,The California Natural Resources Agency’s Access for All Initiative and 30x30 set a goal of equitable access for all to the state’s natural and open spaces. This dashboard helps illustrate the current challenges and highlights opportunities.,The Access Explorer shows statewide measures of the population living within a half mile of any open space such as a park with public access contained within the Conserved Areas database, whether it meets the 30x30 definition of conserved or not.,You can then compare those measures to areas that meet the 30x30 definition or to the population overall.,The Access Explorer is a work in progress. Enhancements will be informed by an Outdoors for All roadmap due out in early 2023.,The demographics were compiled from ESRI Demographics in March 2022.,
Open Data User Guide
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,,This guide will introduce the open data resources available in the CA Nature website and familiarize you with key features and capabilities of the site.,CA Nature is an online Geographic Information System (or GIS), that collects a suite of publicly accessible interactive digital mapping tools and data.,
Administrative Maps Viewer
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,This data was created to depict portions of state-owned Sovereign Lands that are under the jurisdiction of the California State Lands Commission. Data coverage is currently limited to reaches 1A, 4A and 4B1 of the San Joaquin River.,The California State Lands Commission (CSLC) was created by the California Legislature in 1938 and given the authority and responsibility to manage certain public lands within the state. The public lands under the Commission’s jurisdiction are of two distinct types—sovereign lands acquired upon California’s admission into the Union in 1850; and certain federally granted lands including school lands, and swamp and overflowed lands. For purposes of this GIS data, sovereign lands are considered to be further divided into two general categories—fixed-boundary sovereign lands and ambulatory-boundary sovereign lands.,The following lands are included in this data:,· Portions of the ambulatory-boundary for state sovereign lands at a specific point in time, for portions of the San Joaquin River.,NOT INCLUDED IN THIS DATA:,· School lands: These are what remains of nearly 5.5 million acres throughout the state originally granted to California by Congress in 1853 to benefit public education.,· Fixed-boundary sovereign lands: These are sovereign, public trust lands having fixed boundaries as the result of land exchanges, boundary line agreements or court orders.,· Swamps and overflowed lands: These are what remain of federal lands granted to California by Congress in 1850 to encourage reclamation and development of agricultural lands.,ALSO NOT INCLUDED IN THIS DATA: Ownership details within the U.S. Government meanders of Owens Lake.,THIS DATA SUPERSEDES all previously published GIS information with respect to the above described state-owned lands under the jurisdiction of the CSLC.,