AZSITE CONSORTIUM
Quarterly Meeting, CES, ASU
Wednesday, October 6, 1999
Minutes
Participants:
Michael Barton, ASU, presiding
Beth Grindell, ASM, recording
Peter McCartney, ASU
Steve Erdmann, MNA
Carol Griffith, SHPO, Chair
Jon Shumaker, Ak-Chin Indian Community
Ian Robertson, ASU
Cari Kreshak, Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community
Dallas D. Enos, Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community
Chad Smith, Fort Mohave Tribe
Gary Stumpf, BLM
Rick Karl, ASM
Jarren LeBeach, Ak-Chin Indian Community
Steve Ross, ASLD
Teresa Cadiente, ARS
Cathy Johnson, Arizona State Parks
Bill Doelle, Desert Archaeology
Erika Finbraaten, SHPO
William Collins, SHPO
Michael Ohnersorgen, SHPO
- The meeting was called to order at 9:35 am. Peter McCartney announced that there would
be a Database Committee meeting at 1 p.m. Carol Griffith introduced Michael Ohnersorgen as
the new SHPO Compliance Officer.
- Grindell and Karl moved and seconded that the minutes of the last meeting be accepted.
The minutes were unanimously approved without change.
- Enhancement Funds status report: Carol Griffith reported that the intergovernmental
agreement controlling use of ADOT Enhancement Funds was signed. The revised indirect costs
had been approved by all agencies. Funds became available in August, although SHPO
received an Order to Proceed that was backdated to May. Therefore, Heritage Funds
expenditures since May will count toward the non-reimbursable portion.
- Database Committee: Peter McCartney reported that the server has moved to CES and is now
on a VBNS (Internet 2 connection) network so connections should be faster. He is hoping
for a November 1 opening date. There is a new version of the Standalone database ready for
beta testing. It has a digitizing feature incorporated into the data entry form which
obviates the need for ArcView software. A data submission tracking system is in
development. There is an SDE problem in which multiple shapes and shape types corrupt
layers. ESRI engineers are aware of the problem and working on it. He plans to switch to
SQL 7.0 before replicating the system. On miscellaneous issues, he reported that a CAZMAL
grant for bibliographic records was not funded so that option for recording and retrieving
reports will not be available for a while. A database has been developed for environmental
bibliographies and its format may be adaptable to AZSITEs needs. There was general
discussion of the need to develop user technical support to deal with installation and
operations questions and to develop user friendly graphical search functions. Development
of reporting tools is on the backburner now and will probably be accomplished through
Visual Basic Java scripts.
- Management Committee: Michael Barton reported the recommendations of the 9/24/99
Management Committee meeting that when the Web interface is available for public use, a
letter including a user agreement will be sent out so that potential users may sign up for
accounts. The letter will state that AZSITE is in a public evaluation phase, for which no
charges will be made but that in six months a fee schedule will be put into place. Barton
then reviewed a draft Funding Plan that establishes priorities for essential system
components that can be used to allocate any available funds, whether from fees, grants, or
legislative apportionment. The top two priorities include a systems administrator at a
half-time level and hardware/software maintenance and upgrades. Other essential priorities
include administrative support and funding to member agencies for data entry and
verification. Second level priorities include increasing the systems administrator
position to full time, funding for hardware and software maintence for non-server related
needs and additional data entry, data management, and technical support personnel. The
Funding Plan includes a proposed fee structure and fee collection procedure. Gary Stumpf
noted that even if AZSITE does collect the projected $90,000 in fees it still leaves a
large portion of the $246,500 budget uncovered and that he hopes that grants, legislative
allocations, and federal monies can be found to cover some of that. Carol Griffith moved
to amend the plan by shifting a half-time data manager position into the first level
priorities. The amendment was approved unanimously; the revised Funding Plan is attached.
In response to a question from Chad Smith, several consortium members noted that it will
still be necessary for agencies to maintain paper records.
- Tribal Concerns Committee: Barton reviewed a draft policy concerning the handling of
archaeological and historical site data on tribal lands. As a general principle, no tribal
lands data will be available in the Cultural Resource Inventory for public viewing, unless
the AZSITE Consortium has the express written permission of the tribe. Various
modifications to wording were suggested. The revised Proposed Policy on Data about
Archaeological and Historic Sites on Tribal Lands and the AZSITE Cultural Resource
Inventory is attached. The policy will be sent to tribes for comment and posted to the
AZSITE web site (http://azsite.asu.edu). It will be
reviewed again in the January meeting.
- The next meeting will be January 11, 2000, at the Arizona State Museum, Tucson, at 9:30
a.m.
AZSite Funding Plan
Approved 6 October 1999
Overview
With the AZSite Culural Resources Inventory on the brink of beginning a public
evaluation and use phase, we need to plan for the long-term maintenance and development of
the system. We previously decided to support the system through a mix of user fees,
grants, and other sources. Of these, user fees most appropriately should go towards
maintenance and improvement of the core components of the AZSite system. While we can make
rough estimates of possible user fee income, based on data from ASM, this is a new service
for the state and we need to be cautious in our budgetary planning based on fee income.
Hence, we are proposing a plan to fund a series of core system components in order of
priority as fees are collected.
Priorities for the Distribution of AZSite User Fees
AZSite funding priorities are initially divided into two categories: a suite of items
that are essential to the successful operation of the AZSite Cultural Resources Inventory
and a second group of items that are needed for the longer-term maintenance and
improvement of the system--especially in terms of data quality and ease of user access.
Within each category, items are ranked in order of funding importance. We propose that
each item be funded only after the funding of all higher priority items. In this way we
can ensure that available user fees go to support the most essential components, while
maintaining the possibility of funding longer-term needs.
Annual Funding for Essential System Components (minimal needed to
launch and operate the AZSite Cultural Resources Inventory on a day to day basis)
| First priority: System Administrator, to be funded initially at 0.5 FTE for up to
$32,500 ($25,000 plus benefits) depending on skills and training. |
| Second priority: Up to $10,000 for hardware/software maintenance. The AZSite server and
related software has priority over other uses (such as workstations) for this fund. |
| Third priority: Administrative and technical assistant to handle user accounts and fee
income. Can also assist System Administrator in support roles. To be funded at 0.5 FTE for
up to $16,250 ($12,500 plus benefits) depending on skills and training. |
| Fourth priority: Up to $10,000 to consortium member institutions on an as needed basis
to support data entry, cleaning, and management. |
| Fifth priority: Data manager, to be funded initially at 0.5 FTE for up to $26,000
($20,000 plus benefits) depending on skills an training |
Total annual funding needs for essential system components: $94,750
Annual Funding for Long-Term System Maintenance and Development
| First priority: Increase System Administrator to 1.0 FTE (up to $32,500) |
| Second priority: An additional $9,000 for hardware/software maintenance for non-server
related needs (e.g., workstation or software upgrades). Initial hardware and software
maintenance fund of $10,000 to be dedicated to AZSite server maintenance and upgrades. |
| Third priority: Three data entry and management, and user technical support positions to
be funded at 2.5 FTE for up to $120,250 (Initial $10,000 would be included in this sum). |
Total additional long-term annual funding needs: $161,750
Total initial and long-term AZSite annual funding needs: $246,500
User Agreement Approval and Fee Collection Procedures
This is a brief overview of these procedures. More detailed information will accompany
user agreement application forms and will be posted on the AZSite WWW site.
User agreements for access to the AZSite Cultural Resources Inventory will be made at
the level of organizations or departments within organizations (e.g., CRM firms,
archaeology divisions within CRM firms, government agencies, etc.) and signed by a
responsible party within the organization. The organization or department receiving a user
agreement is responsible for ensuring that the terms of the agreement are met, and for the
proper use of any individual user accounts issued under that agreement. Sanctions for
violating the terms of the user agreement (e.g., suspension or revocation of the
agreement) will be made at the level of the organization or department signing the
agreement.
Potential users will complete a user agreement and send it to the Arizona State
Historic Preservation Office for review and approval. Upon approval, relevant user fees
will be sent to the AZSite System Administrator's office at Arizona State University.
After fee payment has been received, the appropriate user accounts will be activated.
Funding will dispersed to other AZSite Consoritum member institutions according to the
priorities outlined above.
Under the current proposed plan, user fees will be paid on an annual basis. A proposed
fee structure is outlined below. These fees may be adjusted depending on the AZSite
Consortium's success in obtaining additional funding and the costs of ensuring data
quality and usability.
Proposed Initial User Fee Structure
The proposed fee structure takes into account the logistics of billing and managing
user accounts along with estimated system costs. We currently favor a set of flat annual
fees for access by users for an unlimited time within the year. To help maintain security
and discourage individuals sharing user accounts (prohibited by the user agreement), no
single user accounts will be offered. Our goal is to keep user fees as low as possible
while providing a high quality, secure service; we will structure our fees according.
However, we are making the initial, proposed fee structure public for the benefit of
potential users who wish to begin to plan for use of the AZSite Cultural Resources
Inventory.
User
category |
accounts
per user agreement |
estimated
number in category* |
annual
fee |
monthly
fee per user |
Projected
annual income |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Small users |
3 |
38 |
$750
|
$21 |
$28,500 |
Medium users |
9 |
6 |
$1,800
|
$17 |
$10,800 |
Large users |
unlimited |
17 |
$3,000
|
$13 |
$51,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total fees |
|
61 |
|
|
$90,300 |
*User estimates are based on data from Arizona State Museum.
Proposed policy ON DATA ABOUT
ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORIC SITES ON tribal LANDS
AND THE AZSITE CULTURAL RESOURCE INVENTORY
AZSITE Consortium, October 1999
Background
For decades, the four members of the AZSITE Consortiumthe Arizona State Museum,
Arizona State University Department of Anthropology, the Museum of Northern Arizona, and
the State Historic Preservation Officehave archived and managed information about
archaeological and historic sites, and about archaeological surveys within the State of
Arizona. This always has included information about sites on federal, state, tribal,
municipal, and private land. These members have made this information available to bona
fide archaeologists and cultural resource managers under their institutional policies and
applicable State and Federal statutes. This information has been maintained and made
available at the member institutions/agencies for the two related goals of preserving
archaeological and historic resources and using these resources to gain a better
understanding of the human past. Historically, the users of this information have
regularly included archaeologists and historians from federal, state and local government;
private cultural resource management agencies; representatives of tribal cultural resource
offices; and trained archaeologist and historian researchers.
This site and survey information was originally collected and archived on paper and
photographic media. In the last few decades, a subset of this information has been put
into digital format at all the member institutions to improve their abilities to properly
manage and more effectively use this information. Nevertheless, archiving archaeological
and historic site data at four (and even more) institutions and in different data formats
led to inevitable overlapping records, misrecorded sites, and other errors. It also made
the effective use of the four data sets very difficult for bona fide users. In 1995 the
four member institutions and agency entered into a formal agreement to share the
information about archaeological and historic sites and surveys previously archived at
each locale in a single database in order to better achieve the purposes for which this
information was originally collected and maintained. This was the formation of the AZSITE
Consortium.
This data sharing agreement involved information already archived (or being submitted
for archiving) to the consortium members and data formats (i.e., digital) already being
used for managing that information. While developing a master database to incorporate all
participants data, the Consortium has held regular meetings to solicit input from
potential users in federal, state, local, tribal, and private agencies. Meeting
participants have raised concerns about security, access, quality, and intellectual
property rights for this information. All of these concerns have been addressed by the
consortium during the development of the AZSITE Cultural Resources Inventory over the past
four years and many have been solved to the satisfaction of all concerned.
One set of concerns that has not yet been resolved involves information about
archaeological and historic sites and surveys on tribal lands, that was archived and
managed by consortium member institutions/agency prior to the formation of the AZSITE
Consortium. Specifically, these concerns involve who should have access to these data, who
should decide questions of access, and where and in what ways these data should be
managed. Further, information about tribal sites and surveys have differing kinds of
importance for different constituencies. For example, this information includes:
| information maintained and augmented, and often compiled, through the time and effort of
the staffs of the institution/agency where they were originally archived; |
| information needed by the Historic Preservation Office to fulfill statutory obligations;
|
| information comprising the cultural heritage of Native American tribes; |
| information collection paid for and/or permitted by federal (i.e., non-tribal) agencies; |
| and research data for scientists studying the human past. |
Furthermore, under Federal and State laws this information is deemed worthy of
protection because it comprises the legacy of the human past important to all people.
Several of these different constituencies have made at least informal claims of
intellectual property rights over this information. These concerns have been the topic of
numerous discussions between the consortium members, representatives of government
agencies, tribal representatives, and other interested parties. Given the remaining
concerns about sites and surveys on tribal lands, the AZSITE Consortium felt it wise to
issue a policy statement outlining the consensus arrived at after several years of
discussing this issue.
In establishing a policy toward information from archaeological and historic sites and
surveys on tribal lands, the AZSITE Consortium has followed several guiding principals.
| The AZSITE Consortium is fundamentally an agreement and mechanism for sharing data among
the member institutions/agency and disseminating it to relevant users (i.e., the AZSITE
Cultural Resources Inventory). Hence, it does not have basis, legal or otherwise for
deciding conflicting claims of intellectual hegemony over information contributed by the
consortium members. Such claims are most appropriately settled at the level of the
particular member institution or agency which originally archived and managed relevant
data--often for decades. |
| The AZSITE Consortium has no statutory obligation to share or not share site and
historic sites data with other institutions, and no statutory obligation to consult with
any land manager about access policies to information about archaeological and historic
sites and surveys on the land for which the manager is responsible. |
| Nevertheless, the AZSITE Consortium has come to a consensus agreement that it is to the
benefit of land managers, users, and data contributors if the information made available
in the AZSITE Cultural Resources Inventory is, to the extent possible, present with the
common consent of the contributors and those responsible for the land on which the
relevant sites are located. |
| The AZSITE Consortium does not have the legal authority to enforce cultural resource
statutes or compel AZSITE users to comply with such statutes. However, it can prevent
access to the Cultural Resources Inventory to any users misusing the information from the
inventory in violation of a signed user agreement, or? of any applicable statutes, or in
contravention of the purposes for which the information was compiled and shared by the
member institutions/agency. |
| The AZSITE Consortium members contributed information from their own institutions/agency
in good faith, for the benefit of the broader user constituency, often at considerable
expense, and with the expectation that their own access to these same data would not be
restricted. |
Policy
With express, official tribal permission, the AZSITE Consortium will manage and make
available to approved AZSITE users information about archaeological and historic
properties on tribal land in Arizona. The AZSITE Consortium is highly concerned for the
preservation of all cultural resources and will manage any information about tribal sites
with the same care that it affords information about archaeological and historic places on
other lands. The AZSITE Consortium is not currently able to manage or make available such
site information from tribal lands in a manner different from other site information.
- Without express, official tribal permission, the AZSITE Consortium will not make
available to AZSITE users via the AZSITE Cultural Resource Inventory information about
sites on tribal lands.
Currently, for technological and security reasons, all pre-existing (i.e.,
"legacy") data on historic and archaeological sites contributed by members of
the AZSITE Consortium has been (and is still being) loaded into a master holding database
for checking and data cleaning prior to making it available in the AZSITE Cultural
Resource Inventory. Any such pre-existing information about historic and archaeological
properties on tribal lands will not be transferred to the AZSITE Cultural Resources
Inventory without express, official tribal approval. Nor will it be deleted from this
holding database without an agreement to do so between the tribe and the contributing
institution or agency.
- The AZSITE Cultural Resource Inventory comprises shared information contributed by
AZSITE Consortium members, and all AZSITE Consortium institutions potentially have access
to the master holding database. Access to any cultural resource information maintained
internally by a member institution is governed by the policies of that institution and all
applicable state and federal statutes. Hence, each AZSITE Consortium member will not
release information in the holding database contributed by other member institutions, to
the extent that it can be determined, about archaeological and historic sites on tribal
lands without the express permission of the source institution or agency.
Because a single, central database affords greater security and permits more effective
management and preservation of cultural resources, the AZSITE Consortium encourages
Arizona tribes to contribute information on historic and archaeological properties to the
AZSITE Cultural Resources Inventory. For tribes who may choose to manage such information
themselves, the current standards and data structures of the AZSITE Cultural Resources
Inventory are open and freely available.
- However, it is not the responsibility of the AZSITE Consortium to ensure compatibility
between the AZSITE Cultural Resources Inventory and cultural resources data sets
independently maintained by tribes or other institutions. Nor is it the responsibility of
the AZSITE Consortium to ensure that data not contributed to the AZSITE Cultural
Resources Inventory is made available to local, state, or federal agencies responsible for
compliance with statues and regulations pertaining to cultural resource management.
|