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TwitterPolygon layer for SSA OCDs.
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TwitterThe United Nations Standard Products and Services Code (UNSPSC) is a hierarchical convention that is used to classify all products and services.
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TwitterThis table is a summary of information published elsewhere on this portal. It contains standardized codes for City Programs and Departments. These codes, when integrated with other datasets, can be used to analyze service trends across programs and departments.
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TwitterZIP Code Tabulation Areas (ZCTAs) are generalized representations of United States Postal Service (USPS) ZIP Code service areas. The USPS ZIP Codes identify the individual post office or metropolitan area delivery station associated with mailing addresses. USPS ZIP Codes are not areal features but a collection of mail delivery routes.
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TwitterThis dataset contains statewide counts for every diagnosis, procedure, and external cause of injury/morbidity code reported on the hospital emergency department data. Diagnosis codes are reported using ICD-9-CM or ICD-10-CM. Procedure codes are reported using CPT-4. External cause of injury/morbidity codes are reported using ICD-9-CM or ICD-10-CM. ICD-10 replaced ICD-9, effective October 1, 2015.
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TwitterODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
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These department codes are maintained in the City's financial system of record. Department Groups, Divisions, Sections, Units, Sub Units and Departments are nested in the dataset from left to right. Each nested unit has both a code and an associated name.
The dataset represents a flattened tree (hierarchy) so that each leaf on the tree has it's own row. Thus certain rows will have repeated codes across columns.
Data changes as needed.
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TwitterThe Electronic Code of Federal Regulations (e-CFR) is the codification of the general and permanent rules published in the Federal Register by the executive departments and agencies of the Federal Government. It is divided into 50 titles that represent broad areas subject to Federal regulation. The Electronic Code of Federal Regulations is updated daily. The Electronic Code of Federal Regulations and its accompanying XML data is not yet an official format of the Code of Federal Regulations. Only the PDF and Text versions of the annual Code of Federal Regulations have legal status as parts of the official online format of the Code of Federal Regulations. The XML-structured files are derived from SGML-tagged data and printing codes, which may produce anomalies in display. In addition, the XML data does not yet include image files. Users who require a higher level of assurance may wish to consult the official version of the Code of Federal Regulations or the daily Federal Register on FDsys.gov.
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TwitterODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
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Summary of Department Codes dataset. If you are looking for sub-departments or divisions, please see the source dataset.
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TwitterPoint layer for SSA OCDs.
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TwitterThis dataset contains financial tracking codes used by City of Austin staff to manage various program budgets. Our internal operations systems consume data directly from this dataset. This data is subset of the canonical data maintained by Austin Financial Services. https://www.austintexas.gov/fsd
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TwitterAttribution-ShareAlike 3.0 (CC BY-SA 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
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Pakistan Post Office is one of the oldest government departments in the Sub-Continent. In 1947, it began functioning as the Department of Post & Telegraph. This Data Set Contains details of the general post offices of Pakistan.
The Data set contains details of 11844 general post offices of Pakistan with their postal codes and GPS coordinates, name of the GPO, and city/area of the GPO.
The data set has been download and extracted from the GeoNames Postal Code dataset (www.geonames.org). The Data is provided "as is" without warranty or any representation of accuracy, timeliness or completeness. Source: http://download.geonames.org.
For many countries lat/lng are determined with an algorithm that searches the place names in the main geonames database using administrative divisions and numerical vicinity of the postal codes as factors in the disambiguation of place names. For postal codes and place name for which no corresponding toponym in the main geonames database could be found an average lat/lng of 'neighbouring' postal codes is calculated.
This dataset can be used to combine some external data sources from postal service management and E-commerce data set for analysis, data visualization, and operations management
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Comprehensive dataset containing 290 verified Post Office Centre D'examen Du Code De La Route locations in France with complete contact information, ratings, reviews, and location data.
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Twitter.nyc domain registrations broken down by zip code. This list is updated monthly.
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TwitterPursuant to New York City’s Housing Maintenance Code, the Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) issues violations against conditions, in rental dwelling units and buildings, that have been verified to violate the New York City Housing Maintenance Code (HMC) or the New York State Multiple Dwelling Law (MDL).
Each row in this dataset contains discrete information about one violation of the New York City Housing Maintenance Code or New York State Multiple Dwelling Law. Each violation is identified using a unique Violation ID. These Laws are in place to provide requirements for the maintenance of residential dwelling units within New York City.
Violations are issued by Housing Inspectors after a physical inspection is conducted (except for class I violations which are generally administratively issued). Violations are issued in four classes: Class A (non-hazardous), Class B (hazardous), Class C (immediately hazardous) and Class I (information orders). For more information on violations, see https://www1.nyc.gov/site/hpd/owners/compliance-clear-violations.page
The base data for this file is all violations open as of October 1, 2012. Violation data is updated daily. The daily update includes both new violations and updates to the status of previously issued violations. An open violation is a violation which is still active on the Department records. See the status table for determining how to filter for open violations versus closed violations, and within open violations for a more detailed current status.
The property owner may or may not have corrected the physical condition if the status is open. The violation status is closed when the violation is observed/verified as corrected by HPD or as certified by the landlord. The processes for having violations dismissed are described at http://www1.nyc.gov/site/hpd/owners/compliance-clear-violations.page
Using other HPD datasets, such as the Building File or the Registration File, a user can link together violations issued for given buildings or for given owners.
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TwitterThe 2013 Rural-Urban Continuum Codes form a classification scheme that distinguishes metropolitan counties by the population size of their metro area, and nonmetropolitan counties by degree of urbanization and adjacency to a metro area. The official Office of Management and Budget (OMB) metro and nonmetro categories have been subdivided into three metro and six nonmetro categories. Each county in the U.S. is assigned one of the 9 codes. This scheme allows researchers to break county data into finer residential groups, beyond metro and nonmetro, particularly for the analysis of trends in nonmetro areas that are related to population density and metro influence. The Rural-Urban Continuum Codes were originally developed in 1974. They have been updated each decennial since (1983, 1993, 2003, 2013), and slightly revised in 1988. Note that the 2013 Rural-Urban Continuum Codes are not directly comparable with the codes prior to 2000 because of the new methodology used in developing the 2000 metropolitan areas. See the Documentation for details and a map of the codes. An update of the Rural-Urban Continuum Codes is planned for mid-2023.
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TwitterThe rural-urban commuting area codes (RUCA) classify U.S. census tracts using measures of urbanization, population density, and daily commuting from the decennial census. The most recent RUCA codes are based on data from the 2000 decennial census. The classification contains two levels. Whole numbers (1-10) delineate metropolitan, micropolitan, small town, and rural commuting areas based on the size and direction of the primary (largest) commuting flows. These 10 codes are further subdivided to permit stricter or looser delimitation of commuting areas, based on secondary (second largest) commuting flows. The approach errs in the direction of more codes, providing flexibility in combining levels to meet varying definitional needs and preferences. The 1990 codes are similarly defined. However, the Census Bureau's methods of defining urban cores and clusters changed between the two censuses. And, census tracts changed in number and shapes. The 2000 rural-urban commuting codes are not directly comparable with the 1990 codes because of these differences. An update of the Rural-Urban Commuting Area Codes is planned for late 2013.
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TwitterACRIS Document Type and Class Code mappings for Codes in the ACRIS Real and Personal Property Master Datasets
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Data and code that is not already in a public location that is used in Kilcher, Thomson, Harding, and Nylund (2017) "Turbulence Measurements from Compliant Moorings - Part II: Motion Correction" doi: 10.1175/JTECH-D-16-0213.1.
The links point to Python source code used in the publication. All other files are source data used in the publication.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The Code Enforcement Offices dataset is a spatial data representation of the three administration offices that correspond to the three Code Enforcement Sectors, two of them in the Central and one in the Southern sector, within the City of Miami. The data was created by Code Enforcement Department (used to operate as part of Neighborhood Enhancement Team or NET before December 2003), City of Miami. It is maintained and managed by the GIS Team of the City.
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TwitterDataset SummaryAbout this data:The City of Rochester has numerous residential, commercial and industrial buildings which are substantially sound and habitable structures which provide housing resources for residents and businesses in the city. The condition and timely maintenance of these existing structures as well as the safe and code compliant construction of newly built buildings play a vital role in the success of our businesses and city neighborhoods. In order to preserve these valuable housing and business resources in the city, to enhance the residential neighborhoods and to protect the safety, health and welfare of the persons who live, work and recreate in the city, the Division of Code Enforcement conducts property and building code inspections and performs necessary code enforcement activity. There are many aspects of code enforcement; each is uniquely designed to further encourage compliance. The actions taken by a Code Enforcement Officer (CEO) are dependent upon the specific situation and may include but are not limited to the:Voiding of a permit;Issuance of a Notice and Order;Issuance of a stop work order;Issuance of an immediate ticket;Issuance of a final letter;Issuance of housing code tickets;The vacating of a unit which poses an immediate hazard to the occupants;Executing a work order to remove trash, cut grass or secure a vacant building;Scheduling of a Warning meeting in the Law Department;Application for Judicial Inspection Warrant;Commencement of a proceeding in City Court;Commencement of a proceeding in State Supreme Court;Pursuit of an order of DemolitionFor more information visit the City of Rochester's Code Inspection and Enforcement website and the Permit Inspection website.Data Dictionary: InspectorArea: Each inspector is assigned an area, with the first two letters denoting the city quadrant (SE, SW, NE, NW) and the numbered region in each quad. Name: The full name of the code enforcement inspector. Phone: The phone number of the code enforcement inspector. Email: The email address of the code enforcement inspector. NSC: The Neighborhood Service Center (NSC) that is associated with the Inspector (Northeast, Northwest, Southeast, Southwest). OfficeAddr: The address of the code enforcement inspector’s office. ContSitua: The general phone number to schedule an inspection (the same for all inspectors). NewCompl: The general phone number to call in a complaint (the same for all inspectors). Inspector_ID: The unique identifier for each inspector in the mainframe. AreaName: The name of the City of Rochester data division that the census tract falls into. Inspector_Extension: The phone extension for each inspector. SupervisorName: The name of the supervisor of the code inspector. SupervisorEmail: The email address for the supervisor. SupervisorPhone: The phone number for the supervisor.
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TwitterPolygon layer for SSA OCDs.