Video Timeline (min:sec):
00:00 - 10:00 Introductory banter
10:00 - 22:00 Importing council data - East Suffolk Council as an example
22:00 - 25:30 file imports into XMAP - shapefiles
25:30 - 34:00 using polygons in PO - examples from Nether Stowey
34:00 - 36:00 searching layers
36:00 - 47:25 pipes, nodes, water systems, flooding
47:25 - 54:00 recording development in PO - Stoke Mandeville as example, with roads, HS2, multiple housing estates, green spaces
54:00 - 65:00 biodiversity, EPCs, aerial photography
65:00 - 67:00 Case Histories
67:00 - 74:00 (end) banter, EPC legends, feedback on Knowledgebase
Presentation - none this week
Chat session:
00:03:16 Ray Toomer: RayToomer@gmail.com
00:22:56 Stuart Bacon: https://support.safe.com/hc/en-us/articles/25407718223373-How-to-Convert-Microsoft-Excel-to-Esri-Shapefile
00:23:56 Angie Bamford: I'll be back in a bit
00:24:07 Helen Davey: Reacted to "I'll be back in a bi..." with 👍
00:45:42 Bob Grainger: Sorry, I have to go now. See you all again soon (ish).
00:46:48 Angie Bamford: The Landowner may know where the pipes are?
01:03:41 Stuart Bacon: I'm interested 0
1:07:56 John Roberts: https://www.parish-online.co.uk/case-studies
Speech to text:
WEBVTT
1 00:00:51.060 --> 00:00:51.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hi. Chris.
2 00:00:52.200 --> 00:00:53.860 chris edwards: Oh, good afternoon, Graham.
3 00:00:54.130 --> 00:00:55.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: As well.
4 00:00:55.360 --> 00:00:57.440 chris edwards: Yes, very well, thank you very much.
5 00:00:58.300 --> 00:01:00.350 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Sunny sunset, still, sunny.
6 00:01:00.660 --> 00:01:04.054 chris edwards: Oh, no, Cloud Cloud, I'm afraid.
7 00:01:07.549 --> 00:01:10.919 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And I guess we have Ray there, but he's all
8 00:01:11.349 --> 00:01:12.439 Graham Stoddart-Stones: quiet.
9 00:01:15.280 --> 00:01:16.710 Ray Toomer: Hello! Can you hear me?
10 00:01:17.370 --> 00:01:18.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No
11 00:01:18.420 --> 00:01:19.035 Graham Stoddart-Stones: good.
12 00:01:19.780 --> 00:01:21.869 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good afternoon, Ray. How are you?
13 00:01:22.190 --> 00:01:24.109 Ray Toomer: Very well, thank you very much.
14 00:01:24.240 --> 00:01:24.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good.
15 00:01:25.300 --> 00:01:32.650 Ray Toomer: Yeah, I'm here as a complete novice. I know nothing, and I don't know what I don't know, but I thought I might just
16 00:01:32.780 --> 00:01:35.879 Ray Toomer: tap in and try and glean something.
17 00:01:37.360 --> 00:01:38.779 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's fine.
18 00:01:44.120 --> 00:01:48.759 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, your your email address doesn't give away where you are, Ray. Whereabouts are you.
19 00:01:48.760 --> 00:01:50.239 Ray Toomer: I'm in pittany.
20 00:01:51.620 --> 00:01:52.959 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, in Somerset.
21 00:01:53.200 --> 00:01:53.920 Ray Toomer: Yes.
22 00:01:53.920 --> 00:01:55.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: At Pitney. Okay?
23 00:01:55.770 --> 00:01:57.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, I know that very well.
24 00:01:57.700 --> 00:01:58.830 Ray Toomer: No very good.
25 00:01:59.350 --> 00:02:01.590 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, until recently I was in Long Sutton.
26 00:02:01.860 --> 00:02:02.900 Ray Toomer: Okay.
27 00:02:03.876 --> 00:02:11.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So are you the only user or potential user of parish online in pitney? Or is that somebody else already using it?
28 00:02:12.101 --> 00:02:18.420 Ray Toomer: I don't think anyone else is currently using it, and I'm sort of associated with the biodiversity
29 00:02:18.600 --> 00:02:20.749 Ray Toomer: subgroup of the parish.
30 00:02:20.920 --> 00:02:24.139 Ray Toomer: and we're just looking to see how we might use it.
31 00:02:25.670 --> 00:02:31.579 Ray Toomer: And, as I say, I don't know what I don't know, so I'm just here to try and get a view as to how we might use it.
32 00:02:31.790 --> 00:02:36.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well join the usual group of ignoramuses. Can I.
33 00:02:36.030 --> 00:02:42.360 Andrew Clegg: Quickly jump in and introduce myself to to to Ray. I'm from Martok
34 00:02:43.350 --> 00:02:54.559 Andrew Clegg: and what I want to. What Ca, can can you put in the chat your email address because I have a fairly urgent message to get to the environment grouping pitney.
35 00:02:54.910 --> 00:02:55.265 Ray Toomer: Okay.
36 00:02:57.290 --> 00:02:59.109 Ray Toomer: okay, how to do it in here.
37 00:03:00.700 --> 00:03:05.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, Richard, good afternoon, and you are now an unemployed person.
38 00:03:06.220 --> 00:03:06.780 Helen Davey: Why?
39 00:03:06.780 --> 00:03:08.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You're happy with that.
40 00:03:09.154 --> 00:03:16.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: all right, but it's very lovely to see you. We're very pleased.
41 00:03:17.390 --> 00:03:18.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Great stuff.
42 00:03:19.620 --> 00:03:21.120 Ex Clerk: They'll own. And Uber
43 00:03:22.380 --> 00:03:24.489 Ex Clerk: new man started today. So.
44 00:03:24.710 --> 00:03:25.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
45 00:03:25.260 --> 00:03:29.680 Ex Clerk: I'll be about. I'll be about for a day or 2. Well, an hour or 2, because of carnival.
46 00:03:31.960 --> 00:03:33.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Carnival ritual.
47 00:03:33.050 --> 00:03:34.360 Andrew Clegg: Oh, gosh!
48 00:03:34.360 --> 00:03:34.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
49 00:03:35.560 --> 00:03:39.200 Ex Clerk: What did you say? You didn't mention that swear word, did you.
50 00:03:44.580 --> 00:03:46.529 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hi John Hi Karen, Helen.
51 00:03:46.530 --> 00:03:47.560 John Roberts: Afternoon.
52 00:03:49.110 --> 00:03:51.650 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The Guy Fawkes Carnival. Right?
53 00:03:53.470 --> 00:03:56.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So is that completely independent of Bridgewater.
54 00:03:57.390 --> 00:04:01.470 Ex Clerk: You've mentioned that swear word again. This is not good enough.
55 00:04:01.470 --> 00:04:03.630 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, I thought you were swearing at Andrew.
56 00:04:04.370 --> 00:04:04.960 Ex Clerk: What?
57 00:04:09.700 --> 00:04:12.220 chris edwards: Can you send us a photograph of your float.
58 00:04:13.310 --> 00:04:16.060 Ex Clerk: Oh, another swear word!
59 00:04:19.510 --> 00:04:20.120 chris edwards: It, took.
60 00:04:20.120 --> 00:04:24.130 Ex Clerk: Cart, Chris, but it's not a car. I don't do carts. I do. Organizing.
61 00:04:24.210 --> 00:04:28.550 Ex Clerk: We're the. We're the event organizers. We're not. We're not participants in that way.
62 00:04:28.550 --> 00:04:29.770 chris edwards: Alright. Okay.
63 00:04:31.250 --> 00:04:32.300 Ex Clerk: Volunteers.
64 00:04:32.300 --> 00:04:33.100 Bob Grainger: Hello!
65 00:04:33.690 --> 00:04:42.889 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So. Mr. Ex. Clerk, there is a lady in North Fetherton called Amanda, who called me up the other day to say
66 00:04:43.240 --> 00:04:50.989 Graham Stoddart-Stones: when she was so pleased with the gullies and the new table view that she was desperate to export them into a spreadsheet.
67 00:04:51.060 --> 00:04:59.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then the spreadsheet, although it cheerfully said it was exporting. 313 records arrived completely empty at the far end.
68 00:04:59.690 --> 00:05:00.320 Helen Davey: Cool.
69 00:05:00.830 --> 00:05:03.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I was able to direct her to
70 00:05:04.120 --> 00:05:06.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: support@geosphere.com.
71 00:05:07.060 --> 00:05:07.760 Ex Clerk: Hmm.
72 00:05:08.130 --> 00:05:14.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But if anyone else has issues with exporting from table view, I'd love to hear about it. Please.
73 00:05:16.130 --> 00:05:20.410 Helen Davey: I don't have trouble exporting, but I have sent you an email rather late.
74 00:05:20.410 --> 00:05:26.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I saw that, and I thought it was well worth our discussing, and the call Helen.
75 00:05:26.260 --> 00:05:27.000 Helen Davey: Yes.
76 00:05:27.000 --> 00:05:27.794 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So
77 00:05:29.330 --> 00:05:43.839 Graham Stoddart-Stones: let me just welcome Ray as a newcomer to the group. He has insufficient knowledge of parish online to even know what he doesn't know, so I'm not going to ask him for any questions. But, Philip.
78 00:05:43.890 --> 00:05:50.919 Graham Stoddart-Stones: welcome to you, and I always start these sessions by saying, Arthur, did you arrive at any questions that you wanted, answered.
79 00:05:51.818 --> 00:05:55.160 philip wilson: I really have no idea
80 00:05:55.420 --> 00:05:57.659 philip wilson: what how to use it. I've a brief.
81 00:05:57.970 --> 00:06:01.030 philip wilson: basic knowledge from one of our
82 00:06:01.430 --> 00:06:05.370 philip wilson: colleagues over my colleagues at Wooden Town council.
83 00:06:06.760 --> 00:06:10.349 philip wilson: But yeah, very limited knowledge of parish online. To be honest.
84 00:06:10.350 --> 00:06:12.405 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Alright. Well, that's
85 00:06:13.670 --> 00:06:16.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Basically the wrong answers from both of you.
86 00:06:16.190 --> 00:06:16.770 philip wilson: Perfect.
87 00:06:16.770 --> 00:06:20.379 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We're supposed to arrive loaded with questions. So we've got something to talk about.
88 00:06:20.715 --> 00:06:21.050 philip wilson: Alright!
89 00:06:22.340 --> 00:06:23.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I will just.
90 00:06:23.260 --> 00:06:25.299 philip wilson: From the beginning, because start from the beginning.
91 00:06:26.023 --> 00:06:28.916 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, there are the
92 00:06:30.580 --> 00:06:38.849 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There are free demonstrations of what parish online can do every Wednesday, and I'll happily send you the link to that, if you wish.
93 00:06:38.850 --> 00:06:40.300 philip wilson: Perfect. Yeah, just because you know.
94 00:06:40.300 --> 00:06:42.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: View of what's possible.
95 00:06:42.210 --> 00:06:42.630 philip wilson: Yeah.
96 00:06:42.969 --> 00:06:46.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then where you want to go from. There is.
97 00:06:47.040 --> 00:06:49.259 philip wilson: We obviously do use it as a council.
98 00:06:49.929 --> 00:06:56.810 philip wilson: Quite, quite often. But as my responsibility, I'm the buildings facilities manager.
99 00:06:58.110 --> 00:07:02.769 philip wilson: It normally gets delegated someone up to someone else, but in the
100 00:07:03.450 --> 00:07:08.240 philip wilson: extreme circumstances where she might be absent, or whatever, then I would need to use it. So
101 00:07:09.469 --> 00:07:12.469 philip wilson: so I need to be up to date with it, really, to be honest. So
102 00:07:12.860 --> 00:07:13.890 philip wilson: that's my
103 00:07:15.010 --> 00:07:17.143 philip wilson: so reason for being here.
104 00:07:17.570 --> 00:07:19.629 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, well, we we could
105 00:07:19.780 --> 00:07:22.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: well ask somebody to demonstrate.
106 00:07:22.180 --> 00:07:22.750 philip wilson: Yeah.
107 00:07:22.750 --> 00:07:27.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What you can do with it. Let me just check with
108 00:07:27.960 --> 00:07:33.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Bob. Do you need to get a word in sideways before you have to run away?
109 00:07:34.610 --> 00:07:35.610 Bob Grainger: no.
110 00:07:36.440 --> 00:07:38.980 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, God! You're struck down by the lurkey, aren't you?
111 00:07:38.980 --> 00:07:39.969 Bob Grainger: I have. Yes.
112 00:07:39.970 --> 00:07:41.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You sound revolting, that.
113 00:07:41.960 --> 00:07:45.110 Bob Grainger: I will keep my hand over my face whenever I speak.
114 00:07:48.050 --> 00:07:48.860 Ex Clerk: You too.
115 00:07:53.230 --> 00:07:58.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right. So any of the usual suspects want to make a point, ask a question, do something useful.
116 00:07:59.370 --> 00:08:08.159 Ex Clerk: 2,000 2,000 332,476 gullies for North Paladins, without any trouble at all.
117 00:08:08.520 --> 00:08:09.380 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Did you?
118 00:08:09.750 --> 00:08:12.637 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay? So maybe it was something about
119 00:08:13.060 --> 00:08:16.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: well, to North Petherton
120 00:08:16.270 --> 00:08:21.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: it was Amanda I was talking to in North Petherton. Okay? So that's why you did. That's why you chose north. Okay.
121 00:08:22.000 --> 00:08:22.860 Ex Clerk: That's right.
122 00:08:23.340 --> 00:08:27.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And the resulting spreadsheet was available and.
123 00:08:27.330 --> 00:08:28.130 Ex Clerk: Events.
124 00:08:28.450 --> 00:08:32.530 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right? Yeah. Well, maybe they. Of course they may want to fix the problem without telling anybody.
125 00:08:34.789 --> 00:08:36.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: who knows? But thank you for that
126 00:08:36.880 --> 00:08:37.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: it should
127 00:08:38.875 --> 00:08:54.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: well, in the past I have arrived with things to tell people so that we get the ball rolling, but since in the past few weeks we've had people arriving with lots of fresh questions, and I saw 2 new names today, I thought, bothered to prepare anything.
128 00:08:55.010 --> 00:08:56.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So
129 00:08:56.790 --> 00:09:05.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: if no one has anything that they particularly wish to raise. Yep, good for. Helen. Well done! Oh, let's go. I was going to go over your question next, but.
130 00:09:06.530 --> 00:09:13.119 Helen Davey: Only briefly what format he says, and what format do you want it in?
131 00:09:14.490 --> 00:09:18.120 Helen Davey: I really don't know how to answer that. Can you help me? Or.
132 00:09:20.078 --> 00:09:24.401 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, actually, the problem is taken out of your hands, Helen. So let me
133 00:09:25.020 --> 00:09:27.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: have you got the email in front of you?
134 00:09:27.720 --> 00:09:28.110 Helen Davey: Yes.
135 00:09:28.110 --> 00:09:29.839 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Would you like to share it with us?
136 00:09:30.970 --> 00:09:33.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because I'll go through it and show people.
137 00:09:33.020 --> 00:09:33.350 Helen Davey: Bye.
138 00:09:33.350 --> 00:09:36.559 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Forward, and what we need to do, what you need to do in the future.
139 00:09:37.720 --> 00:09:38.450 Helen Davey: Oh.
140 00:09:39.820 --> 00:09:41.430 Helen Davey: I've lost oath!
141 00:09:41.980 --> 00:09:43.397 Helen Davey: I've lost the
142 00:09:44.910 --> 00:09:49.500 Helen Davey: I've lost you! I've lost the screen with all of you on it.
143 00:09:49.500 --> 00:09:50.699 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you do.
144 00:09:50.700 --> 00:09:51.100 Helen Davey: I'll go.
145 00:09:51.100 --> 00:09:59.189 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you press down the Alt key and the tab key, then all the windows will show up, and you can find the one that says Zoom, in big blue letters.
146 00:10:00.160 --> 00:10:02.229 Helen Davey: I think I'm sharing the right one here.
147 00:10:04.280 --> 00:10:05.120 Helen Davey: S.
148 00:10:05.770 --> 00:10:07.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's good. Yep.
149 00:10:08.050 --> 00:10:10.666 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So to give the background to everybody.
150 00:10:11.200 --> 00:10:15.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Helen is in some weird part of the country over on the east coast
151 00:10:16.270 --> 00:10:17.520 Graham Stoddart-Stones: in Suffolk.
152 00:10:17.560 --> 00:10:20.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and is looking for data
153 00:10:20.420 --> 00:10:24.340 Graham Stoddart-Stones: that is not in parish online at the moment for her parish.
154 00:10:24.690 --> 00:10:33.009 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and these data are usually held by a higher tier of government, either the District Council or the County Council.
155 00:10:33.480 --> 00:10:40.929 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and last week we went through the stages that you have to go through to get that data into parish online
156 00:10:41.260 --> 00:10:42.100 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and
157 00:10:42.560 --> 00:10:51.109 Graham Stoddart-Stones: step one and step 2 involve finding whether the data that you're looking for already exists in a publicly viewable fashion.
158 00:10:51.220 --> 00:10:55.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And we concluded that nothing much was available from East Suffolk.
159 00:10:55.120 --> 00:11:05.759 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and the 3rd step said, Here's a template to send as an email to the customer service people of your local council, and they should help you out.
160 00:11:05.830 --> 00:11:10.660 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And clearly this is the answer that Helen got from her question.
161 00:11:11.200 --> 00:11:15.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and that 1st link the East Suffolk mapping system.
162 00:11:15.550 --> 00:11:17.599 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then would you like to click on that?
163 00:11:25.810 --> 00:11:26.720 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.
164 00:11:28.390 --> 00:11:29.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: shoot. Yeah.
165 00:11:29.490 --> 00:11:30.410 Helen Davey: Not great.
166 00:11:30.410 --> 00:11:31.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
167 00:11:33.190 --> 00:11:38.179 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And in the left hand column is the layers that are available to you.
168 00:11:38.450 --> 00:11:42.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And I'm just looking down there to see if there's anything that's likely to be used to you.
169 00:11:43.440 --> 00:11:46.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So conservation areas could be.
170 00:11:47.236 --> 00:11:49.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The walls could be.
171 00:11:49.510 --> 00:11:50.450 Helen Davey: Yeah.
172 00:11:51.190 --> 00:11:53.340 Helen Davey: Plan areas would be.
173 00:11:54.170 --> 00:11:56.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Planning committee areas. Hmm.
174 00:11:57.170 --> 00:11:58.719 Helen Davey: Planning committee, but.
175 00:11:58.720 --> 00:12:06.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There's nothing there in the usual list that you're looking for, which are things like bins and footpaths and stuff like that?
176 00:12:07.610 --> 00:12:11.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Do you already get any footbars. Can you see footbars in your copy of parish online?
177 00:12:14.070 --> 00:12:15.170 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The answer is probably no.
178 00:12:15.170 --> 00:12:16.150 Helen Davey: Oh yes!
179 00:12:16.830 --> 00:12:17.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can.
180 00:12:17.510 --> 00:12:18.170 Helen Davey: Okay.
181 00:12:18.170 --> 00:12:20.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay. So they've got those. So
182 00:12:21.340 --> 00:12:29.929 Graham Stoddart-Stones: if you scroll down through the rest of that list, this, just make sure there's nothing there that you, O 3 preservation orders can be useful.
183 00:12:29.930 --> 00:12:30.800 Helen Davey: Action.
184 00:12:30.990 --> 00:12:31.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So.
185 00:12:32.680 --> 00:12:33.270 Helen Davey: S.
186 00:12:33.270 --> 00:12:40.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The the reason that I'm going through this list, Helen, is because the way that the system works is that you
187 00:12:41.070 --> 00:12:48.819 Graham Stoddart-Stones: take a copy of the URL on this page, and you send it to geosphere, and they say, could you please arrange to import.
188 00:12:48.820 --> 00:12:49.450 Malcolm Daniels: Hello!
189 00:12:49.450 --> 00:12:51.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There this layer and this layer.
190 00:12:51.230 --> 00:12:52.060 Malcolm Daniels: All right.
191 00:12:52.560 --> 00:12:54.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay. But if there's nothing there that you want.
192 00:12:54.970 --> 00:12:58.500 Malcolm Daniels: Okay, soup and sandwiches, or I can do a sausage roll.
193 00:12:58.660 --> 00:13:01.116 Malcolm Daniels: Alright lovely. Thank you.
194 00:13:01.730 --> 00:13:02.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Soup, please.
195 00:13:05.660 --> 00:13:06.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So
196 00:13:06.930 --> 00:13:12.839 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you might once say that the East Suffolk boundary and the Tree Preservation order, or something like that.
197 00:13:12.840 --> 00:13:13.420 Helen Davey: Yes.
198 00:13:13.420 --> 00:13:20.709 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You would take a copy of that URL at the top of your page at the moment, and send that to support. No, not that one.
199 00:13:20.710 --> 00:13:22.070 Helen Davey: Oh, yes, yes, this one.
200 00:13:22.070 --> 00:13:24.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's right. So just copy that.
201 00:13:24.620 --> 00:13:28.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Put it in an email to support@geosphere.com.
202 00:13:28.860 --> 00:13:34.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And say, please, could we have the separate boundary and the tree preservation layers.
203 00:13:36.778 --> 00:13:39.070 Helen Davey: Yes, so I copy that.
204 00:13:39.070 --> 00:13:41.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, stick. It into an email.
205 00:13:41.970 --> 00:13:42.910 Helen Davey: Copy.
206 00:13:43.560 --> 00:13:45.099 Helen Davey: and then I'll.
207 00:13:45.270 --> 00:13:48.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, just go into your email estimate whilst we're there
208 00:13:48.760 --> 00:13:51.249 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and just create a new one.
209 00:13:51.740 --> 00:13:54.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Send it to support at
210 00:13:55.820 --> 00:13:57.509 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you can paste it in there.
211 00:13:59.800 --> 00:14:00.609 Helen Davey: At least.
212 00:14:00.610 --> 00:14:01.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good.
213 00:14:01.320 --> 00:14:05.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and address it to support@geosphere.com.
214 00:14:06.340 --> 00:14:09.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: which might come up if you've written to them before. No, all right.
215 00:14:13.220 --> 00:14:16.870 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Geosphere GEOX PHER e.
216 00:14:17.600 --> 00:14:21.490 Helen Davey: EOXP HERE.
217 00:14:21.490 --> 00:14:22.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Dot com
218 00:14:24.210 --> 00:14:25.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: dot com yeah.
219 00:14:25.800 --> 00:14:26.190 Helen Davey: Cool.
220 00:14:26.190 --> 00:14:28.999 Stuart Bacon: Sorry, Helen. You've left a space after support.
221 00:14:29.440 --> 00:14:30.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh yes!
222 00:14:30.390 --> 00:14:31.760 Helen Davey: Who please.
223 00:14:32.290 --> 00:14:34.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: She's just doing that to make sure you're on the ball.
224 00:14:36.260 --> 00:14:36.899 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and that.
225 00:14:38.090 --> 00:14:38.720 Helen Davey: Aha!
226 00:14:38.720 --> 00:14:43.339 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So then let's go back to the original email, if we can.
227 00:14:43.360 --> 00:14:44.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: please
228 00:14:45.000 --> 00:14:52.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yup, and go down to the other one. See where it says there are many available to download here East Suffolk Council.
229 00:14:52.910 --> 00:14:54.259 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You click on that link.
230 00:14:54.260 --> 00:14:54.860 Helen Davey: It's
231 00:14:55.720 --> 00:14:56.819 Helen Davey: I'm sorry.
232 00:14:57.300 --> 00:14:59.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Go up to the second sentence.
233 00:14:59.310 --> 00:15:01.340 Helen Davey: East Suffolk, Council.
234 00:15:01.340 --> 00:15:02.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Click on that. Yeah.
235 00:15:05.470 --> 00:15:09.599 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And again, we're gonna see if there's anything interesting there that you want.
236 00:15:11.090 --> 00:15:13.700 Helen Davey: All data, yes, please.
237 00:15:14.046 --> 00:15:15.084 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, all right.
238 00:15:15.620 --> 00:15:17.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you just click on the all data.
239 00:15:22.810 --> 00:15:28.010 Graham Stoddart-Stones: completion is coastal management changes, employment, allocation. Can you just scroll down there you go.
240 00:15:36.520 --> 00:15:42.909 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so I wouldn't have thought. Oh, cripes is one to 12. There's 109 of them. So what you want to do just
241 00:15:43.060 --> 00:15:49.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the same thing there, Helen, if there's anything in there that you want in your copy of parish online.
242 00:15:50.000 --> 00:15:53.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you'd again copy that URL,
243 00:15:53.100 --> 00:15:55.549 Graham Stoddart-Stones: stick it in the same email
244 00:15:55.740 --> 00:15:58.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and say, May I please have
245 00:15:58.060 --> 00:15:59.349 Graham Stoddart-Stones: these layers
246 00:15:59.360 --> 00:16:03.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so on that 1st one you got in there? You wanted the.
247 00:16:03.390 --> 00:16:06.759 Graham Stoddart-Stones: He suffered boundary and the Tree Preservation orders.
248 00:16:06.760 --> 00:16:07.460 Helen Davey: Yes.
249 00:16:07.680 --> 00:16:12.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And on the second one here you've got 12 pages to go through to see which ones you want.
250 00:16:12.270 --> 00:16:13.079 Helen Davey: That'll be fun.
251 00:16:13.080 --> 00:16:13.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If any
252 00:16:16.016 --> 00:16:24.549 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and then it. It looks to me as if you still not getting any of the information that you want, so that 1st link you want
253 00:16:24.710 --> 00:16:28.530 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Suffolk boundary and tree preservation orders. Yeah.
254 00:16:29.050 --> 00:16:29.780 Helen Davey: Yes.
255 00:16:32.930 --> 00:16:35.089 Helen Davey: Should I write this in later? I don't.
256 00:16:35.090 --> 00:16:37.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, yeah, you can do it now, because.
257 00:16:37.300 --> 00:16:37.860 Helen Davey: And.
258 00:16:37.860 --> 00:16:40.464 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We're moving on to the next thing which
259 00:16:40.960 --> 00:16:45.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: is. Do you know specifically what it is you do want.
260 00:16:46.470 --> 00:16:47.280 Helen Davey: Yes.
261 00:16:48.535 --> 00:16:49.270 Helen Davey: so.
262 00:16:49.270 --> 00:16:51.599 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You just put comma tpos. There.
263 00:16:54.930 --> 00:16:56.089 Helen Davey: Sorry I'm lost.
264 00:16:56.370 --> 00:17:01.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay where you've got the cursor at the moment. Just put in a comma, and then you want Tpo.
265 00:17:02.770 --> 00:17:06.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: which is the tree, the tea preservation orders, I think, which will be useful to you.
266 00:17:06.700 --> 00:17:07.160 Helen Davey: Yes!
267 00:17:07.770 --> 00:17:09.559 Bob Grainger: I know enough.
268 00:17:12.490 --> 00:17:12.970 Helen Davey: You do.
269 00:17:12.970 --> 00:17:14.230 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's let's yeah.
270 00:17:14.680 --> 00:17:16.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: that's good. Yup.
271 00:17:16.579 --> 00:17:18.349 Helen Davey: His boundaries spelt wrong.
272 00:17:18.540 --> 00:17:21.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you need an a in between the D and the A.
273 00:17:21.220 --> 00:17:21.750 Helen Davey: Oh yes!
274 00:17:22.098 --> 00:17:23.141 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Here we go.
275 00:17:27.099 --> 00:17:35.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you, what you need to do now, Helen, is, think of what it is that you actually do need that they have yet given you
276 00:17:35.890 --> 00:17:36.440 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so.
277 00:17:37.003 --> 00:17:38.129 Helen Davey: That, in.
278 00:17:38.130 --> 00:17:45.660 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Typically it typically, given our recent conversations, you might want gullies. This is not going to go in this email. This email is going to geosphere.
279 00:17:45.890 --> 00:17:46.310 Helen Davey: Yes.
280 00:17:46.310 --> 00:17:53.049 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So what I'm discussing now is that question that she asked you which says if there's anything else that you want, could you let me know.
281 00:17:53.050 --> 00:17:53.440 Helen Davey: Yes.
282 00:17:54.030 --> 00:17:57.559 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And what you're going to say is, yes, I would like to have the following.
283 00:17:57.820 --> 00:18:00.700 Helen Davey: Alright. So this one goes
284 00:18:00.750 --> 00:18:06.689 Helen Davey: on its own. And then the things that I want to add. Also I ask Josh.
285 00:18:07.240 --> 00:18:08.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Correct.
286 00:18:08.050 --> 00:18:08.640 Helen Davey: Yeah.
287 00:18:08.900 --> 00:18:09.805 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And
288 00:18:11.510 --> 00:18:21.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's up to you to tell him what you want, because we found in the past. And good afternoon to Malcolm, who's the expert on this, that
289 00:18:21.260 --> 00:18:24.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: if you say something glib like everything you've got.
290 00:18:24.720 --> 00:18:32.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and they'll come back and tell you. We have no idea what we've got, because they're all in individual silos, and we don't know who manages what.
291 00:18:32.160 --> 00:18:39.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you have to be specific about. So if if you're particularly interested in in waste bins or dog poo bins, or whatever.
292 00:18:42.020 --> 00:18:49.289 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Don't forget you still got to go into that second link and work out which of the layers that are showing that you want. If any of them.
293 00:18:50.900 --> 00:18:51.750 Helen Davey: Right, so.
294 00:18:51.750 --> 00:19:03.259 Graham Stoddart-Stones: With me. So that second one, remember, if you go down to the second one, this 12 pages, you need to go through the 12 pages and see if there's any of the data that they want, that that you want.
295 00:19:03.260 --> 00:19:04.209 Helen Davey: We'll do that.
296 00:19:04.390 --> 00:19:06.549 Helen Davey: but I won't take your time
297 00:19:06.600 --> 00:19:09.259 Helen Davey: getting a medal. We'll try again next week.
298 00:19:09.840 --> 00:19:12.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So hopefully and for everyone's benefit.
299 00:19:13.398 --> 00:19:19.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Helen, we're on the way for you to get data exported into parish online.
300 00:19:19.260 --> 00:19:19.650 Helen Davey: Yes.
301 00:19:19.650 --> 00:19:21.660 Graham Stoddart-Stones: From your local councils.
302 00:19:21.750 --> 00:19:24.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and for the benefit of
303 00:19:24.380 --> 00:19:29.100 Graham Stoddart-Stones: are 2 newcomers. Getting information out of your local councils
304 00:19:29.290 --> 00:19:36.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: can be a real trial, or it can be a piece of cake, and it depends entirely upon
305 00:19:36.640 --> 00:19:43.530 Graham Stoddart-Stones: how well educated the people are in the upper layers of government, and what I mean by that is, they've all got
306 00:19:44.326 --> 00:20:00.469 Graham Stoddart-Stones: big geographical information systems which are the computer systems that give them this sort of information or store this sort of information and very few councils at the county and district and unitary level are aware that
307 00:20:00.690 --> 00:20:09.649 Graham Stoddart-Stones: with parish online we have a Gis available at parish level. And so it never occurs to them that they can export the data to us.
308 00:20:09.990 --> 00:20:10.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And
309 00:20:10.950 --> 00:20:14.292 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the again, just for the the newcomers information,
310 00:20:15.740 --> 00:20:18.669 Graham Stoddart-Stones: provided you can identify what you want.
311 00:20:18.880 --> 00:20:25.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Then geosphere will do all the hard work of exporting it or taking it from your councils.
312 00:20:26.430 --> 00:20:29.909 Graham Stoddart-Stones: computer systems and putting them into parish online for you.
313 00:20:30.220 --> 00:20:40.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you, if you run into the reply that what you like is is all very interesting. But we don't have the time. We don't have the resources. We don't have the money, and you can say
314 00:20:40.650 --> 00:20:43.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: kibosh on that. We'll do all the work.
315 00:20:46.110 --> 00:20:48.859 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So that's just one thing. Just.
316 00:20:48.860 --> 00:20:50.350 Helen Davey: That last question
317 00:20:50.510 --> 00:20:57.599 Helen Davey: data you'd like from East Suffolk and the format that it's required for your use. Well, I don't understand that.
318 00:20:57.780 --> 00:21:05.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, if you the answer to that is, shapefiles SHAP, EFIL ES.
319 00:21:05.260 --> 00:21:06.160 Helen Davey: Right.
320 00:21:06.160 --> 00:21:07.549 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's all. One word.
321 00:21:07.550 --> 00:21:09.700 Helen Davey: I'll write down. I'll write.
322 00:21:09.920 --> 00:21:11.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So shapefiles is the word.
323 00:21:11.600 --> 00:21:16.650 Helen Davey: SHAP, EFIL ES.
324 00:21:16.650 --> 00:21:17.429 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Perfect. Yeah.
325 00:21:18.490 --> 00:21:21.750 Graham Stoddart-Stones: they'll understand that. That's a standard Gis format.
326 00:21:21.910 --> 00:21:22.750 Helen Davey: Thank you.
327 00:21:26.110 --> 00:21:28.460 Helen Davey: That's lovely. Thank you very, very much.
328 00:21:29.440 --> 00:21:38.039 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Andrew, just for your interest. I'm I've got layer upon layer upon layer information that I'm trying to get into Xmat.
329 00:21:38.080 --> 00:21:41.409 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and there's a file upload facility in Xmap.
330 00:21:41.700 --> 00:21:46.959 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But it'll only upload if you've got those files in shapefile format.
331 00:21:46.960 --> 00:21:48.439 Andrew Clegg: Oh, is there? I didn't know that.
332 00:21:48.440 --> 00:21:54.759 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Recently, I've just been given a tool by geosphere that will take a Csv file.
333 00:21:54.790 --> 00:22:01.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: a regular spreadsheet export and convert it into shapefiles for you, and then you can just go ahead and do your own import.
334 00:22:02.890 --> 00:22:04.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so you might want.
335 00:22:04.640 --> 00:22:11.260 Andrew Clegg: Why don't? Why don't we have that on parish in line? That would be fantastic, wouldn't it? If you could take an excel file.
336 00:22:11.450 --> 00:22:13.199 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, I think you're running up to the against
337 00:22:13.700 --> 00:22:15.010 Graham Stoddart-Stones: well worn phrase.
338 00:22:15.010 --> 00:22:15.370 Andrew Clegg: So.
339 00:22:15.370 --> 00:22:18.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Want to keep it simple in parish online.
340 00:22:19.270 --> 00:22:22.639 Graham Stoddart-Stones: because we're dealing with, you know, parish clerks who
341 00:22:24.790 --> 00:22:30.939 Graham Stoddart-Stones: present company accepted tend to be computer, illiterate or can be
342 00:22:31.980 --> 00:22:32.770 Andrew Clegg: Oh!
343 00:22:33.660 --> 00:22:34.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So.
344 00:22:39.610 --> 00:22:43.680 Andrew Clegg: So I have to do a bit of homework on what a shapefile is, and all that kind of thing.
345 00:22:43.680 --> 00:22:52.583 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, no, what I'll do, Andrew, is. I'll send you the tool, and you can just apply it to a Csv file, and it should do it all for you.
346 00:22:52.880 --> 00:22:53.390 Andrew Clegg: Are a bit.
347 00:22:53.390 --> 00:23:02.349 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Having got the tool yesterday. I haven't had a chance to apply it yet, but if you can do the heavy lifting, then let me know how to do it. That'll be great.
348 00:23:02.350 --> 00:23:03.020 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
349 00:23:03.830 --> 00:23:04.690 Andrew Clegg: okay.
350 00:23:05.070 --> 00:23:05.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.
351 00:23:05.500 --> 00:23:13.549 Andrew Clegg: I get lots of Csv files from the environmental work I'm doing, from from the environment agency, on, on flooding and so on.
352 00:23:13.550 --> 00:23:14.619 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, look at Stuart's.
353 00:23:14.620 --> 00:23:14.990 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
354 00:23:14.990 --> 00:23:18.420 Graham Stoddart-Stones: In the in the chat. He's given us a completely different one.
355 00:23:18.880 --> 00:23:24.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Mine doesn't come from there, but that looks like it could be. Have you tried that one, Stuart?
356 00:23:24.110 --> 00:23:24.680 Stuart Bacon: Now I've.
357 00:23:24.680 --> 00:23:25.230 Andrew Clegg: Oh!
358 00:23:25.230 --> 00:23:25.799 Stuart Bacon: Google shirt.
359 00:23:25.800 --> 00:23:26.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just Google, it right?
360 00:23:26.800 --> 00:23:28.620 Stuart Bacon: Yeah. Oh.
361 00:23:28.620 --> 00:23:32.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, my goodness me! Look who's joining us in the bottom right hand corner.
362 00:23:33.220 --> 00:23:36.959 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Angie, you're very quiet, and you're very unvisual.
363 00:23:38.290 --> 00:23:41.069 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Are you talking to us, or are you just there for fun?
364 00:23:42.610 --> 00:23:43.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, yeah.
365 00:23:43.740 --> 00:23:44.170 Graham Stoddart-Stones: yeah, we've got.
366 00:23:44.170 --> 00:23:45.170 Stuart Bacon: Oh, I ain't on this.
367 00:23:45.590 --> 00:23:51.119 Ex Clerk: She's she's in a tunnel somewhere in the Hs 2 environment.
368 00:23:52.095 --> 00:23:54.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, Bob, we'll do that.
369 00:23:58.790 --> 00:24:00.980 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Let me back in a minute. Let me.
370 00:24:00.980 --> 00:24:02.459 Ex Clerk: She's in the chat.
371 00:24:02.480 --> 00:24:03.770 Ex Clerk: See it in the chat.
372 00:24:03.980 --> 00:24:07.660 Graham Stoddart-Stones: John. Oh, she's in the chat. I'll be back in a bit. Okay, thank you. Yeah.
373 00:24:07.660 --> 00:24:08.460 Andrew Clegg: And.
374 00:24:08.850 --> 00:24:17.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: John, I wonder if I could ask you for Philip and Ray's sake, if you could do your famous areas of
375 00:24:20.190 --> 00:24:21.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: better. Steady
376 00:24:21.710 --> 00:24:28.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: in colors to show them the sorts of things that you can do in parish online. And that's a classic one, I think. And also
377 00:24:29.088 --> 00:24:33.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: somebody was doing a newspaper distribution, weren't they? But that wasn't. She's not here today.
378 00:24:36.260 --> 00:24:40.319 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Does that work for you, John? There's Angie. Good day, Angie.
379 00:24:41.400 --> 00:24:42.480 Malcolm Daniels: Hello!
380 00:24:42.480 --> 00:24:43.010 Andrew Clegg: Okay.
381 00:24:43.010 --> 00:24:44.709 Bob Grainger: Oh, hello! Welcome back!
382 00:24:44.960 --> 00:24:47.601 Angie Bamford: Oh, nightmare! But Hi! Everyone.
383 00:24:48.130 --> 00:24:48.580 John Roberts: Oh, yeah, I do.
384 00:24:49.040 --> 00:24:49.790 philip wilson: Hi.
385 00:24:50.260 --> 00:24:53.619 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So are you the nightmare Angie? Or is your life a nightmare?
386 00:24:53.620 --> 00:24:56.420 Angie Bamford: My life is a nightmare. Unfortunately.
387 00:24:56.650 --> 00:25:02.928 Angie Bamford: college work I supposed to be working from home this week, and I have to go into the office. So I just got back.
388 00:25:04.190 --> 00:25:06.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So it looks like you've got an office in your home.
389 00:25:07.090 --> 00:25:09.599 Angie Bamford: Oh, yeah, that's that's all the other stuff as well.
390 00:25:10.740 --> 00:25:11.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
391 00:25:15.440 --> 00:25:18.849 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, John, would you like to have a go at that? Is that good.
392 00:25:19.630 --> 00:25:22.029 John Roberts: Now be looking at my parish online screen.
393 00:25:22.030 --> 00:25:23.679 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, thank, you.
394 00:25:23.850 --> 00:25:25.369 John Roberts: At least that worked, and nothing else.
395 00:25:28.330 --> 00:25:29.640 John Roberts: this is huh!
396 00:25:30.490 --> 00:25:34.450 John Roberts: This is small play compared with what Andrew does, but we'll go through it
397 00:25:35.620 --> 00:25:36.830 John Roberts: what we did
398 00:25:37.410 --> 00:25:44.489 John Roberts: because we've got a village with rather convoluted roads and areas and everything else
399 00:25:44.720 --> 00:25:48.029 John Roberts: we needed to identify parts of the village
400 00:25:49.170 --> 00:25:52.590 John Roberts: and the easiest way for us to do this was to take the streets
401 00:25:53.810 --> 00:25:58.490 John Roberts: so you can see the list of streets here. Would take
402 00:25:59.110 --> 00:26:01.050 John Roberts: Castle Street north side.
403 00:26:02.560 --> 00:26:04.170 John Roberts: And as you can see.
404 00:26:04.500 --> 00:26:06.500 John Roberts: basically, we've outlined
405 00:26:09.070 --> 00:26:12.169 John Roberts: and we just go along and fill in the areas. So
406 00:26:13.350 --> 00:26:14.970 John Roberts: what that will give me
407 00:26:15.350 --> 00:26:16.390 John Roberts: ace.
408 00:26:17.660 --> 00:26:19.819 John Roberts: I can then click on that.
409 00:26:22.090 --> 00:26:23.940 John Roberts: And this is where it normally goes. Wrong.
410 00:26:29.230 --> 00:26:30.670 John Roberts: Data extract
411 00:26:32.810 --> 00:26:34.580 John Roberts: extract from
412 00:26:34.840 --> 00:26:35.790 John Roberts: addressed
413 00:26:37.090 --> 00:26:38.450 John Roberts: address points
414 00:26:41.430 --> 00:26:42.489 John Roberts: and then run.
415 00:26:44.250 --> 00:26:50.910 John Roberts: That will give me a list of all the houses, their addresses, etc, within that area that I've just mapped.
416 00:26:52.520 --> 00:26:59.360 John Roberts: So if we need to target a an area, a street, or anything like this for mail, drop, or whatever.
417 00:26:59.860 --> 00:27:05.060 John Roberts: instead of having to go through all the different addresses, we've got it there on it, we can export that as a spreadsheet.
418 00:27:07.980 --> 00:27:18.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Could you, John, just go from there? Go back to your regular screen where you are, and just turn on addresses so that the newcomers can see what you've done and what you mean by it.
419 00:27:19.150 --> 00:27:22.200 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. And I would also point out to them that
420 00:27:22.600 --> 00:27:31.069 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the work that you've been doing is in parish layers, which is the part of parish online, where you have complete control, and you can do anything you like yourself.
421 00:27:31.280 --> 00:27:38.849 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But then all the other layers belong to other people, and you can read them and you can use them. But you cannot change anything.
422 00:27:39.390 --> 00:27:45.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. So we're gonna go down now to the 3rd party layers and go into addresses.
423 00:27:45.670 --> 00:27:50.899 John Roberts: I'll go. Yeah, I'll go to the address, and I'll go back to what I was doing under addresses.
424 00:27:50.900 --> 00:27:53.650 Ray Toomer: Can I just ask a quick question whilst we're there?
425 00:27:53.650 --> 00:27:54.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Sure. Yeah.
426 00:27:54.708 --> 00:28:01.649 Ray Toomer: So if you're not from that parish, is it possible to have, you know, view access of
427 00:28:01.790 --> 00:28:04.319 Ray Toomer: of your parish layers.
428 00:28:05.860 --> 00:28:10.769 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can. No other parishes cannot see what you've done in your parish. No.
429 00:28:10.770 --> 00:28:12.299 Ray Toomer: Okay. But they are.
430 00:28:12.300 --> 00:28:29.899 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then there's always a caveat. So, with the exception of the layers, which are either used to be called national layers, and are now known just as allotments and cemeteries, and in the assets and maintenance layers there are some fields which are called collaborative.
431 00:28:30.070 --> 00:28:33.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and that means that the data is visible to everyone.
432 00:28:33.680 --> 00:28:37.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: but it only applies to certain layers and
433 00:28:37.740 --> 00:28:39.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the ones that it applies to
434 00:28:39.930 --> 00:28:46.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: say collaborative, 90% of the time. And then there's the few that don't say anything just to catch you out.
435 00:28:47.450 --> 00:28:48.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's right.
436 00:28:48.250 --> 00:28:54.030 John Roberts: Any layers. You, any layers that you create under parish layers are peculiar to you.
437 00:28:54.470 --> 00:28:55.489 Ray Toomer: Fine. Okay. Thanks.
438 00:28:55.490 --> 00:28:55.850 John Roberts: Okay.
439 00:28:55.850 --> 00:29:00.829 Stuart Bacon: If you did want to share them with somebody else, though there is a way to do it
440 00:29:00.930 --> 00:29:02.640 Stuart Bacon: as a public map.
441 00:29:03.070 --> 00:29:03.700 John Roberts: Yep.
442 00:29:07.000 --> 00:29:10.740 John Roberts: we're running ahead of a thousand.
443 00:29:10.930 --> 00:29:11.640 John Roberts: but.
444 00:29:11.640 --> 00:29:12.680 Ray Toomer: Carry on, carry on.
445 00:29:12.680 --> 00:29:16.749 John Roberts: Let let's do it the way Graham wanted to dress it. So
446 00:29:17.790 --> 00:29:22.870 John Roberts: if I work my way down the the layers that are provided we come to addresses.
447 00:29:22.870 --> 00:29:23.440 Ray Toomer: Yeah.
448 00:29:24.160 --> 00:29:26.389 John Roberts: The address plus points.
449 00:29:26.810 --> 00:29:29.239 John Roberts: They will highlight all the properties.
450 00:29:30.690 --> 00:29:32.540 John Roberts: and then we can click on
451 00:29:32.570 --> 00:29:33.880 John Roberts: any property.
452 00:29:35.840 --> 00:29:38.590 John Roberts: And that's the address and the details of it.
453 00:29:40.540 --> 00:29:41.270 Helen Davey: Don't!
454 00:29:42.400 --> 00:29:43.179 John Roberts: Hang on.
455 00:29:43.650 --> 00:29:44.700 John Roberts: did you.
456 00:29:44.830 --> 00:29:47.789 Helen Davey: Put all that information in, or was that there for you.
457 00:29:47.790 --> 00:29:49.439 John Roberts: No, that. That's there.
458 00:29:49.510 --> 00:29:52.399 John Roberts: That's provided by parish online. Yeah.
459 00:29:52.420 --> 00:29:55.979 John Roberts: And also you can do your postcode areas
460 00:29:59.200 --> 00:30:01.640 John Roberts: which can be quite useful.
461 00:30:01.640 --> 00:30:07.539 Angie Bamford: That is, yeah, we do mail shops. What we did for the labor plan. That's very useful.
462 00:30:08.410 --> 00:30:11.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, exactly. But going back.
463 00:30:12.080 --> 00:30:14.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Sorry all yours, John.
464 00:30:14.750 --> 00:30:16.830 John Roberts: Right going back to
465 00:30:19.417 --> 00:30:21.620 John Roberts: where am I? I'll go there.
466 00:30:23.160 --> 00:30:29.550 John Roberts: going back to how we arrived at it the 1st place, and this is where Angie is the expert. But never mind.
467 00:30:31.380 --> 00:30:34.579 John Roberts: this is set up to draw polygons.
468 00:30:35.730 --> 00:30:39.050 John Roberts: and what I will normally do is very quickly
469 00:30:41.850 --> 00:30:45.329 John Roberts: draw a polygon around any given area.
470 00:30:50.580 --> 00:30:53.930 John Roberts: What you can't hear is my mouse clicking on each of those places.
471 00:30:54.180 --> 00:30:54.770 Ray Toomer: No.
472 00:30:54.770 --> 00:30:56.250 John Roberts: That gives me a polygon.
473 00:30:57.460 --> 00:30:58.710 John Roberts: I will save it
474 00:31:02.080 --> 00:31:02.960 John Roberts: now.
475 00:31:03.870 --> 00:31:05.720 John Roberts: where are we? I've lost myself again.
476 00:31:14.140 --> 00:31:15.410 John Roberts: I do apologize.
477 00:31:16.760 --> 00:31:18.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Can't remember which one it was you did now.
478 00:31:18.680 --> 00:31:21.299 Stuart Bacon: It was. It was in the Car Park Library area.
479 00:31:21.800 --> 00:31:24.800 John Roberts: Yeah, right there. It seems to have disappeared, and I don't know.
480 00:31:24.800 --> 00:31:26.370 Nigel Carrick: I don't think you saved it.
481 00:31:26.570 --> 00:31:28.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: He did. He did.
482 00:31:29.550 --> 00:31:33.500 Nigel Carrick: Oh, well, I find sometimes that happens, and then it comes back a little bit later.
483 00:31:34.090 --> 00:31:35.419 John Roberts: We're gonna get 3.
484 00:31:35.420 --> 00:31:36.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Sure.
485 00:31:37.760 --> 00:31:40.200 John Roberts: Very quickly brought a polygon.
486 00:31:41.630 --> 00:31:42.779 John Roberts: and then save.
487 00:31:42.780 --> 00:31:45.970 Stuart Bacon: You haven't saved any details in this file.
488 00:31:46.330 --> 00:31:47.359 John Roberts: You're quite right.
489 00:31:47.410 --> 00:31:49.689 John Roberts: It's there they're both there. Now, look.
490 00:31:50.400 --> 00:31:51.110 Nigel Carrick: Yeah.
491 00:31:51.640 --> 00:31:52.919 John Roberts: If I click on.
492 00:31:55.120 --> 00:31:57.320 John Roberts: that's why there's no detail.
493 00:31:57.570 --> 00:31:58.350 John Roberts: Right?
494 00:31:58.500 --> 00:31:59.350 John Roberts: Okay.
495 00:31:59.610 --> 00:32:01.800 John Roberts: let me true. Let me tell you.
496 00:32:01.800 --> 00:32:04.889 Graham Stoddart-Stones: They're there you can. You can edit them by the look of it.
497 00:32:04.890 --> 00:32:07.420 John Roberts: Yeah, let me take the one I've already done.
498 00:32:07.700 --> 00:32:09.330 John Roberts: Okay, click on this one.
499 00:32:10.070 --> 00:32:13.490 John Roberts: If, having drawn a rough polygon around
500 00:32:14.000 --> 00:32:16.439 John Roberts: now here it's missed missed a bit.
501 00:32:17.350 --> 00:32:18.889 John Roberts: but click on the pencil.
502 00:32:20.610 --> 00:32:22.140 John Roberts: I can then edit
503 00:32:23.880 --> 00:32:24.980 John Roberts: that polygon.
504 00:32:25.870 --> 00:32:26.540 Bob Grainger: I know.
505 00:32:29.710 --> 00:32:31.810 John Roberts: I won't save these because they're wrong, but
506 00:32:32.720 --> 00:32:37.019 John Roberts: I can actually edit any part of that polygon I want, and if I I can zoom in
507 00:32:38.420 --> 00:32:41.830 John Roberts: and get it exact, exact as I want it.
508 00:32:42.770 --> 00:32:44.350 John Roberts: You can move around it
509 00:32:46.680 --> 00:32:48.539 John Roberts: and alter anything that's
510 00:32:50.670 --> 00:32:52.040 John Roberts: slightly out of line
511 00:32:54.010 --> 00:32:55.070 John Roberts: then, save.
512 00:32:58.950 --> 00:33:04.200 John Roberts: And as Stuart pointed out. You do have to put the details in before you save it when you've done it.
513 00:33:07.040 --> 00:33:10.799 John Roberts: But that's basically how we highlight a polygon. And
514 00:33:14.380 --> 00:33:16.319 John Roberts: if I go into the style area.
515 00:33:18.050 --> 00:33:22.979 John Roberts: This is where I can put shading colors, whatever within that polygon.
516 00:33:24.390 --> 00:33:26.790 John Roberts: So you can make each individual area
517 00:33:27.450 --> 00:33:28.960 John Roberts: distinct to itself.
518 00:33:30.110 --> 00:33:32.110 John Roberts: That's a very quick way of doing it.
519 00:33:33.000 --> 00:33:36.260 Ray Toomer: Yeah. So you have a wild flower areas layer.
520 00:33:37.340 --> 00:33:39.976 John Roberts: It's not got a lot in it at the moment.
521 00:33:42.040 --> 00:33:46.369 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, if your interest is biodiversity right? I can see that one appealing to you.
522 00:33:46.370 --> 00:33:47.110 Ray Toomer: Yes.
523 00:33:49.354 --> 00:33:57.379 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But there are all sorts of things already in parish online that may be of interest for you, and it's just worth.
524 00:33:57.400 --> 00:34:04.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Perhaps, John, if you can come back to your screen again, just showing how you can search through the layers for the information you're looking for.
525 00:34:04.860 --> 00:34:05.510 John Roberts: Yeah.
526 00:34:07.410 --> 00:34:09.419 John Roberts: I'm just getting rid of something a minute.
527 00:34:09.420 --> 00:34:10.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.
528 00:34:11.739 --> 00:34:17.409 John Roberts: My pseudo car part layers that suddenly, as Stuart said, they suddenly they suddenly appeared
529 00:34:18.059 --> 00:34:18.949 John Roberts: right.
530 00:34:25.760 --> 00:34:35.809 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So again for Ray and Phil, there are literally hundreds and hundreds of layers of information. So the question is, how do you find out where the stuff that you're looking for is.
531 00:34:37.040 --> 00:34:37.710 philip wilson: Yeah.
532 00:34:38.510 --> 00:34:39.570 John Roberts: We do the favourite one.
533 00:34:39.570 --> 00:34:40.530 philip wilson: Really, useful.
534 00:34:41.150 --> 00:34:42.850 John Roberts: If you, if you go up to the
535 00:34:43.980 --> 00:34:45.520 John Roberts: search bar at the top.
536 00:34:47.780 --> 00:34:48.550 John Roberts: the.
537 00:34:48.830 --> 00:34:49.389 Ray Toomer: Yeah.
538 00:34:54.780 --> 00:34:55.620 John Roberts: Gullies.
539 00:34:55.800 --> 00:34:57.550 John Roberts: Immediately it comes up
540 00:34:57.680 --> 00:34:59.789 John Roberts: with the layer that where gullies are
541 00:35:01.670 --> 00:35:02.610 John Roberts: click on it.
542 00:35:03.220 --> 00:35:05.359 John Roberts: There's all the gullies in my village.
543 00:35:05.690 --> 00:35:06.650 philip wilson: Oh, okay.
544 00:35:08.770 --> 00:35:15.999 Nigel Carrick: Has anyone got? I'm looking actually for underground pipes.
545 00:35:16.787 --> 00:35:18.100 Nigel Carrick: In our area.
546 00:35:18.100 --> 00:35:18.809 John Roberts: What was the name?
547 00:35:18.810 --> 00:35:23.509 Nigel Carrick: Some of our drains and ditches have been covered over, and they've been put into pipes.
548 00:35:24.990 --> 00:35:28.350 Nigel Carrick: Does. Is anyone aware of an underground map.
549 00:35:29.170 --> 00:35:31.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, how far underground are you talking now?
550 00:35:31.740 --> 00:35:34.690 Nigel Carrick: Well, I'm actually trying to find out where the
551 00:35:37.210 --> 00:35:43.339 Nigel Carrick: because, where our gullies are being emptied into, there should be a pipe.
552 00:35:45.350 --> 00:35:45.900 Nigel Carrick: Please.
553 00:35:45.900 --> 00:35:48.806 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Chris Edwards may be able to help you if
554 00:35:49.130 --> 00:35:53.030 chris edwards: I've I've searched Nigel, and I can't find anything
555 00:35:53.070 --> 00:35:55.250 chris edwards: within our county of Somerset.
556 00:35:55.450 --> 00:35:56.620 Nigel Carrick: Yeah, yeah.
557 00:35:56.620 --> 00:35:59.609 chris edwards: No such layer that exists. As far as I can tell.
558 00:35:59.610 --> 00:36:03.685 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Chris, I was going to go back to that point where you raised. Where? What are
559 00:36:04.150 --> 00:36:07.230 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The nodes that you were looking for the other day.
560 00:36:07.600 --> 00:36:14.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Do you remember the nodes and the network of water systems? And I wonder whether that would be some pipes that could help Nigel.
561 00:36:14.800 --> 00:36:18.899 chris edwards: Possibly. Do you know what? I can't remember? What layer
562 00:36:19.240 --> 00:36:21.010 chris edwards: I found the nodes.
563 00:36:21.010 --> 00:36:24.340 Nigel Carrick: Well under the gully. Each gully has a node point.
564 00:36:25.122 --> 00:36:27.940 Nigel Carrick: I thought that was just a reference.
565 00:36:27.940 --> 00:36:29.709 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But you could also do a search.
566 00:36:29.710 --> 00:36:32.790 John Roberts: Water. It comes under water network nodes.
567 00:36:33.290 --> 00:36:33.870 chris edwards: Oh!
568 00:36:36.740 --> 00:36:39.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, Chris, do you want to take a chance and Demo.
569 00:36:39.020 --> 00:36:40.700 chris edwards: Yeah, yeah, sure. Sure.
570 00:36:40.980 --> 00:36:43.319 chris edwards: Can I share my screen?
571 00:36:43.320 --> 00:36:44.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
572 00:36:44.250 --> 00:36:45.010 chris edwards: I don't.
573 00:36:46.140 --> 00:36:49.249 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Angie, are you? Have you got access to Persia online today?
574 00:36:49.250 --> 00:36:50.330 Angie Bamford: Yeah, I have.
575 00:36:50.470 --> 00:36:52.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, you know that we're gonna come to you.
576 00:36:52.120 --> 00:36:57.739 Angie Bamford: For the grand finale of this is what you can do.
577 00:37:02.660 --> 00:37:05.040 chris edwards: So Somerset, Somerset, Council.
578 00:37:05.210 --> 00:37:06.100 Nigel Carrick: Yeah.
579 00:37:06.834 --> 00:37:10.479 chris edwards: John, what did you say I should be looking for.
580 00:37:11.340 --> 00:37:14.059 John Roberts: If you go to the search layer and put nodes.
581 00:37:20.210 --> 00:37:23.879 John Roberts: then click on that there and you'll get water network nodes.
582 00:37:24.450 --> 00:37:25.880 chris edwards: Oh, here we go.
583 00:37:26.240 --> 00:37:27.140 chris edwards: So
584 00:37:27.818 --> 00:37:32.370 chris edwards: let's home in on this particular node here.
585 00:37:36.890 --> 00:37:38.230 chris edwards: That gives me
586 00:37:38.350 --> 00:37:41.340 chris edwards: what I would think of is a reference number.
587 00:37:43.910 --> 00:37:44.820 chris edwards: What
588 00:37:46.830 --> 00:37:50.050 chris edwards: what else would I be looking for here.
589 00:37:50.050 --> 00:37:54.959 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, did the nodes get connected by any of the lines, or
590 00:37:54.970 --> 00:37:57.809 Graham Stoddart-Stones: did you just get the nodes? I can't remember.
591 00:37:58.100 --> 00:38:00.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you go back in, and
592 00:38:00.680 --> 00:38:01.250 Graham Stoddart-Stones: it.
593 00:38:01.250 --> 00:38:02.330 Nigel Carrick: Is, it
594 00:38:02.360 --> 00:38:05.549 Nigel Carrick: was, that is, that the line which is connecting is that their pipe.
595 00:38:05.550 --> 00:38:06.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, that's the.
596 00:38:06.390 --> 00:38:09.510 chris edwards: No, no, that's that's the boundary of our parish.
597 00:38:09.510 --> 00:38:12.020 Nigel Carrick: Oh! But underneath it there was that.
598 00:38:12.020 --> 00:38:13.040 chris edwards: Remove that.
599 00:38:13.090 --> 00:38:16.249 chris edwards: So this is in the middle of a recreational field
600 00:38:16.390 --> 00:38:17.910 chris edwards: in our parish.
601 00:38:18.560 --> 00:38:22.089 chris edwards: clicked on that, as as I've indicated before.
602 00:38:22.270 --> 00:38:24.609 chris edwards: but this, not giving me
603 00:38:25.230 --> 00:38:30.610 chris edwards: much information of where it where the outlet is. Now I happen to know
604 00:38:31.070 --> 00:38:31.765 chris edwards: that
605 00:38:33.830 --> 00:38:43.289 chris edwards: This part of the field is higher, this part is lower. So obviously the the direction of the pipe work goes down here.
606 00:38:43.330 --> 00:38:47.019 chris edwards: It goes underneath the road and continues.
607 00:38:47.950 --> 00:38:50.660 chris edwards: But it doesn't give me information
608 00:38:50.990 --> 00:38:53.759 chris edwards: about the actual pipe work itself.
609 00:38:54.200 --> 00:38:55.970 chris edwards: There's another node here.
610 00:38:58.170 --> 00:38:59.160 Nigel Carrick: Yeah.
611 00:38:59.520 --> 00:39:03.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Course it's worth pointing out that it doesn't work that way in Martok. Everything.
612 00:39:03.770 --> 00:39:04.480 chris edwards: That's the option.
613 00:39:05.040 --> 00:39:07.700 Andrew Clegg: Yeah. Water flows uphill. Here.
614 00:39:10.640 --> 00:39:11.130 Angie Bamford: Got it.
615 00:39:11.130 --> 00:39:15.060 Nigel Carrick: Yeah. But I mean that that purple dotted line is is obviously the.
616 00:39:15.400 --> 00:39:17.890 chris edwards: No, it's a boundary of the parishes.
617 00:39:17.890 --> 00:39:19.150 Nigel Carrick: So? Is it a.
618 00:39:19.150 --> 00:39:24.030 chris edwards: Anything to the north of that line is our parish.
619 00:39:24.080 --> 00:39:27.130 chris edwards: and anything to the south is our neighboring parish.
620 00:39:27.290 --> 00:39:29.810 chris edwards: So you you can forget that dotted line.
621 00:39:30.280 --> 00:39:31.877 Nigel Carrick: Yeah, they were.
622 00:39:33.320 --> 00:39:33.910 Nigel Carrick: yeah.
623 00:39:33.910 --> 00:39:38.019 chris edwards: And a stream follow. It follows the line of the stream.
624 00:39:38.020 --> 00:39:38.830 Nigel Carrick: Yeah.
625 00:39:39.970 --> 00:39:57.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Nigel. The other thing that we've found in the past is that you have under the Somerset heritage layers. You've got the tithe maps, and you can often see where water flows used to be, and it may well be you've now got pipes doing it instead of the streams.
626 00:39:57.020 --> 00:40:00.750 Nigel Carrick: Yeah, yes, I I yes, yes.
627 00:40:01.290 --> 00:40:13.140 Nigel Carrick: yes, it's 1 of those things that one of our roads is constantly flooded after that last bout of rain, and it pooled in the bottom of a lane, and I know that in the past a ditch.
628 00:40:13.180 --> 00:40:17.389 Nigel Carrick: you know, proper ditch drainage ditch went up to that corner.
629 00:40:17.410 --> 00:40:25.119 Nigel Carrick: But the building on that corner has expanded, and it's it's run over the the ditch, and I think there was an underground pipe.
630 00:40:25.380 --> 00:40:26.199 Nigel Carrick: But I just.
631 00:40:27.110 --> 00:40:31.859 Nigel Carrick: and that's that pipe which is blocked, I believe, and so causing a blockage. But I don't know.
632 00:40:33.150 --> 00:40:35.989 chris edwards: While while I've got this map on the screen?
633 00:40:36.507 --> 00:40:40.079 chris edwards: Can I mention that we can go into view?
634 00:40:40.970 --> 00:40:42.780 chris edwards: Look at bookmarks.
635 00:40:43.450 --> 00:40:47.170 chris edwards: and about 2 days ago I did a bookmark.
636 00:40:47.938 --> 00:40:52.870 chris edwards: I've got to have a look through. I can't remember the actual title I gave it.
637 00:40:53.340 --> 00:40:56.159 chris edwards: Let me just whiz down.
638 00:40:56.414 --> 00:40:59.470 Nigel Carrick: Could I have a look at your areas at risk of flooding.
639 00:40:59.790 --> 00:41:03.007 chris edwards: In a minute I'll go back to that.
640 00:41:03.510 --> 00:41:04.550 chris edwards: Here we are.
641 00:41:06.820 --> 00:41:08.729 chris edwards: Oh, why hasn't it come up?
642 00:41:09.390 --> 00:41:17.449 chris edwards: What I did was to put a 1 color in the the area that our parish owns, and then another color.
643 00:41:18.035 --> 00:41:22.489 chris edwards: For our neighboring parish. Now, why hasn't that come up with.
644 00:41:23.390 --> 00:41:27.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you may not have the layers turned on when you did the bookmark, Chris.
645 00:41:28.580 --> 00:41:32.309 chris edwards: Right. Okay. Now, going back to Nigel. What were you looking.
646 00:41:32.310 --> 00:41:34.140 Nigel Carrick: Areas at risk of flooding.
647 00:41:35.380 --> 00:41:36.120 Stuart Bacon: 2.
648 00:41:37.510 --> 00:41:38.180 Nigel Carrick: Down.
649 00:41:39.750 --> 00:41:41.080 Nigel Carrick: just yep.
650 00:41:41.940 --> 00:41:42.510 chris edwards: There we are!
651 00:41:42.510 --> 00:41:44.419 Nigel Carrick: Oh, yes. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
652 00:41:44.420 --> 00:41:48.160 chris edwards: So now this blue line is the border of our parish.
653 00:41:48.230 --> 00:41:50.660 chris edwards: It's the river brew.
654 00:41:51.020 --> 00:41:55.639 chris edwards: and it obviously will flood at certain times.
655 00:41:55.720 --> 00:42:02.520 chris edwards: and this will give you information about the extent of the area of of flooding
656 00:42:02.700 --> 00:42:03.550 chris edwards: and
657 00:42:03.790 --> 00:42:05.659 chris edwards: just a point of interest.
658 00:42:06.000 --> 00:42:10.020 chris edwards: There's this planning application, which has been approved
659 00:42:10.140 --> 00:42:13.190 chris edwards: for 200 homes in this rectangle.
660 00:42:13.480 --> 00:42:15.539 chris edwards: and what we're saying is that.
661 00:42:16.210 --> 00:42:19.940 chris edwards: look at the look at the historical flooding here
662 00:42:19.990 --> 00:42:23.949 chris edwards: and along here, which is along the side of a railway line.
663 00:42:24.170 --> 00:42:28.939 chris edwards: and we're objecting to the 200 homes because of the risk of flooding
664 00:42:29.310 --> 00:42:31.245 chris edwards: and the the
665 00:42:32.500 --> 00:42:34.630 chris edwards: the inadequate
666 00:42:35.040 --> 00:42:38.809 chris edwards: sewer network and the culverts
667 00:42:38.850 --> 00:42:41.689 chris edwards: would not be able to get rid of the
668 00:42:41.710 --> 00:42:42.935 chris edwards: floodwater.
669 00:42:44.820 --> 00:42:50.509 chris edwards: So so you know, this is a it's a real real sore point with our Parish council.
670 00:42:50.750 --> 00:42:52.840 chris edwards: and just to zoom in.
671 00:42:53.650 --> 00:42:59.489 chris edwards: We've got the railway lines here, and where I've got my cursor where it says Footbridge.
672 00:42:59.640 --> 00:43:04.780 chris edwards: there's a culvert running under the 2 railway lines out
673 00:43:04.820 --> 00:43:06.349 chris edwards: to the other side.
674 00:43:06.510 --> 00:43:07.510 chris edwards: and then
675 00:43:07.880 --> 00:43:12.939 chris edwards: the the sewers go by the side of a new car park
676 00:43:12.950 --> 00:43:15.010 chris edwards: into the river. Brew here.
677 00:43:15.490 --> 00:43:21.230 chris edwards: and this car park, which is brand spanking new for 200 cars
678 00:43:21.270 --> 00:43:23.369 chris edwards: that is likely to be flooded.
679 00:43:23.880 --> 00:43:25.789 chris edwards: But we have a huge downpour.
680 00:43:26.170 --> 00:43:30.280 chris edwards: So we we've got this data which we can make use of.
681 00:43:30.450 --> 00:43:31.670 chris edwards: And you know
682 00:43:32.000 --> 00:43:35.029 chris edwards: we find this to be very, very useful indeed.
683 00:43:36.570 --> 00:43:41.735 Nigel Carrick: Yeah, yeah, yes, I see, I see. And and those flood areas were in the
684 00:43:43.400 --> 00:43:44.826 Bob Grainger: Oh, you're in as well, are you?
685 00:43:45.438 --> 00:43:47.480 chris edwards: I'll share. I'll show you.
686 00:43:47.480 --> 00:43:50.140 Nigel Carrick: I've got the. I've got those areas because I was.
687 00:43:50.140 --> 00:43:50.670 Bob Grainger: Going on here.
688 00:43:51.046 --> 00:43:52.553 Nigel Carrick: Our own flood map
689 00:43:52.930 --> 00:43:54.099 chris edwards: Somewhere down here.
690 00:43:54.100 --> 00:43:57.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, the environment agency puts out all the fun.
691 00:43:57.150 --> 00:43:57.560 Nigel Carrick: Yes.
692 00:43:57.560 --> 00:43:58.370 Andrew Clegg: Yes.
693 00:43:58.370 --> 00:43:58.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Pretty good.
694 00:43:58.990 --> 00:43:59.960 Nigel Carrick: Got those.
695 00:44:00.370 --> 00:44:01.750 chris edwards: Yes, I'll I'll
696 00:44:01.760 --> 00:44:03.560 chris edwards: I'm almost there.
697 00:44:03.600 --> 00:44:05.639 chris edwards: flooding somewhere here.
698 00:44:05.640 --> 00:44:06.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you can.
699 00:44:06.070 --> 00:44:07.310 John Roberts: Environment, agency.
700 00:44:07.700 --> 00:44:08.120 John Roberts: gosh.
701 00:44:08.120 --> 00:44:08.619 Andrew Clegg: That's the one.
702 00:44:08.620 --> 00:44:17.519 chris edwards: Here we are, so I won't click on it. But that's where you go. Environment agency flooding. Well, in fact, I will click on it, and it'll give you.
703 00:44:17.520 --> 00:44:18.080 Nigel Carrick: Yeah.
704 00:44:18.080 --> 00:44:20.269 chris edwards: I've got all these layers turned on.
705 00:44:20.270 --> 00:44:21.260 Nigel Carrick: Yes. Yeah.
706 00:44:23.270 --> 00:44:23.960 Nigel Carrick: Yeah.
707 00:44:24.480 --> 00:44:27.059 chris edwards: So I would urge you to have a look at that.
708 00:44:27.060 --> 00:44:33.239 Nigel Carrick: Yeah, no, I've done. I've done that. And I've got that in my map as I was actually creating a a flood
709 00:44:33.330 --> 00:44:48.059 Nigel Carrick: resilience plan, and so I've been creating some maps to to support it. And, honest, I've got the gullies and drains, and I've I've highlighted all the block drains, but we can't get anyone to clear them. That's the problem.
710 00:44:48.899 --> 00:44:49.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Welcome!
711 00:44:49.740 --> 00:44:53.010 chris edwards: Richard, you got your hand up anything to do with my map.
712 00:44:53.860 --> 00:45:00.960 Ex Clerk: It was just to say that another one of your layers inside Somerset is some buildings over sewers
713 00:45:02.290 --> 00:45:12.529 Ex Clerk: which you know is underground, but obviously you haven't got any in your parish, but there's there's loads down in Yeovil but and and surrounding areas.
714 00:45:12.560 --> 00:45:17.339 Ex Clerk: But seeing as that was something to do with sewers. I thought I'd just mention it.
715 00:45:17.340 --> 00:45:21.260 chris edwards: Would that possibly be under the South Somerset District Council share.
716 00:45:21.260 --> 00:45:22.120 Nigel Carrick: Yes.
717 00:45:22.490 --> 00:45:23.499 Ex Clerk: I said, Well.
718 00:45:23.660 --> 00:45:24.250 Nigel Carrick: That's the one.
719 00:45:24.250 --> 00:45:25.260 chris edwards: Building
720 00:45:25.783 --> 00:45:28.470 chris edwards: you say, under sewers or over sewers.
721 00:45:28.470 --> 00:45:29.540 Nigel Carrick: Building over.
722 00:45:29.540 --> 00:45:30.409 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, they hope they.
723 00:45:30.410 --> 00:45:31.370 Ex Clerk: Building over.
724 00:45:31.370 --> 00:45:31.710 chris edwards: Right.
725 00:45:31.710 --> 00:45:32.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Speech.
726 00:45:32.320 --> 00:45:33.470 chris edwards: No nothing!
727 00:45:36.670 --> 00:45:37.140 Stuart Bacon: no.
728 00:45:37.140 --> 00:45:37.890 Nigel Carrick: Well.
729 00:45:38.750 --> 00:45:39.790 chris edwards: My goodness, of that.
730 00:45:39.790 --> 00:45:46.280 Nigel Carrick: I don't think they're that accurate. I certainly know that in our area we've got built buildings over pipes, and
731 00:45:46.460 --> 00:45:47.390 Nigel Carrick: it's not shin.
732 00:45:47.390 --> 00:45:51.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You. You'll always ask Chris to move to your area rather than be in his.
733 00:45:51.570 --> 00:45:52.720 Graham Stoddart-Stones: just to show it.
734 00:45:53.354 --> 00:45:55.010 chris edwards: Which area is that.
735 00:45:55.290 --> 00:45:58.639 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But if you go back to your buildings over sewers, lair
736 00:45:58.740 --> 00:46:02.429 Graham Stoddart-Stones: under Ssdc next next collection down. Yeah, that one.
737 00:46:04.730 --> 00:46:05.929 chris edwards: And whose area am I going.
738 00:46:05.930 --> 00:46:09.309 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, Richard was saying, Yeovil was a good example.
739 00:46:09.570 --> 00:46:11.639 Ex Clerk: Yeah, yo was a good example.
740 00:46:12.430 --> 00:46:13.870 Ex Clerk: There's plenty in yoga.
741 00:46:17.380 --> 00:46:20.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, my, yes! Look at all those! Wow!
742 00:46:20.270 --> 00:46:21.050 Nigel Carrick: Yeah.
743 00:46:21.410 --> 00:46:23.229 chris edwards: That's in the center of Yehovo.
744 00:46:23.230 --> 00:46:25.139 Ex Clerk: Oh, yeah, that's great. I'm sending.
745 00:46:25.260 --> 00:46:26.030 Ex Clerk: Yeah.
746 00:46:27.920 --> 00:46:29.870 chris edwards: I'm clicking on it. Oh, here we are.
747 00:46:33.920 --> 00:46:38.540 chris edwards: there! There's some details which one could obviously explore.
748 00:46:38.540 --> 00:46:39.500 Nigel Carrick: Yeah.
749 00:46:40.480 --> 00:46:41.230 Nigel Carrick: Hmm.
750 00:46:42.440 --> 00:46:44.903 Nigel Carrick: yeah, it doesn't. It doesn't show the pipes. That's that's
751 00:46:46.304 --> 00:46:52.865 Nigel Carrick: I was just curious. Because I know the pipe must exist somewhere, but presumably they've sent a
752 00:46:53.720 --> 00:46:56.409 Nigel Carrick: They do the jetting. They'll discover it so.
753 00:46:56.410 --> 00:47:00.679 chris edwards: So Wes Wessex water would be the company, probably to ask for details.
754 00:47:00.680 --> 00:47:01.889 Nigel Carrick: Yes, they would.
755 00:47:01.890 --> 00:47:02.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
756 00:47:02.270 --> 00:47:02.860 chris edwards: Yeah.
757 00:47:03.270 --> 00:47:04.810 chris edwards: right? Let me just
758 00:47:05.660 --> 00:47:07.379 chris edwards: remove the layer.
759 00:47:08.460 --> 00:47:09.880 chris edwards: There we are. Okay.
760 00:47:10.090 --> 00:47:12.660 chris edwards: right? I'm going to stop sharing for a moment.
761 00:47:13.570 --> 00:47:18.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So let let's shine the spotlight on Angie for a good period.
762 00:47:18.240 --> 00:47:27.239 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And again, this is for Ray and for Philip, really, just to show the sort of use that parish online can be put to in a busy place
763 00:47:27.520 --> 00:47:31.089 Graham Stoddart-Stones: as opposed to the quiet rural areas. We all inhabit.
764 00:47:34.833 --> 00:47:36.400 Angie Bamford: Righty Hi
765 00:47:37.110 --> 00:47:40.120 Angie Bamford: Stoke Mandible Parish Council.
766 00:47:40.880 --> 00:47:42.349 Angie Bamford: where we have
767 00:47:43.980 --> 00:47:49.489 Angie Bamford: quite a few houses being built, we have Hs 2 going through. We have
768 00:47:49.610 --> 00:47:54.919 Angie Bamford: a bypass going through a link road going through. So
769 00:47:55.560 --> 00:48:00.099 Angie Bamford: I've got. Let me just move everybody over to the side, otherwise I can't see
770 00:48:02.650 --> 00:48:05.192 Angie Bamford: Where do? Where do we just start? Brian?
771 00:48:05.510 --> 00:48:09.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hs 2. Just show Hs 2 to start. Everyone's interested in that.
772 00:48:09.190 --> 00:48:10.320 Angie Bamford: How are you guys today?
773 00:48:20.380 --> 00:48:21.430 Angie Bamford: Not letting me.
774 00:48:21.430 --> 00:48:23.369 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It doesn't exist anymore. There you go.
775 00:48:23.420 --> 00:48:24.270 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
776 00:48:24.410 --> 00:48:25.080 Angie Bamford: Us.
777 00:48:26.090 --> 00:48:27.210 Angie Bamford: use them.
778 00:48:29.170 --> 00:48:31.170 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Isn't that intriguing? It must.
779 00:48:31.170 --> 00:48:32.080 Angie Bamford: Coming up.
780 00:48:32.080 --> 00:48:35.810 Stuart Bacon: Hang over the the red exclamation.
781 00:48:37.970 --> 00:48:38.980 Stuart Bacon: Just that.
782 00:48:40.400 --> 00:48:44.240 Nigel Carrick: Go to extent. You're too close in. You need to go out. Yeah.
783 00:48:44.240 --> 00:48:46.029 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's I don't think that's right.
784 00:48:50.000 --> 00:48:51.090 Nigel Carrick: Oh!
785 00:48:51.090 --> 00:48:52.820 Angie Bamford: I can show you where.
786 00:48:53.500 --> 00:48:55.523 Angie Bamford: Well, hey, just tubing
787 00:48:56.030 --> 00:48:58.099 Andrew Clegg: I think it's since the budget.
788 00:49:12.470 --> 00:49:13.240 Nigel Carrick: Christ.
789 00:49:13.410 --> 00:49:16.300 Angie Bamford: Railway. We've got the railway line downstream.
790 00:49:17.680 --> 00:49:20.859 Angie Bamford: That's a normal right way.
791 00:49:21.700 --> 00:49:22.750 Nigel Carrick: HOS, 2 there.
792 00:49:22.750 --> 00:49:23.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Whoa! Whoa! There it is.
793 00:49:23.965 --> 00:49:24.170 Stuart Bacon: Yep.
794 00:49:24.180 --> 00:49:25.166 Angie Bamford: That's the
795 00:49:25.680 --> 00:49:30.729 Angie Bamford: That's the where Hs 2 is going. Let me take that one off, but it should be.
796 00:49:31.830 --> 00:49:36.592 Angie Bamford: Pick that one up. It should be under Hs 2. You can show all the
797 00:49:38.570 --> 00:49:41.879 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There's a red line for some reason, so it's not running.
798 00:49:42.900 --> 00:49:45.960 Angie Bamford: You should be able to. I could show you the land grab, but.
799 00:49:45.960 --> 00:49:47.990 Ex Clerk: Trains don't run on Fridays.
800 00:49:52.630 --> 00:49:54.310 Angie Bamford: It's showing it isn't.
801 00:49:54.310 --> 00:49:56.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No very interesting.
802 00:49:56.220 --> 00:49:56.970 Nigel Carrick: Yeah.
803 00:49:58.330 --> 00:50:01.449 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, as Richard says, it's Friday afternoon.
804 00:50:06.030 --> 00:50:11.539 John Roberts: It's not just on Angie's either, because if I if I click on the same bit, it's coming up with that red.
805 00:50:11.970 --> 00:50:13.570 Angie Bamford: How's that?
806 00:50:14.980 --> 00:50:17.550 Angie Bamford: It doesn't say what that is? Is it just a.
807 00:50:18.430 --> 00:50:20.159 Ex Clerk: Obviously taking it away.
808 00:50:22.660 --> 00:50:23.500 Ex Clerk: derailed.
809 00:50:23.730 --> 00:50:25.579 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Are you sure it's still there, Angie?
810 00:50:25.580 --> 00:50:26.170 Angie Bamford: Yeah.
811 00:50:26.170 --> 00:50:26.840 Ex Clerk: Hmm.
812 00:50:27.210 --> 00:50:28.136 Angie Bamford: That's my
813 00:50:29.380 --> 00:50:33.000 Angie Bamford: I take it off. That's the original neighbourhood that we had.
814 00:50:34.210 --> 00:50:37.390 Angie Bamford: That's that is Stoke mandible. So we have the village palm.
815 00:50:37.420 --> 00:50:40.919 Angie Bamford: We have Stoke Grange, we have Stoke leaves and Hawkslade.
816 00:50:41.160 --> 00:50:47.880 Angie Bamford: and then we've got additional neighborhoods that are coming along. These are being built at the moment.
817 00:50:49.046 --> 00:50:52.179 Angie Bamford: And then we've got oh.
818 00:50:53.270 --> 00:50:57.599 Angie Bamford: let's see, develop land, which is the Vale of Aylesbury local planning
819 00:50:57.730 --> 00:51:01.260 Angie Bamford: allocated land for development.
820 00:51:01.260 --> 00:51:02.080 Nigel Carrick: Bennett.
821 00:51:02.080 --> 00:51:03.469 Angie Bamford: Last was
822 00:51:03.640 --> 00:51:06.550 Angie Bamford: the 1,700 houses.
823 00:51:06.790 --> 00:51:08.670 Nigel Carrick: You're not going to exist anymore. Are you?
824 00:51:08.670 --> 00:51:09.515 Angie Bamford: No.
825 00:51:10.360 --> 00:51:12.339 Nigel Carrick: You're just going to be a part of the blob.
826 00:51:12.630 --> 00:51:14.250 Angie Bamford: We are.
827 00:51:15.530 --> 00:51:17.690 Angie Bamford: they're the developmental areas.
828 00:51:17.960 --> 00:51:21.300 Angie Bamford: You've got Ailsbury Garden Town, West and East
829 00:51:22.370 --> 00:51:27.080 Angie Bamford: Ellesby Garden Town as well, isn't out of our parish, but it runs through
830 00:51:27.320 --> 00:51:28.590 Angie Bamford: just to the north.
831 00:51:29.120 --> 00:51:32.720 Angie Bamford: and that's the development of Ashbury Garden Town 2.
832 00:51:34.265 --> 00:51:35.960 Angie Bamford: It's coming along.
833 00:51:38.600 --> 00:51:42.580 Angie Bamford: Then we have a green buffer. They want to go around.
834 00:51:43.010 --> 00:51:50.190 Angie Bamford: says the village. Want some form of green buffer around the existing neighbourhood and the new development.
835 00:51:50.830 --> 00:51:52.950 Angie Bamford: And then there's a garden way.
836 00:51:53.580 --> 00:51:54.569 Angie Bamford: This is the
837 00:51:54.600 --> 00:51:56.359 Angie Bamford: local authority wants
838 00:51:56.550 --> 00:51:59.569 Angie Bamford: a link between the other parishes
839 00:51:59.850 --> 00:52:03.110 Angie Bamford: either side. So there's going to be a garden way.
840 00:52:03.646 --> 00:52:07.060 Angie Bamford: Walk, cycle. Do whatever you fancy around there.
841 00:52:07.890 --> 00:52:10.339 Angie Bamford: Then we've got a link road
842 00:52:10.390 --> 00:52:13.410 Angie Bamford: coming in as well. That's the South East Link Road
843 00:52:13.560 --> 00:52:15.000 Angie Bamford: coming in there
844 00:52:16.750 --> 00:52:19.010 Angie Bamford: and then we have the slope manageable bypass.
845 00:52:19.390 --> 00:52:29.209 Angie Bamford: So all our land is being cut through. This is another road coming through from one parish to the other. Then it goes up to the north and it goes down to the south.
846 00:52:30.471 --> 00:52:36.960 Angie Bamford: We have a slope book corridor as well, which we wanted to protect, but neighborhood planning
847 00:52:37.720 --> 00:52:45.111 Angie Bamford: inspector, and well, the inspector more like the parish parishioners and some some locals.
848 00:52:46.100 --> 00:52:47.200 Angie Bamford: objected.
849 00:52:47.800 --> 00:52:56.019 Angie Bamford: Then we decided, we will have a settlement boundary. So anything in this red area, we said, should have
850 00:52:56.460 --> 00:53:01.249 Angie Bamford: the development only, and not around, not out of that settlement area.
851 00:53:05.370 --> 00:53:08.689 Angie Bamford: Oh, put the bypas up at the bypass in
852 00:53:08.950 --> 00:53:11.590 Angie Bamford: might put the link code in. Yeah, put the link code in
853 00:53:12.560 --> 00:53:14.500 Angie Bamford: the North.
854 00:53:14.610 --> 00:53:16.430 Angie Bamford: You've got business centers.
855 00:53:17.100 --> 00:53:17.920 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We can't.
856 00:53:18.250 --> 00:53:21.820 Angie Bamford: Care and retirement community going in there.
857 00:53:25.390 --> 00:53:27.129 Angie Bamford: probably the best
858 00:53:27.880 --> 00:53:34.439 Angie Bamford: best one of all like to put this on is a landowner. So I take these others off because it might help you
859 00:53:34.580 --> 00:53:35.460 Angie Bamford: with
860 00:53:35.960 --> 00:53:37.170 Angie Bamford: tracking.
861 00:53:39.180 --> 00:53:41.560 Angie Bamford: What we did 1st of all was.
862 00:53:41.980 --> 00:53:44.089 Angie Bamford: find out who the landowners were.
863 00:53:46.561 --> 00:53:49.210 Angie Bamford: so we've got. Oh, excuse me.
864 00:53:49.840 --> 00:53:52.340 Angie Bamford: so we've got the development. We've got Carla Holmes
865 00:53:52.450 --> 00:53:55.850 Angie Bamford: Development going on there. We've got Crest Nicholson going on there.
866 00:53:56.140 --> 00:53:58.490 Angie Bamford: We've got land improvements going on there.
867 00:53:58.670 --> 00:54:03.719 Angie Bamford: Richborough going on there, Manorak going on there so that the developers going yeah,
868 00:54:04.120 --> 00:54:05.590 Angie Bamford: mapping their area.
869 00:54:05.640 --> 00:54:08.729 Angie Bamford: And then we've got the individual landowners as well.
870 00:54:08.930 --> 00:54:11.030 Angie Bamford: so I can go into
871 00:54:12.140 --> 00:54:13.240 Angie Bamford: One of these
872 00:54:14.110 --> 00:54:16.150 Angie Bamford: and find out who the landowner is.
873 00:54:17.630 --> 00:54:18.700 Angie Bamford: Was that
874 00:54:18.840 --> 00:54:20.719 Angie Bamford: so? I can go onto the attachments.
875 00:54:20.720 --> 00:54:22.299 Nigel Carrick: Was that what you put on.
876 00:54:22.300 --> 00:54:22.960 Angie Bamford: Yeah.
877 00:54:23.840 --> 00:54:26.869 Nigel Carrick: So you didn't get that from any other source.
878 00:54:27.590 --> 00:54:33.789 Angie Bamford: No, I did I I did this myself. Sorry I've got somebody at the door. Excuse me, I'll stop sharing somebody at the door.
879 00:54:37.710 --> 00:54:38.290 John Roberts: That
880 00:54:38.610 --> 00:54:41.659 John Roberts: what Angie's done over the time is is
881 00:54:41.860 --> 00:54:46.110 John Roberts: the back. The best illustration you've got of how you can build up in.
882 00:54:46.110 --> 00:54:46.520 philip wilson: Amazing.
883 00:54:46.520 --> 00:54:47.789 John Roberts: Not barish online.
884 00:54:50.680 --> 00:54:58.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm gonna share my screen for Ray just to show him a couple of things that are also available that we haven't touched on yet.
885 00:54:58.150 --> 00:55:01.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if I change to there
886 00:55:03.160 --> 00:55:05.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and go to
887 00:55:07.010 --> 00:55:08.200 Graham Stoddart-Stones: personal line.
888 00:55:11.290 --> 00:55:12.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Whoa.
889 00:55:12.910 --> 00:55:13.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: yeah.
890 00:55:15.750 --> 00:55:17.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: let's make this bigger.
891 00:55:18.940 --> 00:55:22.239 Angie Bamford: Sorry, and parcel wasn't even for me. It's my neighbor.
892 00:55:25.210 --> 00:55:26.439 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So it's just
893 00:55:27.020 --> 00:55:31.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: One of our newcomers. Angie is interested in biodiversity.
894 00:55:31.780 --> 00:55:35.719 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and I just wanted to show him the sorts of things that we get
895 00:55:36.030 --> 00:55:40.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: from friends of the earth. So if we type in, I think it's under woodland.
896 00:55:42.470 --> 00:55:45.409 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. So if you go to the friends of the Earth collection.
897 00:55:45.970 --> 00:55:49.199 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and you can look at what they call woodland opportunities
898 00:55:49.720 --> 00:55:52.983 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and what they've done. Ray is to
899 00:55:54.360 --> 00:56:08.369 Graham Stoddart-Stones: put together all the existing woodland that they can find, and then they highlight the ones that they think can usefully be joined together to help create corridors. And you know, spaces for hedgehogs and things that are in in deep trouble.
900 00:56:09.830 --> 00:56:16.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and they recommend how you can sort of link these together. So that's 1 of the the 3rd party networks that's available.
901 00:56:16.850 --> 00:56:26.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Then you've got natural. England has their idea of the same sort of thing, and if you're a fan of the great Crested Newt, you can find out where they are
902 00:56:26.130 --> 00:56:34.279 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and how they're doing. And similarly, parish online has just started a couple of new layers dedicated to helping hedgehogs.
903 00:56:34.830 --> 00:56:36.030 Helen Davey: So.
904 00:56:36.905 --> 00:56:37.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Again
905 00:56:37.900 --> 00:56:42.440 Graham Stoddart-Stones: things that are in the system. Should you wish to make use of them.
906 00:56:42.620 --> 00:56:43.689 Ray Toomer: Good. Thank you.
907 00:56:44.455 --> 00:56:44.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: New.
908 00:56:44.800 --> 00:56:47.109 Helen Davey: Also because yes, that's part of our.
909 00:56:49.620 --> 00:56:59.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, I think by and large, the more that people are getting used to mapping, the more requests are going to geosphere for new layers to be brought in.
910 00:56:59.590 --> 00:57:12.039 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and I know they're doing a lot of work at the moment on solar panels, so you can see not only who's already got solar panels up, but you can also see where the best places are to go
911 00:57:12.310 --> 00:57:14.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: for solar panels to be fitted.
912 00:57:14.970 --> 00:57:15.875 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And
913 00:57:17.470 --> 00:57:21.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: again. You're a building management person. You said Philip.
914 00:57:21.140 --> 00:57:21.820 philip wilson: Yeah.
915 00:57:21.820 --> 00:57:24.420 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Does that include the environmental
916 00:57:25.930 --> 00:57:27.200 Graham Stoddart-Stones: certificates.
917 00:57:27.950 --> 00:57:29.170 philip wilson: He sees
918 00:57:29.510 --> 00:57:31.280 philip wilson: we are looking.
919 00:57:32.010 --> 00:57:34.550 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you there are the Epcs here.
920 00:57:34.550 --> 00:57:34.920 philip wilson: Yeah.
921 00:57:34.920 --> 00:57:41.249 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Broken those down into into several layers. You just want to see who's got what at the moment
922 00:57:41.660 --> 00:57:42.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: houses.
923 00:57:42.720 --> 00:57:47.539 Graham Stoddart-Stones: then they're color coded for what degree they are. So if I turn the legend on.
924 00:57:48.190 --> 00:57:51.779 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you can see what grades they are at the moment.
925 00:57:51.940 --> 00:57:52.930 philip wilson: Alright, brilliant.
926 00:57:52.930 --> 00:57:56.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you sort of zoom in a bit to make a bit more clear.
927 00:57:57.190 --> 00:58:02.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you know you can easily go to your whoever your local funding people are and say.
928 00:58:02.690 --> 00:58:03.420 philip wilson: Yeah.
929 00:58:03.420 --> 00:58:09.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There's a whole bunch of people that are not going to make it to the grade C required by 2,035 and.
930 00:58:09.490 --> 00:58:09.980 philip wilson: Yeah.
931 00:58:09.980 --> 00:58:19.609 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We need to help them. Or there's another facility in the layers where we turn off those and say, Let's go to the potential score increase.
932 00:58:20.260 --> 00:58:23.639 Graham Stoddart-Stones: then these are what you call the low hanging fruits.
933 00:58:23.840 --> 00:58:34.280 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So again, the the legend is slightly different. Here the green ones are the ones that you as a parish council want to focus on, because the
934 00:58:34.860 --> 00:58:39.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: they're the houses that are currently on a very low grade.
935 00:58:39.290 --> 00:58:47.420 Graham Stoddart-Stones: but they with a fairly simple upgrade, they can jump the highest number of points in the increase of carbon efficiency.
936 00:58:47.610 --> 00:58:48.070 philip wilson: And.
937 00:58:48.070 --> 00:59:01.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So again, it's just a way of showing the information. And again, it's very simple for you to go to say a retrofitter or somebody, and say, Look, we'll give you 50 addresses around here.
938 00:59:01.480 --> 00:59:01.870 philip wilson: Okay.
939 00:59:01.870 --> 00:59:07.129 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because you then don't have to do any marketing. You can cut your costs to them, and we'll we'll all benefit.
940 00:59:07.912 --> 00:59:15.819 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So that sort of idea is becoming, I think, more and more popular and useful because it's the sort of thing that people are focusing on. Now.
941 00:59:16.510 --> 00:59:16.860 philip wilson: Yes.
942 00:59:16.860 --> 00:59:20.750 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Mention that to give you an idea of the sorts of things
943 00:59:21.020 --> 00:59:25.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: that you can do. Another way of expressing the same data is to say which ones?
944 00:59:26.092 --> 00:59:34.189 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I've got the opportunity to to move up to grade C, so again, you've got all the ones that need to be raised.
945 00:59:34.290 --> 00:59:43.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, and and can be done so you could encourage your parishioners, or you can come up with, find some investment, or do some sourcing of funding, or whatever
946 00:59:43.420 --> 00:59:46.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: to bring these houses up, to scratch.
947 00:59:46.740 --> 00:59:47.780 philip wilson: Brilliant.
948 00:59:47.780 --> 00:59:50.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I just mentioned that in passing, in case it's helpful.
949 00:59:50.850 --> 00:59:52.441 philip wilson: Yeah, we are looking at
950 00:59:52.760 --> 00:59:54.590 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And the the odd thing that nobody has.
951 00:59:55.120 --> 01:00:02.569 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But I will gladly take full kudos, for this is they have a wonderful facility for overhead photography.
952 01:00:02.920 --> 01:00:11.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you're now seeing 2 layers of data at the same time. The one layer underlying is the Ordnance Survey, showing you where
953 01:00:12.276 --> 01:00:18.339 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the buildings are, and where the the names are, and so forth. But if I turn down
954 01:00:18.490 --> 01:00:21.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: they're mapping information to
955 01:00:21.360 --> 01:00:22.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: to 0,
956 01:00:23.080 --> 01:00:25.269 Graham Stoddart-Stones: then you get a hundred percent photography.
957 01:00:26.150 --> 01:00:35.010 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And if you're in the business of counting trees or something, it's fantastic. You can get the level of detail is astonishing, and you can go down and take a look at
958 01:00:35.286 --> 01:00:41.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the individual tree, and you can give it a name, or you can say, you know, it's been replaced, or it doesn't
959 01:00:41.340 --> 01:00:49.599 Graham Stoddart-Stones: need to whatever all sorts of things, there's also hedgerow width have been added reasonably recently, so that you can start marking
960 01:00:50.311 --> 01:00:55.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the the width of a hedgerow which you can see from these overhead.
961 01:00:55.460 --> 01:01:02.269 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's pretty easy to put a line along here just to follow the line of the hedge, and then you can get an idea of the volume of the hedge
962 01:01:02.600 --> 01:01:06.079 Graham Stoddart-Stones: in terms of you know, cubic meters, or whatever. If that's important.
963 01:01:06.080 --> 01:01:06.450 philip wilson: Yeah, yeah.
964 01:01:06.450 --> 01:01:14.349 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Biodiversity, because you've got this thing at the moment with biodiversity, where you've got to have a net gain after development.
965 01:01:14.640 --> 01:01:25.449 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And the question is, you can't know what the net gain you've got to get is if you don't know what the baseline was in the 1st place. So how do you calculate the baseline? Well, one of the ways of doing is to measure how big, how much hedgerow you've got.
966 01:01:25.450 --> 01:01:26.100 philip wilson: Yeah.
967 01:01:26.100 --> 01:01:29.199 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So that's again a facility that's in there.
968 01:01:30.790 --> 01:01:33.269 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and can be very useful if that's the.
969 01:01:33.270 --> 01:01:33.740 philip wilson: Yeah.
970 01:01:33.740 --> 01:01:35.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You know, interest that you're you're working.
971 01:01:35.760 --> 01:01:39.180 philip wilson: Yeah, I didn't realize there was so much to it.
972 01:01:39.180 --> 01:01:41.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, it's it's it's commercial program.
973 01:01:41.310 --> 01:01:41.890 Andrew Clegg: The other.
974 01:01:41.890 --> 01:01:55.949 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Thing that I just mentioned is that under the laws of the land imposed by the public services, geographic agreement, the Psga and ordinance survey
975 01:01:56.620 --> 01:02:23.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: parish councillors are able to use this system at no charge, but they've also now extended it to community organizations. So if you've got a group of people in your area who are mapping where the hedgehogs are or where they aren't no longer, or the butterflies, or you know the the lesser work weed or whatever it happens to be. They also can now have access to parish online and stop plotting these things for them. If it's to the benefit of the community.
976 01:02:23.860 --> 01:02:24.230 philip wilson: Yeah.
977 01:02:24.230 --> 01:02:25.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: These things usually are.
978 01:02:26.150 --> 01:02:51.439 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, just as a matter of interest, Graham. This last week we got our 1st planning application with biodiversity net gain report. And it's quite interesting how it's done. It's all a big fancy spreadsheet, and you're right. What they try and do is to minimize the amount of biodiversity that will be lost
979 01:02:51.911 --> 01:03:08.439 Andrew Clegg: by the, and you can see how it's being done by saying, Oh, this field is only just a ryegrass. There's absolutely nothing in it. There's no mice or anything or voles or anything like that. And unless we have maps with this basic biodiversity data on.
980 01:03:08.470 --> 01:03:10.879 Andrew Clegg: we're we're going to be steamrollered.
981 01:03:11.870 --> 01:03:23.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. I also run a separate banter session on Wednesdays to do with climate change. And we have a different speaker each week, and we've got one coming up, which is from Defra
982 01:03:23.260 --> 01:03:34.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: to explain exactly how you do measure biodiversity and the net gain, and so forth. So if anybody is interested in that. Let me know, and I'll send you an invite to the.
983 01:03:34.680 --> 01:03:36.729 Andrew Clegg: I'd be, I'd be interested. Graham. Yeah.
984 01:03:36.730 --> 01:03:43.069 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, we do one every Wednesday at noon on zoom Andrew, so I'll send you the link, and you can.
985 01:03:43.070 --> 01:03:43.630 Andrew Clegg: Okay.
986 01:03:43.630 --> 01:03:45.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And Stuart wants to come. Okay, good.
987 01:03:46.870 --> 01:03:47.470 chris edwards: Okay.
988 01:03:47.470 --> 01:03:50.870 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The landowner may know where the pipes are. Quite right, Angie.
989 01:03:51.220 --> 01:03:58.010 Angie Bamford: I have found a map. If you want me to quickly show it's not on parish online, but it's 1 that I made a map to put into our.
990 01:03:58.010 --> 01:04:00.199 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, please do go for it.
991 01:04:00.660 --> 01:04:01.260 Angie Bamford: Okay.
992 01:04:04.400 --> 01:04:09.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, we should say, shouldn't we? As a caveat, that other sources of information are available.
993 01:04:11.280 --> 01:04:12.719 Angie Bamford: So that's the oh.
994 01:04:13.460 --> 01:04:14.689 Angie Bamford: that was the
995 01:04:15.660 --> 01:04:16.950 Angie Bamford: Oh, I'm okay with that one.
996 01:04:17.070 --> 01:04:17.920 Angie Bamford: Have fun.
997 01:04:21.640 --> 01:04:22.210 Angie Bamford: Is that.
998 01:04:22.210 --> 01:04:24.629 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Looks very similar to what you've shown us in the past.
999 01:04:24.630 --> 01:04:27.029 Angie Bamford: This is. This is the presentation I did for you.
1000 01:04:28.300 --> 01:04:31.180 Angie Bamford: So that's the land grab, just to show you.
1001 01:04:34.110 --> 01:04:39.819 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And didn't you say that when they finish building and they no longer need that land they're not going to give it back.
1002 01:04:40.310 --> 01:04:43.950 Angie Bamford: They? They don't know. Basically
1003 01:04:43.980 --> 01:04:46.950 Angie Bamford: they don't know what to do with it. Will they give it back to the landowner?
1004 01:04:47.310 --> 01:04:51.649 Angie Bamford: And what use is it to the landowner after they've churned it all up? Anyway.
1005 01:04:52.070 --> 01:04:56.090 Angie Bamford: it's gonna be worth nothing, because it is just huge piles of earth
1006 01:04:56.500 --> 01:04:57.680 Angie Bamford: so high.
1007 01:04:58.274 --> 01:05:03.970 Angie Bamford: So would it. Would it be any good? You can't graze on it. You can't grow anything on it, so
1008 01:05:04.210 --> 01:05:09.770 Angie Bamford: you can't. You know you can't have your animals, and you can't have your crops. So what use is it to your farmer?
1009 01:05:09.960 --> 01:05:14.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, that's true for this year, but in 5 years time won't that all be different?
1010 01:05:14.520 --> 01:05:21.009 Angie Bamford: But it depends on how they leave it. That's the thing. Will they leave it like a, you know, so many builders. They just leave it like a dumping ground.
1011 01:05:21.800 --> 01:05:29.269 John Roberts: On the on the stretch of Hs. 2 that they've now abandoned. They actually refuse to sell the land or the houses back to the original owners.
1012 01:05:29.270 --> 01:05:29.660 Angie Bamford: Oh, yeah.
1013 01:05:29.660 --> 01:05:30.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, really.
1014 01:05:32.560 --> 01:05:33.420 Graham Stoddart-Stones: hi.
1015 01:05:33.736 --> 01:05:39.110 Angie Bamford: But yeah, that was the presentation I did to you all those all those weather long ago.
1016 01:05:39.110 --> 01:05:39.455 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
1017 01:05:41.700 --> 01:05:43.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, well, it's good stuff.
1018 01:05:43.660 --> 01:05:51.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So let me just again mention for Ray and for Phil's benefit, that on the parish online website, their own website.
1019 01:05:51.290 --> 01:05:54.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There is a tab called case histories.
1020 01:05:54.180 --> 01:06:07.079 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And basically there is what other people have done in the past with parish online, and most councils have got the same tasks, you know you want to do a neighbourhood plan you want to do.
1021 01:06:07.130 --> 01:06:22.759 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Where are the cycle paths? Where are the footpaths? Whatever all sorts of things. And so the chances are that, with something like 2.5,000 councils around the country, using this system, that whatever you want to do has already been done by somebody.
1022 01:06:22.810 --> 01:06:43.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and the beauty of the case histories is that you can go in there and see what they did. They usually tell you exactly what steps to take to achieve your ends, which is very helpful. And the other thing that I found particularly useful was that they tell you what not to do, so you try and avoid making the daft mistakes that they made.
1023 01:06:44.040 --> 01:06:45.939 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So they're very handy.
1024 01:06:47.470 --> 01:06:48.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What was that called
1025 01:06:49.260 --> 01:06:58.289 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and called in in the parish online website, which is what parish hyphen online.co.uk, I think. There's a tab called case histories.
1026 01:06:58.290 --> 01:07:00.639 Nigel Carrick: Oh, yes. Yes. Sorry case history. Yep. Yep.
1027 01:07:02.750 --> 01:07:10.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And it's now my turn to say to people, are there any questions which we've left unanswered, or even unasked so far.
1028 01:07:10.120 --> 01:07:20.790 chris edwards: Yes, please, Graham, just a quickie you mentioned in your presentation a moment ago. I think you used the word solar panels.
1029 01:07:20.790 --> 01:07:21.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
1030 01:07:21.320 --> 01:07:23.760 chris edwards: Would would there be a layer
1031 01:07:23.890 --> 01:07:27.359 chris edwards: indicating where solar panels exist
1032 01:07:27.620 --> 01:07:28.729 chris edwards: in a parish.
1033 01:07:28.730 --> 01:07:34.321 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's just about to arrive. The the key word to look out for Chris in the next
1034 01:07:34.810 --> 01:07:36.849 Graham Stoddart-Stones: parish online newsletter.
1035 01:07:36.970 --> 01:07:40.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The letters IREN. ES. Irene's.
1036 01:07:40.880 --> 01:07:43.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and that is the
1037 01:07:43.350 --> 01:07:55.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: acronym. For whatever organization it is that is, putting all this data together. So that's coming. I don't know when the actual release date is, but I keep being told it was yesterday. It was yesterday. It was yesterday.
1038 01:07:55.170 --> 01:07:58.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yesterday hasn't actually arrived yet, but it's not very far away.
1039 01:07:59.360 --> 01:08:01.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you could write a song about that.
1040 01:08:04.190 --> 01:08:05.320 chris edwards: Anyway. Thanks for that.
1041 01:08:05.320 --> 01:08:08.839 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay. You're welcome. Anybody else. Please.
1042 01:08:09.290 --> 01:08:16.299 Angie Bamford: Can I ask why, Richard is an ex clerk? What happened since I left here last time?
1043 01:08:19.569 --> 01:08:20.729 chris edwards: You're on Richard.
1044 01:08:20.729 --> 01:08:25.149 Ex Clerk: You talk. You're talking to me. On the 1st day of my second retirement.
1045 01:08:26.500 --> 01:08:28.599 Angie Bamford: I'm doing well.
1046 01:08:28.609 --> 01:08:31.135 Angie Bamford: Happy retirement second time around.
1047 01:08:31.649 --> 01:08:41.569 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Angie in the past. Whenever we made rude comments to Richard, he's picked up a mug with some saying on it, and pointed it at us, and I'm just looking for the glass of champagne.
1048 01:08:42.779 --> 01:08:45.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm retired. I'm done.
1049 01:08:46.250 --> 01:08:47.060 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But
1050 01:08:47.520 --> 01:08:51.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: anyway, congratulations to you, Richard. A long way. You join us.
1051 01:08:51.960 --> 01:08:53.599 Angie Bamford: Cool news.
1052 01:08:53.600 --> 01:08:54.430 Nigel Carrick: How sweet.
1053 01:08:56.009 --> 01:09:02.299 Stuart Bacon: Going back to when you were looking at the the Epc layers, Graham.
1054 01:09:02.300 --> 01:09:02.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
1055 01:09:03.222 --> 01:09:07.347 Stuart Bacon: Do you know why it is that each of the
1056 01:09:07.970 --> 01:09:13.090 Stuart Bacon: in the legend each of the categories is there twice small and large.
1057 01:09:13.170 --> 01:09:17.129 Stuart Bacon: Is there a difference between those that were shown?
1058 01:09:17.859 --> 01:09:20.720 Stuart Bacon: sort of as small triangles or big ones.
1059 01:09:20.729 --> 01:09:22.649 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Let's see if I can get there again.
1060 01:09:29.739 --> 01:09:31.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Turn off that
1061 01:09:32.639 --> 01:09:34.349 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and turn out that.
1062 01:09:36.619 --> 01:09:37.339 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well.
1063 01:09:38.239 --> 01:09:39.089 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Whoa!
1064 01:09:39.469 --> 01:09:41.659 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Can. I just go on to standard?
1065 01:09:42.129 --> 01:09:44.009 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Thank you. You'll be, too.
1066 01:09:45.529 --> 01:09:46.649 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There we go.
1067 01:09:47.889 --> 01:09:51.209 Graham Stoddart-Stones: right. So we wanted to go to the Epc. Layers.
1068 01:09:51.710 --> 01:09:52.279 Stuart Bacon: Yep.
1069 01:09:53.590 --> 01:09:55.439 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And so we just turn those on.
1070 01:09:55.910 --> 01:09:57.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Give you a legend.
1071 01:09:58.900 --> 01:10:03.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you've got the large ones and the small ones. They're all exactly the same, aren't they
1072 01:10:03.540 --> 01:10:05.669 Graham Stoddart-Stones: in terms of the same colors?
1073 01:10:05.940 --> 01:10:11.578 Stuart Bacon: It's the same colors, but it's it's why that why, you've got some cause. It was noticeable.
1074 01:10:12.130 --> 01:10:19.869 Stuart Bacon: it wasn't that one. It was one of the ones in the middle of the the option. For the Epcs.
1075 01:10:22.080 --> 01:10:22.870 Stuart Bacon: when you do.
1076 01:10:22.870 --> 01:10:23.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It was this.
1077 01:10:23.820 --> 01:10:24.590 Stuart Bacon: Central street.
1078 01:10:24.590 --> 01:10:25.279 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Piece, wasn't it?
1079 01:10:25.280 --> 01:10:25.890 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
1080 01:10:26.392 --> 01:10:39.630 Stuart Bacon: you could see sort of in that that. Some of the ones, as you looked at them seemed to be of the small lows, and some of them were the the bigger lows, and I didn't quite understand why it was.
1081 01:10:39.630 --> 01:10:46.100 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It looks to me as if it's for zooming in and out. So when you zoom in you get very big ones.
1082 01:10:46.430 --> 01:10:48.959 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and when you zoom out, you get much smaller ones.
1083 01:10:49.770 --> 01:10:51.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so I don't know whether that's it
1084 01:10:51.860 --> 01:10:53.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: or not.
1085 01:10:54.610 --> 01:10:55.480 Nigel Carrick: Yeah.
1086 01:10:55.800 --> 01:11:00.649 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Please, absolutely. There's a plea from me for you to get hold of Mr. Mews and ask him.
1087 01:11:03.222 --> 01:11:05.799 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I can see that one went down well.
1088 01:11:05.800 --> 01:11:10.279 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, no, it's yeah. He runs the other way whenever he sees me. So.
1089 01:11:12.950 --> 01:11:13.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
1090 01:11:14.613 --> 01:11:17.339 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right? Well, I hope that was helpful to people.
1091 01:11:17.340 --> 01:11:18.009 philip wilson: Yeah, I have a.
1092 01:11:18.010 --> 01:11:18.360 chris edwards: Yeah.
1093 01:11:18.360 --> 01:11:21.069 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Did you want to come back in the future?
1094 01:11:21.810 --> 01:11:24.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And I will send the details to
1095 01:11:25.599 --> 01:11:34.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Philip and Ray about the the Wednesday present demonstration of parish online, where you can see
1096 01:11:34.660 --> 01:11:48.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: a bit more formally what we do. We didn't do much in the way of attachments today, for instance. But to every record in Paris online you can add any sort of document, or photograph or image that you like, which is a very useful place to go back and see what's what.
1097 01:11:48.800 --> 01:11:49.460 philip wilson: Yeah.
1098 01:11:49.770 --> 01:11:52.509 Stuart Bacon: That. Sorry? That's 1 question I've got
1099 01:11:53.251 --> 01:11:56.269 Stuart Bacon: it just reminded me. Talking about attachments.
1100 01:11:56.638 --> 01:12:03.429 Stuart Bacon: restrictions on the type of attachments you can add, do we know what they are? Because I can't see a record of
1101 01:12:03.680 --> 01:12:08.170 Stuart Bacon: what there is? And I was trying to add some video files and can't do it.
1102 01:12:08.920 --> 01:12:11.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, I think you've got to do that as a link.
1103 01:12:12.200 --> 01:12:14.980 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Put the video up on Youtube and just link to it.
1104 01:12:16.750 --> 01:12:17.540 Stuart Bacon: Okay.
1105 01:12:18.445 --> 01:12:27.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because obviously, there's a i think there's all sorts of issues. The videos on how big is your bandwidth and how much you're gonna tie up their servers and so forth.
1106 01:12:28.410 --> 01:12:31.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I think that I would suggest that
1107 01:12:31.510 --> 01:12:35.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: they they're right in saying, Why don't you just use Youtube, who's got much.
1108 01:12:35.560 --> 01:12:43.640 Stuart Bacon: I can. I can see it. I can certainly see a logic for it. But yeah, no, I just couldn't see. I didn't know if there was a list somewhere of the types of attachments you could.
1109 01:12:44.180 --> 01:12:45.559 Stuart Bacon: you could attach, and those.
1110 01:12:45.560 --> 01:12:57.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Does does lead me to another point, Stuart, which is certainly I found in playing a lot more this recently with X map, that there are all sorts of things that are not documented in the knowledge base that really.
1111 01:12:58.420 --> 01:13:00.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: fundamentally they ought to be.
1112 01:13:00.420 --> 01:13:02.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And I would figure it was
1113 01:13:02.638 --> 01:13:14.609 Graham Stoddart-Stones: only fair on our part to write to geosphere and saying, Don't you think it'd be handy if this could be added to the knowledge base, please, because they can't cover everything 1st time through. They need a bit of feedback to say.
1114 01:13:14.790 --> 01:13:18.739 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you know, my ignorance was compounded by your lack of information.
1115 01:13:22.600 --> 01:13:27.677 Stuart Bacon: Fair enough I shall. I shall go and ruin Chris's weekend. With another query.
1116 01:13:30.370 --> 01:13:36.870 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Angie. It was lovely to see you, Malcolm. It was great to see you online. And, Richard, are we going to see you in the future.
1117 01:13:38.830 --> 01:13:40.981 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Was that putting you on the point on.
1118 01:13:41.810 --> 01:13:45.555 Ex Clerk: Yeah, possibly I'm on the system as a volunteer. So
1119 01:13:47.230 --> 01:13:47.840 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Bags.
1120 01:13:47.840 --> 01:13:48.840 Ex Clerk: Yes, you'd be better.
1121 01:13:48.840 --> 01:13:51.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Welcome just to divert us all
1122 01:13:51.650 --> 01:13:55.439 Graham Stoddart-Stones: with how life is for those who are free of the burden.
1123 01:13:56.150 --> 01:13:57.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm sorry.
1124 01:13:57.790 --> 01:14:00.909 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Take care everybody have a very good weekend, and thank you for joining.
1125 01:14:00.910 --> 01:14:03.910 Andrew Clegg: Well, thank you.
1126 01:14:04.150 --> 01:14:04.800 Nigel Carrick: Yeah.