18 datasets found
  1. a

    City Limits

    • data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Oct 29, 2015
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2015). City Limits [Dataset]. https://data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/AuroraCo::city-limits/about
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 29, 2015
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    City limits of the City of Aurora, Colorado. The City of Aurora, Colorado (at 164.8 square miles) sits in three different counties: Adams County, Arapahoe County, and Douglas County and lies just east of the City and County of Denver. The city's population is estimated at over 400,000 and is currently the 50th largest city in the U.S.A. The city is annexing land in enclaves and to the east of the city, please check back frequently for the latest data.

  2. a

    Data from: Street Centerlines

    • data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Mar 3, 2015
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2015). Street Centerlines [Dataset]. https://data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/be21cd4dc1f84e3b8f158182aea928e4
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 3, 2015
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    Street centerlines (built only), constructed to be in the exact center of the road right-of-way within and adjacent to the City of Aurora, Colorado. Most data within Aurora was input using coordinate geometry. Areas outside the City have been updated with various means using Ortho Photos and GIS data from other jurisdictions. The line segments are merged from intersection to intersection. There are breakpoints when the centerlines cross the city limits. This data contains the Street Names, Address Ranges, Road Source, Road Status, Street Classification and numerous other fields used in the Public Safety CAD and dispatch systems. The data is updated whenever a new subdivision dedicates new public streets or right-of-way is acquired by book & page documents. The data is based on the City's horizontal control network and data was input from platted subdivisions tied to the control network.

  3. a

    Street Centerlines Non-Built and Built

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Dec 24, 2020
    + more versions
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2020). Street Centerlines Non-Built and Built [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/AuroraCo::street-centerlines-non-built-and-built
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 24, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    Streets centerlines non-built and built, constructed to be in the exact center of the road right-of-way within and adjacent to the City of Aurora, Colorado. Most data within Aurora was input using coordinate geometry. Areas outside the City have been updated with various means using Ortho Photos and GIS data from other jurisdictions. The line segments are merged from intersection to intersection. There are breakpoints when the centerlines cross the city limits. This data contains the Street Names, Address Ranges, Road Source, Road Status, Street Classification and numerous other fields used in the Public Safety CAD and dispatch systems. The data is updated whenever a new subdivision dedicates new public streets or right-of-way is acquired by book & page documents. The data is based on the City's horizontal control network and data was input from platted subdivisions tied to the control network.

  4. a

    Zoning

    • data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com
    • hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Oct 16, 2019
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2019). Zoning [Dataset]. https://data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/zoning
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 16, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    City of Aurora, Colorado zoning. The City of Aurora, Colorado sits in three different counties: Adams County, Arapahoe County, and Douglas County and lies just east of the City and County of Denver. The city's population was estimated at 381,000 on July 1, 2019.

  5. a

    Easements

    • data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Mar 2, 2015
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2015). Easements [Dataset]. https://data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/easements
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 2, 2015
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    City of Aurora, Colorado easements. Please keep in mind that this easement GIS layer must be paired with City of Aurora parcel GIS layer to show some line work. Also note that the easement layer isn't complete and continues to be worked on. The city's focus is on collecting city owned easements and not on privately owned easements. See disclaimer and terms of use. The City of Aurora, Colorado sits in three different counties: Adams County, Arapahoe County, and Douglas County and lies just east of the City and County of Denver.

  6. c

    Colorado Cities by Population

    • colorado-demographics.com
    • myaistarter.com.tubetargeterapp.com
    Updated Jun 20, 2024
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    Kristen Carney (2024). Colorado Cities by Population [Dataset]. https://www.colorado-demographics.com/cities_by_population
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 20, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Cubit Planning, Inc.
    Authors
    Kristen Carney
    License

    https://www.colorado-demographics.com/terms_and_conditionshttps://www.colorado-demographics.com/terms_and_conditions

    Area covered
    Colorado
    Description

    A dataset listing Colorado cities by population for 2024.

  7. d

    Homicides in Denver, Colorado

    • denvercrimes.com
    csv
    Updated Aug 1, 2016
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    Denver Crimes (2016). Homicides in Denver, Colorado [Dataset]. https://denvercrimes.com/crime/homicide/
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    csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 1, 2016
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Denver Crimes
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 2022 - Jun 23, 2025
    Area covered
    Description

    This data is a slice of the City of Denver's crime spreadsheet showing reported homicides in Denver, Colorado. Updated weekly.

  8. d

    Crime

    • denvercrimes.com
    Updated Aug 1, 2016
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    City of Denver (2016). Crime [Dataset]. https://denvercrimes.com/crime/homicide/
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 1, 2016
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Denver
    Description

    Reported crimes in Denver published by the City of Denver and the Denver Police Department.

  9. a

    City Council Wards

    • data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Aug 6, 2024
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2015). City Council Wards [Dataset]. https://data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/city-council-wards/data
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 6, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    City Council Wards for the city of Aurora, CO.

  10. a

    Comprehensive Plan - PlaceTypes

    • arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com
    • data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Feb 16, 2019
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2019). Comprehensive Plan - PlaceTypes [Dataset]. https://arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/AuroraCo::comprehensive-plan-placetypes/about
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 16, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    City of Aurora, Colorado - Comprehensive Plan 2018: There are 10 place types throughout the city that address common land uses, including residential, commercial, open space, and community facilities. Place types are intended to depict general locations of each place type and not necessarily the land use designation of specific parcels. The City of Aurora, Colorado sits in three different counties: Adams County, Arapahoe County, and Douglas County and lies just east of the City and County of Denver.

  11. a

    Hundred Block Grid Line

    • data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Mar 10, 2022
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2022). Hundred Block Grid Line [Dataset]. https://data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/hundred-block-grid-line
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 10, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    The City of Aurora, Colorado sits in three different counties: Adams County, Arapahoe County, and Douglas County and lies just east of the City and County of Denver. The city's population was estimated at 375,000 on July 1, 2018. This web map application presents licensed business within the City of Aurora.

  12. a

    Parks And Open Space

    • data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Jan 5, 2024
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2024). Parks And Open Space [Dataset]. https://data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/parks-and-open-space
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 5, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    Parks and open space properties, constructed from parcels of land within the City of Aurora, Colorado.

  13. a

    Address Labels Size LARGE - 1001

    • data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Jan 11, 2016
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2016). Address Labels Size LARGE - 1001 [Dataset]. https://data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/address-labels-size-large-1001/data
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 11, 2016
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    Aerial base map for the City of Aurora, Colorado.

  14. a

    Metro Districts

    • data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com
    • arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Oct 29, 2015
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2015). Metro Districts [Dataset]. https://data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/metro-districts
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 29, 2015
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    Title 32 Metro Districts within the City of Aurora, Colorado.

  15. a

    Airport Noise Zone

    • data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Mar 3, 2015
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2015). Airport Noise Zone [Dataset]. https://data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/AuroraCo::airport-noise-zone/about
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 3, 2015
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    Denver International Airport, Centennial Airport, Buckley SFB, and Colorado Air and Space Port noise contours and influence areas within the City of Aurora, Colorado.

  16. a

    072121 Mowle attachment 3

    • redistricting-gallery-coleg.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Aug 7, 2021
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    louis_pino (2021). 072121 Mowle attachment 3 [Dataset]. https://redistricting-gallery-coleg.hub.arcgis.com/maps/d179e1ae00fa4a659b5febb21567121a
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 7, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    louis_pino
    Area covered
    Description

    This is a comment on the preliminary Congressional Commission redistricting map. Along with providing feedback on that map, it offers a draft alternative that better meets the criteria of the Colorado Constitution. As background, I participated in redistricting initiatives in South Bend, Indiana, in the mid-1980s and for Indiana legislative seats after the 1990 census. I didn’t engage with redistricting during the rest of my 20-year military career. After retiring, and while serving as Public Trustee for El Paso County, I participated in redistricting efforts at the county and city level. I also stood for El Paso County Clerk in 2010. I have lived in Colorado since 2000. The draft alternative map is created using Dave’s Redistricting App (DRA) and can be found at https://davesredistricting.org/join/346f297c-71d1-4443-9110-b92e3362b105. I used DRA because it was more user-friendly in that it allows selection by precinct and by city or town, while the tool provided by the commission seems to allow only selection by census block (or larger clusters). The two tools also use slightly different population estimates, but this will be resolved when the 2020 data are released in August. These comments acknowledge that any map created using estimated populations will need to change to account for the actual census data.

    Description of Draft Alternative
    
        My process started by
    

    identifying large-scale geographic communities of interest within Colorado: the Western Slope/mountain areas, the Eastern Plains, Colorado Springs/El Paso County, the North Front Range, and Denver Metro. Two smaller geographic communities of interest are Pueblo and the San Luis Valley—neither is nearly large enough to sustain a district and both are somewhat distinct from their neighboring communities of interest. A choice thus must be made about which other communities of interest to group them with. El Paso County is within 0.3% of the optimal population, so it is set as District 5. The true Western Slope is not large enough to sustain a district, even with the obvious addition of Jackson County. Rather than including the San Luis Valley with the Western Slope, the preliminary commission map extends the Western Slope district to include all of Fremont County (even Canon City, Florence, and Penrose), Clear Creek County, and some of northern Boulder County. The draft alternative District 3 instead adds the San Luis Valley, the Upper Arkansas Valley (Lake and Chaffee Counties, and the western part of Fremont County), Park and Teller Counties, and Custer County. The draft alternative District 4 is based on the Eastern Plains. In the south, this includes the rest of Fremont County (including Canon City), Pueblo, and the Lower Arkansas Valley. In the north, this includes all of Weld County, retaining it as an intact political subdivision. This is nearly enough population to form a complete district; it is rounded out by including the easternmost portions of Adams and Arapahoe Counties. All of Elbert County is in this district; none of Douglas County is. The draft alternative District 2 is placed in the North Front Range and includes Larimer, Boulder, Gilpin, and Clear Creek Counties. This is nearly enough population to form a complete district, so it is rounded out by adding Evergreen and the rest of Coal Creek in Jefferson County. The City and County of Denver (and the Arapahoe County enclave municipalities of Glendale and Holly Hills) forms the basis of draft alternative District 1. This is a bit too large to form a district, so small areas are shaved off into neighboring districts: DIA (mostly for compactness), Indian Creek, and part of Marston. This leaves three districts to place in suburban Denver. The draft alternative keeps Douglas County intact, as well as the city of Aurora, except for the part that extends into Douglas County. The map prioritizes the county over the city as a political subdivision. Draft alternative District 6, anchored in Douglas County, extends north into Arapahoe County to include suburbs like Centennial, Littleton, Englewood, Greenwood Village, and Cherry Hills Village. This is not enough population, so the district extends west into southern Jefferson County to include Columbine, Ken Caryl, and Dakota Ridge. The northwestern edge of this district would run along Deer Creek Road, Pleasant Park Road, and Kennedy Gulch Road. Draft alternative District 8, anchored in Aurora, includes the rest of western Arapahoe County and extends north into Adams County to include Commerce City, Brighton (except the part in Weld County), Thornton, and North Washington. In the draft alternative, this district includes a sliver of Northglenn east of Stonehocker Park. While this likely would be resolved when final population totals are released, this division of Northglenn is the most notable division of a city within a single county other than the required division of Denver. Draft alternative District 7 encompasses what is left: The City and County of Broomfield; Westminster, in both Jefferson and Adams Counties; Federal Heights, Sherrelwood, Welby, Twin Lakes, Berkley, and almost all of Northglenn in western Adams County; and Lakewood, Arvada, Golden, Wheat Ridge, Morrison, Indian Hills, Aspen Park, Genesee, and Kittredge in northern Jefferson County. The border with District 2 through the communities in the western portion of Jefferson County would likely be adjusted after final population totals are released.

    Comparison of Maps
    
    Precise Population Equality
        The preliminary commission
    

    map has exact population equality. The draft alternative map has a variation of 0.6% (4,239 persons). Given that the maps are based on population estimates, and that I left it at the precinct and municipality level, this aspect of the preliminary map is premature to pinpoint. Once final population data are released, either map would need to be adjusted. It would be simple to tweak district boundaries to achieve any desired level of equality. That said, such precision is a bit of a fallacy: errors in the census data likely exceed the 0.6% in the draft map, the census data will be a year out of date when received, and relative district populations will fluctuate over the next 10 years. Both the “good-faith effort†and “as practicable†language leave room for a bit of variance in service of other goals. The need to “justify any variance†does not mean “no variance will be allowed.†For example, it may be better to maintain unity in a community of interest or political subdivision rather than separate part of it for additional precision. The major sticking point here is likely to be El Paso County: given how close it seems to be to the optimal district size, will it be worth it to divide the county or one of its neighbors to achieve precision? The same question would be likely to apply among the municipalities in Metro Denver.

    Contiguity
        The draft alternative map
    

    meets this requirement. The preliminary commission map violates the spirit if not the actual language of this requirement. While its districts are connected by land, the only way to travel to all parts of preliminary Districts 3 and 4 without leaving the districts would be on foot. There is no road connection between the parts of Boulder County that are in District 3 and the rest of that district in Grand County without leaving the district and passing through District 2 in either Gilpin or Larimer Counties. There also is no road connection between some of the southwestern portions of Mineral County and the rest of District 4 without passing through Archuleta or Hinsdale Counties in District 3.

    Voting Rights Act
        The preliminary staff
    

    analysis assumes it would be possible to create a majority-minority district; they are correct, it can be done via a noncompact district running from the west side of Denver up to Commerce City and Brighton and down to parts of northeastern Denver and northern Aurora. Such a district would go against criteria for compactness, political subdivisions, and even other definitions of communities of interest. Staff asserts that the election of Democratic candidates in this area suffices for VRA. Appendix B is opaque regarding the actual non-White or Hispanic population in each district, but I presume that if they had created a majority-minority district they would have said so. In the draft alternative map, District 8 (Aurora, Commerce City, Brighton, and Thornton) has a 39.6% minority population and District 1 (Denver) has a 34.9% minority population. The proposals are similar in meeting this criterion.

    Communities of Interest
        Staff presented a long list
    

    of communities of interest. While keeping all of these intact would be ideal, drawing a map requires compromises based on geography and population. Many communities of interest overlap with each other, especially at their edges. This difficulty points to a reason to focus on existing subdivisions (county, city, and town boundaries): those boundaries are stable and overlap with shared public policy concerns. The preliminary commission map chooses to group the San Luis Valley, as far upstream as Del Norte and Creede, with Pueblo and the Eastern Plains rather than with the Western Slope/Mountains. To balance the population numbers, the preliminary commission map thus had to reach east in northern and central Colorado. The commission includes Canon City and Florence

  17. a

    082721 Thomas Mowle

    • redistricting-gallery-coleg.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Sep 15, 2021
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    louis_pino (2021). 082721 Thomas Mowle [Dataset]. https://redistricting-gallery-coleg.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/755bc89de4de4ca4bf8bd7afea45412a
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Sep 15, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    louis_pino
    Area covered
    Description

    This is my second input on the preliminary Congressional Commission redistricting map, based this time on the census numbers that were released in mid-August. These additional comments again use on Dave’s Redistricting App (DRA), which has the current data for counties and precincts. As of this writing, the commission’s tool did not seem to have the current data loaded. My revised draft alternative is at https://davesredistricting.org/join/b26ec349-27da-4df9-a087-ce77af348056. As background, I participated in redistricting initiatives in South Bend, Indiana, in the mid-1980s and for Indiana legislative seats after the 1990 census. I didn’t engage with redistricting during the rest of my 20-year military career. After retiring, and while serving as Public Trustee for El Paso County, I participated in redistricting efforts at the county and city level. I also stood for El Paso County Clerk in 2010. I have lived in Colorado since 2000. Description of Draft Alternative My process started by identifying large-scale geographic communities of interest within Colorado: the Western Slope/mountain areas, the Eastern Plains, Colorado Springs/El Paso County, the North Front Range, and Denver Metro. Two smaller geographic communities of interest are Pueblo and the San Luis Valley—neither is nearly large enough to sustain a district and both are somewhat distinct from their neighboring communities of interest. A choice thus must be made about which other communities of interest to group them with. A second principle I adopted was to prioritize keeping counties intact over municipalities. County boundaries are fixed, unlike municipal boundaries, and do not interlock based on annexation patterns. Precincts and census blocks do not overlap counties, but they may overlap municipal boundaries. Furthermore, county lines more often correspond to other layers of government than do municipal boundaries. This most matters along the western border of Weld County, which several municipalities overlap while also being rather entangled with each other. I was not able to find a particularly elegant alternative to using the county line that would not then require other communities of interest to be divided.I started with El Paso County, which exceeds the ideal district population (721,714) by 8,681 or 1.2%. It therefore must be split among different districts. El Paso, where I have lived for these past 20 years, is itself a coherent community that should remain as intact as possible – no plan that split it into two large pieces would comply with the commission’s mandate. The best options for moving population into other districts would be on the eastern and western edges. The northern part of El Paso County – Palmer Lake, Monument, Woodmoor, and Black Forest – is much more closely tied to the rest of El Paso County than it is to Douglas County. The small population along I-25 in southern El Paso County is also more closely tied to Fort Carson and the Fountain Valley than it is to Pueblo. The eastern parts of El Paso County, on the other hand – Ramah, Calhan, Yoder, Rush, Truckton – have far more in common with Lincoln County and the Eastern Plains than they do with Colorado Springs. Unfortunately, there is not enough population in the easternmost precincts to bring the county within the population limits. Once you get as far west as Peyton, you are reaching the edge of the Colorado Springs exurbs; once you get to Ellicott, you are reaching communities around Schriever Air Force Base that are part of the community of interest associated with the military. Rather than divide the community of interest there, it would be better to link the precincts in Ute Pass, the Rampart Range, and along the southern part of Gold Camp Road with Woodland Park and Teller County. While I will not claim that they are part of the Colorado Springs community, they are more linked to the larger town to their west than the northern and southern edges of El Paso County are to their neighboring counties. The use of census block data, not yet available on DRA, might allow more fine-tuning of this split that creates District 5 out of all but the western and eastern edges of El Paso County. The true Western Slope is not large enough to sustain District 3, even with the obvious addition of Jackson County and the necessary additions of Lake, Chafee, Park, and Teller Counties. The preliminary commission map would exclude most of the San Luis Valley (all but Hinsdale) from the Western Slope district. Based on the revised census numbers, a district that did this would need to add all of Clear Creek, Gilpin, and Fremont Counties to the Western Slope along with the small part of El Paso County. On its face, this maintains county integrity very well and would be a better map than the preliminary commission map that groups parts of Boulder County into the Western Slope. However, there are two problems with such a design. One would be that it breaks up communities of interest to the east: Gilpin and Clear Creek Counties are more associated with the Denver Metro, and Canon City with Pueblo, than any of them are with the Western Slope. The second problem is that it means any district centered in the North Front Range would need to take on arbitrary parts of neighboring Broomfield and Weld County or an even less-logical division of Arvada or Golden in Jefferson County. The draft alternative map submitted with these comments places the San Luis Valley with the Western Slope. To complete the required population, it adds western El Paso County (as described above), western Fremont County, Custer County, and Huerfano County to the Western Slope district. Certainly, arguments can be made about dividing communities of interest here as well, but ties do exist along the Wet Mountain Valley and across La Veta Pass. Throughout the map – throughout any map – tradeoffs must be made among which communities remain together. The draft alternative District 4 is based on the Eastern Plains. In the south, this includes eastern Fremont County (including Canon City), Pueblo County, Las Animas County, the Lower Arkansas Valley, and parts of far eastern El Paso County. In the north, this includes all of Weld and Elbert Counties, retaining them as intact political subdivisions. It does not extend into Larimer, Broomfield, Adams, Arapahoe, or Douglas Counties. The draft alternative District 2 is placed in the North Front Range and includes Larimer, Boulder, Gilpin, and Clear Creek Counties. This is nearly enough population to form a complete district, so it is rounded out by adding Evergreen and the rest of Coal Creek in Jefferson County. The City and County of Denver (and the Arapahoe County enclave municipalities of Glendale and Holly Hills) forms the basis of draft alternative District 1. This is approximately the right size to form a district, but the complexities of interlocking communities make it sensible to include Bow Mar and a small piece of southern Lakewood in this district and exclude the Indian Creek and Kennedy neighborhoods. This leaves three districts to place in suburban Denver. A great place for a boundary among these three districts that does not split communities of interest is in the area of low population to the northeast of Denver International Airport. District 7 in this numbering (which is arbitrary) would include all of Adams County to the west of the airport: to name only the largest communities, Commerce City, Brighton (except the part in Weld), Thornton, Northglenn, and Westminster. It would also include the City and County of Broomfield, and Arvada and the rest of Westminster in Jefferson County. District 6 would include all of the City of Aurora and the parts of Adams and Arapahoe Counties to its east. It would also include Parker, Stonegate, and Meridian in Douglas County; Centennial, Greenwood Village, and Cherry Hills Village in Arapahoe County; and the Indian Creek and Kennedy neighborhoods in Denver. District 8 would include the rest. It would include all of Jefferson County from Golden and Lakewood south (except for small parts of southeastern Lakewood and western Bow Mar) It would include the rest of Douglas County, including Highlands Ranch, Lone Tree, Castle Pines, and The Pinery. Comparison of Maps Precise Population Equality The preliminary commission map has exact population equality. The draft alternative map has a variation of 0.28% (2,038 persons). This is well within the courts’ guidelines for population equality, without even considering that errors in the census data likely exceed this variation, the census data are already a year out of date, and relative district populations will fluctuate over the next 10 years. Both the “good-faith effort†and “as practicable†language leave room for a bit of variance in service of other goals. The need to “justify any variance†does not mean “no variance will be allowed.†It may be better to maintain unity in a community of interest or political subdivision rather than separate part of it for additional precision. Contiguity The draft alternative map meets this requirement. The preliminary commission map violates the spirit if not the actual language of this requirement. While its districts are connected by land, the only way to travel to all parts of preliminary Districts 3 and 4 without leaving the districts would be on foot. There is no road connection between the parts of Boulder County that are in District 3 and the rest of that district in Grand County without leaving the district and passing through District 2 in either Gilpin or Larimer Counties. There also is no road connection between some of the southwestern portions of Mineral County and the rest of District 4 without passing through Archuleta or Hinsdale Counties in District 3. Voting Rights Act The draft alternative

  18. a

    Sidewalk Centerlines

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    Updated Mar 22, 2016
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    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2016). Sidewalk Centerlines [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/datasets/AuroraCo::sidewalk-centerlines
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 22, 2016
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
    Area covered
    Description

    This metadata describes the stereocompiled paved sidewalks and paved trails centerlines feature of DRCOG Denver Region Urbanized Project Area. The feature was compiled from the Denver Regional Aerial Photography Project (DRAPP) 2014 Aerial Imagery Acquisition and Production. This 1"=100' scale imagery is comprised of 4-band RGBIR color orthoimagery with a GSD (Ground Sample Distance) of 0.5'. Imagery was collected with the Leica ADS40 and ADS80 digital sensors and processed with Leica XPro software. Imagery is projected in State Plane Coordinate System, Colorado central zone using the Lambert Conformal Conic map projection parameters. Horizontal and vertical datums are NAD83(11) and NAVD88(GEOID12A) respectively.

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City of Aurora, Colorado Maps (2015). City Limits [Dataset]. https://data-auroraco.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/AuroraCo::city-limits/about

City Limits

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Dataset updated
Oct 29, 2015
Dataset authored and provided by
City of Aurora, Colorado Maps
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City limits of the City of Aurora, Colorado. The City of Aurora, Colorado (at 164.8 square miles) sits in three different counties: Adams County, Arapahoe County, and Douglas County and lies just east of the City and County of Denver. The city's population is estimated at over 400,000 and is currently the 50th largest city in the U.S.A. The city is annexing land in enclaves and to the east of the city, please check back frequently for the latest data.

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