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This resource contains a polyline shapefile of all Utah Streams. The associated data was pulled from the Utah GIS portal.
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Last Update: 08/29/2024The statewide roads dataset is a multi-purpose statewide roads dataset for cartography and range based-address location. This dataset is also used as the base geometry for deriving the GIS-representation of UDOT's highway linear referencing system (LRS). A network analysis dataset for route-finding can also be derived from this dataset. This dataset utilizes a data model based on Next-Generation 911 standards and the Federal Highway Administration's All Roads Network Of Linear-referenced Data (ARNOLD) reporting requirements for state DOTs. UGRC adopted this data model on September 13th, 2017.The statewide roads dataset is maintained by UGRC in partnership with local governments, the Utah 911 Committee, and UDOT. This dataset is updated monthly with Davis, Salt Lake, Utah, Washington and Weber represented every month, along with additional counties based on an annual update schedule. UGRC obtains the data from the authoritative data source (typically county agencies), projects the data and attributes into the current data model, spatially assigns polygon-based fields based on the appropriate SGID boundary, and then standardizes the attribute values to ensure statewide consistency. UGRC also generates a UNIQUE_ID field based on the segment's location in the US National Grid, with the street name then tacked on. The UNIQUE_ID field is static and is UGRC's current, ad hoc solution to a persistent global id. More information about the data model can be found here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1jQ_JuRIEtzxj60F0FAGmdu5JrFpfYBbSt3YzzCjxpfI/edit#gid=811360546 More information about the data model transition can be found here: https://gis.utah.gov/major-updates-coming-to-roads-data-model/We are currently working with US Forest Service to improve the Forest Service roads in this dataset, however, for the most up-to-date and complete set of USFS roads, please visit their data portal where you can download the "National Forest System Roads" dataset.More information can be found on the UGRC data page for this layer:https://gis.utah.gov/data/transportation/roads-system/
The State of Utah, including the Utah Automated Geographic Reference Center, Utah Geological Survey, and the Utah Division of Emergency Management, along with local and federal partners, including Salt Lake County and local cities, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, have funded and collected over 8380 km2 (3236 mi2) of high-resolution (0.5 or 1 meter) Lidar data across the state since 2011, in support of a diverse set of flood mapping, geologic, transportation, infrastructure, solar energy, and vegetation projects. The datasets include point cloud, first return digital surface model (DSM), and bare-earth digital terrain/elevation model (DEM) data, along with appropriate metadata (XML, project tile indexes, and area completion reports).
This 0.5-meter 2013-2014 Wasatch Front dataset includes most of the Salt Lake and Utah Valleys (Utah), and the Wasatch (Utah and Idaho), and West Valley fault zones (Utah).
Other recently acquired State of Utah data include the 2011 Utah Geological Survey Lidar dataset covering Cedar and Parowan Valleys, the east shore/wetlands of Great Salt Lake, the Hurricane fault zone, the west half of Ogden Valley, North Ogden, and part of the Wasatch Plateau in Utah.
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Water use and supply data for 2022 joined to spatial boundaries. GPCD = Gallons Per Capita Day or Gallons Per Person Per Day. Supply and Use numbers are in Acre Feet Per Year (ACFT).This database contains municipal, institutional, commercial and industrial water use data gathered by the Utah Division of Water Rights for the 2022 calendar year. The Utah Division of Water Resources has analyzed water use data every five years since 1990; however, since 2015 the division uses a significantly different methodological and data accuracy system.The updated and improved methodology is based on recommendations from a 2015 Legislative Audit, 2017 Legislative Audit Update and a 2018 third party analysis of our processes. All recommendations necessary for this data release have been implemented. Changes in recommended secondary water use estimate inputs, as well as the transfer of second homes from the commercial category to the residential category, are examples of updates that impact categorical or total use estimates.While we are encouraged by the improvements, these changes make comparing the 2022 numbers to past water use data before 2015 problematic due to the significant methodology differences. As a result, we will be using the 2015 data as the new baseline for comparison and planning moving forward. The audit reports and third party recommendations can be found at: https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/pages/municipal-and-industrial.Likewise, comparisons from region to region within Utah are problematic due to differences in climate, number of vacation homes and other factors. Comparisons between Utah’s water use numbers and data from other states have little value given there is no nationally consistent methodology standard for analyzing and reporting water use numbers.It should be noted that administrative processes were changed in 2016 to ensure community water system data corrections are updated in the Utah Division of Water Rights’ database and website. These updated processes are included in the 2022 data.Utah’s Open Water Data Portal can be found at https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/. The division believes that data accessibility and transparency is vital as water decisions become more complicated and critical.
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Update information can be found within the layer’s attributes and in a table on the Utah Parcel Data webpage under Basic Parcels."Database containing parcel boundary, parcel identifier, parcel address, owner type, and county recorder contact information" - HB113. The intent of the bill was to not include any attributes that the counties rely on for data sales. If you want other attributes associated with the parcels you need to contact the county recorder.Users should be aware the owner type field 'OWN_TYPE' in the parcel polygons is a very generalized ownership type (Federal, Private, State, Tribal). It is populated with the value of the 'OWNER' field where the parcel's centroid intersects the CADASTRE.LandOwnership polygon layer.This dataset is a snapshot in time and may not be the most current. For the most current data contact the county recorder.
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Last Update: 02/04/2025The statewide roads dataset is a multi-purpose statewide roads dataset for cartography and range based-address location. This dataset is also used as the base geometry for deriving the GIS-representation of UDOT's highway linear referencing system (LRS). A network analysis dataset for route-finding can also be derived from this dataset. This dataset utilizes a data model based on Next-Generation 911 standards and the Federal Highway Administration's All Roads Network Of Linear-referenced Data (ARNOLD) reporting requirements for state DOTs. UGRC adopted this data model on September 13th, 2017.The statewide roads dataset is maintained by UGRC in partnership with local governments, the Utah 911 Committee, and UDOT. This dataset is updated monthly with Davis, Salt Lake, Utah, Washington and Weber represented every month, along with additional counties based on an annual update schedule. UGRC obtains the data from the authoritative data source (typically county agencies), projects the data and attributes into the current data model, spatially assigns polygon-based fields based on the appropriate SGID boundary, and then standardizes the attribute values to ensure statewide consistency. UGRC also generates a UNIQUE_ID field based on the segment's location in the US National Grid, with the street name then tacked on. The UNIQUE_ID field is static and is UGRC's current, ad hoc solution to a persistent global id. More information about the data model can be found here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1jQ_JuRIEtzxj60F0FAGmdu5JrFpfYBbSt3YzzCjxpfI/edit#gid=811360546 More information about the data model transition can be found here: https://gis.utah.gov/major-updates-coming-to-roads-data-model/We are currently working with US Forest Service to improve the Forest Service roads in this dataset, however, for the most up-to-date and complete set of USFS roads, please visit their data portal where you can download the "National Forest System Roads" dataset.More information can be found on the UGRC data page for this layer:https://gis.utah.gov/data/transportation/roads-system/
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Water use and supply data for 2019 joined to spatial boundaries. GPCD = Gallons Per Capita Day or Gallons Per Person Per Day. Supply and Use numbers are in Acre Feet Per Year (ACFT).This database contains municipal, institutional, commercial and industrial water use data gathered by the Utah Division of Water Rights for the 2019 calendar year. The Utah Division of Water Resources has analyzed water use data every five years since 1990; however, since 2015 the division uses a significantly different methodological and data accuracy system.The updated and improved methodology is based on recommendations from a 2015 Legislative Audit, 2017 Legislative Audit Update and a 2018 third party analysis of our processes. All recommendations necessary for this data release have been implemented. Changes in recommended secondary water use estimate inputs, as well as the transfer of second homes from the commercial category to the residential category, are examples of updates that impact categorical or total use estimates.While we are encouraged by the improvements, these changes make comparing the 2019 numbers to past water use data before 2015 problematic due to the significant methodology differences. As a result, we will be using the 2015 data as the new baseline for comparison and planning moving forward. The audit reports and third party recommendations can be found at: https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/pages/municipal-and-industrial.Likewise, comparisons from region to region within Utah are problematic due to differences in climate, number of vacation homes and other factors. Comparisons between Utah’s water use numbers and data from other states have little value given there is no nationally consistent methodology standard for analyzing and reporting water use numbers.It should be noted that administrative processes were changed in 2016 to ensure community water system data corrections are updated in the Utah Division of Water Rights’ database and website. These updated processes are included in the 2019 data.Utah’s Open Water Data Portal can be found at https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/. The division believes that data accessibility and transparency is vital as water decisions become more complicated and critical.
Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
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Water use and supply data for 2018 joined to spatial boundaries. GPCD = Gallons Per Capita Day or Gallons Per Person Per Day. Supply and Use numbers are in Acre Feet Per Year (ACFT).This database contains municipal, institutional, commercial and industrial water use data gathered by the Utah Division of Water Rights for the 2018 calendar year. The Utah Division of Water Resources has analyzed water use data every five years since 1990; however, since 2015 the division uses a significantly different methodological and data accuracy system.The updated and improved methodology is based on recommendations from a 2015 Legislative Audit, 2017 Legislative Audit Update and a 2018 third party analysis of our processes. All recommendations necessary for this data release have been implemented. Changes in recommended secondary water use estimate inputs, as well as the transfer of second homes from the commercial category to the residential category, are examples of updates that impact categorical or total use estimates.While we are encouraged by the improvements, these changes make comparing the 2018 numbers to past water use data before 2015 problematic due to the significant methodology differences. As a result, we will be using the 2015 data as the new baseline for comparison and planning moving forward. The audit reports and third party recommendations can be found at: https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/pages/municipal-and-industrial.Likewise, comparisons from region to region within Utah are problematic due to differences in climate, number of vacation homes and other factors. Comparisons between Utah’s water use numbers and data from other states have little value given there is no nationally consistent methodology standard for analyzing and reporting water use numbers.It should be noted that administrative processes were changed in 2016 to ensure community water system data corrections are updated in the Utah Division of Water Rights’ database and website. These updated processes are included in the 2018 data.Utah’s Open Water Data Portal can be found at https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/. The division believes that data accessibility and transparency is vital as water decisions become more complicated and critical.
Mobile Map Packages (MMPK’s) can be used in the ESRI Field Maps app (no login required), either by direct download in the Field Maps app or by sideloading from your PC. They can also be used in desktop applications that support MMPK’s such as ArcGIS Pro, and ArcGIS Navigator. MMPK’s will expire quarterly and have a warning for the user at that time but will still function afterwards. They are updated quarterly to ensure you have the most up to date data possible. These mobile map packages include the following national datasets along with others: Surface Management Agency, Public Land Survey System (PLSS), BLM Recreation Sites, National Conservation Lands, ESRI’s Navigation Basemap and Vector Tile Package. Last updated 20250321. Contact jlzimmer@blm.gov with any questions.
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Water use and supply data for 2016 joined to spatial boundaries. GPCD = Gallons Per Capita Day or Gallons Per Person Per Day. Supply and Use numbers are in Acre Feet Per Year (ACFT).This database contains municipal, institutional, commercial and industrial water use data gathered by the Utah Division of Water Rights for the 2016 calendar year. The Utah Division of Water Resources has analyzed water use data every five years since 1990; however, since 2015 the division uses a significantly different methodological and data accuracy system.The updated and improved methodology is based on recommendations from a 2015 Legislative Audit, 2017 Legislative Audit Update and a 2018 third party analysis of our processes. All recommendations necessary for this data release have been implemented. Changes in recommended secondary water use estimate inputs, as well as the transfer of second homes from the commercial category to the residential category, are examples of updates that impact categorical or total use estimates.While we are encouraged by the improvements, these changes make comparing the 2016 numbers to past water use data before 2015 problematic due to the significant methodology differences. As a result, we will be using the 2015 data as the new baseline for comparison and planning moving forward. The audit reports and third party recommendations can be found at: https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/pages/municipal-and-industrial.Likewise, comparisons from region to region within Utah are problematic due to differences in climate, number of vacation homes and other factors. Comparisons between Utah’s water use numbers and data from other states have little value given there is no nationally consistent methodology standard for analyzing and reporting water use numbers.It should be noted that administrative processes were changed in 2016 to ensure community water system data corrections are updated in the Utah Division of Water Rights’ database and website. These updated processes are included in the 2016 data.Utah’s Open Water Data Portal can be found at https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/. The division believes that data accessibility and transparency is vital as water decisions become more complicated and critical.
Events are symbolized by their Seismic Magnitude regardless of age.
This map displays the forecasted wind gust over the next 72 hours across the contiguous United States. Wind Gust is the maximum 3-second wind speed (in knots) forecast to occur within a 2-minute interval at a height of 10 meters Above Ground Level (AGL). Wind gust forecasts are valid at the top of the indicated hour. Data are updated hourly from the National Digital Forecast Database (NDFD) produced by the National Weather Service.Where is the data coming from?The National Digital Forecast Database (NDFD) was designed to provide access to weather forecasts in digital form from a central location. The NDFD produces gridded forecasts of sensible weather elements. NDFD contains a seamless mosaic of digital forecasts from National Weather Service (NWS) field offices working in collaboration with the National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP). All of these organizations are under the administration of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Source: https://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov/SL.us008001/ST.opnl/DF.gr2/DC.ndfd/AR.conus/VP.001-003/ds.wgust.binWhere can I find other NDFD data?The Source data is downloaded and parsed using the Aggregated Live Feeds methodology to return information that can be served through ArcGIS Server as a map service or used to update Hosted Feature Services in Online or Enterprise.What can you do with this layer?This map service is suitable for data discovery and visualization. Identify features by clicking on the map to reveal the pre-configured pop-ups. View the time-enabled data using the time slider by Enabling Time Animation.This map is provided for informational purposes and is not monitored 24/7 for accuracy and currency.If you would like to be alerted to potential issues or simply see when this Service will update next, please visit our Live Feed Status Page!
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Water use and supply data for 2017 joined to spatial boundaries. GPCD = Gallons Per Capita Day or Gallons Per Person Per Day. Supply and Use numbers are in Acre Feet Per Year (ACFT).This database contains municipal, institutional, commercial and industrial water use data gathered by the Utah Division of Water Rights for the 2017 calendar year. The Utah Division of Water Resources has analyzed water use data every five years since 1990; however, since 2015 the division uses a significantly different methodological and data accuracy system.The updated and improved methodology is based on recommendations from a 2015 Legislative Audit, 2017 Legislative Audit Update and a 2018 third party analysis of our processes. All recommendations necessary for this data release have been implemented. Changes in recommended secondary water use estimate inputs, as well as the transfer of second homes from the commercial category to the residential category, are examples of updates that impact categorical or total use estimates.While we are encouraged by the improvements, these changes make comparing the 2017 numbers to past water use data before 2015 problematic due to the significant methodology differences. As a result, we will be using the 2015 data as the new baseline for comparison and planning moving forward. The audit reports and third party recommendations can be found at: https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/pages/municipal-and-industrial.Likewise, comparisons from region to region within Utah are problematic due to differences in climate, number of vacation homes and other factors. Comparisons between Utah’s water use numbers and data from other states have little value given there is no nationally consistent methodology standard for analyzing and reporting water use numbers.It should be noted that administrative processes were changed in 2016 to ensure community water system data corrections are updated in the Utah Division of Water Rights’ database and website. These updated processes are included in the 2017 data.Utah’s Open Water Data Portal can be found at https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/. The division believes that data accessibility and transparency is vital as water decisions become more complicated and critical.
Visually prepared Wind Force Probability (120 Hour Forecast) for wind speeds of 64 knots or greater (Hurricane Force Winds).
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Water use and supply data for 2022 joined to spatial boundaries. GPCD = Gallons Per Capita Day or Gallons Per Person Per Day. Supply and Use numbers are in Acre Feet Per Year (ACFT).This database contains municipal, institutional, commercial and industrial water use data gathered by the Utah Division of Water Rights for the 2022 calendar year. The Utah Division of Water Resources has analyzed water use data every five years since 1990; however, since 2015 the division uses a significantly different methodological and data accuracy system.The updated and improved methodology is based on recommendations from a 2015 Legislative Audit, 2017 Legislative Audit Update and a 2018 third party analysis of our processes. All recommendations necessary for this data release have been implemented. Changes in recommended secondary water use estimate inputs, as well as the transfer of second homes from the commercial category to the residential category, are examples of updates that impact categorical or total use estimates.While we are encouraged by the improvements, these changes make comparing the 2022 numbers to past water use data before 2015 problematic due to the significant methodology differences. As a result, we will be using the 2015 data as the new baseline for comparison and planning moving forward. The audit reports and third party recommendations can be found at: https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/pages/municipal-and-industrial.Likewise, comparisons from region to region within Utah are problematic due to differences in climate, number of vacation homes and other factors. Comparisons between Utah’s water use numbers and data from other states have little value given there is no nationally consistent methodology standard for analyzing and reporting water use numbers.It should be noted that administrative processes were changed in 2016 to ensure community water system data corrections are updated in the Utah Division of Water Rights’ database and website. These updated processes are included in the 2022 data.Utah’s Open Water Data Portal can be found at https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/. The division believes that data accessibility and transparency is vital as water decisions become more complicated and critical.
This map contains continuously updated US tornado reports, wind storm reports and hail storm reports.
This map contains continuously updated U.S. tornado reports, wind storm reports and hail storm reports. Click each feature to receive information about the specific location and read a short description about the issue.Now contains ALL available Incident Report types, for a total of 15, not just Hail; Wind; and Tornados.See new layer for details or Feature Layer Item with exclusive Past 24-Hour ALL Storm Reports Layer.Each layer is updated 4 times hourly from data provided by NOAA’s National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center.A full archive of storm events can be accessed from the NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information.SourceNOAA Storm Prediction Center https://www.spc.noaa.gov/climo/reportsNOAA ALL Storm Reports layer https://www.spc.noaa.gov/exper/reportsSample DataSee Sample Layer Item for sample data during inactive periods!Update FrequencyThe service is updated every 15 minutes using the Aggregated Live Feeds MethodologyArea CoveredCONUS (Contiguous United States)What can you do with this layer?This map service is suitable for data discovery and visualization.Change the symbology of each layer using single or bi-variate smart mapping. For instance, use size or color to indicate the intensity of a tornado.Click each feature to receive information about the specific location and read a short description about the issue.Query the attributes to show only specific event types or locations.Revisions:Aug 10, 2021: Updated Classic Layers to use new Symbols. Corrected Layer Order Presentation. Updated Thumbnail.Aug 8, 2021: Update to layer-popups, correcting link URLs. Expanded length of 'Comment' fields to 1kb of text. New Layer added that includes ALL available Incident Types and Age in 'Hours Old'.This map is provided for informational purposes and is not monitored 24/7 for accuracy and currency.If you would like to be alerted to potential issues or simply see when this service will update next, please visit our Live Feed Status Page.
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Water use and supply data for 2015 joined to spatial boundaries. GPCD = Gallons Per Capita Day or Gallons Per Person Per Day. Supply and Use numbers are in Acre Feet Per Year (ACFT).This database contains municipal, institutional, commercial and industrial water use data gathered by the Utah Division of Water Rights for the 2015 calendar year. The Utah Division of Water Resources has analyzed water use data every five years since 1990; however, this new 2015 dataset marks a significant methodologic and data accuracy milestone.The updated and improved methodology is based on recommendations from a 2015 Legislative Audit, 2017 Legislative Audit Update and a 2018 third party analysis of our processes. All recommendations necessary for this data release have been implemented. Changes in recommended secondary water use estimate inputs, as well as the transfer of second homes from the commercial category to the residential category, are examples of updates that impact categorical or total use estimates.While we are encouraged by the improvements, these changes make comparing the 2015 numbers to past water use data problematic due to the significant methodology differences. As a result, we will be using the 2015 data as the new baseline for comparison and planning moving forward. The audit reports and third party recommendations can be found at: https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/pages/municipal-and-industrial.Likewise, comparisons from region to region within Utah are problematic due to differences in climate, number of vacation homes and other factors. Comparisons between Utah’s water use numbers and data from other states have little value given there is no nationally consistent methodology standard for analyzing and reporting water use numbers.It should be noted that administrative processes were changed in 2016 to ensure community water system data corrections are updated in the Utah Division of Water Rights’ database and website; however, these updated processes did not occur for the 2015 data. As a result, the data released in this database will often differ from what is reflected on the Utah Division of Water Rights’ website. That said, this data underwent both legislative auditor and third party review, and our division is confident that it is reflective of regional water use and useful for planning purposes.Utah’s Open Water Data Portal can be found at https://dwre-utahdnr.opendata.arcgis.com/. The division believes that data accessibility and transparency is vital as water decisions become more complicated and critical.
URL from idinfo/citation in CSDGM metadata.