This dataset consists of a shapefile representing 50 foot contour intervals for Santa Cruz County, Arizona. Datasets are also available for 100', 250', and 500' intervals. Each file covers an Arizona county or part of a county and as a collection covers the entire state. The data were created by processing hillshade TIF files derived from the U.S. Geological Survey National Elevation Dataset. The processing produced ESRI formatted coverages for each county or part of a county. The U.S. Geological Survey has developed a National Elevation Dataset (NED). The NED is a seamless mosaic of best-available elevation data. The 7.5-minute elevation data for the conterminous United States are the primary initial source data. In addition to the availability of complete 7.5-minute data, efficient processing methods were developed to filter production artifacts in the existing data, convert to the NAD83 datum, edge-match, and fill slivers of missing data at quadrangle seams. One of the effects of the NED processing steps is a much-improved base of elevation data for calculating slope and hydrologic derivatives. The specifications for the NED 1 arc second and 1/3 arc second data are - Geographic coordinate system, Horizontal datum of NAD83, except for AK which is NAD27, Vertical datum of NAVD88, except for AK which is NAVD29, Z units of meters.
Vector polygon map data of property parcels from the State of Arizona containing 1,422,231 features.
Property parcel GIS map data consists of detailed information about individual land parcels, including their boundaries, ownership details, and geographic coordinates.
Property parcel data can be used to analyze and visualize land-related information for purposes such as real estate assessment, urban planning, or environmental management.
Available for viewing and sharing as a map in a Koordinates map viewer. This data is also available for export to DWG for CAD, PDF, KML, CSV, and GIS data formats, including Shapefile, MapInfo, and Geodatabase.
Plan submitted by: redistrictadmin on 12/8/2021 USER DESCRIPTION: In this version based off CD Test Map Version 8.1, CD Test Map Version 8.2 looks to united Mojave county with Navajo County, Apache County, Coconino County, and Yavapai County together in District 2.
USER PLAN OBJECTIVE: N/A
Plan submitted by: AriBradshaw on 10/17/2021 USER DESCRIPTION: N/A USER PLAN OBJECTIVE: Dear public, commission, and mapping team:
This map follows many of the comments received at the latest IRC meeting in addition to a few parameters we feel must be followed to the best of the IRC's ability. The numbers we have used in this map are arbitrary and can be aligned closer with the current IRC numbers. Each district is equal in population.
The Phoenix-Mesa metro area holds 2/3 of the population. It holds that it should have 2/3 of the congressional districts without marginalizing the voices of rural counties.
Tucson can largely fit within one congressional district. Its suburbs can be split and its exurbs can be included into an "East Pima" district alongside a rural district.
We want to honor as best as possible the Latino coalition's map for a Phoenix district.
We have created two rural districts. CD1 combines the Colorado River counties with the Flagstaff-Prescott corridor. We exclude North Coconino and Mohave counties into CD2 as their towns of Fredonia and Colorado City are beyond the Grand Canyon and share more in common with the Mormon settlements of Apache and Navajo counties. The Kaibab reservation gets to have a voice alongside many other natives. CD1 combines the river natives with the Canyon natives and the Southern natives. The IRC made it clear that they wanted the Yuma natives and Tohono natives to be in the same district and so we have accomplished such with minimal compromise.
The East Valley is split into two districts. The far east includes San Tan Valley, Apache Junction, and much of the far east and south of the urban area. The other district includes all of Tempe south of the river alongside Ahwatukee and large portions of Mesa.
There exists a Northeast Valley district that consists of the rapidly changing downtown Phoenix, Uptown, Arcadia, Scottsdale, Fountain Hills, and the Salt River and Fort Mohave Natives. New River, Anthem, Cave Creek, and Carefree are included as well due to their community of interest with Northeast Phoenix and Scottsdale.
The Latino district is largely the same as that submitted by the coalition. We have traded a portion of downtown Phoenix that has much more in common with Arcadia and Uptown than it does with South Phoenix for more of Southwest Phoenix.
District 4 is a suburban and exurban district that covers most of Pinal county in addition to Buckeye, Goodyear, and Avondale. The borders lie across from retirement communities such as Sun City. The only major area of compromise on this entire map is found in this area and it is fixable with some effort - the town of Coolidge, AZ.
This map contains four competitive districts. By trading some blocks between District 5 and District 4 near Glendale, we can create five competitive districts.
This map contains a total of three minority-majority districts (CD3, 4, and 7) with one district at 50.95% non-hispanic white (CD2). By trading land between CD2 and CD3, we can achieve a total of four minority-majority districts.
Abraham and I highly urge the committee and mapping team to consider this map and its choice to leave Maricopan interests out of Rural districts and to consolidate Tucson into one district with its exurbs in another and its suburbs split.
Thank you so much for your time and dedication to the State of Arizona and all of its people. God Bless.
Not seeing a result you expected?
Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.
This dataset consists of a shapefile representing 50 foot contour intervals for Santa Cruz County, Arizona. Datasets are also available for 100', 250', and 500' intervals. Each file covers an Arizona county or part of a county and as a collection covers the entire state. The data were created by processing hillshade TIF files derived from the U.S. Geological Survey National Elevation Dataset. The processing produced ESRI formatted coverages for each county or part of a county. The U.S. Geological Survey has developed a National Elevation Dataset (NED). The NED is a seamless mosaic of best-available elevation data. The 7.5-minute elevation data for the conterminous United States are the primary initial source data. In addition to the availability of complete 7.5-minute data, efficient processing methods were developed to filter production artifacts in the existing data, convert to the NAD83 datum, edge-match, and fill slivers of missing data at quadrangle seams. One of the effects of the NED processing steps is a much-improved base of elevation data for calculating slope and hydrologic derivatives. The specifications for the NED 1 arc second and 1/3 arc second data are - Geographic coordinate system, Horizontal datum of NAD83, except for AK which is NAD27, Vertical datum of NAVD88, except for AK which is NAVD29, Z units of meters.