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Sandy Springs City Limit
A rectangle with the Sandy Springs city limits extracted.
Sandy Springs City Limits approximate digital representation of corporate boundaries. This feature is for general reference only and does not substitute a survey or legal documents. For full legal description see the City Charter specifically, text hosted by Appendix A:"Beginning at the northwest corner of the City of Atlanta, as the boundaries of said city existed on January 1, 2005, at the point where the northerly city limit line of said city intersects the westerly county line of Fulton County and the Chattahoochee River, running thence generally easterly along the said northerly city limit line of the City of Atlanta, following the meanderings thereof, to the point where said line intersects the Fulton-DeKalb County line; run thence northerly, generally easterly, and generally northerly along the easterly county line of Fulton County to the point where the Fulton-Gwinnett County line intersects the Chattahoochee River; run thence generally west and southwest along the southern bank of said river, following the meanderings thereof, to the point of beginning. The corporate limits of the City of Sandy Springs shall also consist of properties, if any, annexed by local ordinance." - Appendix Acs
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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This ready-to-print map shows the proposed sidewalk projects only from the T-SPLOST program.On November 8, 2016, Fulton County voters, including residents of Sandy Springs, approved the Transportation Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax (T-SPLOST), a referendum to fund transportation improvements within the participating cities. In Sandy Springs, T-SPLOST passed with 56.7 percent of the vote.Beginning in April 2017, a 0.75 percent (3/4 of a cent) sales tax will be collected to fund the T-SPLOST transportation projects. An estimate $103.7 million over five years is expected to be raised for use in Sandy Springs for transportation improvements. Who pays the 0.75 percent tax? The sales tax will be paid by anyone - residents, visitors, businesses and tourists - who buys taxable products or services inside Fulton County, outside City of Atlanta limits. Where will the money be spent? The projects identified and approved by the City Council as part of the T-SPLOST initiative are listed below:Traffic Efficiency Improvements: Provides for local intersection and traffic efficiency upgrades throughout the city ($18,000,000)Perimeter Transit Last Mile Connectivity: Construct Perimeter Trails and acquire right-of-way for future high capacity transit linking the Perimeter CID and other alternative transportation options ($8,000,000)Sidewalk Program: Continue filling sidewalk gaps throughout Sandy Springs ($11,000,000)Johnson Ferry/Mt Vernon Efficiency Improvements: Construct dual roundabouts at Johnson Ferry Road and Mt Vernon Hwy intersections, sidewalks, and return streets to two-way traffic operations. ($26,000,000)Mt Vernon Multi use Path: Create path from City Springs to Sandy Springs MARTA ($11,000,000)Hammond Drive, Phase 1 Efficiency Improvements: Complete design for Hammond Drive project to include 4 lanes with sidewalks, bicycle lanes, and transit lanes, and acquire right-of-way ($16,000,000)SR 400 Trail System: Connect Path 400 Trail from terminus at Loridans Drive to I-285/SR400 interchange trail ($5,500,000)Roberts Drive Multi use Path: Roswell road to Island Ford Park ($5,500,000)Roadway Maintenance and Paving: Provide for paving and roadway maintenance throughout the city ($16,785,429)
description: These data were created for planimetric display and tax area analysis.Procedures_Used:The principal method of data entry used coordinate geometry software.Digitizing from paper maps and use of digital planimetric data were supplemental. Conversions, filling of gaps, georeferencing, reconciliations, and reformatting were often necessary to create a coherent database. Boundary updates are occasionally accepted from local GIS departments when the USTC has not received all relevant boundary change information through required channels. Updates have been made in this manner to Sandy, some Cache, Washington, Utah, Wasatch, and Carbon County cities.Revisions: Municipal boundaries are revised as documents are filed with the Lt. Governor's Office.Reviews_Applied_to_Data:Digital sources were visually compared with planimetric data. Digitized data were overlaid with source material and visually compared. Technical errors were also identified and corrected with ArcGIS Software.Notes: This metadata document contains a composite of information for alltiles in the library.Current thru Dec. 30, 2016; abstract: These data were created for planimetric display and tax area analysis.Procedures_Used:The principal method of data entry used coordinate geometry software.Digitizing from paper maps and use of digital planimetric data were supplemental. Conversions, filling of gaps, georeferencing, reconciliations, and reformatting were often necessary to create a coherent database. Boundary updates are occasionally accepted from local GIS departments when the USTC has not received all relevant boundary change information through required channels. Updates have been made in this manner to Sandy, some Cache, Washington, Utah, Wasatch, and Carbon County cities.Revisions: Municipal boundaries are revised as documents are filed with the Lt. Governor's Office.Reviews_Applied_to_Data:Digital sources were visually compared with planimetric data. Digitized data were overlaid with source material and visually compared. Technical errors were also identified and corrected with ArcGIS Software.Notes: This metadata document contains a composite of information for alltiles in the library.Current thru Dec. 30, 2016
Perimeter Community Improvement Districts
Approximate ZIP Code boundaries derived from running known locations of address data through a third party address coder, SmartyStreets, to derive USPS ZIP Codes. Area polygons are created using the Thiessen (Voronoi) polygons based on the ZIP code values. Updated in March, 2017.
These data were created for planimetric display and tax area analysis.Procedures_Used:The principal method of data entry used coordinate geometry software.Digitizing from paper maps and use of digital planimetric data were supplemental. Conversions, filling of gaps, georeferencing, reconciliations, and reformatting were often necessary to create a coherent database. Boundary updates are occasionally accepted from local GIS departments when the USTC has not received all relevant boundary change information through required channels. Updates have been made in this manner to Sandy, some Cache, Washington, Utah, Wasatch, and Carbon County cities.Revisions: Municipal boundaries are revised as documents are filed with the Lt. Governor's Office.Reviews_Applied_to_Data:Digital sources were visually compared with planimetric data. Digitized data were overlaid with source material and visually compared. Technical errors were also identified and corrected with ArcGIS Software.Notes: This metadata document contains a composite of information for alltiles in the library.Current thru March 31, 2014
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Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Sandy Springs City Limit