GeoComm talks School and Public Safety Solutions with Fort Bend GIS Consortium

Sugar Land City Hall – Cane Room, November 13, 2025 – The Fort Bend GIS Consortium (FBGISC) welcomed GeoComm as the featured presenter for the 2025 4th Quarter meeting. Represented by Mr. Larry Warner and supporting colleagues, GeoComm introduced members to their School Safety Mapping Solution, a modern, GIS-driven approach to improving situational awareness for public safety and school district partners.

In recent years, Texas has heightened its focus on school safety and emergency preparedness, most notably through House Bill 3 (HB 3), which strengthened requirements for safety planning, communication with first responders, and the maintenance of accurate facility information. GIS plays a central role in meeting these expectations. Up-to-date indoor maps, standardized symbology, evacuation layers, and room-level location awareness directly support the intent of HB 3 by giving emergency personnel the information they need before arriving on scene. Beyond compliance, modern GIS platforms materially improve public safety outcomes by enabling school districts, public safety agencies, and local governments to plan, train, and respond with greater precision. GeoComm’s School Safety Mapping Solution aligns with these needs by integrating building details, safety assets, and emergency protocols into a shared environment that strengthens coordination and improves protections for students, educators, and staff.

GeoComm’s solution combines a web-based map viewer and map data manager, enabling school districts and other facility owners to maintain floor plans, update points of interest, and manage safety-related assets with confidence. While major structural edits remain controlled for accuracy, the system empowers staff to make unlimited day-to-day updates-adding, moving, and renaming features as needed. Built on Esri’s ArcGIS platform, the solution leverages national standards for symbology and data structure, ensuring that maps are consistent, interoperable, and reliable for emergency response.

Feature highlights include support for multi-story facilities, a floor picker, customizable emergency protocol layers (rally points, evacuation routes, hazard areas, and more), PDF export for offline use, and robust user-management tools for handling sensitive information. Of particular interest to members was the platform’s ability to support real-time 911 call visualization, enabling dispatchers and first responders to view indoor locations down to the room level. Additional considerations-such as version control through saved PDFs, controlled data sharing with public safety partners, and secure APIs currently in development-demonstrated GeoComm’s commitment to accuracy and responsible information governance.

GeoComm also addressed several operational and future-facing elements of the solution. Although exporting lists of assets-such as AEDs or fire extinguishers-is not currently a native function, GeoComm can generate those reports upon request. Members also discussed multi-floor connectivity, evacuation routing conventions, floor plan-sharing workflows, and file format considerations during the Q&A.

As a regional consortium of over 16 public entities, FBGISC continues to serve as an established, collaborative resource for local governments evaluating geospatial technologies. While the consortium does not hold purchasing authority, our shared expertise and cross-jurisdictional experience position us to help member organizations-and, by extension, public administrators and elected officials-better understand the feasibility, value, and real-world impact of GIS solutions that safeguard our communities.

LJA Engineering presents to Fort Bend GIS Consortium

City of Sugar Land Regional Airport, May 15, 2025 – Mr. George Culver, Director of GIS at LJA Engineering (LJA) and the Industry Liaison to the Fort Bend GIS Consortium (FBGISC) presented to members and greater area partners on the leverage of GIS by LJA as the employee-owned company grew from 40 to over 2,000 employees over LJA’s 50+ years of business. Emphasizing LJA’s unofficial motto of Grow or Die, Mr. Culver guided attendees through the adoption and growth of GIS across every department and operation within LJA. Beginning with the all too familiar task of layering parcels over imagery, to the use of automated data processes, to the integration of company-wide communications into project packets complete with land history, parcel data, land development prospects, and existing trails of correspondence, LJA has not only leveraged existing GIS solutions available on the market, but pushed past the boundaries of what is available and supported the development of their own internal geospatial solutions and infrastructure.

Beyond their services, LJA invests into the next generation of engineers through internship opportunities and graduate programs. You can learn more about internship and early career programs here.

So, what did this presentation offer a consortium of public entities? It gave insight and example to how publicly sourced geospatial data is utilized in the private industry, and the potential for cost-savings that being proper data-stewards offers the public. The public investment in geospatial technologies offers similar return-on-investments as it has for LJA. While we, public entities, are not profit motivated, we are charged with leveraging existing and future resources to optimize operations that are critical to the public-at-large. From supporting disaster preparedness and response to simplifying animal-control operations, a small investment in public geospatial technologies can yield returns far beyond the initial cost and improve the lives of our residents.

It Takes a City! -Insights into Open Portal at the City of Sugar Land, TX

Fort Bend Chamber of Commerce, April 25, 2024 – Ms. Miriam Salazar of the City of Sugar Land (COSL) and the Vice Chairperson of the Fort Bend GIS Consortium (FBGISC) presented to members at out Q2 meeting on the Open Portal project by the City of Sugar Land. The presentation, which demonstrated the technology’s front and back-ends, provided insights into the planning, development, and implementation efforts that spanned nearly every department of the City of Sugar Land. These insights provided critical details to other local government representatives considering similar open portal efforts and encouraged in depth discussions among members. These kinds of presentations successfully targeted one of the core goals of FBGISC: collaboration between local government GIS offices.