Description: OR-Trans is a GIS road centerline dataset compiled from numerous sources of data throughout the state. Each dataset is from the road authority responsible for (or assigned data maintenace for) the road data each dataset contains. Data from each dataset is compiled into a statewide dataset that has the best avaialble data from each road authority for their jurisdiction (or assigned data maintenance responsibility). Data is stored in a SQL database and exported in numerous formats.
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: Transportation Framework Implementation Team (T-FIT) and the Oregon Department of Transportation, GIS unit as the data steward.
Description: The evacuation zones are the local and distant tsunami scenarios shown on the tsunami evacuation brochures which can be found on the Oregon Tsunami Clearinghouse web site: www.oregontsunami.org The local tsunami evacuation zone is equal to the XXL tsunami scenario. The distant tsunami evacuation zone is equal to the AKMax tsunami scenario. DOGAMI modeled 7 tsunami scenarios altogether; 5 local tsunami events (S, M, L, XL, and XXL) and 2 distant tsunami events (AK64 and AKMax). These are the worst case scenarios for a local and distant earthquake/tsunami event. These polygons represent the evacuation zones for the entire Oregon coast.All 7 tsunami scenarios, along with a text report and other supplemental files, can be found in DOGAMI publication: OFR O-13-19, Summary of Tsunami Hazard Data for Oregon.
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: George R. Priest (1), Robert C. Witter (2), Y. Joseph Zhang (3), Kelin Wang (4), Chris Goldfinger (5), Laura L. Stimely (1), John English (6), Sean G. Pickner (7), Kaleena L.B. Hughes (7), Taylore E. Wille (7), and Rachel L. Smith (7)
1) Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, Coastal Field Office, 313 SW 2nd Street, Suite D, Newport, Oregon 97365
2) U.S. Geological Survey, Alaska Science Center, 4210 University Dr., Anchorage, Alaska, 99508
3) Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Center for Coastal Resources Management, 1375 Greate Road, P.O. Box 1346, Gloucester Point, VA 23062
4) Geological Survey of Canada, Pacific Geoscience Centre, Room 4714m, 9860 West Saanich Road, Sidney, British Columbia, Canada V8L 4B2
5) College of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, Ocean Admin. Bldg. 104, Corvallis, Oregon 97331
6) City of Hillsboro, Information Services, Civic Center 150 E. Main Street, Hillsboro, Oregon, 97123
7) Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, 800 NE Oregon Street, #28, Suite 965, Portland, OR 97232
Color: [0, 0, 0, 255] Background Color: N/A Outline Color: N/A Vertical Alignment: baseline Horizontal Alignment: left Right to Left: false Angle: 0 XOffset: 0 YOffset: 0 Size: 8 Font Family: Arial Font Style: normal Font Weight: normal Font Decoration: none
Description: Volume 1Rural Center - These are "committed" rural nodes that include residential, commercial, and public/semi-public uses (such as schools, churches, etc.).Rural Residential - These are justified sites plus "committed" areas. The County's plan prescribes and allocates a finite number of rural dwelling/units/acreage. The zoning ordinance will specify permitted uses and minimum lot sizes. Two and five acre zones have been tentatively proposed for minimum lot sizes. These will be identified on the zone map.Urban Residential - This includes conventional, urban density housing (single family/multi-family) plus cluster housing and planning unit developments.Commercial - This self-evidence designation is primarily intended for urban growth areas, but it is also appropriate for application in rural areas where commercial uses are already established (i.e., "committed" to commercial development). Limited infilling would be allowed.Agriculture - These include all inventoried "agricultural lands" not otherwise found to be needed (expected) for other uses.Forest - These include all inventoried "forestlands" not otherwise found to be needed (expected) for other uses.Industrial - This designation applies to sites potentially needed for industrial development. Use of the designation is not restricted to urban growth areas.Recreation - This category applies to designated recreation areas (State, County, Parks, National Recreation Area).Natural Resource Conservation - This designation is intended for especially sensitive areas where wildlife habitat or special scenic values have been identified or where natural hazards totally preclude any development (i.e., active foredunes). This designation is to be sparingly applied.Controlled Development - This designation is applied to specific portions of the following Urban Growth Areas: Bandon, Charleston/Barview and Bunker Hill. Generally, this designation applies to areas that are experiencing or are projected to experience limited conversion of residential areas to commercial uses. Bandon Dunes Resort Area - This designation is applied to a 2,140-acre are located north of the City of Bandon for which an exception to applicable statewide planning goals to permit a destination resort has been adopted as an amendment to this comprehensive planVolume II“Management units” are discrete geographic areas within which particular uses and activities are promoted, encouraged, protected, or enhanced, and where others are discouraged, restricted, or prohibited. Management units are assigned “management classifications” based upon statewide planning requirements and the varied geographical characteristics of the estuary and adjacent lands. Management unit classifications distinguish between aquatic and shoreland areas.The following describes management unit classifications with a general statement of purpose.Management Units:Aquatic: extend water ward from the “line of non-aquatic vegetation”;Natural Aquatic (NA): areas managed for resource protection, preservation and restoration. Severe restrictions are placed on the intensity and types of uses and activities allowed. Natural Aquatic areas include all major tracts of salt marshes, mud-sand flats, seagrass and algae beds that, because of a combination of factors such as size; biological productivity; and habitat value, play a major role in the functioning of the estuarine ecosystem. Natural Aquatic areas also include ecologically important subtidal areas. Conservation Aquatic (CA): areas managed for low to moderate intensities of uses and activities. Emphasize maintaining the integrity and continuity of aquatic resources and recreational benefits. Minor alterations may be allowed in conjunction with approved uses as specified in each unit. Conservation aquatic areas include open water portions of the estuary and valuable salt marshes and mud-sand flats of lesser biological significance than those in the Natural Aquatic category.Development Aquatic (DA): areas managed for navigation and other water-dependent uses, consistent with the need to minimize damage to the estuarine system. Some water-related and other uses may be allowed as specified in each respective unit. Development Aquatic areas include areas suitable for deep or shallow-draft navigation (including shipping and access channels or turning basis), in-water dredged material disposal sites, mining or mineral extraction areas, and areas adjacent to developed or developable shorelines which may need to be altered to provide navigational access or create new land areas for water-dependent uses. Shoreland: extend inland from the “line of non-aquatic vegetation (Section 404 line)” to the Coastal Shoreland Boundary.Natural Shorelands (NS): areas managed for the protection of natural resources, including the restoration of natural resources to their natural condition. Direct human influence in these areas will be minimal and primarily oriented toward passive undeveloped forms of recreation, educational, and research needs. Natural shoreland areas include major fresh-water marshes, significant wildlife habitat, and other special areas where a lesser management category would not afford adequate protection. Conservation Shorelands (CS): areas managed for uses and activities that directly depend on natural resources (such as farm and forest lands). While it is not intended that these areas remain in their natural resources of the areas. Conservation Shorelands include commercial forestlands, areas subject to severe flooding or other hazards, scenic recreation areas, specified public shorelines, and important habitat areas.Rural Shorelands (RS): areas managed to maintain a rural character and mix of uses and activities. Management in these areas restricts the intensification of uses to maintain a rural environment and to protect the integrity of existing uses. Compatible rural uses and activities may be expanded in Rural Shorelands. Rural Shorelands include Exclusive Farm Uses areas (including the farm and non-farm uses set forth in ORS 215, forestlands, rural centers, and low-intensity rural-residential development.Development Shorelands (D): areas managed to maintain a mix of compatible uses, including non-dependent and non-related uses. Development areas include areas presently suitable for commercial, industrial, or recreational development. Development Shoreland areas are always located outside of urban growth boundaries and satisfy needs that cannot be met within urban growth boundaries.Water-Dependent Development Shorelands (WD): areas managed for water-dependent uses and some of these areas are suited for water-dependent development. Water-related and other uses are restricted to specific instances prescribed in unit management objectives. Water-Dependent Development Shoreland areas are always located outside of urban growth boundaries, and satisfy needs that cannot be met within urban growth boundaries. Urban Development (UD): areas managed to maintain a mix of compatible urban uses, including non-dependent and non-related uses. Urban Development areas include areas presently suitable for residential, commercial, industrial, or recreational development generally at intensities greater than would be found in rural areas. Urban Development areas primarily within the urban growth boundaries of existing communities but may include other development areas.Urban Water-Dependent (UW): areas managed for water-dependent uses, since these areas are suited for water-dependent development. Water-related and other uses are restricted to specific instances prescribed in unit management objectives. Volume IIICREMP: Volume III, Part 1 (Plan Provisions), Section 1.3 The Plan map for the Coquille River Estuary Management Plan is an official policy document, which has the same statutory force as the policy contained in the Plan Provisions Section. The aquatic and shoreland use designations indicate the broad purpose and types of uses planned for each "Management Unit" on the Map.Natural Aquatic (NA): areas managed for resource protection preservation, and restoration. Severe restrictions are placed on the intensity and types of uses and activities allowed. Natural Aquatic areas include all major tracts of tidal marshes, mud-sand flats, seagrass and algae beds that, because of a combination of factors such as siz, biological productiviity, and habitat value, play a major role in the functioning of the estuarine ecosystems. Natural Aquatic areas also include ecologically important subtidal areas. Conservation Aquatic (CA): areas managed for low to moderate intensities of uses and activities, and emphasize maintaining the integrity and continuity of aquatic resources and recreational benefits. Minor alterations may be allowed in conjunction with approved uses, as specified in each unit. Conservation Aquatic areas include open water portions of the estuary and valuable tidal marshes and mud-sand flats of lesser biological significance than those in the Natural Aquatic category.Development Aquatic (DA): areas managed for navigation and other water-dependent uses, consistent with the need to minimize damage to the estuarine system. Some water-related and other uses may be allowed, as specified in each unit. Development Aquatic areas include areas suitable for deep or shallow-draft navigation (including shipping and access channels or turning basins), in-water dredged material disposal sites, mining or mineral extraction areas, and areas adjacent to developed or developable shorelines which may need to be altered to provide navigational access or create new land areas for water-dependent uses._______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Comprehensive Plan and Zonings Maps were digitized by the Coos County Planning Department in 2023 using an ArcGIS for Desktop 10.8 Standard license GIS system. The initial step was to convert the scanned maps from JPEG to TIFF format. These TIFF format images were geo-reference and registered using PLSS, 2023 Assessor’s tax lots, and BLM GCDB as reference points. The map layers (represented by polygons) were then digitized to the ideal scale. These features were then interpreted and adjusted using 2023 Coos County Assessor’s tax lot, PLSS, 2023 e911 County road datasets, and USGS National Hydrological geospatial datasets. County Planning GIS Staff then adjusted updated all areas where Post Adopted Plan Amendment rezones and all Administrative Boundary Interpretations by the County Planning Director have been adopted. The projection for this layer is Oregon State Plane South NAD 83 HARN (EPSG: 2270)
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: Coos County Comprehensive Plan: Volume I. Part 2. Inventories and Factual Base. Coos County Comprehensive Plan: Volume II. Coos Bay Estuary Management Plan. Part 1. Plan Provisions. Coos County Comprehensive Plan: Volume III. Coquille River Estuary Management Plan. Part 2. Inventories and Factual Base. Digital work created by Coos County Planning Staff & Coos County Board of Commissioners with financial assistance provided by the Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972, as amended, administered by the Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the Ocean and Coastal Management Program, Department of Land Conservation and Development. Publication Date, June 2023.
Description: This polygon feature is a subset from DEQ_Lakes and contains only the lakes, ponds, and reservoirs that have assessment data.
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: This data set was assembled by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, Water Quality Divison, Standards and Assessments Section.
Color: [102, 153, 205, 255] Background Color: N/A Outline Color: N/A Vertical Alignment: bottom Horizontal Alignment: left Right to Left: false Angle: 0 XOffset: 0 YOffset: 0 Size: 8 Font Family: Times New Roman Font Style: italic Font Weight: normal Font Decoration: none
Description: Eelgrass is a type of marine, flowering seagrass that grows underwater in temperate marine environments around the world, and on the West coast includes three species: Zostera marina, non-native dwarf eelgrass Zostera japonica, and a distinct species to Southern California, Zostera pacifica. In 2014, The Nature Conservancy (TNC) and the Pacific Marine and Estuarine Fish Habitat Partnership (PMEP) produced the report, "Nursey Functions of U.S. West Coast Estuaries: The State of Knowledge for Juveniles of Focal Invertebrate and Fish Species," which found that eelgrass (Zostera sp.) beds are one of the most important juvenile habitats for a broad array of fish species. Understanding the spatial extent of eelgrass habitats in West Coast estuaries is important for restoration and conservation of this valued habitat. This is not a complete collection of eelgrass data on the West Coast, it is the best available information available at the time of compilation. The extent of eelgrass has been derived from multiple datasets and sources, from data collected over different time periods using a variety of data collection methods. Data sources include Washington Department of Land Conservation and Development's Submerged Vegetation Monitoring Porgram (SVMP), Island County, Clallam County, Snohomish County, Skagit County, Whatcom County, Pierce County, and Jefferson County, Marine Resource Consultants, United States Geological Survey (USGS), Pacific Northwest National Laboratories (PNNL), Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development's (DLCD) Estuary Plan Book, the Environmental Protection Agency, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife's SEACOR program, South Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve (SSNERR), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Merkel & Associates, Inc., Tetra Tech, Inc., Point Reyes National Seashore, Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve (ESNERR), California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW), California Seagrant, Coastal Resource Management, MBC Applied Environmental Sciences, Ocean Imaging, Golden State Aerial Surveys, Inc., and Pentec. For a complete list of datasets and data sources, see accompanying table "PMEP_WestCoast_USA_Eelgrass_DatasetList," or the accompanying report for this dataset titled, "Eelgrass Habitats on the U.S. West Coast: State of the Knowledge of Eelgrass Ecosystem Services and Eelgrass Extent" at www.pacificfishhabitat.org/assessment-reports/.
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: Pacific Marine and Estuarine Fish Habitat Partnership (PMEP), Pacific States Marine FIsheries Commission (PSMFC) GIS, The Nature Conservancy (TNC), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Office of Habitat Conservation.
Description: Data Source: NWIC, NWI-GX
Image Year: 1982
Scale: 1:58:0000
NWI Version 2 derived by supplementing single-line stream features not mapped by the NWI with NHD 931v220.
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: US Fish and Wildlife Service, downloaded 5/3/2023, https://www.fws.gov/program/national-wetlands-inventory/data-download
Description: This feature class is a vector line feature representing the SB 379 tsunami regulatory line created in 1995 for the entire Oregon coast. This file is for GIS purposes only. This publication is supplemental to DOGAMI Open File Report O-00-05, Digital reissue of tsunami hazard maps of coastal quadrangles orginally mandated by Senate Bill 379 (1995) by George Priest, 2000.
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: This feature class is created from tsunami work performed by George Priest, Geologist, for the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, and published in 1995. See DOGAMI Open-File Report O-95-67, Explanation of Mapping Methods and Use of the Tsunami Hazard Maps of the Oregon Coast, by George Priest, 1995.
Description: This shapefile represents the Extra-Large (XL1) tsunami inundation scenario for the Oregon coast. See the accompanying text report for more information.
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: George R. Priest (1), Robert C. Witter (2), Y. Joseph Zhang (3), Kelin Wang (4), Chris Goldfinger (5), Laura L. Stimely (1), John English (6), Sean G. Pickner (7), Kaleena L.B. Hughes (7), Taylore E. Wille (7), and Rachel L. Smith (7)
1) Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, Coastal Field Office, 313 SW 2nd Street, Suite D, Newport, Oregon 97365
2) U.S. Geological Survey, Alaska Science Center, 4210 University Dr., Anchorage, Alaska, 99508
3) Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Center for Coastal Resources Management, 1375 Greate Road, P.O. Box 1346, Gloucester Point, VA 23062
4) Geological Survey of Canada, Pacific Geoscience Centre, Room 4714m, 9860 West Saanich Road, Sidney, British Columbia, Canada V8L 4B2
5) College of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, Ocean Admin. Bldg. 104, Corvallis, Oregon 97331
6) City of Hillsboro, Information Services, Civic Center 150 E. Main Street, Hillsboro, Oregon, 97123
7) Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, 800 NE Oregon Street, #28, Suite 965, Portland, OR 97232
Description: This shapefile represents the Extra-Extra-Large (XXL1) tsunami inundation scenario for the Oregon coast. See the accompanying text report for more information.
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: George R. Priest (1), Robert C. Witter (2), Y. Joseph Zhang (3), Kelin Wang (4), Chris Goldfinger (5), Laura L. Stimely (1), John English (6), Sean G. Pickner (7), Kaleena L.B. Hughes (7), Taylore E. Wille (7), and Rachel L. Smith (7)
1) Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, Coastal Field Office, 313 SW 2nd Street, Suite D, Newport, Oregon 97365
2) U.S. Geological Survey, Alaska Science Center, 4210 University Dr., Anchorage, Alaska, 99508
3) Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Center for Coastal Resources Management, 1375 Greate Road, P.O. Box 1346, Gloucester Point, VA 23062
4) Geological Survey of Canada, Pacific Geoscience Centre, Room 4714m, 9860 West Saanich Road, Sidney, British Columbia, Canada V8L 4B2
5) College of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, Ocean Admin. Bldg. 104, Corvallis, Oregon 97331
6) City of Hillsboro, Information Services, Civic Center 150 E. Main Street, Hillsboro, Oregon, 97123
7) Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, 800 NE Oregon Street, #28, Suite 965, Portland, OR 97232
Color: [92, 137, 68, 255] Background Color: N/A Outline Color: N/A Vertical Alignment: baseline Horizontal Alignment: left Right to Left: false Angle: 0 XOffset: 0 YOffset: 0 Size: 8 Font Family: Arial Font Style: normal Font Weight: normal Font Decoration: none
Color: [92, 137, 68, 255] Background Color: N/A Outline Color: N/A Vertical Alignment: baseline Horizontal Alignment: left Right to Left: false Angle: 0 XOffset: 0 YOffset: 0 Size: 8 Font Family: Arial Font Style: normal Font Weight: normal Font Decoration: none
Description: This layer is a polygon file containing an updated and refined version of the CMECS Biotic Component layer for the Coos estuary. The CMECS Biotic Component is a hierarchical classification that identifies (a) the composition of floating and suspended biota and (b) the biological composition of coastal and marine benthos.
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: The original CMECS Biotic Component layer was funded by NOAA via a CZMA section 309 "Project of Special Merit" grant. The update/refinemement of the CMECS Biotic Component layer for the Coos estuary was funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts.
Description: This is a polygon file that provides users with information about the location, size and other attributes associated with current or former tidal wetlands in Oregon's Coos estuary. It classifies sites as: 1) Restoration Potential sites, 2) Previously Restored (Actively or Passively) sites, 3) Least Disturbed sites, and 4) Intertidal Eelgrass Potential sites.
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: The first draft of the Coos Restoration Opportunity Inventory (ROI) layer was funded by the NERRS Science Collaborative. This completion of the Coios ROI layer was funded by the Pew Charitibale Trusts.
Description: This dataset is a digital version of the Goal 18 Dunes and Beachesinformation that appears in the adopted CBEMP from mylar map 16"beaches and dunes"
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: German Whitley, GIS Technician, South Slough National Research Reserve
Description: This dataset is a digital version of the Goal 18 Dunes and Beachesinformation that appears in the adopted CBEMP from mylar map 16"beaches and dunes"
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: German Whitley, GIS Technician, South Slough National Research Reserve
Description: The navigable portion of a watercourse normally defined by the lines connecting the beacons and/or buoys. The channel has been subdivided into reaches. This feature class is a compilation of geographic data digitized from various sources.This dataset was updated in March 2013 with refined channel framework at Lower Desdemona Shoal, river miles 3 - 6.
Service Item Id: b8bce435bdb342788ae673f400873b5c
Copyright Text: US Army Corps of Engineers, Portland District
CENWP-OD-NWH