This dataset is a compilation of address point data for the City of Tempe. The dataset contains a point location, the official address (as defined by The Building Safety Division of Community Development) for all occupiable units and any other official addresses in the City. There are several additional attributes that may be populated for an address, but they may not be populated for every address. Contact: Lynn Flaaen-Hanna, Development Services Specialist Contact E-mail Link: Map that Lets You Explore and Export Address Data Data Source: The initial dataset was created by combining several datasets and then reviewing the information to remove duplicates and identify errors. This published dataset is the system of record for Tempe addresses going forward, with the address information being created and maintained by The Building Safety Division of Community Development.Data Source Type: ESRI ArcGIS Enterprise GeodatabasePreparation Method: N/APublish Frequency: WeeklyPublish Method: AutomaticData Dictionary
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
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damien-johnston/open-data-project dataset hosted on Hugging Face and contributed by the HF Datasets community
This dataset comes from the Community Survey questions relating to the Community Health & Well-Being performance measure: "With β10β representing the best possible life for you and β0β representing the worst, how would you say you personally feel you stand at this time?" and "With β10β representing the best possible life for you and β0β representing the worst, how do you think you will stand about five years from now?" β the results of both scores are then used to assess a Cantril Scale which is a way of assessing general life satisfaction. As per the Cantril Self-Anchoring Striving Scale the three categories of identification are as follows: Thriving β Respondents rate their current life as a 7 or higher AND their future life as an 8 or higher. Struggling β Respondents either rate their current life moderately (5 or 6) OR rate their future life moderately (5, 6 or 7) or negatively (0 to 4). Suffering β Respondents rate their current life negatively (0 to 4) AND their future life negatively (0 to 4). The survey is mailed to a random sample of households in the City of Tempe and has a 95% confidence level.This page provides data for the Community Health and Well-Being performance measure. The performance measure dashboard is available at 3.34 Community Health and Well-Being. Additional InformationSource: Community Attitude Survey (Vendor: ETC Institute)Contact: Adam SamuelsContact email: adam_samuels@tempe.govPreparation Method: Survey results from two questions are calculated to create a Cantril Scale value that falls into the categories of Thriving, Struggling, and Suffering.Publish Frequency: AnnuallyPublish Method: ManualData Dictionary
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Synthetic data 1: A network contains nine communities. The nodes insides the community are closely connected
Open Data Handbook for Tempe Open Data includes:IntroRoles and ResponsibilitiesData Management ProcessReferences
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
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DECD's listing of direct financial assistance to businesses from July 1, 2009 through June 30, 2024. New projects are usually added quarterly, but updates may be made on an ongoing basis.
Small Business Boost loan recipients can be found here: https://data.ct.gov/d/yk65-8y82
Community Connections Program: 100 Gigabit Speed (Google Fiber) Public Facilities administered through the City's Office of Telecom & Regulatory Affairs (TARA) and Google Fiber.
This table contains data from the community survey conducted as part of an Audit of the City's Cultural Centers. We surveyed members of the Austin community using a survey developed by the audit team. Survey questions generally asked respondents' opinions on cultural center programs, staff, fees, and facilities. The survey opened January 3 and closed January 27, 2020. Austin community members were invited to take the survey through social media outreach and direct email invitations. The survey and outreach materials were written in English and translated into Spanish, Vietnamese, and Simplified Chinese. A total of 1,330 community members responded to the survey. Respondents were asked only to respond for centers they had visited in the last two years and could respond for more than one center. The comments detailed in this table were in response to open-ended survey items that allowed respondents to give opinions or suggestions about each center's programming, fees, staff, and facilities. Any open-ended responses answered in Spanish, Vietnamese, or Chinese were translated prior to analysis. To gauge the general sentiment of the responses, each was categorized as "Positive," "Negative," "Suggestion," or "N/A." During analysis, some comments were deemed more relevant to other open-ended survey items than the items for which they were originally written. These responses were re-assigned to the survey items that more closely aligned with their subject.
Community Facilities Districts (CFDs) in the City of Temecula.
Housing Problems by Type of Issue and Community, 2019
This public feature service is maintained for the Nashua Regional Planning Commission's (NRPC) member municipalities, their stakeholders, and the wider GIS community. The service contains the most frequently-requested, general-purpose GIS basemap datasets that are originated and maintained by NRPC. The service can be used by any software that can ingest an ESRI rest endpoint, including ArcGIS Desktop, ArcGIS Pro, and ArcGIS Online.Edits to these datasets are made in NRPC's on-premise GIS database on an ongoing basis; online published data are refreshed weekly through an automatic script.Each of the sublayers is regional in nature; i.e., the geographic coverage includes the entire 13-community region of NRPC. For convenience, NRPC has also published community-specific hosted feature views from this feature service.Non-GIS users are invited to browse the data in MapGeo, NRPC's interactive parcel viewer. Please contact Sara Siskavich, NRPC GIS Manager, with any questions.Data DownloadsUse the following links to download the data from this service in a variety of ESRI and open formats.Town BoundariesParcelsTrail Parking AreasPublic TrailsConserved LandZoningCAMA (assessing data)
These indicators are presented by Public Health β Seattle & King County, in conjunction with the King County Hospitals for a Healthier Community (HHC). The data offer a comprehensive overview of demographics, health, and health behaviors among King County residents.
Users can search by key word or topic area to filter the table of contents displayed below. After clicking on an indicator, a summary tab will open and users can click on additional tabs to explore data analyzed by demographic characteristics, see how rates have changed over time, and view data for cities/neighborhoods. Most indicators are interactive and users can hover over maps or charts to find more information.
The data presented on this website may be reproduced without permission. Please use the following citation when reproducing: "Retrieved (date) from Public Health β Seattle & King County, Community Health Indicators. www.kingcounty.gov/chi"
In 1991, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) began a study of more than 50 major river basins across the Nation as part of the National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) project of the National Water-Quality Program. One of the major goals of the NAWQA project is to determine how water-quality and ecological conditions change over time. To support that goal, long-term consistent and comparable ecological monitoring has been conducted on streams and rivers throughout the Nation. Fish, invertebrate, and diatom data collected as part of the NAWQA program were retrieved from the USGS Aquatic Bioassessment database for use in trend analysis. Ultimately, these data will provide insight into how natural features and human activities have contributed to changes in ecological condition over time in the Nationβs streams and rivers. This USGS data release contains all of the input and output files necessary to reproduce the results of the ecological trend analysis described in the associated U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report. Data preparation for input to the model is also fully described in the above mentioned report.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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City of Tempe Open Data Terms of Use document includes:Terms of UseData Rights and UsageSecondary UseRight to LimitChangesModeration NoticeDisclaimer of WarrantiesLimitations on LiabilityNo Waiver Rights
The General Offense Crime Report Dataset includes criminal and city code violation offenses which document the scope and nature of each offense or information gathering activity. It is used to computate the Uniform Crime Report Index as reported to the Federal Bureau of Investigation and for local crime reporting purposes.Contact E-mailLink: N/AData Source: Versaterm Informix RMS \Data Source Type: Informix and/or SQL ServerPreparation Method: Preparation Method: Automated View pulled from SQL Server and published as hosted resource onto ArcGIS OnlinePublish Frequency: WeeklyPublish Method: AutomaticData Dictionary
New York City Population By Community Districts
The data was collected from Census Bureaus' Decennial data dissemination (SF1) for the years 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000 and 2010.
Compiled by the Population Division β New York City Department of City Planning
he Austin Police Department has launched the Community Connect website, hosted on the City of Austin Open Data Portal. This platform serves as a centralized hub for information on various sectors of the Austin Police Department, providing community members and analysts with timely, reliable, and well-documented data on policing activities.
Miscellaneous Reports from the 2014 American Community Survey Report
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Office of Aging Lead Agency Service Boundary. The dataset contains service boundaries and attributes of lead agencies funded by the DC Office of Aging, created as part of the DC Geographic Information System (DC GIS) for the D.C. Office of the Chief Technology Officer (OCTO) and participating D.C. government agencies. A database provided by the Office of Aging identified Lead Agency service boundaries. Lead Agencies are comprehensive service-delivery organizations that plan and deliver direct services to the District''s elderly residents and their caregivers.
This dataset is a compilation of address point data for the City of Tempe. The dataset contains a point location, the official address (as defined by The Building Safety Division of Community Development) for all occupiable units and any other official addresses in the City. There are several additional attributes that may be populated for an address, but they may not be populated for every address. Contact: Lynn Flaaen-Hanna, Development Services Specialist Contact E-mail Link: Map that Lets You Explore and Export Address Data Data Source: The initial dataset was created by combining several datasets and then reviewing the information to remove duplicates and identify errors. This published dataset is the system of record for Tempe addresses going forward, with the address information being created and maintained by The Building Safety Division of Community Development.Data Source Type: ESRI ArcGIS Enterprise GeodatabasePreparation Method: N/APublish Frequency: WeeklyPublish Method: AutomaticData Dictionary