AZSITE Quarterly
Meeting
Arizona State
Parks
Minutes
April 21, 2004
Present:
Michael Barton, ASU, presiding
Carol Griffith, SHPO
Ron Savage, URS Corporation
Rod Rothrock, Cochise County
Sheriff’s Department
Patrick Lyons, Center for Desert Archaeology
Jim Cogswell, Northland Research,
Inc.
David Wilcox, MNA
Beth Grindell, ASM, recording
Rick Karl, ASM
Ingrid Klune, Tierra Right of Way
Matthew Bilsbarrow, SHPO
Andrea Stahman, Northland
Research, Inc.
The minutes of the January meeting were approved on motion
and second from Grindell and Barton.
Old Business
- Grants
and ISAs:
On suggestion of Carol Griffith, we will be updating and renewing
the AZSITE founding MOA and intergovernmental agreements between ASP, ASU
and ASM; and the memorandum of agreement between Arizona
State Parks and the Museum
of Northern Arizona.
- Database
Committee:
- Rick
Karl reported on the most common errors made in submitting electronic
data.
i.
Spacing within ASM site numbers
ii.
Completion of the on-line form that notifies ASM that
records are being sent. Naming it AZSITE
makes it very difficult to separate various agency projects. Using the project name is the preferred
naming convention.
iii.
National Register evaluation: if you do not make a recommendation, please
enter “not evaluated” rather than leaving it blank.
iv.
Make sure to check the update box if the site record is
an update so that it can be routed differently into the database as an update
rather than a new site.
- Karl
noted that we do not change any data submitted, although we may
re-arrange some of it.
- Karl
reported on new features recently added to AZSITE:
i.
Users can now search for sites or reports associated
with various reports.
ii.
The “search by report” function provides a list of
sites included in the report.
iii.
Report references get entered immediately, as do
project registration forms, so these are available very quickly.
iv.
Try ASM’s LARC for literature
searches; it now contains over 9000 references to Arizona
archaeology. Site names and numbers can
be searched through LARC, as can year, author, subject, company name.
v.
Map search application changes include a list of sites
or surveys now linked to attribute data in a related window.
vi.
There is an updated help menu, much more extensive than
the earlier version.
vii.
There is an “Export to Excel” button to allow you to
download attribute data to an Excel spreadsheet.
viii.
The map now prints in landscape format, showing
whatever you see on the screen, and users can control whether the legend prints
or not.
- Karl
reported on upcoming features:
i.
“We are that close to getting the 7.5’ USGS maps
on-line.” We were waiting for the server
move so that domain name and IP addresses did not have to be changed, but since
the move date is uncertain so will go ahead with this.
ii.
Getting SHPO’s historic
districts on-line is a SHPO priority.
iii.
ASM’s summer projects include
uploading MNA data, getting Santa Cruz County data uploaded (courtesy of help
from the UA College of Architecture and the Center for Desert Archaeology) and a
list of data missing so users can determine where they need to do a paper
search, as well as checking AZSITE.
iv.
BLM’s Arizona Strip data
should be on-line by the end of the year.
v.
BLM is collaborating with AZSITE to develop a handheld
computer AZSITE data entry module that BLM can use in field work on its IPACs.
vi.
Karl has been working with Forest
archaeologists to develop a program that can populate both the Forest
database and AZSITE.
- Karl
reported that a new records search form is on –line and he requests that
users complete that. We also need
a map with requests, either electronic or hand. Too frequently when we take requests in
verbal form without supporting map boundaries, inevitably we end up
re-doing the request due to misunderstandings of the scope.
- Karl
reported on areas that have recently received extensive data entry focus,
including Yuma Proving Grounds, the N quads and the Safford and Sierra
Vista BLM Field Office areas.
- Griffith
asked about inconvenience of having maps out of circulation for
scanning. Cogswell
noted that we need to find the balance between SHPO convenience and speed
so contractors can see them.
- If
we put site maps on line Savage asked that we consider using jpg file
format so that users can insert such maps into reports and over-label
them, which cannot be done in PDF file formats.
- Savage
asked if it is possible to make this portable across CE platforms. Barton suggested that we might make
this open source licensed for use by others, with credit to AZSITE.
- Financial
report
- Grindell
reported on AZSITE income. Over the past fiscal year, since July 1, 2003, AZSITE user fees
brought in $39,745, of which 15% is retained by the University
of Arizona to cover
administrative costs. The
Consortium board voted to allocate $24,300 of this amount to assist with
salary and employee related costs of managing the system. Barton requested and will receive some
funds to cover the costs of inputting ASU project data, to be done this
summer. He will bill ASM for the
costs, to be paid from the AZSITE user fees.
- Barton
reported on plans for funding upcoming other improvements: SHPO historic districts (through SHPO
salary lines),
- Other
sources of funds: BLM funding for
the ASU GIS lab, ASM’s records repository fees
cover student wages.
- Tribal
data report: Karl reported that
tribal site data are removed from the database, not merely filtered out,
and not available through the database.
New Business
- Site
updates and corrections: As a term
of the annual Users License, users agree to provide updated information to
AZSITE (via ASM) for any site visits or work on sites (excavation, survey,
testing). It is not necessary to
complete a full site record, but recorders should note why they went there
and what got done. This is critical
to tracking who visited a site, and how the history of the site changes
over time. There are plans to add a
boundary update field so that we can track who reports site boundaries and
when. Griffith
raised the issue of whether site steward information on their visits gets
into the relevant records. Wilcox
suggests that the first step would be to get the site steward’s name into
the database so that people checking the record knows to check SHPO
records completed by site stewards.
- Patrick
Lyons introduced Ron Rothrock of the Cochise
County Sheriff’s Department. Rothrock and colleagues have noted an increase in
vandalism sites on state lands and have been partnering with the State
land Department on training for monitoring and prosecuting destruction of
archaeological sites. It would be
helpful for them to have some sort of site location information, directly
or through sensitivity maps, scaled to the six substations of Cochise
County, for use by the
deputies in each area as to which areas are sensitive and need to be
monitored. Rothrock
noted that if law enforcement is not aware of sites in an area, they won’t
know which lands need to be monitored for that type of illegal activity,
versus other activities that may not be destructive of archaeological
sites. Griffith
commented on issue of need to protect the site location information. Barton discussed the need to be able to
provide law enforcement with information they need while assuring
ourselves that the information is being properly protected. Lyons
discussed issues of the larger view of collaborating with law enforcement
in an educational way that benefits the sites. He has been working to provide training
to law enforcement, similar to the training for site stewards who are not,
as sheriff’s employees are, licensed law enforcement officers. They would not need access to database,
just areas, Barton would like to know how they would protect the
information. Griffith
described the CLG process, as part of which a staff person is designated
to be the AZSITE user. Rothrock described briefly the screening process that
Sheriffs must go through to ensure integrity, which is undoubtedly greater
than site stewards must go through.
Barton urged the development of an intergovernmental agreement to
allow us to work together. Grindell
noted that we have spent 8 years looking for ways to keep people out of
the database, for the best protection of the data, but that law endowment
officials are the kind of people we need to collaborate with. We need to do education on both
sides. Lyons
circulated a letter from Chris Roll, the Cochise County Attorney, urging collaboration with AZSITE managers for the
benefit of archaeological site protection.
Barton and Griffith noted that County land crosscuts multiple
jurisdictions and we would need to know that we have permission from other
jurisdictions for reviewing data. Rothrock noted that BLM has come to the Cochise County
Sheriff’s office to seek collaboration on site protection. Cogswell
raised the issue of the level of data they may need. What kind of information would laws
enforcement need about a site? How
quickly does law enforcement need information? If they carry GPS equipment, can they
use it to report location and get information on nearby sites. How quickly is the information that law
enforcement gets updated? How
quickly is good enough? Rothrock noted that paper maps, updated quarterly or
semi-annually, in the control of the sergeant and lieutenant, would be an
appropriate source of information.
In response to a question from Klune, Griffith
noted that when vandalism is discovered it needs to be reported to the
land manager. Griffith
is concerned that we make sure that federal agencies be brought into the
discussions; Rothrock commented that BLM wants
to develop an agreement and that the State Land Department is eager for
collaboration. Fort
Huachuca maintains exclusive
jurisdiction so that would not be a subject for discussion. Other federal agencies that need to be
included are the National Park Service and the Forest Service. Barton asked for a proposal from Cochise
County with specifics about
what kind of information they need, what other agencies would need to be
involved, and how the information would be protected. Griffith
discussed the possible need for a meeting of federal and state agencies
that have data that AZSITE contains.
AZSITE is very interested in participating and we appreciate the
support of the Cochise County Sheriff’s office.
Next meeting: Wednesday, August 4, 2004, Museum
of Northern Arizona, Flagstaff
Agenda: SHPO undertakings numbers
Legislation
Attachment: Letter
dated 4/19/04 from Chris M.
Roll, Cochise County Attorney