ESRI International User Conference 2007
 

Coeur d'Alene Tribe "Native Names" Project

Press Information:
Nikki Snowhite
ESRI
Tel.: 909-793-2853
extension 1-2194
E-mail: press@esri.com
For Immediate Publication
June 18, 2007


Coeur d’Alene Tribe “Native Names” Project Earns Top Honors for Innovative Use of GIS Technology

San Diego, California—Coeur d’Alene Tribe “Native Names” Project stood out from more than 300,000 organizations worldwide that use geographic information system (GIS) software to make a difference in the world. ESRI will present the organization with a Special Achievement in GIS (SAG) Award at the 27th Annual ESRI International User Conference in San Diego, California, June 20.

“ESRI recognizes the passion of our very special users with our Special Achievement in GIS award,” says Jack Dangermond, ESRI president. “The effectiveness of these people to infuse our technology into their real world contexts creates meaning for our efforts. For this we are grateful.”

GIS is a software tool for exploring geographic relationships to better understand how the world works and how it is evolving, connecting, and changing. Virtually unlimited amounts of information can be linked to a geographic location, allowing users to see regions, counties, neighborhoods, and the people who live in them with clarity to solve real-world problems from tracking delivery vehicles to modeling global atmospheric circulation. Government agencies, businesses, nonprofits, and other organizations rely on the software to analyze their communities and make better decisions for their well-being.

The Coeur d’Alene Tribe introduced a GIS program in 1992 to collect, store, and analyze information about the lands it has traditionally used. Information is collected for environmental, social, and cultural geographic features. The tribal GIS goals are to provide information to Tribal Council and Managers for better decisions about future generations, create a central location for Tribal information and make it accessible to the Tribe, provide the Tribe with accurate information about their resources, and to preserve information about past activities that have occurred within the Tribe’s aboriginal territory.

Other organizations being honored at the 2007 ESRI International User Conference include Society for Conservations GIS, Kenya; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), National Weather Service; The Lyse Energi, Norway; Illinois Department of Transportation; Ball State University and Afterimage GIS; and the Kentucky Department of Public Health.

To learn more about the 2007 SAG Award winners as well as view previous years’ winners, visit www.esri.com/sag. Go to www.esri.com for more information about GIS technology and its applications.

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