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TwitterSacramento city council district boundaries adopted on December 16, 2021.
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TwitterData updates include: July 8, 2019 as a result of the Panhandle annexation (Sacramento Local Agency Formation Commission Certificate of Completion LAFC#02-18/City Resolution No. 2018-0281); Aspen 1 annexation boundary changes on January 17, 2019; Beach Lake Road annexation boundary changes on January 12, 2016; The Redistricting process in 2011 and effective October 6, 2011. Contact GIS at: sacgis@cityofsacramento.org
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TwitterThis dataset represents all Historic Districts adopted by Sacramento City Council. Contact GIS at: sacgis@cityofsacramento.org
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TwitterCity Council districts in the City of Elk Grove.
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TwitterCity boundaries of all incorporated cities and towns within the SACOG region. Not Legal Boundaries, used for cartographic purposes only. Mapped to align with county parcels and county boundaries as provided by the county. County boundaries within the SACOG region. Not Legal Boundaries, used for cartographic purposes only. Mapped to align with county parcels and county boundaries as provided by the county.Current as of August 2025
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TwitterThe annexation data set contains all of the annexations, detachments, land grants, additions, consolidations, subtractions, reorganizations, and relocations of the city boundary since 1849. It is updated from council approved ordinances and resolutions and coordination with LAFCo. Updates to boundary data set are updated on a regular basis to reflect adjustments to base and re-interpretations of legal descriptions.
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TwitterAreas for further study to identify the best connections to complete the trail network. Our GIS data is not to survey precision. Boundaries for Local Connection Study Areas (LCSAs) are not meant to align with property lines or any other delineation, physical or administrative. They are general areas and should be displayed as such.
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TwitterThis data set is to display council districts in Buena Park.Citizens elect a five member City Council on a nonpartisan basis for staggered four-year terms. Municipal elections are held on the first Tuesday in November on even numbered years. Because Council terms overlap, three positions are open at one election and two positions are open at the next election two years later. Members elected to serve on the Council must be registered voters and City residents. Annually, the City Council elects one of its members to serve as Mayor and another to serve as Mayor Pro Tempore. The Mayor is the Presiding Officer at City Council meetings. Additionally, he or she makes committee assignments and represents the City at official functions. The Mayor Pro Tempore assumes the duties of the Mayor in his or her absence. The City Council Members are elected officers identified in Government Code Section 87200 and file statements of economic interests with the City Clerk's office. Copies of the statements of economic interests filed by the above elected officers may be obtained by visiting the offices of the Fair Political Practices Commission (FPPC) or the City Clerk. The physical address of the FPPC is 428 J Street, Suite 620, Sacramento, California 95814. The physical address of the City Clerk's office is 6650 Beach Boulevard, Buena Park, California 90621. The statements of economic interests for some state and local government agency elected officers may be available in electronic format on the FPPC's website at http://www.fppc.ca.gov/.
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TwitterSACOG Region : El Dorado, Placer, Sacramento, Sutter, Yolo, and Yuba Counties in California.The TIGER/Line Files are shapefiles and related database files (.dbf) that are an extract of selected geographic and cartographic information from the U.S. Census Bureau's Master Address File / Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (MAF/TIGER) Database (MTDB). The MTDB represents a seamless national file with no overlaps or gaps between parts, however, each TIGER/Line File is designed to stand alone as an independent data set, or they can be combined to cover the entire nation. Census Blocks are statistical areas bounded on all sides by visible features, such as streets, roads, streams, and railroad tracks, and/or by nonvisible boundaries such as city, town, township, and county limits, and short line-of-sight extensions of streets and roads. Blocks are the smallest geographic areas for which the Census Bureau publishes data from the decennial census. A block may consist of one or more faces. Block Groups are the first level of Block aggregation.
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TwitterSACOG Regional Conservation Lands obtained from the California Protected Areas DatabaseVersion 2024b CPAD 2024b Database ManualSACOG provides this data on behalf of the GreenInfo Network.CPAD is made available without charge for a wide range of uses, for example, use by government agencies in planning and operations, use by private consultants in the development of plans and analyses, use by non-profit organizations and educational institutions for strategy, research, planning, management and other functions. This use includes the ability of agencies, organizations, individuals and businesses to distribute free of any charges copies of the data and to use the data on computer networks.The Regional Parks and Open Space layer represents protected land in the six-county SACOG region. This includes properties protected for preservation of natural or historic features and recreational lands. These may be under the management of government entities, non-governmental organizations, or private entities. Data ranges from street landscaping buffer to small urban parks to large national parks and forests. Every attempt has been made to align features to county assessor parcel boundaries, though in some instances the preserved area is not all of the parcel that contains it. Some of the data originated with the California Protected Areas Database (CPAD), but more features have been added based on city, county, and special district information for parks and recreational spaces, land trust acquisitions, and data from state and national government agencies.Features are described by access level (public, limited, restricted, none, etc) to the best of our ability to determine it, primary use (PRIM_USE) and secondary use (Type), manager, name and label. Note that the private or public owner of the preserved land is not listed, but rather only the entity managing it. In most cases, these are the same. Some - the American River Parkway, for example - are managed more locally, though the owner may be a state or federal agency. Additional fields include booleans for park (developed/maintained) or open space (undeveloped/wild), descriptors of the managing agency, city in which it is located, and acreage. New in this update are planned parks and greenbelts. These are only included from areas where the information could be found in parcel layers or in planning documents. These are most easily located (or excluded, if that is the goal) by searching in the ACCESS_TYP/A
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TwitterThis data originated from the SACOG Regional Disadvantaged Community 2016 data, and was amended through Council Member meetings. The data outlines the City of Sacramento’s shared-rideable opportunity areas where 20% of a shared-rideable business’ fleet must be deployed each morning. For more details, please refer to City Ordinance OR2019-0007. For more information about the city's Shared Rideable Program, please visit the program's webpage.
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TwitterSacramento city council district boundaries adopted on December 16, 2021.