An address point represents a geographic location that has been assigned an address by the local address authority (i.e., county or municipality) but does not necessarily receive mail from the US Postal Service (USPS). Address points may include several pieces of information about the structure or location that’s being mapped, such as:[WHOLE_ADDRESS] the full address (i.e., the USPS mailing address, if the address is for a physical location [rather than a PO box]);the type of unit [UNIT_TYPE] and unit [UNIT];the city or zip community [POST_COMM] and ZIP code POST_CODE;the vacancy status (occupied, vacant, meter) [OccupiedUseStatus]; andthe date that the address point was created [DATE_CREATED] and last edited [DATE_MODIFIED].These data were originally created for Public Safety e911 response in 2001 through field survey by county staff and is mapping grade. Today it is used throughout the County and by the public to conduct business and assist in decision making. This feature service is updated daily from its source ArcGIS Enterprise feature class. Source data within an Enterprise Geodatabase is accessed by County and City of Rock Hill staff through ArcGIS Server and Portal. When edited, business rules are enforced by BCS theAddresser software. York County has an Address Manual used by staff and stakeholders to ensure quality and standards are adhered to during maintenance and use.These data are shared through open data and available for download. York County addresses are included in the National Address Database (USDOT NAD). The NAD is consumed by Google as highlighted in their Maps Content Partners 2022 November Newsletter. York County is one of 13 counties added in 2022. Access the NAD through the ArcGIS Online Living Atlas.As of October 2022, the schema of these data are compatible with NG911. Previous schema remains as of January 2023 with intent to remove fields tentatively planned for 2024. Review the schema field mapping document (PDF) to gain a better understanding of field mapping used to transition these data to NG911 standards.
Road segments within this layer represent centerlines of public and private (not gated) roadways. Road segments define left (_L) and right (_R) side attributes and address ranges along the segment. Additional attribute information may include:The full street name ST_DIR_NAM;the city or zip community [POSTCOMM_L]; The ZIP code POSTCODE_L; The jurisdiction (Incorporated Municipality) the segment is within [INCMUNI_L];The functional classification [F_CLASS] used; (ex: Interstate, Major Collector, Minor Arterial, Local)The route number [RT_NUM] containing a county road or highway number;The road maintenance provider or construction status [ST_OWNER];Fields used in routing [MPH, ONEWAY, _ELEV, _IM] and; the date that the road segment was created [DATE_CREATED] and last edited [DATE_MODIFIED].This information is was originally compiled from orthophotography in 2001 for use in Public Safety e911 response. Today it is used throughout the County and by the public to conduct business and assist in decision making.County and City staff update records daily or as needed (such as through subdivision plan review and approval using georeferenced CAD files provided by land developers). The road centerlines support address geocoding, analysis, routing and mapping.The centerline represents the geographic location on the roadway between both shoulders (physical center), which often, but not always coincides with the center painted line dividing bi-directional travel lanes. Roadway centerline data plays an important role in transportation management and planning, while also being the basis for all other roadway-related data products.This feature service is updated daily from its source ArcGIS Enterprise feature class. Source data within an Enterprise Geodatabase is accessed by County and City of Rock Hill staff through ArcGIS Server and Portal. When edited, business rules are enforced by BCS theAddresser software. York County has an Address Manual used by staff and stakeholders to ensure quality and standards are adhered to during maintenance and use.For additional information about county maintained roadways, review the County Road Inventory data or search for data through One Map. County staff maintain the relationship between streets and the County Road Inventory through the RT_NUM field. The street ownership [ST_OWNER] designation serves as a source to determine the maintenance provider by municipal public works agencies who actively manage the road assets. SCDOT roadways can be confirmed by reviewing data within their lookup application or their source data within our One Map application.Railroads are contained within the streets feature class to enable cross street lookup (geodcoding), a requirement for e911 dispatchers.Street segments outside the county are present for cartographic and Public Safety dispatch of nearest vehicle (routing) purposes. These can be filtered out and removedAddressing data (streets and addresses) are used to update the US Census Bureau Tiger data in support of the decennial census. As of October 2022, the schema of these data are compatible with NG911. Previous schema remains as of January 2023 with intent to remove fields tentatively planned for 2024. Review the schema field mapping document (PDF) to gain a better understanding of field mapping used to transition these data to NG911 standards. Continuing NG911 compliance projects include splitting the centerline as they cross the city limit. To assist York County, South Carolina in the maintenance of the data, please provide any information concerning discovered errors, omissions, or other discrepancies found in the data. Data Owner: County IT/GIS, Addressing Staff and City of Rock Hill.Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
On April 3, 2023, after consulting with addressing staff to evaluate workflow and processes related to annexations, we determined that this zip code layer was never intended to be a true representation of postal service zip code. Instead, this layer represents the MSAG community. During an annexation, as a street is consumed by a city jurisdiction boundary, its MSAG equivalent range receives a new ESN and Community designation. With MSAG, the ESN + Community designation are intended to be the components relating back to a GIS street centerline segment. Decades ago when the PSAP call routing was first established, this layer was established to aid in assigning the community value placed on MSAG street segment equivalents.As of April 2023, the street and address layers have a zip code and zip community value assigned. These are based on the MSAG zip code layer maintained by York county, which were developed from postal service zip code route delivery areas decades ago, but are now maintained only for MSAG community assignment. At some point, possibly once York County migrates to NG911 in 2024-2025 and MSAG becomes obsolete, we may need to update our MSAG zip code values to reflect the true postal service route delivery boundary.Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
Reference w:63237 for details.
Meeting minutes from January 9, 2023 where these boundaries were approved can be found here.Town staff has been working with the South Carolina Revenue and Fiscal Affairs office (SCRFA) to study and plan for the redistricting of the Town Council’s wards based upon the results of the 2020 Decennial Census. SCRFA first developed a Redistricting Benchmark Report, which staff presented to Council on March 14, 2022. The report outlines the current demographics of the existing Council ward geographies and discusses the path forward to developing a new ward map. After receiving input, staff reached back out to SCRFA to begin the process of developing a draft map for public review. The draft map is attached. The map was developed utilizing the following traditional redistricting principles:Wards will be drawn contiguously, so that all parts of the district or ward are connected to each other. Wards will be drawn to minimize the division of voting precincts. Wards will be geographically compact to the extent practicable, such that nearby areas of population are not bypassed for a more distant population. Wards will be drawn to comply with other applicable court decisions and federal and state laws. Wards will be drawn, when feasible, with respect to existing districts and communities of interests, which will require input from Council and the citizens.Wards will be drawn to give careful consideration to minority districts for compliance with Section 2 criteria of the Voting Rights Act Wards will be drawn to a deviation range of 5%The adoption process follows the normal ordinance adoption process, which requires two readings and one public hearing. The public hearing is tentatively set for Council’s first meeting in January.
The township boundary is used by Magistrates in York County SC to determine the jurisdiction of civil cases. Civil cases should (typically) be filed in the jurisdiction where the defendant/ plaintiff resides due to servicing (to prevent someone from driving across the county to be assisted with a court matter). Plaintiffs/ defendants have a right to have their case heard in their own township by a potential jury of their own peers. (Of note, Magistrate lines don’t match up with township lines. Magistrate lines may not be useful if the judges have countywide jurisdiction.) Square Miles area was added as a calculated attribute (Arcade, AreaGeodetic) Feb 2022 by request.As of 9/2023 Magistrate lines are not used. Instead, township lines are used to determine areas represented by Judge. Some judges cover over more than one township and city in parenthesis is the town where the office is located:
York County is divided into five geographical areas called townships. There is one Judge for each of the townships. The Townships are: (office location in parenthesis): Bethel-Kings Mountain (Clover), Broad River-Bullocks Creek (Hickory Grove), Catawba-Ebenezer (Rock Hill), Fort Mill (Fort Mill), York-Bethesda (York).
For more information: https://www.yorkcountygov.com/284/MagistrateLast updated 9/2023Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
Hydrants are part of the water systems maintained by various entities in York County. They are primarily serviced by the fire agency within the jurisdiction the hydrant is found in. The hydrants are provided to 911 dispatchers for use during an emergency, to relay nearest and best available to vehicles while on route to call. Apps and web maps:Hydrant Search, report for each hydrant, report by districtWeb map for Hydrant SearchFire hydrants within the County jurisdiction are inspected and maintained by York County Fire staff. Access to maintain hydrants in cities by City staff has been granted in previous years (using map service functionality, users are restricted from editing hydrants they did not create). At end of year, for ISO to use during their review, a report by district is obtained. This report is available for each district through the hydrants app. Having inspection reports yearly results in max points. Typically, once all hydrants in a district have been inspected in a year, the report is printed and stored for ISO to reference. County Fire staff also capture a shapefile of the hydrants yearly, from the open data site.630 INSPECTION AND FIRE FLOW TESTING OF HYDRANTS:A. Inspection (HI):Inspection of hydrants should be in accordance with AWWA manual M17, Installation, Field Testing, and Maintenance of Fire Hydrants. The frequency of inspection is the average time interval between the 3 most recent inspections.Assign points for frequency of inspection (FI) according to the following:Frequency of Inspection (FI) Points1 year 302 years 203 years 104 years 55 years or more No creditAccess the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate systemUpdate History:3/6/24 - first draft
Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
This data represents the graphic portrayal of land parcels and their spatial relationships throughout York County, South Carolina. Land parcel boundaries are also the basis for and define coincident boundaries for other layers, such as zoning, subdivisions, public safety response (ORI -Police, Fire, EMS) and Jurisdiction.Boundaries are established from a variety of sources including cadastral plats, subdivision plats, deeds, land contracts, right-of-way plats, and others. Each feature represents a parcel of land that is inventoried by a unique identifier, referred to as a “Tax Map Id” number. This dataset also includes multi-unit structures which have separate tax accounts for each unit, such as condominium units, represented as stacked polygon features. The parent parcel number [ParentTaxID] for the land parcel is distinguished from the child parcel [TaxMapID] for the condo unit. This data does not include mobile home data. Attributes include data stored within the Esri Fabric data model combined with those from the CAMA data. Examples of relevant attributes include:the [TaxMapID], [ParcelID] and [AprAccNum] can be used to uniquely identify each parcel. the [MailAddr1], [MailAddr2], [MailApt], [MailCity], [MailState], [MailZip] can be used as the full tax billing address for the owner.The [Owner1], [Owner2], [Owner3] describe the owner.the [YearBuilt] offers the oldest year a building was built on the property, reference this web map for info on potential lead pipes on premises;the area of the parcel in acres [GISSizeAC] as calculated from the parcel geometry and also the [deededAcres] from recorded documents, and ;the date that the parcel boundary was last edited [DATE_MODIFIED].How were parcels compiled? This layer was initially developed as an ink-on-mylar property maps maintained by the County from the early 1970's through around 2001.In the 1990s, the county procured services to convert parcels from source documents, however the product delivered in 2000 used a methodology which lost fidelity of source documents. Since then, county staff adhered to this same methodology in their daily work. Between 2001 and 2015 staff used an Esri topology to maintain parcel data in ArcMap. In 2015 the county migrated to Parcel Fabric (ArcMap) and then in 2021 to Pro (2.6/10.8.1 Enterprise) Parcel Fabric. In May of 2021 the county began outsourcing maintenance of parcel edits. This has worked well and was initiated in part to ensure a higher standard of editing practice was adhered to, but also to fulfil a shortage of skilled staff in the job market. County parcel mapping staff remain responsible for simple transactions (merge, split), compilation of materials to create vendor edit request task, and QC or review of vendor work. In Q4 2021, County Staff performed a needs assessment to review alignment issues between parcels and other layers and the internal business requirements for data alignment to parcels. They determined boundary layers must remain coincident with parcels, which are used in decision making by citizens and across many areas of government. Also, it was determined that our parcels had many errors from 20 years of edits in a non-Fabric data model and the previous editing practices. The county will be remapping parcels using ARP grant funding in the 2023-2024 timeframe. Upon delivery in 2024, data maintenance practices will ensure ongoing alignment with parcels.Year BuiltTo obtain the year built for structures on a property, use the 'Buildings' table available through our open data portal.Once you have downloaded the 'Buildings' table and this parcels layer, consider processing the building records in some way to join or perform a relate as there could be many buildings on one parcel, using the following fields:Parcel.AprAccNum = BuildingTable.PropertyID(Note: 98,227 parcels have 1 building, 647 parcels have 2 buildings, 272 have 3 or more)Data SchemaReview the Parcel schema document (PDF) to gain a better understand of the data fields. Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
Data acquired from the City of Rock Hill (June 2020). The City of Rock Hill studied all of the creeks upstream of the FEMA zones to a drainage area of 0.1Sq. miles.ESP & Associates defined the flood prone areas (100 year) for Taylors and Wildcat.Keck & Wood defined the flood prone areas (100 year) for Manchester, Tools Fork, and Waterford.Data was compiled into one feature class by the City of Rock Hill City Engineer (DD) around 2016.Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
To view this map and search for a road in context of an application, visit One Map, click on search roads or click here to access directly.Note: This AGOL View item has 11 fields hidden.(Replaces HFV)Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
Adjacent county boundaries originally sourced from Esri data in the 2000s, but have been modified over time to best available data. Municipal boundaries are updated by York County staff when notified of annexations. Municipal boundaries may differ from parcel town tax code until CAMA records are updated.The county boundary may not yet reflect a surveyed boundary, the surveyed county boundary can be found here.This layer is maintained to be coincident with parcel and ORI (Police, Fire, EMS) boundaries. It is often used in court cases to resolve disputes over jurisdiction. As of February 2022, we have identified right of way discrepancies and need to review annexations for the last 5 to 20 years to ensure this layer reflects the intent of the documentation as approved by town councils.Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
Basemap with Building Footprints as of 2019. Created through Pictometry ChangeFinder program
The Zoning Overlay Buffer is primarily used by the Planning Department. It was originally created in the early 2000s. The file contains five buffers consisting of the Airport Overlay, Lake Wylie Overlay, Riparian Buffer (formerly Lake Wylie Catawba River Buffer), Scenic Overlay, and Transportation Overlay.The Airport Overlay consist of three buffer on the Rock Hill - York County Airport. Documentation can be found in County Ordinance Section 115.173. This data remained the same from the the original data to the 2023 update. The Lake Wylie Overlay consist of one buffer around Lake Wylie. Documentation can be found in County Ordinance Section 155.197. This data remained the same from the original data to the 2023 update. The Riparian Buffer consist of thirty-three buffers and was formerly known as the Lake Wylie Catawba River Buffer. Originally this data was only for the Lake Wylie Catawba River; however it was expanded to include the Broad River in 2023. It also encompasses the perennial streams that flow into the rivers. Documentation can be found in County Ordinance Section 155.846.The Scenic Overlay Buffer consist of six buffers: Anne Springs Close Greenway, Broad River, Catawba River, Historic Brattonsville, Kings Mountain State/National Park, and Catawba Bend Preserve. The buffer was originally 2640 feet but revised to 500 feet in the 2023 update. Documentation can be found in County Ordinance Section 155.217.The Transportation Corridor Preservation Overlay consist of 19 buffers. This data remained the same in the 2023 update. Documentation can be found in County Ordinance Section 155.231.For more information about this layer and other planning related topics, contact York County Planning & Development Services. Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
Pennies for Progress Intersection improvement projects. Use the [Program_nam] field to filter by project.Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
Contains Improperly subdivided plats, Special Exceptions, Public Service Uses, Variances, and Rezonings that have occurred during 2003 to present. The variances are further identified by type of variance; such as bufferyard, setback, parking, lot size, etc.Maintained by the Planning Manager.Filter restricting access to features is in place: ProblemType <> 'Rezoning' is in place as of June 2023 to match definition query found in map service used in previous application. When displayed, these appear to suggest a rezoning is to take place, which is not the case.Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
Note: When reviewing the comprehensive plan, add the layer 'Mixed Use Areas' to overlay on top of this. Also include layer Urban Services Boundary (USB, 2035).For more informationComprehensive Plan Update - 2022On March 6, 2023, the York County Council approved the update of York Forward. The process to develop an updated plan included a coordinated review of each goal and strategy with the Planning Commission. A series of community-wide open house meetings were held to define the purpose of each element, to recognize achievements made over the past five years, and to show proposed amendments. The effort resulted in a Plan that is relevant to current conditions, addressed changing needs of the community, and identified new key programs and partners to facilitate growth management initiatives. York Forward 2035 Comprehensive PlanFuture Land Use MapYork Forward 2035 - York County's Comprehensive PlanOn July 18, 2016, the York County Council approved the York Forward 2035 Comprehensive Plan. A Comprehensive Plan is best described as a guide to the County's future. It informs current and future decision makers where they are now, where they want to go, how they intend to get there, and who will help them along the way. The Comprehensive Plan provides the basis for York County's regulations and policies that guide its physical development. The plan establishes priorities for public action and direction for complementary private decisions.An important and overarching component of this planning effort was an inclusionary public engagement process. Understanding community values today ensures that this Plan, implemented in accordance with the recommendations, supports and advances those priorities over the long term. The effort was guided by an Advisory Committee appointed by County Council. Interviews with local stakeholders verified and supplemented the feedback received directly from citizens and property owners. Seven community meetings were held throughout the County to provide an opportunity to learn about the project, refine the goals and provide comments on the plan's components. Finally a project website was established as an additional opportunity for residents to access information and provide comments.The plan discusses opportunities and issues York County faces as it manages the rapid pace of growth while preserving the rural character of western area of York County. The Plan includes goals and strategies that address land use, economic development, housing, natural resources, cultural resources, community facilities and transportation. Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
One of 3 layers in the Comprehensive Plan (2035).The Urban Services Boundary (USB) was established as a growth management tool with the intent to achieve a quality compact development pattern, provide a balance of land uses and densities at appropriate locations, supported by available public services and facilities, while expanding lifestyle choices and discouraging sprawl and other unforeseeable forms of development. It is a conceptual depiction of the maximum area which should be served by water, sewer, and other major public facilities and services. Outside of this line, facilities such as schools, parks, and public safety should be limited to those which only serve the rural population. Ideally, new or expanded public facilities would locate well inside of the USB in order to allow some growth while providing an efficient availability of servicesAccess the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system
An address point represents a geographic location that has been assigned an address by the local address authority (i.e., county or municipality) but does not necessarily receive mail from the US Postal Service (USPS). Address points may include several pieces of information about the structure or location that’s being mapped, such as:[WHOLE_ADDRESS] the full address (i.e., the USPS mailing address, if the address is for a physical location [rather than a PO box]);the type of unit [UNIT_TYPE] and unit [UNIT];the city or zip community [POST_COMM] and ZIP code POST_CODE;the vacancy status (occupied, vacant, meter) [OccupiedUseStatus]; andthe date that the address point was created [DATE_CREATED] and last edited [DATE_MODIFIED].These data were originally created for Public Safety e911 response in 2001 through field survey by county staff and is mapping grade. Today it is used throughout the County and by the public to conduct business and assist in decision making. This feature service is updated daily from its source ArcGIS Enterprise feature class. Source data within an Enterprise Geodatabase is accessed by County and City of Rock Hill staff through ArcGIS Server and Portal. When edited, business rules are enforced by BCS theAddresser software. York County has an Address Manual used by staff and stakeholders to ensure quality and standards are adhered to during maintenance and use.These data are shared through open data and available for download. York County addresses are included in the National Address Database (USDOT NAD). The NAD is consumed by Google as highlighted in their Maps Content Partners 2022 November Newsletter. York County is one of 13 counties added in 2022. Access the NAD through the ArcGIS Online Living Atlas.As of October 2022, the schema of these data are compatible with NG911. Previous schema remains as of January 2023 with intent to remove fields tentatively planned for 2024. Review the schema field mapping document (PDF) to gain a better understanding of field mapping used to transition these data to NG911 standards.