This dataset contains all the parcel outlines within the City of New Westminster
Block outlines of contiguous aggregated parcels.
New Westminster has an annual renewal of approximately 4,000 business licenses each year. Business Licensing also issues licenses for liquor establishments and municipal decals.Things to know1) Before you sign a lease, it’s important for prospective business owners who are applying for business licenses to check with the Building, Planning and Licensing divisions on property they wish to lease or buy in regards to outstanding orders or issues pertaining to that property.2) Before you sign a lease, check with the Planning and Building Department to make sure your business is a permitted use on the site.3) Before you purchase a sign for your business, review the requirements of the sign bylaw with the Planning Division. Click here for Sign Permit information.4) Each space in a building has its own specific approved use and sometimes the use of that space cannot be changed without approval and/or permit.https://www.newwestcity.ca/business_licences.php
Stormwater inlets typically found along the side or roads or in drainage swales.
For open data
Contractors from different municipalities doing business within New Westminsterhttps://www.newwestcity.ca/business_licences.php
Got to https://www.newwestcity.ca/ourcity for more details
The open drains, sometimes called ditches, that are a part of the stormwater network.
Access points on the sewer/stormwater network that can be used to clean out debris or other blockages.
A pressure zone is defined as the area bounded by both a lower and upper elevation, all of which receives water from a given hydraulic grade line (HGL) or pressure from a set water surface. The HGL is usually provided by one or more storage tanks located at the same elevations so they share high and low water surfaces. Ideally, pressure zones contain the same pressures and, therefore, the infrastructure within each pressure zone can be designed with a uniform set of design criteria which stresses efficiency, reliability and durability.
A Heritage Designation By-law is adopted by Council, with or without the owner's consent, to protect a building, structure or other heritage feature. A heritage designation by-law may also protect specific interior features or a heritage landscape features. The by-law can prohibit exterior alterations including structural changes, the moving of a structure, excavation or other actions that would damage the protected features. Alterations to a designated building, structure or feature cannot be made without special approval from the City.
City of New Westminster Boundaries.
A Heritage Revitalization Agreement (HRA) is a by-law in the form of an agreement between the City and the owner of a heritage property. An HRA has the flexibility to vary requirements found in other by-laws and City regulations, either by being more restrictive or providing relaxations to by-law requirements. An HRA is most useful where creative solutions, including incentives, are needed to retain a heritage building, structure or feature in the context of redevelopment. This could apply to a rezoning, subdivision or a development permit application. Examples of variances include lot size, setbacks, building height, use or density, parking, landscaping, park or open space requirements, or development cost charges. If an HRA varies use or density, Council must hold a Public Hearing. An HRA may be amended, but only with the consent of both the property owner and the City.
The City of New Westminster Zoning Bylaw No. 6680 was adopted by Council September 17, 2001. Subsequent amendments to the Zoning Bylaw are consolidated for convenience only. For accurate interpretation, the public is encouraged to consult the Official Zoning Bylaw (including maps and amendments) available for viewing at City Hall in the Planning Division or Legislative Services Department.
A Heritage Conservation Covenant is an agreement that protects part or all of a heritage property. It is negotiated the owner of a heritage property and registered on title of the land. A conservation covenant can apply to either a natural or built feature. The owner signs the covenant with either the City or another interested party such as a heritage society. However, unlike an HRA, a conservation covenant cannot vary other City by-laws and regulations such as zoning. It is most useful where no changes to a property or building are proposed to take place, and the owner wishes to enter into a covenant with the City to ensure long-term protection.
Full detail, visit https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/55cce0c5e4b08400b1fe111fReport: https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/sir20175064BackgroundEvery day, the New York City Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) supplies more than one billion gallons of drinking water to more than nine million people. To do this, the DEP maintains an extensive network of reservoirs and aqueducts. A major part of this system, the West of Hudson (WOH) network, in the Delaware and Hudson River drainages, includes six reservoirs (fig. 1) – Ashokan, Cannonsville, Neversink, Pepacton, Rondout, and Schoharie – which were constructed from the early 1900s to the 1960s and have an estimated combined storage capacity of more than 460 billion gallons. Problem and ObjectiveThe daily and seasonal management of the WOH reservoirs by DEP depends on accurate bathymetric data. In the West of Hudson reservoirs, these data are used to monitor and regulate storage capacity, to model water quality, and to plan future operations. The bathymetry of the reservoirs was initially determined from land surface maps before the reservoirs were built, 50 to 100 years ago.The objective of this project is to provide updated bathymetric data needed to help better manage water use and availability in the watersheds of the six WOH reservoirs. The information provided as part of this study will help DEP to improve water-quality models used in reservoir management and to more accurately regulate storage in the reservoirs, to better provide quality drinking water to its many customers.
Contains information on purpose-built rental housing inventory (defined by CMHC as “occupied rental units in privately initiated, purpose-built, rental structures of three units or more, both in apartments and in row housing structures”), as well as non-market rental and co-op rental buildings.
This inventory does not contain secondary suites, rented condominiums and supportive housing buildings. This data set contains information on the locations of buildings with rental housing units, as well as the total number of rental housing units in such buildings.
This form is a mandated requirement of the Provincial government and is completed annually.The data elements on the form are:1) Name 2) Any assets the councillor owns 3) Any liabilities the councillor has 4) All income sources for the councillor 5) Real property owned by the councillor that is not their primary residence
Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Parks within the City of West Palm Beach.Update Frequency:As new parks are added to the City, GIS and Parks staff will coordinate to update the layer. Last Updated: January 2018.When the user downloads the data, fields will be shortened to 10 characters.Here is a breakdown of the fields:SUBTYPEFIE=SUBTYPEFIELDFEATURECOD=FEATURECODE
12/06/2024 - Updates to Ellendale, Fargo, Kindred, Lincoln, Mandan, Rugby and Tappen.12/06/2024 - Update to Lincoln and Bismarck Corporate Boundaries based on requests from Lincoln.6/27/2024 - Update to the Valley City and Dickinson Corporate Boundary based on requests from their GIS personal.4/8/2024 - Update to the Valley City Corporate Boundary12/04/2023 - Update to Fargo City Boundary7/23/2023 - Removed Church’s Ferry due to proclamation and notice of dissolution.7/01/2023 - Changes to Binford - Ordinance 51; Lidgerwood - Ordinance 2022-1; Killdeer Golf Course annexation; Bismarck based on current City of Bismarck GIS boundary9/26/2022 - Changes to Steele boundary per Kidder County 911 coordinator.9/23/2022 - Updates to Grand Forks, Mandan and Fargo7/01/2022 - Updates to Killdeer, Mandan and Williston per State Tax Dept changes. 2/14/2022- Updates to Minot -13th ST SE/31st AVE SE, Updates to Elgin, Horace and St. John.11/16/2021 -Updates to Bismarck, Fargo and Killdeer based on city ordinances.7/2/21 – Changes were made to the City of Bismarck, Fargo and Hillsboro to include local taxing jurisdiction boundary changes from the State Tax Commissioner.5/4/21 - Updates were made to the City of Wahpeton due to an annexation.4/29/21 - Updated Minot and Makoti3/5/21 - Updated an annexation to Arnegard that was submitted to the DOT by Mackenzie's County Public Works GIS Coordinator.1/21/21 - Update to Sentinel Butte per Golden Valley 911 Coordinator7/17/20 - Updates to Bismarck, Linton and Stanley6/1/20 - Updates to Killdeer, New Town and Surrey1/17/2020 - Boundary changes have been updated for Bismarck, Bowman Fargo, Garrison, Linton, and New Salem.3/5/19 - The corporate boundary of Surrey has been updated.12/26/18 - The following corporate boundaries have been updated: Bismarck, Lincoln, Grand Forks, Horace, Casselton, Fargo, Oxbow, Tioga and Stanley.6/19/18 - City of Maza is not incorporated based on the 2011-2013 North Dakota Blue book. Removed Maza.5/14/18 - Updated Dickinson, Watford City, Berthold, Minnewauken, and Cavalier.1/31/18 - Updated Dickinson, Mandan, Minot, Tioga, Devils Lake, Belfield, Washburn, Mohall, Minnewauken, Lincoln, Bismarck and Casselton. 10/24/17 - Updated Watford City and Makoti10/16/17 - The following cities have been updated: Jamestown, Milnor, Bismarck, Carrington, Casselton, Mandan, Minot, Stanley, Larimore, Crosby, and Watford City.1/10/17 - The following cities have been updated: Lehr, Grand Forks, Langdon, Drayton, Flasher, Glen Ullin, Watford City, Zap, Lignite, Hankinson, Beach, Underwood, South Heart, Devils Lake, all cities in Ward County, Cavalier, Bismarck, Lincoln, Fargo, West Fargo, Ayr, Briarwood, Casselton, Davenport, Enderlin, Grandin, Horace, and North River.9/19/16 - Updated the following cities: Watford City, Steele, Richardton, Berthold, Carpio, Burlington, Des Lacs, Donnybrook, Douglas, Kenmare, Makoti, Ryder, Sawyer, and Surrey.6/23/16 - Updated cities are as follows: All cities in Pembina, Morton, Richland, and Williams Counties. The cities of Bismarck, West Fargo, Harwood, Oxbow, Beach, Minot, Stanley, Jamestown, Fargo, Dickinson and New Town.9/28/15 - The following cites have had annexation: Stanley, Bottineau, Minot, Casselton, Belfield and Watford City.7/24/15 - Updated Grafton, Stanley, Bismarck, Williston, Horace, Fargo, Grand Forks, Watford City, Turtle Lake, Leeds, Maxbass and Medora1/16/15 - Updated Grafton, Stanley and Bismarck.11/3/2014 - Updated Bismarck, Mandan, Minot, Stanley, and Watford City7/16/14 - Corporate limits updated include: Mandan, Towner, Fargo, West Fargo, Grand Forks, Bismarck, Bowman, Watford City, Stanley, Tioga, Kenmare, Casselton, Minot, Carrington, Kindred, and Killdeer. The corporate limit updates consisted of receiving from the cities, shape files, CADD files, scanned images of annexations or by converting pdf files into images, rectifying them within ArcGIS, then heads-up digitizing. 7/29/13 - updated Stanley, Williston, Minot, and Bismarck.4/30/13 - updated Williston, Hazen, Minot, Dickinson, Valley City, Velva, Rugby, Bismarck, and Lincoln1/28/13 - updated Valley City, Grand Forks, Bismarck, Williston, Jamestown, Harvey, Mohall, Park River, Ray, Rugby, Stanley, Tioga, Mayville and Glenfield10/9/12 - updated Williston and Dickinson6/20/12 - updated Williston via shapefile from city.3/20/12 - updated Bismarck and Minot10/3/2011 - Edited corporate limits for Bottineau, Grand Forks, Bismarck, Grafton, Fargo, West Fargo, Horace, Dickinson, Williston, Valley City and Devils Lake.2/4/11 - Removed urban areas so only corporate boundaries remain. Removed boolean field named URBAN_AREA. Updated corporate limist in Dickinson and cities with Cass county. 6/24/10 - Stanley, Lincoln, Oakes, Hankinson, Enderlin, Ellendale, Linton, Carrington, Minot, and Kulm corportate limits were changed 6/18/09 - Stanley, Wahpeton, Center, Watford City, Williston, Grand Forks, Killdeer, Beulah, Beach, Hazen, Garrison, Washburn, Bismarck and Lincoln corporate limits were changed 3/24/08 - Added Milton, Drayton, and Cavalier Boudaries updated: Park River 1/16/08 - Boundaries updated: Devils Lake, Glen Ullin, Langdon, Minnewaukan, Northwood, Thompson 2/13/07 - Boundaries updated: Amenia, Arthur, Bismarck, Bottineau, Buffalo, Casstleton, Davenport, Dickinson, Enderlin, Gardner, Grand Forks, Grandin, Harvey, Harvey, Hillsboro, Horace, Hunter, Jamestown, Kindred, Mapleton, Mayville, New Rockford, Oxbox, Page, Prairie Rose, Relies Acres, Tappen, Towner City 1/10/06 - Boundaries updated: Wishek, Fargo, Lincoln, Bottineau, Williston, Grand Forks, Granville, Velva, Stanley, urban areas in Fargo, West Fargo, Bismarck and Mandan. Deleted Larson This data came from the NDDOT's Mapping Section. The original data was digitized from hand scribed maps and registered to the 1:24000 USGS PLSS data. It was converted from a projection (NAD 1983 UTM Zone 14N) to a Geographic coordinate system.
This dataset contains all the parcel outlines within the City of New Westminster