Project Goal
The International Joint Commission (IJC) is responsible for helping the United States and Canada prevent and resolve disputes over shared waters. Managing these complex transboundary systems requires integrating environmental monitoring data, hydrologic information, and scientific analysis from dozens of agencies operating across two countries.Business Problem Solved
The International Joint Commission operates in one of the most complex water governance environments in the world. Its work spans multiple transboundary watersheds and requires collaboration among federal agencies, state and provincial governments, Tribal Nations and Indigenous governments, regional organizations, and scientific institutions in both the United States and Canada.
Historically, spatial information supporting this work was dispersed across numerous organizations and systems. Hydrologic datasets, monitoring networks, infrastructure information, and environmental data were often maintained independently by partner agencies using different spatial frameworks and documentation standards. As a result, Commission staff and Technical Working Groups frequently spent significant time locating data, reconciling inconsistent datasets, and assembling spatial information needed to support studies and Board activities.
This fragmentation limited the Commission’s ability to effici
Technology Implemented
The Commission leverages the ArcGIS platform, including ArcGIS Online and the ArcGIS Pro suite, to host spatial data, manage geospatial services, and deliver interactive applications to staff, Boards, and the public. Within this environment, the International Joint Commission maintains authoritative feature layers representing watershed boundaries, hydrologic networks, monitoring stations, infrastructure, and environmental datasets. ArcGIS Pro is used to develop, manage, and curate these datasets, supporting advanced spatial analysis, data preparation, and cartographic production prior to publication to ArcGIS Online. ArcGIS Online supports a range of applications that advance Commission work, including interactive web maps used by Technical Working Groups for analysis and data integration, dashboards that visualize hydrologic conditions and environmental indicators, and StoryMaps that communicate basin conditions and Commission initiatives to governments and stakeholders. Basin Atlas
Development Team Biography
The modernization of the International Joint Commission’s geospatial program was led by Michael Thomas Laitta, Senior Physical Scientist and Director of the Commission’s Geospatial Program.
Michael joined the Commission in 2005 on detail from the U.S. Geological Survey, where he led the development of several national geospatial datasets supporting hydrologic analysis and water resource management. Drawing on a background in civil engineering and geomatics, he has spent nearly two decades advancing the use of geospatial technologies to support the Commission’s transboundary water governance mission.
At the Commission, Michael has led the development of a modern geospatial framework that integrates environmental monitoring data, watershed boundaries, hydrologic networks, and analytical tools across multiple international basins. His work focuses on improving the Commission’s ability to synthesize scientific information, support its Boards and Studies, and communicate complex water res