Alaska DNR Easements includes private and public easements and right-of-ways granted by the State of Alaska.
This shape file characterizes the geographic representation of land parcels within the State of Alaska contained by the Easements category. It has been extracted from data sets used to produce the State status plats. This data set includes cases noted on the digital status plats up to one day prior to data extraction.
Each feature has an associated attribute record, including a Land Administration System (LAS) file-type and file-number which serves as an index to related LAS case-file information. Additional LAS case-file and customer information may be obtained at: http://dnr.alaska.gov/projects/las/ Those requiring more information regarding State land records should contact the Alaska Department of Natural Resources Public Information Center directly.
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Class EL3 easements are tow and footage easements for the riparian properties of a watercourse or a federal lake, pursuant to articles L.2131-2 to L.2131-6 of the General Code of Property for Public Persons (CGPPP): * Walking easements The riparian properties of a watercourse or a federal lake are encumbered on each bank by a 3.25-metre easement, known as a walkway easement. This easement prohibits riparian landowners from planting trees or closing by hedges or otherwise. * Towing easements Easement in respect of federal watercourses where there is a tow or operating road of interest to the navigation service. The easement strikes the properties in a space of 7.80 meters wide along the edges of these federal watercourses, as well as on the islands where it is needed. Riparian owners may not plant trees or close by hedges or otherwise only at a distance of 9.75 metres on the edges where there is a towing or operating path. * Servitude for the use of fishermen On the encumbered lands there are walk and tow easements, a so-called “fisherman’s use” easement. Article L2131-2 of the General Code of Property for Public Persons (CGPPP) provides that “Every owner, tenant, farmer or holder of a right in rem, riparian of a watercourse or a federal lake is obliged to leave the land encumbered by that easement for the use of the watercourse or lake manager, fishers and pedestrians.” In addition, “Along navigation channels, fishermen and pedestrians may use the towway and the portion of the bank in the public domain, to the extent permitted by the operation of navigation.” By decision of the administrative authority, the right referred to in the preceding subparagraph may exceptionally be abolished either for reasons of general interest or for safety reasons where the banks are included in industrial establishments. This resource describes the surface plates of the EL3 easements, i.e. buffer zones around generators. The DDT of the Tarn is concerned by the easement of foot.
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Grade AC1 easements relate to easements for the protection of listed or registered historic monuments: — Classification under historical monuments: these easements relate to buildings or parts of immovables whose conservation is of a public interest from the point of view of history or art. Owners of classified buildings may not carry out restoration, repair or alteration work without the prior authorisation of the regional prefect or the Minister responsible for culture. — Inscription as historical monuments: these easements relate to immovables or parts of immovables which, without justifying an application for immediate classification, are of sufficient historical or artistic interest to make their preservation desirable. Owners of registered immovables may not make any changes without prior declaration; No planning authorisation may be issued without the prior consent of the prefect of the region. — Buildings backed by classified buildings and buildings located in the field of visibility of classified or registered buildings: 1. Any building in contact with a classified building, in elevation, on the ground or in the basement shall be considered as a backed building. Any part not protected under the historical monuments of a partially classified building shall be considered as a backed building. 2. Any other building, naked or built, visible from the first or visible at the same time as it is situated within a perimeter determined by a distance of 500 m from the monument shall be considered to be within the field of visibility of a classified or registered building. This 500 m perimeter can be modified or adapted: • the appropriate protection perimeter (PPA): where an unprotected building is subject to a registration, classification or classification procedure, the architect of the buildings of France (ABF) may propose a protection area adapted to the nature of the building and its environment. • Modified perimeter of protection (PPM): the perimeter established around a historic monument can be modified on the proposal of the ABB. This resource describes the generators of Grade AC1 easements, i.e. the monument or part of a monument classified or registered or classified and registered.
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Grade AC1 easements relate to easements for the protection of listed or registered historic monuments: — Classification under historical monuments: these easements relate to buildings or parts of immovables whose conservation is of a public interest from the point of view of history or art. Owners of classified buildings may not carry out restoration, repair or alteration work without the prior authorisation of the regional prefect or the Minister responsible for culture. — Inscription as historical monuments: these easements relate to immovables or parts of immovables which, without justifying an application for immediate classification, are of sufficient historical or artistic interest to make their preservation desirable. Owners of registered immovables may not make any changes without prior declaration; No planning authorisation may be issued without the prior consent of the prefect of the region. — Buildings backed by classified buildings and buildings located in the field of visibility of classified or registered buildings: 1. Any building in contact with a classified building, in elevation, on the ground or in the basement shall be considered as a backed building. Any part not protected under the historical monuments of a partially classified building shall be considered as a backed building. 2. Any other building, naked or built, visible from the first or visible at the same time as it is situated within a perimeter determined by a distance of 500 m from the monument shall be considered to be within the field of visibility of a classified or registered building. This 500 m perimeter can be modified or adapted: • the appropriate protection perimeter (PPA): where an unprotected building is subject to a registration, classification or classification procedure, the architect of the buildings of France (ABF) may propose a protection area adapted to the nature of the building and its environment. • Modified perimeter of protection (PPM): the perimeter established around a historic monument can be modified on the proposal of the ABB. This resource describes the bases of Grade AC1 easements, i.e. all or part of an immovable, or a defined perimeter(s) around the monument: • the radius of 500 metres fixed by law, • either a perimeter extended beyond 500 metres or on the contrary reduced (industrial buildings, rural buildings,...) or even specific (view cone, monumental perspective,...), • a perimeter limited to geographical areas most sensitive or extended to landscape elements located beyond 500 metres but maintaining a strong relationship with the monument (perspective of a lane, landscape, etc.).
Unofficial data, digitised from administrative documents collected by DDT 77, contact the manager or consult the GPU to obtain data that can be used in a regulatory framework. Easements on private property established for the benefit of operators of telecommunications networks (electronic communication) open to the public in order to allow the installation and operation of network equipment, including fixed and mobile very high-speed network equipment: — on and in parts of collective buildings and subdivisions for common use, including those capable of accommodating radio installations or equipment; — on the ground and in the basement of unbuilt properties, including those capable of accommodating radio installations or equipment; — above private property to the extent that the operator merely uses the installation of a third party benefiting from easements without compromising, where appropriate, the own public service task entrusted to that third party. The installation of the structures of the telecommunications network (electronic communication) cannot hinder the right of owners or co-owners to demolish, repair, modify or close their property. However, the owners or co-owners must, at least three months before undertaking work likely to affect the works, notify the beneficiary of the easement. Texts in force: — L. 45-9, L. 48 and R. 20-55 to R. 20-62 of the Postal and Electronic Communications Code The linear entities of this data relate to the use of certain resources and equipment, they affect land use. With the collection of easements from third parties, DDT-77 cannot guarantee the completeness and accuracy of the deferral of these easements on a large-scale map.
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The purpose of this national standard of data is to harmonise the minimum information for the description of Public Utilities (SUPs). It is common to all categories of easements and aims to ensure the interoperability of spatial and textual data on SUPs.The scope of the conceptual data model encompasses the concepts relating to the easements themselves, the legal acts establishing them, the managers, generators and bases.It takes place from the point of view of the service which brings together all the SUPs (community and/or DDT) and not of the department that manages the SUP, the latter being able to have its own internal data structure. This document is aimed primarily at:- DDT and local authorities responsible for managing a set of SUPs, be it for the Porter à savoir (PAC), the constitution of the annexes of the PLUs (Territorial Communities) or the Application of Sole Law;- to SUP managers wishing to draw inspiration from the conceptual data model proposed in this document;- to design offices responding to the digitalisation markets of SUPs. This national standard of SUP data is consistent and complements, in the field of easements, the CNIG national standard for the dematerialisation of POS, PLU and communal maps.
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This is a polygon data set that depicts the locations of easements and vacations of easements granted to the City of Boise. An easement is a legal right to make use of land owned by another party, for a specific and limited purpose as specified within an easement description. An easement vacation is a legal declaration to relinquish to the parcel owner the easement that was formerly granted. Easements are attained by the City of Boise in the following ways: 1)through right-of-way vacation from Ada County Highway District where the City of Boise retains rights to build and maintain utility structures across the area vacated within the vacation description; 2)a Boise City Council resolution where a grantor gives the City the right to build and maintain sanitary sewer, geothermal, drainage or pressure irrigation across their property; 3)as a grant of easement or grant deed recorded at Ada County; and 4) as a note on a subdivision final plat that a specific lot, portion of a lot or lots is shown to have an easement across it (them) and may or may not include dimensions of the easement. All easements in this data set are within the Boise City Area of Impact. This data set is maintained by Boise City Public Works GIS staff. Features in this data set are derived from available computer aided drafting CAD drawings, paper map documents and legal descriptions that define easement locations. Easements have been granted to the City of Boise since about 1900 to the present. Documentation of easements prior to 1970 is incomplete; therefore most of the easements in this data set will be from 1970 to the present. The data is updated continuously. It is current to the date it was published.
The National Conservation Easement Database (NCED) is the first national database of conservation easement information, compiling records from land trusts and public agencies throughout the United States. This public-private partnership brings together national conservation groups, local and regional land trusts, and local, state and federal agencies around a common objective. This effort helps agencies, land trusts, and other organizations plan more strategically, identify opportunities for collaboration, advance public accountability, and raise the profile of what’s happening on-the-ground in the name of conservation.For an introductory tour of the NCED and its benefits check out the story map.
Public utility easements (SUPs) are administrative limitations on the right to property, they are established for the benefit of public persons, concessionaires of public works or public works, private persons engaged in an activity in the public interest. The collection and conservation of public utility easements is a sovereign task of the State, which must bring them to the attention of local and regional authorities so that they may annex them to their urban planning documents. The public utility easements concerned are those defined by Articles L. 126-1 and R. 126-1 of the Urban Planning Code and their annexes.
Two categories of water resource management easements should be distinguished: easements of passage established on the basis of articles L. 211-7 (I) of the Environmental Code or L. 151-37-1 and R. 152-29 to R. 152-35 of the Rural Code former easements known as “free passage of maintenance equipment in the bed or on the banks of non-Domanial streams”: Old texts governing servitude: Decree No 59-96 of 7 January 1959 on easements of free passage on the banks of watercourses which are not navigable or flotable, Decree No 60-419 of 25 April 1960 laying down the conditions for the application of Decree No 59-96 of 7 January 1959
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Public utility easements (SUPs) are administrative limitations on the right to property, they are established for the benefit of public persons, concessionaires of public works or public works, private persons engaged in an activity in the public interest. The collection and conservation of public utility easements is a sovereign task of the State, which must bring them to the attention of local and regional authorities so that they may annex them to their urban planning documents. The public utility easements concerned are those defined by Articles L. 126-1 and R. 126-1 of the Urban Planning Code and their annexes. T2 type easements are linked to the possibility for manufacturers and operators of a passenger cable car and declared to be of public benefit: — a right to establish an easement over unbuilt, unclosed land from a height of 50 metres. The easement is applicable over a width corresponding to the right-of-way of the line. — the right to remove from any obstacle or vegetation an area of strictly sufficient width and not more than 4 metres above the line and up to the level of the ground, in order to facilitate the installation, removal and maintenance of cables. Text in force: Act of 8 July 1941 establishing an easement of overflight for the benefit of cable cars. Type T2 easements shall be established in accordance with the following procedure: 1.Declaration of public utility of the construction of cable cars for passenger transport; 2.Special parcel survey conducted in each municipality concerned; 3.Approval by the competent authority of the detailed draft of the route of the cable car in question; 4.Direct notification to interested parties of approval of the route of the line concerned; 5.Terms of publication and display; 6. Attachment of servitude to the local urban plan. link to the text of the law: http://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/affichTexte.do?cidTexte=JORFTEXT000000497700&idArticle=LEGIARTI000006878833&dateTexte=20140922 link to SUP scanning guide: http://www.geomatique-aln.fr/spip.php?article296 The reference date of the data is the date of publication of this metadata
GIS layer grouping, for the department of Cantal, the plates of easements around a certain facility classified for the protection of the environment (PM2) Source: DDT 15, 2018.
Floodplain delineations were first added to the County tax maps in the 1970's for creeks and streams with watersheds of 1 square mile or greater. In 1977 all the studies on these large streams had been completed and a "Floodplain Overlay District" was created. Within several years this floodplain overlay district was depicted on the zoning maps. Again, these delineations were only for those creeks with drainage areas of over 1 square mile. A note in a 1981 memo to the Mapping Division about these delineations said, "...the County delineation of a Flood Plain Overlay District line on the tax map is treated here as a flag or general indicator of approximate location of this District's line. Normal development provides 2 field run topography professionally certified on which the floodplain elevations can be more accurately determined..." In 1985 the Zoning Ordinance was amended, an entire section on floodplains was added to Chapter 2 and the definition of what constituted a floodplain was significantly revised. Where as the Floodplain Overlay District had principally contained only those overbank areas inundated by the 100-yr storm along streams with drainage areas of 1 square mile or greater (i.e. 640 acres), the new definition included the overbank areas inundated by the 100-year storm along creeks with drainage areas of 70 acres and greater. But this change in the definition of floodplain created a problem for those who had become dependent on the tax maps to show them whether or not there was floodplain on a given property. These newly-defined floodplains were not yet studied or mapped and would only be mapped one property at a time, as each parcel containing these smaller floodplains submitted plans for development. When such parcels were developed, floodplain studies were required, and floodplain easements (later titled "floodplain and storm drainage easements") were recorded around these smaller floodplains. And as those easements were recorded, they were added to the tax maps. For all the floodplains which have been studied since 1985, the limits of the floodplain and storm drainage easements have been added to the tax maps, when such easements were required by the County Code or the Zoning Ordinance. But if a parcel has not yet been developed or if it was developed prior to 1985, there is usually no easement around the floodplain. There are also numerous cases where, for some reason, floodplain easements were recorded along small creeks with drainage areas well below 70 acres. These recorded "floodplain" easements were then added to the tax maps. THE RESULT: The tax maps cannot be used to definitively determine whether floodplain exists on a given parcel .There are approximately 900 miles of streams which meet the 70 acre drainage area requirement for floodplains, but to date (6/2003) almost 400 of these 900 miles remain unstudied. And if a stream has never been studied, no easement would have been recorded and thus the fact that it was a floodplain would not be reflected in the tax maps. Only after a determination of the drainage area is made can one know whether the overbank areas along a given creek meet the Zoning Ordinance definition of floodplain. Further if the drainage area is over 70 acres, only a floodplain study can determine the limits of the floodplain that is, how much of the overbank areas are inundated by the peak flow of the 100-yr storm. The layer for floodplains with drainage areas of over 1 square mile is good, but above that, it's inconsistent, especially in those areas which are minor floodplains (i.e. less than 360 acres of drainage area) and which were developed prior to 1985. The entire 850 or so miles of floodplain have not been mapped as unbroken corridors. And the "floodplain" here in Fairfax County, we're using the zoning ordinance definition which is the 100-yr water surface limits along streams with drainage areas of over 70 acres. This definition came into the zoning ordinance in 1985, so from that time, developers have had to study and map even these smaller floodplains on their developments and put them in easements. These easements have been captured on our tax maps since 1985, development by development, as the record plats were recorded. FEMA doesn't recognize as Special Flood Hazard Areas, many stream valleys that we would call floodplain. The layer currently on the data loader for floodplains is missing many segments of stream that are defined as floodplain per the zoning ordinance. Yet because of our zoning ordinance definition, this layer extends up in many areas far beyond where FEMA has mapped its 100-yr floodplains.
Contact: Fairfax County Department of Information Technology GIS Division
Data Accessibility: Publicly available
Update Frequency: Daily
Last Revision Date: 1/1/2000
Creation date: 1/1/2000
Dataset Name: GISMGR.ENCUMBRANCES
Layer name: GISMGR.FLOOD_PLAIN_RECORDED
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Unofficial data, digitised from administrative documents collected by DDT 77, contact the manager or consult the GPU to obtain data that can be used in a regulatory framework.In order to ensure the proper functioning of the networks, easements are established pursuant to Articles L. 54 to L. 56-1 of the Postal and Electronic Communications Code to protect radio centres from physical obstacles that may impede the spread of waves. Two schemes should be distinguished: — easements established for the benefit of radio centres concerning national defence or public security (Articles L.54 to L.56 of the Postal and Electronic Communications Code); — easements established for the benefit of radio centres owned by private operators (Article L.56-1 of the Postal and Electronic Communications Code). However, in the absence of a decree applying Article L.62-1 of the Postal and Electronic Communications Code, operators of electronic communications networks open to the public cannot benefit from radio easements to date. A plan for the establishment of easements approved by decree sets out the areas that are subject to easement. Four types of zone can be created: — primary clearance zones and/or secondary clearance zones around each radio station transmitting or receiving radio waves using directional aerials, as well as around radio laboratories and research centres; — special clearance zones between two centres providing a radio wave link exceeding 30 megahertz (i.e. with a wavelength of less than 10 metres); — areas of clearance around radio-tracking stations or radionavigation stations of transmission or reception Texts in force: Articles L. 54 to L. 56-1 of the Postal and Electronic Communications Code; Article L. 5113-1 of the Defence Code; Articles R. 21 to R. 26 and R.39 of the Postal and Electronic Communications Code The one-off entities of this data relate to the use of certain resources and equipment, they affect land use. Data owner: National Frequency Agency (ANFR) With the collection of easements from third parties, DDT-77 cannot guarantee the completeness and accuracy of the deferral of these easements on a large-scale map.
Countywide rights of way and easements layer displays rights of ways and easments in incorporated and unincorporated territories within Hamilton County and is maintained by Hamilton County Engineers.
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.
These are the locations where the city has an easement or right of access on private property to access and maintain sanitary sewers pipes owned by the City.
Geospatial data about City of San Jose Easements. Export to CAD, GIS, PDF, CSV and access via API.
Platted layers of subdivisions within the City of Laredo. This map includes lotlines, easements, and subdivision boundaries and phases.
description: This map depicts lands owned and/or administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service at Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge.; abstract: This map depicts lands owned and/or administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service at Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge.
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Public utility easements (SUPs) are administrative limitations on the right to property, they are established for the benefit of public persons, concessionaires of public works or public works, private persons engaged in an activity in the public interest. The collection and conservation of public utility easements is a sovereign task of the State, which must bring them to the attention of local and regional authorities so that they may annex them to their urban planning documents. The public utility easements concerned are those defined by Articles L. 126-1 and R. 126-1 of the Urban Planning Code and their annexes. T5 SUPs, known as Aeronautical Clearance Servitudes, are created to ensure the safe operation of aircraft, excluding radio easements. They are defined as: —by a plan of aeronautical alternate easements (PSA) drawn up for each aerodrome referred to in Article L.6350-1 (1) and (2) of the Transport Code (formerly R. 241-2 of the Civil Aviation Code), —or by provisional safeguard measures which may be implemented in the event of an emergency, before being included in an approved SAAP. Legislative texts: Latest laws, orders or decrees issued by the Council of State: Order No 2010-1307 of 28 October 2010 concerning the legislative part of the Transport Code, repealing Title IV of Book II of the Civil Aviation Code relating to aeronautical easements in order to incorporate it into “Part 6: Civil Aviation” of the Transport Code, under Title V, “Requirements in the vicinity of aerodromes” link to articles L.281-1 et seq. of the Civil Aviation Code: http://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/WAspad/UnArticleDeCode?code=CAVIACIL.rcv&art=L281-1 link to SUP scanning guide: http://www.geomatique-aln.fr/spip.php?article296 The reference date of the data is the date of publication of this metadata
Alaska DNR Easements includes private and public easements and right-of-ways granted by the State of Alaska.
This shape file characterizes the geographic representation of land parcels within the State of Alaska contained by the Easements category. It has been extracted from data sets used to produce the State status plats. This data set includes cases noted on the digital status plats up to one day prior to data extraction.
Each feature has an associated attribute record, including a Land Administration System (LAS) file-type and file-number which serves as an index to related LAS case-file information. Additional LAS case-file and customer information may be obtained at: http://dnr.alaska.gov/projects/las/ Those requiring more information regarding State land records should contact the Alaska Department of Natural Resources Public Information Center directly.