MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
Election District public dataset. Recommended for ArcGIS online web maps, applications and desktop. An election district, or voting district, is delineated around voters or constituents residing within that area.
Generally, only the voters (constituents) who reside within the district are permitted to vote in elections held there.The Albany County Board of Elections was established and is mandated by Section 3-200 of the New York State Election Law. The Board’s operations are supervised by two Commissioners, each representing one of the two major political parties in New York State. Commissioners are nominated by majority vote of the County Committees of their respective political parties and are confirmed by vote of the County Legislature. Section 3-300 of the New York State Election Law requires equal representation of the two major political parties in the appointment of Board employees. Other Resource Links:
Find your Albany polling location and other voter information: app.albanycounty.com/boe/voterinfo/NYS Elected Officials: www.elections.ny.gov/district-map/district-map.html#/?radius=1City of Albany Ward boundaries eCode: https://ecode360.com/7681967
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
A hosted dataset of City of Albany Street Light Inventory:
Original
survey (completed July 2017 by CB&I) joined with post-survey updates
(last
received, October 25, 2019). Dataset includes only street lights owned
and operated by the City of Albany. The feature layer is
editable and recommended for internal web maps and applications only.
Download data below in a variety of formats.Original CB&I Inventory: June 2017 to July 2017. Citywide inventory of feature locations in City of Albany,
New York of street light poles, including physical appearance and
condition, as well as information regarding quantity and type of lights
attached to each pole. Features were collected during a
block-by-block survey to inventory all streetlight poles, fixtures and
lights in Albany. Each streetlight was uniquely and specifically
identified. Notes: The original inventory includes existing
street lights and those utility poles containing street light fixtures,
found along City streets and accessible paths. Other existing standing
utility poles or tangent poles without attached light fixtures were not
included in the survey.Maintenance and LED
conversions took place between 2018-2020. Updates to attributes for
post-survey work is inaccessible, due to proprietary rights of new
consultants.
This resource is a member of a series. The TIGER/Line shapefiles and related database files (.dbf) are an extract of selected geographic and cartographic information from the U.S. Census Bureau's Master Address File / Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (MAF/TIGER) Database (MTDB). The MTDB represents a seamless national file with no overlaps or gaps between parts, however, each TIGER/Line shapefile is designed to stand alone as an independent data set, or they can be combined to cover the entire nation. The All Roads Shapefile includes all features within the MTDB Super Class "Road/Path Features" distinguished where the MAF/TIGER Feature Classification Code (MTFCC) for the feature in MTDB that begins with "S". This includes all primary, secondary, local neighborhood, and rural roads, city streets, vehicular trails (4wd), ramps, service drives, alleys, parking lot roads, private roads for service vehicles (logging, oil fields, ranches, etc.), bike paths or trails, bridle/horse paths, walkways/pedestrian trails, and stairways.
Albany County, New York, tax parcel boundaries with limited property information.A tax map is a special purpose map, accurately drawn to scale showing all the real property parcels within a city, town or village. These maps are used to locate parcels and obtain other information required in assessment work. The size, shape and dimensions (or acreage) of a parcel may be found on a tax map. Tax maps are primarily used by local governments to maintain a current inventory of all parcels in a city, town or village.Tax parcel boundaries are maintained by the Albany County Real Property Tax Service Agency. Albany County provides the municipalities with digital GIS files on an annual basis. Therefore, all parcel boundary changes may not be reflected in this GIS file, depending on the revision date.Real Property Information, as recorded and managed by the local municipal assessor is updated annually using the final roll taxable status date March 1 by the County and also may not be reflecting the most current information, depending on the information revision date.
City Wards. In accordance with the City Charter, Albany, New York is divided into fifteen legislative districts, or Wards. Each Ward is represented by a Common Council Member, who is elected by their constituency to serve a four year term. Each Common Council Member functions to regulate and protect the interests of residents within their Ward. Collectively the Common Council serves as the legislative branch of Albany’s government, which is authorized to adopt, amend or repeal local laws, ordinances, resolutions and regulations pertaining to property and government affairs within the City. In the City of Albany, Ward boundaries are evaluated and adjusted every ten years through a redistricting process based on the latest U.S. Decennial Census data. Redistricting impacts the weight of your vote and involves making difficult decisions constricted by complicated local, State and Federal laws and represents one of the most important undertakings of our democracy. Ward boundaries are established by the Albany Common Council to best represent the demographics, protected groups and community of interests within the City. The current Wards were last updated and adopted in 2013, based on changes reflected in the 2010 Census.NYS Government. The New York State Legislature is the legislative body of New York, consisting of two houses (the Senate and the Assembly). The legislature’s primary purpose is to draft and approve changes to the laws of New York. The Legislature is seated in Albany, New York State’s Capitol.The New York State Senate is the upper house of the New York State Legislature. The New York Constitution provides for a varying number of members in the Senate; currently there are 63 members elected (without term limits) from single-member constituencies equal in population. The New York State Assembly is the lower house of the New York State Legislature. The Assembly is composed of 150 members representing an equal number of districts, with each district having an average population of 128,652. Assembly members serve two-year terms without term limit. For more information, please visit:City of Albany Albany Common Council24 Eagle Street, Albany, NY 12207(518) 434-5081
Local Wetlands Inventory areas in the City of Albany. Disclaimer: There is no cost to the end user for this data, however, all users agree to the following disclaimer by virtue of downloading any Albany GIS data. The City of Albany's Infrastructure records, drawings, and other documents have been gathered over many decades, using differing standards for quality control, documentation, and verification. All of the data provided represents current information in a readily available format. While the data provided is generally believed to be accurate, occasionally it proves to be incorrect; thus its accuracy is not warranted. Prior to making any property purchases or other investments based in full or in part upon the material provided, it is specifically advised that you independently field verify the information contained within our records.
This dashboard created by Operations Dashboard contains the most up-to-date coronavirus COVID-19 cases and latest trend plot. It covers China, the US, Canada, Australia (at province/state level), and the rest of the world (at country level, represented by either the country centroids or their capitals). Data sources are WHO, US CDC, China NHC, ECDC, and DXY. The China data is automatically updating at least once per hour, and non China data is updating manually. This layer is created and maintained by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at the Johns Hopkins University. This service is supported by Esri Living Atlas team and JHU Data Services. This layer is opened to the public and free to share.
This map delineates both active and inactive Neighborhoods Associations within the City of Albany, New York. A Neighborhood Association in Albany can be described as a group of residents, property owners or stakeholders of a defined area, who have voluntarily organized themselves in order to advocate for their common interests and needs, as well as to preserve, protect and enhance their surrounding environment within the community. Neighborhood Associations are organized independent of City government. Boundaries are non-regulated and community-based, where local (neighborhood) members freely self-identify and volunteer their participation and support. Albany's Neighborhood Associations may have an elected leader, established bylaws, and/or require dues from their members. Neighborhood Associations help facilitate quality of life improvements, mitigate issues, and provide a platform for community involvement. They create a sense of identity for our residents and are regarded by City government as a valuable resource for communication.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This feature class is used for cartographic purposes, for generating statistical data, and for clipping data. Ideally, state and federal agencies should be using the same framework data for common themes such as county boundaries. This layer provides an initial offering as "best available" at 1:24,000 scale for counties.Incorporated cities were merged from the Board of Equalization's 11/16/2021 City and County boundaries dataset. The Cal Fire FRAP County boundaries v 19_1 were maintained for consistency with other use in CA Nature.
In an urban setting, parks are created and allocated to serve a broad range of public needs. Accessible green space is an essential way to improve quality of life—providing opportunities from active healthy living to environmental resiliency. Parks strengthen our families and our Neighborhoods, and are designed to creatively bring us together as a community. While parks and green space, as a whole, are appreciated for recreation, open space offers other types of opportunities, such as designed sustainable initiatives, improving the local watershed, expanding green technology or transportation alternatives.A green space inventory, in part with the Albany 2030 Comprehensive Plan, was conducted to identify areas where the community has access to outdoor areas within a quarter-mile (or 15-minute) walking radius. Therefore this GIS inventory includes a variety of properties, from official City-managed parks to observances of accessible open space (i.e., pocket parks, community gardens, dog parks, sites of beautification, historic landmarks, road medians, etc.) that offer an opportunity to utilize green space for active recreation, passive enjoyment or sustainability initiatives (i.e., multi-use paths, stormwater management, etc.). The properties are managed jointly by the Department of Recreation and the Department of General Services. The City continues to implement its Park Renovation Plan, a City-funded effort to upgrade play spaces with improved accessibility, playground equipment, and picnic areas for people of all ages and abilities, in compliance with the Americans With Disabilities Act. The Park Renovation Plan is being implemented through a phased approach. When completed, the new creative play spaces will be enhanced to allow those with disabilities the same opportunity to use and enjoy our recreational facilities, as all others. The upgrades will improve safety, promote use, activity and development, because Recreation in Albany means: stay longer—play longer! Albany is 25% green space—almost three times the recommended recreational acres-to-person ratio, according to the National Recreation & Park Association. This list of open space continues to grow and change along with recreational opportunities, maintenance support, funding sources, and community needs. Resources City Departments work in collaboration to help support and facilitate green space needs and improvements throughout the City.Department of RecreationDepartment of General ServicesPlanning DepartmentWater & Water SupplyReport property issues on SeeClickFixFind Park programs and activities at The RecDesk
This Zoning feature class is an element of the Oregon GIS Framework statewide, Zoning spatial data. This version is authorized for public use. Attributes include zoning districts that have been generalized to state classes. As of June 30, 2023, this feature class contains zoning data from 229 local jurisdictions. DLCD plans to continue adding to and updating this statewide zoning dataset as they receive zoning information from the local jurisdictions. Jurisdictions included in the latest version of the statewide zoning geodatabase:
Cities: Adams, Adrian, Albany, Amity, Antelope, Ashland, Astoria, Athena, Aurora, Banks, Barlow, Bay City, Beaverton, Bend, Boardman, Bonanza, Brookings, Brownsville, Burns, Butte Falls, Canby, Cannon Beach, Carlton, Cascade Locks, Cave Junction, Central Point, Chiloquin, Coburg, Columbia City, Coos Bay, Cornelius, Corvallis, Cottage Grove, Creswell, Culver, Dayton, Detroit, Donald, Drain, Dufur, Dundee, Dunes City, Durham, Eagle Point, Echo, Enterprise, Estacada, Eugene, Fairview, Falls City, Florence, Forest Grove, Fossil, Garibaldi, Gaston, Gates, Gearhart, Gervais, Gladstone, Gold Beach, Gold Hill, Grants Pass, Grass Valley, Gresham, Halsey, Happy Valley, Harrisburg, Helix, Hermiston, Hillsboro, Hines, Hood River, Hubbard, Idanha, Independence, Jacksonville, Jefferson, Johnson City, Jordan Valley, Junction City, Keizer, King City, Klamath Falls, La Grande, La Pine, Lafayette, Lake Oswego, Lebanon, Lincoln City, Lowell, Lyons, Madras, Malin, Manzanita, Maupin, Maywood Park, McMinnville, Medford, Merrill, Metolius, Mill City, Millersburg, Milton-Freewater, Milwaukie, Mitchell, Molalla, Monmouth, Moro, Mosier, Mount Angel, Myrtle Creek, Myrtle Point, Nehalem, Newberg, Newport, North Bend, North Plains, Nyssa, Oakridge, Ontario, Oregon City, Pendleton, Philomath, Phoenix, Pilot Rock, Port Orford, Portland, Prescott, Prineville, Rainier, Redmond, Reedsport, Rivergrove, Rockaway Beach, Rogue River, Roseburg, Rufus, Saint Helens, Salem, Sandy, Scappoose, Scio, Scotts Mills, Seaside, Shady Cove, Shaniko, Sheridan, Sherwood, Silverton, Sisters, Sodaville, Spray, Springfield, Stanfield, Stayton, Sublimity, Sutherlin, Sweet Home, Talent, Tangent, The Dalles, Tigard, Tillamook, Toledo, Troutdale, Tualatin, Turner, Ukiah, Umatilla, Vale, Veneta, Vernonia, Warrenton, Wasco, Waterloo, West Linn, Westfir, Weston, Wheeler, Willamina, Wilsonville, Winston, Wood Village, Woodburn, Yamhill.
Counties: Baker County, Benton County, Clackamas County, Clatsop County, Columbia County, Coos County, Crook County, Curry County, Deschutes County, Douglas County, Harney County, Hood River County, Jackson County, Jefferson County, Josephine County, Klamath County, Lane County, Lincoln County, Linn County, Malheur County, Marion County, Multnomah County, Polk County, Sherman County, Tillamook County, Umatilla County, Union County, Wasco County, Washington County, Wheeler County, Yamhill County.
R emaining jurisdictions either chose not to share data to incorporate into the public, statewide dataset or did not respond to DLCD’s request for data. These jurisdictions’ attributes are designated “not shared” in the orZDesc field and “NS” in the orZCode field.
This Zoning feature class is an element of the Oregon GIS Framework statewide, Zoning spatial data. This version is authorized for public use. Attributes include zoning districts that have been generalized to state classes. As of June 30, 2023, this feature class contains zoning data from 229 local jurisdictions. DLCD plans to continue adding to and updating this statewide zoning dataset as they receive zoning information from the local jurisdictions. Jurisdictions included in the latest version of the statewide zoning geodatabase: Cities: Adams, Adrian, Albany, Amity, Antelope, Ashland, Astoria, Athena, Aurora, Banks, Barlow, Bay City, Beaverton, Bend, Boardman, Bonanza, Brookings, Brownsville, Burns, Butte Falls, Canby, Cannon Beach, Carlton, Cascade Locks, Cave Junction, Central Point, Chiloquin, Coburg, Columbia City, Coos Bay, Cornelius, Corvallis, Cottage Grove, Creswell, Culver, Dayton, Detroit, Donald, Drain, Dufur, Dundee, Dunes City, Durham, Eagle Point, Echo, Enterprise, Estacada, Eugene, Fairview, Falls City, Florence, Forest Grove, Fossil, Garibaldi, Gaston, Gates, Gearhart, Gervais, Gladstone, Gold Beach, Gold Hill, Grants Pass, Grass Valley, Gresham, Halsey, Happy Valley, Harrisburg, Helix, Hermiston, Hillsboro, Hines, Hood River, Hubbard, Idanha, Independence, Jacksonville, Jefferson, Johnson City, Jordan Valley, Junction City, Keizer, King City, Klamath Falls, La Grande, La Pine, Lafayette, Lake Oswego, Lebanon, Lincoln City, Lowell, Lyons, Madras, Malin, Manzanita, Maupin, Maywood Park, McMinnville, Medford, Merrill, Metolius, Mill City, Millersburg, Milton-Freewater, Milwaukie, Mitchell, Molalla, Monmouth, Moro, Mosier, Mount Angel, Myrtle Creek, Myrtle Point, Nehalem, Newberg, Newport, North Bend, North Plains, Nyssa, Oakridge, Ontario, Oregon City, Pendleton, Philomath, Phoenix, Pilot Rock, Port Orford, Portland, Prescott, Prineville, Rainier, Redmond, Reedsport, Rivergrove, Rockaway Beach, Rogue River, Roseburg, Rufus, Saint Helens, Salem, Sandy, Scappoose, Scio, Scotts Mills, Seaside, Shady Cove, Shaniko, Sheridan, Sherwood, Silverton, Sisters, Sodaville, Spray, Springfield, Stanfield, Stayton, Sublimity, Sutherlin, Sweet Home, Talent, Tangent, The Dalles, Tigard, Tillamook, Toledo, Troutdale, Tualatin, Turner, Ukiah, Umatilla, Vale, Veneta, Vernonia, Warrenton, Wasco, Waterloo, West Linn, Westfir, Weston, Wheeler, Willamina, Wilsonville, Winston, Wood Village, Woodburn, Yamhill. Counties: Baker County, Benton County, Clackamas County, Clatsop County, Columbia County, Coos County, Crook County, Curry County, Deschutes County, Douglas County, Harney County, Hood River County, Jackson County, Jefferson County, Josephine County, Klamath County, Lane County, Lincoln County, Linn County, Malheur County, Marion County, Multnomah County, Polk County, Sherman County, Tillamook County, Umatilla County, Union County, Wasco County, Washington County, Wheeler County, Yamhill County. R emaining jurisdictions either chose not to share data to incorporate into the public, statewide dataset or did not respond to DLCD’s request for data. These jurisdictions’ attributes are designated “not shared” in the orZDesc field and “NS” in the orZCode field.
Published: January 2024. Updated as needed. Current as of the Publication Date. Map service is also available at: https://gisservices.its.ny.gov/arcgis/rest/services/NYS_Place_Points/MapServer.Centroid point locations for cities, towns, villages, unincorporated places, tribal communities, and selected neighborhoods in New York State. Places that cross county boundaries have only one point location and one county assigned. Only neighborhoods in the following cities are represented: Albany, Buffalo, New York City, Rochester, and Syracuse.Centroid points for incorporated places and Indian Territories are mathematically derived based on NYS ITS Geospatial Services published 1:24,000-scale NYS Civil Boundaries data. Points for unincorporated places and neighborhoods are located based on NYS Department of Transportation 1:24,000-scale raster quadrangle maps and local input. This map service is available to the public. The State of New York, acting through the New York State Office of Information Technology Services, makes no representations or warranties, express or implied, with respect to the use of or reliance on the Data provided. The User accepts the Data provided “as is” with no guarantees that it is error free, complete, accurate, current or fit for any particular purpose and assumes all risks associated with its use. The State disclaims any responsibility or legal liability to Users for damages of any kind, relating to the providing of the Data or the use of it. Users should be aware that temporal changes may have occurred since this Data was created.
Publication Date: April 2025. This polygon layer is updated annually.
This layer contains 2024 parcel data only for NY State counties which gave NYS ITs Geospatatial Services permission to share this data with the public. Work to obtain parcel data from additional counties, as well as permission to share the data, is ongoing. To date, 36 counties have provided the Geospatial Services permission to share their parcel data with the public. Parcel data for counties which do not allow the Geospatial Services to redistribute their data must be obtained directly from those counties. Geospatial Services' goal is to eventually include parcel data for all counties in New York State.
Parcel geometry was incorporated as received from County Real Property Departments. No attempt was made to edge-match parcels along adjacent counties. County attribute values were populated using 2024 Assessment Roll tabular data Geospatial Services obtained from the NYS Department of Tax and Finance’s Office of Real Property Tax Services (ORPTS). Tabular assessment data was joined to the county provided parcel geometry using the SWIS & SBL or SWIS & PRINT KEY unique identifier for each parcel.
Detailed information about assessment attributes can be found in the ORPTS Assessor’s Manuals available here: https://www.tax.ny.gov/research/property/assess/manuals/assersmanual.htm. New York City data comes from NYC MapPluto which can be found here: https://www1.nyc.gov/site/planning/data-maps/open-data/dwn-pluto-mappluto.page.
This layer displays when zoomed in below 1:37,051-scale.
This map service is available to the public.
Geometry accuracy varies by contributing county.
Thanks to the following counties that specifically authorized Geospatial Services to share their GIS tax parcel data with the public: Albany, Cayuga, Chautauqua, Cortland, Erie, Genesee, Greene, Hamilton, Lewis, Livingston, Montgomery, New York City (Bronx, Kings, New York, Queens, Richmond), Oneida, Onondaga, Ontario, Orange, Oswego, Otsego, Putnam, Rensselaer, Rockland, Schuyler, Steuben, St Lawrence, Suffolk, Sullivan, Tioga, Tompkins, Ulster, Warren, Wayne, and Westchester.
The State of New York, acting through the New York State Office of Information Technology Services, makes no representations or warranties, express or implied, with respect to the use of or reliance on the Data provided. The User accepts the Data provided “as is” with no guarantees that it is error free, complete, accurate, current or fit for any particular purpose and assumes all risks associated with its use. The State disclaims any responsibility or legal liability to Users for damages of any kind, relating to the providing of the Data or the use of it. Users should be aware that temporal changes may have occurred since this Data was created.
The web map includes active and inactive Neighborhoods Associations within the City of Albany,
New York. A Neighborhood Association in Albany can be described as a
group of residents, property owners or stakeholders of a defined area,
who have voluntarily organized themselves in order to advocate for their
common interests and needs, as well as to preserve, protect and enhance
their surrounding environment within the community. Neighborhood Associations
are organized independent of City government. The community establishes boundaries based on a
fusion of social and geographic factors (rather than legislative
districts), where local (neighborhood) members freely self-identify and volunteer their
participation and support. Albany's Neighborhood Associations may have an elected leader,
established bylaws, and/or require dues from their members. Neighborhood Associations help facilitate quality of life
improvements, mitigate issues, and provide a platform for community
involvement. They create a sense of identity for our residents and are
regarded by City government as a valuable resource for communication.
We encourage you to find and be involved with your local Neighborhood!If you have an update for this dataset, we would like to hear from you. Please contact:City of Albany Department of Planning and Development200 Henry Johnson BlvdAlbany, NY 12210(518) 465-6066ddp@albanyny.gov
Subdivision Boundaries in the City of Albany. Disclaimer: There is no cost to the end user for this data, however, all users agree to the following disclaimer by virtue of downloading any Albany GIS data. The City of Albany's Infrastructure records, drawings, and other documents have been gathered over many decades, using differing standards for quality control, documentation, and verification. All of the data provided represents current information in a readily available format. While the data provided is generally believed to be accurate, occasionally it proves to be incorrect; thus its accuracy is not warranted. Prior to making any property purchases or other investments based in full or in part upon the material provided, it is specifically advised that you independently field verify the information contained within our records.
Municipality boundaries for Albany County, NY. These boundaries do not change to often. Annexations occasionally happen that go through the Real Property Tax Service Agency who work with Planning to update the GIS data.9/2023: Voorheesville/New Scotland boundary update.
Significant Wetlands Overlay areas in the City of Albany. Disclaimer: There is no cost to the end user for this data, however, all users agree to the following disclaimer by virtue of downloading any Albany GIS data. The City of Albany's Infrastructure records, drawings, and other documents have been gathered over many decades, using differing standards for quality control, documentation, and verification. All of the data provided represents current information in a readily available format. While the data provided is generally believed to be accurate, occasionally it proves to be incorrect; thus its accuracy is not warranted. Prior to making any property purchases or other investments based in full or in part upon the material provided, it is specifically advised that you independently field verify the information contained within our records.
Habitat Overlay in the City of Albany. Disclaimer: There is no cost to the end user for this data, however, all users agree to the following disclaimer by virtue of downloading any Albany GIS data. The City of Albany's Infrastructure records, drawings, and other documents have been gathered over many decades, using differing standards for quality control, documentation, and verification. All of the data provided represents current information in a readily available format. While the data provided is generally believed to be accurate, occasionally it proves to be incorrect; thus its accuracy is not warranted. Prior to making any property purchases or other investments based in full or in part upon the material provided, it is specifically advised that you independently field verify the information contained within our records.
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
In an urban setting, parks are created and allocated to serve a broad range of public needs. Accessible green space is an essential way to improve quality of life—providing opportunities from active healthy living to environmental resiliency. Parks strengthen our families and our Neighborhoods, and are designed to creatively bring us together as a community. While parks and green space, as a whole, are appreciated for recreation,
open space offers other types of opportunities, such as designed
sustainable initiatives, improving the local watershed, expanding green
technology or transportation alternatives.A green space inventory, in part with the Albany 2030 Comprehensive Plan,
was conducted to identify areas where the community has access to
outdoor areas within a quarter-mile (or 15-minute) walking radius. Therefore this GIS inventory does not just include official City-managed parks, but combines lists and observances where other accessible open space exists (such as, pocket parks, community gardens, dog parks, sites of beautification, historic landmarks, road medians, etc.) that offer an opportunity for active recreation, passive enjoyment or sustainability initiatives (i.e., multi-use paths, stormwater management, etc.). The properties are managed jointly by the Department of Recreation and
the Department of General Services. The City continues to implement
its Park Renovation Plan, a
City-funded effort to upgrade play spaces with improved accessibility,
playground equipment, and picnic areas for people of all ages and
abilities, in compliance with the Americans With Disabilities Act. Albany is 25% green
space—almost three times the recommended recreational acres-to-person
ratio, according to the National Recreation & Park Association. This list of open space continues to grow and change along
with recreational opportunities, maintenance support, funding sources, and community needs.
Resources
City Departments work in collaboration to help support and facilitate green space needs and improvements throughout the City.
Department of RecreationDepartment of General ServicesPlanning DepartmentWater & Water SupplyReport property issues on SeeClickFixFind Park programs and activities at The RecDesk
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
Election District public dataset. Recommended for ArcGIS online web maps, applications and desktop. An election district, or voting district, is delineated around voters or constituents residing within that area.
Generally, only the voters (constituents) who reside within the district are permitted to vote in elections held there.The Albany County Board of Elections was established and is mandated by Section 3-200 of the New York State Election Law. The Board’s operations are supervised by two Commissioners, each representing one of the two major political parties in New York State. Commissioners are nominated by majority vote of the County Committees of their respective political parties and are confirmed by vote of the County Legislature. Section 3-300 of the New York State Election Law requires equal representation of the two major political parties in the appointment of Board employees. Other Resource Links:
Find your Albany polling location and other voter information: app.albanycounty.com/boe/voterinfo/NYS Elected Officials: www.elections.ny.gov/district-map/district-map.html#/?radius=1City of Albany Ward boundaries eCode: https://ecode360.com/7681967