30 datasets found
  1. Data from: California County Boundaries

    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • data.cnra.ca.gov
    • +6more
    Updated Oct 16, 2019
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    California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (2019). California County Boundaries [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/datasets/CALFIRE-Forestry::california-county-boundaries/about
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 16, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Department of Forestry and Fire Protectionhttp://calfire.ca.gov/
    Area covered
    Description

    In late 1996, the Dept of Conservation (DOC) surveyed state and federal agencies about the county boundary coverage they used. As a result, DOC adopted the 1:24,000 (24K) scale U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) dataset (USGS source) for their Farmland Mapping and Monitoring Program (FMMP) but with several modifications. Detailed documentation of these changes is provided by FMMP and included in the lineage section of the metadata.A dataset was made available (approximately 2004) through CALFIRE - FRAP and the California Spatial Information Library (CaSIL), with additional updates throughout subsequent years. More recently, an effort was made to improve the coastal linework by using the previous interior linework from the 24k data, but replacing the coastal linework based on NOAA's ERMA coastal dataset (which used NAIP 2010). In this dataset, all bays (plus bay islands and constructed features) are merged into the mainland, and coastal features (such as islands and constructed features) are not included, with the exception of the Channel Islands which ARE included.This service represents the latest released version, and is updated when new versions are released. As of June, 2019 it represents cnty19_1.

  2. California Health Map

    • data.countyofnapa.org
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Jan 10, 2024
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    California Department of Public Health (2024). California Health Map [Dataset]. https://data.countyofnapa.org/Health-Outcomes-and-Health-Behaviors/California-Health-Map/casy-nbdf
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    xml, csv, tsv, json, application/rdfxml, application/rssxmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 10, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Department of Public Healthhttps://www.cdph.ca.gov/
    Area covered
    California
    Description

    California Health Maps is the pdf result of an interactive mapping tool of health data for geographies beyond the county level in California. The interactive tools allows users to map cancer incidence for 12 of the most common invasive cancer sites and filter by sex and race/ethnicity. Link - https://www.californiahealthmaps.org/

  3. California's National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Funding Program Map

    • catalog.data.gov
    • datasets.ai
    Updated Nov 27, 2024
    + more versions
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    California Energy Commission (2024). California's National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Funding Program Map [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/californias-national-electric-vehicle-infrastructure-funding-program-map-february-2023-a32b4
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 27, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    California Energy Commissionhttp://www.energy.ca.gov/
    Area covered
    California
    Description

    The California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) and the California Energy Commission (CEC) are partnering to implement the federal National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (NEVI) Program, which allocates $5 billion to the states to create a nationwide, interconnected network of DC fast chargers along the National Highway Systems. California's share will be $384 million over 5 years. This map was developed to help prospective applicants and interested parties identify eligible areas for infrastructure deployment.InstructionsViewers can display corridor groups, corridor segments, electric vehicle (EV) charging stations, Justice40 disadvantaged communities, Tribal lands, California-designated low-income or disadvantaged communities, metropolitan planning organizations, regional transportation planning agencies, California state legislative districts, counties, Caltrans districts, utility districts, and congressional districts in this interactive map. The map initially displays corridor groups and their corridor segments included in the Round 2 NEVI solicitation. Viewers can toggle individual layers on and off using the map layers menu located to the right of the map. Some layers are organized into groups; viewers can toggle all layers within a group or select specific ones. The legend to the left of the map will show the layers that have been turned on. There is a search tool to the right of the map that enables viewers to type in an address and locate the address on the map. A basemap selector allows viewers to view road detail. Additional information on the map can be found under the information icon. Viewers can download the map files by clicking on the Data and Supplemental Links icon. Map layers include:A Corridor groups layer that shows designated corridor groups for California's NEVI funding program. Users can click on a corridor segment to view the start and end of each segment within a corridor group. When selected, a pop-up window will appear that identifies the corridor group number, corridor segment, corridor name, minimum number of charging stations required, minimum number of ports required, and needed locations, if applicable, for the corridor segment. Corridor group labels for enhanced accessibility. Note that labels are only visible at certain ranges (zoom in and out to view labels). A NEVI 2 corridors layer shows corridor groups eligible for Round 2 of California's NEVI funding program. NEVI 2 corridor group labels for enhanced accessibility. Note that labels are only visible at certain ranges (zoom in and out to view labels). NEVI 2 corridor segment labels for enhanced accessibility. Note that labels are only visible at certain ranges (zoom in and out to view labels). A Round 1 solicitation corridor groups layer that shows corridor groups eligible for Round 1 of California's NEVI funding program. A layer showing California and Justice40 disadvantaged or low-income communities. A layer showing California-designated disadvantaged or low-income communities. A layer showing Justice40-designated disadvantaged communities. A layer showing California Federally Recognized Tribal Lands. A layer showing Metropolitan Planning Organizations. A layer showing Regional Transportation Planning Agencies. A layer showing California State Senate Districts. A layer showing California State Assembly Districts. A layer showing California Counties. EV charging stations layers (existing DC fast charging stations that are located within one mile of a NEVI-eligible corridor offramp). One layer shows locations of EV charging stations with DC fast charging capabilities that meet the NEVI power level and four-port minimum requirement and could likely become part of the NEVI network if these stations became compliant with other NEVI program requirements such as data reporting. The other layer shows DC fast charging stations that do not meet NEVI power-level or port count requirements but could be upgraded to be NEVI-compliant. Users can click on EV charging stations and a pop-up window will appear with more information on the station (i.e., station address, total port count, minimum NEVI standard, etc.). These data were last updated in March 2024. Please refer to the Department of Energy's Alternative Fuels Data Center and PlugShare for up-to-date existing and planned DC fast charger site information. A layer showing Caltrans Districts. A layer showing Electric Utilities (IOUs and POUs). A layer showing California Congressional Districts. BackgroundThe $5 billion NEVI Program is part of the $1.2 trillion Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) signed into law by President Biden in November 2021. IIJA commits significant federal funding to clean transportation and energy programs throughout the U.S. to reduce climate changing greenhouse gas emissions. Caltrans is the designated lead agency for NEVI. The CEC is their designated state energy partner. Caltrans and the CEC have partnered to create California's Deployment Plan for the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Program that describes how the state plans to allocate its $384 million share of federal NEVI funds to build out a network of modern, high-powered DC fast chargers along federally designated Alternative Fuel Corridors throughout California. California's latest NEVI Deployment Plan was submitted to the Joint Office of Energy and Transportation on August 1, 2023 and approved on September 29, 2023. The Plans must be updated each year over 5 years.NEVI funds must be used initially on federally-designated Alternative Fuel Corridors (shown on the map).Each NEVI-funded DC fast charge station will have a minimum of four 150 kW Combined Charging System (CCS) connectors. Stations will be located no more than 50 miles apart along freeways and highways and no more than 1 mile from a freeway exit or highway roadway. States are required to emphasize equity, with at least 40 percent of NEVI benefits going to disadvantaged, low income, rural and Tribal communities.Data SourcesData are from the Federal Highway Administration's Alternative Fuel Corridors website, the U.S. Department of Energy's Alternative Fuels Data Center Station Data for Alternative Fuel Corridors (as of September 2022), Argonne National Laboratory's Electric Vehicle Charging Justice40 Map, and the California Air Resources Board's Map of California Climate Investments Priority Populations 2022 CES 4.0. ContactPlease submit questions and comments to mediaoffice@energy.ca.gov

  4. S

    Surveyor - Interactive Map

    • opendata.sjgov.org
    Updated Mar 24, 2025
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    Department of Public Works (2025). Surveyor - Interactive Map [Dataset]. https://opendata.sjgov.org/dataset/surveyor-interactive-map
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    arcgis geoservices rest api, htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 24, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    San Joaquin County, CA - GIS
    Authors
    Department of Public Works
    Description

    {{description}}

  5. California Urgent Drinking Water Needs (UDWN) Funded Projects

    • calepa-dtsc.opendata.arcgis.com
    • gis.data.ca.gov
    Updated Jul 23, 2021
    + more versions
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    California Water Boards (2021). California Urgent Drinking Water Needs (UDWN) Funded Projects [Dataset]. https://calepa-dtsc.opendata.arcgis.com/maps/7f6dd6b53e7740008959838f222574b3
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 23, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    California State Water Resources Control Board
    Authors
    California Water Boards
    Area covered
    Description

    Interactive GIS Mapping Tool – Urgent Drinking Water Needs (UDWN) Web Map in California

    Use Constraints:

    This mapping tool is for reference and guidance purposes only and is not a binding legal document to be used for legal determinations. The data provided may contain errors, inconsistencies, or may not in all cases appropriately represent the current status of Urgent Drinking Water Needs project locations. The data in this map are subject to change at any time and should not be used as the sole source for decision making. By using this data, the user acknowledges all limitations of the data and agrees to accept all errors stemming from its use. The Urgent Drinking Water Needs map does not provide the locations of individual households that were provided funding through grant agreements with non-profit organizations.

    Description:

    This map displays Urgent Drinking Water Needs due to drought, contamination, or other eligible emergencies. This includes projects approved for funding from July 1, 2014 to November 18, 2022, including both active and completed projects. The data comes from the State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) Cleanup and Abatement Account’s (CAA) project database and was exported on November 18, 2022. The map contains four layers: UDWN_Projects, UDWN_Summary_by_county, CA_Assembly_Districts_WEB, and CA_Senate_Districts_WEB.

    The attributes for each project in the UDWN_Projects layer include the recipient of grant funding (grantee), community served, type of project, grant amount, funding program, date the project was approved, date the project was completed, Disadvantaged Community status, Small Disadvantaged Community status, the public water system number, status of the project (Active or Completed), and the state fiscal year in which the project was approved.

    How to Use the Interactive Mapping Tool:When the map loads, it displays the state of California, UDWN Project locations, and California county boundaries. The “About” tab is located on the left-hand side of the map and displays instructions for using the map. The next tab display pre-set filters, the legend, and a layer list. Clicking on the “Legend” tab in the menu will show the legend of the map. Projects that appear as blue dots are still active, while projects that appear as red dots have already been completed.Note: Layers that show CA Assembly and Senate Districts were created by the Sierra Nevada Conservancy (SNC). These layers must be toggled on in the layers list to be seen. To view information about a specific project, click on a project location. A pop-up box will appear with the following information: (a) county name, (b) community served, (c) type of project, (d) approved funding amount, (e) approval date, and (f) status. To view information about the total funding and number of projects in a county, click within a county boundary and a pop up will appear.Use the pre-set filters to filter projects by status, fiscal year, funding program, county, assembly district, and/or senate district using the drop-down menu. The filters can be toggled on or off using the switches on the right side of the menu. To create a custom filter, click the filter icon at the bottom of the preset filter menu and enter the desired parameters. For one parameter, click “add expression” to create a custom filter. For more than one, click “add set” to create a custom filter.To export and download filtered data, open the Attribute Table located at the bottom of the map, click the “Options” drop down menu, select “Export all to CSV” from the drop-down menu, and download the desired information.

    Map Layers:UDWN_Projects – This layer shows all active or completed UDWN projects from July 1, 2014 to November 18, 2022. Active projects are represented with blue dots while completed projects are represented with red dots. The attributes in this layer include what county the project is in, the community served, the type of project, approved funding amount, approval date, and status.UDWN_Summary_by_county – This layer shows the boundary lines for all the counties in California. The attributes in this layer include the total number of projects and total funding approved in that county since July 1, 2014. CA_Assembly_Districts_WEB – This layer shows the boundary lines for all the assembly districts in California. It is owned and maintained by the Sierra Nevada Conservancy (SNC) and boundaries may not be accurate. CA_Senate_Districts_WEB – This layer shows the boundary lines for all the senate districts in California. It is owned and maintained by the Sierra Nevada Conservancy (SNC) and boundaries may not be accurate.

    Informational Pop-up Box:County – California county where the project is locatedCommunity Served – California community that is benefiting from UDWN funding Type of Project – Project type, which can include bottled water, consolidation, hauled water, pilot study, POU, pump, tank, treatment, and well Approved Funding Amount – Amount of money in U.S. dollars approved for the projectApproval Date – Date that the project was approved for fundingStatus – Current status of the project (active or closed)Date Created:

    Data created on November 18, 2022 and valid up to this date.

    Sources:

    Urgent Drinking Water Needs data was exported from the CAA Database.

    The Sierra Nevada Conservancy (SNC) created the California Senate and Assembly layers.

    Points of Contact:

    Christina Raynard is the creator and owner of this layer. Christina.raynard@waterboards.ca.gov (State Water Resources Control Board, Division of Financial Assistance)

    Terms of Use

    No special restrictions or limitations on using the item’s content have been provided.

  6. i03 DAU county cnty2018

    • data.cnra.ca.gov
    • data.ca.gov
    • +5more
    Updated May 29, 2025
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    California Department of Water Resources (2025). i03 DAU county cnty2018 [Dataset]. https://data.cnra.ca.gov/dataset/i03-dau-county-cnty2018
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    arcgis geoservices rest api, kml, csv, geojson, html, zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 29, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Department of Water Resourceshttp://www.water.ca.gov/
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Detailed Analysis Unit-(DAU) Convergence via County Boundary cnty18_1 for Cal-Fire, (See metadata for CAL-FIRE cnty18_1), State of California.

    The existing DAU boundaries were aligned with cnty18_1 feature class.

    Originally a collaboration by Department of Water Resources, Region Office personnel, Michael L. Serna, NRO, Jason Harbaugh - NCRO, Cynthia Moffett - SCRO and Robert Fastenau - SRO with the final merge of all data into a cohesive feature class to create i03_DAU_COUNTY_cnty24k09 alignment which has been updated to create i03_DAU_COUNTY_cnty18_1.

    This version was derived from a preexisting “dau_v2_105, 27, i03_DAU_COUNTY_cnty24k09” Detailed Analysis Unit feature class's and aligned with Cal-Fire's 2018 boundary.

    Manmade structures such as piers and breakers, small islands and coastal rocks have been removed from this version. Inlets waters are listed on the coast only.

    These features are reachable by County\DAU. This allows the county boundaries, the DAU boundaries and the State of California Boundary to match Cal-Fire cnty18_1.

    DAU Background

    The first investigation of California's water resources began in 1873 when President Ulysses S. Grant commissioned an investigation by Colonel B. S. Alexander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The state followed with its own study in 1878 when the State Engineer's office was created and filled by William Hammond Hall. The concept of a statewide water development project was first raised in 1919 by Lt. Robert B. Marshall of the U.S. Geological Survey.

    In 1931, State Engineer Edward Hyatt introduced a report identifying the facilities required and the economic means to accomplish a north-to-south water transfer. Called the "State Water Plan", the report took nine years to prepare. To implement the plan, the Legislature passed the Central Valley Act of 1933, which authorized the project. Due to lack of funds, the federal government took over the CVP as a public works project to provide jobs and its construction began in 1935.

    In 1945, the California Legislature authorized an investigation of statewide water resources and in 1947, the California Legislature requested that an investigation be conducted of the water resources as well as present and future water needs for all hydrologic regions in the State. Accordingly, DWR and its predecessor agencies began to collect the urban and agricultural land use and water use data that serve as the basis for the computations of current and projected water uses.

    The work, conducted by the Division of Water Resources (DWR’s predecessor) under the Department of Public Works, led to the publication of three important bulletins: Bulletin 1 (1951), "Water Resources of California," a collection of data on precipitation, unimpaired stream flows, flood flows and frequency, and water quality statewide; Bulletin 2 (1955), "Water Utilization and Requirements of California," estimates of water uses and forecasts of "ultimate" water needs; and Bulletin 3 (1957), "The California Water Plan," plans for full practical development of California’s water resources, both by local projects and a major State project to meet the State's ultimate needs. (See brief addendum below* “The Development of Boundaries for Hydrologic Studies for the Sacramento Valley Region”)

    DWR subdivided California into study areas for planning purposes. The largest study areas are the ten hydrologic regions (HR), corresponding to the State’s major drainage basins. The next levels of delineation are the Planning Areas (PA), which in turn are composed of multiple detailed analysis units (DAU). The DAUs are often split by county boundaries, so are the smallest study areas used by DWR.

    The DAU/counties are used for estimating water demand by agricultural crops and other surfaces for water resources planning. Under current guidelines, each DAU/County has multiple crop and land-use categories. Many planning studies begin at the DAU or PA level, and the results are aggregated into hydrologic regions for presentation.

    Since 1950 DWR has conducted over 250 land use surveys of all or parts of California's 58 counties. Early land use surveys were recorded on paper maps of USGS 7.5' quadrangles. In 1986, DWR began to develop georeferenced digital maps of land use survey data, which are available for download. Long term goals for this program is to survey land use more frequently and efficiently using satellite imagery, high elevation digital imagery, local sources of data, and remote sensing in conjunction with field surveys.

    There are currently 58 counties and 278 DAUs in California.

    Due to some DAUs being split by county lines, the total number of DAU’s identifiable via DAU by County is 782.

    ADDENDUM

    The Development of Boundaries for Hydrologic Studies for the Sacramento Valley Region

    [Detailed Analysis Units made up of a grouping of the Depletion Study Drainage Areas (DSA) boundaries occurred on the Eastern Foothills and Mountains within the Sacramento Region. Other DSA’s were divided into two or more DAU’s; for example, DSA 58 (Redding Basin) was divided into 3 DAU’s; 143,141, and 145. Mountain areas on both the east and west side of the Sacramento River below Shasta Dam went from ridge top to ridge top, or topographic highs. If available, boundaries were set adjacent to stream gages located at the low point of rivers and major creek drainages.

    Later, as the DAU’s were developed, some of the smaller watershed DSA boundaries in the foothill and mountain areas were grouped. The Pit River DSA was split so water use in the larger valleys (Alturas area, Big

  7. s

    San Bernardino County Map Viewer

    • open.sbcounty.gov
    Updated Feb 16, 2024
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    County of San Bernardino (2024). San Bernardino County Map Viewer [Dataset]. https://open.sbcounty.gov/datasets/san-bernardino-county-map-viewer
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 16, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of San Bernardino
    Area covered
    San Bernardino County
    Description

    The San Bernardino County map viewer is a collection of maps and apps related to various administrative boundaries in San Bernardino County. All data is publicly available. The San Bernardino County map viewer contains the following maps:Parcels: Find and identify parcels by APN or address.Flood Control: Find and identify Flood Control facilities within San Bernardino CountyBoundaries: Explore various administrative boundaries in San Bernardino County, such as Supervisor districts, city limits, US Senate districts and moreHistorical Imagery: Imagery archives for the years 2008 - 2023Power Outages: Power outage data from CalOES showing power outages within San Bernardino County3D Scene: Interactively explore San Bernardino County geographic data in 3D.DIY Map Viewer: Create your own map using a variety of provided datasets, or add your ownThe San Bernardino County Map viewer was created by San Bernardino County's Information Services Department. For more information please contact the Information Services Department (ISD) Help Desk at (909)884-4884.

  8. San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund Program Boundaries Map...

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Feb 25, 2025
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    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 9 (Publisher) (2025). San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund Program Boundaries Map Service, San Francisco Bay CA, 2019, U.S. EPA Region 9 [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/san-francisco-bay-water-quality-improvement-fund-program-boundaries-map-service-san-francisco-b14
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 25, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    United States Environmental Protection Agencyhttp://www.epa.gov/
    Area covered
    San Francisco, San Francisco Bay
    Description

    This map service contains the program boundary, major rivers and tributaries within the boundary, labels for counties within the boundary, and California counties associated with the San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund (SFBWQIF). SFBWQIF is a competitive grant program that is helping implement TMDLs to improve water quality, protect wetlands, and advance green development planning throughout the Bay Area. This service is incorporated in the San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund Story Map, an interactive series of maps and QlikSense graphics highlighting the competitive grant program which supports projects to protect and restore San Francisco Bay. The application can be found on the EPA GeoPlatform at:https://epa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=db223d22741140b9b10baf7e91815271 "https://epa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=db223d22741140b9b10baf7e91815271 The story map is also embedded in the following EPA web page: "https://www2.epa.gov/sfbay-delta/sf-bay-water-quality-improvement-fund-interactive-project-map" https://www2.epa.gov/sfbay-delta/sf-bay-water-quality-improvement-fund-interactive-project-map

  9. San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund County Polygons,...

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Feb 25, 2025
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    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 9 (Point of Contact); Tele Atlas(R) (Publisher) (2025). San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund County Polygons, California, 2007, Tele Atlas [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/san-francisco-bay-water-quality-improvement-fund-county-polygons-california-2007-tele-atlas13
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 25, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Tele Atlashttp://tomtom.com/
    United States Environmental Protection Agencyhttp://www.epa.gov/
    Area covered
    California, San Francisco Bay
    Description

    This layer contains 58 polygon features representing California counties clipped from the national Tele Atlas county dataset. Dynamap(R)/2000 County Boundary file with a shoreline buffer is a non-generalized polygon layer that represents all U.S. government-defined entities named County. A County is a type of governmental unit that is the primary legal subdivision of every U.S. state. This file contains a 'shoreline buffer' that extends out from the shoreline to the political limits of the census entity. The political limit is usually 12 miles or less from the shoreline into the abutting water feature. The cartographical representation of a shoreline buffer is visibly apparent for census areas that border the Pacific Ocean. These features are incorporated in the San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund Story Map, an interactive series of maps and QlikSense graphics highlighting the competitive grant program which supports projects to protect and restore San Francisco Bay. The application can be found on the EPA GeoPlatform at: https://epa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=db223d22741140b9b10baf7e91815271 The story map is also embedded in the following EPA web page: https://www2.epa.gov/sfbay-delta/sf-bay-water-quality-improvement-fund-interactive-project-map

  10. d

    Quaternary deposits of the 9-county San Francisco Bay Region: an areally...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.usgs.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Jul 6, 2024
    + more versions
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    U.S. Geological Survey (2024). Quaternary deposits of the 9-county San Francisco Bay Region: an areally continuous digital map database prepared from Knudsen and others (2000) and Witter and others (2006) [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/quaternary-deposits-of-the-9-county-san-francisco-bay-region-an-areally-continuous-digital-6fa5e
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 6, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
    Area covered
    San Francisco Bay
    Description

    This digital map database provides an areally continuous representation of the Quaternary surficial deposits of the San Francisco Bay region merged from the database files from Knudsen and others (2000) and Witter and others (2006). The more detailed mapping by Witter and others (2006) of the inner part of the region (compiled at a scale of 1:24,000), is given precedence over the less detailed mapping by Knudsen and others (2000) of the outer part of the area (compiled at a scale of 1:100,000). The Quaternary map database is accompanied by a list of the map-unit names represented by polygon identities, a digital map index of the 1:24,000-scale topographic quadrangles of the region, and a figure illustrating the contents of the database. The Quaternary map database includes line work and the identity of the Quaternary map units, but no further description of the map units or how they were mapped. Use of the database should thus be accompanied by consultation with the original reports, which describe the map units and mapping procedures: citation of this database should be accompanied by citation of those original reports. As with all such digital maps, use of this database should attend to the compilation scales involved and not try to extract spatial detail or accuracy beyond those limits. Database layers: SFBQuat-lns: Quaternary map database: unit boundaries and their attributes SFBQuat-pys: Quaternary map database: polygons and their attributes SFBIndex-lns: Boundaries of 7.5-minute quadrangles for the map area, distinguishing those that form boundaries of 15-minute and 30x60-minute quadrangles SFBIndex-pys: 7.5-minute quadrangles, and for those within map area, their names and the names of the 30x60-minute quadrangles that contain them. The liquefaction ratings presented in the original reports for the various Quaternary map units remain valid and can be assigned to the units in this database if desired, with ratings of Witter and others (2006) given precedence. Assembly of the Quaternary map database involved stripping out all the information from the source maps that dealt with liquefaction, a major component of the original reports, and adjusting line work at the common boundary between the two source maps to produce a nearly seamless spatial database. The common boundary between the two sources is retained. Mismatches remaining at that common boundary are of two types: (1) contrasts in the degree of subdivision of the deposits resulting from the different compilation scales, and (2) terminations of narrow bands of water and artificial fill and levees at quadrangle boundaries that resulted from differences in details shown on the 1:24,000-scale topographic maps used as a source of mapping information in the original reports. The illustrative figure accompanying the database shows the content of the database plotted at a scale of 1:275,000, with the different map units distinguished by color and the different types of lines distinguished by symbol and color. An index map in that figure shows the 165 7½-minute quadrangles covering the region and the areas of the two source maps. Knudsen, K.L., Sowers, J.M., Witter, R.C., Wentworth, C.M., Helley, E.J., Nicholson, R.S., Wright, H.M., and Brown, K.M., 2000, Preliminary maps of Quaternary deposits and liquefaction susceptibility, nine-county San Francisco Bay region, California: a digital database: U.S. Geological Survey Open File Report 00-444. http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2000/of00-444/ Witter, R.C., Knudsen, K.L, Sowers, J.M., Wentworth, C.M., Koehler, R.D., Randolph, C. E., Brooks, S.K., and Gans, K.D., 2006, Maps of Quaternary Deposits and Liquefaction Susceptibility in the Central San Francisco Bay Region, California: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 06-1037 (http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2006/1037)

  11. g

    California's National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Funding Program Map

    • gimi9.com
    Updated Nov 8, 2024
    + more versions
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    (2024). California's National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Funding Program Map [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/data-gov_37a0c28bb0441aec359c8bbf43339db110edefbd
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 8, 2024
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    California
    Description

    InstructionsViewers can display corridor groups, corridor segments, electric vehicle (EV) charging stations, Justice40 disadvantaged communities, Tribal lands, California-designated low-income or disadvantaged communities, metropolitan planning organizations, regional transportation planning agencies, California state legislative districts, counties, Caltrans districts, utility districts, and congressional districts in this interactive map. The map initially displays corridor groups and their corridor segments included in the Round 2 NEVI solicitation. Viewers can toggle individual layers on and off using the map layers menu located to the right of the map. Some layers are organized into groups; viewers can toggle all layers within a group or select specific ones. The legend to the left of the map will show the layers that have been turned on. There is a search tool to the right of the map that enables viewers to type in an address and locate the address on the map. A basemap selector allows viewers to view road detail. Additional information on the map can be found under the information icon. Viewers can download the map files by clicking on the Data and Supplemental Links icon. Map layers include:A Corridor groups layer that shows designated corridor groups for California's NEVI funding program. Users can click on a corridor segment to view the start and end of each segment within a corridor group. When selected, a pop-up window will appear that identifies the corridor group number, corridor segment, corridor name, minimum number of charging stations required, minimum number of ports required, and needed locations, if applicable, for the corridor segment. Corridor group labels for enhanced accessibility. Note that labels are only visible at certain ranges (zoom in and out to view labels).

  12. San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund County Names Annotation,...

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Feb 25, 2025
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    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 9 (Publisher) (2025). San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund County Names Annotation, San Francisco Bay CA, 2019, U.S. EPA Region 9 [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/san-francisco-bay-water-quality-improvement-fund-county-names-annotation-san-francisco-bay-ca-214
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 25, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    United States Environmental Protection Agencyhttp://www.epa.gov/
    Area covered
    San Francisco, San Francisco Bay
    Description

    This layer includes 9 annotation features for the county labels for the San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvment Fund (SFBWQIF) area of interest These features are incorporated in the San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund Story Map, an interactive series of maps and QlikSense graphics highlighting the competitive grant program which supports projects to protect and restore San Francisco Bay. The application can be found on the EPA GeoPlatform at: "https://epa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=db223d22741140b9b10baf7e91815271" "https://epa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=db223d22741140b9b10baf7e91815271" The story map is also embedded in the following EPA web page: "https://www2.epa.gov/sfbay-delta/sf-bay-water-quality-improvement-fund-interactive-project-map" https://www2.epa.gov/sfbay-delta/sf-bay-water-quality-improvement-fund-interactive-project-map

  13. K

    Kern County, CA Oil Wells

    • koordinates.com
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Sep 13, 2018
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    Kern County, California (2018). Kern County, CA Oil Wells [Dataset]. https://koordinates.com/layer/97160-kern-county-ca-oil-wells/
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    dwg, shapefile, geopackage / sqlite, csv, pdf, geodatabase, mapinfo tab, kml, mapinfo mifAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Sep 13, 2018
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Kern County, California
    Area covered
    Description

    The California Department of Conservation, Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources publishes a GIS feature class of well locations across the state for use by the public. This shapefile is the same as the data displayed in the Division's WellFinder application (http://maps.conservation.ca.gov/doggr/index.html) as of July 6, 2016. This shapefile is provided in geographic coordinates on the North American Datum of 1983. A partial description of the attributes contained in this feature class is listed on the WellFinder application's Help system (see entity and attributes section in this metadata). Geothermal wells have been excluded from this shapefile.The DOGGR Wells layer in WellFinder is also available as a WFS service at http://spatialservices.conservation.ca.gov/arcgis/rest/services/DOMS/DOMS_Wells/MapServer/WFSServer?/.Well Attributes: API Number, Well Number, Well Status, GIS Symbol, Operator Code, Operator Name, Lease Name, Field Name, Area Name, District, County, Section, Township, Range, Base Meridian, Latitude, Longitude, Elevation, Total Depth, Redrill Footage, Redrill Cancel Flag, Location Description, Comments, GIS Source Code, Dry Hole, Confidential Well, Directionally Drilled, Hydraulically Fractured, BLM Well, EPA Well, Spud Date, Completion Date, Abandoned Date

    © Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources

    This layer is a component of Geology & Geography.

  14. City Boundaries

    • gisopendata.marincounty.gov
    • marin-county-lafco-marinlafco.hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Jun 26, 2024
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    Public ArcGIS Online (2024). City Boundaries [Dataset]. https://gisopendata.marincounty.gov/datasets/marincounty::city-boundaries
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 26, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    https://arcgis.com/
    Authors
    Public ArcGIS Online
    Area covered
    Description

    City is a topologically correct polygon representation of city boundaries as recorded in Marin County Assessor map pages. Coverage includes the entire jurisdiction of Marin County, California.

  15. FRAP - Public Lands Ownership

    • wifire-data.sdsc.edu
    csv, esri rest +4
    Updated Jul 18, 2019
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    CA Governor's Office of Emergency Services (2019). FRAP - Public Lands Ownership [Dataset]. https://wifire-data.sdsc.edu/dataset/frap-public-lands-ownership
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    geojson, kml, zip, esri rest, csv, htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 18, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    California Governor's Office of Emergency Services
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This ownership dataset utilizes a methodology that results in a federal ownership extent that matches the Federal Responsibility Areas (FRA) footprint from CAL FIRE's State Responsibility Areas for Fire Protection (SRA) data. FRA lands are snapped to county parcel data, thus federal ownership areas will also be snapped. Since SRA Fees were first implemented in 2011, CAL FIRE has devoted significant resources to improve the quality of SRA data. This includes comparing SRA data to data from other federal, state, and local agencies, an annual comparison to county assessor roll files, and a formal SRA review process that includes input from CAL FIRE Units. As a result, FRA lands provide a solid basis as the footprint for federal lands in California (except in the southeastern desert area). The methodology for federal lands involves:

    1) snapping federal data sources to parcels;
    2) clipping to the FRA footprint;
    3) overlaying the federal data sources and using a hierarchy when sources overlap to resolve coding issues (BIA, UFW, NPS, USF, BLM, DOD, ACE, BOR);
    4) utilizing an automated process to merge “unknown” FRA slivers with appropriate adjacent ownerships;
    5) a manual review of FRA areas not assigned a federal agency by this process.

    Non-Federal ownership information was obtained from the California Protected Areas Database (CPAD), was clipped to the non-FRA area, and an automated process was used to fill in some sliver-gaps that occurred between the federal and non-federal data. Southeastern Desert Area: CAL FIRE does not devote the same level of resources for maintaining SRA data in this region of the state, since we have no fire protection responsibility. This includes almost all of Imperial County, and the desert portions of Riverside, and San Bernardino Counties. In these areas, we used federal protection areas from the current version of the Direct Protection Areas (DPA) dataset. Due to the fact that there were draw-issues with the previous version of ownership, this version does NOT fill in the areas that are not assigned to one of the owner groups (it does not cover all lands in the state). Also unlike previous versions of the dataset, this version only defines ownership down to the agency level - it does not contain more specific property information (for example, which National Forest). The option for a more detailed future release remains, however, and due to the use of automated tools, could always be created without much additional effort.This dataset includes a representation to symbolize based on the Own_Group field using the standard color scheme utilized on DPA maps.For more details about data inputs, see the Lineage section of the metadata. For detailed notes on previous versions, see the Supplemental Information section of the metadata.

    This ownership dataset is derived from CAL FIRE's SRA dataset, and GreenInfo Network's California Protected Areas Database. CAL FIRE tracks lands owned by federal agencies as part of our efforts to maintain fire protection responsibility boundaries, captured as part of our State Responsiblity Areas (SRA) dataset. This effort draws on data provided by various federal agencies including USDA Forest Service, BLM, National Park Service, US Fish and Wildlife Service, and Bureau of Inidan Affairs. Since SRA lands are matched to county parcel data where appropriate, often federal land boundaries are also adjusted to match parcels, and may not always exactly match the source federal data. Federal lands from the SRA dataset are combined with ownership data for non-federal lands from CPAD, in order to capture lands owned by various state and local agencies, special districts, and conservation organizations. Data from CPAD are imported directly and not adjusted to match parcels or other features. However, CPAD features may be trimmed if they overlap federal lands from the SRA dataset. Areas without an ownership feature are ASSUMED to be private (but not included in the dataset as such).

    This service represents the latest release of the dataset by FRAP, and is updated twice a year when new versions are released.

  16. San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund Project Area Polygon,...

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Feb 25, 2025
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    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 9 (Publisher) (2025). San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund Project Area Polygon, California, 2019, U.S. EPA Region 9 [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/san-francisco-bay-water-quality-improvement-fund-project-area-polygon-california-2019-u-s-epa-r14
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 25, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    United States Environmental Protection Agencyhttp://www.epa.gov/
    Area covered
    California, United States, San Francisco Bay
    Description

    This layer includes one polygon feature covering the state of California in all counties except for those in the area of interest for the San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvment Fund (SFBWQIF). This feature is used as a mask to highlight the SFBWQIF project areas. This feature is incorporated in the San Francisco Bay Water Quality Improvement Fund Story Map, an interactive series of maps and QlikSense graphics highlighting the competitive grant program which supports projects to protect and restore San Francisco Bay. The application can be found on the EPA GeoPlatform at: "https://epa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=db223d22741140b9b10baf7e91815271 "https://epa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=db223d22741140b9b10baf7e91815271 The story map is also embedded in the following EPA web page: "https://www2.epa.gov/sfbay-delta/sf-bay-water-quality-improvement-fund-interactive-project-map" https://www2.epa.gov/sfbay-delta/sf-bay-water-quality-improvement-fund-interactive-project-map

  17. d

    Data from: Geologic Map Database of the El Mirage Lake Area, San Bernardino...

    • datadiscoverystudio.org
    • search.dataone.org
    • +1more
    gz
    Updated May 20, 2018
    + more versions
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    (2018). Geologic Map Database of the El Mirage Lake Area, San Bernardino and Los Angeles Counties, California. [Dataset]. http://datadiscoverystudio.org/geoportal/rest/metadata/item/b646323fbf0c4a7cb58c7f4f1a778236/html
    Explore at:
    gzAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 20, 2018
    Area covered
    El Mirage Lake
    Description

    description: This geologic map database for the El Mirage Lake area describes geologic materials for the dry lake, parts of the adjacent Shadow Mountains and Adobe Mountain, and much of the piedmont extending south from the lake upward toward the San Gabriel Mountains. This area lies within the western Mojave Desert of San Bernardino and Los Angeles Counties, southern California. The area is traversed by a few paved highways that service the community of El Mirage, and by numerous dirt roads that lead to outlying properties. An off-highway vehicle area established by the Bureau of Land Management encompasses the dry lake and much of the land north and east of the lake. The physiography of the area consists of the dry lake, flanking mud and sand flats and alluvial piedmonts, and a few sharp craggy mountains. This digital geologic map database, intended for use at 1:24,000- scale, describes and portrays the rock units and surficial deposits of the El Mirage Lake area. It was prepared as part of a water-resource assessments of the area, describing and interpreting surface geology that provides information to help understand distribution and extent of deeper groundwater-bearing units. The area mapped covers the Shadow Mountains SE and parts of the Shadow Mountains, Adobe Mountain, and El Mirage 7.5-minute quadrangles. The map database includes detailed geology of surface and bedrock deposits, which represent a significant update from previous bedrock geologic maps by Dibblee (1960) and Troxel and Gunderson (1970), and the surficial geologic map of Ponti and Burke (1980); it incorporates a fringe of the detailed bedrock mapping in the Shadow Mountains by Martin (1992).; abstract: This geologic map database for the El Mirage Lake area describes geologic materials for the dry lake, parts of the adjacent Shadow Mountains and Adobe Mountain, and much of the piedmont extending south from the lake upward toward the San Gabriel Mountains. This area lies within the western Mojave Desert of San Bernardino and Los Angeles Counties, southern California. The area is traversed by a few paved highways that service the community of El Mirage, and by numerous dirt roads that lead to outlying properties. An off-highway vehicle area established by the Bureau of Land Management encompasses the dry lake and much of the land north and east of the lake. The physiography of the area consists of the dry lake, flanking mud and sand flats and alluvial piedmonts, and a few sharp craggy mountains. This digital geologic map database, intended for use at 1:24,000- scale, describes and portrays the rock units and surficial deposits of the El Mirage Lake area. It was prepared as part of a water-resource assessments of the area, describing and interpreting surface geology that provides information to help understand distribution and extent of deeper groundwater-bearing units. The area mapped covers the Shadow Mountains SE and parts of the Shadow Mountains, Adobe Mountain, and El Mirage 7.5-minute quadrangles. The map database includes detailed geology of surface and bedrock deposits, which represent a significant update from previous bedrock geologic maps by Dibblee (1960) and Troxel and Gunderson (1970), and the surficial geologic map of Ponti and Burke (1980); it incorporates a fringe of the detailed bedrock mapping in the Shadow Mountains by Martin (1992).

  18. m

    Data from: County Service Areas

    • gisopendata.marincounty.gov
    • share-open-data-marincounty.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Jun 26, 2024
    + more versions
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    Public ArcGIS Online (2024). County Service Areas [Dataset]. https://gisopendata.marincounty.gov/datasets/marincounty::county-service-areas
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 26, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Public ArcGIS Online
    Area covered
    Description

    Data are a graphic representation of County Service Area boundaries in Marin County, California.

  19. l

    LA County Legislative Districts

    • data.lacounty.gov
    Updated Jun 20, 2023
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    County of Los Angeles (2023). LA County Legislative Districts [Dataset]. https://data.lacounty.gov/datasets/la-county-legislative-districts-1
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 20, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Los Angeles County
    Description

    Legislative District web map application is created to review and visualize current LA County legislative districts in an interactive way. This web map application includes Supervisorial Districts 2021, US Congressional Districts, California State Senate Districts and State Assemble Districts. The data source is the LA County eGIS Repository. This web map layer also includes county boundary as well as countywide statistical area (CSA) boundary and city/community names.

  20. California's National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Funding Program Map

    • data.cnra.ca.gov
    Updated Jun 6, 2025
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    California Energy Commission (2025). California's National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Funding Program Map [Dataset]. https://data.cnra.ca.gov/dataset/californias-national-electric-vehicle-infrastructure-funding-program-map
    Explore at:
    html, arcgis geoservices rest apiAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 6, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Energy Commissionhttp://www.energy.ca.gov/
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    California
    Description

    The California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) and the California Energy Commission (CEC) are partnering to implement the federal National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (NEVI) Program, which allocates $5 billion to the states to create a nationwide, interconnected network of DC fast chargers along the National Highway Systems. California's share will be $384 million over 5 years. This map was developed to help prospective applicants and interested parties identify eligible areas for infrastructure deployment.


    Instructions

    Viewers can display Alternative Fuel Corridors, NEVI 2 (GFO-24-606) corridor groups and corridor segments, NEVI 1 (GFO-23-601) corridor groups, electric vehicle (EV) charging stations, Tribal lands, California-designated low-income or disadvantaged communities, metropolitan planning organizations, regional transportation planning agencies, California state legislative districts, counties, Caltrans districts, utility districts, and congressional districts in this interactive map. The map initially displays the corridor groups and corridor segments eligible for California's Round 2 NEVI solicitation. Viewers can toggle individual layers on and off using the map layers menu located to the right of the map. Some layers are organized into groups; viewers can toggle all layers within a group or select specific ones. The legend to the left of the map will show the layers that have been turned on. There is a search tool to the right of the map that enables viewers to type in an address and locate the address on the map. A basemap selector allows viewers to view road detail. Additional information on the map can be found under the information icon. Viewers can download the map files by clicking on the Data and Supplemental Links icon.


    Map layers include:

    • An Alternative Fuel Corridors layer that shows designated corridors for California's NEVI funding program. Users can click on a corridor segment to view the start and end of each corridor. When selected, a pop-up window will appear that shows the corridor name and description.
    • A NEVI 2 (GFO-24-606) corridor groups layer shows corridor groups eligible for Round 2 of California's NEVI funding program. Note that this layer is only visible when the Alternative Fuels Corridors layer is turned off.
    • NEVI 2 (GFO-24-606) corridor group labels for enhanced accessibility. Note that labels are only visible at certain ranges (zoom in and out to view labels) and when the Alternative Fuels Corridors layer is turned off.
    • NEVI 2 (GFO-24-606) corridor segment labels for enhanced accessibility. Note that labels are only visible at certain ranges (zoom in and out to view labels) and when the Alternative Fuels Corridors layer is turned off.
    • A NEVI 1 (GFO-23-601) corridor groups layer that shows corridor groups eligible for Round 1 of California's NEVI funding program. Note that this layer is only visible when the Alternative Fuels Corridors layer is turned off.
    • A layer showing the locations of EV charging stations awarded through Round 1 of California's NEVI funding program that are planned for deployment.
    • A layer showing California-designated disadvantaged or low-income communities.
    • A layer showing California Federally Recognized Tribal Lands.
    • A layer showing Metropolitan Planning Organizations.
    • A layer showing Regional Transportation Planning Agencies.
    • A layer showing California State Senate Districts.
    • A layer showing California State Assembly Districts.
    • A layer showing California Counties.
    • EV charging stations layers (existing DC fast charging stations that are located within one mile of a NEVI-eligible corridor offramp). One layer shows locations of EV charging stations with DC fast charging capabilities that meet the NEVI power level and four-port minimum requirement and could likely become part of the NEVI network if these stations became compliant with other NEVI program requirements such as data reporting. The other layer shows DC fast charging stations that do not meet NEVI power-level or port count requirements but could be upgraded to be NEVI-compliant. Users can click on EV charging stations and a pop-up window will appear with more information on the station (i.e., station address, total port count, minimum NEVI standard, etc.). These data were last updated in March 2024. Please refer to the Department of Energy's Alternative Fuels Data Center and PlugShare for up-to-date existing and planned DC fast charger site information.
    • A layer showing Caltrans Districts.
    • A layer showing Electric Utilities (IOUs and POUs).
    • A layer showing California Congressional Districts.

    Background

    The $5 billion NEVI Program is part of the $1.2 trillion Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) signed into law by President Biden in November 2021. IIJA commits significant federal funding to clean transportation and energy programs throughout the U.S. to reduce climate changing greenhouse gas emissions. Caltrans is the designated lead agency for NEVI. The CEC is their designated state energy partner. Caltrans and the CEC have partnered to create California's Deployment Plan for the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Program that describes how the state plans to allocate its $384 million share of federal NEVI funds to build out a network of modern, high-powered DC fast chargers along federally designated Alternative Fuel Corridors throughout California. California's latest NEVI Deployment Plan was submitted to the Joint Office of Energy and Transportation on August 1, 2023 and approved on September 29, 2023. The Plans must be updated each year over 5 years.


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California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (2019). California County Boundaries [Dataset]. https://gis.data.ca.gov/datasets/CALFIRE-Forestry::california-county-boundaries/about
Organization logo

Data from: California County Boundaries

Related Article
Explore at:
Dataset updated
Oct 16, 2019
Dataset authored and provided by
California Department of Forestry and Fire Protectionhttp://calfire.ca.gov/
Area covered
Description

In late 1996, the Dept of Conservation (DOC) surveyed state and federal agencies about the county boundary coverage they used. As a result, DOC adopted the 1:24,000 (24K) scale U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) dataset (USGS source) for their Farmland Mapping and Monitoring Program (FMMP) but with several modifications. Detailed documentation of these changes is provided by FMMP and included in the lineage section of the metadata.A dataset was made available (approximately 2004) through CALFIRE - FRAP and the California Spatial Information Library (CaSIL), with additional updates throughout subsequent years. More recently, an effort was made to improve the coastal linework by using the previous interior linework from the 24k data, but replacing the coastal linework based on NOAA's ERMA coastal dataset (which used NAIP 2010). In this dataset, all bays (plus bay islands and constructed features) are merged into the mainland, and coastal features (such as islands and constructed features) are not included, with the exception of the Channel Islands which ARE included.This service represents the latest released version, and is updated when new versions are released. As of June, 2019 it represents cnty19_1.

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