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License information was derived automatically
District of Columbia Single Member District (SMD) boundaries. This dataset contains lines representing advisory neighborhood commission (ANC) single member districts (SMDs) in 1990. The data was created as part of the DC Geographic Information System (DC GIS) for the D.C. Office of the Chief Technology Officer (OCTO) and participating D.C. government agencies. ANC SMDs were identified from public records, including published maps and written legal descriptions and heads-up digitized from 1995/1999 orthophotographs
Addresses that have changed ANC and SMD as a result of new delineations in the Advisory Neighborhood Commission Boundaries Act of 2022, signed into law on June 16, 2022. They are in effect beginning January 1, 2023. View the ANC 2023 and SMD 2023 boundaries.
Advisory Neighborhood Commission (ANC) polygons. This dataset contains polygons representing ANC boundaries in 1990, created as part of the DC Geographic Information System (DC GIS) for the D.C. Office of the Chief Technology Officer (OCTO) and participating D.C. government agencies. These political jurisdictions were identified from public records, including published maps and written legal descriptions and heads-up digitized from the snapbase.
Advisory Neighborhood Commissions or ANC's are collections of Single Member Districts or SMD's. There are multiple ANC's for each of the eight Wards. The initial number of ANC codes correspond to the ward. Three ANC's cross ward boundaries; 3C, 3G and 6D, the remaining do not. ANC's consider a wide range of policies and programs affecting their neighborhoods. These include traffic, parking, recreation, street improvements, liquor licenses, zoning, economic development, police protection, sanitation and trash collection, and the District's annual budget. No public policy area is excluded from the purview of the Advisory Neighborhood Commissions. The intent of the ANC legislation is to ensure input from an advisory board made up of the residents of the neighborhoods directly affected by government action. The ANCs are the body of government with the closest official ties to the people in a neighborhood. ANCs present their positions and recommendations on issues to various District government agencies, the Executive Branch, and the Council. They also present testimony to independent agencies, boards and commissions, usually under rules of procedure specific to those entities. By law, the ANCs may also present their positions to Federal agencies.
Advisory Neighborhood Commissions (ANCs) were created pursuant to legislation approving the District of Columbia's Home Rule charter in 1973. They are collections of Single Member Districts (SMDs). ANCs allow input from an advisory board made up of the residents of the neighborhoods directly affected by government action. The ANCs are the body of government with the closest official ties to the people in a neighborhood. ANCs present their positions and recommendations on issues to various District government agencies, the Executive Branch, and the Council. They also present testimony to independent agencies, boards and commissions, usually under rules of procedure specific to those entities. By law, the ANCs may also present their positions to Federal agencies. ANCs consider a wide range of policies and programs affecting their neighborhoods. These include traffic, parking, recreation, street improvements, liquor licenses, zoning, economic development, police protection, sanitation and trash collection, and the District's annual budget. No public policy area is excluded from the purview of the Advisory Neighborhood Commissions. ANCs present their positions and recommendations on issues to various District government agencies, the Executive Branch, and the Council. They also present testimony to independent agencies, boards and commissions, usually under rules of procedure specific to those entities. By law, the ANCs may also present their positions to Federal agencies.This dataset reflects the ANC boundaries delineated in the Advisory Neighborhood Commission Boundaries Act of 2022, signed into law on June 16, 2022. They are in effect beginning January 1, 2023.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
District of Columbia Single Member District (SMD) boundaries. This dataset contains lines representing advisory neighborhood commission (ANC) single member districts (SMDs) in 1990. The data was created as part of the DC Geographic Information System (DC GIS) for the D.C. Office of the Chief Technology Officer (OCTO) and participating D.C. government agencies. ANC SMDs were identified from public records, including published maps and written legal descriptions and heads-up digitized from 1995/1999 orthophotographs
This map displays the National Park Service (NPS) jurisdictional boundaries in the District of Columbia (DC) overlaid with DC's Advisory Neighborhood Commission (ANC) and Single Member District (SMD) boundaries. It's intended purpose is to help people determine what ANC and/or SMD a particular park area is associated with.This web app uses the following DC datasets:Advisory Neighborhood Commissions from 2023 | Open Data DCSingle Member District from 2023 | Open Data DCMore information is available on the DC GIS website or the DC OpenData website.The NPS Land and Jurisdictional data layers represent the land under the jurisdiction of the NPS including which NPS administrative unit manages it. This boundary is equivalent to the type of boundary that is displayed on park brochure maps.These polygons do NOT represent the legal the boundary. For issues regarding land ownership and official boundaries, contact the National Capital Region Land Resources Program Center using the contact form.The National Capital Region NPS jurisdictional boundaries data is available on the National Capital Region NPS OpenData site, along with other NCR-specific NPS datasets. Visit the National Park Service OpenData site for more NPS data or the Integrated Resource Management Application (IRMA) Portal for NPS data, documents, and more.This web map is used in the NPS Land in DC and Advisory Neighborhood Commissions InstantApp (Item Details - NCR DC ANCs and NPS in DC Web App).
Advisory Neighborhood Commissions (ANCs) are collections of Single Member Districts (SMDs). ANCs allow input from an advisory board made up of the residents of the neighborhoods directly affected by government action. The ANCs are the body of government with the closest official ties to the people in a neighborhood. ANCs present their positions and recommendations on issues to various District government agencies, the Executive Branch, and the Council. They also present testimony to independent agencies, boards and commissions, usually under rules of procedure specific to those entities. By law, the ANCs may also present their positions to Federal agencies. This data set reflects the boundaries approved by the DC Council in May, 2012, for official 2013 ANCs. ANC's consider a wide range of policies and programs affecting their neighborhoods. These include traffic, parking, recreation, street improvements, liquor licenses, zoning, economic development, police protection, sanitation and trash collection, and the District's annual budget. No public policy area is excluded from the purview of the Advisory Neighborhood Commissions. The intent of the ANC legislation is to ensure input from an advisory board made up of the residents of the neighborhoods directly affected by government action. The ANCs are the body of government with the closest official ties to the people in a neighborhood. ANCs present their positions and recommendations on issues to various District government agencies, the Executive Branch, and the Council. They also present testimony to independent agencies, boards and commissions, usually under rules of procedure specific to those entities. By law, the ANCs may also present their positions to Federal agencies.
The dataset contains a subset of locations and attributes of incidents reported in the ASAP (Analytical Services Application) crime report database by the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department (MPD). Visit crimecards.dc.gov for more information. This data is shared via an automated process where addresses are geocoded to the District's Master Address Repository and assigned to the appropriate street block. Block locations for some crime points could not be automatically assigned resulting in 0,0 for x,y coordinates. These can be interactively assigned using the MAR Geocoder.On February 1 2020, the methodology of geography assignments of crime data was modified to increase accuracy. From January 1 2020 going forward, all crime data will have Ward, ANC, SMD, BID, Neighborhood Cluster, Voting Precinct, Block Group and Census Tract values calculated prior to, rather than after, anonymization to the block level. This change impacts approximately one percent of Ward assignments.
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License information was derived automatically
The DDOT Residential/Visitor Parking Zone layer delineates the residential and visitor parking zone boundaries in the District. In place since 2013, the boundaries are similar to the Ward/ANC boundaries, however they do not always share a boundary with Ward/ANC.
The addresses that will be in a new ANC when the 2023 ANC boundaries go into effect on January 1st, 2023.Does not include:- Non Residential Addresses
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Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
District of Columbia Single Member District (SMD) boundaries. This dataset contains lines representing advisory neighborhood commission (ANC) single member districts (SMDs) in 1990. The data was created as part of the DC Geographic Information System (DC GIS) for the D.C. Office of the Chief Technology Officer (OCTO) and participating D.C. government agencies. ANC SMDs were identified from public records, including published maps and written legal descriptions and heads-up digitized from 1995/1999 orthophotographs