16 datasets found
  1. a

    LA County 2021 Redistricting Highlights

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • geohub.lacity.org
    • +2more
    Updated May 21, 2024
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    County of Los Angeles (2024). LA County 2021 Redistricting Highlights [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/08bd6fa3633146bab713b72c989e29c7
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    Dataset updated
    May 21, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    This web map shows the major boundary differences of Los Angeles County 2021 Supervisorial District boundaries and 2011 supervisorial district boundaries.2021 Supervisorial District boundaries was adopted on December 15, 2021. 2011 Supervisorial District boundaries was adopted on September 27, 2011.How is this data created?This data is created by intersecting 2021 Supervisorial District boundary with 2011 Supervisorial District boundary and select only the major boundary change polygons.

  2. a

    LA County 2021 Redistricting Highlights WebApp

    • demography-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com
    • data.lacounty.gov
    Updated Jul 1, 2024
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    County of Los Angeles (2024). LA County 2021 Redistricting Highlights WebApp [Dataset]. https://demography-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/la-county-2021-redistricting-highlights-webapp
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 1, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Los Angeles County
    Description

    The LA County 2021 Redistricting WebApp provides an interactive platform that allows users to explore the changes in supervisorial district boundaries between the 2010 and 2020 redistricting efforts. The app visually compares the old and new district maps, highlighting shifts in geographic adjustments and the impact on political boundaries. Users can toggle between the 2010 and 2020 maps to see how population changes and community needs influenced the redrawing of district lines, ensuring fair and equitable representation across the county.

  3. a

    Supervisorial Districts (Current)

    • egis-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com
    • geohub.lacity.org
    Updated Mar 8, 2022
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    County of Los Angeles (2022). Supervisorial Districts (Current) [Dataset]. https://egis-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com/maps/lacounty::supervisorial-districts-current
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 8, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    This layer contains the current Official Supervisorial District Boundary for the County of Los Angeles, per Assessor parcels and the Department of Public Works' City/Community boundaries.Supplemental Information: Adopted December 15, 2021 - The County of Los Angeles Citizens Redistricting Commission’s Redistricting Plan adjusting the Official Supervisorial District Boundary for the County of Los Angeles pursuant to Elections Code Sections 21530 et seq. See Resolution No. 2021-04, Resolution of the County of Los Angeles Citizens Redistricting Commission Adopting a Redistricting Plan for the Los Angeles County Supervisorial Districts pursuant to Elections Code Section 21530 et seq.and Resolution No. 2021-05, Resolution of the County of Los Angeles Citizens Redistricting Commission Adopting a Redistricting Report for the Los Angeles County Supervisorial Districts pursuant to Elections Code Section 21534, subd. (d)(3). Per Sec. 21531 of the California Elections Code, Supervisorial District boundaries in the County of Los Angeles are adjusted in the year following the year in which the decennial federal census is taken. Published in the County Code under Title 1, Chapter 1.08, are boundary descriptions for the Supervisorial Districts.Last Updated: 3/4/2022

  4. a

    Service Planning Areas 2022 (view)

    • egis-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com
    • data.lacounty.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Mar 25, 2022
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    County of Los Angeles (2022). Service Planning Areas 2022 (view) [Dataset]. https://egis-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/lacounty::service-planning-areas-2022-view/about
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 25, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    Los Angeles County Service Planning Areas (SPAs), updated in 2022. Los Angeles County is divided into eight SPAs for health care planning purposes.Updating SPA and Health District boundaries to align with new U.S. Census Bureau census tract boundaries is performed after every Decennial Census.How was this data created?The 2020 Census Tracts from the U.S. Census Bureau's 2021 TIGER/Line were used as building blocks for the SPA layer. The 2012 SPA layer was compared to the 2020 Census Tracts to provide preliminary information on the SPAs associated with each Census Tract and to determine where SPAs no longer aligned. For the 2022 SPA layer, boundaries were updated to align with the 2020 Census Tract boundary changes with consideration for maintaining effective service delivery. The SPAs were refined to conform with the County boundary and coastline from the Supervisorial Districts 2021 and County Boundary layers.Data Fields:SPA (Type = Text, Length = 1, Alias = SPA 2022): SPA number as text; a numeric but non-quantitative identifierSPA_NAME (Type = Text, Length = 30, Alias = SPA NAME): Full SPA nameABBV (Type = Text, Length = 5): Abbreviated SPA nameLABEL (Type = Text, Length = 10): Descriptive text of SPA for mapsSPA_NUM (Type = Short, Alias = SPA NUM): SPA number as number; field type from earlier 2012 version of SPAsUpdate Frequency: After every Decennial Census or as needed

  5. l

    2020 Census Blocks

    • data.lacounty.gov
    • geohub.lacity.org
    • +2more
    Updated Mar 22, 2021
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    County of Los Angeles (2021). 2020 Census Blocks [Dataset]. https://data.lacounty.gov/maps/lacounty::2020-census-blocks
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 22, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    Blocks are typically bounded by streets, roads or creeks. In cities, a census block may correspond to a city block, but in rural areas where there are fewer roads, blocks may be limited by other features. The Census Bureau established blocks covering the entire nation for the first time in 1990.There are less number of Census Blocks within Los Angeles County in 2020 Census TIGER/Line Shapefiles, compared in 2010.Updated:1. June 2023: This update includes 2022 November Santa Clarita City annexation and the addition of "Kinneloa Mesa" community (was a part of unincorporated East Pasadena). Added new data fields FIP_CURRENT to CITYCOMM_CURRENT to reflect new/updated city and communities. Updated city/community names and FIP codes of census blocks that are in 2022 November Santa Clarita City annexation and new Kinneloa Mesa community (look for FIP_Current, City_Current, Comm_Current field values)2. February 2023: Updated few Census Block CSA values based on Demographic Consultant inquiry/suggestions3. April 2022: Updated Census Block data attribute values based on Supervisorial District 2021, Service Planning Area 2022, Health District 2022 and ZIP Code Tabulation Area 2020Created: March 2021How This Data is Created? This census geographic file was downloaded from Census Bureau website: https://www2.census.gov/geo/tiger/TIGER2020PL/STATE/06_CALIFORNIA/06037/ on February 2021 and customized for LA County. New data fields are added in the census blocks 2020 data and populated with city/community names, LA County FIPS, 2021 Supervisorial Districts, 2020 Census Zip Code Tabulation Area (ZCTA) and some administrative boundary information such as 2022 Health Districts and 2022 Service Planning Areas (SPS) are also added. "Housing20" field value and "Pop20" field value is populated with PL 94-171 Redistricting Data Summary File: Decennial Census P.L. 94-171 Redistricting Data Summary Files. Similarly, "Feat_Type" field is added and populated with water, ocean and land values. Five new data fields (FIP_CURRENT to CITYCOMM_CURRENT) are added in June 2023 updates to accommodate 2022 Santa Clarita city annexation. City/community names and FIP codes of census blocks affected by 2022 November Santa Clarita City annexation are assigned based on the location of block centroids. In June 2023 update, total of 36 blocks assigned to the City of Santa Clarita that were in Unincorporated Valencia and Castaic. Note: This data includes 3 NM ocean (FEAT_TYPE field). However, user can use a definition query to remove those. Data Fields: 1. STATE (STATEFP20): State FIP, "06" for California, 2. COUNTY (COUNTYFP20): County FIP "037" for Los Angeles County, 3. CT20: (TRACTCE20): 6-digit census tract number, 4. BG20: 7-digit block group number, 5. CB20 (BLOCKCE20): 4-digit census block number, 6. CTCB20: Combination of CT20 and CB20, 7. FEAT_TYPE: Land use types such as water bodies, ocean (3 NM ocean) or land, 8. FIP20: Los Angeles County FIP code, 9. BGFIP20: Combination of BG20 and FIP20, 10. CITY: Incorporated city name, 11. COMM: Unincorporated area community name and LA City neighborhood, also known as "CSA", 12. CITYCOMM: City/Community name label, 13. ZCTA20: Parcel specific zip codes, 14. HD12: 2012 Health District number, 15. HD_NAME: Health District name, 16. SPA22: 2022 Service Planning Area number, 17. SPA_NAME: Service Planning Area name, 18. SUP21: 2021 Supervisorial District number, 19. SUP_LABEL: Supervisorial District label, 20. POP20: 2020 Population (PL 94-171 Redistricting Data Summary File - Total Population), 21. HOUSING20: 2020 housing (PL 94-171 Redistricting Data Summary File - Total Housing),22. FIP_CURRENT: Los Angeles County 2023 FIP code, as of June 2023,23. BG20FIP_CURRENT: Combination of BG20 and 2023 FIP, as of June 2023,24. CITY_CURRENT: 2023 Incorporated city name, as of June 2023,25. COMM_CURRENT: 2023 Unincorporated area community name and LA City neighborhood, also known as "CSA", as of June 2023,26. CITYCOMM_CURRENT: 2023 City/Community name label, as of June 2023.

  6. l

    Los Angeles County Housing Element (2021-2029) - Rezoning

    • data.lacounty.gov
    • geohub.lacity.org
    • +2more
    Updated May 31, 2022
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    County of Los Angeles (2022). Los Angeles County Housing Element (2021-2029) - Rezoning [Dataset]. https://data.lacounty.gov/datasets/bd0a0d015f204665afd9a0fe5ddaa5f7
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    Dataset updated
    May 31, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    IntroductionThis metadata is broken up into different sections that provide both a high-level summary of the Housing Element and more detailed information about the data itself with links to other resources. The following is an excerpt from the Executive Summary from the Housing Element 2021 – 2029 document:The County of Los Angeles is required to ensure the availability of residential sites, at adequate densities and appropriate development standards, in the unincorporated Los Angeles County to accommodate its share of the regional housing need--also known as the Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA). Unincorporated Los Angeles County has been assigned a RHNA of 90,052 units for the 2021-2029 Housing Element planning period, which is subdivided by level of affordability as follows:Extremely Low / Very Low (<50% AMI) - 25,648Lower (50 - 80% AMI) - 13,691Moderate (80 - 120% AMI) - 14,180Above Moderate (>120% AMI) - 36,533Total - 90,052NOTES - Pursuant to State law, the projected need of extremely low income households can be estimated at 50% of the very low income RHNA. Therefore, the County’s projected extremely low income can be estimated at 12,824 units. However, for the purpose of identifying adequate sites for RHNA, no separate accounting of sites for extremely low income households is required. AMI = Area Median IncomeDescriptionThe Sites Inventory (Appendix A) is comprised of vacant and underutilized sites within unincorporated Los Angeles County that are zoned at appropriate densities and development standards to facilitate housing development. The Sites Inventory was developed specifically for the County of Los Angeles, and has built-in features that filter sites based on specific criteria, including access to transit, protection from environmental hazards, and other criteria unique to unincorporated Los Angeles County. Other strategies used within the Sites Inventory analysis to accommodate the County’s assigned RHNA of 90,052 units include projected growth of ADUs, specific plan capacity, selected entitled projects, and capacity or planned development on County-owned sites within cities. This accounts for approximately 38 percent of the RHNA. The remaining 62 percent of the RHNA is accommodated by sites to be rezoned to accommodate higher density housing development (Appendix B).Caveats:This data is a snapshot in time, generally from the year 2021. It contains information about parcels, zoning and land use policy that may be outdated. The Department of Regional Planning will be keeping an internal tally of sites that get developed or rezoned to meet our RHNA goals, and we may, in the future, develop some public facing web applications or dashboards to show the progress. There may even be periodic updates to this GIS dataset as well, throughout this 8-year planning cycle.Update History:1/7/25 - Following the completion of the annexation to the City of Whittier on 11/12/24, 27 parcels were removed along Whittier Blvd which contained 315 Very Low Income units and 590 Above Moderate units. Following a joint County-City resolution of the RHNA transfer to the city, 247 Very Low Income units and 503 Above Moderate units were taken on by Whittier. 10/16/24 - Modifications were made to this layer during the updates to the South Bay and Westside Area Plans following outreach in these communities. In the Westside Planning area, 29 parcels were removed and no change in zoning / land use policy was proposed; 9 Mixed Use sites were added. In the South Bay, 23 sites were removed as they no longer count towards the RHNA, but still partially changing to Mixed Use.5/31/22 – Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors adopted the Housing Element on 5/17/22, and it received final certification from the State of California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) on 5/27/22. Data layer published on 5/31/22.Links to other resources:Department of Regional Planning Housing Page - Contains Housing Element and it's AppendicesHousing Element Update - Rezoning Program Story Map (English, and Spanish)Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG) - Regional Housing Needs AssessmentCalifornia Department of Housing and Community Development Housing Element pageField Descriptions:OBJECTID - Internal GIS IDAIN - Assessor Identification Number*SitusAddress - Site Address (Street and Number) from Assessor Data*Use Code - Existing Land Use Code (corresponds to Use Type and Use Description) from Assessor Data*Use Type - Existing Land Use Type from Assessor Data*Use Description - Existing Land Use Description from Assessor Data*Vacant / Nonvacant – Parcels that are vacant or non-vacant per the Use Code from the Assessor Data*Units Total - Total Existing Units from Assessor Data*Max Year - Maximum Year Built from Assessor Data*Supervisorial District (2021) - LA County Board of Supervisor DistrictSubmarket Area - Inclusionary Housing Submarket AreaPlanning Area - Planning Areas from the LA County Department of Regional Planning General Plan 2035Community Name - Unincorporated Community NamePlan Name - Land Use Plan Name from the LA County Department of Regional Planning (General Plan and Area / Community Plans)LUP - 1 - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Primary Land Use Policy (in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 1 (% area) - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Primary Land Use Policy (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 2 - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Secondary Land Use Policy (in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 2 (% area) - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Secondary Land Use Policy (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 3 - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Tertiary Land Use Policy (in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 3 (% area) - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Tertiary Land Use Policy (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*Current LUP (Description) – This is a brief description of the land use category. In the case of multiple land uses, this would be the land use category that covers the majority of the parcel*Current LUP (Min Density - net or gross) - Minimum density for this category (as net or gross) per the Land Use Plan for this areaCurrent LUP (Max Density - net or gross) - Maximum density for this category (as net or gross) per the Land Use Plan for this areaProposed LUP – Final – The proposed land use category to increase density.Proposed LUP (Description) – Brief description of the proposed land use policy.Prop. LUP – Final (Min Density) – Minimum density for the proposed land use category.Prop. LUP – Final (Max Density) – Maximum density for the proposed land use category.Zoning - 1 - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Primary Zone (in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 1 (% area) - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Primary Zone (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 2 - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Secondary Zone (in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 2 (% area) - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Secondary Zone (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 3 - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Tertiary Zone (in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 3 (% area) - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Tertiary Zone (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Current Zoning (Description) - This is a brief description of the zoning category. In the case of multiple zoning categories, this would be the zoning that covers the majority of the parcel*Proposed Zoning – Final – The proposed zoning category to increase density.Proposed Zoning (Description) – Brief description of the proposed zoning.Acres - Acreage of parcelMax Units Allowed - Total Proposed Land Use Policy UnitsRHNA Eligible? – Indicates whether the site is RHNA Eligible or not. NOTE: This layer only shows those that are RHNA Eligible, but internal versions of this layer also show sites that were not-RHNA eligible, or removed during the development of this layer in 2020 – 2022.Very Low Income Capacity - Total capacity for the Very Low Income level as defined in the Housing ElementLow Income Capacity - Total capacity for the Low Income level as defined in the Housing ElementModerate Income Capacity - Total capacity for the Moderate Income level as defined in the Housing ElementAbove Moderate Income Capacity - Total capacity for the Above Moderate Income level as defined in the Housing ElementRealistic Capacity - Total Realistic Capacity of parcel (totaling all income levels). Several factors went into this final calculation. See the Housing Element (Links to Other Resources above) in the following locations - "Sites Inventory - Lower Income RHNA" (p. 223), and "Rezoning - Very Low / Low Income RHNA" (p231).Income Categories - Income Categories assigned to the parcel (relates to income capacity units)Lot Consolidation ID - Parcels with a unique identfier for consolidation potential (based on parcel ownership)Lot Consolidation Notes - Specific notes for consolidationConsolidation - Adjacent Parcels - All adjacent parcels that are tied to each lot consolidation IDsShape_Length - Perimeter (feet)Shape_Area - Area (sq feet)*As it existed in 2021

  7. l

    Precincts by Council District

    • geohub.lacity.org
    • visionzero.geohub.lacity.org
    • +4more
    Updated Mar 18, 2017
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    chelsea_lahub (2017). Precincts by Council District [Dataset]. https://geohub.lacity.org/items/9658c360aaca4e4ba8ab078573bc0e54
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 18, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    chelsea_lahub
    Area covered
    Description

    Voting precincts in the City of LA. Data comes from the Los Angeles County Registrar/Recorder’s Office. The Registrar/Recorder uses these precincts to run elections by grouping them into election precincts, so they capture the boundaries of all voting districts in the County, including, but not limited to: LA County Supervisorial Districts US Congressional Districts State Senate and Assembly Districts Schools Districts Water and Waste Districts See more at egis3.lacounty.gov

  8. a

    Health Districts 2022 (view)

    • ph-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com
    • data.lacounty.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Mar 25, 2022
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    County of Los Angeles (2022). Health Districts 2022 (view) [Dataset]. https://ph-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/health-districts-2022-view/explore
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 25, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    Los Angeles County Health Districts (HDs), updated in 2022. Los Angeles County is divided into twenty-six HDs, which are subdivisions of Service Planning areas (SPAs). HDs are used for planning and managing health service delivery across Los Angeles County.Updating HD and SPA boundaries to align with new U.S. Census Bureau census tract boundaries is performed after every Decennial Census.How was this data created?The 2020 Census Tracts from the U.S. Census Bureau's 2021 TIGER/Line were used as building blocks for the HD layer. The 2012 HD layer was compared to the 2020 Census Tracts layer to provide preliminary information on the HDs associated with each Census Tract and to determine where HDs no longer aligned. For the 2022 HD layer, boundaries were updated to align with 2020 Census Tract boundary changes within their corresponding 2022 SPAs with consideration for maintaining effective service delivery. The HDs were refined to conform with the County boundary and coastline from the Supervisorial Districts 2021 and County Boundary layers.Data Fields:HD (Type = Text, Length = 2, Alias = HD 2022): Health District number as text; a numeric but non-quantitative identifierHD_NAME (Type = Text, Length = 30, Alias = HD NAME): Full Health District nameSPA (Type = Text, Length = 1, Alias = SPA 2022): SPA number that HD resides withinSPA_NAME (Type = Text, Length = 30, Alias SPA NAME): Full SPA name that HD resides withinHD_NUM (Type = Short, Alias HD NUM): Health District number as number; field type from earlier 2012 version of HDsUpdate Frequency: After every Decennial Census or as needed

  9. l

    Los Angeles County Housing Element (2021-2029) - Rezoning - ALL Sites

    • data.lacounty.gov
    • geohub.lacity.org
    Updated Jul 19, 2022
    + more versions
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    County of Los Angeles (2022). Los Angeles County Housing Element (2021-2029) - Rezoning - ALL Sites [Dataset]. https://data.lacounty.gov/maps/c8c1506d35e841cbb424de72d75205a7
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 19, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    Important Note:The metadata description below mentions the Regional Housing Needs Assessment (or RHNA). Part of meeting RHNA Eligibility is satisfying a list of criteria set by the State of California that needs to be met in order to qualify. This dataset contains both RHNA Eligible and non-RHNA Eligible sites. Non-RHNA Eligible sites are those that didn't quite meet the eligibility criteria set by the state, but will be still eligible for Rezoning per Department of Regional Planning guidelines, and thus represents a full picture of ALL sites that are eligible for Rezoning. The official Housing Element Rezoning layer that was certified by the State of California is located here, but it should be noted that this layer only contains sites that are RHNA Eligible.IntroductionThis metadata is broken up into different sections that provide both a high-level summary of the Housing Element and more detailed information about the data itself with links to other resources. The following is an excerpt from the Executive Summary from the Housing Element 2021 – 2029 document:The County of Los Angeles is required to ensure the availability of residential sites, at adequate densities and appropriate development standards, in the unincorporated Los Angeles County to accommodate its share of the regional housing need--also known as the Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA). Unincorporated Los Angeles County has been assigned a RHNA of 90,052 units for the 2021-2029 Housing Element planning period, which is subdivided by level of affordability as follows:Extremely Low / Very Low (<50% AMI) - 25,648Lower (50 - 80% AMI) - 13,691Moderate (80 - 120% AMI) - 14,180Above Moderate (>120% AMI) - 36,533Total - 90,052NOTES - Pursuant to State law, the projected need of extremely low income households can be estimated at 50% of the very low income RHNA. Therefore, the County’s projected extremely low income can be estimated at 12,824 units. However, for the purpose of identifying adequate sites for RHNA, no separate accounting of sites for extremely low income households is required. AMI = Area Median IncomeDescriptionThe Sites Inventory (Appendix A) is comprised of vacant and underutilized sites within unincorporated Los Angeles County that are zoned at appropriate densities and development standards to facilitate housing development. The Sites Inventory was developed specifically for the County of Los Angeles, and has built-in features that filter sites based on specific criteria, including access to transit, protection from environmental hazards, and other criteria unique to unincorporated Los Angeles County. Other strategies used within the Sites Inventory analysis to accommodate the County’s assigned RHNA of 90,052 units include projected growth of ADUs, specific plan capacity, selected entitled projects, and capacity or planned development on County-owned sites within cities. This accounts for approximately 38 percent of the RHNA. The remaining 62 percent of the RHNA is accommodated by sites to be rezoned to accommodate higher density housing development (Appendix B).Caveats:This data is a snapshot in time, generally from the year 2021. It contains information about parcels, zoning and land use policy that may be outdated. The Department of Regional Planning will be keeping an internal tally of sites that get developed or rezoned to meet our RHNA goals, and we may, in the future, develop some public facing web applications or dashboards to show the progress. There may even be periodic updates to this GIS dataset as well, throughout this 8-year planning cycle.Update History:12/18/24 - Following the completion of the annexation to the City of Whittier on 11/12/24, 27 parcels were removed along Whittier Blvd which contained 315 Very Low Income units and 590 Above Moderate units. Following a joint County-City resolution of the RHNA transfer to the city, 247 Very Low Income units and 503 Above Moderate units were taken on by Whittier. 10/23/24 - Modifications were made to this layer during the updates to the South Bay and Westside Area Plans following outreach in these communities. In the Westside Planning area, 29 parcels were removed and no change in zoning / land use policy was proposed; 9 Mixed Use sites were added. In the South Bay, 23 sites were removed as they no longer count towards the RHNA, but still partially changing to Mixed Use.5/31/22 – Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors adopted the Housing Element on 5/17/22, and it received final certification from the State of California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) on 5/27/22. Data layer published on 5/31/22.Links to other resources:Department of Regional Planning Housing Page - Contains Housing Element and it's AppendicesHousing Element Update - Rezoning Program Story Map (English, and Spanish)Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG) - Regional Housing Needs AssessmentCalifornia Department of Housing and Community Development Housing Element pageField Descriptions:OBJECTID - Internal GIS IDAIN - Assessor Identification Number*SitusAddress - Site Address (Street and Number) from Assessor Data*Use Code - Existing Land Use Code (corresponds to Use Type and Use Description) from Assessor Data*Use Type - Existing Land Use Type from Assessor Data*Use Description - Existing Land Use Description from Assessor Data*Vacant / Nonvacant – Parcels that are vacant or non-vacant per the Use Code from the Assessor Data*Units Total - Total Existing Units from Assessor Data*Max Year - Maximum Year Built from Assessor Data*Supervisorial District (2021) - LA County Board of Supervisor DistrictSubmarket Area - Inclusionary Housing Submarket AreaPlanning Area - Planning Areas from the LA County Department of Regional Planning General Plan 2035Community Name - Unincorporated Community NamePlan Name - Land Use Plan Name from the LA County Department of Regional Planning (General Plan and Area / Community Plans)LUP - 1 - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Primary Land Use Policy (in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 1 (% area) - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Primary Land Use Policy (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 2 - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Secondary Land Use Policy (in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 2 (% area) - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Secondary Land Use Policy (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 3 - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Tertiary Land Use Policy (in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 3 (% area) - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Tertiary Land Use Policy (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*Current LUP (Description) – This is a brief description of the land use category. In the case of multiple land uses, this would be the land use category that covers the majority of the parcel*Current LUP (Min Density - net or gross) - Minimum density for this category (as net or gross) per the Land Use Plan for this areaCurrent LUP (Max Density - net or gross) - Maximum density for this category (as net or gross) per the Land Use Plan for this areaProposed LUP – Final – The proposed land use category to increase density.Proposed LUP (Description) – Brief description of the proposed land use policy.Prop. LUP – Final (Min Density) – Minimum density for the proposed land use category.Prop. LUP – Final (Max Density) – Maximum density for the proposed land use category.Zoning - 1 - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Primary Zone (in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 1 (% area) - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Primary Zone (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 2 - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Secondary Zone (in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 2 (% area) - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Secondary Zone (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 3 - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Tertiary Zone (in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 3 (% area) - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Tertiary Zone (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Current Zoning (Description) - This is a brief description of the zoning category. In the case of multiple zoning categories, this would be the zoning that covers the majority of the parcel*Proposed Zoning – Final – The proposed zoning category to increase density.Proposed Zoning (Description) – Brief description of the proposed zoning.Acres - Acreage of parcelMax Units Allowed - Total Proposed Land Use Policy UnitsRHNA Eligible? – Indicates whether the site is RHNA Eligible or not. Very Low Income Capacity - Total capacity for the Very Low Income level as defined in the Housing ElementLow Income Capacity - Total capacity for the Low Income level as defined in the Housing ElementModerate Income Capacity - Total capacity for the Moderate Income level as defined in the Housing ElementAbove Moderate Income Capacity - Total capacity for the Above Moderate Income level as defined in the Housing ElementRealistic Capacity - Total Realistic Capacity of parcel (totaling all income levels). Several factors went into this final calculation. See the Housing Element (Links to Other Resources above) in the following locations - "Sites Inventory - Lower Income RHNA" (p. 223), and "Rezoning - Very Low / Low Income RHNA" (p231).Income Categories - Income Categories assigned to the parcel (relates

  10. a

    CD13 Voting Precincts

    • visionzero-lahub.opendata.arcgis.com
    • visionzero.geohub.lacity.org
    • +6more
    Updated Mar 22, 2017
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    chelsea_lahub (2017). CD13 Voting Precincts [Dataset]. https://visionzero-lahub.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/b5637c55b76145419abe630e1f4c90ea
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 22, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    chelsea_lahub
    Area covered
    Description

    Contains precincts from the Los Angeles County Registrar/Recorder’s Office. The Registrar/Recorder uses these precincts to run elections by grouping them into election precincts, so they capture the boundaries of all voting districts in the County, including, but not limited to: LA County Supervisorial Districts US Congressional Districts State Senate and Assembly Districts Schools Districts Water and Waste Districts See more: http://egis3.lacounty.gov/dataportal/2012/12/20/2012-precincts-as-of-march-9th/

  11. a

    2010 Split Census Block Groups

    • egis-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com
    • data.lacounty.gov
    • +1more
    Updated Oct 2, 2020
    + more versions
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    County of Los Angeles (2020). 2010 Split Census Block Groups [Dataset]. https://egis-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/87837bcd1a9f4c58af15feac3fe487d7
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 2, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    This data was created by combining the 2010 Census Block Group file as well as the Legal City Boundaries maintained by the LA County Department of Public Works.In reviewing this overlap, LA County aligned a fairly large number of block group boundaries to city boundaries where those boundaries were identified as being incorrectly misaligned by the Census Bureau. This removed split block groups that did not have any population assigned to them.To support the development of the Countywide Statistical Areas, some split block groups that had multiple parts were “unmerged” so that non-contiguous portions of the split block group could be assigned to different CSAs. Examples include areas of Unincorporated Quartz Hill and Lancaster that have 2 or more CSA names for a single split block group. Those portions are identified as “Parts” and tracked in the “Parts” field.In the City of Los Angeles, the LA City Neighborhood file was overlaid on the Block Groups and boundaries assigned using the centroid of the block group therefore, while the names of the CSAs in LA City match the neighborhood file, the boundaries are not the same.Field Descriptions:BG10 2010 Block Group (7 digits)CT10 2010 Census Tract (6 digits)FIPxx 2010-2020 City Code (5 digit FIPS code - note that Unincorporated is 99037)CITY_TYPE "City" or "Unincorporated"LCITY Legal City NameCSA - Countywide Statistical Area Name (e.g. Community)LABEL Pretty name for LabellingSOURCE CSA sourceBG10FIPxx 2010 - 2020 Split Block Group (Block group and FIP code combined)CT10FIPxx 2010 - 2020 Split Tract (Tract and FIP code combined)DISTRICT 2011 Supervisorial DistrictNOTES Notes relevant to the geographyPART Part number (for non-contiguous split block groups)PARTS Total number of non-contiguous parts (for non-contiguous split block groups)CSA_ID Unique BASA ID - combination of 2016 Split Block Group and Part NumberMERGED Flag if the Split BLock Group was merged into multi-part shapesCITYCOMM - merged values for the legal city, community, and supervisorial districtREMARKS - additional remarks about the source of any changes.

  12. l

    Disability Status (census tract)

    • data.lacounty.gov
    • arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com
    • +2more
    Updated Oct 8, 2021
    + more versions
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    County of Los Angeles (2021). Disability Status (census tract) [Dataset]. https://data.lacounty.gov/datasets/lacounty::disability-status-census-tract/about
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 8, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    For the original data source: https://data.census.gov/cedsci/table?tid=ACSDP5Y2020.DP02. Layer published for the Equity Explorer, a web experience developed by the LA County CEO Anti-Racism, Diversity, and Inclusion (ARDI) initiative in collaboration with eGIS and ISD. Visit the Equity Explorer to explore disability status and other equity related datasets and indices, including the COVID Vulnerability and Recovery Index. Disability status for census tracts in LA County from the US Census American Communities Survey (ACS), 2020. Estimates are based on 2020 census tract boundaries, and tracts are joined to 2021 Supervisorial Districts, Service Planning Areas (SPA), and Countywide Statistical Areas (CSA). For more information about this dataset, please contact egis@isd.lacounty.gov

  13. l

    Lung Cancer Mortality

    • data.lacounty.gov
    • geohub.lacity.org
    • +2more
    Updated Dec 20, 2023
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    County of Los Angeles (2023). Lung Cancer Mortality [Dataset]. https://data.lacounty.gov/maps/lacounty::lung-cancer-mortality
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 20, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    Death rate has been age-adjusted by the 2000 U.S. standard population. Single-year data are only available for Los Angeles County overall, Service Planning Areas, Supervisorial Districts, City of Los Angeles overall, and City of Los Angeles Council Districts.Lung cancer is a leading cause of cancer-related death in the US. People who smoke have the greatest risk of lung cancer, though lung cancer can also occur in people who have never smoked. Most cases are due to long-term tobacco smoking or exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke. Cities and communities can take an active role in curbing tobacco use and reducing lung cancer by adopting policies to regulate tobacco retail; reducing exposure to secondhand smoke in outdoor public spaces, such as parks, restaurants, or in multi-unit housing; and improving access to tobacco cessation programs and other preventive services.For more information about the Community Health Profiles Data Initiative, please see the initiative homepage.

  14. l

    Income per Capita (census tract)

    • data.lacounty.gov
    • egis-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Oct 8, 2021
    + more versions
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    County of Los Angeles (2021). Income per Capita (census tract) [Dataset]. https://data.lacounty.gov/datasets/income-per-capita-census-tract
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 8, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    For source data: https://data.census.gov/cedsci/table?tid=ACSDP5Y2020.DP03. Layer published for the Equity Explorer, a web experience developed by the LA County CEO Anti-Racism, Diversity, and Inclusion (ARDI) initiative in collaboration with eGIS and ISD. Visit the Equity Explorer to explore Income and other equity related datasets and indices, including the COVID Vulnerability and Recovery Index. Income per capita for census tracts in LA County from the US Census American Communities Survey (ACS), 2020. Estimates are based on 2020 census tract boundaries, and tracts are joined to 2021 Supervisorial Districts, Service Planning Areas (SPA), and Countywide Statistical Areas (CSA). For more information about this dataset, please contact egis@isd.lacounty.gov

  15. l

    Homicide Rate

    • data.lacounty.gov
    • geohub.lacity.org
    • +2more
    Updated Dec 19, 2023
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    County of Los Angeles (2023). Homicide Rate [Dataset]. https://data.lacounty.gov/maps/lacounty::homicide-rate
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 19, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    This indicator is based on location of residence. Mortality rate has been age-adjusted to the 2000 U.S. standard population. ICD 10 codes used to identify homicides are X85-Y09, Y87.1, and U01-U02. Single-year data are only available for Los Angeles County overall, Service Planning Areas, Supervisorial Districts, City of Los Angeles overall, and City of Los Angeles Council Districts.Violence is a public health crisis in the US, with gun violence being a major driver. Almost three quarters of homicides involve firearms. In the US, the age-adjusted homicide rate from firearms is more than 20 times higher than in the European Union or in Australia. Significant disparities by age, sex, and race and ethnicity exist, with young adults ages 15-34 years, males, and Black individuals most disproportionately impacted. Comprehensive prevention strategies should work to address the underlying physical, social, economic, and structural conditions known to increase risk.For more information about the Community Health Profiles Data Initiative, please see the initiative homepage.

  16. l

    Violent Crime Rate

    • geohub.lacity.org
    Updated Dec 19, 2023
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    County of Los Angeles (2023). Violent Crime Rate [Dataset]. https://geohub.lacity.org/maps/409e28bd1a7e4ea6929fbb0fdb9cb5b9_0/about
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 19, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Los Angeles
    Area covered
    Description

    Serious violent crimes consist of Part 1 offenses as defined by the U.S. Department of Justice’s Uniform Reporting Statistics. These include murders, nonnegligent homicides, rapes (legacy and revised), robberies, and aggravated assaults. LAPD data were used for City of Los Angeles, LASD data were used for unincorporated areas and cities that contract with LASD for law enforcement services, and CA Attorney General data were used for all other cities with local police departments. This indicator is based on location of residence. Single-year data are only available for Los Angeles County overall, Service Planning Areas, Supervisorial Districts, City of Los Angeles overall, and City of Los Angeles Council Districts.Neighborhood violence and crime can have a harmful impact on all members of a community. Living in communities with high rates of violence and crime not only exposes residents to a greater personal risk of injury or death, but it can also render individuals more susceptible to many adverse health outcomes. People who are regularly exposed to violence and crime are more likely to suffer from chronic stress, depression, anxiety, and other mental health conditions. They are also less likely to be able to use their parks and neighborhoods for recreation and physical activity.For more information about the Community Health Profiles Data Initiative, please see the initiative homepage.

  17. Not seeing a result you expected?
    Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.

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County of Los Angeles (2024). LA County 2021 Redistricting Highlights [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/08bd6fa3633146bab713b72c989e29c7

LA County 2021 Redistricting Highlights

Explore at:
Dataset updated
May 21, 2024
Dataset authored and provided by
County of Los Angeles
Area covered
Description

This web map shows the major boundary differences of Los Angeles County 2021 Supervisorial District boundaries and 2011 supervisorial district boundaries.2021 Supervisorial District boundaries was adopted on December 15, 2021. 2011 Supervisorial District boundaries was adopted on September 27, 2011.How is this data created?This data is created by intersecting 2021 Supervisorial District boundary with 2011 Supervisorial District boundary and select only the major boundary change polygons.

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