This map service from MassGIS displays the 26 Massachusetts Gateway Cities, municipalities with:population greater than 35,000 and less than 250,000;median household income below the state average;and rate of educational attainment of a bachelor’s degree or above that is below the state average.Read more about Gateway CitiesMap service also available.
This web map holds all 69+ layers of the Gateway Cities Climate Action Plan. This is not the Interactive Map.
This map service from MassGIS displays the 26 Massachusetts Gateway Cities, municipalities with:population greater than 35,000 and less than 250,000;median household income below the state average;and rate of educational attainment of a bachelor’s degree or above that is below the state average.Read more about Gateway CitiesFeature service also available.
Assessor Parcels from the 2016 Tax RollThe Office of the Assessor (click here for their website) maintains assessment records of real and personal property in the County of Los Angeles, as well as a GIS Tax Parcel Base Map. They will be available here, as well as on the County’s Open Data Portal (click here to learn more). To access the Property Assessment Information System, where you can search for properties and see maps and imagery, go to the PAIS website.
This is a patient count by Census Block Group. This is highlighting patients who live within the City of Laredo (City Limits) that visited Gateway Community Center. There were over 23,000 unique patients. The locations were geocoded, then spatial related to the corresponding Census Block Group.
This layer represents current city boundaries within Los Angeles County. The Los Angeles County Department of Public Works provides the most current shapefiles representing city boundaries and city annexations on the Los Angeles County GIS Data Portal. True, legal boundaries are only determined on the ground by surveyors licensed in the State of California. Numerous records are freely available at the Land Records Information website, hosted by the Department of Public Works.Principal attributes include:CITY_NAME: represents the city's name.CITY_TYPE: may be used for definition queries; "Unincorporated" or "City".FEAT_TYPE: identifies the feature that each polygon represents:Land - This value is used for polygons representing the land masses, if you want to see only land features on your map.Pier - This value is used for polygons representing piers along the coastline. One example is the Santa Monica Pier.Breakwater - This value is used for polygons representing man-made barriers that protect the harbors.Water - This value is used for polygons representing navigable waters inside the harbors and marinas.3NM Buffer - This value is used for polygons representing the three seaward nautical miles within the cities' limits, per the Submerged Lands Act.POPULATION: Information in this field is supplied by Mark Greninger (mgreninger@cio.lacounty.gov).Reference Date: 2013
This dataset was developed by LA County Urban Research in support of a project to map the Metrolink Lines and their related Reporting Districts for the Sheriff in 2006.This dataset is fairly complex, since it uses a linear referencing model to ensure transfer information about reporting districts from a table of cities based upon the distance down a line. That is the reason you will find segment length information.
Polygon feature layer representing the Major Gateway areas within the City of Barrie.
Relevant fields within the layer include (but not limited to): Control Type, Location and Status of Asset
The City of Barrie is situated in the heart of Central Ontario, a premier waterfront community on Lake Simcoe, conveniently located an hour north of Toronto. Visit barrie.ca for more information or contact Service Barrie at 705-726-4242 or ServiceBarrie@barrie.ca
Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC) Redlining maps were developed between 1935-1940 to denote credit-worthiness and risk on neighborhood and metropolitan levels. This in turn produced a map of racial inequalities across the United States. Data clipped to focus on Gateway Cities.KeyGreen is A "Best"Blue is B "Still Desirable"Yellow is C "Definitely Declining"Red is D "Hazardous" (Redline)
All the data sources and descriptions are available in a google spreadsheet: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1GYKR9MMQGbpBALY3-Oci-2diXTmX2qUvi4U-T1S7N9o/edit?usp=sharing
Annual 2100 Maximum Temperatures change projected by higher emission scenario (RCP 8.5) and the CanESM2 Model.
PRC 4201 - 4204 and Govt. Code 51175-89 direct the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) to map areas of significant fire hazards based on fuels, terrain, weather, and other relevant factors. These zones, referred to as Fire Hazard Severity Zones (FHSZ), define the application of various mitigation strategies to reduce risk associated with wildland fires. CAL FIRE is remapping Fire Hazard Severity Zones (FHSZ) for State Responsibility Areas (SRA) and Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones (VHFHSZ) recommendations in Local Responsibility Areas (LRA) to provide updated map zones, based on new data, science, and technology. This specific dataset is used to create the official "Maps of Fire Hazard Severity Zones in the State Responsibility Area of California" as required by Public Resources Code 4201-4204 and entitled in the California Code of Regulation, Title 14, Section 1280 Fire Hazard Severity Zones, and as adopted by CAL FIRE on November 7, 2007 Maps of the adopted zones in SRA are available at: http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/fhz.html More information about the project can be found at: http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/hazard.html
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
This digital database contains the faults shown on the Fault Activity Map of California by Charles W. Jennings and William A. Bryant published in 2010. The map shows locations of known faults that can be portrayed at 1:750,000 scale and indicates the latest age when displacements took place, according to available data. The displacements may have been associated with earthquakes or may have been the result of gradual creep along the fault surface. The faults are separated into five categories: historic, Holocene, late Quaternary, Quaternary, and pre-Quaternary.The 2010 Fault Activity Map of California presents a much more detailed depiction of faults in California than previous versions. In order to preserve as much of the original detail as possible, most faults active in the Quaternary (2.6 Ma) were digitized from their original sources (geologic maps ranging from 1:12,000 to 1:250,000 scale). However, due to limitations associated with printing the map at the 1:750,000 scale, some of the fault traces have been simplified or omitted. For a complete, unsimplified database of Quaternary faults, refer to the Digital Database of Quaternary and Younger Faults from the Fault Activity Map of California, Version 2.0 (Bryant, 2005; http://www.conservation.ca.gov/cgs/information/publications/Pages/quaternaryfaults_ver2.aspx).
Micklegate Bar, Monk Bar, Fishergate Bar, Walmgate Bar, Victoria Bar and Bootham Bar. For further information about the Bars and the City Walls - see the City of York Council website
This is a digital Seismic Hazard Zone Map presenting areas where liquefaction may occur during a strong earthquake. Two types of geological hazards, referred to as seismic hazard zones, may be featured on the map: 1) liquefaction, and 2) overlapping liquefaction and earthquake-induced landslides.
This is a digital Seismic Hazard Zone Map presenting areas where landslides may occur during a strong earthquake. Two types of geological hazards, referred to as seismic hazard zones, may be featured on the map: 1) earthquake-induced landslides, and 2) overlapping liquefaction and earthquake-induced landslides.
The Licensed Healthcare Facilities point layer represents the locations of all healthcare facilities licensed by the State of California, Department of Health Services (DHS). This copy of the DHS license data is maintained by OSHPD. The data snapshot was taken from OSHPD's ALIRTS system as of Oct 26, 2012.Facility address information is maintained and provided by the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSHPD). Facility types include hospitals, nursing homes, clinics, etc.The accuracy of the latitude/longitude geocodes are adequate for administrative planning purposes only. The data, on a case-by-case basis, may not be appropriate for driving directions, routing, emergency services, or other critical uses of the data.
"Plan Description: Map F-3 is a very good map and is about 99% of the way there. But for that last percent, I wanted to recommend some tweaks to the map based on testimonies/comments and population deviation consideration. Now that Commissioners have narrowed down to 1 map, Commissioners must work to get each District as close to 0% Population Deviation as possible. For reference, our current Supervisor Districts only have at most + or – 31,214 population difference for all 5 Districts. Plan Objectives: Based on testimonies I’ve read, heard, and from my personal opinions, here are my best recommendations on where you should tweak/move cities into these districts: ~District 1: Koreatown (LA), Little Bangladesh (LA), Whilshire Center (LA). This will keep the Asian communities together and compact in District 1 (which already includes Thai Town, China Town, Little Tokyo, and Historic Filipinotown). ~District 2: Torrance. Please keep Torrance with the other South Bay Cities (rather than the Gateway Cities) for better representation. Also: Marina Del Ray (unincorporated), Marina Peninsula (LA), and Playa Del Ray (LA). This is to keep in mind the area's environmental concerns. ~District 3: West Hills (LA), Lake Manor (unincorporated). To keep as much as the San Fernando Valley together. ~District 4: Commerce, La Habra Heights (unincorporated). ~District 5: Covina, Sun Valley (LA). If Commissioners were to adopt all these recommendations together, the standard deviation will be no greater than + or – 14,260 population (which is no greater than + or – 0.71% deviation). Thank you very much for your time." - OP 105 - Modified Option F-3 (Faraz Aqil)
Government Code 51175-89 directs the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) to identify areas of very high fire hazard severity zones within Local Responsibility Areaas (LRA). Mapping of the areas, referred to as Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones (VHFHSZ), is based on data and models of, potential fuels over a 30-50 year time horizon and their associated expected fire behavior, and expected burn probabilities to quantify the likelihood and nature of vegetation fire exposure (including firebrands) to buildings. Details on the project and specific modeling methodology can be found at http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/methods.htm. Local Responsibility Area VHFSZ maps were initially developed in the mid-1990s and are now being updated based on improved science, mapping techniques, and data.In late 2005 to be effective in 2008, the California Building Commission adopted California Building Code Chapter 7A requiring new buildings in VH FHSZs to use the ignition resistant construction methods and materials. These new codes include provisions to improve the ignition resistance of buildings, especially from firebrands. The updated very high fire hazard severity zones will be used by building officials for a new building permits in LRA. The updated zones will also be used to identify property whose owners must comply with natural hazards disclosure requirements at time of property sale and 100 foot defensible space clearance. It is likely that the fire hazard severity zones will be used for updates to the safety element of general plans.This specific map is based on a geographic information system dataset that depicts CAL FIRE recommendations for Very High FHSZs within the local jurisdiction. The process of finalizing these boundaries involved an extensive local review process, the details of which are available at http://frap.ca.gov/projects/hazard/btnet/ (click on "Continue as guest without logging in"). Local government has 120 days to designate, by ordinance, very high fire hazard severity zones within its jurisdiction after receiving the recommendation. Local government can add additional VHFHSZs. There is no requirement for local government to report their final action to CAL FIRE when the recommended zones are adopted. Consequently, users are directed to the appropriate local entity (county, city, fire department, or Fire Protection District) to determine the status of the local fire hazard severity zone ordinance.Obtain FRAP maps, data, metadata and publications on the Internet at http://frap.cdf.ca.govFor more information, contact CDF-FRAP, PO Box 944246, Sacramento, CA 94244-2460, (916) 327-3939.
This map service from MassGIS displays the 26 Massachusetts Gateway Cities, municipalities with:population greater than 35,000 and less than 250,000;median household income below the state average;and rate of educational attainment of a bachelor’s degree or above that is below the state average.Read more about Gateway CitiesMap service also available.