This dataset contains information on all projects funded under the School Facility Program. The data is provided by the Office of Public School Construction under the authority of the Department of General Services. As staff to the State Allocation Board (SAB), the Office of Public School Construction (OPSC) implements and administers the $42 billion voter-approved school facilities construction program, known as the School Facility Program.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
The California Health and Human Services Agency (CHHS) has launched its Open Data Portal initiative in order to increase public access to one of the State’s most valuable assets – non-confidential health and human services data. Its goals are to spark innovation, promote research and economic opportunities, engage public participation in government, increase transparency, and inform decision-making. "Open Data" describes data that are freely available, machine-readable, and formatted according to national technical standards to facilitate visibility and reuse of published data.
This dataset contains numbers of COVID-19 outbreaks and associated cases, categorized by setting, reported to CDPH since January 1, 2021.
AB 685 (Chapter 84, Statutes of 2020) and the Cal/OSHA COVID-19 Emergency Temporary Standards (Title 8, Subchapter 7, Sections 3205-3205.4) required non-healthcare employers in California to report workplace COVID-19 outbreaks to their local health department (LHD) between January 1, 2021 – December 31, 2022. Beginning January 1, 2023, non-healthcare employer reporting of COVID-19 outbreaks to local health departments is voluntary, unless a local order is in place. More recent data collected without mandated reporting may therefore be less representative of all outbreaks that have occurred, compared to earlier data collected during mandated reporting. Licensed health facilities continue to be mandated to report outbreaks to LHDs.
LHDs report confirmed outbreaks to the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) via the California Reportable Disease Information Exchange (CalREDIE), the California Connected (CalCONNECT) system, or other established processes. Data are compiled and categorized by setting by CDPH. Settings are categorized by U.S. Census industry codes. Total outbreaks and cases are included for individual industries as well as for broader industrial sectors.
The first dataset includes numbers of outbreaks in each setting by month of onset, for outbreaks reported to CDPH since January 1, 2021. This dataset includes some outbreaks with onset prior to January 1 that were reported to CDPH after January 1; these outbreaks are denoted with month of onset “Before Jan 2021.” The second dataset includes cumulative numbers of COVID-19 outbreaks with onset after January 1, 2021, categorized by setting. Due to reporting delays, the reported numbers may not reflect all outbreaks that have occurred as of the reporting date; additional outbreaks may have occurred that have not yet been reported to CDPH.
While many of these settings are workplaces, cases may have occurred among workers, other community members who visited the setting, or both. Accordingly, these data do not distinguish between outbreaks involving only workers, outbreaks involving only residents or patrons, or outbreaks involving both.
Several additional data limitations should be kept in mind:
Outbreaks are classified as “Insufficient information” for outbreaks where not enough information was available for CDPH to assign an industry code.
Some sectors, particularly congregate residential settings, may have increased testing and therefore increased likelihood of outbreak recognition and reporting. As a result, in congregate residential settings, the number of outbreak-associated cases may be more accurate.
However, in most settings, outbreak and case counts are likely underestimates. For most cases, it is not possible to identify the source of exposure, as many cases have multiple possible exposures.
Because some settings have been at times been closed or open with capacity restrictions, numbers of outbreak reports in those settings do not reflect COVID-19 transmission risk.
The number of outbreaks in different settings will depend on the number of different workplaces in each setting. More outbreaks would be expected in settings with many workplaces compared to settings with few workplaces.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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The open data portal catalogue is a downloadable dataset containing some key metadata for the general datasets available on the Government of Canada's Open Data portal. Resource 1 is generated using the ckanapi tool (external link) Resources 2 - 8 are generated using the Flatterer (external link) utility. ###Description of resources: 1. Dataset is a JSON Lines (external link) file where the metadata of each Dataset/Open Information Record is one line of JSON. The file is compressed with GZip. The file is heavily nested and recommended for users familiar with working with nested JSON. 2. Catalogue is a XLSX workbook where the nested metadata of each Dataset/Open Information Record is flattened into worksheets for each type of metadata. 3. datasets metadata contains metadata at the dataset
level. This is also referred to as the package
in some CKAN documentation. This is the main
table/worksheet in the SQLite database and XLSX output. 4. Resources Metadata contains the metadata for the resources contained within each dataset. 5. resource views metadata contains the metadata for the views applied to each resource, if a resource has a view configured. 6. datastore fields metadata contains the DataStore information for CSV datasets that have been loaded into the DataStore. This information is displayed in the Data Dictionary for DataStore enabled CSVs. 7. Data Package Fields contains a description of the fields available in each of the tables within the Catalogue, as well as the count of the number of records each table contains. 8. data package entity relation diagram Displays the title and format for column, in each table in the Data Package in the form of a ERD Diagram. The Data Package resource offers a text based version. 9. SQLite Database is a .db
database, similar in structure to Catalogue. This can be queried with database or analytical software tools for doing analysis.
The California Health and Human Services Agency (CalHHS) has launched its Open Data Portal initiative in order to increase public access to one of the State’s most valuable assets – non-confidential health and human services data. Its goals are to spark innovation, promote research and economic opportunities, engage public participation in government, increase transparency, and inform decision-making. "Open Data" describes data that are freely available, machine-readable, and formatted according to national technical standards to facilitate visibility and reuse of published data. The portal offers access to standardized data that can be easily retrieved, combined, downloaded, sorted, searched, analyzed, redistributed and re-used by individuals, business, researchers, journalists, developers, and government to process, trend, and innovate. The CalHHS Open Data Handbook provides guidelines to identify, review, prioritize and prepare publishable CalHHS data for access by the public via the CalHHS Open Data Portal – with a foundational emphasis on value, quality, data and metadata standards, and governance. This handbook is meant to serve as an internal resource and is also freely offered to any party that may be interested in improving the general public’s online access to data and to provide an understanding of the processes by which CalHHS makes its publishable data tables available. The handbook focuses on general guidelines and thoughtful processes but also provides linked tools/resources that operationalize those processes. The CalHHS Open Data Handbook is based on and builds upon the New York State Open Data Handbook, and we would like to acknowledge and thank the New York staff who created that document and made it available for public use. The role of the California Health and Human Services Agency is to provide policy leadership and direction to the departments and programs it oversees, to reduce duplication and fragmentation and improve coordination among the departments, to ensure programmatic integrity, and to advance the Governor's priorities on health and human services issues. The Agency coordinates the administration of state and federal programs for public health, health care services, social services, public assistance, health planning and licensing, and rehabilitation. These programs touch the lives of millions of California's most needy and vulnerable residents. The Agency is responsible for balancing the twin imperatives of providing access to essential health and human services for California's most disadvantaged and at-risk residents and managing and controlling costs. The following Departments and Offices are under the direct supervision of the California Health and Human Services Agency: The Agency Secretary also serves as Chair of Covered California, the health benefit exchange established pursuant to the Affordable Care Act. The CalHHS Open Data initiative encourages entrepreneurs, and civic coders and developers to use CalHHS data to create applications, products and services to better the health and lives of Californians. We are eager to hear from you how we can improve the portal and answer your questions, please send us an email at [email protected].
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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The California System Performance Measures (CA SPMs) are a series of metrics developed by the California Interagency Council on Homelessness (Cal ICH), pursuant to Health and Safety Code §50220.7, that help the state and local jurisdictions assess their progress toward preventing, reducing, and ending homelessness. All measures except for Measure 1b are generated using data from the state’s Homelessness Data Integration System. Measure 1b and Point in Time (PIT) Count data are sourced from each Continuum of Care’s PIT Count. Measure 1b and PIT Count data are not shown for 2021 because of irregularities in that year’s counts. For more information about the measures and how they are calculated, please see the California System Performance Measures Guide and Glossary: https://www.bcsh.ca.gov/calich/documents/california_system_performance_measures_guide.pdf
For more information about Measure 1b and PIT Count data, please see the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s website: https://www.hudexchange.info/programs/hdx/pit-hic.
Universal Analytics data from Google Analytics for the CalHHS Open Data Portal. This data was captured using the depreciated Universal Analytics tool and is no longer available on the web via Google UI or Google APIs. It has been loaded here so that users and the metrics dashboard can access the data.
The following datasets are based on the children and youth (under age 21) beneficiary population and consist of aggregate Mental Health Service data derived from Medi-Cal claims, encounter, and eligibility systems. These datasets were developed in accordance with California Welfare and Institutions Code (WIC) § 14707.5 (added as part of Assembly Bill 470 on 10/7/17). Please contact BHData@dhcs.ca.gov for any questions or to request previous years’ versions of these datasets. Note: The Performance Dashboard AB 470 Report Application Excel tool development has been discontinued. Please see the Behavioral Health reporting data hub at https://behavioralhealth-data.dhcs.ca.gov/ for access to dashboards utilizing these datasets and other behavioral health data.
City of San José is committed to an open, honest, and effective government and strives to consistently meet the community’s expectations for excellent services in a positive and timely manner, and in full view of the public. With the advancement in information technologies and the increasing ability to share data more easily across multiple platforms and online, appropriate leveraging of these tools to make information accessible and usable by the public can help improve public service delivery and fuel entrepreneurship and innovation. The Open Data Portal serves as means to implement the City’s Open Data Policy and Open Data Community Architecture which is intended to help the City better utilize its data. Open Data is an important component of this commitment; through making its data publicly available and easily accessible, the City will empower the community to engage with government on a new level and stimulate new ideas, new services, and new economic opportunities. In addition, Open Data will provide a new platform to increase the sharing of information among City departments, improving the City’s ability to deliver services to the community efficiently and effectively. To help achieve these outcomes. To get started please go to the OpenGov Open Data Training page.
This dataset contains shapefile boundaries for CA State, counties and places from the US Census Bureau's 2023 MAF/TIGER database. Current geography in the 2023 TIGER/Line Shapefiles generally reflects the boundaries of governmental units in effect as of January 1, 2023.
Taxable Sales Small Citieshttps://cdtfa.ca.gov/dataportal/dataset.htm?url=TaxSalesByCityTaxable Sales - Large Citieshttps://cdtfa.ca.gov/dataportal/dataset.htm?url=TaxSales272LargestCitiesTaxable Sales, by Cityhttps://cdtfa.ca.gov/dataportal/dataset.htm?url=TaxSalesCRCityCounty
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This page contains the help documentation for the GIS Open Data Portal. Refer to https://gisdata-csj.opendata.arcgis.com/pages/help.
This dataset contains the records of all the flights in the Northern California TRACON. The data was provided by the aircraft noise abatement office (http://www.flyquietsfo.com/) of San Francisco International Airport. The data cover Jan-Mar 2006. It is organized by day and flight. Each record contains some information about the flight and a sequence of 3D position and estimated speed. This data contains thousands of trajectories that can be used for trajectory clustering. The data is used by the Aircraft Noise Abatement Office to analyze the trajectories of aircraft flying in and out SFO. The objective is to minimize the noise pollution due to aircraft in the San Francisco Bay Area The files have the extension "lt6" and are organized as follow, one file per day. line number & explaination 1 TRACK OPNUM (TRACK header word and operation number) 2 eventid (Corralation number) 3 trackstart date (in time since 1900, A8 version four year digit) 4 trackstart time HH:MM:SS 5 trackend time HH:MM:SS 6 airportid 7 ACID (FLIGHTNUM/TAILNUMBER) 8 owner name 9 aircrafttype 10 aircraft category 11 beacon 12 adflag 13 waypoint 14 other_port (dest/origin) 15 runwayname 16 min alt 17 max alt 18 min range 19 max range 20 Count of trackpoints (to follow) 21 x,y,z,v,t (all points is meters relative to MRP, velocity and time from start of track)
The following data is provided as a public service, for informational purposes only. This data should not be construed as legal advice. Users of this data should independently verify its determinations prior to taking any action under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) or any other law. The State of California makes no warranties as to accuracy of this data. General plan land use element data was collected from 532 of California's 539 jurisdictions. An effort was made to contact each jurisdiction in the state and request general plan data in whatever form available. In the event that general plan maps were not available in a GIS format, those maps were converted from PDF or image maps using geo-referencing techniques and then transposing map information to parcel geometries sourced from county assessor data. Collection efforts began in late 2021 and were mostly finished in late 2022. Some data has been updated in 2023. Sources and dates are documented in the "Source" and "Date" columns with more detail available in the accompanying sources table. Data from a CNRA funded project, performed at UC Davis was used for 7 jurisdictions that had no current general plan land use maps available. Information about that CNRA funded project is available here: https://databasin.org/datasets/8d5da7200f4c4c2e927dafb8931fe75dIndividual general plan maps were combined for this statewide dataset. As part of the aggregation process, contiguous areas with identical use designations, within jurisdictions, were merged or dissolved. Some features representing roads with right-of-way or Null zone designations were removed from this data. Features less than 4 square meters in area were also removed.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Building a comprehensive data inventory as required by section 6.3 of the Directive on Open Government: “Establishing and maintaining comprehensive inventories of data and information resources of business value held by the department to determine their eligibility and priority, and to plan for their effective release.” Creating a data inventory is among the first steps in identifying federal data that is eligible for release. Departmental data inventories has been published on the Open Government portal, Open.Canada.ca, so that Canadians can see what federal data is collected and have the opportunity to indicate what data is of most interest to them, helping departments to prioritize data releases based on both external demand and internal capacity. The objective of the inventory is to provide a landscape of all federal data. While it is recognized that not all data is eligible for release due to the nature of the content, departments are responsible for identifying and including all datasets of business values as part of the inventory exercise with the exception of datasets whose title contains information that should not be released to be released to the public due to security or privacy concerns. These titles have been excluded from the inventory. Departments were provided with an open data inventory template with standardized elements to populate, and upload in the metadata catalogue, the Open Government Registry. These elements are described in the data dictionary file. Departments are responsible for maintaining up-to-date data inventories that reflect significant additions to their data holdings. For purposes of this open data inventory exercise, a dataset is defined as: “An organized collection of data used to carry out the business of a department or agency, that can be understood alone or in conjunction with other datasets”. Please note that the Open Data Inventory is no longer being maintained by Government of Canada organizations and is therefore not being updated. However, we will continue to provide access to the dataset for review and analysis.
Open Database License (ODbL) v1.0https://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/
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By California Health and Human Services [source]
Welcome to the California Health and Human Services Agency's Open Data Portal! Here, you can explore and utilize information from one of the state's most valuable assets: the non-confidential data set of Medi-Cal Fee-for-Service (FFS) program providers.
This dataset provides insight into Medi-Cal FFS enrollment. The information was retrieved from the Provider Master File (PMF), which is maintained by the Provider Enrollment Division (PED). With this dataset, you will gain insights into provider number, legal name, type description, specialty description and other geographical data points such as county code, attention line address parts , landmark coordinate points (longitude/latitude) and more!
The goal with this Open Data Portal initiative is to empower Californians with:
- Increased public access to high quality health & human service data;
- Stemmed creativity & innovation in research;
- The ability to make informed decisions about our health & services providers;
- Transparency in government policy expenditure measures.
Our hope is that you'll use these tools for responsible data analytics exploration on not just Medi-Cal FFS provision but on any related subject matter that interest& benefit your community at large. Good luck & happy researching!
For more datasets, click here.
- 🚨 Your notebook can be here! 🚨!
- Creating a mobile application or website to help people easily and quickly find their nearest Medi-Cal FFS providers based on location, specialty and provider type.
- Developing analytics tools to help organizations understand the concentrations of providers across the state in order to inform decision making when considering regional expansion and improving service accessibility.
- Developing a tool that visualizes specialty diversity across the state to identify areas with low provider density while helping inform strategies aimed at increasing access to care for communities with high needs populations
If you use this dataset in your research, please credit the original authors. Data Source
License: Open Database License (ODbL) v1.0 - You are free to: - Share - copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format. - Adapt - remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially. - You must: - Give appropriate credit - Provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. - ShareAlike - You must distribute your contributions under the same license as the original. - Keep intact - all notices that refer to this license, including copyright notices. - No Derivatives - If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you may not distribute the modified material. - No additional restrictions - You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.
File: Profile_of_Enrolled_Medi-Cal_Fee-for-Service_FFS_Providers_as_of_May_1_2016.csv | Column name | Description | |:----------------------------|:---------------------------------------------------------------| | NPI | National Provider Identifier (Number) | | SERVICE LOCATION NUMBER | Unique identifier for the provider's service location (Number) | | LEGAL NAME | Legal name of the provider (Text) | | TYPE DESCRIPTION | Type of provider (Text) | | SPECIALTY DESCRIPTION | Specialty of the provider (Text) | | OUT OF STATE INDICATOR | Indicates if the provider is located out of state (Boolean) | | IN/OUT OF STATE | Indicates if the provider is located in or out of state (Text) | | COUNTY CODE | County code of the provider's service location (Number) | | COUNTY NAME | County name of the provider's service location (Text) | | ADDRESS ATTENTION | Attention line of the provider's address (Text) | | ADDRESS LINE 1 | First l...
CDTFA Data PortalTaxable Sales - Large Counties https://cdtfa.ca.gov/dataportal/dataset.htm?url=TaxSales36LargestCountiesTaxable Sales - Small Countieshttps://cdtfa.ca.gov/dataportal/dataset.htm?url=TaxSales22SmallestCountiesTaxable Sales by Countyhttps://www.cdtfa.ca.gov/dataportal/map.htm?url=TaxSalesByCounty
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Pollution Prevention (P2) Planning Notices published in the Canada Gazette under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (CEPA) legally require persons subject to the Notice to prepare and implement a pollution prevention plan in respect of a specified substance(s). Environment and Climate Change Canada receives P2 Notice reports which contain information on the P2 plans implemented by facilities as well as the results achieved. Information submitted is publicly available except for parts where confidentiality requests were accepted. The data for each P2 Planning Notice listed alphabetically below is provided in a csv format. Note that reports received for active P2 Planning Notices are searchable via the Online Search of the P2 Planning Reporting Tool.
The Katie A. Settlement Agreement requires the Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) to collect and post data used to evaluate utilization of services and timely access to appropriate care. These county datasets show services used by children and youth (under the age of 21) identified as Katie A. Subclass members and/or utilizing Katie A. specialty mental health services (Intensive Care Coordination, Intensive Home Based Services, and Therapeutic Foster Care). This data assists in evaluating each county’s progress with implementing.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
Vaccination data by California county. Updated daily.
Source: California Open Data (https://data.ca.gov/dataset/covid-19-vaccine-progress-dashboard-data/resource/c020ef6b-2116-4775-b11d-9df2875096ab). Code available: https://github.com/CityOfLosAngeles/covid19-indicators.
This dataset contains information on all projects funded under the School Facility Program. The data is provided by the Office of Public School Construction under the authority of the Department of General Services. As staff to the State Allocation Board (SAB), the Office of Public School Construction (OPSC) implements and administers the $42 billion voter-approved school facilities construction program, known as the School Facility Program.