
GIS ShapefilePlanners' ToolBox GIS Shapefile Subscription Service®Our subscription service is designed to assist social researchers, urban planners or and other analysts with critical tools and skills in community analysis. The fee is $199 for a 1 year subscription. Once you subscribe you will be emailed an access code which will allow you to gain entry to the subscription site. What you get: 1. Access to the Shapefile WarehouseAccess to an easy to navigate portal which includes a "starter pack" of current shapefiles for all counties. The Census Bureau recently released official geography boundaries for all Census geography. We have downloaded the most common geographies and translated them into shapefiles (meant to be used with ArcGIS) which is a huge time saver. Files for each county include new 2005 First Edition Tiger/lines updated as of January 1, 2005. In most instances we have a shapefile from the year 2000 and the year 2005. These may be different, or may be the same.For each county (plus the entire state) we have one zipped file that includes: - 2005 Streets Network - 2005 County Boundaries - 2005 Place Boundaries (i.e. Cities) - 2005 School District Boundaries - 2005 Census Zip Code Tabulation Areas - 2005 Water Boundaries - 2000 Voting Districts - 2000 Census Tract Boundaries - 2000 Census Block Groups - 2000 Census Blocks - 2005 American Indian/ Alaska Native / Hawaiian Homelands - 2005 Key Landmarks - 2000 Public Use Microdata Areas - 2000 Traffic Analysis Zones - 2000 Oregon Growth Boundary 2. Web Workshop SeriesAnalyzing Your Community: Using Census Data to Better Analyze Changing People and PlacesThis workshop is divided into a series of modules meant to teach the user how to extract data from the Census of Population and Housing and how to use that data to perform community analysis. Module 1: What is the Census of Population and Housing -What are the strengths and weakness of using Summary Files 1-4 and the American Community Survey -What are the most commonly used Census geographies, especially for community analysis -How Accurate is the Census Module 2: Getting the Data from American Factfinder -How do you extract raw Census data from the block level up to the national level (and all geographic levels in between) -How can you use the Census to map data online through American Factfinder 3. Cheat SheetsCheat sheets are practical step by step guides designed to give users a quick way to get things done. Examples include:-How to reproject in ArcGIS -Tips, tricks and techniques for presenting data - How to download Census data -How to get better geocoding accuracy rates |