Tag
gis
6 Porch Notes tagged “gis,” from counties across Colorado.
Water and land - Delta County
Delta County flood zone status starts with a map check
The county GIS map and its FEMA flood hazard layer are where to start checking whether a property sits in a flood zone.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Rio Grande County
Rio Grande County's GIS map is not a legal boundary survey
Rio Grande County GIS parcel lines help you ask questions, but they are not a survey and cannot settle a legal boundary or title.
Read note ->Home and property - Chaffee County
Chaffee County's GIS map is more than a parcel lookup
Chaffee County's GIS map shows parcel-level zoning, floodplain, steep-slope, wildfire-risk, and wildlife-habitat layers in one place.
Read note ->Home and property - La Plata County
La Plata County property questions often start in several portals
La Plata County splits property records across GIS, Assessor, Community Development, Clerk, and Treasurer tools, so one search rarely tells the story.
Read note ->Home and property - Otero County
Otero County GIS is a map tool, not a survey
Otero County's GIS maps are great for orienting and parcel numbers, but accuracy is not guaranteed, so a boundary fight needs a survey.
Read note ->Home and property - Grand County
Grand County's parcel viewer is useful, but it is not a survey
Grand County's parcel viewer draws on changing public records and does not replace a survey when a boundary truly matters.
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