How Open Government Is Helping With Hurricane Relief in Puerto Rico

In the aftermath of a natural disaster, embracing open government principles—such as open data, collaboration between citizens and government, and transparency—can save lives.

Daniel RubinsteinJust weeks after Hurricane Harvey hit Texas, two more "unprecedented" hurricanes made their way to the southeastern United States. Although changes in Hurricane Irma's path spared Florida from the bulk of the damage, both Irma and Maria directly hit Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Hurricane Maria was particularly devastating for the more than 3.5 million American citizens living in these U.S. Caribbean territories. The CEO of Puerto Rico's sole electric company indicated that the grid had been "basically destroyed." Without electricity, communications were severely limited.

In the aftermath of a natural disaster, embracing open government principles—such as open data, collaboration between citizens and government, and transparency—can save lives.

Using open data: OnTheMap for Emergency Management

Reliable data is crucial to any relief effort. Rescuers need to know which roads are impassable. Citizens need to know where they can find help. Government agencies such as FEMA need information about the populations with whom they're working.

The Census Bureau's OnTheMap for Emergency Management tool provides an easy-to use interface for viewing detailed information about the populations in areas hit by natural disasters. By combining real-time open data from the Census Bureau, the National Weather Service, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and the Department of Agriculture, questions important to relief efforts easily can be answered, such as:

  • How many people with disabilities were in the affected areas?
  • Where do people who worked in the impacted area live?
  • What proportion of the affected population does not speak English?

All this information was already available through different government sources, but its fragmentation limited its usability. OnTheMap uses the different agencies' APIs to make getting meaningful information a simple, one-step process.

Citizen involvement: Crowd Rescue HQ

In the days after the hurricane, information about the state of roads, bridges, and flooded areas in Puerto Rico was scarce. Former FEMA director Michael Brown called the situation a "logistical nightmare."

Crowd Rescue HQ, a crowdsourced initiative led by more than 700 volunteers, aimed to help by collecting information from people on the ground. Through an online form, people submitted information about the state of roads, bridges, and flooded areas. Crowd Rescue volunteers then translated this information to data that can be viewed on an online map. Crowd Rescue HQ works with government agencies, such as FEMA, to ensure their data is providing practical value for rescue efforts.

Centralizing and standardizing information: NAPSG

The National Alliance for Public Safety GIS (NAPSG) Foundation has aggregated geospatial data from nonprofits, government agencies, and private companies into a single map. Through one simple visual interface, any citizen, first responder, or government official can access the following information about Puerto Rico:

  • The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's weather hazard information
  • Crowd Rescue HQ's information concerning infrastructure issues such as flooded roads, downed power lines, and bridge collapses
  • Aerial photos of the situation from the Civil Air Patrol
  • Live information about the status of shelters from the American Red Cross' National Shelter System
  • FEMA Urban Search & Rescue data on the status of rescue operations
  • Live traffic feed from the Esri World Traffic Service
  • Hospital status information from the Department of Homeland Security and the Standby Task Force, a crowdsourced nonprofit organization

NAPSG has been working with the Department of Homeland Security to develop standards for incident maps and GIS applications. This initiative provides a framework for nonprofits, citizens, and government agencies to work together more effectively. By ensuring that incident information is transcribed in a consistent way, government agencies can better leverage external geospatial data in their relief efforts. For example, after Hurricane Irma, NAPSG led an initiative to crowdsource photos of the damage. This geographically encoded data was used by FEMA in its operations and is now hosted on a Department of Homeland Security open data portal.

With most of the island cut off from the grid, open data can do only so much. Environmental contamination is widely suspected in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria, yet the Puerto Rico Environmental Quality Board has still not made its measurements public. FEMA is far from transparent. Nevertheless, these three initiatives show how the ideas of open government can directly translate to more transparent, collaborative, and efficient relief operations.

How Open Government Is Helping With Hurricane Relief was authored by Daniel Rubinstein and published in Opensource.com. It is being republished by Open Health News under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-SA 4.0). The original copy of the article can be found here.