Full Circle

Community Mapping and Planning Project 

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Phase One:  Data Collection

Parcel Pointer Data Tool

Technical assistance is a core part of CMAP’s mission. We support the efforts of local planning agencies at the regional, municipal and neighborhood levels by offering tools, expertise and replicable models. As part of our commitment to technical assistance, CMAP has developed Parcel Pointer, a web-based GIS tool that allows local planning agencies to track land use and other important data at the parcel level.  

CMAP’s intention is not to be involved in local planning decisions, but to provide tools that local planning organizations can use to gather the information required for good planning.

Input systems

Parcel Pointer can track many attributes associated with parcels of land: land use, age of structures, property value, historical significance, employment, environmental sensitivity and many others. Authorized users can update the data via the internet (using handheld computers if they wish) at any time. Information can be kept current as changes occur in the community.

Data input is important for several reasons. First, local organizations are often interested in data that is not available from public sources. Second, public data sources can quickly become outdated in transitional neighborhoods where gentrification, abandonment or demographic shifts sometimes happen very quickly. Third, local organizations, given the right tools, can take ownership of data collection in their neighborhoods in a way that is very difficult for large centralized public agencies (such as city or county departments) to do.

Output systems

In addition to serving as a data-gathering tool, Parcel Pointer provides data from public sources such as the County Assessor’s office and the County Recorder’s office. Outputs can be generated from user queries and displayed as maps, reports or charts.

For example, a community organization might wish to view a map or a list of all parcels in their neighborhood with a land use category of ‘Retail – Grocery.’ Or they might want to output a list of properties with a previous known sale price greater than $150,000. Or they may simply like to view all available data fields for a specific parcel.

Locating a parcel

Parcel Pointer allows users to locate specific properties via neighborhood maps or address lists.

Neighborhood maps are interactive, allowing zoom-in, zoom-out and pan functions. But the maps also serve as parcel locators: clicking a parcel will bring up both existing data for the selected parcel, and a data entry screen for updates.

Neighborhood maps are not easily displayed in handheld devices, so Parcel Pointer also includes an address finder in the form of a dropdown list. Users can view a list of properties in a particular neighborhood and select one for viewing or update.

 Flexibility

Parcel Pointer’s data entry forms are flexible, allowing different organizations to view only the data they want to see. For example, housing organizations might choose to see detailed information about housing (such as sales transaction history or public subsidies associated with a parcel), while environmental or economic development entities might choose different fields.

Internet connectivity

The Parcel Pointer system is web-based, so users do not need any GIS software on their computers to use the system. Any internet-enabled computer can call up the maps, data entry screens and other features.

Internet-based data collection has great advantages over other methods. The greatest advantage is that staffers can simultaneously update various parts of the database without getting ‘out of sync’ with each other. Syncing multiple spreadsheets is cumbersome; with web systems, data always enters the system through a single portal so at any time, there exists only one copy of the data.

This also means that the system is available from anywhere, not just on the computers in the organization’s offices.

Handheld data collection devices

The handheld units deployed for the Full Circle project are not PDAs (personal data assistants), but rather Pocket PCs connected to the internet via the cellular phone network (‘smart phones’). This means that data collection is not limited to wireless ‘hot spots’—which are often nonexistent in low-income neighborhoods. It also means that no docking is needed—a significant advantage over PDA data collection.

For more information

For more information, contact Greg Sanders at gsanders@cmap.illinois.gov, (312) 454-0400.

 

 

  • © Copyright 2004, Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning

  • Last updated 03/28/2007