11 datasets found
  1. d

    DMV Disability Placard

    • catalog.data.gov
    • prod.testopendata.com
    • +3more
    Updated Apr 2, 2025
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    D.C. Office of the Chief Technology Officer (2025). DMV Disability Placard [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/dmv-disability-placard-446c6
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 2, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    D.C. Office of the Chief Technology Officer
    Description

    April 1, 2025: data feeds from DMV are currently offline while the agency works to migrate reporting systems. The most recent data available is from December 2024. Open Data DC is working with DMV to restore data feeds as soon as possible.On behalf of the District Department of Transportation (DDOT), which regulates parking in the District, DC DMV issues three types of disability placards or permits, one-week permits, temporary placards, and long-term placards, all described below.One-Week PermitsYou can get a one-week disability permit if you only require the placard for a week or less (or you have a visitor who requires it), you have a short-term disability, or your vehicle with disability tags is being repaired. For a one-week permit, you do not need a doctor’s certification. The one-week permit is not renewable within a one-year period.Temporary PlacardsYou can get a temporary disability placard if you have a physical condition that substantially impairs your mobility that is expected to last no longer than 8 years. Your medical practitioner must certify the application and indicate the expected length of your disability. If you find you need your disabled privileges longer, you must submit a new application with a medical practitioner's certification.Long-Term PlacardsYou can get a long-term disability if you have a long-term disability. The list of qualifying disabilities is included on the application for the placard. You do not need a medical practitioner's certification if you have an obvious missing lower extremity or you use a motorized wheelchair.The long-term placard is valid up to 8 years to coincide with the expiration of your driver license or identification card. To renew it, you must submit a new application with a medical practitioner's certification.Temporary and long-term placards expire on the last day of the month and year indicated on the placard.Placards or permits should be hung from the rearview mirror while the vehicle is parked in a space authorized for the disabled and must be displayed and readable from the front windshield. They must be removed from the rearview mirror while the vehicle is in motion.

  2. d

    Certificate of Occupancy

    • catalog.data.gov
    • opendata.dc.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Jun 11, 2025
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    City of Washington, DC (2025). Certificate of Occupancy [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/certificate-of-occupancy
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 11, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    City of Washington, DC
    Description

    All applicants for a Basic Business License operating from a commercial location in the District of Columbia must provide a Certificate of Occupancy (C of O) for the premise address from which the business activity is conducted in order to demonstrate the activity does not conflict with building and zoning codes. A certificate of occupancy is needed to occupy any structure other than a single family dwelling. To include the following uses: two family flat, apartment house, and all commercial uses.

  3. d

    DMV Disability Placard

    • catalog-dev.data.gov
    • arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Mar 28, 2025
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    D.C. Office of the Chief Technology Officer (2025). DMV Disability Placard [Dataset]. https://catalog-dev.data.gov/dataset/dmv-disability-placard
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 28, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    D.C. Office of the Chief Technology Officer
    Description

    On behalf of the District Department of Transportation (DDOT), which regulates parking in the District, DC DMV issues three types of disability placards or permits, one-week permits, temporary placards, and long-term placards, all described below.One-Week PermitsYou can get a one-week disability permit if you only require the placard for a week or less (or you have a visitor who requires it), you have a short-term disability, or your vehicle with disability tags is being repaired. For a one-week permit, you do not need a doctor’s certification. The one-week permit is not renewable within a one-year period.Temporary PlacardsYou can get a temporary disability placard if you have a physical condition that substantially impairs your mobility that is expected to last no longer than 8 years. Your medical practitioner must certify the application and indicate the expected length of your disability. If you find you need your disabled privileges longer, you must submit a new application with a medical practitioner's certification.Long-Term PlacardsYou can get a long-term disability if you have a long-term disability. The list of qualifying disabilities is included on the application for the placard. You do not need a medical practitioner's certification if you have an obvious missing lower extremity or you use a motorized wheelchair.The long-term placard is valid up to 8 years to coincide with the expiration of your driver license or identification card. To renew it, you must submit a new application with a medical practitioner's certification.Temporary and long-term placards expire on the last day of the month and year indicated on the placard.Placards or permits should be hung from the rearview mirror while the vehicle is parked in a space authorized for the disabled and must be displayed and readable from the front windshield. They must be removed from the rearview mirror while the vehicle is in motion.

  4. l

    Louisville Metro KY - Contract Compliance and Certification System

    • data.lojic.org
    • louisville-metro-opendata-lojic.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Feb 7, 2025
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    Louisville/Jefferson County Information Consortium (2025). Louisville Metro KY - Contract Compliance and Certification System [Dataset]. https://data.lojic.org/datasets/-louisville-metro-ky-contract-compliance-and-certification-system
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 7, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Louisville/Jefferson County Information Consortium
    License

    https://louisville-metro-opendata-lojic.hub.arcgis.com/pages/terms-of-use-and-licensehttps://louisville-metro-opendata-lojic.hub.arcgis.com/pages/terms-of-use-and-license

    Area covered
    Kentucky, Louisville
    Description

    On the Contract Compliance and Information System website available on: https://louisvilleky.diversitycompliance.com/?TN=louisvilleky , users can download and consume various types of data related to supplier diversity and prequalification processes. This includes information on how businesses can become prequalified to bid on contracts, details about current bid opportunities, and resources for minority, women-owned, and disadvantaged business enterprises. The site also provides access to compliance documents and guidelines to help businesses understand and meet the requirements for doing business with the Louisville Metro Government. Additionally, users can find tools and support for navigating the prequalification and bidding processes.To download data from the Compliance website, you can follow these steps:Use the Search Option: Each item has a search option that allows you to find specific datasets by entering keywords or using filters.Select the Desired Dataset: Once you find the dataset you need, click on it to view more details.Download the Data: You can download the data in various formats, including CSV and Excel. Look for the download button or link, and choose your preferred format.If you have any further questions about the data or the website, please contact the Human Relations Commission directly at: https://louisvilleky.wufoo.com/forms/contact-human-relations-commission/

  5. a

    ISM Approximate 401 Water Quality Certification Boundaries

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • mapthatcapecod.com
    Updated Dec 5, 2022
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    Center for Coastal Studies (2022). ISM Approximate 401 Water Quality Certification Boundaries [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/datasets/5982d03143a14816b08889fb95346967
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 5, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Center for Coastal Studies
    Area covered
    Description

    The four adjacent Outer Cape communities of Eastham, Truro, Provincetown, and Wellfleet have built an intermunicipal partnership to pursue a regional approach to shoreline management. This partnership promotes short- and long-term science-based decisions that will maximize the effectiveness and efficiency of community responses to the increased threat of coastal hazards. This layer is a product of that partnership, the Intermunicipal Shoreline Management Project, a project first initiated in 2019 with funding from CZM's Coastal Resilience Grant Program.This layer represent jurisdictional boundaries of the Code of Massachusetts Regulations Title 314 9.00 - 401 WATER QUALITY CERTIFICATION FOR DISCHARGE OF DREDGED OR FILL MATERIAL, DREDGING, AND DREDGED MATERIAL DISPOSAL IN WATERS OF THE UNITED STATES WITHIN THE COMMONWEALTH. 314 CMR Section 9.07 applies to any dredging project and the management of dredged material within the marine boundaries and at upland locations within the Commonwealth, for this reason upland areas were incorporated in addition to all waters of the United States within the ISM planning area. This layer is intended for planning purposes only.

  6. a

    Long Term Care Facilities of New Jersey

    • share-open-data-njtpa.hub.arcgis.com
    • njogis-newjersey.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Jun 9, 2020
    + more versions
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    New Jersey Office of GIS (2020). Long Term Care Facilities of New Jersey [Dataset]. https://share-open-data-njtpa.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/newjersey::long-term-care-facilities-of-new-jersey
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 9, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    New Jersey Office of GIS
    Area covered
    Description

    The Long Term Care Facilities layer contains point locations and limited attributes for long term health care facilities including but not limited to adult day care centers, pediatric day care centers, assisted living facilities, dementia and memory care facilities, rehabilitation centers, hospice branches, long-term acute care hospitals, skilled nursing facilities, subacute care facilities, long-term care facilities, nursing homes, and various other residential and non-residential health care facilities. In addition to state licensure, some of the referenced facilities may qualify for and obtain certification from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid services, which would also make them subject to adherence with federal regulations. The point locations and most of the attributes are derived as periodic output from the NJ Department of Health (NJ DOH) Health Facilities Licensing Database.

  7. Long Term Care - Residential Care

    • arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com
    • geo.wa.gov
    • +3more
    Updated Apr 6, 2020
    + more versions
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    WA State Department of Social and Health Services (2020). Long Term Care - Residential Care [Dataset]. https://arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com/maps/WADSHS::long-term-care-residential-care
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 6, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Washington State Department of Social and Health Services
    Authors
    WA State Department of Social and Health Services
    Area covered
    Description

    Presents the locations of DSHS-licensed Long Term Care Adult Family Homes, Assisted Living Facilities, and Enhanced Services Facilities. Also presents the business locations of Certified Residential Service and Supports Providers and their Group Training Homes when available. The data is extracted nightly from the Washington State Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) Aging and Long Term Support Administration's (ALTSA), Facilities Management System (FMS) and geocoded using the the Washington Master Address Services (WAMAS) address correction and geocoding tool. This is the same data that is available in the lookup tools in the Residential Care Services web site with the addition of location data columns.Current and archived records since the initial load on 3/9/2020 are provided in this dataset. Filter on GDLArchiveDate is NULL to work with only the current records.

  8. State Licensed Long-Term Care Facilities in Arizona

    • geodata-adhsgis.hub.arcgis.com
    • azgeo-open-data-agic.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Feb 13, 2023
    + more versions
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    Arizona Department of Health Services (2023). State Licensed Long-Term Care Facilities in Arizona [Dataset]. https://geodata-adhsgis.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/state-licensed-long-term-care-facilities-in-arizona
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 13, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Arizona Department of Health Services
    Area covered
    Description

    ADHS Division of Licensing Mission Statement: To protect the health and safety of Arizonans by providing information, establishing standards, and licensing and regulating health and child care services.The Arizona Department of Health Services-Bureau of Long-Term Care Licensing licenses and inspects Arizona nursing homes facilities. Long-Term Care staff also perform Medicaid certification inspections for Arizona's Intermediate Care Facilities for the Developmentally Disabled (ICFDD).Records are created and maintained by Bureau of Long-Term Care Licensing staff in the licensing division, while the GIS Team extracts the data and creates GIS layers and shares them publicly. Each month, an extract from the ADHS Division of Licensing SQL database is geocoded using ADHS's internal geocoder, and post-processed using a Python script to create and publish feature classes by facility type, including long-term care facilities. Last Updated: February 2025Updated frequency: MonthlyData FAQs:Some records have “license_expiration” earlier than the “rundate” while the “OPERTION_STATUS” is “ACTIVE”, should we treat all records with “OPERATION_STATUS” of “ACTIVE” as open at the time the data is released? Answer: Yes - ACTIVE is all the current licenses. In 2019 there was a perpetual rule change that affected certain facilities so in lieu of an expiration date, we began tracking the annual fee due date in the "license_expiration" field. Per rule, these facilities can submit annual requirements up to 30 days after the fee due date (aka license expiration in the provider database) so we do expect some to be earlier than the run date. Is the FACID of the same facility maintained unique and same throughout all releases? If a facility is purchased by a different company or has it’s name changed, is the FACID changed? Answer: The FACID represents a licensed premise - in many cases the facility ID is maintained when purchased by a different owner but under federal rule, certain facilities may choose to have a new CMS certification number which would require a new FACID be issued for that premise. What’s the unit type of capacities for different categories? Answer: This varies - it can be child capacity, bed count, dialysis station, etc. For Group_Home_for_Individuals_with_a_Developmental_Disability and Residential_Facility, how to tell if the employer’s office is at the facility VS the employer’s office is somewhere else and employees are sent to those facilities? Also is there a way to tell if a facility only has part time workers (Like workers only need to be at the residential facility less than 8hr per day or less than 5 days a week )? Answer: This is not currently available on the public databaseThe data contains a 'COUNTY' field and a "N_County' field - which one should I use to filter results? Answer: N_County - this is the county that's assigned when a record is geocoded using the physical street address, vs one that is assigned manually during the licensing process.

  9. a

    Certificate of Occupancy - Residential

    • information-stpaul.hub.arcgis.com
    • information.stpaul.gov
    Updated Apr 21, 2022
    + more versions
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    Saint Paul GIS (2022). Certificate of Occupancy - Residential [Dataset]. https://information-stpaul.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/8908aa067a434a92b15cf7e61837ff2b
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 21, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Saint Paul GIS
    Area covered
    Description

    The Fire Certificate of Occupancy is a document issued by the City of Saint Paul’s Department of Safety and Inspections, Fire Safety Inspection Division, indicating the existing structure complies with all state and local safety codes allowing its use as a commercial building or residential occupancy.The City of Saint Paul requires that all buildings, except for owner-occupied single family and duplex structures, are required to have and maintain a Fire Certificate of Occupancy issued by the Department of Safety and Inspections.The Fire Certificate of Occupancy shall be an indication that the building meets, at the time of inspection, all relevant codes to maintain the health, safety and welfare of the building's occupants and the general public. After each inspection, a property is assigned a letter grade that corresponds to the number of years before the next inspection is required. Different occupancies may need to be on a tighter schedule due to the perceived hazard level.For more information about the different occupancy types and inspection schedules for one and two family residential, multi- family residential and commercial properties, please visit the following link:Certificate of Occupancy Information and FeesA Provisional Fire Certificate of Occupancy is required for single family and duplex structures converting to nonowner-occupied status, allowing the structure to be temporarily occupied, pending an inspection.Property owners are encouraged to conduct a pre-inspection before their scheduled inspection date using the provided checklists for residential and commercial properties:One or Two UnitsThree + UnitsCommercial PropertiesFor more information please see Saint Paul’s Fire Inspections Page.

  10. Ground Ambulance Certificate of Necessity's (CONs) Viewer

    • geodata-adhsgis.hub.arcgis.com
    • azgeo-open-data-agic.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Jun 17, 2024
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    Arizona Department of Health Services (2024). Ground Ambulance Certificate of Necessity's (CONs) Viewer [Dataset]. https://geodata-adhsgis.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/ground-ambulance-certificate-of-necessitys-cons-viewer
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 17, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Arizona Department of Health Services
    Description

    The Arizona Certificate of Necessity web mapping application displays all the ground ambulance Certificate of Necessity's (CONs) service area boundaries within the state of Arizona. To operate an ambulance service and ambulances in Arizona, an application must be filled with the Department of Health Services, Bureau of Emergency Medical Services & Trauma System, and a Certificate of Necessity (CON) granted by the Director. The Ambulance Services Section oversees the regulatory process for ambulance providers in Arizona. Regulation includes all matter affecting services to the public, service area, response times, and rates and charges to ensure providers are charging appropriately. For more information about a specific CON approximation boundary or its legal service description, please visit the Ground Ambulance Program - Certificate of Necessity (CON) Holders official website. Update Frequency: As Needed; Boundaries change when a new CON is approved, or an amendment affects the geographical boundary of an existing CON.

  11. Aids to Navigation Southeast United States

    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Mar 12, 2025
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    Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (2025). Aids to Navigation Southeast United States [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/datasets/3a09a36f422e4153b9333c5c2697f5e7
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 12, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commissionhttp://myfwc.com/
    Area covered
    Description

    This GIS data set represents the aids to navigation (ATONs) for the Seventh and Eighth Coast Guard Districts. The term "aids to navigation" refers to devices outside of a vessel that are used to assist mariners in determining their position, safe course or warn them of obstructions. Aids to navigation include light buoys and beacons. This data set includes federal aids, which are installed and maintained by the Coast Guard, as well as some privately maintained aids. This data set does not include unofficial (illegal) aids, such as PVC pipes, placed without permission. This data set is not certified for navigation and is not intended for navigation purposes. Each USCG district headquarters is responsible for updating its database on an as-needed basis. When existing aids are destroyed or relocated and new aids are installed, the database is updated. Each aid is assigned an official light listing number. The Light List is a document listing the status of the ATONs; it is regularly published and distributed. Interim changes to the Light List are published in local notices to mariners. In addition, the USCG broadcasts notices to mariners on the marine band radio as soon as changes in the status of individual aids are reported. Navigators should use the official notices to mariners to maintain current charts. Annual (or more frequent) updates of the Aids to Navigation database can be obtained from each USCG district headquarters.

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D.C. Office of the Chief Technology Officer (2025). DMV Disability Placard [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/dmv-disability-placard-446c6

DMV Disability Placard

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Apr 2, 2025
Dataset provided by
D.C. Office of the Chief Technology Officer
Description

April 1, 2025: data feeds from DMV are currently offline while the agency works to migrate reporting systems. The most recent data available is from December 2024. Open Data DC is working with DMV to restore data feeds as soon as possible.On behalf of the District Department of Transportation (DDOT), which regulates parking in the District, DC DMV issues three types of disability placards or permits, one-week permits, temporary placards, and long-term placards, all described below.One-Week PermitsYou can get a one-week disability permit if you only require the placard for a week or less (or you have a visitor who requires it), you have a short-term disability, or your vehicle with disability tags is being repaired. For a one-week permit, you do not need a doctor’s certification. The one-week permit is not renewable within a one-year period.Temporary PlacardsYou can get a temporary disability placard if you have a physical condition that substantially impairs your mobility that is expected to last no longer than 8 years. Your medical practitioner must certify the application and indicate the expected length of your disability. If you find you need your disabled privileges longer, you must submit a new application with a medical practitioner's certification.Long-Term PlacardsYou can get a long-term disability if you have a long-term disability. The list of qualifying disabilities is included on the application for the placard. You do not need a medical practitioner's certification if you have an obvious missing lower extremity or you use a motorized wheelchair.The long-term placard is valid up to 8 years to coincide with the expiration of your driver license or identification card. To renew it, you must submit a new application with a medical practitioner's certification.Temporary and long-term placards expire on the last day of the month and year indicated on the placard.Placards or permits should be hung from the rearview mirror while the vehicle is parked in a space authorized for the disabled and must be displayed and readable from the front windshield. They must be removed from the rearview mirror while the vehicle is in motion.

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