Here in the UK there is a growing momentum in the move towards using 
FOSS/FOSS4G (QGIS / Geoserver / MapServer / PostgreSQL / PostGIS / OpenLayers / 
Leaflet / etc / etc) in local government (and central government too).  This is 
being driven by a number of factors - open formats/standards vs proprietary 
lock-in, flexibility vs more static processes, robustness/reliability/speed of 
development vs more static release schedules.  Cost plays a small part.

There is also a (small) pool of companies starting to offer support services 
for desktop and web GIS, open source databases, and consultancy specialising in 
FOSS4G.  Some of these companies also offer enterprise solutions (intranet and 
internet mapping, database backend, web services, back-office integration) 
based on a full FOSS4G stack.

As for paying for all this - the subscription model is gaining in popularity as 
more and more is being offered in the cloud as a remotely hosted and managed 
service.

If you want some examples of solutions and offerings being made here have a 
look at:
* https://astuntechnology.com/
* http://www.thinkwhere.com
* http://www.lutraconsulting.co.uk/
* https://www.esdm.co.uk/
* 
https://www.digitalmarketplace.service.gov.uk/search?lot=saas&showSubcategories=true
 (search "GIS" or "mapping")

Cheers

Ross

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Steve G
Sent: 11 June 2015 21:29
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Qgis-user] Local Government for QGIS

I am not sure this is the correct forum for a start to this discussion, but 
I've been pondering this for a while and interested what others think.  I work 
for local government in the U.S. and when people generally talk about GIS there 
is no doubt an automatic association with the ESRI ArcGIS platform.  And beyond 
GIS itself, the dominance that ESRI has is even more pronounced given the fact 
that many cities have implemented other related systems (permitting, computer 
aided dispatch, etc) that are identified business partners with ESRI.  
Furthermore, the "GIS Local Government" track that ESRI developed has evolved 
to offer an "turnkey" approach for local government self-service to establish a 
robust geodatabase (Local Government Information Model), maps, apps, web 
services, etc.  This extends a COTS approach for local governments to 
establish, develop, and maintain a fairly complete GIS.  In my opinion, pure 
genius...because for a lot of small cities/governments with limited staff and
  budget, the turnkey approach is very appealing.  For city bureaucrats 
thinking about implementing/extending GIS, what they might think as little $$$ 
and you get all of this?
Awesome...here's my money.

HOWEVER, this approach has its drawbacks.  Long-term license/use costs, vendor 
lock-in, continuous waiting for someone at the company to fix 
something....well, the list goes on (just read any blog post supporting open 
source/FOSS).

So, with the evolution of QGIS as a prevailing replacement/alternative for the 
other product, is anyone thinking about building more of a turnkey approach 
(database, maps, apps, web services, etc) geared to local governments?  I like 
the direction of the OpenGeo platform (and others) trying to provide the whole 
software stack, but still if a small local government wants to have a full 
fledged interactive GIS, it might seem like a lot of work to develop and 
maintain.

I am interested in other thoughts...perhaps this belongs on a blog post 
somewhere more independent, but perhaps this can be a place to begin.

Steve G.



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