San Francisco Plant Finder Data
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This is the plant list used by the SF Plant Finder (http://sfplantfinder.org). The San Francisco Plant Finder is a resource for gardeners, designers, ecologists and anyone who is interested in greening neighborhoods, enhancing our urban ecology and surviving the drought. The Plant Finder recommends appropriate habitat-building plants for sidewalks, gardens and roofs that are adapted to San Francisco's unique environment and climate. The plants in the database include California natives and Mediterranean climate exotics. A large subset of the California natives are actually local San Francisco natives. We strongly recommend local natives since they provide the best habitat for local pollinators and other wildlife with whom they have co-evolved. San Francisco natives are the most closely adapted to the climate and environment of the San Francisco peninsula of course, and so they are the best in terms of water and soil conservation, ecosystem health, and overall sustainability. You can get the geographic ares for plant communities represented in this dataset here: https://data.sfgov.org/d/27u4-a5b3
California Strategic Growth Council - California Affordable Housing and Sustainable Communities
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,This dataset includes all Affordable Housing and Sustainable Communities Awards. This includes the location of the awards, the award amounts, award amounts for each Project component, GHG reductions, and co-benefits.,
San Francisco Land Use - 2023
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A. SUMMARY This data is an annual snapshot of existing land use as of March of the indicated year for every parcel in the City and County of San Francisco. This year's 2023 data was produced from the Land Use 2020, updated for residential properties using the Planning Department's permit database and current 2023 Assessor-Recorder data. The commercial data was not updated; the commercial data will be updated in next year's 2024 release. Each row of data corresponds to a parcel with 16 columns (fields or attributes) of information about each parcel, as described below. B. HOW THE DATASET IS CREATED The dataset is assembled from a range of City and commercial databases, including Assessor’s office and Dun & Bradstreet for commercial land uses. C. UPDATE PROCESS A new dataset will be added annually without updating previous years’ data. D. HOW TO USE THIS DATASET Review this document to understand the data (fields and their categories): Land Use Database 2023 Summary Limitations: Although every attempt is made to provide accurate data, the volume of data and parcels does not allow the Department to guarantee accuracy. Should errors be found, or questions arise, please email rebecca.latto@sfgov.org. E. RELATED DATASETS San Francisco Land Use - 2020
Citywide Service Inventory
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A. SUMMARY The Citywide Service Inventory is the most comprehensive view of the services offered by the City & County of San Francisco. A public facing service is when a department provides a product or information in response to a customer request. A customer can be anyone who the City & County of San Francisco serves including residents, businesses, visitors and anyone else. B. HOW THE DATASET IS CREATED All information was validated or provided by Department leadership in September-October of 2020. C. UPDATE PROCESS As needed D. HOW TO USE THIS DATASET Data can be filtered by department, service area, service delivery and digital maturity.
San Francisco Environmental Justice Communities Map
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The Environmental Justice Communities Map (“EJ Communities Map”) describes areas of San Francisco that have higher pollution and are predominately low-income. This map is based on CalEnviroScreen, a tool created by CalEPA & OEHHA that maps California communities that are most affected by pollution and other health risks. This EJ Communities Map includes additional local data on pollution and demographics, and was refined during the community engagement process based on public feedback. “EJ Communities” are defined as the areas facing the top one-third of cumulative environmental and socioeconomic burdens across the City. The EJ Communities include areas of Bayview Hunters Point, Chinatown, Excelsior, Japantown, Mission, Ocean View-Merced Heights-Ingleside, Outer Mission, Potrero Hill, SoMa, Tenderloin, Treasure Island, Visitacion Valley, and Western Addition. "EJ Communities” are defined as the areas facing the top one-third of cumulative environmental and socioeconomic burdens across the City, with scores 21-30. Further information is available here: https://sfplanning.org/project/environmental-justice-framework-and-general-plan-policies#ej-communities