1 comments

For the mashup artists, AJAX gurus, ArcIMS experts, .NET jockeys out there...
Synergist Technology Group, Inc. is currently looking for GIS web applications developers, for its Pennsylvania and Northern Virginia locations.

Requirements:

Strong background in web-based GIS applications development.


  • DHTML, CSS, and JavaScript;

  • ASP.NET, C#, VB.NET, or Java

  • ESRI ArcIMS

  • Web Services (XML, SOAP, JSON, REST, OGC)

  • Understanding of spatial databases
Desired Skills:

ArcGIS Server, Oracle Spatial query and analysis, mashups and exposure to Microsoft Virtual Earth, Google Earth, Google Maps, good documentation and communication skills.

Additionally, a background in emergency response, transportation, facilities management or environmental science may be very useful.

Applying:

Applicant must be a US Citizen or have US Permanent Resident Status

Interested applicants should respond with a current curriculum vitae and salary requirements to dsmith[@]synergist-tech.com.

Synergist Technology Group, Inc. - A Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) specializing in geospatial technology, environmental science, transportation and emergency response.

Technology Workers, H1B Visas and Controversy

Posted by Dave Smith On 6/29/2007 04:22:00 PM 1 comments

There have been a number of news stories circulating about the H1B visas and overseas technology workers finding employment in the US:



A fraud aspect of it stems from the appearance that employers are going out of their way to deny Americans jobs - more details here:



There are a number of additional videos and clips on YouTube and others relating to this...

I don't think that I have any problem whatsoever with foreign developers coming here in and of itself - I know and work with a lot of very wonderful and talented people from overseas.

What concerns me on one side is the pure profit motive of industry, and on the other side, I am also concerned by the protectionist and xenophobic attitude of some others, and so on. However even these seem to be stuck in the weeds and shallow water - there is also a bigger picture that needs to be examined -for example if Americans cannot find gainful employ in technology sectors, it creates many other cascading impacts and disincentives - and this in turn begins to undermine technology curricula at schools and universities, it impacts research and innovation, and so on. And ultimately, all of these may also adversely impact profit.

Gains and losses should be balanced judiciously.


Life isn't just about cold hard cash.

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