This dataset provides lane closure occurrences within the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) highway system in a tabular format.
A continuously updating archive of the TxDOT WZDx feed data can be found at ITS WorkZone Raw Data Sandbox and the ITS WorkZone Semi-Processed Data Sandbox. The live feed is currently compliant with the Work Zone Data Exchange (WZDx) Specification version 2.0.
Find information on population, income, jobs, wages, graduation rates, highways, water and healthcare for the Comptroller's 12 Economic Regions.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
This file contains a list of nonprofit and other types of organizations that hold state tax exemption from Sales and Use tax, Franchise tax, and Hotel Occupancy tax. Statewide group organizations might have one listing with “All Branches” as the city, rather than a separate listing for each local chapter.
This dataset provides a list of individuals commissioned to perform services as a notary public by the Office of the Texas Secretary of State. This dataset receives regular updates.
DISCLAIMER ON ACCURACY AND COMPLETENESS OF INFORMATION. While the Office of the Texas Secretary of State (the “SOS”) uses reasonable efforts to provide accurate and up-to-date information, some of the information provided is gathered by third-parties and has not been independently verified by the SOS. Data can quickly become out of-date. Although the information found on this system has been produced and processed from sources believed to be reliable, no warranty, express or implied, is made regarding accuracy, adequacy, completeness, legality, reliability or usefulness of any information. This disclaimer applies to both isolated and aggregate uses of information. SOS does not represent or warrant that access to the service will be uninterrupted or that there will be no failures, errors or omissions or loss of transmitted information.
Texas Code, Texas Enterprise Zone Agreements
List of winner claims for Texas Lottery® prizes with player (excluding identity of those designated anonymous), prize, game and selling retailer information. GOV'T § 466.411: A prize winner, or owner of a legal entity that is a prize winner, of a lottery prize in an amount equal to $1 million or more may choose to remain anonymous. If the prize is an annuity, then the prize winner may be anonymous for 30 days after the prize is claimed.
TCEQ provides easily accessible Texas Water District data to the public and to regional water planning groups. Find information on municipal utility districts, special utility districts, river authorities, water systems, water control and improvement districts, and other information. Districts include their business contact, office address, and associated county.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year 2018, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies
Approved regional investigations resulting in a Notice of Violation (NOV) and the details associated with each violation that are documented in the Consolidated Compliance and Enforcement Data System (CCEDS). All NOVs displayed were sent as physical letters to the Regulated Entities' business contacts. An NOV may contain multiple violation citations (Category A, B, and C) due to identified noncompliance with different regulatory requirements. Note other databases are utilized within the agency and may contain information on additional violations.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year 2019, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year 2021, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
First & last name, work email address, work phone, job title and job location for all active Texas Lottery Commission employees.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year 2020, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
This is data represented in the Annual Enforcement Report, pursuant to Texas Water Code Section 5.126, and published each December following the end of the fiscal year. The TCEQ has authority to issue administrative orders, as opposed to civil or criminal orders issued in court. Administrative orders are TCEQ orders enforcing or directing compliance with any provisions whether of statutes, rules, regulations, permits, licenses, or orders that we are authorized by law to enforce or with which we are authorized by law to compel compliance.
This file contains a list of Coin-Operated Amusement Machine Operators in Texas.
A dataset of releases from TDCJ during the TDCJ fiscal year (September - August). Including release type, demographics, and offense information.
This file contains a list of taxpayers required to report cement production tonnage under Tax Code Chapter 181, Subchapter A. The list provides taxpayer names, amounts reported, and other public information.
Cartographic Boundary Map provided the State of Texas Open Data Portal here: https://data.texas.gov/dataset/Texas-Counties-Cartographic-Boundary-Map/sw7f-2kkd/about_data
Terms of Use This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of property boundaries. This product has been provided by the City of Austin via the US Census Bureau for the sole purpose of geographic reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
Contains detailed information for expenditures or an in-kind contributions that were used for travel outside the state of Texas. Data in this sheet corresponds to the information collected on Texas Ethics Commissions's Schedule T.
Purchase Order commodity line level detail for City of Austin Commodities/Goods purchases dating back to October 1st, 2009. Each line includes the NIGP Commodity Code/COA Inventory Code, commodity description, quantity, unit of measure, unit price, total amount, referenced Master Agreement if applicable, the contract name, purchase order, award date, and vendor information. The data contained in this data set is for informational purposes only. Certain Austin Energy transactions have been excluded as competitive matters under Texas Government Code Section 552.133 and City Council Resolution 20051201-002.
The following data represents the Texas Freshwater/Saltwater Boundary line.
Emergency Response Spills received by the TCEQ are assigned an Incident Tracking Number. The information submitted by the reporting party is documented and associated to that unique number and then further investigated. An Incident Tracking Number may be listed more than once if there are multiple Customer Names, Released Materials, Media, and/or Effects.
Information about City's authorized spending limit, contract lifetime (called inception-to-date) ordering and spending. Contracts are visible only while active. For the purposes of this data set, a contract is a long-term (multi-year) contract for goods and services, and contracts for construction activity. Within the City, these are referred to as Master Agreements and Purchase Contracts.
Information from the TCEQ annual waste summary report form, including generator's registration number, the year of report, waste, total quantity generated, quantity handled and how the waste was handled. The report lists the generator's annual waste generation quantities and handling for hazardous and Industrial Class 1 waste.
Delivery certificates issued for Petroleum Storage Tanks (PSTs) which authorize petroleum deliveries. Information including facility numbers, owner information, and expiration dates are available for both registered and self-certified PSTs.
View complaints received by the TCEQ with their associated Complaint Number. The information alleged by the complainant is documented and associated to that unique number and then further investigated. Note, a complaint may be listed more than once if there are multiple associated Customer Names, Released Materials, Media, and/or Effects.
A dataset of releases from TDCJ during the TDCJ fiscal year (September - August). Including release type, demographics, and offense information.
As recommended by the Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) to ensure consistency across all HHSC agencies, in 2012 DFPS adopted the HHSC methodology on how to categorize race and ethnicity. As a result, data broken down by race and ethnicity in 2012 and after is not directly comparable to race and ethnicity data in 2011 and before.
The population totals may not match previously printed DFPS Data Books. Past population estimates are adjusted based on the U.S. Census data as it becomes available. This is important to keep the data in line with current best practices, but may cause some past counts, such as Abuse/Neglect Victims per 1,000 Texas Children, to be recalculated.
Population Data Source - Population Estimates and Projections Program, Texas State Data Center, Office of the State Demographer and the Institute for Demographic and Socioeconomic Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio.
Current population estimates and projections data as of December 2020.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on all DFPS programs.
All inmate releases from the TDCJ for FY 2020
Investigations resulting in a Notice of Enforcement (NOE) and the details associated with each violation. An investigation may be listed more than once if there were multiple violations associated to that investigation. Multiple violations may be due to identified noncompliance with different regulatory requirements (citations).
A dataset of releases from TDCJ during the TDCJ fiscal year (September - August). Including release type, demographics, and offense information.
This dataset lists the incoming documents received by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality's Registration and Reporting Section in the Office of Waste for the petroleum storage tank and industrial/hazardous waste registration programs. Use this data to determine if the Registration and Reporting Section has received a document that you sent to them and if the section has processed the document.
A dataset of all TDCJ inmate receives during the TDCJ fiscal year (September - August). Including receive type, demographics, and offense information.
Information from the TCEQ monthly waste receipts summary report form submitted by receivers of hazardous and Industrial Class 1 waste. It contains the receiver's registration number, the received date, waste code, quantity received, who shipped the waste and how it was handled.
Texas Lottery® sales by fiscal month/year, game and retailer with identifying information. DISCLOSURE: This information is not audited sales and reflects unadjusted sales data.
Total border crime arrests offenses reported in border and non-border counties for counties with the 20 highest numbers of reported arrests. The counties listed represent more than 95% of the reported activity.
A survey is a measurement for a parcel of land. Original surveys were performed as part of the patenting process where land was transferred from the public domain. The original patented surveys are recorded at the Texas General Land Office. The construction and placement of these survey polygons are not to be used to define or establish survey boundaries. These survey polygons are provided as a public service for informational purposes only.
Information from the TCEQ Waste Shipment Summary report form used by unregistered episodic generators of Industrial Class 1 or Hazardous Waste (IHW). This dataset contains the generator's identification number and name, shipment date, quantity of waste shipped, who received the waste and how it was handled.
Before filing an informal complaint with the Public Utility Commission (PUC), customers are requested to contact their electric, telephone, water or sewer provider first and allow them to investigate the complaint. If the customer is unable to come to a satisfactory resolution with their provider, they can then file a complaint with the PUC's Consumer Protection Division (CPD). This dataset includes the complaints filed with CPD.
Notices of Registration (NOR) Facilities.
This file contains the basic information for a site including the registration number, registration type, company name, mailing address, site location, and other notification information.
The Star of Texas Award honors Texas peace officer, firefighters, emergency medical first responders, and federal law enforcement officers who are seriously injured or killed in the line of duty. Private Citizens who where seriously injured or killed while aiding or attempting to aid a peace officer, firefighter, or emergency first responder in the performance of their duties are also eligible to receive a Star of Texas Award. This dataset lists the recipients of the Star of Texas Award between 2004 and 2019.
Family Connects Texas is a free evidence-based, nurse home visiting program for all families with newborns, provided through United Way and Austin Public Health. For more information, visit: https://www.familyconnectstexas.org
Violation citations are displayed along with their category, allegation description, resolution, and further details that are documented in the Consolidated Compliance and Enforcement Data System (CCEDS). Note other databases are utilized within the agency and may contain additional violation data.
All inmate receives into the TDCJ for FY 2020
This is data represented in the Annual Enforcement Report, pursuant to Texas Water Code Section 5.126, and published each December following the end of the fiscal year. Supplemental Environmental Projects (SEPs) are environmentally beneficial projects that a respondent agrees to undertake in settlement of an enforcement action. Dollars directed to TCEQ-approved environmental projects may be used to offset assessed penalties in enforcement actions.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
Disciplinary orders of the Texas Lottery Commission which include Commission Orders and the following specific sub types: • Action on Motion for Rehearing • Agreed Order – Civil Penalty • Agreed Order – Removal of Officer • Agreed Order – Temporary Suspension • SOAH Order – Denial PFD • SOAH Order – Remand Default • SOAH Order - Revocation PFD • SOAH PFD Suspension
A survey is a measurement for a parcel of land. Original surveys were performed as part of the patenting process where land was transferred from the public domain. The original patented surveys are recorded at the Texas General Land Office. The construction and placement of these survey polygons are not to be used to define or establish survey boundaries. These survey polygons are provided as a public service for informational purposes only.
All inmate releases from the TDCJ for FY 2019
An Aggregate Production Operation (APO) refers to any site where aggregates are being (or have been) removed or extracted from the earth, including the entire area of extraction, stripped areas, haulage ramps, and the land on which plant processing for the raw materials is located. Rock quarries, gravel pits, borrow pits, and other commercial APOs are required to register with TCEQ and undergo recurring inspections. APOs are included with their location, material type, permit number, and other information.
The 87th Legislature, 3rd Called Special Session, enacted H.B. 1 (PLAN H2316) which applies to elections beginning with the primary and general elections in 2022. For more information, visit: https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov.
TCEQ calculates the compliance history mass classification on Sept. 1 each year, which generates compliance history ratings and classifications for all applicable entities. By Nov. 15 these ratings and classifications are then published.
Customers and regulated entities are scored on their performance and assigned a corresponding rating and classification, which range from "High Performer" to "Unsatisfactory Performer". "Unclassified" indicates that there is no information on which to base a rating.
Please refer to the TCEQ Compliance History website for additional information: https://www.tceq.texas.gov/compliance/enforcement/compliance-history
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
This is a summary of expenditure categories from FY 2023
APS investigates allegations of abuse, neglect, and financial exploitation and provides protective services, regardless of race, creed, color, or national origin to people who are: • age 65 or older; • age 18-64 with a mental, physical, or developmental disability that substantially impairs the ability to live independently or provide for their own self-care or protection; or • emancipated minors with a mental, physical, or developmental disability that substantially impairs the ability to live independently or provide for their own self-care or protection. APS clients do not have to meet financial eligibility requirements.
The population totals will not match previously printed DFPS Data Books. Past population estimates are adjusted based on the U.S. Census data as it becomes available. This is important to keep the data in line with current best practices, but may cause some past counts, such as Abuse/Neglect Victims per 1,000 Texas Population, to be recalculated.
Population Data Source - Population Estimates and Projections Program, Texas State Data Center, Office of the State Demographer and the Institute for Demographic and Socioeconomic Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio.
Current population estimates and projections for all years from 2010 to 2019 as of December 2019.
This data is a listing of customers reported from the monthly vendor sales reports.
The 87th Legislature, 3rd Called Special Session, enacted S.B. 4 (PLAN S2168) which applies to elections beginning with the primary and general elections in 2022. For more information, visit: https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
The 83rd Legislature, 1st Called Session, enacted S.B. 2 (PLAN S172). The districts are identical to the interim plan, ordered by the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas, used to elect members in 2012 to the Texas Senate. This plan is effective January 2013. PLAN S2100 is the representation of the current state senate districts drawn on 2020 census geography.
Texas has 31 state senate districts. Each district has an ideal 2020 census population of 940,178. For more information, please visit https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov/Current-districts
Notices of Registration (NOR) Waste.
This file contains the information about waste generated at a registered site. The information includes registration number, Texas waste code, and the waste description. This file also contains a unique waste ID to link the waste to other tables pertaining to waste information. There may be zero to many waste records associated to a single site or waste management unit. For descriptions of the origin, source, and form codes on this page, view the Instructions for Notification for Hazardous or Industrial Waste Management at tceq.texas.gov/downloads/permitting/waste-registration/forms/ihw/00002inst.pdf.
A survey is a measurement for a parcel of land. Original surveys were performed as part of the patenting process where land was transferred from the public domain. The original patented surveys are recorded at the Texas General Land Office. The construction and placement of these survey polygons are not to be used to define or establish survey boundaries. These survey polygons are provided as a public service for informational purposes only.
List of Leaking Petroleum Storage Tank sites in Texas with associated PST Registration ID number(s), location information, the date each site was reported to the TCEQ, and the closure date (if closed).
The 87th Legislature, 3rd Called Special Session, enacted S.B. 6 (PLAN C2193) which applies to elections beginning with the primary and general elections in 2022. For more information, visit: https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov.
The 83rd Legislature, 1st Called Session, enacted S.B. 3 (PLAN H358), the plan used to elect members to the Texas House from 2014-2018. The U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas ordered changes to districts 90, 97 and 99 in Tarrant County for the 2020 elections. The resulting statewide plan (PLAN H414) is effective January 2021. PLAN H2100 is the representation of the current state house districts drawn on 2020 census geography.
Texas has 150 state representative districts. Each district has an ideal 2020 census population of 194,303. For more information, visit https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov/Current-districts#st-house-section
This is data represented in the Annual Enforcement Report, pursuant to Texas Water Code Section 5.126, and published each December following the end of the fiscal year. If administrative orders and penalties issued by the TCEQ do not achieve environmental compliance, the agency may refer the matter to the Office of the Attorney General for civil enforcement.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
All inmate receives into the TDCJ for FY 2019
A survey is a measurement for a parcel of land. Original surveys were performed as part of the patenting process where land was transferred from the public domain. The original patented surveys are recorded at the Texas General Land Office. The construction and placement of these survey polygons are not to be used to define or establish survey boundaries. These survey polygons are provided as a public service for informational purposes only.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
The 87th Legislature, 3rd Called Special Session, enacted S.B. 7 (PLAN E2106) which applies to elections beginning with the primary and general elections in 2022. For more information, visit: https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov.
This is 2020 decennial census data at the county level. Technical documentation for the 2020 census is available here: https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/decennial/2020/technical-documentation/complete-tech-docs/summary-file/2020Census_PL94_171Redistricting_NationalTechDoc.pdf
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
Active contracts and purchase orders that TCEQ has set forth are listed with information on the vendor, project, timeframe, and cost. The acquisition of these goods and services are categorized by Purchasing Category Codes (PCC), which are used to document the purchase method and the commodity type.
Filename: Incidents2019_2020.csv Description: Problem Type, Service Time and Call Disposition of each EMS incident in 2019-2020.
· Problem states the problem type of the emergency. · Time_PhonePickUp_Date states the date of the EMS call. · Time_First_Unit_Assigned (in minutes) states the length of time, in minutes, after the EMS call was picked up and before the first ambulance received notification of the emergency and was assigned. · Time_First_Unit_Enroute (in minutes) states the length of time, in minutes, after the first ambulance was assigned and before the ambulance set off toward the emergency. · Time_First_Unit_Arrived (in minutes) states the length of time, in minutes, after the first ambulance wheels began to roll and before the ambulance arrived at the emergency and the wheels stopped. · Call_Disposition states the final disposition of the event, such as cancelled call, transported to hospital, etc. If the ambulance transported the patient to a hospital, the name of the hospital would be specified. If the emergency call was from another government agency, for example, the Austin Fire Department, then the call disposition would be labelled as ”referred”. Other types of call dispositions fall into the category of ”defunct calls”; in this case, the call disposition of an incident would be labelled as its respective subcategory. · Call_Disposition states the acuity of the emergency. A 1 indicates highest priority and a 15 would indicate least priority.
This table combines data from the IHW NOR Unit table and the IHW NOR Waste table to show which wastes generated by a site get managed in a particular waste management unit.
The 83rd Legislature, 1st Called Session, enacted S.B. 4 (PLAN C235). The districts are identical to the interim plan, ordered by the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas, used in 2012 to elect members of the Texas delegation to the U.S. Congress. This plan is effective January 2013. PLAN C2100 is the representation of the current congressional districts drawn on 2020 census geography.
Texas has 36 congressional districts, as determined by apportionment following the 2010 census. According to results of 2020 census congressional reapportionment, Texas will have 38 districts, and each district will have an ideal 2020 census population of 766,987. For more information, visit https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov/Current-districts#us-congress-section.
Filename: ts_2019_2020.csv Description: Time series of the daily frequency of EMS incidents from 2019 to 2020
total_ts: the daily frequency of all EMS incidents. defunct_calls_pandemic_removed_ts: the daily frequency of non-pandemic defunct EMS incidents. Pandemic_defunct_calls_ts: the daily frequency of pandemic defunct EMS incidents. Incidents_pandemic_removed_ts: the daily frequency of non-pandemic, non-defunct EMS incidents. Pandemic_effect_ts: the daily frequency of pandemic, non-defunct EMS incidents. hospitalisation_ts: the daily frequency of the newly admitted Covid-19 patients to hospitals in the Austin-Round Rock metropolitan statistical area.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
This chart includes child fatalities investigated and confirmed by Child Protective Investigations, Day Care Investigations, Residential Child Care Investigations, and Adult Provider Investigations. Fatality information does not include corrections or updates, if any, that may subsequently be made to DFPS data after fiscal year end.
The Adult Protective Provider Investigations (API) division was transferred to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) in Fiscal Year 2018.
This dashboard addresses Texas Family Code Section 264.017, Subsection (b) (4) and (5).
Median Household Income All States 2000-2012
The 82nd Legislature, Regular Session, enacted H.B. 600 (PLAN E120). This plan is effective January 2013. PLAN E2100 is the representation of the current State Board of Education Districts drawn on 2020 census geography.
Texas has 15 State Board of Education districts. Each district has an ideal 2020 census population of 1,943,034. For more information, please visit https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov/Current-districts#sboe-section
FY2021 VA facilities data provided by the National Center for Veterans Statistics and Analysis, published in 2023 includes PR
All inmate receives into the TDCJ for FY 2023
The number of Texas Youth Helpline contacts for the selected Fiscal Year.
This file contains the information about a site's waste management either from onsite generation or received from offsite. The waste management unit (WMU) information includes the site's registration number, the WMU sequence number, and unit type. There may be zero to many WMU records associated to a site and one or multiple waste codes associated to a WMU. For descriptions of the codes on this page, view Appendixes B and C of the Instructions for Notification for Hazardous or Industrial Waste Management at tceq.texas.gov/downloads/permitting/waste-registration/forms/ihw/00002inst.pdf.
All inmate releases from the TDCJ for FY 2023
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
Industrial Hazardous Waste (IHW) Notices of Registration (NOR) Owners & Operator Contacts. This file contains the basic contact information for facility operators and operators including the facility registration number, operator or operator name, mailing address, phone, fax, and business type. The file reflects only the most recent owner or operator for the facility.
This dataset contains all historical Dry Cleaner Registrations in Texas. Note that most registrations listed are expired and are from previous years.
View operating dry cleaners with current and valid (unexpired) registration certificates here: https://data.texas.gov/dataset/Texas-Commission-on-Environmental-Quality-Current-/qfph-9bnd/
State law requires dry cleaning facilities and drop stations to register with TCEQ. Dry cleaning facilities and drop stations must renew their registration by August 1st of each year. The Dry Cleaners Registrations reflect self-reported registration information about whether a dry cleaning location is a facility or drop station, and whether they have opted out of the Dry Cleaning Environmental Remediation Fund. Distributors can find out whether to collect solvent fees from each registered facility as well as the registration status and delivery certificate expiration date of a location.
FY2021 VA Health and Benefits and FY2021 VA Education data provided by the National Center for Veterans Statistics and Analysis, published in 2023.
This is 2020 decennial census data at the place level. Technical documentation is available here: https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/decennial/2020/technical-documentation/complete-tech-docs/summary-file/2020Census_PL94_171Redistricting_NationalTechDoc.pdf
This retention schedule indicates the minimum length of time listed records series must be retained by a universities before destruction or archival preservation. The URRS does not take the place of an agency’s retention schedule, but it is to be used as a guide by the agency in creating and updating its schedule. Records series listed on the URRS are those that are commonly created or received by universities. The retention periods given in the URRS are required minimums. The commission also recommends them as appropriate maximum retention periods.
This dataset contains all operating Dry Cleaner Registrations in Texas that have a current and valid registration.
State law requires dry cleaning facilities and drop stations to register with TCEQ. Dry cleaning facilities and drop stations must renew their registration by August 1st of each year. The Dry Cleaners Registrations reflect self-reported registration information about whether a dry cleaning location is a facility or drop station, and whether they have opted out of the Dry Cleaning Environmental Remediation Fund. Distributors can find out whether to collect solvent fees from each registered facility as well as the registration status and delivery certificate expiration date of a location.
A water and sewer Investor-Owned Utility (IOU) is a retail public utility owned by an individual, partnership, corporation or homeowners association.
This file contains the basic information for the current billing contact for a registered site including contact name, contact title, company name, mailing address, and phone number.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31.
The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
These data are based on the latest Veteran Population Projection Model, VetPop2020, provided by the National Center for Veterans Statistics and Analysis, published in 2023.
The 83rd Legislature, 1st Called Session, enacted S.B. 4 (PLAN C235). This plan is effective January 2013. All data is based on the 2010 census. For more information, visit: https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov/Current-districts#us-congress-section.
FY 2021 VA Personal Income data used to populate the NCVAS State summary visualizations created in FY2023.
FY2021 VA facilities data provided by the National Center for Veterans Statistics and Analysis, published in 2023.
The 83rd Legislature, 1st Called Session, enacted S.B. 3 (PLAN H358), the plan used to elect members to the Texas House from 2014-2018. The U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas ordered changes to districts 90, 97 and 99 in Tarrant County for the 2020 elections. The resulting statewide plan (PLAN H414) is effective January 2021. All data is based on the 2010 census. For more information, visit: https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov/Current-districts#st-house-section.
FY2021 VA expenditures data provided by the National Center for Veterans Analysis and Statistics, published in 2023.
Submetered utility service is water utility service that is master metered for the owner by the retail public utility and individually metered by the owner at each dwelling unit; wastewater utility service based on submetered water utility service; water utility service measured by point-of-use submeters when all of the water used in a dwelling unit is measured and totaled; or wastewater utility service based on total water use as measured by point-of-use submeters.
Allocated utility service is water or wastewater utility service that is master metered to an owner by a retail public utility and allocated to tenants by the owner.
Austin Public Health, using Texas Education Agency data, is measuring the percentage of students attending schools with an "F" rating. The ratings are determined by the Texas Education Agency. The city uses this information for individual school performance measurement. This data set is intended to power visualizations for related measures in the strategic plan.
One strategic measure is reported using this data set.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/b9ik-7u7k
This dataset is comprised of 1-year estimate data from the American Community Survey published as of 2021.
This file contains the basic information for the current site primary contact including facility registration number, contact name, title, mailing address, phone, and fax, and email.
This dataset is comprised of 1-year estimate data from the American Community Survey published as of 2021.
Notices of Registration (NOR) Universal Waste Activity.
This file contains the universal waste information for a site including the registration number, Large Quantity Handler (LQH) Indicator, Universal Waste Type being managed, Destination Facility Indicator. The file only includes sites that have a non-null value for either UNIV_WST_LRG_QTY_HAND_FLG and/or UNIV_WST_DEST_FAC_FLG. The output should be ordered by SWR number.
The 83rd Legislature, 1st Called Session, enacted S.B. 2 (PLAN S172). This plan is effective January 2013. All data is based on the 2010 census. For more information, visit: https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov/Current-districts.
This retention schedule indicates the minimum length of time listed records series must be retained by a state agency before destruction or archival preservation. The RRS does not take the place of an agency’s retention schedule, but it is to be used as a guide by the agency in creating and updating its schedule. Records series listed on the RRS are those that are commonly found in most state agencies. The retention periods given in the RRS are required minimums. The commission also recommends them as appropriate maximum retention periods.
Incidence Rate Of Larynx Cancer Per 100,000 All States
This table lists the EPA Hazardous Waste Numbers (EHWNs) tied to each hazardous waste a site generates. The table lists the Texas Waste Code, other information about the waste, and each EHWN in a separate row.
This chart includes child fatality investigations in which the child's death was determined to be caused by a factor other than abuse/neglect.
A child may be included in more than one abuse/neglect investigation.
NOTE: Includes child fatalities investigated with a non-fatal finding by Child Protective Investigations, Day Care Investigations, Residential Child Care Investigations, Adult Protective Services, and Adult Provider Investigations. Fatality information does not include corrections or updates, if any, that may subsequently be made to DFPS data after fiscal year end.
Administrative Closures are counted for CPS only.
The Adult Protective Provider Investigations (API) division was tranferred to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) in Fiscal Year 2018.
This dashboard addresses the Texas Family Code Section 264.017 (d).
FY 2021 VA facilities data used to populate the NCVAS State summaries created in FY2023.
A listing of all TDLR license holders from https://www.tdlr.texas.gov/LicenseSearch/.
Incidence Rate Of Leukemia Per 100,000 All States
Incidence Of Brain And Central Nervous System Cancer Age 15 Under Per 1,000,000 All States
Incidence Rate Of Mesothelioma Per 100,000 All States
Incidence Rates Of Kidney And Renal Pelvis Cancer Per 100,000 All States.
Incidence Rate Of Pancreatic Cancer Per 100,000 All States
Incidence Rates Of Thyroid Cancer Per 100,000 All States
Incidence Rate Of Non- Hodgkins Lymphoma Per 100,000 All States
Incidence Rate Of Leukemia Among Children Under 15 Per 1,000,000 All States
Incidence Rate Of Melanoma Per 100,000 All States
Number Of Major Effect Illnesses From Exposure To All Pesticides All States
Incidence Rate Of Oral Cancer Per 100,000 All States
Low Birthweight Among Singleton Births Ave Annual Number By State
Age Adjusted Incidence Rates Of Bladder Cancer Per 100,000 All States-TEST
Incidence Rates Of Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Per 100,000 All States
Incidence Rates Of Brain And Nervous System Cancer Per 100,000
Incidence Rate Of Breast Cancer Per 100,000 All States
Number Of People Without Health Insurance All States 2005-2012
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Rate Of Death For CO Per 100,000 All States
This data set shows the number and percentage of children enrolled in quality early childhood education programs in the City of Austin as evidenced by meeting Texas Rising Star (TRS) critera. The TRS criteria can be viewed here: https://texasrisingstar.org/about-trs/trs-guidelines/
The data is from the Workforce Solutions Capital Area Workforce Board agency that oversees the TWIST database that contains the data used here: https://www.twc.texas.gov/childcarenumbers/Capital_Area_Workforce_Development_Board_annual.html
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/sube-u7vs
Average Annual Infant Mortality Rate Per 1000 Live Births All States
Average Annual Number Of Infant Deaths Less Than 1 Year Old All States
A census tract is a geographic area defined by the U.S. Census Bureau for the purpose of collecting and analyzing demographic data. Typically, a census tract contains a population of about 1,200 to 8,000 people and is designed to reflect homogenous social and economic characteristics. Tracts are used in various statistical analyses and are updated every ten years with the decennial census, allowing for a detailed understanding of population trends, housing, and economic conditions within specific communities.
These files do not include demographic data, but they contain geographic entity codes that can be linked to the Census Bureau’s demographic data, available on https://data.census.gov.
Terms of Use This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of property boundaries. This product has been produced by the US Census for the sole purpose of geographic reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
Number Of People Aged 25 Older With High School Diploma Or Equivalent All States
Average Annual Number Of Neonatal Deaths Over 8 Year Period All States
Incidence Rates Of Liver And Intrahepatic Bile Duct Cancer Per 100,000 All States
Percent Of Adults Who Ever Smoked All States All Years
This report lists current calendar year Texas plant closure and layoff notices issued under the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act. Under certain circumstances, the WARN Act requires employers to provide notice 60 days in advance of plant closures or mass layoffs. The WARN Act is intended to offer protection to workers, their families and communities.
Ave Annual Percent Very Low Birthweight All States
Rates Of Esophageal Cancer Per 100,000 All States
Average Annual Percent Of Very Preterm Live Births All States
Percent Of Children Tested Annual Blood Lead Levels All States
Age Adjusted Incidence Rates Of Bladder Cancer Per 100,000 All States
Average Annual Postneonatal Morality Rate Per 100 Live Births All States
Average Annual Number Of Infant Deaths Over 5 Year Period All States
The Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) is responsible for licensing, registering, certifying, and regulating people who sell insurance or adjust property and casualty claims in Texas. This data set includes a row for each license held by a person. A person with more than one license will be listed in multiple rows. To view the list of agencies and business licensed by TDI, go to the Insurance agencies data set. To learn more about the type of licenses in this data set, go to TDI’s agent and adjuster licensing webpage. For detailed search results on individual agencies, agents, and adjusters please click here: Detailed reports.
Incidence Rates Of Lung And Bronchial Cancer Per 100,000 All States
Number Of People In Poverty All States 2000-2012
Children Receiving Interventions Developmental Disabilities Age 6-11 All States
Number Of Minor Effect Illnesses From Exposure To All Pesticides By States
Average Annual Percent Of Very Low Birthweight Over 5 Year Period All States
Children Receiving Interventions Developmental Disabilities 3-5 All States
Children Receiving Interventions For Developmental Disabilities All States
Rate Of Reported Exposures To Fungicides Per 100,000 People All States
Average Annual Neonatal Mortality Rate Per 1000 Live Births All States
Rate Of Reported Exposures To Fungicides Per 100,000 People All States
Average Annual Number Of Very Preterm Live Singleton Births Over 5 Year Period All States
Number Of Adults Who Ever Smoked All States All Years
Average Annual Number Of Very Preterm Live Births Over 5 Year Period All States
Rate Of Exposure To Rodenticides Per 100,000 People All States
Average Annual Number Of Postneonatal Deaths Over 5 Year Period All States
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) publishes a monthly report of private employers that have opted out of Texas workers’ compensation insurance coverage (non-subscribers). Texas does not require most private employers to have workers' compensation insurance coverage.
Non-subscribers are required to file the DWC Form-005, Employers' Notice of No Coverage or Termination of Coverage annually. The DWC Form-005 is the source of this data set.
Individuals currently licensed by the Texas Racing Commission as of 12/21/2021. Foreign addresses are not included in this dataset. Please contact TxRC for further information.
Provides food establishment inspection scores performed within the last 3 years. Inspections are conducted in accordance with the Texas Food Establishment Rules (TFER) and City of Austin Codes. Inspections are completed by Environmental Health Officers working for Austin Public Health (APH) Environmental Health Services Division (EHSD).
The information in this file is a result of HB 268 requiring registration for Sales Tax exemption regarding qualifying Agriculture and Timber purchases.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies
This file contains a list of taxpayers required to report mixed beverage gross receipts tax reports under Tax Code Chapter 183, Subchapter B. The list provides taxpayer names, amounts reported, and other public information.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies
An economic indicator is a statistic about an economic activity, and they allow analysis of economic performance and predictions of current and future economic performance. The TX Comptroller’s Key Economic Indicators includes such measures for TX & the US employment and unemployment, consumer confidence, price inflation, housing data, etc.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
Product Labels approved by TABC before Sept 1, 2021.
Learn more about this data and how to search it at https://www.tabc.texas.gov/public-information/approved-labels-search/.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) publishes a quarterly report of employers with active Texas workers’ compensation insurance coverage. Employers with coverage are called “subscribers.” Texas does not require most private employers to have workers' compensation insurance coverage.
Insurance carriers report coverage data to DWC using the International Association of Industrial Accident Boards and Commissions’ (IAIABC) IAIABC Proof of Coverage (POC) Release 2.1 electronic data interchange (EDI) standard. The National Council on Workers’ Compensation Insurance (NCCI) collects the POC data for DWC. POC filings are the source of this data set.
Visit the DWC Employer Coverage Page for more information.
Texas public school district superintendent salary information as of October 2023.
This file contains a list of taxpayers who hold an active sales tax permit under Tax Code Chapter 151, Subchapter F. The file includes taxpayer and outlet information.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies
This file contains a list of International Fuel Tax Agreement (IFTA) Licensees in Texas.
The Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) is responsible for licensing, registering, certifying, and regulating agencies and businesses that want to sell insurance or adjust property and casualty claims in Texas. This data set includes a row for each license held by an agency or business. An agency or business with more than one license will be listed in multiple rows. To view a list of people licensed by TDI, go to the Insurance agent and adjusters data set. To learn more about the type of licenses in this data set, go to TDI’s agent and adjuster licensing webpage. For detailed search results on individual agencies, agents, and adjusters please click here: Detailed reports.
Fuels tax license holders in Texas including Taxpayer Number, Name, City, Zip Code and Permit Type.
The submitting agency SHALL be responsible for ensuring the accuracy of the bid document posting(s), closing time, delivery of bid, evaluation, awards and any other procurement documentation. The agency shall not waive any state or federal law or agency’s requirements on purchases.
This file contains a list of entities that have an active direct payment permit for paying Texas sales and use taxes.
This file contains a list of active taxpayers set up for franchise tax under Tax Code Chapter 171. The file includes taxpayer name, address, and other public business information.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies
Active Bingo Conductors by playing location with identifying information.
Adults age 65 or older are automatically eligible for APS services based on their age. An adult age 18 to 64 old must be substantially impaired to be eligible for APS services.
Substantial impairment is defined as: "When a disability grossly and chronically diminishes an adult’s physical or mental ability to live independently or provide self-care as determined through observation, diagnosis, evaluation, or assessment." (Texas Human Resources Code §48.002(a)(8); 40 Texas Administrative Code §705.1001)
Assessment of a mental, physical, or developmental disability as indicated by one of the following: • A medical condition • Professional diagnosis • Reported or observed behavior that is consistent with such a diagnosis. The disability must cause a long-lasting and considerable inability to live independently or provide self-care.
The population totals do not match prior DFPS Data Books, printed or online. Past population estimates are adjusted based on the U.S. Census data as it becomes available. This is important to keep the data in line with current best practices, but will cause some past counts, such as Abuse/Neglect Victims per 1,000 Texas Children, to be recalculated.
Population Data Source - Population Estimates and Projections Program, Texas State Data Center, Office of the State Demographer and the Institute for Demographic and Socioeconomic Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio.
Current population estimates and projections for all years from 2014 to 2023 as of December 2023.
This data set details approved nominations for the Media Production & Development Zone Program, administered by the Texas Film Commission.
Sales tax allocation comparison summary reports present data on monthly local sales and use tax payments to local jurisdictions. These payments represent funds identified for local jurisdictions since the previous month’s distribution. When used with other local indicators, these reports may help indicate present and future economic trends. This table lists entities alphabetically by city.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
Questions or edits: email dir.hub@dir.texas.gov. Bid Book Spreadsheet Senator Royce West Doing Business Texas Style Spot Bid Portal FY2024
For Help: https://data.texas.gov/videos For more information, go to TABC Sept. 1, 2021 License Consolidation Explained chart Contains information associated with the licenses, permits, certificates, and authorities granted (issued) by the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission (referenced herein as “Licenses”). This information includes certain identifiers for the licenses, the license holders (owners), the license types, and license statuses as more fully defined within this Open Data Portal (ODP) data file for both the Alcohol Industry Management System (AIMS), effective September 1, 2021, and TABCs legacy system(s) prior to September 1, 2021. This “tool” has been provided to allow the user to locate information and cross reference the licenses that were migrated from the TABC legacy system(s) to the AIMS system and for which have been assigned new License numbers effective September 1, 2021.
Questions or edits: email dir.hub@dir.texas.gov. Bid Book Spreadsheet Senator Royce West Doing Business Texas Style Spot Bid Portal FY2023
This report shows jurisdictions adopting new or changed sales tax rates. The rates shown are for each jurisdiction and do not represent the total rate in the area.
This file contains information at the outlet level for all Cigarette/tobacco Retailers with an active permit. The list is for Distributors to know Authorized Retailers for sales and gives information required for reporting.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies
Texas Code, Chapter 380 Executed Agreements
Listing of deaths by suicide in the City of Austin by year, age group, and gender. This listing is compiled from the Texas Electronic Registrar (TER). The Texas Electronic Registrar is an online system used by funeral directors, physicians, medical examiners, and others in Texas to create death certificates.
Businesses licensed by TxRC as of 12/21/2021. Foreign addresses are not included in this dataset. Please contact TxRC for further information.
This file contains a list of licensed motor fuel transporters (common carriers) in Texas.
Texas Code, Chapter 380 Creative content Incentive Agreements
Visit: https://www.austintexas.gov/financeonline/finance/unclaimed_property.cfm for information about how to submit a claim if you find your name on the list. Every year, various departments of the City of Austin report unclaimed cash and valuables, from uncashed checks, deposits, refunds, overpayments or any other transactions creating a credit balance valued at $100 or less.
Contact: 512-974-7890 or 512-974-1384
The Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) regulates the state’s insurance industry and oversees the administration of the Texas workers’ compensation system. This data set includes counts for confirmed complaints and policies in force by company name and line of coverage. The complaint index is calculated by dividing the company's percentage of complaints for a specific line of insurance by the company's percentage of policies in force for the same line of insurance. The average index is 1.00. A number less than 1 indicates fewer complaints than average. A number greater than 1 indicates more complaints than average. Please visit TDI Complaints: All Data for details about processed complaints.
Questions or edits: email dir.hub@dir.texas.gov. Bid Book Spreadsheet Senator Royce West Doing Business Texas Style Spot Bid Portal FY2022
The City of Austin as approved by Council resolution agreed to serve as the endorsing municipality.
This file contains a list of Signed Statement Registration Numbers in Texas.
This dataset contains the number of Vaccine for Children (VFC) and adult safety net (ASN) eligible client visits and the number of shots given through the Austin Public Health ‘Shots for Tots’ and ‘Big Shots’ programs at the St. John's and Far South clinics. Data are reported monthly from 2010 through 2022.
The data was previously extracted from the Texas Department of State Health Services’ Texas-Wide Integrated Client Encounter System (TWICES) into an aggregate report for each clinic by an Austin Public Health employee at the beginning of each month. APH transitioned from TWICES to the eClinicalWorks (eCW) platform in December 2017.
This dataset supports measure HE.B.6 of SD23
Data Source : Texas Department of State Health Services’ Texas-Wide Integrated Client Encounter System (TWICES), eCW
Calculation: HE.B.6 Number of clinic visits / 10,000 appointments (maximum number of available appointments per Fiscal Year)
Measure Time Period: Annually (Fiscal Year)
Automated: No
Date of last description update: 4/28/2020
Optimized version of DIR Cooperative Contract Sales Data Fiscal 2010 To Present. This dataset was made active 09072018 and include data going back to 2010 within the dataset. For a complete dataset history of downloads, visits, rows and columns refer to ARCHIVE DIR Cooperative Contract Sales Data Fiscal 2010 for a complete history of statistics regarding the dataset (downloads, visits, rows, etc.)
All inmate releases from the TDCJ for FY 2024
This file includes all sales tax outlets, and local tax responsibility, in Texas which have been active during the last four years. Inactive outlets will include an Out-of-Business date.
Purses paid by Texas tracks as reported to TxRC thru 12/20/2021.
Austin Water Authorized Irrigation Inspector List
This file contains information for all Cigarette/Tobacco Cigarette and Tobacco Distributors, Manufacturers, Wholesalers, and Importers with an active permit.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies
A listing of all HOA management certificates from https://www.hoa.texas.gov/management-certificates-search.
► The Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) handles complaints against people and organizations licensed by TDI, such as companies, agents, and adjusters. To learn more, go to the TDI webpage, How to get help with an insurance issue or file a complaint.  ► This dataset includes a row for each person and organization named in a complaint. This means some complaint numbers are listed multiple times. To view a dataset that lists each complaint number once due to removing the “Complaint filed against” column, use TDI Complaints: One Record / Complaint.
This file contains a list of maquiladora enterprises that currently hold an active maquiladora export permit.
Sales tax allocation comparison summary reports present data on monthly local sales and use tax payments to local jurisdictions. These payments represent funds identified for local jurisdictions since the previous month’s distribution. When used with other local indicators, these reports may help indicate present and future economic trends. This table lists entities alphabetically by county name, then alphabetically by cities within the county.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
Residential customers use an average of about 1,000 kWh of electricity per month, with usage higher during hot summer months and lower in the winter. View tables show monthly average usage in kWh by month for residential customers starting in 2000. Tables include monthly fuel charges and electric bill amounts.
The data set may include active and inactive credit access businesses.
The Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) collects and reports information about billing rates for emergency service providers by procedure code as set by the political subdivisions. The procedure codes include Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) Codes and any other codes reported by the political subdivisions. This dataset lists the codes and the rates for residents of that political subdivision and for non-residents if that rate differs. There is a row for each procedure code and the rates set by a political subdivision. Political subdivisions with more than one code with a rate set will be listed in multiple rows. The data includes the year and quarter the information applies to as well as the date the political subdivision submitted their report.
The Texas Legislature amended Texas Insurance Code Chapter 38 via Senate Bill 2476 during the 88th session to add reporting “relating to consumer protections against certain medical and health care billing by emergency medical services providers. A political subdivision may submit to the department a rate set, controlled, or regulated by the political subdivision for emergency services.”
► For contact information, refer to dataset: Emergency Services Billing Rates - Contact List.
► For National Provider Identifier Standard (NPI) information reported in each political subdivision, refer to dataset: Emergency Services Billing Rates - NPI.
► For ZIP codes within political subdivisions, refer to dataset: Emergency Services Billing Rates - ZIPs.
Users are responsible for reviewing and updating data before the submission deadlines. Information entered or found in this dataset is subject to change. Visit TDI’s web site disclaimer for more information.
For more information related to this data, visit TDI’s FAQ page.
Flat file data set of the data found in the Austin Finance Online eCheckbook application. The data contained in this dataset is for informational purposes only and contains expenditure information for the City of Austin. Certain Austin Energy transactions have been excluded as competitive matters under Texas Government Code Section 552.133 and City Council Resolution 20051201-002; therefore, the line amounts may not reflect the total check amount if certain Austin Energy invoices were included on the check. Please visit the Austin Finance Online website for a searchable front end to this data set.
This chart counts victims in completed investigations. Completed investigations only include those cases conducted as a traditional investigation that were not administratively closed or merged into another stage. An investigation can only be administratively closed if all allegations have a disposition of administrative closure. A completed investigation can include more than one alleged victim. Completed investigations do not include any Alternative Response stages.
A confirmed victim on a completed investigation is a child who is a victim on at least one allegation with a disposition of reason to believe.
An unconfirmed victim on a completed investigation is a child who was an alleged victim on at least one allegation with a disposition of unable to complete, unable to determine or ruled out.
A description of Alternative Response and how it differs from a traditional investigation and the definitions of the different dispositions in a traditional investigation are in the glossary.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on CPS Abuse/Neglect Investigations and all DFPS programs.
Austin Resource Recovery daily report providing waste collection information based on the following categories: Report Date: The date collections information was recorded. Load Type: The specific type of load that is being collected on that day. Load Weight: The weight (in pounds) collected for each service on the day it was delivered to a diversion facility Drop off Site: The location where each type of waste is delivered for disposal, recycling or reuse: TDS Landfill indicates the Texas Disposal System landfill located at 12200 Carl Rd, Creedmoor, TX 78610; Balcones Recycling is a recycling facility located at 9301 Johnny Morris Road Austin, TX 78724; MRF is a Materials Recycling Facility (such as Texas Disposal Systems or Balcones Recycling); Hornsby Bend is located at 2210 FM 973, Austin, TX 78725 and accepts food scraps, yard trimmings, food-soiled paper and other materials collected by ARR, and combined with other waste to produce nutrient-rich dillo dirt, used for landscaping. Route Type: The general category of collection service provided by Austin Resource Recovery This information is used to help ARR reach its goals to transform waste into resources while keeping our community clean. For more information, visit www.austintexas.gov/department/austin-resource-recovery
The Texas Commission on the Arts funds a wide variety of arts and cultural activities across the state. This is a list of all the grants approved by the Commission. You can search this list by the grantee organization name, by city, or by Texas region.
This file contains information at the outlet level for all Cigarette/Tobacco Retailers with an active permit or that have been active within the last four years. The list is for Distributors to know Authorized Retailers for sales and gives information required for reporting.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies
Types of Abuse, Neglect and Financial Exploitation
A single APS case can have more than one allegation.
Neglect is the failure to provide the protection, food, shelter, or care necessary to avoid emotional harm or physical injury. The alleged perpetrator of the neglect may be the victim or the victim's caregiver. There are three types of neglect allegations: Physical Neglect, Medical Neglect, and Mental Health Neglect.
Other allegation types include: Financial Exploitation, Physical Abuse, Emotional or Verbal Abuse, or Sexual Abuse.
The population totals do not match prior DFPS Data Books, printed or ontline. Past population estimates are adjusted based on the U.S. Census data as it becomes available. This is important to keep the data in line with current best practices, but will cause some past counts, such as Abuse/Neglect Victims per 1,000 Texas Children, to be recalculated.
Population Data Source - Population Estimates and Projections Program, Texas State Data Center, Office of the State Demographer and the Institute for Demographic and Socioeconomic Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio.
Current population estimates and projections for all years from 2014 to 2023 as of December 2023.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs.
This file contains information for all Cigarette and Tobacco Registered Manufacturers with an active permit.
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all summer meal sites approved by TDA to operate during the 2019 program period. Applications to participate in summer programs open on January 15 and close May 1. Changes in site information can occur through August. Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
An overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by April 1 of the active program year. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, dataset updates will occur every two weeks until the end of August.
All TDA datasets will have a final active update 90 days after the close of the program period. Datasets will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Any data posted during the active update schedule is subject to change.
New Data Fields Available!
CE and site status (active/inactive), termination status, termination as of date, and CE application cycle (new/renewal) are now available on this dataset. These fields have been added to the last columns of the report and data descriptions have been added to the column metadata.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
This data set includes a row for each active underwriter appointment by county for Title Agencies and Title Direct Operations.
This file contains a list of licensed interstate truckers in Texas.
Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts dataset
Street Name Master List - contains all the reserved and active street names.
2023 Houston Minority Supplier Development Council Spot Bid Fair
Austin Water updates the following set of key facts and statistics quarterly based on customer and GIS data.
Monthly residential water consumption grouped by zip code and customer class.
This is a list of Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) and Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) license holders.
The Family Business Loan Program is a public-private partnership between the City of Austin, HUD, and participating private lenders to offer low-interest loans to qualified small businesses that are expanding and creating jobs.
This data set includes a row for each person associated with a surplus lines agency in the role of officer or director.
2024 Houston Minority Supplier Development Council Spot Bid Fair
ELEVATION.contours_2021
Summary The Texas Natural Resources Information System (TNRIS) contracted Sanborn to fly LiDAR in March of 2021. TNRIS then created the contours in the Spring of 2022 using Global Mapper.
Description This layer represents contour elevation lines as of the March 2021. The contours are derived from LiDAR data, collected in the March 2021. Contours were generated using Global Mapper, sample spacing used to create the contours is consistent with the Nominal Point Spacing (NPS), of the source LiDAR dataset from which it was derived. Lines were automatically smoothed while being generated by Global Mapper.
Important: The LiDAR data was created using UTM zone 14N and was projected in Central Texas State Plane (NAD 83) FIPS 4203.
For contour type: 1 = Minor Contour 2 = Intermediate Contour 3 = Major Contour
Credits The Texas Natural Resources Information System (TNRIS)
Use limitations This map has been produced by the City of Austin for the cartographic purposes. No warranty is made by the City or TNRIS regarding its accuracy or completeness.
► The Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) handles complaints against people and organizations licensed by TDI, such as companies, agents, and adjusters. To learn more, go to the TDI webpage, How to get help with an insurance issue or file a complaint.  ► This dataset does not include the person or organization the complaint is filed against. To view the dataset that includes the "Complaint filed against" column, use TDI Complaints: All Data.
Animal Center Outcomes from Oct, 1st 2013 to present. Outcomes represent the status of animals as they leave the Animal Center. All animals receive a unique Animal ID during intake. Annually over 90% of animals entering the center, are adopted, transferred to rescue or returned to their owners. The Outcomes data set reflects that Austin, TX. is the largest "No Kill" city in the country.
This data set replaces all previous Animal Center Outcomes data sets.
Animal Center Intakes from Oct, 1st 2013 to present. Intakes represent the status of animals as they arrive at the Animal Center. All animals receive a unique Animal ID during intake. Annually over 90% of animals entering the center, are adopted, transferred to rescue or returned to their owners.
Sales tax allocation comparison summary reports present data on monthly local sales and use tax payments to local jurisdictions. These payments represent funds identified for local jurisdictions since the previous month’s distribution. When used with other local indicators, these reports may help indicate present and future economic trends. This table contains data for counties, Special-Purpose Districts (SPDs), Metropolitan Transit Authorities (MTAs), and city transit departments (CTDs).
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
This file contains information for all Cigarette/Tobacco holders with an suspended or revoked permit.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
As outlined in the Texas Juvenile Justice Department General Administrative Policy (GAP) Manual reference GAP.07.03, incidents must be properly documented and reported. Critical incidents, serious incidents, and suspected mistreatment of youth must be reported immediately to the Office of Inspector General – Incident Reporting Center (IRC).
All fatal and non-fatal injuries and fatal illnesses as reported to or reported by Texas Racing Commission veterinarians in the years 2010 through 2020.
These entities received mixed beverage tax revenue from permit holders located in the city or county respectively.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for summer meal sites approved by TDA to operate between October 2020 and September 2021 (Program Year 2021). Summer meal programs typically operate June through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the COVID Meal Site or Oct-May Claims columns. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program participation data by April 1 of the active program year. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, updates to the program participation dataset will occur every two weeks until the end of August.
All TDA datasets will have a final active update 90 days after the close of the program period. Datasets will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Any data posted during the active update schedule is subject to change.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
See the attached PDF for a detailed description of each tax type. The Comptroller of Public Accounts is charged by statute, Tex. Gov’t Code § 403.0142, with reporting and posting the amounts of revenue remitted from each Texas municipality and county for taxes whose location information is available from tax returns. The revenue is presented by county only because specific cities could not be definitively determined from the report data. Returns submitted directly by local governments are open records and include their names and addresses. Due to confidentiality restrictions, amounts reported by businesses cannot be provided when less than four businesses report for a specific county. This data is posted quarterly, six months after the end of the quarterly data period to allow for collection actions when needed.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies
Purses paid by Texas tracks as reported to TxRC thru 01/30/19.
Monthly Handle by TxRC Track Code and Signal Type - as of 6/31/2021.
The document displays all the facilities in Harris County, Texas that have submitted a DMR. There are multiple lines for each facility due to outfalls and parameters. The spreadsheet is searchable by permittee name and EPA ID.
Austin Water’s approved plant list specifies plants that may receive a new landscape/xeriscape watering schedule variance. A landscape must have xeric (low or very low water use) plants to receive the variance. Austin Water might approve other plants if they will be low or very low water use once established. For a list of stabilization/erosion control plants that qualify for this variance, please refer to The City of Austin’s Standard Specifications Manual Item #604S
This file contains a list of organizations that have been issued a determination letter and are therefore eligible to apply for local property tax exemptions.
This is a polygon feature class representing the boundaries of USGS 3.5 min quadrangle grid for Travis County, Texas. Data obtained from Texas Natural Resources Information System and clipped to Travis County extent. This data has been produced by the City of Austin for the sole purpose of aiding regional planning and is not warranted for any other use. No warranty is made by the City regarding its accuracy or completeness.
Texas Code, Chapter 380 Payments & Compliance Reports
This data set includes a row for each alias by which Title Agencies and Title Direct Operations are known or recognized.
This project is part of a larger plan to transfer commonly requested TJJD data onto the Texas Open Data Portal. This will allow for greater efficiency in sharing publicly available information and answering Public Information Requests (PIRs). County-level referral data is the source for most statistics in the “State of Juvenile Probation Activity in Texas” Report, which is published yearly. This report “provides information regarding the magnitude and nature of juvenile criminal activity and the juvenile probation system's response. This information is offered to assist the state's effort in improving the juvenile justice system and reducing juvenile crime in Texas” (State of Juvenile Probation Activity in Texas, 2020).
2016 Daily purses paid by Texas pari-mutuel racetracks as reported to TxRC. All figures are based on information available to TxRC at the time the data was compiled and are subject to being audited and revised.
Chapter 48, Title 2, of the Texas Human Resources Code (HRC) and Chapter 705 of the Texas Administrative Code (TAC) authorizes APS to investigate abuse and financial exploitation of a person age 65 or older or an adult with a disability when the person responsible for the maltreatment is a: • caretaker; • paid caretaker; • family member; or • person who has an ongoing relationship with the alleged victim. Examples include a personal friend, paramour, or roommate. In the case of neglect, the perpetrator may also be the victim himself or herself. This is called "Self-neglect". In cases of family violence, a protective order can be obtained from a court that prohibits a member of a family or household from remaining in the household, and from contacting or coming near the victim. The purpose of the order is to prevent that person from committing further acts of family violence against the victim. The statutes governing family violence protective orders are set forth in Texas Family Code Chapters 71-87. This order is only available when family violence has been committed by a family member, member of the household, or in some circumstances by a person the victim has dated.
Each victim may have more than one perpetrator in an investigation.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs.
The Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) collects and reports information about billing rates for emergency service providers within political subdivisions as reported by those political subdivisions. The National Provider Identifier Standard (NPI) is a unique ten-digit identification number for covered health care providers. This dataset relates emergency service providers by NPI with the political subdivisions where they operate by year and quarter. There is a row for each emergency service provider operating within a political subdivision. Subdivisions with more than one provider operating in them or providers operating in more than one subdivision will be listed in multiple rows. The data includes the year and quarter the information applies to as well as the date the political subdivision submitted their report.
The Texas Legislature amended Texas Insurance Code Chapter 38 via Senate Bill 2476 during the 88th session to add reporting “relating to consumer protections against certain medical and health care billing by emergency medical services providers. A political subdivision may submit to the department a rate set, controlled, or regulated by the political subdivision for emergency services.”
► For contact information, refer to dataset: Emergency Services Billing Rates - Contact List.
► For procedure codes rates, refer to dataset: Emergency Services Billing Rates - Code Rates.
► For ZIP codes within political subdivisions, refer to dataset: Emergency Services Billing Rates - ZIPs.
Users are responsible for reviewing and updating data before the submission deadlines. Information entered or found in this dataset is subject to change. Visit TDI’s web site disclaimer for more information.
For more information related to this data, visit TDI’s FAQ page.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of health care providers with current maximum medical improvement (MMI) and designated doctor certifications in Texas. This list includes doctors’ certification periods, phone numbers, and fax numbers.
For more information about designated doctors, go to https://www.tdi.texas.gov/wc/dd/index.html.
For a detailed list of exam locations for these health care providers, go to Workers’ Compensation Maximum Medical Improvement Doctors and Designated Doctors’ Address Information.
Appointments are formal designations to represent regulated insurance companies. This data set includes a row for each active appointment between an agent or adjuster and an insurance company. To view a list of appointments for agencies and businesses, go to the Active insurance company appointments for agencies and businesses data set. To view a list of non-appointment relationships between agents, agencies, adjusters, and insurance companies, go to the Business relationships between agents, agencies, adjusters, and insurance companies data set.
Eligible Training Providers (ETPs) are entities with job training programs approved by the Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) to provide Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA)–funded training services. Local Workforce Development Boards (Boards) fund training for Adult and Dislocated Worker program participants primarily through Individual Training Accounts (ITAs). The publicly accessible Statewide Eligible Training Providers List (ETPL) includes all programs that are currently approved by TWC for ITA funding. Note: This data is refreshed monthly.
This dataset contains information about the unemployment rate in Austin (SD23 measure EOA.A.1). Texas Workforce Comission provides Texas Labor Market Information for Austin, the Austin Round-Rock MSA, Texas, and the United States.
This dataset includes the average number of people in the civilian labor force, the employment count, the unemployment count, and the unemployment rate for Austin, the Austin Round-Rock MSA, Texas, and the United States. The unemployment rate can be useful in understanding economic and workforce trends in Austin over time.
View more details and insights related to this dataset on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percentage-Unemployment-Rate/ehhu-nafn/
Types of Abuse, Neglect and Financial Exploitation -
A single APS case can have more than one allegation.
Neglect is the failure to provide the protection, food, shelter, or care necessary to avoid emotional harm or physical injury. The alleged perpetrator of the neglect may be the victim or the victim's caregiver. There are three types of neglect allegations: Physical Neglect, Medical Neglect, and Mental Health Neglect.
Other allegation types include: Financial Exploitation, Physical Abuse, Emotional or Verbal Abuse, or Sexual Abuse.
The population totals do not match prior DFPS Data Books, printed or ontline. Past population estimates are adjusted based on the U.S. Census data as it becomes available. This is important to keep the data in line with current best practices, but will cause some past counts, such as Abuse/Neglect Victims per 1,000 Texas Children, to be recalculated.
Population Data Source - Population Estimates and Projections Program, Texas State Data Center, Office of the State Demographer and the Institute for Demographic and Socioeconomic Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio.
Current population estimates and projections for all years from 2014 to 2023 as of December 2023.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs.
The Texas State Legislature designates Texas State Artists during each Legislative Session. Texas Commission on the Arts (TCA) manages the Texas State Artists nomination process. These positions, including state poet laureate, state musician, state two-dimensional artist and state three-dimensional artist, are one-year appointments. Appointees are selected for their years of excellence and dedicated commitment to the arts in Texas.
Texas State Artists represent the best of Texas’ rich and diverse artistic community. These individuals inspire others through their unique creative expression. This designation is our state’s highest recognition for excellence in the arts.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset shows point locations of public trees inventoried by the City of Austin as of March 13th, 2020. Data is compiled from various sources: Development Services Department's Tree Division, AISD, Parks and Recreation Department, and Public Works Department's downtown tree inventory (2013). This is not a complete comprehensive inventory of all trees. Some errors and/or duplicate data may exist. For more information on Austin's urban forest, visit the U.S. Forest Service's Urban Forest Inventory and Analysis report: https://www.fs.usda.gov/treesearch/pubs/50393
This file comprises the list of all objects of expenditure and objects of revenue. These 4-digit codes identify specific operating statement ledger items. Objects in the 3000 series are generally revenues, while objects in the 7000 series are generally expenditures.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains meal reimbursements to Contracting Entities (CEs) sponsoring Seamless Summer Option sites for summer 2018 (SNP program year 2017-2018). Data reported represents the latest claims that have been paid or approved to pay as of the data update date. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Summer feeding programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains sponsor-level meal reimbursements. Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Feeding Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Meal Counts” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Feeding Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
The Project Data table includes all projects that entities claim they have eminent domain authority to undertake. Also included in the table are entity names, report years, and a unique report ID number. The ID number can be used to cross-reference the project data with the Eminent Domain table.
The Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) collects and reports information about billing rates for emergency service providers within political subdivisions as set by those political subdivisions. This dataset includes contact information for the reporting political subdivisions. There is a row for the contact information for each reporter and their political subdivision by year and quarter. The data also includes the date the political subdivision reported it.
The Texas Legislature amended Texas Insurance Code Chapter 38 via Senate Bill 2476 during the 88th session to add reporting “relating to consumer protections against certain medical and health care billing by emergency medical services providers. A political subdivision may submit to the department a rate set, controlled, or regulated by the political subdivision for emergency services.”
► For procedure codes rates, refer to dataset: Emergency Services Billing Rates - Code Rates.
► For National Provider Identifier Standard (NPI) information reported in each political subdivision, refer to dataset: Emergency Services Billing Rates - NPI.
► For ZIP codes within political subdivisions, refer to dataset: Emergency Services Billing Rates - ZIPs.
Users are responsible for reviewing and updating data before the submission deadlines. Information entered or found in this dataset is subject to change. Visit TDI’s web site disclaimer for more information.
For more information related to this data, visit TDI’s FAQ page.
This dataset lists all contributions and pledges received by candidates, officeholders and political committees on data files submitted per City Code Chapter 2-2-26.
For a complete listing of each column heading, please see the field listing here: http://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=262464
Note: Texas Election Code § 254.0401 requires the City Clerk to publish campaign finance reports online and was amended in 2023 to allow the Clerk to remove the street address of the contributors listed in the report, as long as the city, state, and ZIP code remain visible in the report, and the entire address is available on the original report maintained by the City Clerk in her office. Due to this change in the law, the City Clerk redacts the street addresses from the online datasets containing the information in campaign finance forms filed with the City Clerk’s office. Original, unredacted reports are maintained at the City Clerk’s office and are available upon request.
The 2014 Austin Digital Assessment Project was supported by the Telecommunications & Regulatory Affairs Office of the City of Austin, the Telecommunications and Information Policy Institute at the University of Texas, and faculty and graduate students from the Department of Radio, Television, and Film and the University of Texas. This dataset includes the individual survey responses. To see aggregated dataset weighted to reflect Austin demographics, refer to the attached document
These cities, which are located in multiple counties, received mixed beverage tax revenue from permit holders located in the counties listed.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
Polygon layer delineating the area covered by major lakes within Travis County Texas.
This lists the broad categories of expenditure by 2-digit code and corresponding title. Expenditure Comptroller Objects are consolidated under these categories for presentation on Where-the-Money-Goes and the Texas Cash Report.
This data set includes a row for each person or organization with an active or inactive Surplus Lines license issued by TDI. For detailed search results on individual agencies, agents, and adjusters please click here: Detailed reports.
The Spirit of East Austin Team has identified more than 200 projects that could impact the East Austin Crescent. This list includes project titles with brief descriptions.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset
This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all Texas child and adult care centers approved by the Texas Department of Agriculture to operate as a meal site under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during the 2023-2024 program year. CACFP centers include Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours. Sites can participate in one or more CACFP sub-programs. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for CACFP centers. For data on Texas Day Care Homes (DCH) participating in CACFP, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Day Care Homes – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
The Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) collects and reports information about billing rates for emergency service providers within political subdivisions as reported by those political subdivisions. The Zone Improvement Plan (ZIP) code is a unique seven-digit identification number for postal delivery in the United States. This dataset relates political subdivisions and ZIP codes they contain by year and quarter. There is a row for each ZIP code within a political subdivision. Subdivisions containing more than one ZIP code or providers operating in more than one subdivision will be listed in multiple rows. The data includes the year and quarter the information applies to as well as the date the political subdivision submitted their report.
The Texas Legislature amended Texas Insurance Code Chapter 38 via Senate Bill 2476 during the 88th session to add reporting “relating to consumer protections against certain medical and health care billing by emergency medical services providers. A political subdivision may submit to the department a rate set, controlled, or regulated by the political subdivision for emergency services.”
► For contact information, refer to dataset: Emergency Services Billing Rates - Contact List.
► For procedure codes rates, refer to dataset: Emergency Services Billing Rates - Code Rates.
► For National Provider Identifier Standard (NPI) information reported in each political subdivision, refer to dataset: Emergency Services Billing Rates - NPI.
Users are responsible for reviewing and updating data before the submission deadlines. Information entered or found in this dataset is subject to change. Visit TDI’s web site disclaimer for more information.
For more information related to this data, visit TDI’s FAQ page.
4-Year, 5-Year, and 6-Year Graduation Rates at Texas Public Universities 2020-2022. For additional years and the latest downloadable data, use the Accountability Interactive tool at: http://www.txhigheredaccountability.org/AcctPublic/InteractiveReport/ManageReports.
TxRC Handle & Commission by Track, Signal Type, & Date as provided to TxRC as of 12/21/2021. NOTE: All figures are based on data available at the time the report was compiled and are subject to being audited and revised.
Purses paid by Texas tracks as reported to TxRC thru 12/31/2020.
See the attached PDF for a detailed description of each tax type. The Comptroller of Public Accounts is charged by statute, Tex. Gov’t Code § 403.0142, with reporting and posting the amounts of revenue remitted from each Texas municipality and county for taxes whose location information is available from tax returns. The revenue is presented by county only because specific cities could not be definitively determined from the report data. Returns submitted directly by local governments are open records and include their names and addresses. Due to confidentiality restrictions, amounts reported by businesses cannot be provided when less than four businesses report for a specific county. This data is posted quarterly, six months after the end of the quarterly data period to allow for collection actions when needed.
Describes regulatory boundaries of Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone based on the adoption of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) Recharge Zone Boundary, defined in September of 2005.
This is a listing of the currently certified small business enterprises registered with the City of Austin.
This lists the broad categories of revenue by 2-digit code and corresponding title. Revenue Comptroller Objects are consolidated under these categories for presentation on Where-the-Money-Comes-From and the Texas Cash Report.
Texas Government Code §2206.155 requires the Comptroller’s office to publish a list of entities that have failed to comply with the reporting requirements of Government Code Chapter 2206, Subchapter D. The Comptroller does not make determinations regarding the accuracy or veracity of reports received under this chapter. Rather, it is incumbent upon the reporting entity to determine whether it possesses eminent domain authority such that it is required to submit a report in accordance with §2206.154, and to identify in that report which provisions in law grant the entity that authority.
The Comptroller may determine that an entity is not in compliance with the requirements of Subchapter D if the entity has previously submitted a report of eminent domain authority as required under Government Code §2206.101 or 2206.154, but subsequently fails to file the report in later years and fails to inform the Comptroller of changes to the entity’s eminent domain authority (in accordance with §2206.154(c)) that would relieve the entity from future reporting obligations. Should an entity that has previously submitted a report of eminent domain authority later inform the Comptroller that a change has occurred such that the entity no longer possesses eminent domain authority or is required to submit a report in accordance with §2206.154, that entity will not be placed on the noncompliant entities list (or will be removed from the list, as the case may be).
Purses paid by Texas tracks as reported to TxRC thru 12/31/19.
All inmate receives into the TDCJ for FY 2024
Based on the delivery period, the publication date of the delinquent list becomes effective five business days (M-F) subsequent to the due date excluding federal and state holidays, Saturdays and Sundays.
**To avoid unnecessary delays in processing time and to allow retailers adequate time to reconcile delinquencies, please report delinquent accounts by the reporting dates shown.
If the due date (10th or 25th) or publication date falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or a state or federal holiday, the due date or publication date shall be the next regular business day.
To allow adequate processing time, Sellers that have been granted an exception waiver to utilize a paper-based process to submit paper notices of default and/or cash law affidavits to the Commission, should submit those notices to the appropriate regional office within two business days following the 10th or 25th for credit law and with two days of receipt of the NFS check for cash law affidavits.
Appointments are formal designations to represent regulated insurance companies. This data set includes a row for each active appointment between an insurance agency and an insurance company. To view a list of appointments for agents and adjusters, go to the Active insurance company appointments for agents and adjusters data set. To view a list of non-appointment relationships between agents, agencies, adjusters, and insurance companies, go to the Business relationships between agents, agencies, adjusters, and insurance companies data set.
Texas Commission on the Arts Approved Grants Fiscal Year 2021
Texas Code, Chapter 380 Payments & Compliance Dataset
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for summer meal sites approved by TDA to operate summer 2023. Changes in participant information can occur through August. Unless otherwise noted, summer meal programs operate mid-May through August.
An overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program participation data by May 1 of the active program year. Data updates will occur daily and end 60 days after then close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
TxRC 2016 Monthly Handle by TxRC Track Code and Signal Type - unaudited
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for Day Care Home (DCH) providers approved to operate under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during program year 202-2022. Contracting Entity (CE) sponsors can participate in more than one CACFP program. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset only includes information for Texas Day Care Home providers participating in CACFP. For data on CEs and sites participating as Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Centers – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our SquareMeal.org website.
The Texas Commission on the Arts funds a wide variety of arts and cultural activities across the state. This is a list of all the grants approved by the Commission. These grant activities will occur sometime within fiscal year 2022 (Sept 1, 2021 through August 31, 2022).
You can search this list by the grantee organization name, by city, or by Texas region.
Monthly Handle by TxRC Track Code and Signal Type (unaudited)
Senator Royce West Doing Business Texas Style Spot Bid Fair Post Award Summary FY2023
2017 Monthly Handle by TxRC Track Code and Signal Type - unaudited
The dataset contains monthly county-level criminal caseload information for district and county courts by calendar year. Data used for this report comes from the Office of Court Administration's Court Activity Reporting and Directory System (CARD). Section 71.035(b) of the Texas Government Code and Chapter 171 of the Texas Administrative Code requires submission of court activity reports each month to the Texas Judicial Council. Reports much be submitted each month no later than the 20th day following the end of the month for which data are being reported. Because of the submission deadlines for reports, the most recent monthly data will be two months behind.
This chart includes statewide intake staff, investigation staff, Alternative Response staff with caseworker job classifications along with CPI Screeners and CPI Special Investigators.
SWI Intake Workers are located in Austin (Travis County), El Paso and Texarkana (Bowie County).
This dashboard addressed a prior reporting requirement from the Texas Family Code.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on CPS Abuse/Neglect Investigations and all DFPS programs.
This dataset is to report on a strategic measure for the City of Austin about how many individuals in high risk areas are signed up to receive emergency notifications. This measure is tracked by the City of Austin Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Management. The regional notification system that is used across Central Texas is called Warn Central Texas. It is managed by the Capital Area Council of Governments and is who is providing the data for those who are registered in high risk disaster areas. For this dataset, high disaster areas have been identified as places with a high risk of wildfire and a high risk of river or creek flooding.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page:https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ux2t-6z3y
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for summer meal sites approved by TDA to operate between October 2021 and September 2022 (Program Year 2022). Summer meal programs typically operate June through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the COVID Meal Site or Oct-May Claims columns. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program participation data by April 1 of the active program year. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, updates to the program participation dataset will occur every two weeks until the end of August.
All TDA datasets will have a final active update 90 days after the close of the program period. Datasets will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Any data posted during the active update schedule is subject to change.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
This is the list of 4-digit GAAP Fund codes and corresponding GAAP Fund titles used to report fund activity on the Texas Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, according to Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). GAAP Funds are for financial presentation; Appropriated Funds are used for budget and control.
As authorized by H.B. 2208 of the 79th Legislature, the Texas Commission on the Arts (TCA) can designate cultural districts in cities across Texas. Cultural districts are special zones that harness the power of cultural resources to stimulate economic development and community revitalization. These districts can become focal points for generating businesses, attracting tourists, stimulating cultural development and fostering civic pride.
This is the current list of designated cultural districts in Texas.
The Texas Department of Information Resources (DIR) has established a digital transformation guide to assist agencies with modernizing agency operations and services with respect to electronic data and converting agency information into electronic data.
The purpose of the guide is to help Texas government take the next steps to advance digital transformation and improve the customer experience, no matter where the organization is on its digital journey.
Data source contains select information from 2020 Information Resources Deployment Review.
Information on City of Austin vehicles organized by make and model
Recidivism is a measure of the APS clients with investigations closed in a particular fiscal year, who had a separate investigation opened in the same fiscal year.
To protect the identities of clients in counties with very small populations, data from counties with between 1 and 5 cases of Recidivism are displayed as "1-5", and no Recidivism % is provided. Additionally, these counties will be unavailable on the Ranking, Trends, and Gender Balance charts for fiscal years in which they have 5 or fewer cases of Recidivism.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs.
This dataset lists all registered lobbyists with the City of Austin.
This project is part of a larger plan to transfer commonly requested TJJD data onto the Texas Open Data Portal. This will allow for greater efficiency in sharing publicly available information and answering Public Information Requests (PIRs). This dataset provides an overview of TJJD’s average daily population (ADP) by location type since FY 1980. Location types include State-Operated Secure, Halfway Houses, Contract Care, and Parole.
Fall Enrollment at Texas Public Universities by Gender for 2020-2022. For additional years and the latest downloadable data, use the Accountability Interactive tool at: http://www.txhigheredaccountability.org/AcctPublic/InteractiveReport/ManageReports.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset
This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all Texas child and adult care centers approved by the Texas Department of Agriculture to operate as a meal site under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during the 2021-2022 program year. CACFP centers include Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours. Sites can participate in one or more CACFP sub-programs. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset only includes information for CACFP centers. For data on Texas Day Care Homes (DCH) participating in CACFP, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Day Care Homes – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset
This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all Texas child and adult care centers approved by the Texas Department of Agriculture to operate as a meal site under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during the 2020-2021 program year. CACFP centers include Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours. Sites can participate in one or more CACFP sub-programs. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset only includes information for CACFP centers. For data on Texas Day Care Homes (DCH) participating in CACFP, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Day Care Homes – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
Dataset content and column order have been updated starting with program year 2018-2019 forward. Older program year datasets will retain original content and organization.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
The Texas Department of Insurance is responsible for monitoring the continuing education (CE) compliance of people licensed to sell insurance or adjust property claims. This data set includes a row for each CE course completed by a licensee.
The Texas Department of Insurance administers Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR), a mediation and arbitration process for certain health care billing disputes between out-of-network providers and health plans. Mediation is used for billing disputes between out-of-network facilities and health plans. Arbitration is used for billing disputes between out-of-network health care providers (not facilities) and health plans. Medical services or supplies received on or after January 1, 2020 may be eligible for IDR. To learn more, go to the TDI webpage, Mediation and arbitration of medical bills.
AskTED is the online Texas Education Directory. This system provides contact and address information for Texas public schools, districts, and Education Service Centers. To learn more about AskTED, please visit https://tealprod.tea.state.tx.us/Tea.AskTed.Web/Forms/Home.aspx.
Data collected to assess water quality conditions in the natural creeks, aquifers and lakes in the Austin area. This is raw data, provided directly from our Water Resources Monitoring database (WRM) and should be considered provisional. Data may or may not have been reviewed by project staff. A map of site locations can be found by searching for LOCATION.WRM_SAMPLE_SITES; you may then use those WRM_SITE_IDs to filter in this dataset using the field SAMPLE_SITE_NO.
2017 Daily purses paid by Texas pari-mutuel racetracks as reported to TxRC. All figures are based on information available to TxRC at the time the data was compiled and are subject to being audited and revised.
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
The general neighborhood and zip code location of active short term rentals (including type) across Austin, TX. Licenses are only active for one year. We have not included specific addresses, at the request of residents for safety reasons, but we have included street name and zip code. For more information or for records of licenses older than a year, concerned parties can pursue a public information request: public.information@austintexas.gov. FYI: your request will not be considered received unless it is sent to the proper address.
ABOUT THIS CHART Allegation Disposition (Findings) Codes:
Valid. Based on the standard of preponderance of the evidence, it is more likely than not that the maltreatment occurred.
Invalid. Based on the standard of preponderance of the evidence, it is more likely than not that the maltreatment did not occur.
Unable to Determine. A preponderance of the available evidence is insufficient to support a finding of Valid or Invalid.
Other. The allegation disposition Other is used when an investigation of the allegation was not completed for some reason, e.g. clients died or cases were misclassified.
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Family Violence is indicated when a validated investigation has a relative perpetrator, excluding those where financial exploitation is the only confirmed allegation.
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Beginning in Fiscal Year 2015, services provided during the investigation are documented in the investigation stage and not in a separate service stage.
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The "Other" Disposition category refers to those investigations that workers could not complete, e.g. clients died or cases were misclassified.
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The population totals do not match prior DFPS Data Books, printed or online. Past population estimates are adjusted based on the U.S. Census data as it becomes available. This is important to keep the data in line with current best practices, but will cause some past counts, such as Abuse/Neglect Victims per 1,000 Texas Children, to be recalculated.
Population Data Source - Population Estimates and Projections Program, Texas State Data Center, Office of the State Demographer and the Institute for Demographic and Socioeconomic Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio.
Current population estimates and projections for all years from 2014 to 2023 as of December 2023.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for summer meal sites approved by TDA to operate between March 2020 and September 2020 (Program Year 2020). Summer meal programs typically operate June through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the COVID Meal Site or Oct-May Claims columns. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program participation data by April 1 of the active program year. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, updates to the program participation dataset will occur every two weeks until the end of August.
All TDA datasets will have a final active update 90 days after the close of the program period. Datasets will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Any data posted during the active update schedule is subject to change.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
2022 Houston Minority Supplier Development Council Spot Bid Fair
This data set provides information on each payment and completed compliance report associated with all executed Chapter 380 agreements. This information is updated regularly to include new payments and adjustments.
Spirit of East Austin participants were asked to write down a commitment to stay engaged in this initiative.
TxRC Handle & Commission by Track, Signal Type, & Date as provided to TxRC. NOTE: All figures are based on data available at the time the report was compiled and are subject to being audited and revised.
Chapter 48, Title 2, of the Texas Human Resources Code (HRC) and Chapter 705 of the Texas Administrative Code (TAC) authorizes APS to investigate abuse and financial exploitation of a person age 65 or older or an adult with a disability when the person responsible for the maltreatment is a: • caretaker; • paid caretaker; • family member; or • person who has an ongoing relationship with the alleged victim. Examples include a personal friend, paramour, or roommate. In the case of neglect, the perpetrator may also be the victim himself or herself. This is called "Self-neglect". In cases of family violence, a protective order can be obtained from a court that prohibits a member of a family or household from remaining in the household, and from contacting or coming near the victim. The purpose of the order is to prevent that person from committing further acts of family violence against the victim. The statutes governing family violence protective orders are set forth in Texas Family Code Chapters 71-87. This order is only available when family violence has been committed by a family member, member of the household, or in some circumstances by a person the victim has dated.
Each victim may have more than one perpetrator in an investigation.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs.
Eligible Training Providers (ETPs) are entities with job training programs approved by the Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) to provide Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA)–funded training services. The Statewide ETPL Performance Report includes data related to student enrollment for approved programs.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains claims information for paid or approved to pay meal reimbursement for sites participating in school nutrition programs for program year 2019-2020. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new data by November 1 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and at one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Capital improvement expenditures include upgrades to the Distribution and Transmission system such as new substations and transformers. They also include expenditures to build or upgrade power plants, new or upgraded chillers, new or upgraded facilities, and information technology infrastructure. All of these expenditures result in assets for the utility that become part of the rate base. Funding for CIP projects includes both current revenue and short-term debt or commercial paper which is eventually rolled into long-term bonds with a life of 30 years.
Breakdown of usage by Department and mileage per vehicle
This is a list of City Council Resolutions sponsored by Council Member Kathie Tovo in 2011, 2012 and 2013.
These cities received mixed beverage tax revenue from permit holders located in the city. Cities located in more than one county will be listed in each county the city is in. The mixed beverage tax revenue listed for the city in a particular county is from permit holders located in the part of the city in the listed county.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset
This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all Texas child and adult care centers approved by the Texas Department of Agriculture to operate as a meal site under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during the 2022-2023 program year. CACFP centers include Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours. Sites can participate in one or more CACFP sub-programs. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for CACFP centers. For data on Texas Day Care Homes (DCH) participating in CACFP, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Day Care Homes – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Chapter 48, Title 2, of the Texas Human Resources Code (HRC) and Chapter 705 of the Texas Administrative Code (TAC) authorizes APS to investigate abuse and financial exploitation of a person age 65 or older or an adult with a disability when the person responsible for the maltreatment is a: • caretaker; • paid caretaker; • family member; or • person who has an ongoing relationship with the alleged victim. Examples include a personal friend, paramour, or roommate. In the case of neglect, the perpetrator may also be the victim himself or herself. This is called "Self-neglect". In cases of family violence, a protective order can be obtained from a court that prohibits a member of a family or household from remaining in the household, and from contacting or coming near the victim. The purpose of the order is to prevent that person from committing further acts of family violence against the victim. The statutes governing family violence protective orders are set forth in Texas Family Code Chapters 71-87. This order is only available when family violence has been committed by a family member, member of the household, or in some circumstances by a person the victim has dated.
Each victim may have more than one perpetrator at the end of an investigation.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs.
The Plan Holders dataset includes information such as vendor’s name, proposal request, State Project Number and let type.
This data addresses Texas Family Code §264.017, Subsection (b)(3).
Senator Royce West Doing Business Texas Style Spot Bid Fair Post Award Summary FY2022
This is a breakdown of fuel usage from the City of Austin by type of fuel consumed
This Data set contains all the non-compliance detail information for the specific section evaluated. The Operation ID, Activity ID and Section ID can be used to link back to the Activity records, Activity Section record, and Operation record files.
The Texas Commission on the Arts funds a wide variety of arts and cultural activities across the state. This is a list of all the grants approved by the Commission. These grant activities will occur sometime within fiscal year 2023 (Sept 1, 2022 through August 31, 2023).
This watershed boundary consists of modeled lines and edited lines based on site plans and field investigations.
The Provision Data table includes all legal authorities that entities claim grants them eminent domain powers. Also included in the table are entity names, report years, and a unique report ID number. The ID number can be used to cross-reference the provision data with the Eminent Domain Data table.
These are the various 2-digit GAAP fund types and their titles under which GAAP Funds are consolidated for financial reporting. GAAP Fund Types are used to report consolidated fund activity for presentation on the Texas Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, according to Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP).
The Texas Commission on the Arts funds a wide variety of arts and cultural activities across the state. This is a list of all the grants approved by the Commission. These grant activities will occur sometime within fiscal year 2020 (Sept 1, 2019 through August 31, 2020).
You can search this list by the grantee organization name, by city, or by Texas region.
About the Dataset
This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all Texas child and adult care centers approved by the Texas Department of Agriculture to operate as a meal site under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during the 2018-2019 program year. CACFP centers include Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours. Sites can participate in one or more CACFP sub-programs. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for CACFP centers. For data on Texas Day Care Homes (DCH) participating in CACFP, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Day Care Homes – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
Dataset content and column order have been updated starting with program year 2018-2019 forward. Older program year datasets will retain original content and organization.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
ABOUT THIS CHART This chart includes data on abuse/neglect allegations in a fiscal year by allegation type, disposition, and the type of operation in which the allegation originated.
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Abuse/neglect investigations can contain multiple allegations, each with their own disposition.
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Agency Homes are excluded from these counts. They were included in some past printed Data Books.
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This dashboard addresses Texas Family Code Section 264.017.(b)(13) and Texas Human Resources Code Section 40.0516(1)(B).
A complete list of communities that have been certified as Film Friendly by the Texas Film Commission. To learn more, visit our FFTX website here: https://gov.texas.gov/film/page/fftx_overview
2017 Daily Handle and Commissions by Track Code & Signal Type provided to TxRC. NOTE: All figures are based on data available at the time the report was compiled and are subject to being audited and revised.
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for Day Care Home (DCH) providers approved to operate under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during program year 2018-2019. Contracting Entity (CE) sponsors can participate in more than one CACFP program. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for Texas Day Care Home providers participating in CACFP. For data on CEs and sites participating as Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Centers – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
Dataset content and column order have been updated starting with program year 2018-2019 forward. Older program year datasets will retain original content and organization.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our SquareMeal.org website.
The Vendor List dataset displays the contact information and qualified status related to vendor list. This vendor list includes information such as vendor’s contact information and qualified status.
This data set will include total services connections count for water services by customer class and zip code.
The data include gross sales, amount of sales and purchase subject to state sales and use tax, and the number of reporting outlets by quarter. This information is derived from sales tax returns submitted by taxpayers. The data are available in industry categories by city, county or metropolitan statistical areas.
Monthly commercial water consumption by zip code and customer class.
A removal occurs when CPS determines that a child cannot safely remain in their own home and that DFPS needs to seek legal custody to ensure child safety. Removals can occur in an investigation, family preservation, family substitute care or family reunification stage.
More information at www.dfps.texas.gov.
Degrees and Certificates Awarded at Texas Public Universities by Award Level 2020-2022 For additional years and the latest downloadable data, use the Accountability Interactive tool at: http://www.txhigheredaccountability.org/AcctPublic/InteractiveReport/ManageReports.
This dataset contains the infant mortality rates by ZIP Code for ZIP Codes within Travis County for combined years 2011-2014. It was created from the complete Texas Public Use Data File (PUDF) downloaded from UT System Population Health at: http://www.utsystempophealth.org/imr-texas/
The principal governing legislation for CPI investigations is Chapter 261 of the Texas Family Code (TFC).
The TFC definitions* of abuse or neglect investigated by CPI are: Physical Abuse - Physical injury that results in substantial harm to the child, or the genuine threat of substantial harm from physical injury to the child.
Sexual Abuse - Sexual conduct harmful to a child’s mental, emotional, or physical welfare.
Emotional Abuse - Mental or emotional injury to a child that results in an observable and material impairment in the child’s growth, development, or psychological functioning.
Neglectful Supervision - Placing the child in or failing to remove the child from a situation that a reasonable person would realize requires judgment or actions beyond the child’s level of maturity, physical condition, or mental abilities that results in bodily injury or a substantial risk of immediate harm to the child.
Medical Neglect - Failing to seek, obtain, or follow through with medical care for a child, with the failure resulting in or presenting a substantial risk of death, disfigurement, or bodily injury or with the failure resulting in an observable and material impairment to the growth, development, or functioning of the child.
Physical Neglect - Failure to provide the child with food, clothing, or shelter necessary to sustain the life or health of the child, excluding failure caused primarily by financial inability unless relief services had been offered and refused.
Refusal to Assume Parental Responsibility - Failure by the person responsible for a child’s care, custody, or welfare to permit the child to return to the child’s home without arranging for the necessary care for the child.
Abandonment - The leaving of a child in a situation where the child would be exposed to a substantial risk of physical or mental harm, without arranging for necessary care for the child. *See the full definitions in the CPS Glossary.
Victims have been unduplicated by investigation stage.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on CPS Abuse/Neglect Investigations and all DFPS programs.
This project is part of a larger plan to transfer commonly requested TJJD data onto the Texas Open Data Portal. This will allow for greater efficiency in sharing publicly available information and answering Public Information Requests (PIRs). Average Daily Population (ADP) data provides the daily population of specific TJJD locations of the following types: Institutions, Halfway Houses, Contract Services, Orientation and Assessment, Parole, Other Parole (Out of State Parole) and Interstate Compact. There are two levels of measurement of ADP on this data set. The first, titled MTD ADP (Month to Date), provides a month to month population count; it does NOT take into account the previous month's population count. Each month's population count is specific to that month. The second, titled YTD ADP (Year to Date), provides a rolling average of ADP; it includes the previous month's population and averages it out with that month's population count. Lastly, both Calendar Years (CY) and Fiscal Years (FY) are provided on this data set. TJJD’s fiscal year starts in September and ends in August of the following year.
Senator Royce West Doing Business Texas Style Spot Bid Fair Post Award Summary FY2024
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Flexibilities were extended into the 2020-2021 program year and allowed School Nutrition Programs to operate summer meal service programs through the end of the school year as needed.
The CEs and sites listed in this dataset may be operating under programs other than the School Nutrition Programs as part of the USDA's flexibilities during this period. Please refer to the School Nutrition Program (SNP) Meal Reimbursement, Seamless Summer Option (SSO) Meal Count, and Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) Meal Count datasets for Program Year 2020-2021 to confirm the program used to serve meals.
For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, this dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
This is a list of persons associated with the Texas Historical Commission's Tax Credit Program project applications in process. Federal, state, and local tax incentives exist for owners of historic properties. The Federal Historic Preservation Tax Incentives Program includes a 20 percent income tax credit for the rehabilitation of historic, income-producing buildings.The new Texas Historic Preservation Tax Credit Program offers a 25 percent tax credit for the rehabilitation of historic buildings.
Number of Child Protective Investigations referred to Family Preservation Services organized by final risk assigned to each family through safety and risk assessments.
Data begins in 2018 due to changing Risk Assessments over time in the IMPACT application.
This dashboard addresses the Texas Human Resources Code Sec. 40.0516 (a)(2).
Monthly Handle by TxRC Track Code and Signal Type (unaudited) thru 12/31/2019.
This table groups Austin Energy customers into four classes: residential, commercial, industrial, and lighting (public street/highway and other). View the annual rates in cents per kWh by customer class starting in 2006. Learn more about Austin Energy’s rates at http://austinenergy.com/wps/portal/ae/rates.
Data from https://www.recenter.tamu.edu/data/housing-activity/#!/activity/County/Williamson_County
The Residential Water Meter Inspections/Installs Listing: Check on the status of your residential water meter inspections and installations. The list below shows which service requests have been assigned to a Meter Services Inspector. Meter inspections are generally completed within ten business days of the initiation of the Service Request. An address with an “Assigned” service request may have an inspection completed within three business days, barring unforeseen circumstances. Please make sure the meter box is clean, the wooden dowel spacer is sized properly and marked with the service address, and the angle stop and ball valves are in alignment for a successful meter installation.
This chart counts the number of children who exited from DFPS custody during the fiscal year, the average time to exit and the average number of placements while in DFPS legal responsibility. Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis. A child exits from DFPS custody when a court terminates DFPS legal responsibility or a youth turns 18.
Counties and regions are based on the outcome county.
A description of the different types of exits from DFPS legal responsibility is in the CPS Data Book glossary: https://www.dfps.texas.gov/About_DFPS/Data_Book/Child_Protective_Services/Resources/glossary.asp.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on all DFPS programs.
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information for each Contracting Entity (CE) sponsor participating in a school nutrition programs during program year 2021-2022 and information on Food Service Management Company (FSMC) they may contract with. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new data by September 15 of the active school nutrition program year. This dataset contains multi-year data. Due to the relatively static nature of this data, there are no planned updates for this dataset.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs , the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
This chart counts victims in completed investigations. Completed investigations only include those cases conducted as a traditional investigation that were not administratively closed or merged into another stage. An investigation can only be administratively closed if all allegations have a disposition of administrative closure. A completed investigation can include more than one alleged victim. Completed investigations do not include any Alternative Response stages.
A confirmed victim on a completed investigation is a child who is a victim on at least one allegation with a disposition of reason to believe.
An unconfirmed victim on a completed investigation is a child who was an alleged victim on at least one allegation with a disposition of unable to complete, unable to determine or ruled out.
A description of Alternative Response and how it differs from a traditional investigation and the definitions of the different dispositions in a traditional investigation are in the glossary.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on CPS Abuse/Neglect Investigations and all DFPS programs.
About the Dataset This data set contains contact and program participation information for each site participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2018 (SNP program year 2017-2018). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Contact and Program Participation datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
For an overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Allegation Disposition (Findings):
Valid. Based on the standard of preponderance of the evidence, it is more likely than not that the maltreatment occurred.
Invalid. Based on the standard of preponderance of the evidence, it is more likely than not that the maltreatment did not occur.
Unable to Determine. A preponderance of the available evidence is insufficient to support a finding of Valid or Invalid.
Other. The allegation disposition Other is used when an investigation of the allegation was not completed for some reason, e.g. clients died or cases were misclassified.
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Family Violence is indicated when a validated investigation has a relative perpetrator, excluding those where financial exploitation is the only confirmed allegation.
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Beginning in Fiscal Year 2015, services provided during the investigation are documented in the investigation stage and not in a separate service stage.
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The "Other" Disposition category refers to those investigations that workers could not complete, e.g. clients died or cases were misclassified.
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The population totals do not match prior DFPS Data Books, printed or online. Past population estimates are adjusted based on the U.S. Census data as it becomes available. This is important to keep the data in line with current best practices, but will cause some past counts, such as Abuse/Neglect Victims per 1,000 Texas Children, to be recalculated.
Population Data Source - Population Estimates and Projections Program, Texas State Data Center, Office of the State Demographer and the Institute for Demographic and Socioeconomic Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio.
Current population estimates and projections for all years from 2014 to 2023 as of December 2020.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs.
CPI Intakes: Priority, Screening and Assignment
To establish timeframes for investigations, each report of child abuse and neglect is assigned a priority:
Priority I - Intake reports that concern children who appear to face an immediate risk of abuse or neglect that could result in death or serious harm. CPI must initiate the investigation within 24 hours of receiving a Priority I report.
Priority II - All reports of abuse or neglect that are not assigned as Priority I are assigned as Priority II. These are reports that contain allegations of abuse or neglect in which there does not appear to be an immediate threat of serious harm or death. A subset of these reports are sent down the Alternative Response (AR)* pathway. Those reports not sent to AR continue as a traditional investigation. CPI must initiate these investigations within 72 hours of receiving a Priority II report.
*In November 2014, CPI implemented Alternative Response (AR) which is a different way to respond to reports of abuse/neglect. AR allows for a more flexible, family engaging approach while still focusing on the safety of the children. AR cases differ from traditional investigations cases in that there will be no substantiation of allegations, no entry of perpetrators into the Central Registry (a repository for reports of child abuse and neglect), and there will be a heightened focus on guiding the family to plan for safety in a way that works for them and therefore sustains the safety.
This dashboard addresses Texas Family Code Section 264.017(b)(1).
Fall Enrollment at Texas Public 2-Year Institutions by Gender for 2020-2022. For additional years and the latest downloadable data, use the Accountability Interactive tool at: http://www.txhigheredaccountability.org/AcctPublic/InteractiveReport/ManageReports.
This table lists individual transactions as reported on the Texas Ethics Commission C/OH Form. Each row represents an individual filer's transaction, which may be a loan, expenditure, credit, pledge or contribution.
For information about each report filed, please visit the Reports Table at: https://data.austintexas.gov/Government/Campaign-Finance-Data-Reports-Table/b2pc-2s8n
A data dictionary for this dataset is available at http://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=247730
Austin Energy generates power through a diverse generation portfolio of natural gas, coal, nuclear, renewable resources and purchased power. Browse data about our power plants: percent owned; fuel type used; capacity in MW; and installation year. Go to http://austinenergy.com/go/info to learn more.
System peak demand is the largest amount of electricty consumed by Austin Energy customers at one time. Every year for the past five years, the system peak occurred between 4 and 5 p.m. The utilty is constantly working to assure the distribution grid is ready and capable of handling the peak energy demand that occurs during the summer months. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis. These children may be residing in substitute care or may be living with a parent, referred to as a return and monitor. DFPS legal responsibility terminates when a court orders DFPS custody ended or a youth turns 18, whichever comes first.
Substitute care - all children who are living in a DFPS out of home placement. It does not include children in DFPS custody who are living with a parent on a return and monitor. Unless otherwise noted, it does include youth over 18 who are in extended foster care but are not in DFPS custody.
Kinship care- a subset of substitute care that includes all children in DFPS custody who are living with a legal or blood relative or other individual who has a significant relationship with the child or the child's family known as "fictive kin."
Foster care - a subset of substitute care that includes all children living in a placement that has been verified to provide 24-hour residential care for a child, in accordance with Chapter 42 of the Human Resources Code and related regulations. These placements include foster homes, including kinship care where the caregiver has been verified, general residential operations (GRO), emergency shelters, residential treatment centers (RTC), and juvenile facilities.
Paid foster care - a subset of foster care where DFPS is making foster care payments.
Visit https://www.dfps.texas.gov/ for information on substitute care placements and all DFPS programs.
Map shows all stray cats and dogs that are currently listed in AAC's database for no longer than a week. Most will be located at AAC, but some will be held by citizens, which will be indicated on the "At AAC" column. Please check http://www.austintexas.gov/department/lost-found-pet for more information.
List of Foreign Bank Representative Offices in Texas
Each fiscal year represents PROJECTED expenditures. Prior fiscal year projections are NOT updated.
Data addresses Texas Family Code Section 264.017. Subsection (c). Regional or County level expenditures for PEI programs are not available.
In FY2020, the STAR program was renamed to the Family and Youth Success Program (FAYS), the CBCAP program was renamed to the Fatherhood Effects (FE) Program.
DFPS sets priorities for the delivery of protective services. In establishing priorities, DFPS defines timeframes for conducting initial face-to-face interviews with alleged victims. The priorities are based on severity and immediacy of alleged threat to the life or physical safety of the alleged victim. (40 Texas Administrative Code §705.2101)
The initial face-to-face contact with the alleged victim is conducted according to the following priorities:
Priority 1: Allegations that the victim is in a state of serious harm or is in danger of death from abuse or neglect. APS makes face-to-face contact within 24 hours of SWI’s receipt of Priority I allegations.
Priority 2: Allegations that the victim is abused, neglected, or financially exploited and, as a result, is at risk of serious harm. APS makes face-to-face contact within three calendar days of SWI’s receipt of Priority II allegations.
Priority 3: All other allegations that the victim is in a state of abuse or neglect. APS makes face-to-face contact within seven calendar days of SWI’s receipt of Priority III allegations.
Priority 4: Allegations of financial exploitation when there is no danger of imminent impoverishment or deprivation of basic needs. APS makes face-to-face contact within 14 calendar days of SWI’s receipt of Priority IV allegations.
Inclusion is based on the Intake Closure Date.
This dataset provides the locations of all clinics in Austin/Travis County participating in the Vaccines for Children (TVFC) and Adult Safety Net (ASN) programs administered by Austin Public Health's Immunizations program.
[Networks: ADC - Austin Diagnostic Clinic; APH - Austin Public Health; ARC - Austin Regional Clinic; CPG - Capital Pediatric Group; CSL - Carousel Pediatrics; CUC - CommUnityCare; IC - Integral Care; LSC - Lone Star Circle of Care; MHC - Medical & Health Clinic; PCC - People's Community Clinic; STN - Seton; TCP - Texas Children's Pediatrics; UTW - University of Texas]
[License Type: FQHC - Federally Qualified Health Care Center; DRUG - Drug treatment center; HIV/STD - AIDS Services Organization Clinic; Private - private medical practice]
This represents the top 10 searches that visitors have conducted on via Google Search. The data represents the most recent one-month period.
*Note: On July 1, 2023, standard Universal Analytics properties will stop processing data.
Recidivism is a measure of the APS clients with investigations closed in a particular fiscal year, who had a separate investigation opened in the same fiscal year.
To protect the identities of clients in counties with very small populations, data from counties with between 1 and 5 cases of Recidivism are displayed as "1-5", and no Recidivism % is provided. Additionally, these counties will be unavailable on the Ranking, Trends, and Sex Distribution charts for fiscal years in which they have 5 or fewer cases of Recidivism.
The principal governing legislation for CPI investigations is Chapter 261 of the Texas Family Code (TFC).
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Victims have been unduplicated by investigation stage.
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Abuse/neglect investigations can contain multiple allegations, each with their own disposition.
More information at www.dfps.texas.gov
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for Day Care Home (DCH) providers approved to operate under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during program year 2022-2023. Contracting Entity (CE) sponsors can participate in more than one CACFP program. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for Texas Day Care Home providers participating in CACFP. For data on CEs and sites participating as Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Centers – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our SquareMeal.org website.
This table contains aggregated bridge condition data for each fiscal year beginning in FY2015. The major structures having openings of 20 feet or greater are inspected every other year by Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT). Inspection of the smaller minor structures is not mandated by the Federal government and is managed entirely by the City.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ajuu-uvjm.
Austin Water’s Standard Products List specifies acceptable manufacturer products for use in the construction of water and wastewater facilities. These products have undergone stringent testing to ensure the safety, reliability and consistency within the Austin Water system
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains claims information for paid or approved to pay meal reimbursement for sites participating in school nutrition programs for program year 2023-2024.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur daily during the active program year and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
The School Year 2021-2022 accountability rating reports for each district, campus, and open-enrollment charter school in the state of Texas. The ratings are reported as of February 6, 2023. A few districts are not rated as of the reporting date due to data being under review.
This data is intended for reporting purposes only. Please visit SummerFood.org or text FOOD to 304-304 to find an open summer meal site near you.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for summer meal sites approved by TDA to operate summer 2024. Changes in participant information can occur through August. Unless otherwise noted, summer meal programs operate mid-May through August. Under approved circumstances, summer meal programs may be used during the school year to prevent interruption in school meal service.
An overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program participation data by May 1 of the active program year. Data updates will occur daily and end 60 days after then close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
Listing of our events at Austin Convention Center and Palmer Events Center for the next 12 months. Included are show dates, event names, hosting facility, contact numbers and websites for events.
Relative or Other Designated Caregiver monetary assistance to care for children in DFPS Legal Status.
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for Day Care Home (DCH) providers approved to operate under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during program year 2015-2016. Contracting Entity (CE) sponsors can participate in more than one CACFP program. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for Texas Day Care Home providers participating in CACFP. For data on CEs and sites participating as Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Centers – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
Dataset content and column order have been updated starting with program year 2018-2019 forward. Older program year datasets will retain original content and organization.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our SquareMeal.org website.
A summary of data reported to the Clerk's office within the last 30 days, broken into transaction type and report type, with a transaction total for each type of record (expenditure, contribution, loan) reported. The most recently reported items are at the top of the dataset.
For Austin Energy’s coal and nuclear assets, this table reports only Austin Energy’s 50 percent share of units 1 and 2 at the Fayette Power Project and 16 percent share of the South Texas Project. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
Degrees and Certificates Awarded at Texas Public 2-Year Institutions by Award Level 2020-2022 For additional years and the latest downloadable data, use the Accountability Interactive tool at: http://www.txhigheredaccountability.org/AcctPublic/InteractiveReport/ManageReports.
2020 Monthly Handle by TxRC Track Code and Signal Type - unaudited
Costs allowed in the fuel tariff include fuel for generation, transportation, renewable purchase power agreements, purchase power to serve retail customers, ERCOT fees and hedging. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset
This dataset contains USDA Foods entitlement data for Contracting Entities (CE) approved to operate school nutrition programs for program year 2021-2022. USDA Foods entitlements are funds provided by the state to Texas schools for use on USDA Foods commodities. School nutrition programs operate July 1 through the June 30.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by October 1 of the active program year and update this dataset monthly until the close of the program year.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
TxRC Handle & Commission by Track, Signal Type, & Data as provided to TxRC. NOTE: All figures are based on data available at the time the report was compiled and are subject to being audited and revised.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for Day Care Home (DCH) providers approved to operate under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during program year 2023-2024. Contracting Entity (CE) sponsors can participate in more than one CACFP program. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for Texas Day Care Home providers participating in CACFP. For data on CEs and sites participating as Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Centers – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our SquareMeal.org website.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset serves as source data for the Texas Department of Agriculture Food and Nutrition Meal Served Dashboard. Data is based on the School Nutrition Program (SNP) Meal Reimbursement and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) Meal Count datasets currently published on the Texas Open Data Portal. For the purposes of dashboard reporting, the school year for SSO is defined as September 2021 through May 2022 for SSO meals. The School Nutrition Program meals are reported by program year which runs July 1 through June 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Flexibilities were extended into the 2021-2022 program year and allowed School Nutrition Programs to operate Seamless Summer Option through the 2021-2022 school year.
For more information on the policies implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to update this dataset by the 15th of the month until 60 days after the close of the program year.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
This data set includes a row for each type of non-appointment relationship between an insurance agent, agency, adjuster, and businesses and an insurance company or another person or business approved to manage insurance-related products or claims. To view a list of formal designations, or appointments, for agents to represent a regulated company, go to Active insurance company appointments for agents and adjusters. To view a list of formal designations, or appointments, for agencies to represent a regulated company, go to Active insurance company appointments for agencies and businesses.
This layer represents the jurisdiction and regulatory boundaries of the City of Austin.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information and program participation information for all School Nutrition Program (SNP) meal sites approved by TDA to operate during the 2023-2024 program year. Contracting Entities (CE) or sites they sponsor may cancel or terminate participation after initial approval. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Data is scheduled to update daily until approximately 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, this dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
About the Dataset
This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all Texas child and adult care centers approved by the Texas Department of Agriculture to operate as a meal site under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during the 2016-2017 program year. CACFP centers include Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours. Sites can participate in one or more CACFP sub-programs. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for CACFP centers. For data on Texas Day Care Homes (DCH) participating in CACFP, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Day Care Homes – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claimed meals served by sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option for summer 2022 (SNP program year 2021-2022). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included early operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO). Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor level and is reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
Monthly Handle by TxRC Track Code and Signal Type (unaudited) thru 12/31/2020.
This chart counts the number of unique children for whom a court entered a legal status order during the fiscal year. If a court entered multiple different legal statuses for a child during the fiscal year, the child is only counted once.
A description of the different types of legal statuses is in the CPS glossary
Visit dfps.texas.gov for more information
New weekly allocations of doses are posted every Tuesday. Beginning the following Thursday, states can begin ordering doses from that week’s new allocation of 1st doses. Beginning two weeks (Pfizer) or three weeks (Moderna) from the following Sunday, states can begin ordering doses from that week’s new allocation of 2nd doses. After doses are ordered by states, shipments begin the following Monday. The entire order may not arrive in one shipment or on one day, but over the course of the week.
Second doses are opened up for orders on Sundays, at the appropriate interval two or three weeks later according to the manufacturer’s label, with shipments occurring after jurisdictions place orders.
Shipments of an FDA-authorized safe and effective COVID-19 vaccine continue to arrive at sites across America. Vaccinations began on December 14, 2020.
https://www.hhs.gov/coronavirus/covid-19-vaccines/index.html
Pfizer Vaccine Data - https://data.cdc.gov/Vaccinations/COVID-19-Vaccine-Initial-Allocations-Pfizer/saz5-9hgg
Moderna Vaccine Data- https://data.cdc.gov/Vaccinations/COVID-19-Vaccine-Distribution-Allocations-by-Juris/b7pe-5nws
Child Protective Investigations (CPI) conducts either a traditional investigation or Alternative Response (AR). Traditional investigations and Alternative Response require caseworkers to assess safety and take needed actions to protect a child while assessing any risk of abuse or neglect in the foreseeable future. AR cases present a less adversarial more collaborative approach to working with families by allowing for family engagement along with other community supports to ensure child safety. AR differs from traditional investigations in that AR cases are Priority 2 cases involving victims who are age 6 or older, there is no substantiation of allegations, no entry of perpetrators into the Central Registry (a repository for reports of child abuse and neglect), and there is a heightened focus on guiding the family to plan for safety in a way that works for them and therefore sustains the safety.
Completed investigations only include those cases conducted as a traditional investigation that were not administratively closed or merged into another stage. Investigations may include more than one alleged victim.
All allegations in a completed investigation are given one of the following dispositions: Reason to Believe (RTB) - defined in section 2281.2 of the CPS policy handbook Ruled Out (RO) - defined in section 2281.3 of CPS policy handbook Unable to Complete (UTC) - defined in section 2281.4 of CPS policy handbook Unable to Determine (UTD) - defined in section 2281.4 of CPS policy handbook
If at least one allegation has an RTB disposition, the investigation is given an overall disposition of RTB. If there are no allegations with an RTB disposition but there is at least one allegation with a disposition of UTD, the investigation is given an overall disposition of UTD.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on CPI Abuse/Neglect Investigations and all DFPS programs.
Millions of gallons of water treated grouped by year, month, plant and water type.
This data can be used to track the capacity and incentive levels available for Austin Energy's Solar Rebate Program.
These are the variable codes for the datasets released as part of the 2020 decennial census redistricting data.
Austin Energy manages the City of Austin Utility Contact Center and Online Customer Care Portal. This is the place customers go to start, stop or transfer utility services.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset
This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all Texas child and adult care centers approved by the Texas Department of Agriculture to operate as a meal site under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during the 2019-2020 program year. CACFP centers include Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours. Sites can participate in one or more CACFP sub-programs. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset only includes information for CACFP centers. For data on Texas Day Care Homes (DCH) participating in CACFP, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Day Care Homes – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
Dataset content and column order have been updated starting with program year 2018-2019 forward. Older program year datasets will retain original content and organization.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset
This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all Texas child and adult care centers approved by the Texas Department of Agriculture to operate as a meal site under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during the 2017-2018 program year. CACFP centers include Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours. Sites can participate in one or more CACFP sub-programs. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for CACFP centers. For data on Texas Day Care Homes (DCH) participating in CACFP, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Day Care Homes – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains claims information for paid or approved to pay meal reimbursement for sites participating in school nutrition programs for program year 2022-2023.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur daily during the active program year and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset
This dataset contains USDA Foods entitlement data for Contracting Entities (CE) approved to operate school nutrition programs for program year 2022-2023. USDA Foods entitlements are funds provided by the state to Texas schools for use on USDA Foods commodities. School nutrition programs operate July 1 through the June 30.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by October 1 of the active program year and update this dataset at least monthly until the close of the program year.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
About the Dataset
This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all Texas child and adult care centers approved by the Texas Department of Agriculture to operate as a meal site under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during the 2015-2016 program year. CACFP centers include Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours. Sites can participate in one or more CACFP sub-programs. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for CACFP centers. For data on Texas Day Care Homes (DCH) participating in CACFP, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Day Care Homes – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information and program participation information for all School Nutrition Program (SNP) meal sites approved by TDA to operate during the 2021-2022 program year. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Flexibilities were extended into the 2021-2022 program year and allowed School Nutrition Programs to operate Seamless Summer Option through the 2021-2022 school year.
A CE must have an approved School Nutrition Program application on file for the the program year for a CE to operate Seamless Summer Option. Therefore, CEs and sites listed in this School Nutrition Program dataset may be providing meals under the Seamless Summer Option. Please use School Nutrition Program and Seamless Summer Option claims data to determine which program a CE has selected to provide meals.
For more information on the policies implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, this dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
Services provided to clients by DFPS may include social casework, case management, and arranging for psychiatric and health evaluation, home care, day care, social services, health care, respite services, and other services.
The APS specialist works with the client to develop a service plan to address identified problems. Safely maintaining clients in the least restrictive environment is a primary goal of APS intervention.
Protective services may be necessary to alleviate or prevent the client from returning to a state of abuse, neglect or financial exploitation. In this case, DFPS may also provide services to a family member or caretaker. (Texas Human Resources Code §48.002(a)(5) and §48.204) Protective services may be delivered in every stage of an investigation
The APS specialist makes all reasonable efforts to resolve problems, including root causes, and stabilizes the client’s condition. Full resolution of a client’s problems is always the goal of APS casework, but it is not always achievable. When full resolution is not a practical goal because of inadequate resources, client resistance, or some other impediment, the APS specialist closes the case when a client’s situation is as close to stable as possible.
The phrase "reasonable effort" implicitly recognizes that: • personal choice on the part of the client may limit the effectiveness of APS intervention; • resources available to APS for helping clients are limited; and • APS cannot remedy all situations.
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Counts for FY 2015 and subsequent years cannot be compared to those from prior Data Books, due to changes in the APS casework practice model. Cases with services provided during the investigation may not have a separate service stage.
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Clients in validated cases may receive more than one service.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs
Degrees and Certificates Awarded at Texas Public Health-Related Institutions by Award Level 2020-2022. For additional years and the latest downloadable data, use the Accountability Interactive tool at: http://www.txhigheredaccountability.org/AcctPublic/InteractiveReport/ManageReports.
The City of Austin, using Texas Health and Human Services data, measures the number and percentage of residents eligible for federal food assistance programs and determines who is currently enrolled in food assistance programs. For this dataset, the food assistance program being examined is the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program. This data comes from Texas Health and Human Services. The city uses this information for performance measurement. This is a small portion of the full dataset that can be found here: https://hhs.texas.gov/doing-business-hhs/provider-portals/wic-providers/wic-general-information. This data set is intended to power visualizations for related measures in the strategic plan.
One strategic measure is reported using this data set.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percentage-of-residents-eligible-for-federal-food-/4qfm-q6mp/
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset
This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all Texas child and adult care centers approved by the Texas Department of Agriculture to operate as a meal site under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during the 2024-2025 program year. CACFP centers include Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours. Sites can participate in one or more CACFP sub-programs. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for CACFP centers. For data on Texas Day Care Homes (DCH) participating in CACFP, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Day Care Homes – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
This dataset contains a list of all entities that are currently marked as a Veteran Owned Business with The Texas Secretary of State. All information provided by the user, and collected on this page by the Office of the Texas Secretary of State, including information collected from the website and any web-based forms, is subject to the provisions of the Texas Public Information Act.
DISCLAIMER ON ACCURACY AND COMPLETENESS OF INFORMATION. While the Office of the Texas Secretary of State (the “SOS”) uses reasonable efforts to provide accurate and up-to-date information, some of the information provided is gathered by third-parties and has not been independently verified by the SOS. Data can quickly become out of-date. Although the information found on this system has been produced and processed from sources believed to be reliable, no warranty, express or implied, is made regarding accuracy, adequacy, completeness, legality, reliability or usefulness of any information. This disclaimer applies to both isolated and aggregate uses of information. SOS does not represent or warrant that access to the service will be uninterrupted or that there will be no failures, errors or omissions or loss of transmitted information.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for Day Care Home (DCH) providers approved to operate under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during program year 2020-2021. Contracting Entity (CE) sponsors can participate in more than one CACFP program. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset only includes information for Texas Day Care Home providers participating in CACFP. For data on CEs and sites participating as Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Centers – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
Dataset content and column order have been updated starting with program year 2018-2019 forward. Older program year datasets will retain original content and organization.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our SquareMeal.org website.
The Defense Economic Adjustment Assistance Grant (DEAAG) program assists military communities across Texas that may be impacted by any future Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) process. The funds support infrastructure projects and other initiatives to increase the military value of these installations in Texas and protect jobs in those communities. The DEAAG program supports the 15 major military installations located in communities across the state, in addition to the Army Futures Command Headquarters in Austin. Their missions are not only of the highest importance to national security and the success of our military, but they are also at the forefront of innovation in cybersecurity, space, medicine, and more.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information and program participation information for all School Nutrition Program (SNP) meal sites approved by TDA to operate during the 2022-2023 program year. Contracting Entities (CE) or sites they sponsor may cancel or terminate participation after initial approval. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Data is scheduled to update daily until approximately 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, this dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for Day Care Home (DCH) providers approved to operate under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during program year 2016-2017. Contracting Entity (CE) sponsors can participate in more than one CACFP program. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for Texas Day Care Home providers participating in CACFP. For data on CEs and sites participating as Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Centers – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
Dataset content and column order have been updated starting with program year 2018-2019 forward. Older program year datasets will retain original content and organization.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our SquareMeal.org website.
This layer represents the locations for low water crossing gates maintained by the City
The information shared on this page is no longer being updated. For more information about Imagine Austin and its ongoing update, please visit speakupaustin.org/ImagineAustin
This dataset contains the results of the Imagine Austin indicators.
Results, descriptions, data sources, and methodology are subject to change.
The complete results of the Imagine Austin indicators including an analysis of the results and visualizations are available as part of the Imagine Austin indicator dashboard and Imagine Austin Year 5 Progress Report.
View the actual dollars for Austin Energy’s annual Operating Budget beginning fiscal year 2007. The Excess/Deficiency is calculated by subtracting the requirements from the available funds. Go to http://austinenergy.com/go/corporatereports to learn more.
Child Protective Investigations (CPI) is authorized to investigate abuse and neglect allegedly committed by a person responsible for a child's care, custody or welfare and to protect abused and neglected children from further harm. This authorization is derived from the U.S. Social Securities Act, Texas Family Code, Human Resources Code, Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act, Indian Child Welfare Act and the Adam Walsh Act.
CPI conducts either a traditional investigation or Alternative Response (AR). Both require CPI to assess safety and take needed actions to protect a child and assess the risk of future abuse or neglect in the foreseeable future. AR, however, allows for a more flexible, family engaging approach on lower priority cases involving alleged victims who are age 6 or older. AR differs from traditional investigations in that there is no substantiation of allegations, no entry of perpetrators into the Central Registry (a repository for reports of child abuse and neglect), and there a heightened focus on guiding the family to plan for safety in a way that works for them and therefore sustains the safety.
Completed investigations only include those cases conducted as a traditional investigation that were not administratively closed or merged into another stage. An investigation can only be administratively closed if all allegations have a disposition of administrative closure. A completed investigation can include more than one alleged victim. Completed investigations do not include any Alternative Response cases. A description of Alternative Response and how it differs from a traditional investigation is in the glossary.
FOOTNOTES An investigation represents a report of abuse or neglect and can involve multiple children.
The data on completed investigations does not include investigative stages that were administratively closed or merged into another investigation.
All completed investigations have a case disposition and a risk finding.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on Abuse/Neglect Investigations and all DFPS programs.
Sales tax allocation comparison summary reports present data on monthly sales and use tax payments to local jurisdictions. These payments represent funds identified for local jurisdictions since the previous month’s distribution. When used with other local indicators, these reports may help indicate present and future economic trends. This table contains data for the amount of tax generated from local tax paid by Marketplace Providers distributed to cities, counties, Special-Purpose Districts (SPDs), Transit districts (MTAs, ATDs, and CTDs).
Static Data Set Opiate overdoses by age group and gender for fiscal year 2018
ABOUT THIS CHART This addresses Texas Human Resources Code Sec. 40.0516 (a) (1) (C) and (D).
Reflects children who receive an adoption subsidy that is paid through either federal or state funds.
Subsidy includes financial payments only, not medical and non-recurring subsidies.
Total kWh consumption per million gallons of water treated by year, month, plant and plant type.
The number of services delivered to people experiencing homelessness through Austin/Travis County Emergency Medical Services' Pop Up Resource Clinics. From November 2017 to the present.
This feature class represents the zoning classification boundaries in the City of Austin and surrounding counties.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of health care providers with current maximum medical improvement (MMI) and designated doctor certifications in Texas. This list includes doctors’ certification periods, phone numbers, fax numbers, and addresses.
For more information about designated doctors, go to https://www.tdi.texas.gov/wc/dd/index.html.
For a list of health care providers’ MMI and designated doctors’ certifications only, go to Workers’ Compensation Maximum Medical Improvement Doctors and Designated Doctors List.
Action steps for Development Services Department (DSD) and Planning and Zoning Department (PAZ) to address the Zucker final report received in May 2015.
Additional information is located at www.austintexas.gov/roadmap.
All 5-digit Appropriation numbers are listed in this file by 3-digit agency number and 2-digit appropriation year. These represent specific authority, granted by legislation in a given biennium or appropriation year, to expend or collect money. Regular appropriations are generally in the 13000 series
Reflects families that are receiving monetary assistance to care for relative children who are in DFPS' legal responsibility.
List of active permitted Industrial Users (IU) of the Austin Water Utility's sanitary sewer system under the Industrial Waste Control/Pretreatement Program.
This shapefile contains the Subdivision Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset shows a list of properties on Austin Codes Repeat Offender list. Status is included to indicate if the property is a currently active registered repeat offender.
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for Day Care Home (DCH) providers approved to operate under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during program year 2017-2018. Contracting Entity (CE) sponsors can participate in more than one CACFP program. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for Texas Day Care Home providers participating in CACFP. For data on CEs and sites participating as Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Centers – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
Dataset content and column order have been updated starting with program year 2018-2019 forward. Older program year datasets will retain original content and organization.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our SquareMeal.org website.
Frequently used terms and phrases in various Program Guidelines and Applications. For additional information, visit the department Funding page: https://www.austintexas.gov/department/economic-development/funding
APS may provide non-purchased services or purchased services. The chart compares these two types of services.
Non-purchased services can include services provided directly by APS staff or services provided by other entities, including social casework, legal actions, or services provided by other government agencies or community organizations.
APS may purchase services for clients using Purchased Client Services (PCS) funds. Purchased services may include short-term shelter, food, medication, health services, financial help with rent or utilities, transportation, and minor home repair. All other available resources must be used where feasible before purchased client services are initiated.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs
This data addresses Texas Family Code §264.017, Subsection (b)(3).
VA data from the National Center for Veterans Analysis and Statistics.
This data set will include total services connections count for wastewater services by customer class and zip code.
These entities received mixed beverage tax revenue from permit holders located in the special purpose districts respectively.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can found at the TDA Open Data Overview page.
About the Dataset This dataset contains claims information for paid or approved to pay meal reimbursement for sites participating in school nutrition programs for program year 2018-2019. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new data by November 1 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and at one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
New weekly allocations of doses are posted every Tuesday. Beginning the following Thursday, states can begin ordering doses from that week’s new allocation of 1st doses. Beginning two weeks (Pfizer) or three weeks (Moderna) from the following Sunday, states can begin ordering doses from that week’s new allocation of 2nd doses. After doses are ordered by states, shipments begin the following Monday. The entire order may not arrive in one shipment or on one day, but over the course of the week.
Second doses are opened up for orders on Sundays, at the appropriate interval two or three weeks later according to the manufacturer’s label, with shipments occurring after jurisdictions place orders.
Shipments of an FDA-authorized safe and effective COVID-19 vaccine continue to arrive at sites across America. Vaccinations began on December 14, 2020.
https://www.hhs.gov/coronavirus/covid-19-vaccines/index.html
Moderna Vaccine Data - https://data.cdc.gov/Vaccinations/COVID-19-Vaccine-Distribution-Allocations-by-Juris/b7pe-5nws
Janssen Vaccine Data - https://data.cdc.gov/Vaccinations/COVID-19-Vaccine-Distribution-Allocations-by-Juris/w9zu-fywh
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains meal reimbursements to Contracting Entities (CEs) sponsoring sites participating in the Summer Feeding Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2020 (SNP program year 2019-2020). Data reported represents the latest claims that have been paid or approved to pay as of the date the data was updated. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included early operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO). Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset contains sponsor-level meal reimbursements. Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Feeding Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF <a href=http://www.squaremeals.org/Portals/8/files/PIR/TDA%20Food%20a
For children who cannot reunify and for whom adoption has been ruled out, the Permanency Care Assistance (PCA) Program provides a monthly subsidy to relatives and fictive kin that take legal custody as a permanent managing conservator and have been a verified foster care provider for the child for at least 6 months. The PCA subsidy is similar to an adoption subsidy.
Does not include non-recurring payments.
Note: The Permanency Care Assistance program began in Fiscal Year 2011.
Names were tabulated using the exact spelling of the baby's first name on the birth certificate. Names from 19,896 birth certificates of births within the City of Austin during 2017 were used to create the data set.
Millions of gallons of water treated by year, month and Plant.
Data Correction Note (02/08/2023): An issue was identified with this dataset affecting At Risk meal counts. We have resolved the issue. Please disregard At Risk data pulled before 02/08/2023. We apologize for the inconvenience.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in CACFP as child centers for the program year 2022-2023. This includes Child Care Centers, At-Risk centers, Head Start sites, Outside School Hours sites, and Emergency Shelters . The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites operating as child centers.Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. Each record (row) represents monthly meals data for a single site and for a single CACFP center sub-program.
To filter data for a specific CACFP center Program, select "View Data" to open the Exploration Canvas filter tools. Select the program(s) of interest from the Program field. A filtering tutorial can be found HERE
For meals data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Adult Day Care Centers, or child care centers for previous program years, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of the program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our <a href=http://www
Layer comprised primarily of legal lots, but also containing parcels and tracts.
APS may provide or arrange for emergency services to alleviate or prevent further abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation. APS works in partnership with other social service agencies to provide resources to vulnerable adults. These services may be provided through collaboration with other state agencies or community organizations. DFPS may use Purchased Client Services funds and may enter into contracts to provide services to clients. All other available resources must be used where feasible before purchased client services are initiated.
After the victim's immediate safety is assured and investigation is completed, APS may remain involved for a short period to stabilize a low-risk situation. In other cases, victims with more complex problems or deemed at moderate or high risk of further maltreatment or self-neglect may receive more intensive services or assistance for a longer period of time.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs
The affected area within the City of Austin that is served by Austin Energy. Not all deed changes require an audit only when the home is going through a Texas Real Estate Commission defined sale. **The term “Exempt” corresponds to a property that is less than 10 years old, performed at least $500 in retrofits, participated in the Austin Energy Home Performance or Free Weatherization programs or previously filed an audit. **Does not include any building that underwent a major remodel that would qualify for an exemption, where the county did not reset the age of the building
This dataset includes legal opinions of the Attorney General. The data starts with Price Daniel (1947-1952), and goes to Ken Paxton (2015-Present). The Opinions are given by the appropriate code and year. The status is the outcome of the opinion. Details are the statute, opinion, or court decision that caused the status of the opinion.
This data is a summary of the prevalence of residents in Travis County whose Body Mass Index (BMI) is categorized as overweight or obese. The data is calculated from self reported measures of height and weight from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) survey from the CDC.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/HE-A-3-Percentage-of-adults-whose-body-mass-index-/7xkh-64hz/
3-Year, 4-Year, and 6-Year Graduation Rates at Texas Public 2-Year Institutions 2020-2022. For additional years and the latest downloadable data, use the Accountability Interactive tool at: http://www.txhigheredaccountability.org/AcctPublic/InteractiveReport/ManageReports.
This dashboard tracks six month and one year outcomes for children who were in an investigation that was Administratively Closed and subsequently alleged as a victim in a new investigation.
This dashboard addresses Texas Human Resource Code Section 40.0516(9)(A).
More information at www.dfps.texas.gov
During the Sept. 12, 2015 Spirit of East Austin launch event, participants were asked: What community resources do we have? What community resources are we missing? What’s one thing you could have to improve the quality of life? What’s one thing I can do to make a difference? These are their captured responses.
If a child is suffering from a severe emotional disturbance and voluntarily relinquishing custody of the child for the sole purpose of obtaining mental health services is warranted, the Department of Family and Protective Services may be appointed managing conservator or joint managing conservator.
In this case, the parent will voluntarily relinquish custody of the child to the state. This provision was added to the Texas Family Code in Fiscal Year 2014.
More information at www.dfps.texas.gov
This table addresses Texas Human Resource Code Section 40.0516, subsection (a) (1)(F).
After FY21 SWI screeners completed the screening process for RCCI intakes. Data can now be found under: SWI 1.5 Residential Child Care Investigation (RCCI) Intakes Screened Out FY2014-2023 https://data.texas.gov/dataset/SWI-1-5-Residential-Child-Care-Investigation-RCCI-/yip4-ziki/about_data
The Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) is a telephone survey conducted annually by Texas Department of State Health Services to assess a variety of health measures within the state. The survey data assesses whether participants have health insurance coverage and uses that data to provide an estimate of insurance coverage across Travis County residents. The measure used refers to residents who are between 18-64 years of age.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/HE-B-1-Percentage-of-residents-younger-than-65-wit/tw9i-pdx2/
Austin Police Department Sectors and Districts.
Austin Energy offers free home energy improvements to customers with low to moderate incomes who qualify. The improvements reduce energy costs and enhance indoor comfort. Qualifying customers can have their home weatherized and receive home improvements. These improvements include attic insulation, solar screens, compact fluorescent light bulbs, minor duct repair and sealing, caulking and weather stripping and other improvements. Customers participating in the program can realize energy savings from 6 to 21 percent. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
The dataset contains the annual criminal caseload information for district and county courts from CY 2018- 2022. Data used for this report comes from the Office of Court Administration's Court Activity Reporting and Directory System (CARD). Section 71.035(b) of the Texas Government Code and Chapter 171 of the Texas Administrative Code requires submission of court activity reports each month to the Texas Judicial Council. Reports much be submitted each month no later than the 20th day following the end of the month for which data are being reported.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains claims information for paid or approved to pay meal reimbursement for sites participating in school nutrition programs for program year 2020-2021. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
In October 1, 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in School Nutrition Program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new data by November 1 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and at one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
This data shows the percentage of individuals over age 65+ who have received all of a grouping of preventative health services in Travis County and in Texas by year and sex. The data is based of off self reported survey data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) survey.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/HE-B-2Percentage-of-residents-age-65-who-received-/e3da-kvkn/
The Texas Commission on the Arts funds a wide variety of arts and cultural activities across the state. This is a list of all the grants approved by the Commission. These grant activities will occur sometime within fiscal year 2024 (Sept 1, 2023 through August 31, 2024).
Snapshot of Children in Substitute Care on August 31 broken out by placement type and relative placements. Please review all of our data and DFPS services at dfps.state.tx.us
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains contact and program participation information for each site participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO) for summer 2016 (SNP program year 2015-2016). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Contact and Program Participation datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
TxRC Handle & Commission by Track, Signal Type, & Data as provided to TxRC thru 12/31/2020. NOTE: All figures are based on data available at the time the report was compiled and are subject to being audited and revised.
This layer depicts the extent of Austin Energy's electric service boundary.
New weekly allocations of doses are posted every Tuesday. Beginning the following Thursday, states can begin ordering doses from that week’s new allocation of 1st doses. Beginning two weeks (Pfizer) or three weeks (Moderna) from the following Sunday, states can begin ordering doses from that week’s new allocation of 2nd doses. After doses are ordered by states, shipments begin the following Monday. The entire order may not arrive in one shipment or on one day, but over the course of the week.
Second doses are opened up for orders on Sundays, at the appropriate interval two or three weeks later according to the manufacturer’s label, with shipments occurring after jurisdictions place orders.
Shipments of an FDA-authorized safe and effective COVID-19 vaccine continue to arrive at sites across America. Vaccinations began on December 14, 2020.
https://www.hhs.gov/coronavirus/covid-19-vaccines/index.html
Pfizer Vaccine Data - https://data.cdc.gov/Vaccinations/COVID-19-Vaccine-Initial-Allocations-Pfizer/saz5-9hgg
Janssen Vaccine Data - https://data.cdc.gov/Vaccinations/COVID-19-Vaccine-Distribution-Allocations-by-Juris/w9zu-fywh
The allocation payment detail shows the components of the total dollars returned to a local sales taxing city, county, special purpose district or transit authority by the Comptroller's office for their local sales tax collections. The components of each payment are listed by month. Allocation amounts are dependent upon the timing and accuracy of taxpayers' returns but generally represent taxes collected on sales made two months or more prior to the allocation payment date.
The injuries that led to the child's death may have been sustained prior to DFPS being granted to legal custody. For example, in Fiscal Year 2016 six children died while in DFPS Conservatorship (five while in Foster Care). However, four of these children sustained the injuries that led to their death prior to being placed in DFPS custody.
This chart includes child fatalities investigated and confirmed by Child Protective Investigations, Day Care Investigations, and Residential Child Care Investigations, and Adult Protective Services. Fatality information does not include corrections or updates, if any, that may subsequently be made to DFPS data after fiscal year end.
Only Children in DFPS Legal Responsibility (Conservatorship) are included. You can further filter to see how many were in Foster Care at the time of death.
The Adult Protective Provider Investigations division was tranferred to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) in Fiscal Year 2018.
This dashboard addresses Texas Family Code Section 264.017, Subsection (b) (4) and (5).
Browse the number of substations, miles of transmission lines, and more by year.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains meal reimbursements to Contracting Entities (CEs) sponsoring Seamless Summer Option sites for summer 2019 (SNP program year 2018-2019). Data reported represents the latest claims that have been paid or approved to pay as of the data update date. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains sponsor-level meal reimbursements. Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Meal Counts” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meals programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains claimed meals served by meal sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2019 (SNP program year 2018-2019). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor level and is reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
Dataset change as of October 4, 2019: Meal Average Daily Participation (ADP) will no longer be included as part of this dataset. Second meals served results in variety in which ADP can be calculated. The end-user can now determine the method of calculating ADP as per their need.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains meal reimbursements to Contracting Entities (CEs) sponsoring Seamless Summer Option sites for summer 2016 (SNP program year 2015-2016). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains sponsor-level meal reimbursements. Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Meal Counts” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
This file contains a list of taxpayers required to report mixed beverage sales tax reports under Tax Code Chapter 183, Subchapter B-1. The list provides taxpayer names, amounts reported, and other public information.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
Currently incarcerated inmate population with relevant demographic, offense, and parole information.
This data shows the percentage of individuals over age 65+ who have received all of a grouping of preventative health services in Travis County and in Texas by year. The data is based of off self reported survey data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) survey.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/HE-B-2Percentage-of-residents-age-65-who-received-/e3da-kvkn/
Vehicle registration counts broken out by fiscal year. Includes passenger vehicles <= 6,000 lbs, Motorcycles, and trucks (1 ton or less)
Notes:
Exempt registrations are included in passenger vehicle counts and total vehicles registered.
Passenger Vehicles includes: automobiles; mini-vans and most SUVs.
Trucks includes 1/2 ton, 3/4 ton and 1 ton trucks.
Source: Fiscal year REGISTRATION CLASS CODE COUNT Report and the Report of Rental Trailers (for All Vehicles Registered) prepared by Explore, Inc.
Prepared by: VTR - Budget and Research Services
This dataset contains more detailed information on the recommendations and resolutions identified by the Office of the City Auditor in their special request report on gentrification and displacement. See report at: To complete this special request project, we categorized recommendations and resolutions based on the following definitions:
Directly related to displacement or gentrification ("direct"): Clearly and immediately impacts the population experiencing gentrification and displacement (e.g., creation of affordable housing units).
Indirectly related to displacement or gentrification ("indirectly"): An initiative designed to support direct efforts (such as monitoring or increasing funding for staffing). Alternatively, an indirect initiative may be one that is designed to affect the broad population (e.g., overall tax decrease), or the language is so vague or broad that the precise intention is unclear.
Actionable recommendations and resolutions ("actionable"): Recommendations that are specific and implementable as written; recommendations that detail the specific site of an action.
Not actionable recommendations and resolutions ("not actionable"): Things that do not appear to be legal; recommendations that are not implementable as worded or that would require significant additional clarification/research.
Report of Custodian Deaths on record with the Office of the Attorney General. These reports include the date, the reporting agency, and the name of the deceased.
Statewide Intake (SWI) has the responsibility to assess information received to the definitions of possible abuse, neglect or exploitation for each program served and to prioritize and route the information to the correct destination workload.
SWI is the centralized point of intake for child abuse and neglect, abuse, neglect or exploitation of people age 65 or older or adults with disabilities, clients served by DSHS or DADS employees in State Hospitals or State Supported Living Centers, and children in licensed child-care facilities or treatment centers for the entire State of Texas.
SWI receives intake reports for the following Programs: Adult Protective Services (APS) Adult Provider Investigations Child Protective Investigations (CPI) Day Care Licensing (DCL) Residential Child Care Licensing (RCCL)
FOOTNOTES Not all reports are assigned for investigation.
There can be more than one source per contact. This dashboard counts report contacts determined by the date of contact.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs
When interviewing the alleged victim, the APS worker: • addresses all important factors regarding the allegations and the alleged victim’s overall situation; • interviews the alleged victim alone in cases involving an alleged perpetrator, but allows the alleged victim to have another person present, if requested by the alleged victim; and • interviews the alleged victim again at a later time as necessary to resolve discrepancies.
When another person is present during the interview, the APS worker documents whether the alleged victim requested that the person be present and the person’s relationship to the alleged victim.
The APS specialist monitors the alleged victim during the interview to see if the alleged victim appears to be hesitant, withdrawn, or nervous while participating in the interview. Such cues may be indications that the alleged victim is not comfortable speaking openly in the presence of the other person.
FOOTNOTES
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Includes victims who were also perpetrators (findings of self-neglect.)
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Victims have been unduplicated by investigation stage.
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Some investigations were completed without region or county location information being recorded. These investigations are included in the relevant annual total, with "None Specified" as their Region and County values.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claimed meals served by sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option for summer 2019 (SNP program year 2018-2019). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor level and is reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
This table addresses Texas Human Resource Code Section 40.0516, subsection (a) (1)(F).
Prior to FY21 RCCI investigation staff completed the screening process for RCCI intakes.
This chart counts the number of children in DFPS custody on August 31 of the fiscal year who meet all of the following criteria: (1) a court has terminated all parental rights; (2) the child has a plan of adoption; and (3) the child is not in an adoptive placement.
The count includes both children who are in an intended to be permanent home and children who are not in an intended to be permanent home. Use the filter to isolate these counts.
Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis. An adoptive placement occurs when the child's caseworker, the family's case manager, and the adoptive family sign paperwork officially placing the child in the home for adoption. Before the paperwork can be signed, a child must be free for adoption (meaning a court has terminated parental rights), have a permanency goal of adoption and the family must have been approved for adoption through a licensed child placing agency.
One of the following closure reasons are applied to the case:
Valid - Based on the standard of preponderance of the evidence, it is more likely than not that the abuse, neglect or financial exploitation occurred.
Valid - Progressed to Services - A valid investigation may be progressed into a service delivery stage. Beginning in FY2015, a valid investigation may be progressed into Intensive Case Services or Maintenance Services, based on risk level.
Services Provided in Investigation - When an alleged victim is experiencing abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation, APS may provide protective services during the investigation stage. Beginning FY 2015, services provided during the investigation are documented in the investigation stage and not as a separate service stage. If the alleged victim is at low or moderate risk of recidivism and the problem was resolved with services provided during the investigation, Maintenance or Intensive Case Services may not be required.
Invalid - Based on the standard of preponderance of the evidence, it is more likely than not that the abuse, neglect or financial exploitation did not occur.
Unable to Determine - A preponderance of the available evidence is insufficient to support a finding of Valid or Invalid.
Other - Refers to those investigations that workers could not complete, e.g. clients died or cases were misclassified.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs
To view the dataset please select the data tab above or use the following link: https://data.texas.gov/dataset/2025-SRWDBTSSBF-Bid-Fair-Submission-Form/fugc-cz79/data_preview
Austin Energy’s system annual average production cost is total operations and maintenance costs divided by total generation in kilowatt-hours. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
List of active liquid waste haulers currently permitted by the City of Austin under the Liquid Waste Haulers Program.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains meal reimbursements to Contracting Entities (CEs) sponsoring sites participating in the Summer Feeding Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2019 (SNP program year 2018-2019). Data reported represents the latest claims that have been paid or approved to pay as of the date the data was updated. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains sponsor-level meal reimbursements. Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Feeding Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
Statewide Intake (SWI) has the responsibility to assess information received to the definitions of possible abuse, neglect or exploitation for each program served and to prioritize and route the information to the correct destination workload.
SWI is the centralized point of intake for child abuse and neglect, abuse, neglect or exploitation of people age 65 or older or adults with disabilities, clients served by DSHS or DADS employees in State Hospitals or State Supported Living Centers, and children in licensed child-care facilities or treatment centers for the entire State of Texas.
SWI receives intake reports for the following Programs: Adult Protective Services (APS) Adult Provider Investigations Child Protective Investigations (CPI) Day Care Licensing (DCL) Residential Child Care Licensing (RCCL)
Not all reports are assigned for investigation.
There can be more than one source per contact. This dashboard counts report contacts determined by the date of contact.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs
Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis. This chart includes any child in DFPS custody on August 31 of the fiscal year.
A description of the different types of legal statuses is in the CPS glossary: https://www.dfps.texas.gov/About_DFPS/Data_Book/Child_Protective_Services/Resources/glossary.asp
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on all DFPS programs
This dataset includes information related to network adequacy waiver requests filed by major medical health benefit plans. It includes data on physicians, providers, and facilities, other than facility-based physicians and providers. Related datasets are available for major medical (facility-based providers) and vision plans:
• Facility-based Physicians & Providers: Network Adequacy Waiver Request - Facility based Physicians & Providers.This dataset relates to waiver requests for networks used for major medical PPO and EPO plans and includes data on facility-based physicians and providers.
• Vision: Network Adequacy Waiver Request - Vision. This dataset relates to waiver requests for networks used for vision PPO and EPO plans.
Insurers offering health benefits through a preferred or exclusive provider benefit plan (also called PPO and EPO plans) are required to demonstrate that the health insurance network meets Texas network adequacy standards. When a network does not meet these requirements and has a deficiency in a county for a specific physician or provider specialty type, an insurer may apply for a waiver to continue operating within its service area. The commissioner of the Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) may grant the waiver following a public hearing and consideration of relevant testimony and information.
Anyone may attend the public hearing and offer testimony. Learn more about how to submit information related to a waiver request or participate in a hearing here: Network Adequacy Standards Waivers.
This is the official list of watersheds for the Drainage Criteria Manual in the City of Austin and whether or not a watershed generally participates in the Regional Stormwater Management Program. For more information about the RSMP visit our website: http://austintexas.gov/RSMP
Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis. This chart includes any child in DFPS custody on August 31 of the fiscal year.
A description of the different types of legal statuses is in the CPS glossary: https://www.dfps.texas.gov/About_DFPS/Data_Book/Child_Protective_Services/Resources/glossary.asp
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on Children In Legal Responsibility and all DFPS programs.
A listing of all registered prescriptive delegation between physicians and Physician Assistants or Advanced Practice Registered Nurses. Additional information can be found at https://www.tmb.state.tx.us/page/look-up-a-license.
A list of golf courses in Austin, their phone numbers, tee times and scorecards.
This dashboard displays the number of clients, both adult and child, involved in a completed CPI investigation during a given fiscal year. It does not include those involved in Alternative Response or those involved in an administratively closed investigation.
This dashboard addressed Texas Family Code Section 264.017.(b)(3).
More information at www.dfps.texas.gov
Millions of gallons of wastewater treated by year, month and plant.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information and program participation information for all School Nutrition Program (SNP) meal sites approved by TDA to operate during the 2024-2025 program year. Contracting Entities (CE) or sites they sponsor may cancel or terminate participation after initial approval. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Data is scheduled to update daily until approximately 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, this dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
2023 Houston Minority Supplier Development Council Spot Bid Fair
A list of registered Water Services Technicians and their employers that provide the services required from customers that are regulated under the Cross Connection/Water Protection Program.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This data set contains contact and program participation information for all sites approved by TDA to operate the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2020. The active application period for summer program participants runs January through April. Changes in participant information can occur through August. Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program participation data by April 1 of the active program year. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, updates to the program participation dataset will occur every two weeks until the end of August.
All TDA datasets will have a final active update 90 days after the close of the program period. Datasets will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Any data posted during the active update schedule is subject to change.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in CACFP as child centers for the program year 2023-2024. This includes Child Care Centers, At-Risk centers, Head Start sites, Outside School Hours sites, and Emergency Shelters . The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites operating as child centers.Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. Each record (row) represents monthly meals data for a single site and for a single CACFP center sub-program.
To filter data for a specific CACFP center Program, select "View Data" to open the Exploration Canvas filter tools. Select the program(s) of interest from the Program field. A filtering tutorial can be found HERE
For meals data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Adult Day Care Centers, or child care centers for previous program years, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of the program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website."
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains claims information for paid or approved to pay meal reimbursement for sites participating in school nutrition programs for program year 2021-2022.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Flexibilities were extended into the 2021-2022 program year and allowed School Nutrition Programs to operate Seamless Summer Option through the 2021-2022 school year. The School Nutrition Program program year runs July 1 through June 30.
A CE must have an approved School Nutrition Program application on file for the the program year for a CE to operate Seamless Summer Option. Therefore, CEs and sites listed in this School Nutrition Program dataset may be providing meals under the Seamless Summer Option. Please use School Nutrition Program and Seamless Summer Option claims data to determine which program a CE has selected to provide meals.
For more information on the policies implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, this dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
The land inventory is based on several sources. The polygon geography is taken from appraisal district parcel layers merged together. A land use inventory is performed by classifying land according to a coding system that reflects the primary improvements (buildings or structures) on each parcel. Most of the land use information is attached through a GIS Union from past land use inventories. Undeveloped parcels are checked against building permit, aerial photos, and appraisal records, generally collected during the fall, or when data was made available. Information is collected only in the City of Austin’s Full, Limited Purpose, and Extra-territorial jurisdictions, and not entire counties.
City Of Austin Easements handled by the Office of Real Estate Services
This is a historical representation of the Rolling Needs Assessment
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Flexibilities were extended into the 2021-2022 program year and allowed School Nutrition Programs to operate Seamless Summer Option through the 2021-2022 school year. The Seamless Summer Option is available to Program Year 2021-2022 School Nutrition Program CEs beginning October 1, 2021 through the end of the school year. For 2021 Seamless Summer Option participation prior to October 1, please refer to the Summer Meals Programs-All Summer Sites-Contacts and Program Participation Information-Program Period 2021.
A CE must have an approved School Nutrition Program application on file for the the program year for a CE to operate Seamless Summer Option. Therefore, CEs and sites listed in this Seamless Summer Option dataset may be providing meals under the School Nutrition Program. Please use School Nutrition Program and Seamless Summer Option claims data to determine which program a CE has selected to provide meals.
For more information on the policies implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, this dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
This feature class is made up of City of Austin zoning ordinance boundaries. Work on this layer began in 2001 with zoning ordinance polygons entered on a day forward basis. Therefore, polygons for older ordinances are less likely to be included in this data.
Local Hotel Occupancy Tax (HOT) data has been compiled by municipalities complying with Tax Code Section 351.009 since 2018. In January 2021, counties began reporting their HOT data in accordance with Tax Code Section 352.009.
If local HOT data related to a specific municipality or county is not available in this dataset, it may be because that entity does not levy such a tax or that the local government failed to submit their information to the Comptroller's office within the specified reporting period.
The data reported through the Comptroller's Local HOT Submission Form and available in this dataset is self-reported by submitting municipalities, counties, or third parties on their behalf and has not been independently verified by the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. Specific questions or concerns regarding a local government's HOT rate, revenue, allocations and/or submitted webpage links should be directed to that entity.
General questions regarding this spreadsheet, Tax Code Sections 351.009 or 352.009 may be directed to the Comptroller’s Transparency Team, either by email (transparency@cpa.texas.gov) or by phone (844-519-5676).
Traffic Intersections in the City of Dallas which have a reported accident count of 50 or greater during the five year period 2015 through 2019.
A removal occurs when CPS determines that a child cannot safely remain in their own home and that DFPS needs to seek legal custody to ensure child safety. Removals can occur in an investigation, family preservation, family substitute care or family reunification stage.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on CPS Abuse/Neglect Investigations and all DFPS programs.
This layer represents the buffered geography around the known landfills in and around the City of Austin, Texas. Due to the uncertainty of the boundaries of the landfills; the buffers are used to regulate development in close proximity to the landfills. Areas of known landfill boundaries utilize the 200' buffer. Areas where general knowledge of the landfill location is known utilize a 1500' buffer.
Dataset of all properties affected by the Recycling Diversion requirements of the Universal Recycling Ordinance. Affected commercial and multi-family properties are required to provide convenient access to recycling for tenants and employees. Each affected property is also required to file an annual report (Annual Diversion Plan) documenting compliance with the URO. All commercial and multi-family properties with more than 4 dwelling units in Austin are affected by the URO. The URO supports Austin's Zero Waste goal by requiring affected property and business owners to ensure that tenants and employees have convenient access to waste diversion. For more on the Universal Recycling Ordinance visit www.austintexas.gov/uro. Austin Resource Recovery staff is available to answer questions – call 512-974-9727 or email commercialrecycling@austintexas.gov.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains meal reimbursements to Contracting Entities (CEs) sponsoring Seamless Summer Option sites for summer 2020 (SNP program year 2019-2020). Data reported represents the latest claims that have been paid or approved to pay as of the data update date. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Summer feeding programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included early operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO). Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset contains sponsor-level meal reimbursements. Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Meal Counts” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meals programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
This layer depicts creeks with buffers for water quality and creek protection.
This chart counts the number of unique children for whom a court entered a legal status order during the fiscal year. If a court entered multiple different legal statuses for a child during the fiscal year, the child is only counted once.
A description of the different types of legal statuses is in the CPS glossary.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on substitute care placements and all DFPS programs.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claimed meals served by sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option for summer 2020 (SNP program year 2019-2020). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included early operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO). Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor level and is reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
The Austin Energy system average carbon intensity is calculated as total greenhouse gas emissions at the point of combustion in pounds of CO2-equivalents divided by net generation in kilowatt-hours from all Austin Energy resources. Austin Energy generation resources include natural gas, coal and nuclear-powered units; renewable resources; and purchased power from renewable and non-renewable resources. GreenChoice® energy sales are subtracted from the net generation total since GreenChoice customers can claim their carbon intensity to be zero. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/reports. NOTE: As of 2017 the metric reported was changed to reporting lbs CO2/kWh. Years before 2017 has different metrics reported.
To determine displacement risk, researchers at the University of Texas conducted a three-part analysis: the presence of vulnerable populations, residential market appreciation, and demographic change. To determine vulnerable populations, the authors used indicators to identify residents who, according to academic research, are least able to absorb housing costs, which includes: communities of color, low-income households, heads of households without a bachelor's degree or higher, families with children in poverty, and renters.
In 2019 and 2020, the City of Austin Housing and Planning staff updated the data and simplified the categories below.
Vulnerable: Vulnerable populations present, no significant demographic change, some tracts are near or contain high-value and high-appreciation areas. Active Displacement Risk: Vulnerable populations present, active demographic change, accelerating or appreciating housing market. Chronic Displacement Risk: Vulnerable populations have been displaced, demographic change has occurred and the housing market is high value and appreciated or appreciating. Historic Displacement: Tracts previously identified as at-risk to displacement in earlier Uprooted models (2016, 2019)
As a community-owned electric utility, Austin Energy returns a dividend to its community. This dividend is comparable to funds distributed to stockholders by investor-owned electric utilities. The dividend (known as the General Fund Transfer) returned by Austin Energy helps fund other City services such as Police, Fire, EMS, Parks, and Libraries. General Fund Transfers are common among municipally-owned utilities. For more detailed information about the General Fund Transfer, visit the City of Austin Finance online page: https://www.austintexas.gov/financeonline/finance/
State DOTs provide the location limits of highway sections to be used to represent statewide aggregations based on a statistically valid Sample Panel. The Mid-America contains data for the following States: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Wisconsin.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for Day Care Home (DCH) providers approved to operate under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during program year 2019-2020. Contracting Entity (CE) sponsors can participate in more than one CACFP program. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset only includes information for Texas Day Care Home providers participating in CACFP. For data on CEs and sites participating as Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Centers – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
Dataset content and column order have been updated starting with program year 2018-2019 forward. Older program year datasets will retain original content and organization.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our SquareMeal.org website.
This table groups Austin Energy customers into five classes: residential, primary 1 & 2, secondary 1, 2, & 3, lighting, and contract/tes/trans/highload. View sales in dollars and kWh.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This data set contains contact and program participation information for each site participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2022 . Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
An overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by May 1 of the active program period. Data will be updated daily until 60 days after the close of the program period. The dataset will be updated six months later after which data will remain static but published. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change..
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset is a monthly upload of the Community Registry (www.AustinTexas.gov/CR), where community organizations such as neighborhood associations may register with the City of Austin to receive notices of land development permit applications within 500 feet of the organization's specified boundaries. This dataset can be used to contact multiple registered organizations at once by filtering/sorting, for example, by Association Type or by Association ZipCode. The organizations' boundaries can be viewed in the City's interactive map at www.AustinTexas.gov/GIS/PropertyProfile/ - the Community Registry layer is under the Boundaries/Grids folder.
Number of needs met by the Homeless Outreach Street Team.
A list of activations of the Austin/Travis County Emergency Operation Center (EOC) in 2014 and YTD 2015.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains claimed meals served by sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO) between October 2020 and September 2021.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) by School Nutrition Program sponsors during the school year.
Beginning October 2020, School Nutrition Program sponsors were given the option to use SFSP or SSO to provide school meals until the end of the sponsor's 2020-2021 school year. Traditional summer meal program service resumed at the end of the school year through September 2021 or until the start of the 2021-2022 school year, whichever was sooner.
For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor level and is reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
List of companies that have registered with Austin Water to purchase wholesale Dillo Dirt from the utility and offer retail sales of Dillo Dirt to the public.
Austin Energy's operating budget includes Operations & Maintenance; fuel costs; debt service payments; and cash transfers to the Capital Improvements Project fund. Please note: Operations and Maintenance with Fuel does not include debt service and transfers. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset shows zones by address.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for each site participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO) for summer 2018 (SNP program year 2017-2018). Summer meals programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Feeding Programs – Summer Feeding Program (SFSP) – Contact and Program Participation datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Due to the short duration of the summer feeding programs, dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
Family and Youth Success Program (FAYS) (Formerly Services to At-Risk Youth (STAR)) - The FAYS program contracts with community agencies to offer family crisis intervention counseling, short- term emergency respite care, and individual and family counseling. Youth up to age 17 and their families are eligible if they experience conflict at home, truancy or delinquency, or a youth who runs away from home. FAYS services are available in all 254 Texas counties. Each FAYS contractor also provides universal child abuse prevention services, ranging from local media campaigns to informational brochures and parenting classes.
Data as of December 11, 2024.
A list of properties that are landmarks, are in historic districts, or were recommended for inclusion in a historic district.
Address, phone number, and information about what is available at a location.
Static Data Set Opiate overdoses treated by EMS by drug type for fiscal year 2018
This dataset connects each subject matter associated with each municipal question. You can recreate the City Clerk's lobbyist database by downloading all lobbyist datasets on the data portal and view the complete data model of the lobbyist database here: https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=293053
The average monthly salary for active Child Protective staff as of the last day of the fiscal year by staff type.
The county and region of the employees are determined by the office to which they are assigned.
More information at www.dfps.texas.gov NOTE: Child Protective Investigations (CPI), Child Care Investigations (CCI), and Child Protective Services (CPS) Staff are all included.
Child Care Investigations (CCI), which is a part of CPI and include Day Care Investigations (DCI) and Residential Child Care Investigations (RCCI) are only available from 2018 onward. This is due to the split of those job functions from Child Care Licensing, which was a part of DFPS until 2017, when it was transferred to the Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC).
This addresses Texas Human Resource Code Section 40.0516(11).
This table shows ATCEMS revenues for the past six fiscal years, broken out by expense category. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS FY2016 annual report.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains claimed meals served by sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2020 (SNP program year 2019-2020). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included early operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO). Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor level and is reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
Dataset change as of October 4, 2019: Meal Average Daily Participation (ADP) will no longer be included as part of this dataset. Second meals served results in variety in which ADP can be calculated. The end-user can now determine the method of calculating ADP as per their need.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF <a href=http://www.squaremeals.org/Portals/8/f
This chart counts the different legal statuses granted during the fiscal year for children in DFPS custody. Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis.
This chart includes any child in DFPS custody at some point during the year. Children may be duplicated in the count, if they were in and out of DFPS custody more than once during the fiscal year.
A description of the different types of legal statuses is in the CPS glossary: https://www.dfps.texas.gov/About_DFPS/Data_Book/Child_Protective_Services/Resources/glossary.asp
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on all DFPS programs
New Data Fields Available!
Dataset content and column order have been updated starting with program year 2018-2019 forward. Older program year datasets will retain original content and organization.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information and program participation information for all School Nutrition Program meal sites approved by TDA to operate during the 2018-2019 program year. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, this dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
The City of Austin provides hearings for customers who would like the opportunity to dispute charges or are in need of any other type of account reconciliation. The hearings are conducted by an impartial Hearing Officer retained by the City of Austin.
In the early 1970s, the Texas Legislature authorized certain local governments to begin collecting a hotel occupancy tax (HOT). Almost two decades later, the Legislature offered hotel occupancy taxing authority as one of several revenue options to support sports and community venues. The tax may be levied by a city, county or a partnership between the two.
Throughout the years, the Texas Legislature has passed laws that increased local government transparency while also allowing the public to better understand the state’s patchwork of municipal and county HOTs. During the 88th Legislative Session, House Bill 3727 and Senate Bill 1420 were passed to require municipalities and counties to report the amount and percentage of HOT revenue allocated by the local government.
While the Comptroller’s office is not required to post submitted local HOT information on its website, this office nonetheless intends to make available all municipal and county data provided to it during the reporting period. The data will be available shortly after the reporting period closes.
Questions about the spreadsheet can be sent to the Transparency and Local Government Teams at 844-519-5676 or sent to Transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Dataset This data set contains claimed meals served by summer feeding sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option for summer 2018 (SNP program year 2017-2018). Summer feeding programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor level and is reported in the “Summer Feeding Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Feeding Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains meal reimbursements to Contracting Entities (CEs) sponsoring sites participating in the Summer Feeding Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2022 (SNP program year 2021-2022). Data reported represents the latest claims that have been paid or approved to pay as of the date the data was updated. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains sponsor-level claimed meal reimbursements. Meal count data is collected at the site level and is reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Count Information” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
This dataset includes all housing projects that have received a subsidy from or participated in a city of Austin developer incentive program. Projects may include a mix of income-restricted and market rate units and span the development pipeline from developer incentive certification or loan approval to project completion.
Texas State Expenditures by County shows where state dollars are spent. It lists state expenditures by agency and type of expenditure in each county. This report was created using information from the state's Uniform Statewide Accounting System. It reflects actual net expenditures of funds from accounts held in the State Treasury during the state's fiscal year, Sept. 1 through Aug. 31. The data is available through the Texas Open Data Portal, can be filtered as needed and is downloadable for further analysis. PDF file reports predating 2017 can be provided upon request by emailing transparency@cpa.texas.gov.
About the Dataset This data set contains contact and program participation information for each site participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO) for summer 2017 (SNP program year 2016-2017). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Contact and Program Participation datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
The TABC Pending Original (New) Primary and Subordinate License Application dataset includes information for certain submitted applications for new licenses. These records include original (new) applications with the status of “Received” or “In Review” by the agency and as found in the Alcohol Industry Management System (AIMS). Data includes transactions as of midnight the day before the current calendar date.
Please note these data records do not include license renewals or other license-related applications. To find data for renewal applications, please see the appropriate section within Public Inquiry or the Open Data Portal’s TABC License Information Dataset. Renewal applications will be identified by the license status “Renewal Pending.”
The system fuel cost average is the cost of fuel purchased, divided by the number of kilowatts generated. View the system annual average fuel cost (cents/kWh) starting in 2006. Go to http://austinenergy.com/go/reports to learn more.
Listing of City of Austin Parks and Recreation Department (PARD) pools and splash pads with schedule.
For more information, please visit the PARD Pools & Splash Pads website - https://www.austintexas.gov/pools-splashpads
Building footprints are created from heads up digitizing using 2012/2013 Orthoimagery and 2012 Lidar where Orthoimagery is not available.
Priority 1 investigations must have initial contact within 24 hours and Priority 2 within 72 hours.
Completed investigations only include those cases conducted as a traditional investigation that were not administratively closed or merged into another stage. An investigation can only be administratively closed if all allegations have a disposition of administrative closure. A completed investigation can include more than one alleged victim. Completed investigations do not include any Alternative Response cases.
A description of Alternative Response and how it differs from a traditional investigation and priority response times are in the CPS glossary.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on all DFPS programs
The City of Austin maintains a Medically Vulnerable Registry of customers with a long-term disease, ailment, or critical illness. Customers eligible for the registry receive additional time to pay their utility bills and personal case management services from Austin Energy and partnering social service agencies.
This dataset contains financial tracking codes used by City of Austin staff to manage various program budgets. Our internal operations systems consume data directly from this dataset. This data is subset of the canonical data maintained by the City of Austin Financial Services Division. https://www.austintexas.gov/fsd
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
Note: Published PY22 SSO reimbursement values do not reflect reimbursement rates allowed by USDA Waiver #86 which allows SFSP rates for schools operating SSO during the 2021-2022 school year. For more information, please visit our Public Resources page on SquareMeals.org.
About the Dataset This dataset contains meal reimbursements to Contracting Entities (CEs) sponsoring Seamless Summer Option sites for summer 2022 (SNP program year 2021-2022). Data reported represents the latest claims that have been paid or approved to pay as of the data update date. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Summer feeding programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included early operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO). Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset contains sponsor-level meal reimbursements. Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Meal Counts” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meals programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our <a href=http://www.SquareMeals.org t
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains claimed meals served by sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2022 (SNP program year 2021-2022). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor level and is reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
Dataset change as of October 4, 2019: Meal Average Daily Participation (ADP) will no longer be included as part of this dataset. Second meals served results in variety in which ADP can be calculated. The end-user can now determine the method of calculating ADP as per their need.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
This layer represents the area and attributes for the Future Land Use Map.
Contains information about abuse/neglect related investigations that were closed by Day Care Investigations staff during the specified timeframe.
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Child Care Investigations (CCI), which is a part of CPI and includes Day Care Investigations (DCI) and Residential Child Care Investigations (RCCI), conduct investigations of abuse and neglect. After the investigation is complete, the investigation is assigned to Child Care Regulation (CCR) with HHSC, where the investigation is assessed for deficiencies of minimum standards.
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The number of unregulated operation investigations is calculated using the operations application date that is after the date of the intake.
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Exemption requests are submitted to CCR to determine if their operation is subject to regulation.
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In Fiscal Year 2011, all Licensed Child Care Centers (LCCCs) were divided into one of the following “care types”: Before and After School Program (BAP), School-Age Program (SAP), or Child Care Program (CCL). Any LCCCs with “No Care Type” after Fiscal Year 2010 are operations that were placed on adverse action prior to 09/01/2010, and a new permit was not issued for the specified care type.
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Abuse and neglect investigations cannot be closed until they have been reviewed and approved by the appropriate CCI staff.
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The dashboard addresses Texas Family Code Section 264.017(c ).
Monthly Handle by TxRC Track Code and Signal Type (unaudited) thru 11/30/2021
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information and program participation information for all School Nutrition Program (SNP) meal sites approved by TDA to operate during the 2019-2020 program year. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, this dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
The City of Austin Utility Contact Center is managed by Austin Energy. This is the place customers call to start, stop, or transfer utility services. The center receives about 6,000 calls per day on average and Online Customer Care handles about 12,000 requests per month.
This chart counts the different legal statuses granted during the fiscal year for children in DFPS custody. Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis.
This chart includes any child in DFPS custody at some point during the year. Children may be duplicated in the count, if they were in and out of DFPS custody more than once during the fiscal year.
A description of the different types of legal statuses is in the CPS glossary: https://www.dfps.texas.gov/About_DFPS/Data_Book/Child_Protective_Services/Resources/glossary.asp
Go to dfps.texas.gov for information on all DFPS programs.
Railroads inside the Austin Jurisdiction 2003. This data has been produced by the City of Austin for the sole purpose of aiding internal processes and is not warranted for any other use. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding its accuracy or completeness. Reproduction is not permitted without permission.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset comprises a list of all urban forest partners involved in projects that DSD helped to fund across Austin.
This dataset contains the number of Vaccine for Children (VFC) and Adult Safety Net (ASN) eligible client visits and the number of shots given through the Austin Public Health ‘Shots for Tots’ and ‘Big Shots’ programs at the St. John's and Far South clinics. Data are reported monthly from 2010 through 2022.
"This dataset contains the number of Vaccine for Children (VFC) and adult safety net (ASN) eligible client visits and the number of shots given through the Austin Public Health ‘Shots for Tots’ and ‘Big Shots’ programs at the St. John's and Far South clinics. Data are reported monthly from 2010 through 2023. The data was previously extracted from the Texas Department of State Health Services’ Texas-Wide Integrated Client Encounter System (TWICES) into an aggregate report for each clinic by an Austin Public Health employee at the beginning of each month. APH transitioned from TWICES to the eClinicalWorks (eCW) platform in December 2017.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Number-of-Eligible-Clients-receiving-Services-thro/p65p-rump
This shapefile contains the Public Land Survey System (PLSS) Abstracts for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
This chart counts the number of children in DFPS custody on August 31 of the fiscal year who meet all of the following criteria: (1) a court has terminated all parental rights; (2) the child has a plan of adoption; and (3) the child is not in an adoptive placement.
The count includes both children who are in an intended to be permanent home and children who are not in an intended to be permanent home. Use the filter to isolate these counts.
Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis. An adoptive placement occurs when the child's caseworker, the family's case manager, and the adoptive family sign paperwork officially placing the child in the home for adoption. Before the paperwork can be signed, a child must be free for adoption (meaning a court has terminated parental rights), have a permanency goal of adoption and the family must have been approved for adoption through a licensed child placing agency.
The operating budget provides spending authorization for the various programs and activities of the City. Please visit https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Key-Terms-and-Facts-about-Open-Budget-ATX/capb-cbrm/ for more information.
ABOUT THIS CHART This dashboard contains information about abuse or neglect investigations that were closed by Residential Child Care Investigations staff during the specified timeframe. If at least one allegation in an investigation is validated, the overall disposition for the investigation is validated.
To see a count of specific allegations, as opposed to investigations as shown here, see the RCCI Types of Abuse dashboard in this section.
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Child Care Investigations (CCI), which is a part of CPI and includes Day Care Investigations (DCI) and Residential Child Care Investigations (RCCI), conduct investigations of abuse and neglect. After the investigation is complete, the investigation is assigned to Child Care Regulation (CCR) with HHSC, where the investigation is assessed for deficiencies of minimum standards.
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Exemption requests are submitted to CCR to determine if their operation is subject to regulation.
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The General Residential Operations (GROs) counts exclude Residential Treatment Centers (RTCs). Though RTCs are a “care type” of GRO, they are counted separately.
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Agency Homes are excluded from these counts. They were included in some past printed Data Books.
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This dashboard addresses Texas Family Code Section. 264.017.(c).
This report is the result of the Austin City Code 6-7's Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 1200 megawatts of Peak Energy by 2025.
The Audit results are averages of the energy efficiency measures evaluated on site during the audit.
This shapefile contains the Municipal Utility District (MUD) Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
Static Data Set Opiate overdoses by age group and gender for fiscal year 2018
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This is a slimmed down view of Repeat Offender Registrations for the purposes of tabular display.
Link to complete dataset: https://data.austintexas.gov/City-Government/Repeat-Offender-Registrations/86z9-i27i
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
The City of Austin’s Community Tree Priority Map (formerly Planting Prioritization) serves as a decision support tool to determine where to focus forestry activities in Austin, Texas. This map shows U.S. Census tracts (2010) containing tabular data related to community forestry priorities determined by the Community Tree Preservation Division’s Urban Forest Program. Prioritization is determined through the priority score. This score combines nine measures normalized and summarized into four broad categories. The score is aggregated at the neighborhood (U.S. Census tract) level. Scores can range from 0 to 100 with higher scores meaning a higher need for community forestry activities to achieve more equitable canopy distribution. Finally, the priority level provides a categorical representation of the data for a simplified view.
Priority Score = ( Σ Natural Environment + Σ Social Vulnerability + Σ Community Investment + Σ Health & Well-Being ) / 4
This map was updated in 2020. Minor updates are made as-needed with a review and data update scheduled for 2025 (every 5 years).
Ultimately, this map is used to aggregate Urban Forest Grant/Portal projects and tree planting/distribution data to assess program performance.
This dataset is intended to be downloaded as a GIS Shapefile but may also be viewed in Excel. It's also available in ArcGIS Online at https://austin.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=7d7c5260e60c4f8ab811d2c5fda6c40f
Austin Energy provides rebates and low interest loans to customers who make energy efficiency improvements. During fiscal year 2012, energy savings totaled nearly 106-million kilowatt hours. That's enough electricity to power nearly 9,400 residential homes in Austin.
Fall Enrollment at Public Health-Related Institutions by Gender 2020-2022. For additional years and the latest downloadable data, use the Accountability Interactive tool at: http://www.txhigheredaccountability.org/AcctPublic/InteractiveReport/ManageReports.
This dataset lists all expenditures and incurred obligations reported by candidates, officeholders and political committees on data files submitted per City Code Chapter 2-2-26.
For a complete listing of each column heading, please see the field listing here: http://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=262465
This dataset lists all registered lobbyists and business entities with the City of Austin. You can recreate the City Clerk's lobbyist database by downloading all lobbyist datasets on the data portal and view the complete data model of the lobbyist database here: https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=293053
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between March 19 to March 29 related to a upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
Austin Code Cases related to the winter storm of Feb. 2021.
Please visit our dashboard for more in-depth analysis: https://austin.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=d3f090400b654c338ceb65c0ec776935
This data set has information about Inspections, Investigations, Assessments done at each Day care and/or Residential Care Operation. The Operation ID can be used to link the records to the operation details in the HHSC CCL Operations Data set
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for each site participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO) for summer 2019 (SNP program year 2018-2019). The active application period for summer program participants runs January through April. Changes in participant information can occur through August. Summer meals programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
New Data Fields Available! CE and site status (active/inactive), termination status, termination as of date, and application cycle (new/renewal) are now available on this dataset. These fields have been added to the last columns of the report and data descriptions have been added to the column metadata.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program participation data by April 1 of the active program year. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, updates to the program participation dataset will occur every two weeks until the end of August.
All TDA datasets will have a final active update 90 days after the close of the program period. Datasets will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Any data posted during the active update schedule is subject to change.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information and program participation information for each site participating in school nutrition programs during program year 2016-2017. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, this dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
DFPS sets priorities for the delivery of protective services. In establishing priorities, DFPS defines timeframes for conducting initial face-to-face interviews with alleged victims. The priorities are based on severity and immediacy of alleged threat to the life or physical safety of the alleged victim. (40 Texas Administrative Code §705.2101)
The initial face-to-face contact with the alleged victim is conducted according to the following priorities:
Priority 1: Allegations that the victim is in a state of serious harm or is in danger of death from abuse or neglect. APS makes face-to-face contact within 24 hours of SWI’s receipt of Priority I allegations.
Priority 2: Allegations that the victim is abused, neglected, or financially exploited and, as a result, is at risk of serious harm. APS makes face-to-face contact within three calendar days of SWI’s receipt of Priority II allegations.
Priority 3: All other allegations that the victim is in a state of abuse or neglect. APS makes face-to-face contact within seven calendar days of SWI’s receipt of Priority III allegations.
Priority 4: Allegations of financial exploitation when there is no danger of imminent impoverishment or deprivation of basic needs. APS makes face-to-face contact within 14 calendar days of SWI’s receipt of Priority IV allegations.
Inclusion is based on the Intake Closure Date.
Bad debt expense is the amount of revenue billed in any fiscal year that is not collected. It represents a final, audited number based on an analysis of collectability. While Austin Energy has experienced growth in receivable balances for active accounts due to a postponement of utility cut-offs for delinquent payment during Austin Energy’s transition to the new customer billing system, the utility is beginning to see significant collection on those balances. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
The average speed for answering calls was up in Fiscal Years 2009 and 2010 due to Customer Service Representatives focusing on one-call resolutions, thus avoiding repeat calls by customers. In addition, the Utility Contact Center has rolled out several campaign initiatives over the past few years to promote conservation programs. Explaining those products and benefits takes extra time.
This is the feedback from the participants at a community meeting in May 2018 at the Central LIbrary for the Special Events Ordinance
Do not use this data to make zoning determinations. This data does not show all zoning regulations for an address, including overlays and situations where an address has more than one zoning. Also, the data may be out of date. Use the interactive mapping application https://maps.austintexas.gov/GIS/PropertyProfile/ to make zoning determinations, and call 311 if you have questions about zoning. Zoning only applies to addresses within the City of Austin city limits.
This dataset is a list of addresses with their zoning provided to answer questions such as "what property addresses have CS zoning." This data is derived from GIS layer for address and zoning. The place_id field is provided for linking to the addresses GIS layer.
This product is produced by the City of Austin for informational purposes. No warranty is made they City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
This chart counts perpetrators in completed investigations. Completed investigations only include those cases conducted as a traditional investigation that were not administratively closed or merged into another stage. An investigation can only be administratively closed if all allegations have a disposition of administrative closure.
A completed investigation can include more than one alleged victim. Completed investigations do not include any Alternative Response cases.
A confirmed perpetrator on a completed investigation is an individual who is a confirmed perpetrator on at least one allegation with a disposition of reason to believe.
An alleged perpetrator on a completed investigation is an individual where all the allegations on which they were an alleged perpetrator have a disposition of ruled out, unable to complete or unable to determine.
A description of Alternative Response and how it differs from a traditional investigation and the definitions of the different dispositions in a traditional investigation are in the glossary.
FOOTNOTES
- Each victim may have more than one perpetrator in an investigation.
- Each perpetrator may have more than one victim.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on CPS Abuse/Neglect Investigations and all DFPS programs.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Day Care Homes for the program year 2022-2023. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Day Care Homes. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP),and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Day Care Homes for program year 2018-2019. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Day Care Homes. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP),and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A listing of all TMB licenses. Additional licensee information can be found at https://www.tmb.state.tx.us/page/look-up-a-license.
Prevention and Early Intervention (PEI) was created to consolidate child abuse prevention and juvenile delinquency prevention and early intervention programs within the jurisdiction of a single state agency. To provide services for at-risk children, youth, and families.
Community Youth Development (CYD) - The CYD program contracts services in 15 targeted Texas ZIP codes with community-based organizations to develop juvenile delinquency prevention programs in areas with high juvenile crime rates. Approaches used by communities to prevent delinquency include mentoring, youth employment programs, career preparation, youth leadership development and recreational activities. Communities prioritize and fund specific prevention services according to local needs.
Family and Youth Success Program (FAYS) (Formerly Services to At-Risk Youth (STAR)) - The FAYS program contracts with community agencies to offer family crisis intervention counseling, short- term emergency respite care, individual and family counseling, and universal child abuse prevention services, ranging from local media campaigns to informational brochures and parenting classes in all counties in Texas. Youth up to age 17 and their families are eligible if they experience conflict at home, truancy or delinquency, or a youth who runs away from home. In FY2018, contracts for the FAYS program were re-procured and started on December 1, 2017. Under these contracts, families could be served through traditional FAYS services or through one-time focused skills training. In some cases, families participating in skills training also chose to enroll in traditional FAYS services. Programmatically, these families are counted uniquely in both programs; for DFPS Data Book purposes, they are reported unduplicated.
Statewide Youth Services Network (SYSN) - The SYSN program contracts provide community and evidence-based juvenile delinquency prevention programs focused on youth ages 10 through 17, in each DFPS region.
Data as of December 11, 2024.
Please visit dfps.texas.gov to learn more about PEI and all DFPS programs.
This dataset contains data regarding infectious disease cases that were investigated by Austin Public Health's Epidemiology & Disease Surveillance Unit from 2013-2018. Data was downloaded from Texas' National Electronic Disease Surveillance System (NEDSS).
** Static Data Set ** This table shows ATCEMS billing payment type for Fiscal Year 2016-17
APS may provide non-purchased services or purchased services. The chart compares these two types of services.
Non-purchased services can include services provided directly by APS staff or services provided by other entities, including social casework, legal actions, or services provided by other government agencies or community organizations.
APS may purchase services for clients using Purchased Client Services (PCS) funds. Purchased services may include short-term shelter, food, medication, health services, financial help with rent or utilities, transportation, and minor home repair. All other available resources must be used where feasible before purchased client services are initiated.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs.
Number and percentage of properties whose exposure to wildfire risk have decreased due to City efforts - SD23 Measure HE.E.5.c.AFD
Fiscal Year values (10/1-9/30) for HPD Blueprint Goals.
Static Data Set Opiate Overdoses by age distribution for FY 2018.
Children in the Custody of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS)- All children for whom DFPS legal responsibility through court ordered temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis. These children may be residing in substitute care or may be living with a parent, referred to as a trial home visit. DFPS legal responsibility terminates when a court orders DFPS custody ended or a youth turns 18, whichever comes first.
Substitute care - all children who are living in a DFPS out of home placement. It does not include children in DFPS custody who are living with a parent on a return and monitor. Unless otherwise noted, it does include youth over 18 who are in extended foster care but are not in DFPS custody.
Kinship care- a subset of substitute care that includes all children in DFPS custody who are living with a legal or blood relative or other individual who has a significant relationship with the child or the child's family known as "fictive kin."
Foster care - all children in DFPS custody living in a placement that has been verified to provide 24-hour residential care for a child, in accordance with Chapter 42 of the Human Resources Code and related regulations. These placements include foster homes, including kinship care where the caregiver has been verified, general residential operations (GRO), emergency shelters, residential treatment centers (RTC), and juvenile facilities.
Paid foster care - a subset of foster care where DFPS is making foster care payments.
Visit https://www.dfps.texas.gov/ for information on substitute care placements and all DFPS programs
A list of drop-off locations to recycle waste oil, oil filters, tires, automotive batteries, metal scrap, aluminum cans, tin cans, glass, plastic, corrugated boxes newspapers and other papers.
Record of the time coded hours of HSEM staff responding to EOC Activation, EOC standby situations, or recovery phases in FY2014. This data provides a general picture for planning purposes, but does not encompass all times when HSEM staff are in response or recovery activities.
“** Static Data Set ** This table shows the ATCEMS Recruiting Process for Fiscal Year 2016-17
Point in Time Count broken up by year and sheltered versus unsheltered. Information provided by HUD - https://www.hudexchange.info/resource/3031/pit-and-hic-data-since-2007/
Currently incarcerated inmate population with relevant demographic, offense, and parole information.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains meal reimbursements to Contracting Entities (CEs) sponsoring sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2018 (SNP program year 2017-2018). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains sponsor-level meal reimbursements. Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts” dataset for the program year.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
Child Abuse/Neglect Prevention Programs include:
Texas Families: Together and Safe (TFTS) - The TFTS program funds evidence-based, community-based programs designed to alleviate stress and promote parental competencies and behaviors that increase the ability of families to become self-sufficient and successfully nurture their children.
Fatherhood Effects (FE) - FE funds a variety of contracts with community-based organizations to provide child abuse and neglect prevention services. These include the Fatherhood Effects grants as well as various special initiatives and public awareness campaigns.
Community Based Family Services (CBFS) - The CBFS program serves families who were investigated by CPS but whose allegations were low-priority or unsubstantiated, through community and evidence-based services. Services include home visitation, case management, and additional social services to provide a safe and stable home environment.
Helping through Intervention and Prevention (HIP) - The HIP program provides an extensive family assessment, home visiting that includes parent education and basic needs support to targeted families.
Healthy Outcomes through Prevention and Early Support (HOPES) - The HOPES program provides child abuse and neglect prevention services that target families with children between 0-5 years of age. Contracts have been awarded in eight counties. Each HOPES contract also has a focus on community collaboration that focus on early childhood and the prevention of child abuse and neglect.
Family Strengthening (FSP) and Tertiary Child Abuse Prevention Programs (TPP) - Served families through 2011.
Texas Service Members, Veterans and Families (SMVF) - Formerly Preventive Services for Veterans and Military Families.
FOOTNOTES
Families served are counted by primary caregivers' participation in child abuse/neglect prevention programs.
Data as of December 11, 2024.
Please visit dfps.texas.gov to learn more about PEI and all DFPS programs.
Services provided to clients by DFPS may include social casework, case management, and arranging for psychiatric and health evaluation, home care, day care, social services, health care, respite services, and other services.
The APS specialist works with the client to develop a service plan to address identified problems. Safely maintaining clients in the least restrictive environment is a primary goal of APS intervention.
Protective services may be necessary to alleviate or prevent the client from returning to a state of abuse, neglect or financial exploitation. In this case, DFPS may also provide services to a family member or caretaker. (Texas Human Resources Code §48.002(a)(5) and §48.204) Protective services may be delivered in every stage of an investigation
The APS specialist makes all reasonable efforts to resolve problems, including root causes, and stabilizes the client’s condition. Full resolution of a client’s problems is always the goal of APS casework, but it is not always achievable. When full resolution is not a practical goal because of inadequate resources, client resistance, or some other impediment, the APS specialist closes the case when a client’s situation is as close to stable as possible.
The phrase "reasonable effort" implicitly recognizes that: • personal choice on the part of the client may limit the effectiveness of APS intervention; • resources available to APS for helping clients are limited; and • APS cannot remedy all situations.
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Counts for FY 2015 and subsequent years cannot be compared to those from prior Data Books, due to changes in the APS casework practice model. Cases with services provided during the investigation may not have a separate service stage.
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Clients in validated cases may receive more than one service.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs.
Column definitions for the lat file data set - Austin Finance Online eCheckbook - found on the data portal . The data contained in this dataset is for informational purposes only. Please visit the Austin Finance Online website for a searchable front end to this data set.
A table of the values and definitions of fields used in Austin Police Department datasets.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
** Static Data Set ** This table shows special events information for Fiscal Year 2016-17
Prevention and Early Intervention (PEI) was created to consolidate child abuse prevention and juvenile delinquency prevention and early intervention programs within the jurisdiction of a single state agency. To provide services for at-risk children, youth, and families.
Community Youth Development (CYD) - The CYD program contracts services in 15 targeted Texas ZIP codes with community-based organizations to develop juvenile delinquency prevention programs in areas with high juvenile crime rates. Approaches used by communities to prevent delinquency include mentoring, youth employment programs, career preparation, youth leadership development and recreational activities. Communities prioritize and fund specific prevention services according to local needs.
Family and Youth Success Program (FAYS) (Formerly Services to At-Risk Youth (STAR)) - The FAYS program contracts with community agencies to offer family crisis intervention counseling, short- term emergency respite care, individual and family counseling, and universal child abuse prevention services, ranging from local media campaigns to informational brochures and parenting classes in all counties in Texas. Youth up to age 17 and their families are eligible if they experience conflict at home, truancy or delinquency, or a youth who runs away from home. In FY2018, contracts for the FAYS program were re-procured and started on December 1, 2017. Under these contracts, families could be served through traditional FAYS services or through one-time focused skills training. In some cases, families participating in skills training also chose to enroll in traditional FAYS services. Programmatically, these families are counted uniquely in both programs; for DFPS Data Book purposes, they are reported unduplicated.
Statewide Youth Services Network (SYSN) - The SYSN program contracts provide community and evidence-based juvenile delinquency prevention programs focused on youth ages 10 through 17, in each DFPS region.
Power Partner was launched in 2013 and is a voluntary program for residential customers who use internet-connected thermostats. View dates and times, starting in calendar year 2006, when we used either this or its predecessor voluntary program to reduce residential energy demand. Go to austinenergy.com/go/powerpartner to learn more.
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information for each Contracting Entity (CE) sponsor participating in a school nutrition programs during program year 2022-2023 and information on Food Service Management Company (FSMC) they may contract with. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new data by September 15 of the active school nutrition program year. This dataset contains multi-year data. Due to the relatively static nature of this data, there are no planned updates for this dataset.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs , the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
County Voter Registrar offices report cancellations to the TEAM system with reasons for each cancellation. The Cancellation Trend report is an overview of the reasons for cancellations for each county over the course of a month.
The Drainage Pipe REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Drainage Pipe feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Drainage-Pipe/ybys-rwgs with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
Austin Energy has consistently maintained high bond ratings. A bond rating is a measure of a company’s credit quality, which includes the ability to repay its debt in a timely fashion. In 2016, two bond rating agencies upgraded their assessments of Austin Energy's creditworthiness, allowing the City of Austin-owned utility to reach a key financial goal of a AA credit rating. Standard & Poor's rated the $1.3 billion utility's bonds at AA Stable, up from AA- Stable. The rating service cited "the electric system's very strong financial performance trend as evidenced by its ability to maintain stronger fixed-charge coverage and total available liquidity levels.
The dataset contains the ranking and status of traffic and pedestrian signal requests in Austin, TX.
This dataset is in response to a Council Budget Question from Council Member Tovo (Request Number 60): Please provide the line item FY 2020-21 Proposed Budget for the Austin Police Department?
100 foot buffers of stream centerlines with drainage areas of 64 acres or greater
This report contains Council Voting history beginning January 6, 2023. This is a summary of the votes cast by members of the City Council and the final results of that voting. The approved minutes by the City Council is the official record. Note that new data will be added continuously and is subject to change without notice. (Note: we recommend "CSV for Excel" format when exporting.)
Effective May 11, 2021 Proposition B Camping Ban offenses filed at Austin Municipal Court & Downtown Austin Community Court Individuals found to be in violation of the ban on public camping are issued citation offenses.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains meal reimbursements to Contracting Entities (CEs) sponsoring Seamless Summer Option sites for summer 2017 (SNP program year 2016-2017). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains sponsor-level meal reimbursements. Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Meal Counts” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
Austin Energy has installed solar projects on municipal facilities such as City Hall, libraries, and recreation centers to increase public awareness about solar power and demonstrate the effectiveness of this technology. View the location name, address, year installed, and system size in kW. Go to austinenergy.com/go/solar to learn more about solar solutions from Austin Energy. Please note that this data set is no longer updated and should be considered static.
The Division of Prevention and Early Intervention (PEI) was created to consolidate child abuse prevention and juvenile delinquency prevention and early intervention programs within the jurisdiction of a single state agency. Consolidation of these programs is intended to eliminate fragmentation and duplication of contracted prevention and early intervention services for at-risk children, youth, and families:
Community Youth Development (CYD) - The CYD program contracts with community-based organizations to develop juvenile delinquency prevention programs in ZIP codes with high juvenile crime rates. Approaches used by communities to prevent delinquency have included mentoring, youth employment programs, career preparation, youth leadership development and recreational activities. Communities prioritize and fund specific prevention services according to local needs. CYD services are available in 15 targeted Texas ZIP codes.
Family and Youth Success Program (FAYS) (formerly Services to At-Risk Youth (STAR)) - The FAYS program contracts with community agencies to offer family crisis intervention counseling, short- term emergency respite care, and individual and family counseling. Youth up to age 17 and their families are eligible if they experience conflict at home, truancy or delinquency, or a youth who runs away from home. FAYS services are available in all 254 Texas counties. Each FAYS contractor also provides universal child abuse prevention services, ranging from local media campaigns to informational brochures and parenting classes.
Statewide Youth Services Network (SYSN) - The SYSN program contracts provide community and evidence-based juvenile delinquency prevention programs focused on youth ages 10 through 17, in each DFPS region.
NOTE: For FY15, as a result of a new procurement, the overall number of youth served decreased however the service requirements were enhanced with additional programmatic components.
Data as of December 11, 2024.
Currently incarcerated inmate population with relevant demographic, offense, and parole information.
This shapefile contains the Emergency Services District (ESD) Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
This dataset lists each employee a lobbyist reports. You can recreate the City Clerk's lobbyist database by downloading all lobbyist datasets on the data portal and view the complete data model of the lobbyist database here: https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=293053
Strategic Direction Measure EOA.B.2
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
Austin Energy is one of the few utilities in the nation that tries to meet with each property owner in advance of tree trimming. A plan detailing the trimming needed for each tree on a property is discussed and provided to the property owner for their acknowledgment and signature. When property owners refuse to meet or cooperate with scheduling, they receive a letter that indicates when trimming will occur. The number of refusal letters is extremely small, often less than 1 percent annually. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/trees and http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
Spring critical environmental features (CEFs) were digitized from construction plans, environmental assessments and City of Austin staff review and field observations.
This chart shows how many children and the percentage who are placed in their legal region and/or county out of all children in foster care placements.
History of annexation actions taken by the City of Austin including annexations, disannexations, releases of territorial jurisdiction and conversions.
This dataset contains crash victim records for crashes which have occurred in Austin, TX in the last ten years. It is one of two datasets which power our Vision Zero Viewer dashboard, available here: https://visionzero.austin.gov/viewer.
Crash data may take several weeks to be submitted, reviewed, and finalized for inclusion in this dataset. To provide the most accurate information as possible, we only provide crash data as recent as two weeks old. Please also note that some crash records may take even longer to appear in this dataset, depending on the circumstances of the crash and the ensuing law enforcement investigation.
Crash data is obtained from the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) Crash Record Information System (CRIS) database, which is populated by reports submitted by Texas Peace Officers throughout the state, including Austin Police Department (APD).
Please note that the data and information on this website is for informational purposes only. While we seek to provide accurate information, please note that errors may be present and information presented may not be complete.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains reimbursement for meals served by Contracting Entities (CEs) participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) between October 2020 and September 2021.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) by School Nutrition Program sponsors during the school year.
Beginning October 2020, School Nutrition Program sponsors were given the option to use SFSP or SSO to provide school meals until the end of the sponsor's 2020-2021 school year. Traditional summer meal program service resumed at the end of the school year through September 2021 or until the start of the 2021-2022 school year, whichever was sooner.
For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset contains sponsor-level claimed meal reimbursements. Meal count data is collected at the site level and is reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Count Information” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Sales tax allocation comparison summary reports present data on monthly sales and use tax payments to local jurisdictions. These payments represent funds identified for local jurisdictions since the previous month’s distribution. When used with other local indicators, these reports may help indicate present and future economic trends. This table contains data for the amount of tax generated from the single local tax rate paid by Remote Sellers distributed to cities, counties, Special-Purpose Districts (SPDs), Transit districts (MTAs, ATDs, and CTDs).
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
The target numbers for the average duration of power outages for System Average Interruption Duration Index (SAIDI) goals: Prior to 2016: 60.00 minutes; 2016 – 2019: 57.22 minutes; 2020 – 2021: 45.50 minutes; 2022: 57.00 minutes The target numbers for the System Average Interruption Frequency Index (SAIFI) goals or the average number of power outages per customer: Prior to 2018: 0.80; 2018: 0.72; 2019: 0.69 2020 – 2021: 0.57; 2022: 0.72
The target number for the System Average Transmission Line Performance index (SATLPI) or the 12-month rolling average of the number of transmission line faults per 100 miles is 3.0.
Exhibit A is attached to each agreement between the City and Circuit of the Americas (COTA) and to each agreement between the City and Circuit Events Local Organizing Committee (CELOC). Exhibit A was amended by City Council on December 12, 2013 (item 73).
This data set contains information about zoning cases submitted for review to the City of Austin where records existed. It includes information about case status, case number, proposed use, applicant, owner, and location. Another version of this data in the form of a location dataset exists, showing cases starting in about 2007, when cases were first created in GIS.
This table shows safety data for FY2017. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS FY2017 annual report.
Agenda items from council meetings and committees of council meetings from 2004 to 2020. The dataset includes, agenda items, agenda item descriptions, and, if applicable, zoning case numbers, sponsors, and districts impacted.
This data set shows the number and percentage of children graduating from high school in Travis County, including public, private, charter, home schools, and other high school equivalents. The data is from the Texas Education Agency (TEA) state agency that oversees primary and secondary public education in the state of Texas.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/n78t-2him
A look up table of each due date associated with a lobbyist's quarterly activity report. You can recreate the City Clerk's lobbyist database by downloading all lobbyist datasets on the data portal and view the complete data model of the lobbyist database here: https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=293053
This feature class represents the boundaries of recorded subdivisions in the City of Austin and surrounding counties.
DIR Shared Technology Services (STS) and Texas.gov Customer Invoices
This table shows activities done by the ATCEMS Public Information Office.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This data set contains contact and program participation information for each site participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2019 (SNP program year 2018-2019). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
For an overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Day Care Homes for program year 2017-2018. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Day Care Homes. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Adult Day Care Centers, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
Utility payment arrangements are available to customers who fall behind on their utility bills. To enter into an arrangement, customers must make on time payments of their monthly bills which include the current billed amount plus a monthly installment of their delinquent total.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains claimed meals served by sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) between October 2020 and September 2021.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) by School Nutrition Program sponsors during the school year.
Beginning October 2020, School Nutrition Program sponsors were given the option to use SFSP or SSO to provide school meals until the end of the sponsor's 2020-2021 school year. Traditional summer meal program service resumed at the end of the school year through September 2021 or until the start of the 2021-2022 school year, whichever was sooner.
For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor level and is reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This data set contains contact and program participation information for all sites approved by TDA to operate the Seamless Summer Option (SSO) for summer 2020. The active application period for summer program participants runs January through April. Changes in participant information can occur through August. Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program participation data by April 1 of the active program year. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, updates to the program participation dataset will occur every two weeks until the end of August.
All TDA datasets will have a final active update 90 days after the close of the program period. Datasets will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Any data posted during the active update schedule is subject to change.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This data set contains contact and program participation information for each site participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO) for summer 2023 . Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
An overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by May 1 of the active program period. Data will be updated daily until 60 days after the close of the program period. The dataset will be updated six months later after which data will remain static but published. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
This polygon delineates the boundary wherein the Austin Water Utility (the City of Austin) intends to serve water, wastewater, and reclaimed water, and wherein it will charge a fee (impact fee) for connecting to their systems.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Day Care Homes for program year 2021-2022. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Day Care Homes. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP),and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
2024 Houston Minority Supplier Development Council Spot Bid Fair
This layer depicts an inventory of sidewalk infrastructure. This data was collected in 2006/2007 as part of the sidewalk master plan.
These Special Purpose Districts received mixed beverage tax revenue from permit holders located in the SPD. SPDs located in more than one county will be listed in each county the SPD is in. The mixed beverage tax revenue listed for the SPD in a particular county is from permit holders located in the part of the SPD in the listed county.
See https://comptroller.texas.gov/about/policies/privacy.php for more information on our agency’s privacy and security policies.
Restricted pipeline area includes an area within 25 feet of a hazardous pipeline and an area within a hazardous pipeline easement.
This dataset includes information related to network adequacy waiver requests filed by major medical health benefit plans. It includes data on facility-based physicians and providers. Related datasets are available for major medical (non-facility-based providers) and vision plans:
• Major medical: Network Adequacy Waiver Request - Major Medical. This dataset relates to waiver requests for networks used for major medical PPO and EPO plans and includes data on physicians, providers, and facilities, other than facility-based physicians and providers.
• Vision: Network Adequacy Waiver Request - Vision. This dataset relates to waiver requests for networks used for vision PPO and EPO plans.
Insurers offering health benefits through a preferred or exclusive provider benefit plan (also called PPO and EPO plans) are required to demonstrate that the health insurance network meets Texas network adequacy standards. When a network does not meet these requirements and has a deficiency in a county for a specific physician or provider specialty type, an insurer may apply for a waiver to continue operating within its service area. The commissioner of the Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) may grant the waiver following a public hearing and consideration of relevant testimony and information.
Anyone may attend the public hearing and offer testimony. Learn more about how to submit information related to a waiver request or participate in a hearing here: Network Adequacy Standards Waivers.
Static Data Set This table shows opiate overdoses by race for Fiscal Year 2018.
This data represents the Race of clients served via digital literacy classes and workshops.
CTM Customer Satisfaction Survey - Issue Resolved
Extra bags of trash that do not fit in your trash cart with the lid closed must be placed next to the trash cart and tagged with an Extra Trash Sticker, which can be purchased at H-E-B, Randall's and most local grocery stores for $4 + tax. Extra bags without a sticker will be charged a per-bag fee of $9.60 + tax. If you find that you often set out extra bagged garbage, consider switching to a larger cart for $15 (plus applicable monthly cart fee).
This data set contains the list of sections evaluated along with number of standards evaluated and violated in each section for activities (inspections, investigations and assessments) done in each operation. The Operation ID and Activity ID can be used to link back to the HHSC CCL Inspection / Investigation / Assessment Dataset and HHSC CCL Operations Dataset.
2022 Houston Minority Supplier Development Council Spot Bid Fair
This dataset contains Neighborhood Planning and Neighborhood Plan Amendment applications as reflected in the City of Austin's AMANDA database.
** Static Data Set ** This table shows ATCEMS billing charges by payor for Fiscal Year 2016-17
This data, exported from Google Analytics displays the most popular 50 pages on Austintexas.gov based on the following: Views: The total number of times the page was viewed. Repeated views of a single page are counted. Bounce Rate: The percentage of single-page visits (i.e. visits in which the person left your site from the entrance page without interacting with the page).
*Note: On July 1, 2023, standard Universal Analytics properties will stop processing data.
This table lists city officials that benefited from a lobbyist expenditure. You can recreate the City Clerk's lobbyist database by downloading all lobbyist datasets on the data portal and view the complete data model of the lobbyist database here: https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=293053
The TABC License Information dataset includes valuable information associated with each primary license issued by TABC as the result of a successfully submitted, processed. and approved application for one of the twenty eight (28) primary license types for a given business entity. Such information includes data in seven (7) subtopics: identifiers, effective dates, managing entities, attributes, subordinate information, contact information and legacy identifier.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all sites approved by TDA to operate the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) between October 2020 and September 2021. Traditional summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) by School Nutrition Program sponsors during the school year.
Beginning October 2020, School Nutrition Program sponsors were given the option to use SFSP or SSO to provide school meals until the end of the sponsor's 2020-2021 school year. Traditional summer meal program service resumed at the end of the school year through September 2021 or until the start of the 2021-2022 school year, whichever was sooner.
For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
For data on sites participating in SSO, please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option – Contacts and Program Participation datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
This dataset includes information related to network adequacy waiver requests filed by vision plans. Related datasets are available for major medical PPO and EPO plans:
Major medical •Network Adequacy Waiver Request - Facility based Physicians & Providers. This dataset relates to waiver requests for networks used for major medical PPO and EPO plans and includes data on facility-based physicians and providers. • Network Adequacy Waiver Request - Major Medical. This dataset relates to waiver requests for networks used for major medical PPO and EPO plans and includes data on physicians, providers, and facilities, other than facility-based physicians and providers.
Insurers offering vision benefits through a preferred or exclusive provider benefit plan (also called PPO and EPO plans) are required to demonstrate that the health insurance network meets Texas network adequacy standards. When a network does not meet these requirements and has a deficiency in a county for a specific physician or provider specialty type, an insurer may apply for a waiver to continue operating within its service area. The commissioner of the Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) may grant the waiver following a public hearing and consideration of relevant testimony and information.
Anyone may attend the public hearing and offer testimony. Learn more about how to submit information related to a waiver request or participate in a hearing here: Network Adequacy Standards Waivers.
Currently incarcerated inmate population with relevant demographic, offense, and parole information.
- Static Data Set ** Opiate Overdoses by Gender for Fiscal Year 2019
This data is the Prevalence of Cardiovascular Disease among Adults in Travis County from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) for the years 2015-2019. Data entered is prevalence of cardiovascular disease, measured annually. View more details and insights related to this measure on story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/j59v-ghj7
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information and program participation information for each site participating in school nutrition programs during program year 2015-2016. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, this dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Adult Day Care centers for program year 2019-2020. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Adult Day Care centers. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About this data set: Texas Families: Together and Safe (TFTS) - The TFTS program funds evidence-based, community-based programs designed to alleviate stress and promote parental competencies and behaviors that increase the ability of families to become self-sufficient and successfully nurture their children.
Fatherhood Effects (FE) - FE funds a variety of contracts with community-based organizations to provide child abuse and neglect prevention services. These include the Fatherhood Effects grants as well as various special initiatives and public awareness campaigns.
Community Based Family Services (CBFS) - The CBFS program serves families who were investigated by CPS but whose allegations were low-priority or unsubstantiated, through community and evidence-based services. Services include home visitation, case management, and additional social services to provide a safe and stable home environment.
Helping through Intervention and Prevention (HIP) - The HIP program provides an extensive family assessment, home visiting that includes parent education and basic needs support to targeted families.
Healthy Outcomes through Prevention and Early Support (HOPES) - The HOPES program provides child abuse and neglect prevention services that target families with children between 0-5 years of age. Contracts have been awarded in eight counties. Each HOPES contract also has a focus on community collaboration that focus on early childhood and the prevention of child abuse and neglect.
Family Strengthening (FSP) and Tertiary Child Abuse Prevention Programs (TPP) - Served families through 2011.
Texas Service Members, Veterans and Families (SMVF) - Formerly Preventive Services for Veterans and Military Families.
FOOTNOTES HIP and HOPES began services in Fiscal Year 2015. TFTS and CBFS where discontinued in FY2018. STAR was renamed to FAYS in FY2020. CBCAP was renamed to FE in FY2020. MFVPP was renamed to SMVF in FY2020.
Fiscal Year 2023 data is as of December 30, 2024.
In the early 1970s, the Texas Legislature authorized certain local governments to begin collecting a hotel occupancy tax (HOT). Almost two decades later, the Legislature offered hotel occupancy taxing authority as one of several revenue options to support sports and community venues. The tax may be levied by a city, county or a partnership between the two.
Throughout the years, the Texas Legislature has passed laws that increased local government transparency while also allowing the public to better understand the state’s patchwork of municipal and county HOTs. During the 88th Legislative Session, House Bill 3727 and Senate Bill 1420 were passed to require municipalities and counties to report the amount and percentage of HOT revenue allocated by the local government.
The Combo Inlet REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Combo Inlet feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Combo-Inlet/4cn2-4rhg with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Day Care Homes for program year 2020-2021. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Day Care Homes. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP),and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
The Division of Prevention and Early Intervention (PEI) was created to consolidate child abuse prevention and juvenile delinquency prevention and early intervention programs within the jurisdiction of a single state agency. Consolidation of these programs is intended to eliminate fragmentation and duplication of contracted prevention and early intervention services for at-risk children, youth, and families:
Community Youth Development (CYD) - The CYD program contracts with community-based organizations to develop juvenile delinquency prevention programs in ZIP codes with high juvenile crime rates. Approaches used by communities to prevent delinquency have included mentoring, youth employment programs, career preparation, youth leadership development and recreational activities. Communities prioritize and fund specific prevention services according to local needs. CYD services are available in 15 targeted Texas ZIP codes.
Family and Youth Success Program (FAYS) (formerly Services to At-Risk Youth (STAR)) - The FAYS program contracts with community agencies to offer family crisis intervention counseling, short- term emergency respite care, and individual and family counseling. Youth up to age 17 and their families are eligible if they experience conflict at home, truancy or delinquency, or a youth who runs away from home. FAYS services are available in all 254 Texas counties. Each FAYS contractor also provides universal child abuse prevention services, ranging from local media campaigns to informational brochures and parenting classes.
Statewide Youth Services Network (SYSN) - The SYSN program contracts provide community and evidence-based juvenile delinquency prevention programs focused on youth ages 10 through 17, in each DFPS region.
NOTE: For FY15, as a result of a new procurement, the overall number of youth served decreased however the service requirements were enhanced with additional programmatic components.
Data as of December 11, 2024.
Austin Energy’s Power Supply Adjustment recovers fuel for generation, transportation, renewable purchase power agreements, purchase power to serve retail customers, ERCOT fees, hedging and the balance from the previous period. The adjustment is reviewed annually. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
Commercial building owners participated in a phased-in reporting since 2012, for buildings 75,000 square feet and larger. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/ecad and http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
This shapefile contains the City Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
This data represents the Race of clients served via digital literacy classes and workshops.
This dataset lists each municipal question a lobbyist reports. You can recreate the City Clerk's lobbyist database by downloading all lobbyist datasets on the data portal and view the complete data model of the lobbyist database here: https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=293053
This table lists each real property associated with a lobbyist's municipal question. You can recreate the City Clerk's lobbyist database by downloading all lobbyist datasets on the data portal and view the complete data model of the lobbyist database here: https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=293053
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains meal reimbursements to Contracting Entities (CEs) sponsoring sites participating in the Summer Feeding Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2017 (SNP program year 2016-2017). Summer feeding programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains sponsor-level meal reimbursements. Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Feeding Programs – Summer Feeding Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts” dataset for the program year.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
This goal is from the Strategic Housing Blueprint
This data represents the gender of clients served via digital literacy classes and workshops.
A running log of the number of currently active permits by type for ATD Right of Way taken at a snapshot in time.
<span style="font-family:"Avenir Next W01", "Avenir Next W00", "Avenir Next", Avenir, "Helvetica Neue", sans-serif; font-size:16px;">Address Points</span>
APS may provide or arrange for emergency services to alleviate or prevent further abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation. APS works in partnership with other social service agencies to provide resources to vulnerable adults. These services may be provided through collaboration with other state agencies or community organizations. DFPS may use Purchased Client Services funds and may enter into contracts to provide services to clients. All other available resources must be used where feasible before purchased client services are initiated.
After the victim's immediate safety is assured and investigation is completed, APS may remain involved for a short period to stabilize a low-risk situation. In other cases, victims with more complex problems or deemed at moderate or high risk of further maltreatment or self-neglect may receive more intensive services or assistance for a longer period of time.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs.
Debt Service Coverage Ratio is a measure of the cash flow available to pay current debt payments. View our debt-to-equity ratio, debt service coverage ratio, and more starting from fiscal year 2005. Go to http://austinenergy.com/go/corporatereports to learn more.
Map of all healthcare providers participating the Texas Vaccine For Children & Adult Safety Net Programs
** Static Data Set ** This table shows Homeless Outreach Street Team (HOST) data for Fiscal Year 2016-17
This is a dataset of information from the results of inspections and /or enforcement of violations related to commercial pool and spa for public health and safety by Austin Public Health - Environmental Health Services Division. Data is updated weekly. Data file includes three years of data.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset combines basic meals served data from the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) Meal Count datasets currently published on the Texas Open Data Portal for 2021-2022 summer meal program operation.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included allowing School Nutrition Program participants to use Seamless Summer Option (SSO) to serve meals during the school year. Summer Food Service Program operation during the school year was not available for 2021-2022. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates Data is updated regularly during the active program season. A final data update will occur at least six months from the close of the active program season after which data will remain published, but static.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
Historical landmarks of the City of Austin and landmarks in the National Registery
This dataset supports measure M.D.3 of SD 2023. The original source of the data is the Texas Department of Transportation supplemented by analysis from the Austin Transportation Department. Each row represents the number of fatalities or injuries on the High Injury Network for a year. This dataset can be used to see how many fatalities and serious injuries have occurred on the High Injury Network.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/M-D-3-Number-of-fatalities-and-serious-injuries-on/i39b-qmzk/
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains claimed meals reimbursed by sponsors participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO) between October 2020 and September 2021.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) by School Nutrition Program sponsors during the school year.
Beginning October 2020, School Nutrition Program sponsors were given the option to use SFSP or SSO to provide school meals until the end of the sponsor's 2020-2021 school year. Traditional summer meal program service resumed at the end of the school year through September 2021 or until the start of the 2021-2022 school year, whichever was sooner.
For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset contains sponsor-level claimed meal reimbursements. Meal count data is collected at the site level and is reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts Information” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
This dataset represents properties leased by the City of Austin through the Office of Real Estate Services. This is a working dataset for employees of the Office of Real Estate Services, and is not represented to be complete or accurate. This data is not survey grade and should not be used for any legal purposes.
The capital budget is used for one-time infrastructure and improvement projects. The following data provide appropriation-to-date and expenses-to-date metrics for active capital projects, which can be funded through multiple fiscal year capital budgets. These metrics can be drilled down to the department, project, and subproject levels.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating as Child Care Centers in CACFP for program year 2020-2021. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites operating as Child Care Centers. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Adult Day Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care centers, Head Start centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
When interviewing the alleged victim, the APS worker: • addresses all important factors regarding the allegations and the alleged victim’s overall situation; • interviews the alleged victim alone in cases involving an alleged perpetrator, but allows the alleged victim to have another person present, if requested by the alleged victim; and • interviews the alleged victim again at a later time as necessary to resolve discrepancies.
When another person is present during the interview, the APS worker documents whether the alleged victim requested that the person be present and the person’s relationship to the alleged victim.
The APS specialist monitors the alleged victim during the interview to see if the alleged victim appears to be hesitant, withdrawn, or nervous while participating in the interview. Such cues may be indications that the alleged victim is not comfortable speaking openly in the presence of the other person.
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Includes victims who were also perpetrators (findings of self-neglect.)
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Victims have been unduplicated by investigation stage.
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Some investigations were completed without region or county location information being recorded. These investigations are included in the relevant annual total, with "None Specified" as their Region and County values.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs.
The City of Austin fiscal year begins on Oct. 1 and ends on Sept. 30. For information about Austin Resource Recovery's approved fiscal year budget, visit austintexas.gov/finance
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains meal reimbursements to Contracting Entities (CEs) sponsoring sites participating in the Summer Feeding Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2016 (SNP program year 2015-2016). Summer feeding programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains sponsor-level meal reimbursements. Site-level meal counts are reported in the “Summer Feeding Programs – Summer Feeding Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts” dataset for the program year.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
The Watershed Protection Department has been distributing engineering assessments and scientific reports using the text-driven Watershed Publications Search tool. [http://www.austintexas.gov/watershed_protection/publications/default.cfm] The idea is to extend that tool by providing geographic context. This dataset will change. Links to applications using the tool will be updated when they go live.
This data represents the income of clients served via digital literacy classes and workshops.
This table contains data on maintenance of the department response fleet – ambulances, command trucks, and utility vehicles. It includes the number of vehicles due for preventative maintenance each month, and the percentage that are serviced. The data is broken out by the three vehicle types in addition to describing overall performance.
When no units are due for service in a month, the "Percent Serviced" column will show a null (blank) value for that month.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Adult Day Care centers for program year 2021-2022. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Adult Day Care centers. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A look up table of each subject matter a lobbyist can select to categorize their municipal question. You can recreate the City Clerk's lobbyist database by downloading all lobbyist datasets on the data portal and view the complete data model of the lobbyist database here: https://www.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=293053
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains contact and program participation information for each site participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2016 (SNP program year 2015-2016). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Contact and Program Participation datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
Sales tax allocation comparison summary reports present data on monthly local sales and use tax payments to local jurisdictions. These payments represent funds identified for local jurisdictions since the previous month’s distribution. When used with other local indicators, these reports may help indicate present and future economic trends. This table lists entities alphabetically by county name, then alphabetically by cities within the county.
To determine displacement risk, researchers at the University of Texas conducted a three-part analysis: the presence of vulnerable populations, residential market appreciation, and demographic change. To determine vulnerable populations, the authors used indicators to identify residents who, according to academic research, are least able to absorb housing costs, which includes: communities of color, low-income households, heads of households without a bachelor's degree or higher, families with children in poverty, and renters.
In 2019 and 2020, the City of Austin Housing and Planning staff updated the data and simplified the categories below.
Vulnerable: Vulnerable populations present, no significant demographic change, some tracts are near or contain high-value and high-appreciation areas. Active Displacement Risk: Vulnerable populations present, active demographic change, accelerating or appreciating housing market. Chronic Displacement Risk: Vulnerable populations have been displaced, demographic change has occurred and the housing market is high value and appreciated or appreciating. Historic Displacement: Tracts previously identified as at-risk to displacement in earlier Uprooted models (2016, 2019)
Aggregate sales data for both recreational and commercial hunting and fishing licenses, License Year 2015 to 2024.
For more information on licenses, please visit: https://tpwd.texas.gov/business/licenses/online_sales/
The revenue budget provides the funds to support the City's operating budget. Please visit https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Key-Terms-and-Facts-about-Open-Budget-ATX/capb-cbrm/ for more information.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset combines basic meals served data from the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) Meal Count datasets currently published on the Texas Open Data Portal for the 2018 summer meal program season.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates Data is updated regularly during the active program season. A final data update will occur at least six months from the close of the active program season after which data will remain published, but static.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
Strategic Direction 23 Measure EOA.B.2
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
This table shows safety data for FY2016. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS FY2016 annual report.
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
This dataset contains all active mobile home operating licenses
See the websites referenced in the item fields for more information on ordinances in this layer.
This shows census data for a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
This dataset shows yearly data for car seat events, car seat distribution, and total car seats checked.
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Day Care Homes for program year 2019-2020. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the newly added COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Day Care Homes. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP),and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information for each Contracting Entity (CE) sponsor approved to participate in School Nutrition Programs during program year 2023-2024 and information on Food Service Management Company (FSMC) they may contract with. The School Nutrition Program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new data by July 15 of the active school nutrition program year. This dataset contains multi-year data.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs , the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains CE-level meal reimbursement from approved TDA claims for Seamless Summer Option (SSO) participants in summer 2023. Summer meal programs typically operate mid-May through August unless otherwise noted. Participants have 60 days from the final meal service day of the month to submit claims to TDA.
Site-level meals served data can be viewed on the Meal Counts datasets found on the Summer Meal Program Data Overview page.
For reimbursement data on CEs participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Summer Meal Programs -Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to submit claims. Data updates will occur daily and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
This dataset reports the progress of the Austin Transportation Department's Annual Signal Timing Program. Traffic signal engineers re-time approximately 1/3 of the city’s 1,000+ signals each year, with the goal of ensuring signals are timed for optimum safety and performance.
This data powers our Signal Re-timing dashboard, available here: https://data.mobility.austin.gov/signal-timing
You may also be interested in our dataset of traffic signals by re-timing corridor, available here: https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Synchronized-Traffic-Signal-Corridors/efct-8fs9
Human Resources Code 48.152 requires that APS investigations include an interview with the person age 65 or older or adult with disabilities, if appropriate, and with persons thought to have knowledge of the circumstances.
APS interviews all appropriate parties, including reporters, alleged victims, alleged perpetrators, witnesses, medical staff, and others who have knowledge of allegations and alleged victims' situations.
DFPS staff must not disclose the reporter’s name to the victim, the victim’s family, or the public. The reporter’s name may be released verbally or in writing to the courts, the district or county attorney, law enforcement agencies, and DFPS staff.
APS case-related information is confidential. APS only provides the reporter with pertinent case information necessary to: • confirm whether allegations will be accepted for investigation; • collect evidence and gather relevant information related to allegations and the alleged victim’s overall situation and risk; and • arrange for protective services to reduce risk of harm or alleviate abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation.
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A report of abuse/neglect/financial exploitation may come from multiple sources making the source total higher than the total number of intakes.
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Inclusion based on intake closure date.
Budget Billing is available to customers who prefer to avoid significant fluctuations in their monthly utility bills. With this program, City of Austin Utilities takes an average of a customer's previous 12-month's worth of utility bills to calculate an average utility bill payment. With Budget Billing, accounts are reviewed and adjusted every six months.
The averages reflect all City of Austin utilities including electric, water, wastewater, solid waste, transportation and drainage fees.
October 2017: Budget billing data for the period October 2011 through September 2013 revises previously published data. The revision reflects increased maturity and stability of our reporting system.
This is a map of zoning designations for parcels. It is updated as changes are officially made, although it may take several days for the dataset to reflect changes once they have gone into effect.
These are jobs supported through Economic Development Department program, services and activities.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information and program participation information for each site participating in school nutrition programs during program year 2017-2018. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, this dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
This layer represents an inventory of underground gas storage tanks both current and historical.
This table lists the clients reported by lobbyists. You can recreate the City Clerk's lobbyist database by downloading all lobbyist datasets on the data portal and view the complete data model of the lobbyist database here: https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=293053
Note on data currency: The vendor for the trip data has changed, and TPW are working with CapMetro and the new vendor to obtain more current trip data. We will refresh the data as soon as it becomes available.
This dataset contains trip data from the Austin MetroBike bicycle sharing program.
Note that trips less than 2 minutes are not included in this dataset. Rebalancing and maintenance trips by MetroBike staff are also not included.
You may also be interested in the MetroBike kiosk location data, available here: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Austin-MetroBike-Kiosk-Locations/qd73-bsdg/data
More information about Austin MetroBike is available here: http://austinbcycle.com/
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains claimed meals served by summer feeding sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2018 (SNP program year 2017-2018). Summer feeding programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor level and is reported in the “Summer Feeding Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Feeding Programs – Seamless Summer Option – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
The Header REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Header feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Header/vzfe-vh6s with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
This dataset contains information about traffic detectors deployed at signalized intersections in the City of Austin, Texas. The data is maintained by the Arterial Management Division of the City of Austin Transportation & Public Works Department.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Day Care Homes for the program year 2023-2024. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Day Care Homes. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP),and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Day Care Homes for the program year 2015-2016. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Day Care Homes. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates This data is considered historical and will not be updated. Data is current as of the Date Data Last Updated listed on the source data published on ODP.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP),and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
The Junction REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Junction feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Junction/bebd-359f with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
This dataset lists each report submitted by a lobbyist. You can recreate the City Clerk's lobbyist database by downloading all lobbyist datasets on the data portal and view the complete data model of the lobbyist database here: https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=293053
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for Day Care Home (DCH) providers approved to operate under the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) during program year 2024-2025. Contracting Entity (CE) sponsors can participate in more than one CACFP program. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes information for Texas Day Care Home providers participating in CACFP. For data on CEs and sites participating as Adult Day Care Centers (ADC), Child Care Centers (CCC), At-Risk Afterschool Centers (At-Risk), Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, and centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Centers – Contact and Program Participation” dataset, also on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Updates will occur quarterly and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active update period is subject to change. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will remain published but will no longer be updated.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our SquareMeal.org website.
This data set includes the total number of trees planted or distributed by the City of Austin from 2015 through 2020.
Total number of trees has been adjusted for different caliper sized trees. One tree in the data set is the equivalent of one 5-gallon tree.
The Economic Development Department measures annual tax revenue generated from strategic initiatives that required City involvement to move forward. These are calculated as direct and indirect City tax revenue related to each initiative.
This dataset contains information about the location of the Austin MetroBike bicycle rental kiosks.
You may also be interested in Austin MetroBike trip data, available here: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Austin-MetroBike-Trip-Data/tyfh-5r8s/data
More information about Austin B-Cycle is available here: http://austinbcycle.com/
** Static Data Set ** This table shows continuing education hours by topic for Fiscal Year 2016-17
This table shows ATCEMS expenses by fiscal year, broken out by expense category. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS annual report.
This shapefile contains the County Boundary for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as a polygon.
The Grate Inlet REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Grate Inlet feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/UTILITIESCOMMUNICATION_GrateInlet/6ewi-icj4 with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
This file prioritizes general improvements to regional on and off-street bicycle corridors in the CAMPO 2035 Regional Transportation Plan.
This layer represents the watershed regulation areas within the jurisdictional extent of the City of Austin
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for all sites approved by TDA to operate the Seamless Summer Options (SSO) between October 2020 and September 2021. Traditional summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) by School Nutrition Program sponsors during the school year.
Beginning October 2020, School Nutrition Program sponsors were given the option to use SFSP or SSO to provide school meals until the end of the sponsor's 2020-2021 school year. Traditional summer meal program service resumed at the end of the school year through September 2021 or until the start of the 2021-2022 school year, whichever was sooner.
For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
For data on sites participating in SFSP, please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program – Contacts and Program Participation datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains CE-level meal reimbursement from approved TDA claims for Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) participants in summer 2023. Summer meal programs typically operate mid-May through August unless otherwise noted. Participants have 60 days from the final meal service day of the month to submit claims to TDA.
Site-level meals served data can be viewed on the Meal Counts datasets found on the Summer Meal Program Data Overview page.
For reimbursement data on CEs participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Summer Meal Programs - Seamless Summer Option (SSO) Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to submit claims. Data updates will occur daily and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Currently incarcerated inmate population with relevant demographic, offense, and parole information.
The Manhole REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Manhole feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Manhole/38q2-v8xr with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
Number and percentage of properties whose exposure to wildfire risk have decreased due to City efforts - SD23 Measure HE.E.5.c.AFD
This measure provides employee attrition or turnover rate. This data is reported to provide city leaders with a measure that enables them make decisions about their workforce needs. This dataset will show the rate of turnover by department. The provided here can be used to view specific departmental attrition rates.
This dataset supports measure(s) GTW.D.4 of SD23 . Data Source: Banner
This is a data report that did not require a calculation.
Measure Time Period: Annually (Fiscal Year)
Automated: No
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/deu4-w2cd
Last Updated 10/23/23
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Adult Day Care centers for program year 2018-2019. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Adult Day Care centers. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
The Discharge Pump REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Discharge Pump feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Discharge-Pump/b5z6-42rk with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
Manmade hydrography feature class is created to assist in City of Austin planning activities.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains claims information for paid or approved to pay meal reimbursement for sites participating in school nutrition programs for program year 2024-2025.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by September 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur daily during the active program year and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains claimed meals served by summer meal sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option for summer 2017 (SNP program year 2016-2017). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data are collected at the sponsor level and are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
Strategic Direction 23 Measure EOA.B.2
Deaths by suicide in the city of Austin are reported to annually to Austin Public Health trough the Office of Vital Statistics. The data represents deaths by suicide within the city limits.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/HE-B-4a-Number-of-Deaths-by-Suicide/mqa2-tm7r/
The City of Austin Community Registry is an important communications tool for neighborhoods and others to be notified of issues relating to their area. Registration provides a means for notification of upcoming zoning issues.Boundaries for community registry are not standardized and can take the geography desired by the registrant.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset combines basic meals served data from the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) Meal Count datasets currently published on the Texas Open Data Portal for the 2017 summer meal program season.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates Data is updated regularly during the active program season. A final data update will occur at least six months from the close of the active program season after which data will remain published, but static.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
Greenhouse gas inventory for City of Austin municipal operations reflected as the number of metric tons of carbon dioxide-equivalent emissions. The data comes from various sources of activity data (gallons of fuel, ccf of natural gas) used in city operations. It can be used to assess how city operations affect climate change.
Date of Last Description Update: 3/13/2020
Number of Homeless Outreach Street Team (HOST) encounters with persons experiencing homelessness resulting in potential diversions or avoided system costs.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/h55f-85nb/
The ultimate goal of HIV treatment is to achieve viral suppression, which means the amount of HIV in the body is very low or undetectable. This is important for people with HIV to stay healthy, have improved quality of life, and live longer. People living with HIV who maintain viral suppression have effectively no risk of passing HIV to others. Texas DSHS is the source of this data. Diagnosed- received a diagnosis of HIV Linked to care-visited an HIV heath care provider within 1 month (30 days) after learning they were HIV positive Received-** or were retained in care** received medical care for HIV infection Viral suppression- their HIV “viral load” – the amount of HIV in the blood – was at a very low level.
** Static Data Set ** This table shows activities done by the ATCEMS Safety Office for FY2015. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS FY2015 annual report. THE DATA IN THIS TABLE WILL NOT BE UPDATED.
This data represents the age of clients served via digital literacy classes and workshops.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains claimed meals served by summer meal sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option for summer 2016 (SNP program year 2015-2016). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data are collected at the sponsor level and are reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs - Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset serves as source data for the Texas Department of Agriculture Food and Nutrition Meal Served Dashboard. Data is based on the School Nutrition Program (SNP) Meal Reimbursement, Seamless Summer Option (SSO) Meal Count, and Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) Meal Count datasets currently published on the Texas Open Data Portal. For the purposes of dashboard reporting, the school year for summer meal programs is defined as March 2020 through May 2020. The School Nutrition Program meals are reported by program year which runs July 1 through June 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Flexibilities were extended into the 2021-2022 program year and allowed School Nutrition Programs to operate Seamless Summer Option through the 2021-2022 school year.
For more information on the policies implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to update this dataset by the 15th of the month until 60 days after the close of the program year.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
The ARR no service areas represent polygon areas that Austin Resource Recovery do not service. These no service polygon areas are often private gated communities that are serviced by private haulers.
This tracks six month, one year, and five year outcomes for children who were provided family preservation services and subsequently alleged as a victim in an investigation within the noted time period.
The date of service is determined by the close of the CPS Family Preservation stage.
The six month period is calculated by following those children who were served within the first six months of the fiscal year (FY) to see if the same child is an alleged victim in an abuse/neglect child protective investigation within six months of the family preservation stage closure.
For the one year outcome, those children who were served in the prior FY are tracked for one year and reported in the next fiscal year. The outcomes reported in FY 2018 had a beginning cohort from FY 2017.
The five year outcomes start with the FY five years prior and follows each child for five years to track the outcomes. FY 2018 would have a beginning cohort of those children who were participated in family preservation services in FY 2013.
This does not track recidivism, which is defined by CPS as subsequent reason to believe finding in a new investigation or subsequent open case to FBSS or removal within a given timeframe.
This dashboard addresses the Texas Human Resources Code Section 40.0516 (a)(9)(A), (B), (C) and (a)(10).
This feature class represents cell tower locations in the City of Austin and surrounding counties.
(Over)/under power supply adjustment recovery represents the difference between actual power supply costs and the amount recovered through the power supply adjustment rates. Values in parenthesis represent an over-recovery for that year. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
The Open Channel REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Open Channel feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/UTILITIESCOMMUNICATION_OpenChannel/n9cb-gxvv with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This data set contains contact and program participation information for each site participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2023 . Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
For an overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by May 1 of the active program year. Updates will occur daily and end 60 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
This dataset contains financial codes which are used to track labor hours for various transportation projects and programs. This dataset is updated daily based on data made available by the City of Austin Financial Services Department.
This indicator measures the percent of citizens living within one-quarter mile walking distance of a park or accessible open space if inside the urban core or half-mile walking distance of a park or accessible opens space if outside the urban core.
This data set supports HE.C.1. of SD23.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/etbz-5muf
Aggregated street condition data for FY2018 and FY2019, broken out by Council District.
This dataset includes the number of blood sugar and blood pressure screenings, cholesterol, community resource referrals, and health presentations performed by Austin Public Health's Health Equity Unit. The dataset is broken down by race/ethnicity and gender.
City Of Austin Properties handled by the Office of Real Estate Services
This dataset includes Blueprint goals that contain yearly percentages. The Fiscal Year runs from 10/1-9/30.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Adult Day Care centers for program year 2022 - 2023. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Adult Day Care centers. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
This shapefile contains the Independent School District (ISD) Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
********NOTICE*********** This dataset is incomplete and in the process of being updated. Please contact david.cruz@austintexas.gov with any questions. ************************* This dataset contains all income-restricted housing within the Austin Full Purpose and into the 5-mile Extra Territorial Jurisdiction. This includes properties funded by the City of Austin along with the Housing Authority City of Austin, Housing Authority of Travis County, and Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs. Some properties may be funded by more than one entity. The property attributes are intended to help Austin residents find income-restricted housing that best suits their needs.
The dataset is connected to the affordable housing data hub which is consistently updated with the most current property information. A Feature Manipulation Engine Script pulls a new dataset to the Open Data Portal on a daily basis.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains site-level meal counts from approved TDA claims for Seamless Summer Option (SSO) and Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) in summer 2023. Summer meal programs typically operate mid-May through August unless otherwise noted. Participants have 60 days from the final meal service day of the month to submit claims to TDA.
Meal count information for individual summer meal programs can be found as filtered views of this dataset on our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
Meal reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor/CE level and is reported in the "Summer Meal Programs - Seamless Summer Option (SSO) - Meal Reimbursements" and “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Reimbursements” datasets found on the Summer Meal Program Data Overview page.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to submit claims. Data updates will occur daily and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Tracker of volunteer time contribution to the Community PC Program
To determine displacement risk, researchers at the University of Texas conducted a three-part analysis: the presence of vulnerable populations, residential market appreciation, and demographic change. To determine vulnerable populations, the authors used indicators to identify residents who, according to academic research, are least able to absorb housing costs, which includes: communities of color, low-income households, heads of households without a bachelor's degree or higher, families with children in poverty, and renters.
In 2019, 2020, 2021, and 2024 the City of Austin Housing and Planning staff updated the data and simplified the categories below.
Vulnerable: Vulnerable populations present, no significant demographic change, some tracts are near or contain high-value and high-appreciation areas. Active Displacement Risk: Vulnerable populations present, active demographic change, accelerating or appreciating housing market. Chronic Displacement Risk: Vulnerable populations have been displaced, demographic change has occurred and the housing market is high value and appreciated or appreciating. Historic Displacement: Tracts previously identified as at-risk to displacement in earlier Uprooted models (2016, 2019)
VITAL SIGNS INDICATOR Time Spent In Congestion (T7)
FULL MEASURE NAME Congested delay on regional freeways
LAST UPDATED May 2017
DESCRIPTION Time spent in traffic congestion – also known as congested delay – refers to the number of minutes weekday travelers spend in congested conditions in which freeway speeds drop below 35 mph. Total delay, a companion measure, includes both congested delay and all other delay in which speeds are below the posted speed limit.
DATA SOURCE Texas Transportation Institute (unpublished analysis) 2011 Used for freeway ratio calculation
Texas Transportation Institute Urban Mobility Scorecard 2014 http://mobility.tamu.edu/ums/
U.S. Census Bureau: Intercensal Estimates http://www.census.gov/popest/data/intercensal/
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: Metro Area Employment http://www.bls.gov/sae/
CONTACT INFORMATION vitalsigns.info@mtc.ca.gov
METHODOLOGY NOTES (across all datasets for this indicator) Delay statistics only include freeway facilities and rely upon INRIX traffic data. They reflect delay on a typical weekday, which is defined as Tuesday through Thursday during peak traffic months. Delay statistics emphasize recurring delay - i.e. consistent delay greater than 15 minutes on a specific freeway segment. Congested delay is defined as congestion occurring with speeds less than 35 mph and is commonly recognized as inefficient delay (meaning that the freeway corridor is operating at speeds low enough to reduce throughput - as opposed to speeds greater than 35 mph which increase throughput). Data sources listed above were used to calculate per-capita and per-worker statistics; national datasets were used for metro comparisons and California datasets were used for the Bay Area. Top congested corridors are ranked by total vehicle hours of delay, meaning that the highlighted corridors reflect a combination of slow speeds and heavy traffic volumes. Historical Bay Area data was estimated by MTC Operations staff using a combination of internal datasets to develop an approximate trend back to 1998. The metropolitan area comparison was performed for the combined primary urbanized areas (San Francisco-Oakland and San Jose) as well as nine other major metropolitan areas' core urbanized area. Because the Texas Transportation Institute no longer reports congested freeway delay or total freeway delay (focusing solely on total regional delay), 2011 data was used to estimate 2014 total freeway delay for each metro area by relying upon the freeway-to-regional ratio from 2011. Estimated urbanized area workers were used for this analysis using the 2011 ratios, which accounts for slight differentials between Bay Area data points under the regional historical data and the metro comparison analysis. To explore how 2016 congestion trends compare to real-time congestion on the region’s freeways, visit 511.org.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for summer meal sites approved by TDA to operate summer 2016. Unless otherwise noted, summer meal programs operate mid-May through August.
An overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program participation data by May 1 of the active program year. Data updates will occur daily and end 60 days after then close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset contains the number of deaths and the average age at death for all deaths in a ZIP Code between 2011 and 2015. The data were obtained by special request from Texas Department of State Health Services Vital Statistics.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for summer meal sites approved by TDA to operate summer 2018. Unless otherwise noted, summer meal programs operate mid-May through August.
An overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program participation data by May 1 of the active program year. Data updates will occur daily and end 60 days after then close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains contact and program participation information for each site participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2017 (SNP program year 2016-2017). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Contact and Program Participation datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
ABOUT THIS CHART Child Protective Investigations (CPI) conducts either a traditional investigation or Alternative Response (AR). Traditional investigations and Alternative Response require caseworkers to assess safety and take needed actions to protect a child while assessing any risk of abuse or neglect in the foreseeable future. AR cases present a less adversarial more collaborative approach to working with families by allowing for family engagement along with other community supports to ensure child safety. AR differs from traditional investigations in that AR cases are Priority 2 cases involving victims who are age 6 or older, there is no substantiation of allegations, no entry of perpetrators into the Central Registry (a repository for reports of child abuse and neglect), and there is a heightened focus on guiding the family to plan for safety in a way that works for them and therefore sustains safety.
Alterative Response has been fully implemented in Regions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6B, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11. AR in Region 6A is in the implementation stage. Full state implementation is anticipated in March 2021. Region 6A is Harris County and Region 6B is Region 6 excluding Harris County.
The persons in these counts are limited to principals in Alternative Response stages. Clients in stages that were administratively closed or closed to merge were excluded from the counts.
This dashboard addresses Texas Family Code Section 264.017 (b) (3).
Austin Energy's energy efficiency programs help reduce the amount of air-polluting emissions released by power plants into the atmosphere. In fiscal year 2012, more than 70,000 metric tonnes of carbon dioxide was avoided. This helps meet Austin Climate Protection Plan goals by avoiding increases in power plant emissions.
This data represents HPMS Sample limits that correspond to the HPMS Section Data. This dataset contains expansion factors that are used to expand the attributes to State wide aggregation. More information regarding the Sample dataset is contained in the HPMS Field Manual. The Mid-America contains data for the following States: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Wisconsin
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains CE-level meal reimbursement from approved TDA claims for Seamless Summer Option (SSO) participants in summer 2024. Summer meal programs typically operate mid-May through August unless otherwise noted. Participants have 60 days from the final meal service day of the month to submit claims to TDA.
Site-level meals served data can be viewed on the Meal Counts datasets found on the Summer Meal Program Data Overview page.
For reimbursement data on CEs participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Summer Meal Programs -Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to submit claims. Data updates will occur daily and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Dataset showing projects, encumbrances, expenditures, and available balances related to Public Improvement Bonds.
Families served in Family Based Safety Services Family Preservation Stages during the fiscal year. All of the children are living in the home at the time of FBSS services.
Planimetrics feature class is created to assist in City of Austin planning activities. Planimetric features are a compilation of features produced for the 2015 City of Austin Planimetrics/Impervious Cover dataset.
A look up table of each lobbyist report types. You can recreate the City Clerk's lobbyist database by downloading all lobbyist datasets on the data portal and view the complete data model of the lobbyist database here: https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=293053
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Adult Day Care centers for program year 2023 - 2024. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Adult Day Care centers. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
The Eminent Domain Data table includes information about the entities that have reported to the Comptroller’s office, their contact information, and whether they have used their eminent domain authority through filing a condemnation petition. Each report includes a unique ID number that can be used to reference data in the Provision Data and Project Data tables. The data included in the reports was submitted by the entities, and entities are required to update the data within 90 days of changes to their information. The Comptroller’s office is not able to guarantee the accuracy of the data. The table is updated daily and includes entity names, entity types, phone numbers, addresses, email and web addresses, and points of contact. Each report specifies whether the entity used their eminent domain authority by filing a condemnation petition in the preceding year. If the report was filed by a third party, the third party’s name, contact information, and relationship to the entity is also listed.
Child Protective Investigations (CPI) conducts either a traditional investigation or Alternative Response (AR). Traditional investigations and Alternative Response require caseworkers to assess safety and take needed actions to protect a child while assessing any risk of abuse or neglect in the foreseeable future. AR cases present a less adversarial more collaborative approach to working with families by allowing for family engagement along with other community supports to ensure child safety. AR differs from traditional investigations in that AR cases are Priority 2 cases involving victims who are age 6 or older, there is no substantiation of allegations, no entry of perpetrators into the Central Registry (a repository for reports of child abuse and neglect), and there is a heightened focus on guiding the family to plan for safety in a way that works for them and therefore sustains safety.
Alterative Response has been fully implemented in Regions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6B, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11. AR in Region 6A is in the implementation stage. Full state implementation is anticipated in March 2021. Region 6A is Harris County and Region 6B is Region 6 excluding Harris County.
Stages that were administratively closed or closed to merge were excluded from this report.
This dashboard addresses Texas Family Code Section 264.017 (b) (3).
This shapefile contains the Public Improvement District (PID) Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
The Austin City Council approved the Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure ordinance in 2008 and revised the initiative in April 2011 to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. Multifamily properties older than 10 years are required to perform an audit and report the results to the City of Austin and all residents living in those communities.
- The affected area within the City of Austin that is served by Austin Energy
This shapefile contains the Water Sewer and Improvement District (WS & ID) Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
The City of Austin is focused on becoming a greener city and the Fleet Mobility Services Department developed the Carbon Neutral Plan, which includes acquiring 330 battery-electric vehicles. The goal is to be early adopters of the overall regional mobility strategy setting the example for the general public and other governmental entities. The data is maintained in Fleet's asset management system. Row level data displays the number of City-owned battery-electric vehicles. View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/tf85-sfat
This data set shows the number and percentage of children graduating from high school in Travis County, including public, private, charter, home schools, and other high school equivalents. The data is from the Texas Education Agency (TEA) state agency that oversees primary and secondary public education in the state of Texas.
View county-level data: https://data.austintexas.gov/Health-and-Community-Services/Strategic-Measure_Percentage-of-Students-Graduatin/djfu-26dw
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/n78t-2him
The City of Austin fiscal year begins on Oct. 1 and ends on Sept. 30. For information about Austin Resource Recovery's approved fiscal year budget, visit austintexas.gov/finance
Dataset of Active Credit Access Business Licenses
This feature class represents the locations of survey monuments in the City of Austin and surrounding counties. Survey monuments are also referred to as "control points". These survey monuments are being placed throughout the City of Austin and surrounding counties to aid in surveying.
This dataset represents data beginning from 2010 to current date. The values represent the entire City of Austin workforce.
The goal of the City of Austin’s Employee Demographic data site is to provide information that is transparent and available to the public in a format that can be easily researched, filtered, analyzed and consumed. The Human Resource Department believes that by providing data sets to the public that are key to setting City priorities and assisting in making better informed decisions, it will enhance the collaboration among City departments and their external partners that will help bring a higher level of civic engagement with the public on local civic issues and concerns.
This dataset contains information about the materials warehouse for the City of Austin Transportation Department's Arterial Management Division.
It is updated daily and provides a running count of materials on-hand, and is used for internal reporting purposes.
This table groups Austin Energy customers into five classes: residential, commercial, industrial, public street and highway, and government. View sales in dollars and kWh along with annual percent change for each customer class.
Core Transit Corridors identified in the May 12, 2005 City Council Approved Design Standards Policy Document, with recommended amendments made August 4, 2006. A copy of the ordinance can be found at http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/planning/neighborhood/downloads/nl/nlcnpa_code_change_ctc.pdf. Additional information can be found at the following: http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/development/downloads/final.pdf
This dataset contains traffic crash records for crashes which have occurred in Austin, TX in the last ten years. It is one of two datasets which power our Vision Zero Viewer dashboard, available here: https://visionzero.austin.gov/viewer.
Crash data may take several weeks to be submitted, reviewed, and finalized for inclusion in this dataset. To provide the most accurate information as possible, we only provide crash data as recent as two weeks old. Please also note that some crash records may take even longer to appear in this dataset, depending on the circumstances of the crash and the ensuing law enforcement investigation.
Crash data is obtained from the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) Crash Record Information System (CRIS) database, which is populated by reports submitted by Texas Peace Officers throughout the state, including Austin Police Department (APD).
The data and information on this website is for informational purposes only. While we seek to provide accurate information, please note that errors may be present and information presented may not be complete.
The Bridge Inlet REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Bridge Inlet feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bridge-Inlet/t598-em66 with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
This dataset supports measure M.D.2 of SD 2023. The original source of the data is the Texas Department of Transportation supplemented by analysis from the Austin Transportation Department. Each row represents the number of crashes resulting in fatalities or injuries due to the top contributing factors for a year. This dataset can be used to understand the trends in the number and percentages of crashes resulting in serious injuries or fatalities caused by the top contributing factors.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page : https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/9ssh-bavk
Peak demand is the highest point of energy use on any given day and typically occurs between the hours of 4 and 6 p.m. Austin Energy’s energy efficiency and demand reduction programs are designed to lower energy usage and reduce the amount of load on the electric system. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/advantage and http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
Case #: C7a-2013-0006 Ordinance #: 20131024-028 Effective: Nov. 4. 2013 FULL PURPOSE ANNEXATION
RESPONSE AREAS: APD RA: FRANK 3 AFD RA: 00-3612 and 00-2403 EMS RA: SOUTH
Data from the Point in Time Count from 2007 to 2018 provided by HUD. Broken down by Families and Individuals and intersecting with Sheltered and Unsheltered categories.
More data can be found here - https://www.hudexchange.info/resource/3031/pit-and-hic-data-since-2007/
Provides the number of cases of over 70 notifiable or reportable conditions in Travis County by year of report. Blank cells note the condition was not reportable for that year. The number of cases is obtained from the National Electronic Disease Surveillance System managed by staff in the Epidemiology and Disease Surveillance Unit, Austin Public Health.
The Misc Points REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Misc Points feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/MiscPoint/4cyn-ayp7 with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
This dataset shows the percent of applicants hired by EMS Recruiting (based on total hired/total applications received).
DATSET DESCRIPTION: This dataset details the type of search conducted on a subject during a motor vehicle traffic stop, as well as the criteria used by the officer for conducting the search.
GENERAL ORDERS RELATING TO THIS DATA: Both the federal and state Constitutions provide every individual with the right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures. This order provides general guidelines for Austin Police Department personnel to consider when dealing with search and seizure issues.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER:
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
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Reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different systems of record may have been used.
4.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
The Austin Police Department as of January 1, 2019, become a Uniform Crime Reporting -National Incident Based Reporting System (NIBRS) reporting agency. Crime is reported by persons, property and society.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
Decennial Census: 2020 Decennial Self-Response Rates
Data sourced from the 2020 Census Response Rates API and filtered for tract level data for Travis, Bastrop, Caldwell, Hays, and Williamson Counties.
Source API Documentation: https://api.census.gov/data/2020/dec/responserate.html
More info about data columns: https://api.census.gov/data/2020/dec/responserate/variables.html
This dataset lists each expenditure reported by a lobbyist. You can recreate the City Clerk's lobbyist database by downloading all lobbyist datasets on the data portal and view the complete data model of the lobbyist database here: https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=293053
This dataset has information about the cost of providing General Fund City services per capita of the Full Purpose City population (SD23 measure GTW.A.4). It provides expense information from the annual approved budget document (General Fund Summary and Budget Stabilization Reserve Fund Summary) and population information from the City Demographer's Full Purpose Population numbers. The Consumer Price Index information for Texas is available through the following Key Economic Indicators dataset: https://data.texas.gov/dataset/Key-Economic-Indicators/karz-jr5v.
This dataset can be used to help understand the cost of city services over time.
View more details and insights related to this dataset on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ixex-hibp
This dataset contains subproject tracking numbers and details used by City of Austin staff to manage capital projects. Our internal project management application consumes data directly from this dataset. This data is subset of the canonical data maintained by the City of Austin Financial Services Division. https://www.austintexas.gov/fsd
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset comprises a list of all urban forest projects that DSD helped to fund across Austin.
Based on the Equity Analysis Zones_2021 feature layer in ArcGIS. For description, please see: https://austin.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=0a095a37ea8a4eb8b835a888f00ef53f
The Curb Inlet REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Curb Inlet feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Curb-Inlet/7rbw-mv35 with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
This table shows safety data by category. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS annual report.
The 2014 Austin Digital Assessment Project was supported by the Telecommunications & Regulatory Affairs Office of the City of Austin, the Telecommunications and Information Policy Institute at the University of Texas, and faculty and graduate students from the Department of Radio, Television, and Film and the University of Texas.
This dataset includes the individual survey responses. To see aggregated dataset weighted to reflect Austin demographics, refer to the attached document.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Day Care Homes for program year 2015-2016. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Day Care Homes. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
This table shows safety data for FY2017. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS annual report.
Number and percentage of all cases granted alternative form of adjudication (e.g. community service) in lieu of monetary penalties for those not able to pay.
This shapefile contains the Road District Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
This table contains data that describes the condition of streets maintained by the City of Austin Public Works Department that host Cap Metro high frequency transit routes as of FY2019. The data in this dataset is a subset of the larger street conditions dataset also posted in the open data portal
Condition data is gathered by a contacted vendor, who drives the streets using a specially equipped vehicle that records the data used to determine street condition. The vendor drives every lane of every street in the city, covering one-third to one-half of the city every year. Street condition is then classified as excellent, good, fair, poor, or failed based on national street engineering standards.
This table contains data for the most recent set of assessment data. Year-to-year performance is reported using another table that contains aggregated values calculated using the method described above. Private streets and streets maintained by the Texas Department of Transportation are excluded from reporting and this data set, since maintenance of those roadways is the responsibility of those parties.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Street-Conditions-High-Frequency-Transit-Routes/kqvg-gud8/
The Bar Ditch REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Bar Ditch feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bar-Ditch/eqiz-dc5p with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
This dataset lists all loans taken out by candidates, officeholders and political committees on data files submitted per City Code Chapter 2-2-26.
For a complete listing of each column heading, please see the field listing here: http://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=262466
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset combines basic meals served data from the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) Meal Count datasets currently published on the Texas Open Data Portal for the 2019 summer meal program season.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates Data is updated regularly during the active program season. A final data update will occur at least six months from the close of the active program season after which data will remain published, but static.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset supports measure CLL.B.5 of SD23 and counts the total number of audience members served through the cultural and music contracts between the City of Austin and local artists and arts groups.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/itfb-it5x
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact information for each Contracting Entity (CE) sponsor approved to participate in School Nutrition Programs during program year 2024-2025 and information on Food Service Management Company (FSMC) they may contract with. The School Nutrition Program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new data by July 15 of the active school nutrition program year. This dataset contains multi-year data.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs , the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
Data indicating each type and weight of material collected at the Household Hazardous Waste facility for fiscal year 2015.
<div style="text-align:Left;"><p><span style="font-size:13.3333px;">This feature class consists of locations of City of Austin owned parcels of land that have been pre-identified as potential treatment zones for wildfire hazard reduction projects. This layer is not an indicator of wildfire hazard.</span></p></div>
The Linear Drain REFDOC table should be used in conjunction with the Linear Drain feature class https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Linear-Drain/3hq8-fwnf with a join on the DRAINAGE_ID.
Comparison of Disposal/ Recycling Costs, Weight Collected and Participation in the Household Hazardous Waste program for Fiscal Years 2010-2015.
This table lists any credit, interest, rebate, refund, reimbursement, or return of a deposit fee resulting from the use of a political contribution or an asset purchased with a political contribution reported on the Texas Ethics Commission C/OH Form, Schedule K. For more information about credits, please visit the Texas Ethic Commission's instruction guide here: https://www.ethics.state.tx.us/forms/COH_ins.pdf
The term "contacts" represents information received by DFPS and then entered into IMPACT system. Information may be received in the form of a telephone call, regular mail, via Internet reporting system or via fax. Contacts may not match number of Abuse/Neglect Intakes in respective program sections.
Note: Update to the code reflects a more accurate count of entries recorded in IMPACT and may not reflect information in past Data Books.
Family Preservation Services are services provided to the child and the family where the caregiver retains legal custody.
This provides a snapshot of how many families were open to services on the final day of the fiscal year. If a family had two family preservation stages open on August 31, they are counted twice.
NOTE: Family Preservation Services is under the umbrella of Family Based Safety Services (FBSS).
** This dataset is currently under construction and subject to change at any time. The records in this dataset do not reflect actual business records and have been created for demonstration purposes only **
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for summer meal sites approved by TDA to operate summer 2017. Unless otherwise noted, summer meal programs operate mid-May through August.
An overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program participation data by May 1 of the active program year. Data updates will occur daily and end 60 days after then close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
Statewide Intake serves as the “front door to the front line” for all DFPS programs. As the central point of contact for reports of abuse, neglect and exploitation of vulnerable Texans, SWI staff are available 24 hours a day, 7 days per week, 365 days per year.
SWI is the Centralized point of intake for child abuse and neglect, abuse, neglect or exploitation of people age 65 or older or adults with disabilities, clients served by DSHS or DADS employees in State Hospitals or State Supported Living Centers, and children in licensed child-care facilities or treatment centers for the entire State of Texas.
SWI provides daily reports on call volume per application; hold times per application, etc. and integrates hardware and software upgrades to phone and computer systems to reduce hold times and improve efficiency.
NOTE: Past Printed Data Books also included EBC, Re-Entry and Support Staff in all queues total.
An abandoned call is a call that disconnects after completing navigation of the recorded message, but prior to being answered by an intake specialist.
Legislative Budget Board (LBB) Performance Measure Targets are set every two years during Legislative Sessions.
LBB Average Hold Time Targets for English Queue: 2010 11.4 minutes 2011 11.4 minutes 2012 8.7 minutes 2013 8.7 minutes 2014 8.7 minutes 2015 8.7 minutes 2016 7.2 minutes 2017 10.5 minutes 2018 12.0 minutes 2019 9.8 minutes
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs
The City of Austin receives 7% of the Hotel Occupancy Tax. The City, by ordinance, divides this tax revenue among cultural arts, live music, heritage preservation and the Austin Convention Center to produce experiences for tourists and local audiences.
This dataset represents the majority of the 15% dedicated to contracts with cultural artists and non-profits.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Cultural-Funding-Awards/q9hf-a4mc/
Fleet Mobility Services strives to keep City vehicles operational and available at all times. This strategic measure details how many vehicles are available to operate, taken from the department's asset management system. Row level data displays the total number of operational vehicles by department and the total vehicle count. View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/tphy-2fke
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for School Nutrition Data
About the Dataset This dataset serves as source data for the Texas Department of Agriculture Food and Nutrition Meal Served Dashboard. Data is based on the School Nutrition Program (SNP) Meal Reimbursement and All Summer Sites (SFSP and SSO) Meal Count datasets currently published on the Texas Open Data Portal. For the purposes of dashboard reporting, summer meal program meals served during the school year include SFSP and SSO meals served September 2021 through May 2022. The School Nutrition Program meals are reported by program year which runs July 1 through June 30.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. Flexibilities were extended into the 2021-2022 program year and allowed School Nutrition Programs to operate Seamless Summer Option through the 2021-2022 school year.
For more information on the policies implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all SNP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - School Nutrition Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to update this dataset by the 15th of the month until 60 days after the close of the program year.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
This dataset contains activities carried out by the Austin Transportation Public Works Mobility Management Center in response to 311 service requests as well as issues identified by staff and regional agencies.
See also this dataset which contains the issues from which these activities originated: https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Mobility-Management-Center-Issues/v7vh-gbi6
Read more about the Mobility Management Center here: https://www.austintexas.gov/department/arterial-management
A Family Team Meeting (FTM) is a family-centered rapid response meeting CPI uses to try and prevent a removal by engaging caregivers, parents and extended family and friends to address child safety concerns. An FTM is not limited to an investigation and can occur at any point or stage in which CPI or CPS is involved with a family.
More information at www.dfps.texas.gov
Families entering Family Based Safety Services Family Preservation Stages during the fiscal year.
** Static Data Set ** This table shows Special Operations incidents for Fiscal Year 2017. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS FY2017 annual report.
This feature defines the geographic area of National Register Historic Districts within the City of Austin.
This table shows ATCEMS expenses by program by fiscal year. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS annual report.
This shapefile contains the Watershed Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
The Economic Development Department routinely surveys clients to determine how their organizations are growing or whether they are remaining stable. To read more on the Economic Development Department and other key measures, check out the 2022 Annual Report https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/2022-Economic-Development-Annual-Report
Survey Response percentages for the question "Please rate your opinion of CTM’s Customer service" since 2015.
Note. No Survey was conducted in 2023.
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
Building, Electrical, Mechanical, and Plumbing Permits and Driveway/Sidewalk Permits issued by the City of Austin. Includes relevant details such as issue date, location, council district, expiration date, description of work, square footage, valuation, and units.
This dataset is compliant with the Building & Land Development Specification (BLDS) data standard.
Development Services DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER:
- The data provided are for informational use only and may differ from official DSD data.
- DSD’s database is continuously updated, so reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different data sources may have been used.
- The Development Services Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
Child Protective Investigations (CPI) conducts either a traditional investigation or Alternative Response (AR). Both require CPI to assess safety and take needed actions to protect a child and assess the risk of future abuse or neglect in the foreseeable future. AR, however, allows for a more flexible, family engaging approach on lower priority cases involving alleged victims who are age 6 or older. AR differs from traditional investigations in that there is no substantiation of allegations, no entry of perpetrators into the Central Registry (a repository for reports of child abuse and neglect), and there a heightened focus on guiding the family to plan for safety in a way that works for them and therefore sustains the safety.
Completed investigations only include those cases conducted as a traditional investigation that were not administratively closed or merged into another stage. An investigation can only be administratively closed if all allegations have a disposition of administrative closure. A completed investigation can include more than one alleged victim. Completed investigations do not include any Alternative Response cases. A description of Alternative Response and how it differs from a traditional investigation is in the CPS glossary.
At the end of a completed investigation, CPI assesses child safety, the risk of abuse or neglect in the foreseeable future, the ability of the family to reduce the risk without CPI intervention, the ability of CPI to provide needed services and other circumstances in the case to decide whether to provide ongoing services.
The Case Action Substitute Care includes investigations that resulted in at least one child (not necessarily all children in the home) being removed. Does not equal number of children removed.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on CPS Abuse/Neglect Investigations and all DFPS programs.
Lifelong Learning participant total by site broken down by fiscal year.
Map indicating Brownfield sites throughout the City of Austin.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This data set corresponds to the requirements of the ordinance passed on April 20, 2023. This ordinance requires reporting of Tier 3 and 4 special events.
This is a historical measure from Strategic Direction 2023.
This indicator measures the number of rental housing units that are considered affordable to households below 80% MFI. These are rental units that are affordable without a subsidy or any incentive from the City of Austin.
** Static Data Set ** This table shows expenses by category for fiscal year 2015. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS FY2015 annual report. THE DATA IN THIS TABLE WILL NOT BE UPDATED.
Family Preservation (FPR) Services are services provided to the child and the family where the caregiver retains legal custody.
Only families in FPR service stages that closed during the fiscal year are included. If a family exited services twice in the same year, they are counted twice.
Case #: C7a-2013-0006 Ordinance #: 20131024-028 Effective: Nov. 4. 2013 FULL PURPOSE ANNEXATION
RESPONSE AREAS: APD RA: FRANK 3 AFD RA: 00-3612 and 00-2403 EMS RA: SOUTH
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains site-level meal counts from approved TDA claims for Seamless Summer Option (SSO) and Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) in summer 2016. Summer meal programs operate mid-May through August unless otherwise noted.
Meal reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor/CE level and is reported in the "Summer Meal Programs - Seamless Summer Option (SSO) - Meal Reimbursements" and “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Reimbursements” datasets found on the Summer Meal Program Data Overview page.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates Data is updated regularly during the active program season. A final data update will occur approximately six months and one year from the close of the active program season after which data will remain published, but static.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Static Data Set This table shows ATCEMS distribution of work for FY 2017
Distribution of Work is the breakdwon of work provided by EMS personnel including responding, providing medical care for patients, and disinfecting medical equipment and replacing used medical supplies after every response.
Tracks six month, one year, and five year outcomes for children who returned home from DFPS custody exiting CPS Conservatorship and subsequently alleged as a victim in an investigation within the noted time period.
Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis.
The six month period is calculated by following those children who exited DFPS Legal Responsibility within the first six months of the fiscal year (FY) and counting forward six months to see if the same child is a designated victim in an abuse/neglect child protective investigation.
For the one year outcome, those children who exited DFPS Legal Responsibility in the prior FY are tracked for one year and reported in the next fiscal year. The outcomes reported in FY 2018 had a beginning cohort from FY 2017.
The five year outcomes starts with the FY five years prior and follows each child for five years to track outcomes. FY 2018 would have a beginning cohort of those children who exited DFPS Legal Responsibility in FY 2013.
This does not track recidivism, which is defined by CPS as subsequent reason to believe finding in a new investigation or subsequent open case to FBSS or removal within a given timeframe.
This dashboard addresses the Texas Human Resources Code Section 40.0516 (a)(9)(A), (B), (C) and (a)(10).
More information at www.dfps.texas.gov
Brush Collection Routes- There are currently twenty six brush collection routes. Brush collection is twice a year monday thru friday. The holes inside the brush collection route boundaries represent no service areas for ARR.
The 84th Legislature passed HB 1378 to increase the transparency of local government debt. Under Local Government Code §140.008, political subdivisions, including counties, cities, school districts, junior college districts, certain special purpose districts, and other subdivisions of state government must annually compile their debt obligation data from the preceding fiscal year and either:
- report it to the Comptroller of Public Accounts for posting or, alternatively,
- post the information on their own websites. The information presented on the Comptroller's website and retrievable using this search tool is self-reported by submitting entities or third parties on their behalf and has not been independently verified by the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. The inclusion of an entity's information here confirms that the Comptroller received the submitted information but does not verify the entity's compliance with the terms of Local Government Code § 140.008. Specific questions or concerns regarding an entity's debt obligations should be directed to that entity.
Submission deadline is 180 days from the last day of the entity’s fiscal year.
Dataset of all properties affected by the Organics Diversion requirements of the Universal Recycling Ordinance. Affected food-permitted businesses are required to implement an Organics Diversion program to divert food waste from going to the landfill. Food-permitted businesses larger than 15,000 square feet were affected on Oct. 1, 2016, food-permitted businesses larger than 5,000 square feet were affected on Oct. 1, 2017, and all food-permitted businesses are required to reduce food waste starting Oct. 1, 2018.
The URO supports Austin's Zero Waste goal by requiring affected property and business owners to ensure that tenants and employees have convenient access to waste diversion. For more on the Universal Recycling Ordinance visit www.austintexas.gov/uro.
Austin Resource Recovery staff is available to answer questions – email commercialrecycling@austintexas.gov.
A record of TVFC doses administered at ARC Far West, March through mid-June 2019
This dataset shows the number and percentage of buildings whose exposure to wildfire risk have decreased due to City efforts - SD23 Measure HE.E.5.c. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/HE-E-5-c_Number-and-percentage-of-buildings-roadwa/3h5e-xc5y
This dataset has been aggregated by year and by council district. The original data can be viewed here: https://data.austintexas.gov/Environment/Fuels-Treatments-Site-Map/nzi8-h6mc
The dataset exists to observe the entrepreneurial activity of Austin over a long time period. The data comes from the U.S. Census County Business Pattern table and is capturing data at the Travis County level. It contains the cumulative count of firms by employee size and count of firms by employee size by industry. This data can be used to see changes of employer growth by industry; to project where workforce growth could be occurring; or to simply see how many small businesses there are in Austin.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ndb5-si22
Survey conducted in 2013 of all trees and vacant planting sites in the right of way and all trees of heritage species greater than or equal to 19 inches on private and city of Austin owned property in the central business district.
This shapefile contains the Defined Area Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
Number and percentage of instances where people access court services other than in person and outside normal business hours (e.g. phone, mobile application, online, expanded hours)
** Static Data Set ** This table shows expenses by program for fiscal year 2015. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS FY2015 annual report. THE DATA IN THIS TABLE WILL NOT BE UPDATED.
This layer represents the boundaires of watersheds which have a contributing impact on the Edwards Aquifer.The Edwards Aquifer contributing zones polygon file was created from modeled boundaries (2003 LIDAR) and customized boundaries based on contours, drainage infrastructure, COA Plans, and staff knowlege.
This shapefile contains the Limited District Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
This measure reports the number of interns that are undergraduate, graduate, post graduate, and vocational that work within the City of Austin departments.
This dataset supports measure EOA.F.3 of SD23.
Data Source: Banner
Calculation: EOAF.3. Count
Measure Time Period: Quarterly
Automated: Yes
Date of last description update: 11/10/2020
ATCEMS conducts phone surveys of all patients or their family members for whom the department has a valid phone number. The survey is performed within 72 hours of department contact with the patient. This table contains data describing patient satisfaction with ATCEMS services in response to a question posed in the survey.
This dataset supports measure HE.F.2 of SD23. Data Source: Third Party Department Calculation: (Resident living in proximity to Fresh Food Access Points)/(Total Residents) Measure Time Period: Annually Automated: No Date of last description update: 4/3/2020
This table contains data describing requests for assistance received by ATCEMS. Incident counts are broken out by location, and priority for City of Austin and Travis County incidents.
See document attached to metadata for more details.
When using this data for research or other purposes, please cite it as:
Austin-Travis County Emergency Medical Services (2014). EMS – Incidents by Month [data set]. City of Austin, Texas Open Data Portal. Retrieved from https://data.austintexas.gov/Public-Safety/EMS-Incidents-by-Month/gjtj-jt2d.
Since this table is updated on a monthly basis, include the date that the table was accessed in the citation.
Includes impervious cover polygon data derived from 2015 impervious cover data and aerial imagery flown in early 2017
This data represents the percentage of Parks & Recreation programs and services that are ADA accessible for fiscal years 2019 - 2024.
This dataset contains financial tracking codes used by City of Austin staff to manage capital projects. Our internal project management application consumes data directly from this dataset. This data is subset of the canonical data maintained by the City of Austin Financial Services Division. https://www.austintexas.gov/fsd
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains CE-level meal reimbursement from approved TDA claims for Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) participants in summer 2024. Summer meal programs typically operate mid-May through August unless otherwise noted. Participants have 60 days from the final meal service day of the month to submit claims to TDA.
Site-level meals served data can be viewed on the Meal Counts datasets found on the Summer Meal Program Data Overview page.
For reimbursement data on CEs participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Summer Meal Programs - Seamless Summer Option (SSO) Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to submit claims. Data updates will occur daily and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
This shapefile contains the Taxing Increment Financing (TIF) Zones for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
** Static Data Set ** This table shows ATCEMS revenue sources for the past five fiscal years. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS FY2015 annual report. THE DATA IN THIS TABLE WILL NOT BE UPDATED.
A dataset with number of staff trained and type of class for the following training classes: Diversity, Equity, and Anti-Racist.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percentage-of-City-employees-who-have-completed-di/9832-e8v2/
These are the land use codes for the City of Austin as of April 2024.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use – https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset displays info on COVID-19 complaints which Austin Code has received since March 17th, 2020. This dataset is unique to Austin Code case responses and doesn't include case data from Austin Fire, Austin Police, or other entities responding to COVID-19 complaints.
This is a dataset of Github issues managed by the Austin Transportation & Public Works' Data & Technology Services team. We publish this data primarily so that it can be used as a data source for reporting purposes. For more information about our team, visit our website: https://austinmobility.io/about/
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in school nutrition programs for program year 2017-2018. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30. About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new data by November 1 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and at one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
Austin Energy has four main customer classes: residential, commercial, industrial, and other.
Residential customers live in single-family dwellings, mobile homes, townhouses, or individually metered apartment units.
The majority of commercial customers are small to large businesses that fall under Austin Energy’s secondary level of service. This means Austin Energy owns, operates, and maintains the equipment (wires, transformers, etc.) supplying power to those facilities.
Industrial (Primary) customers take service at high voltage (12,500 volts or higher) and own, operate and maintain their own equipment. Consequently, Austin Energy experiences lower overall system losses and it costs less to serve these customers. Large commercial and industrial customers such as semiconductors, high-tech facilities, and data centers typically fall under the primary level of service. These customers have very high usage and load factors because they tend to operate 24/7.
The final class, other, typically refers to street lighting and facilities such as ballparks.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset combines basic meals served data from the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) Meal Count datasets currently published on the Texas Open Data Portal for 2020-2021 summer meal program operation.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included allowing School Nutrition Program participants to use Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) to serve meals during the school year. Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates Data is updated regularly during the active program season. A final data update will occur at least six months from the close of the active program season after which data will remain published, but static.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
This is the street preventative maintenance surface treatments for the current fiscal year. Treatments typically include: overlay, seal coat, slurry seal, fog seal, crack sealing, and microsurfacing.
Point layer derived from the Maximo data warehouse that shows the location of reported pollutant spills
These grasslands were digitized from construction plans, environmental assessments, and City of Austin staff field observations into a versioned SDE database using ArcMap. Actual areas for any particular feature may be fluctuate due to antecedent rainfall, subsequent development activity or the invasion of woody species, Grasslands are not, at the time of this writing, a protected Critical Environmental Feature.
The map shows the locations where the public may find Voter Information Brochures for the 2016 Mobility Bond. Learn more about the proposed bond at www.AustinTexas.gov/2016Bond. For questions, call 512-974-7840.
This dataset supports measure M.C.6.b of SD 2023. The source of the data is the Austin Department of Transportation. Each row displays the percent of the All Ages and Abilities Bicycle Network completed. This dataset can be used to understand the progress made towards completing the All Ages and Abilities Bicycle Network. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page : https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/fq5y-4ukw
Direct Campaign Expenditures
Peak demand is the highest point of energy use on any given day and typically occurs between the hours of 4 and 6 p.m. Austin Energy’s energy efficiency and demand reduction programs are designed to lower energy usage and reduce the amount of load on the electric system. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/advantage and http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
This dataset tracks the median taxable house value of homesteads (SD23 measure EOA.D.3). The underlying data comes from the Travis County Appraisal District (TCAD). The general homestead homestead exemption is applied, and homesteads receiving senior or disabled property tax exemption are excluded. This data can be used to gain understanding about affordability trends in the City of Austin over time. View more details and insights related to this dataset on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/psuj-t6cd
City of Austin current budget fiscal year Operating Budget showing budget versus expenditures. This budget is at the Fund, Department, Unit level. This data set includes a build date and will be updated on a quarterly basis. The data contained in this data set is for informational purposes. Certain Austin Energy budget items have been excluded as competitive matters under Texas Government Code Section 552.133 and City Council Resolution 20051201-002.
The comparison of actual expenditures to budget may appear inconsistent. That is because base wages for personnel are fully budgeted in the expense categories regular wages—full-time, regular wages—part-time or regular wages—civil service. The budget does not assume expenditure levels for the various leave categories, such as sick pay, vacation pay, or jury leave. However, actual expenses for various leave categories are recorded based on timesheet coding. The result is that actual expenditures for regular wages are spread across multiple expense categories while the budget is shown in one expense category.
Personnel savings is budgeted to account for the likely savings in personnel costs generated through attrition. However, the savings is realized in the expense categories regular wages—full-time, regular wages—part-time and regular wages—civil service. Therefore, the actual expenditures in the personnel savings expense category will always be zero.
This dataset is under active development and is subject to change at any time
This dataset contains information on the individual signals that synchronized to a larger corridor.
This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of traffic signals.
This chart counts children who exited DFPS custody to adoption during the fiscal year. To be adopted, a court must have terminated parental rights, the child must have lived with the adoptive family for at least 6 months, the family must have been approved for adoption through a licensed child placing agency and a court must have ordered legal custody to the adoptive parents.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
A detailed list of TDA Food and Nutrition datasets and data fields available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be downloaded as a PDF here.
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Adult Day Care centers for program year 2017-2018. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Adult Day Care centers. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
Updates and Comments related to CodeNext
Record of administered doses, provided by Vaccines For Children Grant, from September 2013 to October 2018
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset combines basic meals served data from the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO) Meal Count datasets currently published on the Texas Open Data Portal for the 2020 summer meal program season.
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policies in order to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. This included early operation of the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) and Seamless Summer Option (SSO). Sites participating in these flexibilities are indicated in the COVID Meal Site column of this dataset. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates Data is updated regularly during the active program season. A final data update will occur at least six months from the close of the active program season after which data will remain published, but static.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains claimed meals served by summer meal sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2017 (SNP program year 2016-2017). Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor level and is reported in the “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
A complete listing of all VFC/ASN doses about to expire.
This data shows a count of unintentional overdose deaths by year within the city limits of Austin. The data is reported from the Office of Vital Statistics.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/HE-B-4b-Number-of-unintentional-overdose-deaths/vmwr-d85g/
Street Sweeping Zones- There are currently eight street sweeping zones. Street sweeping is carried out four to six times a year monday thru friday per zone.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This data set provides information on the number and percent of clients provided with digital literacy training who increase their digital skills.
This data is the years of potential life lost (YPLL) before age 75 per 100,000 population from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation County Health Rankings the for the years 2017-2019. This data set contains data for Travis County. YPLL is used to measure of premature mortality that focuses attention on preventable deaths.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/cvz3-7ikr
These are the statistics listed in the "Stats at a Glance" section of the City of Austin demographics website: https://demographics-austin.hub.arcgis.com/
This dataset includes each registered CAB in Austin, the status/disposition of the audit for compliance with municipal ordinances, and the status of the referral to Municipal Court.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Day Care Homes for program year 2016-2017. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Day Care Homes. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
Bulky Collection Routes- There are currently twenty two bulky collection routes. Bulky collection is twice a year pickup monday thru friday. The holes inside the bulky collection route boundaries represent no service areas for ARR.
The Bike Facilities data will serve as the authoritative data for any bicycle infrastructure-related reference and analysis. The Bike Facilities data includes all existing facilities, their level of comfort, as well as recommended facilities and whether they belong to the All Ages and Abilities Network. The data is created from an export of the Comprehensive Transportation Network, and it can join back to it through the Bike Facility ID field.
City of Austin Council Agenda Items Updates (February 2024-Present).
This shapefile contains the Water Control and Improvement District (WC & ID) Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
This data set shows locations at which Austin Public Health has a presence, those locations with office hours contain service providers. Some locations are owned by the Department, while other locations house Austin Public Health staff.
No warranty is made by the City of Austin or Austin Public Health regarding the specific accuracy, relevance, or completeness of this data set.
Names were tabulated using the exact spelling of the baby's first name on the birth certificate. Names from 20,389 birth certificates of births within the City of Austin during 2016 were used to create the data set.
This contains a subset of the Texas census tracts for Travis, Williamson, Hays and Bastrop Counties for 2022.
** Static Data Set ** This table shows revenues by source for fiscal year 2015. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS FY2015 annual report. THE DATA IN THIS TABLE WILL NOT BE UPDATED.
This chart counts children who exited DFPS custody to adoption during the fiscal year. To be adopted, a court must have terminated parental rights, the child must have lived with the adoptive family for at least 6 months, the family must have been approved for adoption through a licensed child placing agency and a court must have ordered legal custody to the adoptive parents.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on all DFPS programs
Garbage Collection Routes- There are currently 184 garbage collection routes. Garbage collection is once a week pickup monday thru friday. The holes inside the garbage collection route boundaries represent no service areas for ARR.
This dataset supports measure M.A.5.a of SD 2023. The source of the data is the Capital Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Each row displays the average speed for bus transit for that year. This dataset can be used to know more about average speed trends for bus transit in Austin. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page : https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Change-in-average-MetroBus-travel-speed/xxgc-8j6n/
This identifies all of the City of Austin corridors that are used for SD 2023 mobility measures. Each entry represents a single direction of a given corridor.
Point in Time Count Numbers for 2007 to 2018 from HUD, which counts the number of people experiencing homelessness at the federal, state, and local level.
https://www.hudexchange.info/resource/5783/2018-ahar-part-1-pit-estimates-of-homelessness-in-the-us/
This dataset contains the location and descriptive attributes of sites within the City of Dallas which have been marked by the Texas Historical Commision in recognition of their architectural or historical significance.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This is a custom query against the larger data set "Issued Construction Permits". This subset of data is looking only at residential demolition permits issued, including both total demolitions (identified by the "work class" of Demolition) and partial demolitions (identified by the partial demolition tag in the folder description). The intent is to answer a question raised about the ratio of partial to total demolitions.
Costs allowed in the fuel tariff include fuel for generation, transportation, renewable purchase power agreements, purchase power to serve retail customers, ERCOT fees and hedging. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
The utility has a diverse repertoire of efficiency programs, including Austin Energy Green Building, PowerSaver and Demand Response, that help customers reduce energy and save money. These efforts directly benefit customers as well as set the utility on the path to meet goals put in place by Austin City Council. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/advantage and http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
Family Preservation Services (FPR) are services provided to the child and the family where the caregiver retains legal custody.
This chart counts unique children served during fiscal year in Family Preservation Services (FPR) with a count of those removed. Children served in Family Preservation Services stay in their own home during services.
NOTE: Family Preservation Services is under the umbrella of Family Based Safety Services (FBSS).
This shapefile contains the Parcel Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
Recycle Collection Routes- There are currently 190 recycle collection routes. Recycle collection is every other week pickup monday thru friday represented as either A or B week pickup. The holes inside the recycle collection route boundaries represent no service areas for ARR.
Provides a count of the number of unique and eligible employees within Austin Police Department (APD), Austin-Travis County Medical Services (ATCEMS), Austin Fire Department (AFD), Code Compliance, and Municipal Court who have taken mental/behavioral health training. This dataset supports measure S.A.4 of SD23.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/SA4-Mental-Behavioral-Health-Training/6mxm-hscu/
This layer represents the detailed transportation infrastructure of the Austin Bergstrom International Airport as of the year 2001. This data has been produced by the City of Austin for the sole purpose of aiding internal processes and is not warranted for any other use. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding its accuracy or completeness. Acknowledgment of the City of Austin GIS Division would be appreciated in products derived from these data.
<span style="font-family:"Avenir Next W01", "Avenir Next W00", "Avenir Next", Avenir, "Helvetica Neue", sans-serif; font-size:16px;">Depicts the Imagine Austin Comprehensive Plan Growth Concept Centers.</span>
This shapefile contains the Community College District Boundaries for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
The purpose of this dataset is to track the distribution of aggregate city income between the 5 quintile of population segments. The dataset comes from the 2019 U.S. Census Bureau, American Communities Survey (5yr) Table B19082. The row levels contain total percentage of income shares by the middle 3 quintiles (20-80%) of population. This data can be used to provide insights into growth/decline of middle class.
Distribution of household income (Note: This indicator can provide insights into growth/decline of middle class) View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Distribution-of-Household-Income/i3a3-vjnc/
GIS Data Model developed by the National Recreation and Parks Association (NRPA).This GIS feature class includes City of Austin Parks and Recreation Department (PARD) Owned Parkland Boundaries within the City of Austin and surrounding areas.
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
The purpose of this dataset is to account for the number and percentage of Census tracts that are economically and/or racially segregated. The data was derived from a calculation originating with data from the 2019 U.S. Census Bureau, American Communities Survey (5yr). The row level data indicates the count or percentage of Census tracts. This data can be used to show the share of Census tracts that are not demographically reflective of the City of Austin’s demographics.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percentage-of-Census-tracts-that-are-economically-/xf9r-hzjn/
The City of Austin's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Management serves as the coordinating focal point for preparedness, response, recovery, and education in an emergency or disaster that disrupts the community. Carrying out this task requires this office to ensure all City departments and partner agencies in the region are prepared to respond to a disaster and ready to work together. Each year we want to ensure that we are providing training to these agencies to help us be a more disaster prepared and resilient community. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/nqji-3wsu
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
The location and activity of "repeat offender properties" with respect to city code violations. To learn more about the Repeat Offender Program, see City's website: http://www.austintexas.gov/department/repeat-offender-program
This data contains information about traffic and pedestrian signals in the city of Austin, Texas. The data is updated on a daily basis and maintained by the Austin Transportation & Public Works Department's Arterial Management Division.
You may also be interested in the following resources:
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Traffic Signal Monitor https://data.mobility.austin.gov/signal-monitor
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Signal Evaluations https://data.mobility.austin.gov/signal-evaluations
** Static Data Set ** This table shows findings from car seat inspections in FY2015 by the ATCEMS Community Relations section. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS FY2015 annual report. THE DATA IN THIS TABLE WILL NOT BE UPDATED.
Between 1982 and 2006, Austin Energy's energy efficiency programs offset the need to build a 700 megawatt (MW) power plant. This became known as Austin Energy's first conservation power plant. In 2007, Austin Energy kicked off a new goal with the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset another 800 MW of peak energy demand by 2020. Between 2007 and 2012, Austin Energy has offset an additional 318 MW which is 40% of the 800 MW goal.
Note: Total participation does not include GB commercial square foot.
Blank cells indicate data are not available because the program either had not started, has been discontinued, or we no longer track that data.
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
The location, violation type, and description of deficiencies of properties registered in the Repeat Offender Property program. To learn more about the Repeat Offender Program, see City's website: http://www.austintexas.gov/department/repeat-offender-program
The data represents patients who were 18+ between January 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018 and whether they were compliant or not with their immunizations. The data shows which immunizations may need to be updated.
The 84th Legislature passed HB 1378 to increase the transparency of local government debt. Under Local Government Code §140.008, political subdivisions, including counties, cities, school districts, junior college districts, certain special purpose districts, and other subdivisions of state government must annually compile their debt obligation data from the preceding fiscal year and either:
- report it to the Comptroller of Public Accounts for posting or, alternatively,
- post the information on their own websites. The information presented on the Comptroller's website and retrievable using this search tool is self-reported by submitting entities or third parties on their behalf and has not been independently verified by the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. The inclusion of an entity's information here confirms that the Comptroller received the submitted information but does not verify the entity's compliance with the terms of Local Government Code § 140.008. Specific questions or concerns regarding an entity's debt obligations should be directed to that entity.
Submission deadline is 180 days from the last day of the entity’s fiscal year.
This shapefile contains the Cadastral Lines for Williamson County, Texas. This shapefile is created and maintained by the Williamson Central Appraisal District Mapping Department. The data in this layer are represented as lines.
This table shows ATCEMS revenue for the past nine fiscal years. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS FY2017 annual report.
This dataset reveals the employees of the City of Austin that are currently paid under the per hour living wage.
This dataset supports measure(s) EOA.B.5 of SD23 . Data Source: Banner
This is a data report that did not require a calculation.
Measure Time Period: Annually (Fiscal Year)
Automated: No
Date of last description update: 9/26/22
More information related to measure can be viewed on its story page : https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/hynm-5nw6
This dataset includes counts of infant births and deaths within Austin city limits by year. The counts are calculated into an infant mortality rate for each year. Both infant deaths and infant births are reported through the Office of Vital Records.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/HE-B-3-Infant-mortality-rate-number-of-deaths-of-i/jwg4-2djc/
The Austin Parks and Recreation Department has 14 Bicycle Fix-it Stations at Parks and Recreation facilities all over Austin in an attempt to help promote healthier, more active and sustainable lifestyles for community members of all ages and backgrounds. These stations are free for the public to use in helping to make minor repairs to their bicycles.
Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis. This chart includes any child in DFPS custody at some point during the year. Children may be duplicated in the count, if they were in and out of DFPS custody more than once during the fiscal year.
See CPS Glossary for legal status definitions.
More information at www.dfps.texas.gov
Austin Energy’s free, interactive web app allows customers to monitor their daily energy usage, view their bill history, and see a future forecast of their energy bill cost. They can also set alerts to warn them of an upcoming rate tier change.
Austin Energy Web App users can also download Green Button Data which can help them better understand their energy usage and take action towards savings. This data set shows the number of web app users by month.
Learn more about the app at http://powersaver.austinenergy.com/wps/portal/psp/residential/learn/free-home-energy-management-options/alerts-and-tips-help-you-manage-your-energy-costs
The 84th Legislature passed HB 1378 to increase the transparency of local government debt. Under Local Government Code §140.008, political subdivisions, including counties, cities, school districts, junior college districts, certain special purpose districts, and other subdivisions of state government must annually compile their debt obligation data from the preceding fiscal year and either:
- report it to the Comptroller of Public Accounts for posting or, alternatively,
- post the information on their own websites. The information presented on the Comptroller's website and retrievable using this search tool is self-reported by submitting entities or third parties on their behalf and has not been independently verified by the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. The inclusion of an entity's information here confirms that the Comptroller received the submitted information but does not verify the entity's compliance with the terms of Local Government Code § 140.008. Specific questions or concerns regarding an entity's debt obligations should be directed to that entity.
Submission deadline is 180 days from the last day of the entity’s fiscal year.
This table shows the 10 primary impressions most frequently recorded by ATCEMS field personnel during the fiscal years shown.
A removal occurs when CPS determines that a child cannot safely remain in their own home and DFPS needs to seek legal custody to ensure child safety. Removals can occur in an investigation, family preservation, family substitute care or family reunification stage.
For removals at the end of the Fiscal Year, the placement represented may be from the following Fiscal Year.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Adult Day Care centers for program year 2015-2016. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Adult Day Care centers. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates This data is considered historical and will no longer be updated. Data is current as of the last Date Last Updated on the source dataset published on ODP.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in school nutrition programs for program year 2016-2017. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new data by November 1 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and at one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
The Imagine Austin Comprehensive Plan was adopted in 2012. It functions as a guide for prioritizing Austin‘s growth over the next 30 years. The Plan encourages development and infrastructure investment in activity centers and corridors in support of the creation of complete and compact communities. This measure helps the City understand where residential development activity is happening in the context of the priorities established by the Plan.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/f35r-94j2
This is a list of all GTOPs applicants and awardees from the inception of the program, including descriptive information as available
This dataset supports measure HE.F.5 of SD23 Data Source : Third Party Department Data Calculation: Sum(City Supported Fresh Food Access Points) Measure Time Period: Annually Automated: No Date of last description update: 4/3/2020
Number and percentage of residents living in proximity to a City-supported fresh food access point
Demographic of HEU client served from January to May 2019
This table contains data that describes the condition of streets maintained by the City of Austin Public Works Department. The street network consisted of about 2525 miles of streets and just over 7863 lane miles of pavement in fiscal year 2019. Note that since many streets consist of multiple lanes, there are about three times as many lane miles as miles of streets. We report based on lane miles, rather than street miles in order to better capture the public's driving experience.
Condition data is gathered by a contacted vendor, who drives the streets using a specially equipped vehicle that records the data used to determine street condition. The vendor drives every lane of every street in the city, covering one-third to one-half of the city every year. Street condition is then classified as excellent, good, fair, poor, or failed based on national street engineering standards.
This table contains data for the most recent set of assessment data. Year-to-year performance is reported using another table that contains aggregated values calculated using the method described above. Private streets and streets maintained by the Texas Department of Transportation are excluded from reporting and this data set, since maintenance of those roadways is the responsibility of those parties.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/kara-xhcd.
Filtered in Excel. All VFC doses within 90 days of expiration in Travis County
** Static Data Set ** This table shows findings from Infant Academy survey conducted in FY2015 by the ATCEMS Community Relations section. It has been uploaded to support the ATCEMS FY2015 annual report. THE DATA IN THIS TABLE WILL NOT BE UPDATED.
This table shows the 10 most frequently recorded incident problem types as recorded by communications personnel for each fiscal year presented.
This dataset represents Rock Outcrop Critical Environmental Features (CEFs) identified during the development review process since 1995. Prior to 1995, data is either unavailable or lost. Rock Outcrop CEFs were digitized from construction plans, environmental assessments, and City of Austin staff field observations into a versioned SDE database using ArcMap.
Areas that are within City of Austin publicly-owned land that have been identfied as Grow Zones in a collaboration between Parks and Recreation and Watershed Protection Departments. Contains primary contact information, acreage, watershed designations and a description of the prescribed maintenance regime that will enable restoration of healthy ecological function.
Divides sibling groups into two groups: Those sibling groups where all siblings are in the same placement on August 31 and those who are not all together with an additional filter for sibling group size.
In this context, siblings are defined as children in substitute care who were removed from the same household whether in the same, or separate, removal events.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in school nutrition programs for program year 2015-2016. The school nutrition program year begins July 1 and ends June 30. About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new data by November 1 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and at one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
The data set indicates the maximum number of seats available for passengers to fly. These are seats scheduled, but not necessarily filled. The success of AUS and all airports is driven by passenger demand, government restrictions, and airline business models. Data on available passenger seats in the Official Airline Guide is collected and distributed by the Campbell-Hill Aviation Schedule Report. The report data is then combined to create the total annual passenger seats for the year. This dataset supports measure M.A.7 of SD23.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Number-of-AUS-passenger-seats-available-for-purcha/26rp-vy2b/
The dataset contains monthly Landlord/Tenant caseload information by court from January 2023- Present. Landlord/Tenant cases include: 1) Eviction- All suits for eviction (recovery of possession of premises) brought to recover possession of real property under Chapter 24 of the Texas Property Code, often by a landlord against a tenant. A claim for rent may be joined with an eviction case if the amount of rent due and unpaid is not more than $20,000, excluding statutory interest and court costs but including attorney fees, if any. Eviction cases filed on or after September 1, 2023, are governed by Rules 500-507 and 510 for Part V of the Rules of Civil Procedure. 2) Repair and Remedy- A case by a residential tenant under Chapter 92, Subchapter B, of the Texas Property Code to enforce the landlord’s duty to repair or remedy a condition materially affecting the physical health or safety of an ordinary tenant. Repair and remedy cases filed on or after September 1, 2013, are governed by Rules 500-507 and 509 of Part V of the Rules of Civil Procedure. Because of the submission deadlines for reports, the most recent monthly data will be two months behind.
During the 2017 Summer Community Engagement Division visited several organizations and events to hear the needs of the community. Locations were selected on the geographic area of Austin known as the Easter Crescent,
DIR Shared Technology Services (STS) and Texas.gov Vendor Invoices
This database includes data used in the Project Connect Anti-Displacement Dashboard. The file includes 2020 decennial population and housing unit counts at the Block level, combined with 2020 ACS data at the Census Tract level that was used in the 2020 Displacement Risk map. To determine displacement risk, researchers at the University of Texas conducted a three-part analysis: the presence of vulnerable populations, residential market appreciation, and demographic change. To determine vulnerable populations, the authors used indicators to identify residents who, according to academic research, are least able to absorb housing costs, which includes: communities of color, low-income households, heads of households without a bachelor's degree or higher, families with children in poverty, and renters. In 2020, the City of Austin Housing and Planning staff updated the data and simplified the categories. The data sources include the 2020 Census, 2016-2020 ACS 5-year Estimates, and City of Austin Affordable Housing Inventory. This file also includes the total income restricted units from the Comprehensive Affordable Housing Directory (CAHD) and City of Austin Affordable Housing Inventory (AHI) as of 8.22.2022.
This data shows the percentage of PARD programs and services that are ADA accessible.
This data set lists all the departments in the City in the Equity Assessment process. This process requires the following steps: Equity Assessment Tool completion, Evaluation of department responses, Department Action Planning, and Implementation. After completing all of these steps, the departments then work back through them again to continue addressing equity.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percentage-of-City-departments-implementing-the-eq/vmrk-df46/
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This dataset contains claimed meals served by summer feeding sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) for summer 2016 (SNP program year 2015-2016). Summer feeding programs operate mid-May through the end of August.
This dataset contains site-level claimed meal counts. Reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor level and is reported in the “Summer Feeding Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Reimbursements” dataset for the program year.
For data on sites participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO), please refer to the Summer Feeding Programs – Seamless Summer Option – Meal Counts and Meal Reimbursement datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to file monthly claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
ABOUT THIS CHART
Child Protective Investigations (CPI) conducts either a traditional investigation or Alternative Response (AR). Traditional investigations and Alternative Response require caseworkers to assess safety and take needed actions to protect a child while assessing any risk of abuse or neglect in the foreseeable future. AR cases present a less adversarial more collaborative approach to working with families by allowing for family engagement along with other community supports to ensure child safety. AR differs from traditional investigations in that AR cases are Priority 2 cases involving victims who are age 6 or older, there is no substantiation of allegations, no entry of perpetrators into the Central Registry (a repository for reports of child abuse and neglect), and there is a heightened focus on guiding the family to plan for safety in a way that works for them and therefore sustains safety.
Alternative response is timely if the first face-to-face meeting with the family and children in the household occurs within five days of an AR stage being opened and will involve working with the family to conduct safety and family assessments. AR cases can remain open for up to 60 days with a one-time 20-day extension, if appropriate. Should CPI staff identify services to improve general family functioning and overall protective actions within the standard AR case time frame, the caseworker will provide support in linking the family to existing resources within the community.
A description of Alternative Response and how it differs from a traditional investigation and priority response times are in the glossary.
Alterative Response has been fully implemented in Regions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6B, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11. AR in Region 6A is in the implementation stage. Full state implementation is anticipated in March 2021. Region 6A is Harris County and Region 6B is Region 6 excluding Harris County.
This dashboard addresses the Texas Family Code Section 264.017 (b) (6).
Tenure with DFPS represents tenure with the agency and not in a specific position.
Child Care Investigations (CCI), which is a part of CPI and include Day Care Investigations (DCI) and Residential Child Care Investigations (RCCI) are only available from 2018 onward. This is due to the split of those job functions from Child Care Licensing, which was a part of DFPS until 2017, when it was transferred to the Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC).
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in CACFP as child centers for the program year 2024-2025. This includes Child Care Centers, At-Risk centers, Head Start sites, Outside School Hours sites, and Emergency Shelters . The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites operating as child centers.Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. Each record (row) represents monthly meals data for a single site and for a single CACFP center sub-program.
To filter data for a specific CACFP center Program, select "View Data" to open the Exploration Canvas filter tools. Select the program(s) of interest from the Program field. A filtering tutorial can be found HERE
For meals data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Adult Day Care Centers, or child care centers for previous program years, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of the program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website."
To pursue the Austin City Council’s policies in energy efficiency, Austin Energy invests millions of dollars in these programs so our customers can benefit from lower usage and bills. Unspent Energy Efficiency Services weatherization funds for FY 2015 are now carried over into the FY 2016 budget. Customer Assistance Program weatherization assistance funds have historically been carried forward into subsequent budget years. Find more information at http://austinenergy.com/go/advantage and http://austinenergy.com/go/reports.
Lists each report prepared by a Texas state agency and submitted to a state agency.
Amanda ROW Permits are polygon features created from Parcel boundaries and/or buffered Street Segment features assigned to Amanda ROW Permits.
Yard Trimmings Collection Routes- There are currently fifty six yard trimmings collection routes and ten organic collection routes. Yard trimmings and organic collection is once a week pickup monday thru friday. The holes inside the yard trimmings and organic route boundaries represent no service areas for ARR.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
Average monthly count of unduplicated children in paid foster care per month by fiscal year. This dataset counts unique children regardless of payment types during the month. Calculations exclude children and young adults where cost of care was not covered by Title IV-E or state paid foster care.
A young adult is any person in foster care who was 18 to 21 years of age at anytime during the fiscal year.
Some children are served in more than one eligibility type in a month.
An overview of public improvement bond project financial data that is updated on the first of every month.
The total attendance at multicultural activities at PARD is computed by combining the operational measures total visits to educational and cultural facilities and adding it to the total attendance at free cultural special events hosted by the Museums & Cultural Programs Division (MCP).
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ay42-mvrx
This dataset represents CEF buffers identified during the development review process since 1995. Prior to 1995, data is either unavailable or lost. CEF buffers were digitized from construction plans, environmental assessments, and City of Austin staff field observations into a versioned SDE database using ArcMap. Actual buffers size for any particular feature may be determined through a process of negotiation with land development interests, and may differ from standard dimensions stated in the Land Development Code.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
this version of the data table has positive counts for both male and female patients.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This dataset provides information about the median family income in Austin (SD23 measure EOA.B.6). Median family income (MFI) is calculated annually by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to help set income limits that determine eligibility for assisted housing programs. This dataset includes the MFI calculated by HUD for the Austin-Round Rock MSA and the United States. For years prior to FY 2016, HUD reported on the Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos MSA instead of the Austin-Round Rock MSA.
This information is important in understanding economic and affordability trends in Austin. Additionally, the Housing and Planning Department uses median family income data in setting income limits for affordable housing programs in Austin.
View more details and insights related to this dataset on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Median-Family-Income/r93e-edn2
Resolution No. 20131024-084 directed the City Manager to “ . . . conduct facilitated discussions . . . about Asian American quality of life issues in Austin; to produce a Community Scorecard; to develop strategies to address the findings of Asian-American Health Assessment, the facilitated discussions, and the Community Scorecard; and to report back . . . with recommendations for enhanced or new City programs and practices.” For more information: marion.sanchez@AustinTexas.gov., https://asianlifeatx.bloomfire.com/, http://austintexas.gov/asianlifeaustin, https://www.facebook.com/AsianLifeATX.
This report is the result of the Austin City Code 6-7’s Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 900 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2024. This report contains information on commercial facilities that have reported the EPA’s Energy Star Portfolio Manager benchmarking results in 2016 () to the City of Austin, as well as the calculated electric Energy Utilization Index (EUI). For information on ECAD exemptions and other requirements, see Austin City Code Chapter 6-7. Note – () Data reported by Commercial Customers
The data being collected is to be used for several purposes: - Hydraulic/hydrologic modeling input - Work Order Management System integration - Map book production - Mobile redlining/correction submission tools
Home rehabilitation programs offer grants or forgivable loans to ensure low- and moderate-income households are safe and healthy by repairing foundations, roofing, plumbing, electrical, drywall, HVAC, and other structural improvements. Rehabilitation programs not only ensure their homes are safe, functional, and accessible but allows Austinites to stay in their homes, instead of selling or moving because they can not afford the repairs. The five programs include: Architectural Barrier Removal Program (Homeowner and Rental), GO Repair Grant Program, Home Rehabilitation Loan Program, and Minor Home Repair Grant Program.
This data is intended for reporting purposes only. Please visit SummerFood.org or text FOOD to 304-304 to find an open summer meal sites near you.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains site-level meal counts from approved TDA claims for Seamless Summer Option (SSO) and Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) in 2024. Summer meal programs typically operate mid-May through August. Any meals reported in non-summer months have been approved due to extenuating circumstances that have disrupted normal school meal service. Participants have 60 days to submit claims to TDA.
Meal count information for individual summer meal programs can be found as filtered views of this dataset on our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
Meal reimbursement data is collected at the sponsor/CE level and is reported in the "Summer Meal Programs - Seamless Summer Option (SSO) - Meal Reimbursements" and “Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Meal Reimbursements” datasets found on the Summer Meal Program Data Overview page.
An overview of all Summer Meal Program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meals Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Participants have 60 days to submit claims. Data updates will occur daily and end 90 days after the close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in CACFP as child centers for the program year 2019-2020. This includes Child Care Centers, At-Risk centers, Head Start sites, Outside School Hours sites, and Emergency Shelters . The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites operating as child centers.Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. Each record (row) represents monthly meals data for a single site and for a single CACFP center sub-program.
To filter data for a specific CACFP center Program, select "View Data" to open the Exploration Canvas filter tools. Select the program(s) of interest from the Program field. A filtering tutorial can be found HERE
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
For meals data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Adult Day Care Centers, “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of the program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, plea
These are the geographic boundaries for reaches evaluated as part of the Environmental Integrity Index and Austin Lakes Index . Scores can be found in tabular form: https://data.austintexas.gov/Environment/Watershed-Reach-Index-and-Problem-Scores/vk3r-6prc
This data is a summary of the prevalence of residents in Travis County who reported experiencing 5 or more days of poor mental health in the past 30 days. The data comes from the self reported Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) survey from the CDC.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/HE-A-2-Percentage-of-people-who-report-5-or-more-p/mxzy-r35z/
Protected Streets are streets that have paved within the last five (residential) or seven (collector/arterial) years or have an RCI greater than seven (collector/arterial). There are strict guidelines for justification of cuts and restoration of Protected Streets. There is also a street damage recovery fee assessed for the life of the pavement that is lost.
This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. This product has been produced by the City of Austin Public Works Dept for the sole purpose of geographic reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
The 84th Legislature passed HB 1378 to increase the transparency of local government debt. Under Local Government Code §140.008, political subdivisions, including counties, cities, school districts, junior college districts, certain special purpose districts, and other subdivisions of state government must annually compile their debt obligation data from the preceding fiscal year and either:
- report it to the Comptroller of Public Accounts for posting or, alternatively,
- post the information on their own websites. The information presented on the Comptroller's website and retrievable using this search tool is self-reported by submitting entities or third parties on their behalf and has not been independently verified by the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. The inclusion of an entity's information here confirms that the Comptroller received the submitted information but does not verify the entity's compliance with the terms of Local Government Code § 140.008. Specific questions or concerns regarding an entity's debt obligations should be directed to that entity.
Submission deadline is 180 days from the last day of the entity’s fiscal year.
Decks feature class is created to assist in City of Austin planning activities. Decks are created from heads up digitizing using 2012/2013 Orthoimagery and 2012 Lidar where Orthoimagery is not available. This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of property boundaries. This product has been produced by the Communications and Technology Department for the sole purpose of geographic reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
This data represents complaints submitted by consumers on issues arising from utility providers. Data is collected via the 311 CSR system and from phone calls received from the public. The TARA executive assistant manages this workflow by collecting data into this spreadsheet weekly and coordinating communications to the utility providers to reach a resolution.
This map displays the ETOD Overlay subdistrict boundaries as adopted on May 16, 2024 by Ordinance No. 20240516-005 (https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=430919).
Community Connections Program: 100 Gigabit Speed (Google Fiber) Public Facilities administered through the City's Office of Telecom & Regulatory Affairs (TARA) and Google Fiber.
Polygons that document stream restoration projects to resolve the problems identified in the Erosion Sites https://data.austintexas.gov/Environmental/Erosion-Sites/599b-4cjg dataset.
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This is a list of Repeat Offender Property violation cases which includes a link to the Austin Build + Connect portal. Notice of Violation documents can be accessed for each case if issued.
All violations (open and closed) for active ROP properties two years prior to license issuance to present. This captures code violations that met the criteria for the property to be registered in ROP and any violations since the property was registered.
The 84th Legislature passed HB 1378 to increase the transparency of local government debt. Under Local Government Code §140.008, political subdivisions, including counties, cities, school districts, junior college districts, certain special purpose districts, and other subdivisions of state government must annually compile their debt obligation data from the preceding fiscal year and either:
- report it to the Comptroller of Public Accounts for posting or, alternatively,
- post the information on their own websites. The information presented on the Comptroller's website and retrievable using this search tool is self-reported by submitting entities or third parties on their behalf and has not been independently verified by the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. The inclusion of an entity's information here confirms that the Comptroller received the submitted information but does not verify the entity's compliance with the terms of Local Government Code § 140.008. Specific questions or concerns regarding an entity's debt obligations should be directed to that entity.
Submission deadline is 180 days from the last day of the entity’s fiscal year.
Disclaimer: This is a historical dataset (12/16/2017-9/9/2021) that is no longer being updated after September 9, 2021. The Wavetronix radar sensors are being phased out and may not be reporting new data as of 2021.
Traffic count and speed data collected from the several Wavetronix radar sensors deployed by the City of Austin.
The Travel Sensor dataset ( https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Travel-Sensors/6yd9-yz29 ) is related to this dataset using the 'KITS ID' field. The Travel Sensors dataset provides more information on sensor location and status.
This dataset supports measure M.A.5.a of SD 2023. The source of the data is the Capital Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Each row displays the average speed for bus transit for that year by type. This dataset can be used to know more about average speed trends for bus transit in Austin. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Change-in-average-MetroBus-travel-speed/xxgc-8j6n/
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER Please read and understand the following information.
This dataset contains a record of incidents that the Austin Police Department responded to and wrote a report. Please note one incident may have several offenses associated with it, but this dataset only depicts the highest level offense of that incident. Data is from 2003 to present. This dataset is updated weekly. Understanding the following conditions will allow you to get the most out of the data provided. Due to the methodological differences in data collection, different data sources may produce different results. This database is updated weekly, and a similar or same search done on different dates can produce different results. Comparisons should not be made between numbers generated with this database to any other official police reports. Data provided represents only calls for police service where a report was written. Totals in the database may vary considerably from official totals following investigation and final categorization. Therefore, the data should not be used for comparisons with Uniform Crime Report statistics. The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided. Pursuant to section 552.301 (c) of the Government Code, the City of Austin has designated certain addresses to receive requests for public information sent by electronic mail. For requests seeking public records held by the Austin Police Department, please submit by utilizing the following link: https://apd-austintx.govqa.us/WEBAPP/_rs/(S(0auyup1oiorznxkwim1a1vpj))/supporthome.aspx
This dashboard includes those Foster and Adoptive homes that were screened and approved for child care through DFPS. Most of the FADs in the state are screened and approved for adoption through a private licensed child placing agency.
Adoptive home – A home which has been screened and approved for adoption through DFPS. The Adoptive Home counts do not include homes open only for receipt of adoption subsidy.
Foster-adoptive home – A home that has been approved to provide 24-hour residential care for a child, in accordance with Chapter 42 of the Human Resources Code and related regulations and that has been screened and approved have been approved for adoption through DFPS.
Foster home – A home that has been approved to provide 24-hour residential care for a child, in accordance with Chapter 42 of the Human Resources Code and related regulation.
Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis.
This dataset supports measure CLL.B.4 of SD23 and provides the number and percentage of creative-sector professionals who indicated they benefited from a City-sponsored professional development opportunity.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/rzxy-tiqz
Traffic count data collected from the several GRIDSMART optical traffic detectors deployed by the City of Austin.
This dataset is no longer updated because these devices are no longer maintained
The Travel Detectors dataset ( https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Traffic-Detectors/qpuw-8eeb ) is related to this dataset using the 'ATD Device ID' field. The Travel Detectors dataset provides more information on device location and status.
The average speed measurements may not have been calibrated for all intersections. All measurements have been collected using automated machine vision processes and have not been validated.
This dataset contains traffic incident information from the Austin-Travis County traffic reports collected from the various Public Safety agencies through a data feed from the Combined Transportation, Emergency, and Communications Center (CTECC).
For further context, see:
- Active Incidents: Map and Context - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Austin-Travis-County-Traffic-Report-Page/9qfg-4swh/
- Data Trends and Analysis - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/48n7-m3me
The dataset is updated every 5 minutes with the latest snapshot of active traffic incidents.
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
This dataset supports measure EOA.D.7 of SD23” Data Source: U.S. Census Bureau Calculation: #of households making less than 60% MFI annually within the City of Austin/total # of households making less than 60% MFI annually in the Austin Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) Measure Time Period: 2005-2017 Automated: No Date of last description update: 08.17.2020
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Ratio-of-residents-whose-income-is-less-than-60-pe/776m-fsj6/
Summary of incidents responded to by EMS Special Events during the annual Spring Festival Season
The Austin City Council approved the Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure ordinance in 2008 and revised the initiative in April 2011 to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. Single-family homeowners must have energy audits performed on their properties prior to a sale of their home. Multifamily properties older than 10 years are required to perform an audit and report the results to the City of Austin and all residents living in those communities. Commercial building owners participated in a phased-in reporting since 2012, for buildings 75,000 square feet and larger.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in CACFP as child centers for the program year 2015-2016. This includes Child Care Centers, At-Risk centers, Head Start sites, Outside School Hours sites, and Emergency Shelters . The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites operating as child centers. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Adult Day Care Centers, or child care sub-programs for previous program years, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates This data is considered historical and will no longer be updated. Data is current as of the last Date Last Updated on the source dataset published on ODP.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website."
Recidivism is calculated as a percentage of all alleged victims and child principals in alternative response and investigation stages, who did not receive any ongoing services, who had a subsequent confirmed allegation, or case open for ongoing services within 12 months.
Numerator: Number of children who have a confirmed allegation in an investigation or an open family preservation or substitute care stage within 12 months of a closed investigation or alternative response stage with no ongoing services.
Denominator: Number of alleged and confirmed victims in investigations (excluding admin closures) and alternative response stages closed 12 months prior with no ongoing services.
This data is provided to help with analysis of various violations charged throughout the City of Austin.
"Case Status" and "Race" abbreviations go as follows: Fields for Race: A, Asian B, Black BA, Black or African American CD, Client does not know CR, Client refused DNC, Data not calculated H, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander L, Hispanic or Latino ME, Middle Eastern MR, Identified Multiple Races N, Native American or Alaskan O, Other U, Unknown W, White
Case Status (Closed Y/N) TERMINATED (TERM) and TERMINATED ADMINISTRATIVELY (TERMA) = Y ACTIVE (ACT) AND INACTIVE(IN) INACTIVE = N Active, Inactive, Terminated, Terminated Administratively Inactive doesn't mean the cases is closed only TERM and TERMA.
This dataset represents wetland CEFs identified during the development review process since 1995. Prior to 1995, data is either unavailable or lost.Wetland CEFs were digitized from construction plans, environmental assessments, and City of Austin staff field observations. Features were digitized into a versioned SDE database in ArcMap. Wetland delineation may be determined through a process of negotiation with land development interests and generally reflect the most protective arrangement that could be obtained. Additionally, “fringe wetlands” were drawn using a standard 2’ width on either side of a waterway.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in CACFP as child centers for the program year 2020-2021. This includes Child Care Centers, At-Risk centers, Head Start sites, Outside School Hours sites, and Emergency Shelters . The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites operating as child centers.Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. Each record (row) represents monthly meals data for a single site and for a single CACFP center sub-program.
To filter data for a specific CACFP center Program, select "View Data" to open the Exploration Canvas filter tools. Select the program(s) of interest from the Program field. A filtering tutorial can be found HERE
In March 2020, USDA began allowing flexibility in nutrition assistance program policy to support continued meal access should the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) impact meal service operation. For more information on the waivers implemented for this purpose, please visit our website at SquareMeals.org.
For meals data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Adult Day Care Centers, “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of the program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, plea
This metric is part of the Culture & Lifelong Learning Outcome Category. The data represented is from the Parks and Recreation Department (PARD), and represents city offered lifelong learning events, activities and resources. FY21 aggregate data was provided by PARD, Austin Public Library, and the Economic Development Department. Site data is provided by PARD.
For more details and insights related to this measure visit the metric story page at: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/rxmc-jicb
Pools feature class is created to assist in City of Austin planning activities. This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of property boundaries. This product has been produced by the Communications and Technology Department for the sole purpose of geographic reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
The 84th Legislature passed HB 1378 to increase the transparency of local government debt. Under Local Government Code §140.008, political subdivisions, including counties, cities, school districts, junior college districts, certain special purpose districts, and other subdivisions of state government must annually compile their debt obligation data from the preceding fiscal year and either:
- report it to the Comptroller of Public Accounts for posting or, alternatively,
- post the information on their own websites. The information presented on the Comptroller's website and retrievable using this search tool is self-reported by submitting entities or third parties on their behalf and has not been independently verified by the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. The inclusion of an entity's information here confirms that the Comptroller received the submitted information but does not verify the entity's compliance with the terms of Local Government Code § 140.008. Specific questions or concerns regarding an entity's debt obligations should be directed to that entity.
Submission deadline is 180 days from the last day of the entity’s fiscal year.
Recidivism is calculated as a percentage of all alleged perpetrators in abuse/neglect investigations closed without services who were a confirmed perpetrator within 12 months after the prior investigation was closed without services.
Calculating this way, for example, the Fiscal Year 2019 rate reflects recidivism of alleged perpetrators in investigations closed without services in Fiscal Year 2018, the Fiscal Year 2018 rate reflects recidivism among alleged perpetrators in investigations closed without services in 2017, and so on.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Economic Development Department routinely surveys clients who participate in programs or services within a fiscal year to see the impact of the services provided. To read more about the Economic Development Department and other important measures, visit the 2022 Annual Economic Development Department Report. https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/2022-Economic-Development-Annual-Report
Percentage of participants who respond to an on-site survey reporting that the activity that they just witnessed contributed to their overall knowledge and understanding of world cultures, world history and/or arts of every discipline.
This data set supports measure CLL.C.5 of SD23.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percentage-of-participants-in-City-supported-event/ht8x-aijb/
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Digital Flood Insurance Rate Map (DFIRM) Database depicts flood risk Information And supporting data used to develop the risk data. The primary risk; classificatons used are the 4-precent-annual-chance flood event, the 1-percent-annual-chance flood event, the 0.2- percent-annual-chance flood event, and areas of minimal flood risk. The DFIRM Database is derived from Flood Insurance Studies (FISs), previously published Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs), flood hazard analyses performed in support of the FISs and FIRMs, and new mapping data, where available. The FISs and FIRMs are published by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The file is georeferenced to earth's surface using the UTM projection and coordinate system. The specifications for the horizontal control of DFIRM data files are consistent with those required for mapping at a scale of 1:12,000.
The data set supports measure M.A.8 and is comprised of the number of domestic and international non-stop destinations from the Austin airport by fiscal year. A nonstop destination is when you fly straight from one airport to another, with no stops along the way. AUS receives an annual report from the Cirium DIIO database. AUS monitors the non-stop destinations because of its implications for passenger growth. View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Number-of-Nonstop-Destinations-by-Fiscal-Year/v2qm-a67r/
Tracking the status of residential plan review cases throughout the development review cycle. One Time vs Late. Also includes location data.
Family Preservation Services (FPR) are services provided to the child and the family where the caregiver retains legal custody.
Counts children entering Family Based Safety Services Family Preservation Stages during the fiscal year.
NOTE: Family Preservation Services is under the umbrella of Family Based Safety Services (FBSS).
Total Trihalomethanes (TTHM) and Haloacetic Acids (HAA5) are disinfection byproducts that are monitored quarterly by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ). The results in this data set are calculated quarterly averages by site using the results from each sample location. Sample data for each location is available on the TTHM and HAA5 pages.
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
This measure answers the question of percentage of people working in Austin that come from outside Austin. The LODES program collects administrative records from unemployment insurance reporting systems. Residence location is derived from annual federal administrative data. LODES are produced and released at the census block level, with all tabulations consisting of paired, origin-destination flows that can also be aggregated to the residence and workplace margins.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/8nmp-gdjr
This data is provided to help with analysis of various violations charged throughout the City of Austin.
"Case Status" and "Race" abbreviations go as follows: Fields for Race: A, Asian B, Black BA, Black or African American CD, Client does not know CR, Client refused DNC, Data not calculated H, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander L, Hispanic or Latino ME, Middle Eastern MR, Identified Multiple Races N, Native American or Alaskan O, Other U, Unknown W, White
Case Status (Closed Y/N) TERMINATED (TERM) and TERMINATED ADMINISTRATIVELY (TERMA) = Y ACTIVE (ACT) AND INACTIVE(IN) INACTIVE = N Active, Inactive, Terminated, Terminated Administratively Inactive doesn't mean the cases is closed only TERM and TERMA.
Collin CAD Open-Space Land Valuation; Agricultural Use Valuation; Timber Use Valuation; Recreational, Park, and Scenic Land Valuation; and Public Access Airport Property List (Texas Administrative Code 9.3012)
This chart counts the number of unique children in DFPS custody who lived in an adoptive placement at some point during the fiscal year and the total number of adoptive placements during the year. Children can have more than one adoptive placement. This chart includes children in DFPS custody for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through Permanent Managing Conservatorship.
An adoptive placement occurs when the child's caseworker, the family's case manager, and the adoptive family sign paperwork officially placing the child in the home for adoption. Before the paperwork can be signed, a child must be free for adoption (meaning a court has terminated parental rights), have a permanency goal of adoption and the family must have been approved for adoption through a licensed child placing agency.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on adoption and all DFPS programs.
This feature class represents the boundaries of the City of Austin Neighborhood Planning Areas (NPA). The status of these areas, as directed by City Council, can either be plan approved, planning underway/set to begin, future planning area, or non-neighborhood planning area. Future planning area boundaries may change before they are set by the City Council to begin. See https://www.austintexas.gov/department/planning-and-zoning/plans for more information.
Terms of Use This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of property boundaries. This product has been produced by the City of Austin for the sole purpose of geographic reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
The 84th Legislature passed HB 1378 to increase the transparency of local government debt. Under Local Government Code §140.008, political subdivisions, including counties, cities, school districts, junior college districts, certain special purpose districts, and other subdivisions of state government must annually compile their debt obligation data from the preceding fiscal year and either:
- report it to the Comptroller of Public Accounts for posting or, alternatively,
- post the information on their own websites. The information presented on the Comptroller's website and retrievable using this search tool is self-reported by submitting entities or third parties on their behalf and has not been independently verified by the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. The inclusion of an entity's information here confirms that the Comptroller received the submitted information but does not verify the entity's compliance with the terms of Local Government Code § 140.008. Specific questions or concerns regarding an entity's debt obligations should be directed to that entity.
Submission deadline is 180 days from the last day of the entity’s fiscal year.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Day Care Homes for the program year 2024-2025. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Day Care Homes. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP),and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
The Recapitulation dataset displays the data of summarized and consolidated information related to a construction contract. This recapitulation includes information such as the unit of measurement, quantity of work completed, unit price, cost, and vendor information.
TxDOT uses this information to determine the amount work has been completed according to the contract specifications. Recapitulation dataset includes data in previous month.
This data has been collected as part of a larger project by the City of Austin's Watershed Protection and Development Review Department to inventory its drainage infrastructure and create a GIS to store this information. The project includes an internal team developing a GIS based on record documents and an external team locating ground level appurtenances using GPS field collection units. The data in this data set represents the former.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Adult Day Care centers for program year 2016-2017. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Adult Day Care centers. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
This measure answers the question of percentage of zip codes that are comprised of 70 percent of more of the composition or race of residents. This indicator calculated the mix by dividing a racial category by total population. Data collected from the U.S. Census Bureau, American Communities Survey (5yr), Race (Table B02001). American Communities Survey (ACS) is a survey with sampled statistics on the citywide level and is subject to a margin of error. ACS sample size and data quality measures can be found on the U.S. Census website in the Methodology section. View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/scuh-nqaj
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in CACFP as child centers for the program year 2021-2022. This includes Child Care Centers, At-Risk centers, Head Start sites, Outside School Hours sites, and Emergency Shelters . The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites operating as child centers.Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. Each record (row) represents monthly meals data for a single site and for a single CACFP center sub-program.
To filter data for a specific CACFP center Program, select "View Data" to open the Exploration Canvas filter tools. Select the program(s) of interest from the Program field. A filtering tutorial can be found HERE
For meals data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Adult Day Care Centers, “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of the program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website."
Specific Regulating Districts are areas that prescribe zoning and development regulations intended to encourage compact, walkable and mixed-use development. See http://austintexas.gov/department/specific-area-regulations for more information.
This is dataset contains the height subdistricts that apply to areas rezoned into the density bonus program of the Equitable Transit-Oriented Development (ETOD) Overlay, known as Density Bonus ETOD or DBETOD.
The associated map displays Height Subdistrict 1 (in purple) allows a maximum of 120 feet, while height Subdistrict 2 (in blue) allows a maximum of 90 feet.
These data are up to date as of September 2024.
The Parks and Recreation Department offers a wide variety of programs for youth and teens, adults and 50+/seniors at our Community Recreation Centers. This dataset contains the name, address, zip code, phone number, and website url for all of PARD's recreation centers.
For more information, please visit https://www.austintexas.gov/department/community-recreation-centers
The Fleet Mobility Services Department is responsible for providing safe and reliable mobile solutions to ensure the continuity of city services. In addition, Fleet’s strategy is to lead, design and incorporate "Sharing, Electric Vehicles, Telematics, and Autonomous Mobility Services" for City employees by providing cost-effective and accessible forms of modality to transport City employees. The primary goals are to reduce transportation costs, traffic congestion and under-utilized fleet assets while improving the health, environment, safety and livability of Austin. The cost per mile of City-owned fleet is below the industry average of $1.19. The data is maintained in Fleet's asset management system. Row level data displays the cost in dollars per mile of City-owned fleet. View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/i7kr-sc6e
The City of Austin through the Capital Area Council of Governments (CAPCOG) contracted Sanborn Mapping, Inc. to update the City of Austin's planimetric database. The planimetrics were created from imagery acquired in Spring 2003 using photogrammetric techniques. This particular represents the index grid of the delivered data from that contract as of the Spring of 2003 This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of property boundaries. This product has been produced by the Communications and Technology Department for the sole purpose of geographic reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
Collin CAD Absolute Exemption List (Texas Administrative Code 9.3011)
This table shows overall ATCEMS response interval performance for entire fiscal years. Data in the table is broken out by incident response priority and service area (City of Austin or Travis County).
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This data is based on https://data.austintexas.gov/Building-and-Development/Land-Database-2016/nuca-fzpt. Please see that dataset for more information.
This dataset contains information about the percent variance between the actual and budgeted revenue (SD23 measure GTW.A.8). The City of Austin has numerous revenue sources, including charges for services/goods, taxes, and more. This measure helps provide insight about whether the City is receiving as much revenue as anticipated.
For each revenue type and year, this dataset provides the budgeted revenue, actual revenue, and percent variance. This data comes from the City of Austin's Open Budget (Revenue Budget) application.
View more details and insights related to this dataset on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percent-Variance-Between-Actual-and-Budgeted-Reven/wmvj-b5er/
The comparing of three years of data of students graduating,
This is a historical measure from Strategic Direction 2023.
Racially/Ethnically Concentrated Areas of Poverty (R/ECAPs) must have a non-white population of 50 percent or more. Regarding the poverty threshold, neighborhoods of extreme poverty are census tracts with 40 percent or more of individuals living at or below the poverty line. Calculation involved totaling the number and percentage of tracts that are meet criteria for RECAP. Learn more about the HUD RECAP calculation process here: http://hudgis-hud.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/56de4edea8264fe5a344da9811ef5d6e_0. Data collected from the HUD portal
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/qn7g-mcec
This dataset provides information on individuals experiencing sheltered or unsheltered homelessness in the Austin/Travis County Continuum of Care (CoC) on a single night in January when the Point in Time (PIT) Count occurs. "Sheltered" homelessness refers to individuals residing in emergency shelter, safe haven, or transitional housing project types. Unsheltered homelessness refers to individuals with a primary nighttime residence that is a public or private place not designed for or ordinarily used as a regular sleeping accommodation for human beings, including a car, park, abandoned building, bus or train station, airport, or camping ground on the night designated for the count. This measure overlaps, but is different from, the annual count of sheltered homelessness in HMIS (SD23 Measure EOA.E.1b).
Data Source: The data for this measure was reported to the City of Austin by the Ending Community Homelessness Coalition (ECHO). Each year, ECHO, as the homeless Continuum of Care Lead Agency (CoC Lead), aggregates and reports community wide data (including this measure) to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). This data is referred to as System Performance Measures as they are designed to examine how well a community is responding to homelessness at a system level.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/hjiv-t2tm
Last Updated December 2020 with data for 2020 PIT Count.
This dataset provides information about the median City property tax as a percentage of median family income (SD23 measure GTW.A.1). The Travis County Appraisal District (TCAD) property value file, the annually adopted City property tax rate, and median income data from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) all contribute to the data supporting this measure.
This data can be used to help understand trends of affordability and the cost of city services over time in Austin.
View more details and insights related to this dataset on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/7kz2-s6y2
These polygons are intended to be used with the ETOD Typologies dataset (https://datahub.austintexas.gov/Locations-and-Maps/ETOD-Typologies/hdpr-6wvx/about_data). They represent a half-mile buffer around each Project Connect station. The half-mile distance is intended to reflect the area that is within a 10 minute walk, bike, or roll from the station.
City Code §4-8-8(C) now requires departments to obtain written disclosure of specific information when engaging in face-to-face, scheduled meetings with visitors who meet specific criteria. This is the visitor log for visitors who meet that criteria at the City of Austin Transportation Department's office locations at:
- 3701 Lake Austin Blvd ("LCRA")
- 1501 Toomey Rd. ("Toomey Rd")
- 1111 Rio Grande St. ("Rio Grande")
Related Ordinance: http://www.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=265293
Inventory of absent and existing sidewalks, driveways and pedestrian facilities for the City of Austin. This layer depicts an inventory of sidewalk infrastructure. This data was collected in 2006/2007 as part of the sidewalk master plan.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This dataset contains information on the handful of dynamic message signs (DMS) deployed across the City of Austin. The data is updated every hour and is maintained by the Arterial Management Division of the City of Austin Transportation and Public Works Department.
We do not retain any historical data pertaining to these assets. The asset updates once an hour and the messaging may change more than once during that window. Should connectivity issues occur, the signs may still display old messages that differ from the ones reflected in this dataset.
This dataset is currently under active development and is subject to change at any time. Please note that it may contain incomplete or inaccurate information.
For Austin area dynamic messages signs maintained by Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT), see https://its.txdot.gov/its/District/AUS/dms-messages
Based on the Family Group Decision Making (FGDM) philosophy, Circles of Support (COS) are meetings that focus on the youth and their plans for transitioning to a successful adulthood. They are led by the youth whenever possible. Participants represent a broad spectrum of the youth’s support network. The youth choses who they want to include in their COS: Participants can be the youth’s siblings, birth family members, foster or kinship care providers, teachers, relatives, church members, friends, mentors, and anyone else who is willing and able to support the youth into adulthood. These participants come together to develop and review the youth's plans for transitioning to a successful adulthood, including strengths, hopes and dreams, and goals. The plans cover needs in the areas of education, employment, mental and physical health, housing, and all Preparation for Adult Living (PAL) life skills training components. The COS is about having discussions with the youth about what is needed and important to the youth and how participants can support the youth.
The Fleet Mobility Services Department tracks number of crashes involving City vehicles for vehicle life cycle management. Collecting accident information helps ensure the continuity of city services by assisting with the planning for department needs while vehicles are being repaired or replaced. This strategic measure details the total number of accidents within a fiscal year, taken from the department's asset management system. Row level data displays the total number of accidents within a fiscal year by department.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/kzsj-wd2x
Combination of stream centerlines created from aerial orthophotography, planimetrics based on LIDAR data "Hydro_L" (a non continuous stream) and construction plans which has been updated and edited to be a continuous stream. Creeks_line_mains is the maintenance version of this layer. One item in the "Fea_Code" attribute domain has been renamed from "Concrete lined open channel" to "altered channel" and an additional domain descriptor has been added called "Altered channel (roadside)". The "Comments" field is used to further define an altered channel's sub-type as "Concrete lined". Features previously labeled as concrete lined in the "Fea-Code" field are identified as such in the "Comments" field. Identifying altered channels (roadsides) will be on an ongoing basis.
Locations where environmental sampling has been either planned or performed or may be performed in the future. Some locations have not been sampled; some have been discontinued due to access constraints; some are locations sampled by partner agencies
This dataset is a work in progress and will update without warning.
Road closures from AMANDA for workzones. Either Temporary use of right of way permits (TRUPs) or excavation permits (EX). Does not include secondary or emergency permits. Only "Active" permits that are on-going or planned appear in this dataset.
This data asset provides the geographic boundaries the City of Austin's City Council Districts, including detailed district shapes and associated geographic coordinates. It is essential for understanding political representation and local governance within the city. By offering this data, we empower city planners, policy analysts, community organizers, and businesses to make informed decisions related to electoral boundaries, public services, and district-level analysis. It also supports more effective civic engagement and resource allocation by helping stakeholders identify key areas of influence and need across the city's council districts.
Terms of Use This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of property boundaries. This product has been produced by the City of Austin for the sole purpose of geographic reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
This dataset contains data about the conditions of sidewalks maintained by the City of Austin Public Works Department. It does not include sidewalks maintained by private parties or other government entities.
This network currently contains about 2700 miles of sidewalks, of which 616 miles have been assessed. Condition assessment is a manual process, requiring people to walk the sidewalks, measure their conditions, and record observations and measurements in a cloud database that is tied to a map of the sidewalks. This dataset describes conditions as of the FY2019 assessment, which includes all high priority and very high priority sidewalks as described in the City of Austin Sidewalk Master Plan adopted in June 2016. Lower priority sidewalks are present in the dataset, but without an assessment of their condition. Assessment of the remaining part of the network should be completed by the conclusion of FY2021.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/t3ve-rx4s
This dataset supports measure M.C.5 of SD 2023. The sources of data are the American Community Survey and the Austin Transportation Department. Each row displays the percentage of people in different demographic categories who participated in mobility engagement process as compared to percentage of people in the same demographic category in Austin. This dataset can be used to understand how well the City reaches different communities and subpopulations when soliciting public input. View more details at https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percentage-of-participants-in-mobility-public-enga/pfnb-5uev/.
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
This measure answers the question of what is the rate of change for the share of the total city population that is African-American. Calculated the difference of percentage of share over reporting period. Data collected from the U.S. Census Bureau, American Communities Survey (ACS) (1-yr), Race (table B02001), except for 2020 data, which are from the 2020 Decennial Census Count. American Communities Survey is a survey with sampled statistics on the citywide level and is subject to a margin of error. ACS sample size and data quality measures can be found on the U.S. Census website in the Methodology section.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/6p8t-s826
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
Whenever CPS removes a child from his or her home and places the child in substitute care, staff must engage in permanency planning on behalf of the child to ensure that the child can return the child’s family if and when this can be accomplished or be placed permanently with an alternative family, preferably a kinship family, as soon as possible.
Federal and state law provide only four acceptable permanency goals: Family Reunification, Adoption, Permanent Managing Conservatorship to a relative or suitable individual or Another Planned Permanent Living Arrangement.
These counts do not reflect all children in DFPS Legal Responsibility on August 31, only those with a permanency goal.
This data set exists to understand the financial requirements to live in Travis County to support a family. The data source is reported every two years by the University of Washington's Self-Sufficiency Standard which has been monitoring county-level data across the United States since the mid-1990's. Dr. Diana Pearce is the creator of the Self-Sufficiency Standard. This data can be used to craft policy, targeting resources, and one-on-one job coaching counseling.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page here: data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/rt9q-qkym
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This table contains data from a survey about the Millenium Youth Entertainment Complex, conducted as part of an Audit of the City's Cultural Centers. This survey was sent out to stakeholders based on reports from City and Millennium Youth Entertainment Complex staff. The survey opened on December 20, 2019 and closed January 10, 2020. Of the 5,181 individuals invited to complete the survey, 695 responded. Percentages in the tables of the appendix may not total 100 due to rounding.
This dataset supports measure CLL.B.2 of SD23 and reports the total number of jobs per North American Industry Classification System [NAICS] codes in the Austin metro area. Data sourced from Creative Vitality Suite.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/nhps-8c54
The Austin Transportation Department manages thousands of IP-enabled devices which enable traffic signal operations. Devices include traffic cameras, battery backup systems, signal controllers, and vehicle detectors.
This dataset, updated daily, serves as a log of attempts to communicate with the various various devices on the traffic signals network.
Currently incarcerated inmate population with relevant demographic, offense, and parole information.
About the Dataset This dataset contains: A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that had findings as a result of their most recent Administrative Review with TDA, including: List of findings Type of Findings Corresponding administrative review question This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
This data is provided to help with analysis of various violations charged throughout the City of Austin's Downtown Community Court.
"Case Status" and "Race" abbreviations go as follows: Race - A, Asian B, Black BA, Black or African American CD, Client does not know CR, Client refused DNC, Data not calculated H, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander L, Hispanic or Latino ME, Middle Eastern MR, Identified Multiple Races N, Native American or Alaskan O, Other U, Unknown W, White
Case Status - Y = closed || N = Not closed TERMINATED (TERM) and TERMINATED ADMINISTRATIVELY (TERMA) = Y ACTIVE (ACT) AND INACTIVE(IN) INACTIVE = N Active, Inactive, Terminated, Terminated Administratively Inactive doesn't mean the cases is closed only TERM and TERMA.
This dataset supports measure M.D.1 of SD 2023. It includes basic crash information that is primarily derived from TxDOT and supplemented with City staff analysis. This data tracks how our community is doing toward achieving the policy goal of zero traffic-related deaths or serious injuries adopted by City Council. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page:https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/a5fa-t7pt/
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in CACFP as child centers for the program year 2017-2018. This includes Child Care Centers, At-Risk centers, Head Start sites, Outside School Hours sites, and Emergency Shelters . The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites operating as child centers.Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. Each record (row) represents monthly meals data for a single site and for a single CACFP center sub-program.
To filter data for a specific CACFP center Program, select "View Data" to open the Exploration Canvas filter tools. Select the program(s) of interest from the Program field. A filtering tutorial can be found HERE
For meals data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Adult Day Care Centers, “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of the program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website."
Annual number of physical items checked out by library for fiscal year 2023. Formats break the circulation down by audience and material type.
This chart counts the number of unique children in DFPS custody who lived in an adoptive placement at some point during the fiscal year and the total number of adoptive placements during the year. Children can have more than one adoptive placement. This chart includes children in DFPS custody for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through Permanent Managing Conservatorship.
An adoptive placement occurs when the child's caseworker, the family's case manager, and the adoptive family sign paperwork officially placing the child in the home for adoption. Before the paperwork can be signed, a child must be free for adoption (meaning a court has terminated parental rights), have a permanency goal of adoption and the family must have been approved for adoption through a licensed child placing agency.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on adoption and all DFPS programs.
City Code §4-8-8(C) now requires departments to obtain written disclosure of specific information when engaging in face-to-face, scheduled meetings with visitors who meet specific criteria. This is the visitor log for the Development Services Department.
Related Ordinance: http://www.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=265293
This dataset represents the SD 2023 mobility measures and others calculated on a monthly basis, adjusted for the current alignments of major city corridors and the latest mapping layout contained within the anonymous travel speed data provided by INRIX. Each row represents a metric recorded for each hour in an average weekend or weekday for corresponding major corridors.
Corridor definitions: https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Major-City-Corridors-for-Strategic-Measures/iyqh-bgm4
The Council Items Update Report (CIUR) system is a project management tool utilized by City departments to monitor progress of Council-adopted policy initiatives and directives, and track these items to their completion. These items are included under the “Items From Council” agenda heading during each City Council meeting, and typically take the form of a resolution. This public portal allows users to view past Council actions (since 2015) and their respective status updates.
Open Record Requests dating from 1999 to 2024. These records include the Agency that the record was requested from. Along with regulatory and financial information.
The Small and Minority Business Resources Department's Compliance Division performs desk audits to verify prime contractors adhere to the requirements on the project and ensure they are performing work as outlined in the contract.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
Spirit of East Austin attendees were asked to fill out a survey as they were leaving the event. Please find here all the data from those surveys.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/9ssh-bavk
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Adult Day Care centers for program year 2024 - 2025. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Adult Day Care centers. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This table contains aggregated street condition data for each fiscal year beginning in FY2018. A contract vendor surveys street conditions for one-third to one-half of the City of Austin each year. The reported value each year represents the aggregate reported conditions for the three most recent years as of the year reported. Detailed condition data for the most recent fiscal year can be found in the dataset Strategic Measure_Street Segment Condition Data.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/kara-xhcd.
This table describes Communications Center compliance with Medical Priority Dispatch System (MPDS) performance standards. Performance targets are based on Accredited Center of Excellence (ACE) standards set forth by the International Academies of Emergency Dispatch.
This dataset supports measure M.A.3 of SD 2023. The source of the data is the Listening to the Workforce Survey, an annual survey conducted by the City of Austin of it's employees. Each row represents the overall average mode split among City of Austin employees based on the responses to the survey. This dataset can be used to understand the trend in predicted and actual average travel time. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page : https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/39pk-y8ma
Effective March 1st, 2022, this dataset is no longer maintained. For current micromobility data, please refer to our 3rd-party data provider's dashboard: https://public.ridereport.com/austin.
Please note: Only aggregated data is currently available for micromobility trips. For several reasons, including privacy concerns, individual trip data is no longer being collected.
This dataset contains shared micromobility vehicle trip data reported to the City of Austin Transportation and Public Works Department as part of the Shared Small Vehicle Mobility Systems operating rules.
Note that our official trip reporting metrics only include trips which meet the following criteria: - Trip distance greater than or equal to 0.1 miles and less than 500 miles - Trip duration less than 24 hours
Read more at about Austin's dockless mobility services at https://austintexas.gov/micromobility
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The dataset contains annual Landlord/Tenant caseload information by court from 2018-2022. Landlord/Tenant cases include: 1) Eviction- All suits for eviction (recovery of possession of premises) brought to recover possession of real property under Chapter 24 of the Texas Property Code, often by a landlord against a tenant. A claim for rent may be joined with an eviction case if the amount of rent due and unpaid is not more than $20,000, excluding statutory interest and court costs but including attorney fees, if any. Eviction cases filed on or after September 1, 2023, are governed by Rules 500-507 and 510 for Part V of the Rules of Civil Procedure. 2) Repair and Remedy- A case by a residential tenant under Chapter 92, Subchapter B, of the Texas Property Code to enforce the landlord’s duty to repair or remedy a condition materially affecting the physical health or safety of an ordinary tenant. Repair and remedy cases filed on or after September 1, 2013, are governed by Rules 500-507 and 509 of Part V of the Rules of Civil Procedure.
This chart counts the number of unique children in DFPS custody who lived in an adoptive placement at some point during the fiscal year. Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis. An adoptive placement occurs when the child's caseworker, the family's case manager, and the adoptive family sign paperwork officially placing the child in the home for adoption. Before the paperwork can be signed, a child must be free for adoption (meaning a court has terminated parental rights), have a permanency goal of adoption and the family must have been approved for adoption through a licensed child placing agency.
Children may have more than one disabling condition.
Drug/Alcohol disabling condition can either be due to self-abuse or exposure to an individual with the condition.
Other includes teen parent or pregnant teen.
Please visit dfps.state.tx.us for more information about DFPS Adoptions and all our programs.
This dataset reflects existing small area plans, but the recommendations, and their associated metadata, have not been updated since 2020. The Planning Department's Small Area Planning team is currently developing a new assessment and product to display the implementation status of existing small area plans.
This dataset shows recommendations from adopted City of Austin small area plans including neighborhood plans, transit station area plans, and corridor plans. Recommendations that do not have a specific geographic location are not mapped. To view the data with different colored symbols based on the recommendation type, view the ArcGIS Online Map at http://bit.ly/1xIbGq3.
This dataset supports measure M.A.2.a of SD 2023. The source of the data is Capital Metro. Each row displays the statistics related to performance by time.This dataset can be used to know more about on-time performance trends for transit in Austin. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page : https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/M-A-2-a-Transit-Travel-Time-Reliability-percent-ch/ktzy-fxx3/
Point feature class of specialty markings on the City of Austin maintained streets. The assets were referenced using NearMap imagery and work orders submitted through the Signs and Markings Data Tracker. The dataset use segment ID and intersection ID as a spatial reference. Specialty markings are seperated into types that include arrows, word legends, parking space boundaries, raised pavement markings (RPM), symbols, and other pavement markings.
Under SO2024-0008386, passed by City Council on 4/17/2024, the Department of Family and Support Services publishes data on the City-operated and City-funded emergency new arrivals shelters. This series of datasets contains data related to the Limited Stay Policy. This dataset shows the total number of migrants who exited each shelter under this policy, each day.
The Transitional Living Services Program includes the Preparation for Adult Living (PAL) program, Education and Training Voucher (ETV) program and other services and supports to help youth transition from foster care to a successful adulthood.
PAL services ensure that youth in DFPS foster care and those transitioning from foster care to a successful adulthood receive the tools, resources, supports, and personal and community connections they need to become self-sufficient adults. PAL supportive services and benefits are provided to eligible youth and young adults ages 16 to 21. 14-15 year old youth in the Permanent Managing Conservatorship (PMC) of DFPS will receive a life skills assessment. All other youth age 14 and 15 can be served, if funding or resources are available.
The ETV program can assist youth and young adults ages 16-23. ETV services can be provided to eligible youth and young adults for 5 years or 15 semesters up to their 23rd birthday.
The total attendance at multicultural activities at PARD is computed by combining the operational measures total visits to educational and cultural facilities and adding it to the total attendance at free cultural special events hosted by the Museums & Cultural Programs Division (MCP). This data set is the breakdown by site.
This metric supports the SD23 Culture & Lifelong Learning Outcome Category.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ay42-mvrx
Updated Oct. 2023
This dataset represents the SD 2023 mobility measures and others calculated on a yearly basis (both Fiscal and Calendar Years), adjusted for the current alignments of major city corridors and the latest mapping layout contained within the anonymous travel speed data provided by INRIX. Each row represents a metric recorded for each hour in an average weekend or weekday for corresponding major corridors. Corridor definitions:
Corridor definitions: https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Major-City-Corridors-for-Strategic-Measures/iyqh-bgm4
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website.
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for CACFP participating as Adult Day Care centers for program year 2015-2016. The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites participating as Adult Day Care centers. Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. For reimbursement data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Child Care Centers, At-Risk Child Care Centers, Head Start Centers, emergency shelters, or centers providing care for students outside school hours, please refer to the corresponding “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
Entrances and exits to surface and garage parking lots in the downtown area of Austin, TX.
The data is also available as an Esri File Geodatabase, here: http://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=c84e634d0d074d70b3cdb2da4e065dda
This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of property boundaries.
This product has been produced by Austin Transportation Department for the sole purpose of geographic reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
This dataset is quarterly data by county, including inmate admissions, average Texas Christian University Drug Screen II (TCU) score, number and percent of inmate admissions who identify opioids as top three drug of choice, inmates with a substance abuse problem, and number and percent who used opioids in the year prior to admission. This data is available starting with the first Quarter of Calendar Year 2016. Updated 12.2.2024 to correct latitude / longitude error.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This table contains performance data related to ATCEMS revenue collection processes.
When using this data for research or other purposes, please cite it as:
Emergency Medical Services Department. (2017). EMS - Monthly Finance Measures [Data set]. City of Austin, Texas Open Data Portal. https://doi.org/10.26000/001.000008.
Since this table is updated on a monthly basis, include the date that the table was accessed in the citation.
Transportation Fuels Spot Prices dataset provides weekly average spot price information for New York Harbor Conventional Gasoline, New York Harbor Ultra-Low Sulfur Diesel as well as Western Texas Intermediate (WTI) and Brent crude oil. The data is presented as a weekly average from June 2006 through current. Jet fuel wholesale price is included on a monthly basis on a 3 month lag.
How does your organization use this dataset? What other NYSERDA or energy-related datasets would you like to see on Open NY? Let us know by emailing OpenNY@nyserda.ny.gov.
Line feature class of specialty markings on the City of Austin maintained streets. The assets were referenced using NearMap imagery and work orders submitted through the Signs and Markings Data Tracker. The dataset use segment ID and intersection ID as a spatial reference. Specialty markings include delineators, curbs, raised pavement marking lane seperators, and concrete domes.
Strategic Direction 2023 (SD23) Measure HE.D.3 reports the number and percentage of creeks and lakes in good or excellent health. This measure is calculated every two years using the monitoring data from the Watershed Protection Department's Environmental Integrity Index (EII) and Austin Lakes Index (ALI) programs. These programs monitor and assess the chemical, biological, and physical integrity of Austin’s creeks and lakes.
Note: Due to software limitations, the scores for one biennial reporting period (e.g., FY2013/2014) are repeated twice in the dataset in order to enable the creation of data visualizations that require annual reporting.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/d5yi-gac8
This dataset contains records of work completed and in-progress work from June 2018 to present for the purpose of installing and maintaining street signs in the City of Austin full purpose jurisdiction. This work is managed by the Signs & Markings division of the City of Austin Transportation and Public Works Department.
You may also be interested in these related datasets, which can be joined together using the work order ID columns:
- Signs and Markings Time Logs: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Work-Order-Signs-Markings-Time-Logs/qvth-gwdv
This directory was compiled through a 2016 community mapping process as part of The City of Austin Cultural Arts Division's Cultural Asset Mapping Project (CAMP). The directory is a comprehensive list of arts and cultural facilities, creative businesses and organizations, public art, and any other cultural or creative resources submitted by CAMP participants as cultural assets. For more information on CAMP and how you can use this directory, visit www.austintexas.gov/culturemapping.
The Urban Trails dataset describes a specific type of pedestrian and bicycle-user infrastructure. The ideal design of an Urban Trail is an off-street, 12 foot wide concrete path that can accommodate a variety of trail users including bicyclists, pedestrians, wheel chair users, parents with strollers, kids on razor scooters and so on. Since the first Urban Trails Master Plan was adopted in September 2014 not all existing trail segments in this dataset strictly comply with the guidelines described in Appendix A: Trail Design Criteria of the Urban Trails Master Plan. The Urban Trails network is intended to be a part of the greater Active Transportation Network and may relate to the on-street bicycle network or the sidewalk network, as well as City of Austin parks. In this dataset, many Urban Trail endpoints connect to the City of Austin’s streets dataset or the City of Austin’s parks dataset.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in CACFP as child centers for the program year 2018-2019. This includes Child Care Centers, At-Risk centers, Head Start sites, Outside School Hours sites, and Emergency Shelters . The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites operating as child centers.Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. Each record (row) represents monthly meals data for a single site and for a single CACFP center sub-program.
To filter data for a specific CACFP center Program, select "View Data" to open the Exploration Canvas filter tools. Select the program(s) of interest from the Program field. A filtering tutorial can be found HERE
For meals data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Adult Day Care Centers, “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of the program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website."
Line feature class of short line markings. The assets were referenced using NearMap imagery and work orders submitted through the Signs and Markings Data Tracker. The short line assets use segment ID and intersection ID as a spatial reference. Short line includes crosswalks, stop lines, school zone lines, and yield lines.
Family Group Decision Making (FGDM) is a collaborative approach to service planning and decision making. Using the FGDM approach, families join with relatives, friends, and others in the community to develop a plan to ensure children are cared for and protected from future harm. This broader constellation of “family” convenes with information providers/community supports and CPS caseworkers in a unique partnership that empowers the “family group” with a high degree of decision-making authority and responsibility. FGCs generally are held after a child is removed, but may also be used before removal when the family receives Family Based Safety Services.
More information at www.dfps.texas.gov.
Urban Roadways identified in the May 12, 2005 City Council Approved Design Standards Policy Document, with recommended amendments made August 4, 2006. A copy of the ordinance can be found at http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/development/downloads/final.pdf.Urban Roadways are roads other than those designated as Core Transit Corridors and Highways located within the following boundaries, as shown on Figure 2: • 183 from Burnet to Hwy 71 • Hwy 71 from 183 to Loop 1 • Loop 1 from Hwy 71 to Lake Austin • Lake Austin from Loop 1 to Exposition • Exposition from Lake Austin to 35th • 35th from Exposition to Loop 1 • Loop 1 from 38th to RM 2222 • RM2222 from Loop 1 to Mesa • Mesa from RM 2222 to Spicewood Springs Road • Spicewood Springs Road from Mesa to 360 • 360 from Spicewood Springs Road to Great Hills Trail • Great Hills Trail from 360 to 183 • 183 from Great Hills Trail to Braker • Braker from 183 to Burnet • Burnet from Braker to 183
About the Dataset This dataset contains: A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that had findings as a result of their most recent Procurement Review with TDA, including: List of findings Type of Findings Corresponding administrative review question This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) Data
About the Dataset This data set contains claims information for meal reimbursement for sites participating in CACFP as child centers for the program year 2016-2017. This includes Child Care Centers, At-Risk centers, Head Start sites, Outside School Hours sites, and Emergency Shelters . The CACFP program year begins October 1 and ends September 30.
This dataset only includes claims submitted by CACFP sites operating as child centers.Sites can participate in multiple CACFP sub-programs. Each record (row) represents monthly meals data for a single site and for a single CACFP center sub-program.
To filter data for a specific CACFP center Program, select "View Data" to open the Exploration Canvas filter tools. Select the program(s) of interest from the Program field. A filtering tutorial can be found HERE
For meals data on CACFP participants operating as Day Care Homes, Adult Day Care Centers, “Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP) – Meal Reimbursement” dataset for that sub-program available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal.
An overview of all CACFP data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Child and Adult Care Food Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates TDA aims to post new program year data by December 15 of the active program year. Participants have 60 days to file monthly reimbursement claims. Dataset updates will occur daily until 90 days after the close of the program year. After 90 days from the close of the program year, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of the program year before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, the Child and Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), and the summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit our website."
The City of Austin Brownfields Revitalization Office partners with local governments and other associations to support the revitalization of brownfields. Brownfield revitalization is a way to return a property to the community as a greenspace or as a commercial, residential or mixed-use development. Brownfields are abandoned, idle or under-utilized properties where revitalization is hindered by real or perceived environmental contamination. Brownfields are real property, where the expansion, redevelopment or reuse may be complicated by the presence or potential presence of a hazardous substance, pollutant or contaminant. The column with ftp folder # corresponds to another posted dataset Brownfield Site Data which provides links to supporting documents for each of the sites.
Data set description: Data demonstrates the percent of Austin Public Clients that receive a preventative health screening and are referred to a health care provided or community based resources and subsequently follow up on that referral.
This data set supports measure HE.B.5 of SD23.
Data Source is Austin Public Health Department Program Data.
Measure HE.B.5 Calculation:
Numerator Number of Austin Public Health Clients that followed up with a community based resource or health care provider referral.
Denominator, Number of Austin Public Health Clients receiving a preventative care screening that were referred to a community based resource or healthcare provider.
Measure time period Annually (Fiscal Year)
Automated: No
Date of last description update: 3/5/2020
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/n4an-tr8w
This report is the result of the Austin City Code 6-7's Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approves in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, Which is to offset 1200 megawatts of Peak Energy by 2025.
The Audit results are averages of the energy efficiency measures evaluated on site during the audit.
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
A resident in a complete community is someone residing in an area that is within a 20 minute walk to multiple essential destinations. Calculation method: This study measured the distance and time it takes for a pedestrian to reach five essential destination, or "indicators," from any point across the city using the existing network of sidewalks and crossings within a 20-minute walk time. Using GIS software, this evaluation resulted in a rasterized overlay of geographic outlines of “walksheds” surrounding each indicator destination. Residential estimates were found using an internal database of residential housing units and applied density assumptions and should not be compared to other demographic datasets. Data was sourced from City of Austin, CapMetro, and Austin ISD.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/rw4g-mrjp
This report is the result of the Austin City Code 6-7’s Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 800 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2020. This report contains information on commercial facilities that have reported the EPA’s Energy Star Portfolio Manager benchmarking results in 2014 () to the City of Austin, as well as the calculated electric Energy Utilization Index (EUI). For information on ECAD exemptions and other requirements, see Austin City Code Chapter 6-7. Note – () Data reported by Commercial Customers
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This dataset describes infrastructure conditions at the network level for assets included in the 2020 Comprehensive Infrastructure Assessment (CIA). Conditions presented in this dataset are not weighted by Current Replacement Value. Data for the CIA is collected every two years.
Data comes from the survey of participating departments conducted every two years during the compilation of the CIA. Each row of the table shows the distribution of asset conditions for an infrastructure network for the year listed.
Observations of Barton Springs Salamanders at Austin's Barton Springs (a complex of several springs) with abundance as observed by size classes with several covariates. Discharge data from USGS: https://waterdata.usgs.gov/tx/nwis/uv/?site_no=08155500&PARAmeter_cd=00065,00060
This dataset supports measure M.A.2.a of SD 2023. The source of the data is the Capital Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Each row displays the statistics related to performance by time.This dataset can be used to know more about on-time performance trends for transit in Austin. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page : https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/M-A-2-a-Transit-Travel-Time-Reliability-percent-ch/ktzy-fxx3/
Collin CAD Partial Exemption Lists (Texas Administrative Code 9.3010)
This dataset provides the public an opportunity to review the measures of each city department and helps to maintain open communication and transparency with Austin residents. It is the dataset form of the online database, ePerformance Measures, found on the City’s website here: http://www.austintexas.gov/budget/eperf/index.cfm. The City of Austin is committed to providing the highest quality services to our community members. As efforts to be the most livable and best managed city in the country continue, this dataset provides valuable information needed to sustain service levels, strive for excellence, and continue improvement. Performance measures provide departmental staff and management with the critical operating information they need to assess quality service delivery and measure success. Measures provide City management key decision-making information for resource allocation, process improvements and other management decisions. Measures also provide the City Council comprehensive data on each department's primary operating functions. Further information on some of the key terms utilized throughout the dataset can be accessed through the Definitions section of the ePerf website: http://www.austintexas.gov/budget/eperf/index.cfm?fuseaction=home.Definitions. The data shown in the dataset is based on the most updated information available and could change as more current information is provided.
If you have any questions or comments regarding this database, or any budget inquiry, please contact the Budget Office via email at coa.budget@austintexas.gov or telephone at (512) 974-2610.
This data has been collected as part of a larger project by the City of Austin's Watershed Protection and Development Review Department to inventory its drainage infrastructure and create a GIS to store this information. The project includes an internal team developing a GIS based on record documents and an external team locating ground level appurtenances using GPS field collection units. The data in this data set represents the former.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This dataset supports measure M.C.5 of SD 2023. The sources of data are the American Community Survey and the Austin Transportation Department. Each row displays the percentage of people in different demographic categories who participated in mobility engagement process as compared to percentage of people in the same demographic category in Austin. This dataset can be used to understand how well the City reaches different communities and subpopulations when soliciting public input. View more details at https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percentage-of-participants-in-mobility-public-enga/pfnb-5uev/
Number of non resident overnight visitors to Nova Scotia. The dataset is broken down by visitor origin and mode of entry to the province. Data is reported monthly.
Median earnings of creative sector occupations tells us how much Austin's artists, musicians, and related creative sector workers are earning per hour. It shows us whether our city's artists and creative sector workers can afford to live and work in Austin.
This data reflects metric CLL.B1 within the City of Austin's Strategic Direction 2023. This metric is meant to inform City efforts in pursuing the Culture and Lifelong Learning Strategic Outcome. The complete metric title is "Median earnings of metro-area creative sector occupations (as defined by specific Bureau of Labor Statistics Standard Occupational Classifications System [SOC] codes)"
Data was gathered directly from the Creative Vitality Suite (cvsuite.org), a subscription-based online research-based, economic development tool that provides creative economy data and reporting. Data extracted from CVSuite software's data analysis from the following sources: Economic Modeling Specialists International (EMSI), National Assembly of State Arts Agencies, National Center for Charitable Statistics.
This dataset supports measure M.A.10 of SD 2023. The source of the data is the Austin Transportation Department. Each row represents a project in which the City of Austin was a sponsoring agency with a partner involved or if another agency was the lead and the City of Austin was a supporting partner. This dataset can be used to look at the transportation projects, programs and initiatives that the City of Austin is working in coordination with other agencies.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page : https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/yejj-ryqx
1999-2024. National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG). Policy—Tobacco Settlement Payments. The National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) provides Tobacco Settlement Revenue data for 46 states participating in the Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) with the four largest tobacco companies in the United States. Data are reported on an annual basis. Four states (Florida, Minnesota, Mississippi, and Texas) provide the STATE System their Tobacco Settlement Revenue data independently.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
State DOTs provide the location limits of highway sections to be used to represent statewide aggregations based on a statistically valid Sample Panel. The Mid-America contains data for the following States: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Wisconsin.
Count of permits issued and requested by type for ATD Right of Way. Data comes from AMANDA and smartsheet. Updated daily.
This dataset represents the number of persons who successfully exit from homelessness in a given fiscal year in the Austin/Travis County Continuum of Care (CoC). This measure is comprised of Metric 7b1 and 7b2 from the HUD System Performance Measures.
Data Source: The data for this measure was reported to the City of Austin by the Ending Community Homelessness Coalition (ECHO). Each year, ECHO, as the homeless Continuum of Care Lead Agency (CoC Lead), aggregates and reports community wide data (including this measure) to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). This data is referred to as System Performance Measures as they are designed to examine how well a community is responding to homelessness at a system level.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/xtip-he7k
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The dataset of canceled or changed projects comprises those that have either been canceled or changed within the previous month due to shifts in estimated let dates or changes in project status. canceled or changed projects dataset includes data in rolling previous 30 months.
This dataset supports measure EOA.F.4 and EOA.G.3 of SD23. It demonstrates the total number of enrollees to those who successfully completed training. Depending on the length of training which can last anywhere from 12 weeks to 3 years there may or may not be a completion rate available at the time of reporting. These trainees are all participating in Community Based Organization workforce training programs in partnership with the Master Community Workforce Plan adopted by Imagine Austin. After participants successfully complete training, the Ray Marshall Center monitors completer-participant earnings. Earnings above Federal Poverty Limit are considered "above poverty". Data sourced by University of Texas Ray Marshall Center, in partnership with Workforce Solution, Capital Area.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/xfnx-fpv8 https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Number-of-Persons-Moved-Out-of-Poverty-Into-Middle/xg7g-9uru/
Safe Routes to School (SRTS) projects include over 4600 total recommendations for improving safety for students walking and biking to school. Of those, 1864 recommendations rank high or very-high benefit and are the focus of implementation.
All SRTS projects are selected for implementation using the following guiding principles: 1) Implement projects that have either a high / very-high overall benefit; or a high / very high cost / benefit score, 2) Make meaningful improvements walking and bicycling to as many schools as possible; 3) For the 2016 bond funding, balance funding equally per district, as per council direction; 4) Other available sources of funding will be leveraged to implement additional projects.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ba2f-gge2
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This data represents Austin Code Department complaint cases.
Under SO2024-0008386, passed by City Council on 4/17/2024, the Department of Family and Support Services publishes data on the City-operated and City-funded emergency new arrivals shelters. This series of datasets contains data related to the Limited Stay Policy. This dataset shows the total number of migrants who exited each shelter under this policy, each week.
The first "week" listed (3/11/2024 to 5/5/2024) is actually cumulative since exits under the Limited Stay Policy began. All subsequent weeks will be individual weeks.
This dataset contains information about the financial stability of the City of Austin's employees' retirement systems, including the City of Austin Employees' Retirement System (COAERS), the Austin Firefighters Retirement System (AFRS), and the Austin Police Retirement System (APRS). It uses the total funded ratio, which is equal to the total actuarial value of assets as a percentage of the total actuarial accrued liability. This data supports the SD23 measure GTQ.A.6. Having a funded ratio of below 80% could potentially impact credit rating agencies' evaluation of the City's pension liabilities, so this ratio is important to measure through annual actuarial valuation reports for all three retirement systems. View more details and insights related to this dataset on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/d4mh-eiif
This Data set contains detailed information about Day Care and/ or Residential Care Operation that is displayed on the Public site. The Operation ID is a unique key that ties to the other data sets for Child Care Licensing data
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
Austin's share of regional households whose income is less than $40,000 and the change since 2016. Austin's share of regional households whose income is less than $40,000 and the change in that share since 2016. This metric helps us to understand where low income households live in the Austin area since some lower income households may be forced to move from the city to the outskirts in order to seek more affordable housing opportunities.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The dataset contains AFD dispatched fire incident records from calendar year 2022-2024.
Disclaimer: The Austin Fire Department does not assume liability for any errors in the data or decisions taken by the recipient. The information provided should be used for general purposes only.
The data in this repository were collected from the San Diego, California testbed, namely, I-15 from the interchange with SR-78 in the north to the interchange with SR-163 in the south, along the mainline and at the entrance ramps. This file contains information on the field observation and simulation results for speed profile from the Dallas, Texas testbed. The time reported for the speed profiles are between 2:00PM to 8:00PM in increments of 10 minutes.
Provisional estimates of death rates. Estimates are presented for each of the 15 leading causes of death plus estimates for deaths attributed to drug overdose, falls (for persons aged 65 and over), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease, homicide, and firearms-related deaths.
Family Preservation Services (FPR) are services provided to the child and the family where the caregiver retains legal custody.
This chart counts children served in Family Based Safety Services Family Preservation Stages during the fiscal year.
Child count is both unduplicated and duplicated by stage of children in FPR stages during the fiscal year. Some children are in more than one Family Preservation Stage at the same time due to having separate caregivers with open stages or having more than one stage opened at different times within the same fiscal year.
NOTE: Family Preservation Services is under the umbrella of Family Based Safety Services (FBSS).
This dataset supports measure M.C.1.b of SD 2023. The data on permitted new non residential development is collected by the Development Services Department and accessed by staff through the permit database known as AMANDA. Spatial data on existing high-frequency transit routes is provided by Capital Metro, while data on existing protected bicycle infrastructure is maintained by the Austin Transportation Department and the Public Works Department. Each row displays the commercial square footage permitted each fiscal year and how much is within a quarter mile of a high frequency transit route or protected bicycle facility. The dataset can be used to understand non residential development trends in relation to high frequency transit routes. View more details at https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/e458-a9pt
DATASET DESCRIPTION Dataset provides the commendation number, the date the commendation was filed, and the completed status of the commendation.
GENERAL ORDERS RELATING TO AWARDS AND COMMENDATIONS Austin Police Department General Order 922 states, "Any employee, group of employees, or individual outside of the Department may initiate the creation of a personal commendation to honor an employee or group of employees for exceptional performance."
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department crime data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
3.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This measure tracks the percentage of lane miles managed by the City of Austin that had preventive maintenance completed. Preventive maintenance of existing pavements extends the life of the surfaces and reduces the amount of capital investment required on City streets each year. Asphalt overlaying, thin surface treatments, and crack sealing existing surfaces are the primary components of what constitutes the City's Preventive Maintenance program.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/kara-xhcd.
This point shapefile contains data regarding building permits issued by the Development Services Department in the City of Austin jurisdiction from 2006 onwards. This information is updated quarterly. Data in this dataset has been retrieved both from the City's Application MANagement and Data Automation(AMANDA) database. The dataset contains information regarding location, proposed uses, valuation, number of units, square footage etc, if available.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This data is provided to help with analysis of various violations charged throughout the City of Austin.
"Case Status" and "Race" abbreviations go as follows: Fields for Race: A, Asian B, Black BA, Black or African American CD, Client does not know CR, Client refused DNC, Data not calculated H, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander L, Hispanic or Latino ME, Middle Eastern MR, Identified Multiple Races N, Native American or Alaskan O, Other U, Unknown W, White
Case Status (Closed Y/N) TERMINATED (TERM) and TERMINATED ADMINISTRATIVELY (TERMA) = Y ACTIVE (ACT) AND INACTIVE(IN) INACTIVE = N Active, Inactive, Terminated, Terminated Administratively Inactive doesn't mean the cases is closed only TERM and TERMA.
About the Dataset This dataset contains: A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that had findings as a result of their most recent Administrative Review with TDA, including: List of findings Type of Findings Corresponding administrative review question This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
The Transitional Living Services Program includes the Preparation for Adult Living (PAL) program, Education and Training Voucher (ETV) program and other services and supports to help youth transition from foster care to a successful adulthood.
PAL services ensure that youth in DFPS foster care and those transitioning from foster care to a successful adulthood receive the tools, resources, supports, and personal and community connections they need to become self-sufficient adults. PAL supportive services and benefits are provided to eligible youth and young adults ages 16 to 21. 14-15 year old youth in the Permanent Managing Conservatorship (PMC) of DFPS will receive a life skills assessment. All other youth age 14 and 15 can be served, if funding or resources are available.
The ETV program can assist youth and young adults ages 16-23. ETV services can be provided to eligible youth and young adults for 5 years or 15 semesters up to their 23rd birthday.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on the Preparation for Adult Living (PAL) program and all DFPS programs.
This dataset supports measure M.A.4. of SD 2023. The source of the data is the Austin Transportation Department. Each row displays a development project. This dataset can be used to understand how many development projects met or exceeded drive alone trip targets. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page : https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/2nus-e2iu/
In the early 1970s, the Texas Legislature authorized certain local governments to begin collecting a hotel occupancy tax (HOT). Almost two decades later, the Legislature offered hotel occupancy taxing authority as one of several revenue options to support sports and community venues. The tax may be levied by a city, county or a partnership between the two.
Throughout the years, the Texas Legislature has passed laws that increased local government transparency while also allowing the public to better understand the state’s patchwork of municipal and county HOTs. During the 88th Legislative Session, House Bill 3727 and Senate Bill 1420 were passed to require municipalities and counties to report the amount and percentage of HOT revenue allocated by the local government.
This dataset supports measure CLL.B.1 of SD23 and identifies the median earnings of metro-area Creative Sector occupations by Bureau of Labor Statistics Standard Occupational Classifications System [SOC] codes.
Data Source: 3rd party - Creative Vitality Suite Calculation: the middle of the earnings, among all SOC codes Measure Time Period: Annually (Calendar Year)
Last update: April 2021
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/jaia-eaet
The Annual Budget Document provides information about the General Fund Reserve as a percentage of the total General Fund requirements (SD23 measure GTW.A.5). The General Fund Reserve ensures the City is capable of offsetting potential downturns in revenue sources and provides a sufficient cash balance for daily financial needs. This dataset contains fields for fund ending balances, total requirements, budgets, and transfers. View more details and insights related to this dataset on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/we9n-h6yb
This table contains performance data regarding resuscitation of cardiac arrest patients. It is limited to patients whose arrest is of presumed cardiac origin, and for whom resuscitation was attempted.
Bar Ditch - A bar ditch is a man-made, open drainage-way into which excess surface water or groundwater drained from land, storm water runoff, or floodwaters flow either continuously or intermittently. It differs from a ditch in that it is typically less than 18 inches deep and contains driveway culverts of insignificant size (6" - 12"). A single line feature represents the entire line of ditch/culvert representing the bar ditch.This data has been collected as part of a larger project by the City of Austin's Watershed Protection and Development Review Department to inventory its drainage infrastructure and create a GIS to store this information. The project includes an internal team developing a GIS based on record documents and an external team locating ground level appurtenances using GPS field collection units. The data in this data set represents the former.
The Dallas Public Library system serves as the municipal library system of the city of Dallas, Texas. The library operates 28 branch locations throughout the city, and an 8-story main branch, the J. Erik Jonsson Central Library, in the Government District of downtown. It also operates the Bookmarks Children's Library located in NorthPark Center.
Strategic Direction 2023 (SD23) Measure HE.E.5.a reports the number and percentage of buildings, roadways, and properties whose exposure to high flooding risk have decreased due to City efforts. Flood risk can occur during rain events when creeks overflow their banks (creek flooding) or when the capacity of older storm drains and small channels is overwhelmed (local flooding). The Watershed Protection Department helps reduce flood risk through the implementation of structural solutions (e.g., detention ponds, low water crossing upgrades, floodwalls, flow diversion, storm drain improvements) and non-structural solutions (e.g., property acquisition or "buyouts" of properties with severe flood risk, permanent road closures).
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/hnnn-h4zz
This dataset provides information on individuals who exit homelessness to permanent housing destinations and then return to homelessness within 2 years from their exit in the Austin/Travis County Continuum of Care (CoC) in a given fiscal year.
Data Source: The data for this measure was reported to the City of Austin by the Ending Community Homelessness Coalition (ECHO). Each year, ECHO, as the homeless Continuum of Care Lead Agency (CoC Lead), aggregates and reports community wide data (including this measure) to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). This data is referred to as System Performance Measures as they are designed to examine how well a community is responding to homelessness at a system level.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/cutp-y8m4
This data has been collected as part of a larger project by the City of Austin's Watershed Protection and Development Review Department to inventory its drainage infrastructure and create a GIS to store this information. The project includes an internal team developing a GIS based on record documents and an external team locating ground level appurtenances using GPS field collection units. The data in this data set represents the former.
As part of the FY 2013 rate case, Austin Energy restructured its customer classes.
Austin Energy’s four customer classes include:
Residential — customers living in single-family dwellings, mobile homes, townhouses or individually metered apartment units.
Secondary — commercial customers including small to large businesses. This means Austin Energy owns, operates and maintains the equipment supplying power to those facilities . Secondary 1 — commercial customers served at less than 10 kW. Secondary 2 — commercial customers served between 10 and 50 kW. Secondary 3 — commercial customers served at more than 50 kW.
Primary — customers that take service at high voltage and own, operate and maintain their own equipment. Consequently, Austin Energy experiences lower overall system losses and expense in serving these customers. Large commercial and industrial customers such as semiconductors, hightech facilities and data centers typically fall under this level of service. These customers have very high usage and load factors because they tend to operate 24/7. Primary 1 — commercial customers served at less than 3 MW. Primary 2 — commercial customers served between 3 and 20 MW. Primary 3 — commercial customers served at more than 20 MW.
Contract/Transmission — customers owning and maintaining all equipment on the customer side for electric delivery and receiving service at 69 kV or above. Contract applies to a small number of large commercial customers operating under legacy contracts.
Lighting — typically refers to street lighting and facilities including ballparks.
Percentage of participants who respond to an on-site survey reporting that the activity that they just witnessed contributed to their overall knowledge and understanding of world cultures, world history and/or arts of every discipline.
This data set supports measure CLL.C.5 of SD23.
Data Source: Department Data Warehouse
Calculation: (CLL.C.5) # of program participants by site who indicated increased knowledge or understanding of culture, history, or art/ # of program participants who responded to a program site survey
This map shows the Equitable Transit-Oriented Development (ETOD) Typologies as attached to the Imagine Austin Comprehensive Plan by City Council on May 30, 2024 through Ordinance No. 20240530-139 (https://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=430294).
These Typologies group the Project Connect station areas into 8 categories. They consider existing population, displacement risk of households, and recent growth and economic development. They also speak to types of growth most needed for equitable outcomes in a station area. Learn more about the ETOD Typologies in the ETOD Policy Plan available on https://speakupaustin.org/etod.
DATASET DESCRIPTION: This data includes a list of sworn officers who have retired or separated from the Austin Police department, along with their retirement or separation date.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
3.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This data was collected from an annual survey sent to all current City employees. Each row represents an employee who responded. It can be used to answer questions related to the survey items.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story pages for each measure.
https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/w6g5-m7dq https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/m3e2-645p https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/6b4k-85mv https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/burb-rtic https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/3fm3-4xds https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/knhk-nvyy
This dataset supports measure M.C.3 of SD 2023. The sources of data are the American Community Survey and Capital Metro. Each row displays the percent of population in a census tract block group that has access to innovative public transit service, or is within a quarter mile of regular fixed route transit. This dataset can be used to understand the percentage of population that has access to innovative public transit service or is within a quarter mile of a regular fixed transit route. View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https:https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percentage-of-population-that-has-access-to-innova/3agy-grwi/
This report is the result of Austin City Code 6-7’s Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 800 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2020. This report contains information on residential dwellings that have reported the results of the ECAD audit () to the City of Austin prior to 2014. For information on ECAD exemptions and other requirements, see Austin City Code Chapter 6-7. *Note – () Data reported by Residential Energy Auditors
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
About the Dataset This dataset contains: A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that had findings as a result of their most recent Administrative Review with TDA, including: List of findings Type of Findings Corresponding administrative review question This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
This data is provided to help with analysis of various violations charged throughout the City of Austin's Downtown Community Court.
"Case Status" and "Race" abbreviations go as follows: Race - A, Asian B, Black BA, Black or African American CD, Client does not know CR, Client refused DNC, Data not calculated H, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander L, Hispanic or Latino ME, Middle Eastern MR, Identified Multiple Races N, Native American or Alaskan O, Other U, Unknown W, White
Case Status - Y = closed || N = Not closed TERMINATED (TERM) and TERMINATED ADMINISTRATIVELY (TERMA) = Y ACTIVE (ACT) AND INACTIVE(IN) INACTIVE = N Active, Inactive, Terminated, Terminated Administratively Inactive doesn't mean the cases is closed only TERM and TERMA.
DATASET DESCRIPTION: Cadets in Training data is collected from the APD Training Academy. Data provided begins with the 143rd Cadet Class which started on February 18, 2020. Cadet classes included in the dataset are both full and modified classes. Modified classes are comprised of individuals who already hold a TCOLE (Texas Commission on Law Enforcement) Peace Officer license. The 150th Cadet Class was combined with the 151st cadet class, therefore the 150th class is not included in the dataset.
GENERAL ORDERS RELATING TO THIS DATA: It is the order of the Department to administer a training program that will provide for the professional growth and continued development of its personnel. By doing so, the Department will ensure its personnel possess the knowledge, skills and abilities necessary to provide a professional level of service that meets the needs of the community.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER:
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
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Reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different systems of record may have been used.
4.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
In the Annual Budget Document, the Budget Office presents information about the annual cost of various city services/fees for the typical ratepayer. These services and fees include Austin Energy, Austin Water, Austin Resource Recovery, the Clean Community Fee, the Transportation User Fee, the Drainage Utility Fee, and the Property Tax Bill.
This dataset supports the SD23 measure, "Dollar amount and percentage increase of major rates and fees for a range of customer types" (EOA.C.5.c). It contains the approved and amended rates for the typical ratepayer, the annual dollar change, and the annual percent change for each service/fee. This dataset can be used to help understand the cost of city services over time.
View more details and insights related to this dataset on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Dollar-Amount-and-Percentage-Increase-of-Major-Rat/56uv-46qi/
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of pharmacy medical billing services (SV4). It contains charges, payments, and prescriptions billed on a DWC Form-066, Statement of Pharmacy Services by pharmacies with dates of service for the last five years. For datasets going back to 2010, see pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) detail information – historical.
The detail section contains information to identify insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill details are individual line items that are grouped in the header section of a single bill. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) detail data dictionary.
See pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) header information for the corresponding header records related this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023. For more data on Austin demographics please visit austintexas.gov/demographics.
This measure answers the question of what number and percentage of residents are living below the federal poverty level, which means they meet certain thresholds set by a set of parameters and computation performed by the Census Bureau. Following the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) Statistical Policy Directive 14, the Census Bureau uses a set of money income thresholds that vary by family size and composition to determine who is in poverty. If a family's total income is less than the family's threshold, then that family and every individual in it is considered in poverty. The official poverty thresholds do not vary geographically, but they are updated for inflation using the Consumer Price Index (CPI-U). The official poverty definition uses money income before taxes and does not include capital gains or noncash benefits (such as public housing, Medicaid, and food stamps).
Data collected from the U.S. Census Bureau, American Communities Survey (1yr), Poverty Status in the Past 12 Months (Table S1701). American Communities Survey (ACS) is a survey with sampled statistics on the citywide level and is subject to a margin of error. ACS sample size and data quality measures can be found on the U.S. Census website in the Methodology section.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page:https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/kgf9-tcgd
This data is provided to help with analysis of various violations charged throughout the City of Austin's Downtown Community Court.
"Case Status" and "Race" abbreviations go as follows: Race - A, Asian B, Black BA, Black or African American CD, Client does not know CR, Client refused DNC, Data not calculated H, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander L, Hispanic or Latino ME, Middle Eastern MR, Identified Multiple Races N, Native American or Alaskan O, Other U, Unknown W, White
Case Status - Y = closed || N = Not closed TERMINATED (TERM) and TERMINATED ADMINISTRATIVELY (TERMA) = Y ACTIVE (ACT) AND INACTIVE(IN) INACTIVE = N Active, Inactive, Terminated, Terminated Administratively Inactive doesn't mean the cases is closed only TERM and TERMA.
This point dataset contains information retrieved from the City's Application MANagement and Data Automation (AMANDA) database and includes information on location, proposed variances, applicants, owners, case managers etc, if available. Note that many fields are intentionally left blank or are not filled out for various reasons.
About the Dataset This dataset contains: A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that had findings as a result of their most recent Procurement Review with TDA, including: List of findings Type of Findings Corresponding administrative review question This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
This table contains data from a survey about the Millenium Youth Entertainment Complex, conducted as part of an Audit of the City's Cultural Centers. This survey was sent out to stakeholders based on reports from City and Millennium Youth Entertainment Complex staff. The survey opened on December 20, 2019 and closed January 10, 2020. Of the 5,181 individuals invited to complete the survey, 695 responded. The comments detailed in this table were in response to open-ended survey items that allowed respondents to give opinions or suggestions about the center's programming, fees, staff, facilities, and how well it meets the community's needs. To gauge the general sentiment of the responses, each was assigned an analysis category. During analysis, some comments were deemed relevant to multiple open-ended survey items. These responses were copied and assigned to all analysis categories that aligned with their subjects.
This data has been collected as part of a larger project by the City of Austin's Watershed Protection and Development Review Department to inventory its drainage infrastructure and create a GIS to store this information. The project includes an internal team developing a GIS based on record documents and an external team locating ground level appurtenances using GPS field collection units. The data in this data set represents the former.
This chart counts the number of unique children in DFPS custody who lived in an adoptive placement at some point during the fiscal year. Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis. An adoptive placement occurs when the child's caseworker, the family's case manager, and the adoptive family sign paperwork officially placing the child in the home for adoption. Before the paperwork can be signed, a child must be free for adoption (meaning a court has terminated parental rights), have a permanency goal of adoption and the family must have been approved for adoption through a licensed child placing agency.
Children may have more than one disabling condition.
This chart gives the count of each child with each disabling condition.
Drug/Alcohol disabling condition can either be due to self-abuse or exposure to an individual with the condition.
Other includes teen parent or pregnant teen.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for more information about DFPS and our programs.
Here is a trend line for the CTM Customer Satisfaction Survey question #1 "Please rate your opinion of CTM's Customer service." See below for the percentage of positive responses to this question since 2020. Positive responses include "Satisfactory", "Above Average", or "Excellent". Blanks are skipped responses and are not included in the total calculation.
We include survey results from 2020 through 2024 with the exception of 2023, as there was no survey conducted that year.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
This dataset provides information on individuals experiencing sheltered homelessness in the Austin/Travis County Continuum of Care (CoC) in a given fiscal year. "Sheltered" homelessness refers to individuals residing in emergency shelter, safe haven, or transitional housing project types. This measure overlaps, but is different from, the Point in Time (PIT) Count (SD23 Measure EOA.E.1a), which is a snapshot of both sheltered and unsheltered homelessness on one night in January.
Data Source: The data for this measure was reported to the City of Austin by the Ending Community Homelessness Coalition (ECHO). Each year, ECHO, as the homeless Continuum of Care Lead Agency (CoC Lead), aggregates and reports community wide data (including this measure) to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). This data is referred to as System Performance Measures as they are designed to examine how well a community is responding to homelessness at a system level.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/2ejn-hrh2
This layer represents the boundaries for the following counties: Travis, Williamson, Hays, Burnet, Caldwell, Blanco, Lee, Fayette, Bastrop, and Llano.
Terms of Use This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of property boundaries. This product has been produced by the City of Austin for the sole purpose of geographic reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
About the Dataset This dataset contains: A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that had findings as a result of their most recent Administrative Review with TDA, including: List of findings Type of Findings Corresponding administrative review question This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
This dataset supports measure GTW.B.5 of SD23 - Number of City Services provided online through the City of Austin Web Portal (austintexas.gov). This data tracks how many City services are completely online and accessible for Austin residents. This measure is part of the City's effort to ensure residents can find services, understand them, access and use them, and provide feedback to the City – across languages and all levels of ability.
Data Source: Manual inventory of services that are hosted on the City’s official web platforms Austintexas.gov and Austin.gov. Data source is maintained by the Communications & Technology Management Department.
Calculation: (GTW.B.5) Count of services meeting the measure's criteria.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/GTW-B-5-Number-of-City-Services-provided-online-th/9853-zew9/
The total percentage of available facility reservations at parks and recreation museum and cultural programs segmented by site breakdown.
Data Source: RecTrac, a Recreation Systems Management Software that captures all transactions for all programs, events and facility rentals.
This metric tracks the number of facility rentals offered by the Parks and Recreation Department. The Department offers two types of facility rentals, one with a fee for individual/private use, and the second type of facility rental is an approved use of the space at no charge or a waived fee for a community organization or non-profit that offers cultural, history and arts programming.
The data used for this outcome excludes the free programs offered by the department because free programs are either co-sponsored by the Parks & Recreation Department or are approved by council and logged as fee waivers, meaning that the fee is waived in order to support a community initiative or City of Austin priority.
Updated October 2020
Family Preservation Services (FPR) are services provided to the child and the family where the caregiver retains legal custody.
This counts children completing Family Based Safety Services Family Preservation Stages during the fiscal year.
Child count is both unduplicated and duplicated by stage of children in FPR stages during the fiscal year. Some children are in more than one Family Preservation Stage at the same time due to having separate caregivers with open stages or having more than one stage opened at different times within the same fiscal year.
NOTE: Family Preservation Services is under the umbrella of Family Based Safety Services (FBSS).
This table contains aggregated street condition data for street segments that host Cap Metro high frequency transit routes in FY2019 for each fiscal year beginning in FY2018.
A contract vendor surveys street conditions for one-third to one-half of the City of Austin each year. The reported value each year represents the aggregate reported conditions for the three most recent years as of the year reported. Detailed condition data for the most recent fiscal year can be found in the dataset Strategic Measure_High Frequency Transit Route Street Conditions.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Street-Conditions-High-Frequency-Transit-Routes/kqvg-gud8/
This feature class represents City of Austin Planning and Development Review Dept. subdivision review case boundaries. These are not the final recorded subdivision boundaries. This data has been created to support City of Austin Planning and Development Review Department business processes.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
This dataset relates work completed for the purpose of installing and maintaining roadway markings and street signs across the City of Austin. Each row records time spent by one or more technicians who completed the work order. This work is managed by the Signs & Markings Division of the City of Austin Transportation Department.
You may also be interested in these related datasets, which can be joined together using the work order ID columns:
- Road Markings Work Orders: https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Roadway-Markings-Work-Orders/nyhn-669r
- Road Markings Jobs: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Work-Order-Markings-Jobs/vey3-7n3x
- Signs Work Orders: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Work-Order-Signs/ivss-na93
- Signs and Markings Reimbursements: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Signs-and-Markings-Reimbursement-Tracking/pma8-yy5k
This data is provided to help with analysis of various violations charged throughout the City of Austin's Downtown Community Court.
"Case Status" and "Race" abbreviations go as follows: Race - A, Asian B, Black BA, Black or African American CD, Client does not know CR, Client refused DNC, Data not calculated H, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander L, Hispanic or Latino ME, Middle Eastern MR, Identified Multiple Races N, Native American or Alaskan O, Other U, Unknown W, White
Case Status - Y = closed || N = Not closed TERMINATED (TERM) and TERMINATED ADMINISTRATIVELY (TERMA) = Y ACTIVE (ACT) AND INACTIVE(IN) INACTIVE = N Active, Inactive, Terminated, Terminated Administratively Inactive doesn't mean the cases is closed only TERM and TERMA.
This data has been collected as part of a larger project by the City of Austin's Watershed Protection and Development Review Department to inventory its drainage infrastructure and create a GIS to store this information. The project includes an internal team developing a GIS based on record documents and an external team locating ground level appurtenances using GPS field collection units. The data in this data set represents the former.
The data being collected is to be used for several purposes: - Hydraulic/hydrologic modeling input - Work Order Management System integration - Map book production - Mobile redlining/correction submission tools
About the Dataset This dataset contains: A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that had findings as a result of their most recent Administrative Review with TDA, including: List of findings Type of Findings Corresponding administrative review question This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
About the Dataset This dataset contains: A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that had findings as a result of their most recent Administrative Review with TDA, including: List of findings Type of Findings Corresponding administrative review question This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
This dataset supports M.C.1.a of SD 2023. The data on permitted new residential units is collected by the Development Services Department and accessed by staff through the permit database known as AMANDA. Spatial data on existing high-frequency transit routes is provided by Capital Metro, while data on existing protected bicycle infrastructure is maintained by the Austin Transportation Department and the Public Works Department. Each row displays residential units permitted each fiscal year and how many are within a quarter mile of a high frequency transit route or protected bicycle facility.The dataset can be used to understand residential development trends in relation to high frequency transit routes. View more details at https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/e458-a9pt
The Small and Minority Business Resources Department's Compliance Division monitors awarded contracts throughout all phases of the project to ensure compliance of the Minority-Owned and Women-Owned Business Enterprise Procurement Program.
When a non-compliance violation occurs, prime contractors are notified of the violation and are provided the opportunity to file an appeal. Violations may be rescinded, upheld, or issued a warning letter.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
Family Preservation Services (FPR) are services provided to the child and the family where the caregiver retains legal custody.
This counts children in Family Based Safety Services Family Preservation Stages on August 31, the final day of the fiscal year.
Child count is both unduplicated and duplicated by stage of children in FPR stages during the fiscal year. Some children are in more than one Family Preservation Stage at the same time due to having separate caregivers with open stages or having more than one stage opened at different times within the same fiscal year.
NOTE: Family Preservation Services is under the umbrella of Family Based Safety Services (FBSS).
About the Dataset This dataset contains: A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that had findings as a result of their most recent Administrative Review with TDA, including: List of findings Type of Findings Corresponding administrative review question This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
Effective September 27, 2023, this dataset will no longer be updated. Similar data are accessible from wonder.cdc.gov.
Deaths involving COVID-19 reported to NCHS by time-period, HHS region, race and Hispanic origin, and age group.
United States death counts include the 50 states, plus the District of Columbia and New York City. The ten (10) United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regions include the following jurisdictions. Region 1: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont; Region 2: New Jersey, New York, New York City, Puerto Rico; Region 3: Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia; Region 4: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee; Region 5: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin; Region 6: Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas; Region 7: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska; Region 8: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming; Region 9: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada; Region 10: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington.
Under SO2024-0008386, passed by City Council on 4/17/2024, the Department of Family and Support Services publishes data on the City-operated and City-funded emergency new arrivals shelters. This series of datasets contains data related to the Limited Stay Policy. This dataset shows the total number of migrants, by country of origin, who exited shelters under this policy, each week.
The first "week" listed (3/11/2024 to 5/5/2024) is actually cumulative since exits under the Limited Stay Policy began. All subsequent weeks will be individual weeks.
This data is provided to help with analysis of various violations charged throughout the City of Austin.
Updated the Municipal Court Caseload: This data is provided to help with analysis of various violations charged throughout the City of Austin. "Case Status" and "Race" abbreviations go as follows: Fields for Race: A, Asian B, Black BA, Black or African American CD, Client does not know CR, Client refused DNC, Data not calculated H, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander L, Hispanic or Latino ME, Middle Eastern MR, Identified Multiple Races N, Native American or Alaskan O, Other U, Unknown W, White
Case Status (Closed Y/N) TERMINATED (TERM) and TERMINATED ADMINISTRATIVELY (TERMA) = Y ACTIVE (ACT) AND INACTIVE(IN) INACTIVE = N Active, Inactive, Terminated, Terminated Administratively Inactive doesn't mean the cases is closed only TERM and TERMA.
Under SO2024-0008386, passed by City Council on 4/17/2024, the Department of Family and Support Services publishes data on the City-operated and City-funded emergency new arrivals shelters.
Chicago has a Limited Stay Policy. However, under this policy, a shelter stay can be extended beyond the initial 60-day period under certain circumstances. This dataset shows the number of migrants granted extensions, each two-week period.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
The following information will allow you to understand the intent of data provided. This report is in conjunction with Austin City Code 6-7’s Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the primary goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan which is to offset 800 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2020 to help reduce Austin's carbon footprint. In addition, this report contains information on multi-family properties older than 10 years that are required to perform an energy audit and report the results to the City of Austin and all residents living in those communities. The Austin Energy report quantifies the 2013 energy efficiency findings and the progress towards meeting City Council goals of Resolution 20081106-048.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
Under SO2024-0008386, passed by City Council on 4/17/2024, the Department of Family and Support Services publishes data on the City-operated and City-funded emergency new arrivals shelters. This dataset shows the total number of migrants who arrived at each shelter each two-week period from the Landing Zone. The Landing Zone is the City's centralized location for welcoming new arrivals and triaging for shelter placement, when available. In some cases, migrants previously exited a shelter (not necessarily the same one) under the Limited Stay Policy.
For HHSC 24-Hour Residential Child Care Facility Rates go to https://www.dfps.texas.gov/Doing_Business/Purchased_Client_Services/Residential_Child_Care_Contracts/Rates/default.asp
Calculations exclude children where cost of care was not covered by Title IV-E or state paid foster care. Children may be duplicated within a month by funding streams.
Full Time Equivalents (FTEs) are calculated by dividing the days of paid foster care by number of the days in the month.
The total of all payment rate types will include duplicated counts due to changes in service levels during the month. Some children are served in more than one eligibility type in a month.
State Paid Foster Care may be funded with Federal Block Grant (TANF).
The methodology used for this chart was modified in FY16 to evaluate at the county level; therefore, the resulting averages may not match prior data books.
The EPA Energy Star Portfolio Manager is a nationally utilized online tool to measure and track energy and water consumption, as well as greenhouse gas emissions. The score, which ranges from 1 to 100 indicates the energy efficiency of a particular building. The score represents the percentile that a particular building falls in compared to similar buildings across the nation. A building with a score of 75 indicates that that building operates more energy efficiently than 75% of similar buildings.
This dataset supports measure GTW.B.4 of SD23.
Data Source: Raw utility data captured by the Office of Sustainability.
Calculation: Number of Buildings with an Energy Star of 75 or Greater / Total Number of Buildings Measured
Measure Time Period: Annually (Fiscal Year)
Automated: No
Date of last description update: 4/5/2020
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/c8hg-ts4g
This data has been collected as part of a larger project by the City of Austin's Watershed Protection and Development Review Department to inventory its drainage infrastructure and create a GIS to store this information. The project includes an internal team developing a GIS based on record documents and an external team locating ground level appurtenances using GPS field collection units. The data in this data set represents the former.
The Growth Concept Map assembles compact and walkable activity centers and corridors, as well as job centers, and coordinates them with future transportation improvements. These centers and corridors allow people to reside, work, shop, access services, people watch, recreate, and hang out without traveling far distances. Within them, the design and scale of buildings and the design and availability of parks and gathering spaces will welcome people of all ages and abilities. They will be walkable, bikable, and connected to one another, the rest of the city, and the region by roads, transit, bicycle routes and lanes, and trails. The activity centers and corridors included on this map identify locations for additional people and jobs above what currently exists on the ground. Unlike more detailed small-area plan maps, the Growth Concept Map provides broad direction for future growth and is not parcel specific. Centers that are already established by existing small-area plans, such as those for East Riverside Drive or Highland Mall, are drawn to reflect those plans. Centers without small-area plans are simply shown with a circle, indicating scale and general location. Specifying boundaries for these centers may occur through small-area plans or general guidelines for implementing this plan.
This measure tracks the percentage of lane miles managed by the City of Austin that had preventive maintenance completed. Preventive maintenance of existing pavements extends the life of the surfaces and reduces the amount of capital investment required on City streets each year. Asphalt overlaying, thin surface treatments, and crack sealing existing surfaces are the primary components of what constitutes the City's Preventive Maintenance program.
This dataset supports the measure M.E.3 within the Mobility outcome under the Strategic Direction 2023 initiative.
Data Source: Pavement Management Information System, Street & Bridge Operations
Calculation: Total number of lane miles of street preventative maintenance completed* / Total number of lane miles managed
*Total number of lane miles of street preventative maintenance completed = Lane miles of overlay completed + lane miles of preventative maintenance crack seal completed + lane miles of preventative maintenance thin surface treatments completed.
Measure Time Period: Quarterly (Fiscal Year)
Automated: No
Date if last description update:
Emergency Service Districts for 911 emergency response.
This dataset contains data about the conditions of sidewalks maintained by the City of Austin Public Works Department, aggregated by fiscal year. It does not include sidewalks maintained by private parties or other government entities. This dataset is used to support related measures in the City of Austin's Strategic Directions 2023 dashboard.
This network currently contains about 2700 miles of sidewalks, of which 616 miles have been assessed. Condition assessment is a manual process, requiring people to walk the sidewalks, measure their conditions, and record observations and measurements in a cloud database that is tied to a map of the sidewalks. This dataset describes conditions as of the FY2019 assessment, which includes all high priority and very high priority sidewalks as described in the City of Austin Sidewalk Plan adopted in June 2016. Lower priority sidewalks are present in the dataset, but without an assessment of their condition. Assessment of the remaining part of the network should be completed by the conclusion of calendar year 2021.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/t3ve-rx4s
This report is the result of the Austin City Code 6-7’s Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 900 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2024. This report contains information on commercial facilities that have reported the EPA’s Energy Star Portfolio Manager benchmarking results in 2015 () to the City of Austin, as well as the calculated electric Energy Utilization Index (EUI). For information on ECAD exemptions and other requirements, see Austin City Code Chapter 6-7. Note – () Data reported by Commercial Customers
List of incidents responded to by EMS Special Events during the annual Spring Festival Season.
About the Dataset This dataset contains: A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that had findings as a result of their most recent Administrative Review with TDA, including: List of findings Type of Findings Corresponding administrative review question This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
Data set of Number and Percent of case-managed households that transition from homelessness into housing. Data is from the PartnerGrants software used for Social Services contracts, and also compiled with additional case-management data located with Downtown Austin Community Court. This data contains quarterly level data of clients served.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/b8iy-icp8
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
This dataset represents the number of persons who are experiencing homelessness for the first time in a fiscal year (October 1 - September 30) in the Austin/Travis County Continuum of Care (CoC).
Data Source: The data for this measure was reported to the City of Austin by the Ending Community Homelessness Coalition (ECHO). Each year, ECHO, as the homeless Continuum of Care Lead Agency (CoC Lead), aggregates and reports community wide data (including this measure) to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). This data is referred to as System Performance Measures as they are designed to examine how well a community is responding to homelessness at a system level.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/wk3t-h5qe
This dataset supports measure S.D.4.c of SD23. The Downtown Austin Community Court (DACC) was established to address quality of life and public order offenses occurring in the downtown Austin area utilizing a restorative justice court model. DACC’s priority population consists of individuals experiencing homelessness and the program’s main goal is to permanently stabilize individuals experiencing homelessness. To effectively serve these individuals, DACC created an Intensive Case Management (ICM) Program, which uses a client-centered and housing-focused approach. The ICM Program focuses on rehabilitating and stabilizing individuals using an evidenced-based model of wraparound interventions to help them achieve long-term stability. Because individuals participating in case management are literally homeless, case managers must actively seek their clients in the community through outreach activities and often times work on behalf of the client via collateral engagement with other social service and housing providers. This measure highlights case management activities accomplished via outreach and collateral engagement.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/65cb-wtrs
Data source: manually tracked internally on a monthly checkbox report Calculation: Numerator: number of clients served through outreach Denominator: total number of cases filed that are homeless this dataset on the portal covers an annual range based on the city's fiscal year.
About the Dataset This dataset contains: A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that had findings as a result of their most recent Procurement Review with TDA, including: List of findings Type of Findings Corresponding administrative review question This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
View the Complete Dataset documentation on Github: https://github.com/cityofaustin/hack-the-traffic/tree/master/docs
This dataset contains aggregate travel time and speed summaries based on the individual traffic match records from the City of Austin's Bluetooth travel sensors.. Each row in the dataset summarizes average travel time and speed along a sensor-equipped roadway segment in 15 minute intervals.
How does the City of Austin use the Bluetooth travel sensor data? The data enables transportation engineers to better understand short and long-term trends in Austin’s traffic patterns, supporting decisions about systems planning and traffic signal timing.
What information does the data contain? The sensor data is available in three datasets:
Individual Address Records ( https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bluetooth-Travel-Sensors-Individual-Addresses/qnpj-zrb9/data ) Each row in this dataset represents a Bluetooth device that was detected by one of our sensors. Each record contains a detected device’s anonymized Media Access Control (MAC) address along with the time and location the device was detected. These records alone are not traffic data but can be post-processed to measure the movement of detected devices through the roadway network
Individual Traffic Matches ( https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bluetooth-Travel-Sensors-Individual-Traffic-Matche/x44q-icha/data ) Each row in this dataset represents one Bluetooth enabled device that detected at two locations in the roadway network. Each record contains a detected device’s anonymized Media Access Control (MAC) address along with contain information about origin and destination points at which the device was detected, as well the time, date, and distance traveled.
Traffic Summary Records ( https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bluetooth-Travel-Sensors-Match-Summary-Records/v7zg-5jg9 ) The traffic summary records contain aggregate travel time and speed summaries based on the individual traffic match records. Each row in the dataset summarizes average travel time and speed along a sensor-equipped roadway segment in 15 minute intervals.
Does this data contain personally identifiable information? No. The Media Access Control (MAC) addresses in these datasets are randomly generated.
Under SO2024-0008386, passed by City Council on 4/17/2024, the Department of Family and Support Services publishes data on the City-operated and City-funded emergency new arrivals shelters. This series of datasets contains data related to the Limited Stay Policy. This dataset shows the total number of migrants, by age range, who exited shelters under this policy, each week.
The first "week" listed (3/11/2024 to 5/5/2024) is actually cumulative since exits under the Limited Stay Policy began. All subsequent weeks will be individual weeks.
Displacement Risk Areas for 2022 but geographically bounded within a 1 mile radius of Project Connect routes and stations. These boundaries guide the investments made by the City of Austin Housing Department.
Full Displacement Risk Areas available here: https://data.austintexas.gov/Locations-and-Maps/City-of-Austin-Displacement-Risk-Areas-2022/t8nv-zcp9/about_data
The polygon dataset contains information regarding the zoning cases that were submitted to the City of Austin's permit review process. Information in this dataset has been retrieved from the City's Application MANagement and Data Automation (AMANDA) database. The dataset contains information on location, proposed uses, proposed number of units, applicants, owners, case managers etc, if available.
Austin's Communications & Technology Management Department is pleased to provide this zip code dataset for general use, designed to support a variety of research and analysis needs. Please note that while we facilitate access to this data, the dataset is owned and produced by the United States Postal Service (USPS). Users are encouraged to acknowledge USPS as the source when utilizing this dataset in their work.
U.S. ZIP Code Areas (Five-Digit) represents five-digit ZIP Code areas used by the U.S. Postal Service to deliver mail more effectively. The first digit of a five-digit ZIP Code divides the United States into 10 large groups of states numbered from 0 in the Northeast to 9 in the far West. Within these areas, each state is divided into an average of 10 smaller geographical areas, identified by the second and third digits. These digits, in conjunction with the first digit, represent a sectional center facility or a mail processing facility area. The fourth and fifth digits identify a post office, station, branch or local delivery area.
This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of property boundaries. This product has been produced by the City of Austin for the sole purpose of geographic reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset shows the location of Sound Ordinance Permits in Austin.
Dataset description - Wildfire mechanical fuel treatments are vegetation reduction projects also known as "Shaded fuel Breaks". Shaded fuel breaks are wildfire mitigation techniques used for wooded areas near homes and other structures. The foliage is reduced by trimming low-hanging branches, the clearing of undergrowth, and the removal of dead and downed trees. The shaded fuel break is designed so that a wildfire that reaches this area may be more easily controlled. This dataset supports measure HE.E.5.c of SD23. Data Source: Austin Fire Department (HE.E.5.c.AFD_Number and percentage of buildings, roadways, and properties whose exposure to wildfire risk have decreased due to City efforts) Calculation: STRUCTURES PROTECTED / YEAR Measure Time Period: Annually (Fiscal Year) Automated: yes Date of last description update: March 30, 2020
Data set description: Data demonstrates the percent of Austin Public Clients that receive a preventative health screening and are referred to a health care provided or community based resources and subsequently follow up on that referral.
This data set supports measure HE.B.5 of SD23.
Data Source is Austin Public Health Department Program Data.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/n4an-tr8w
This dataset contains information about traffic cameras in Austin, TX. These cameras are used to monitor real-time LIVE traffic conditions only. Video is NOT recorded or retained of daily traffic.
Traffic cameras are owned and operated by the City of Austin Transportation & Public Works Department.
You may also be interested in our traffic signal operations dashboards, available at https://data.mobility.austin.gov
For information about Austin's Mobility Management Center, visit: http://www.austintexas.gov/department/arterial-management
This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of traffic signals.
This data has been collected as part of a larger project by the City of Austin's Watershed Protection and Development Review Department to inventory its drainage infrastructure and create a GIS to store this information. The project includes an internal team developing a GIS based on record documents and an external team locating ground level appurtenances using GPS field collection units. The data in this data set represents the former.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of professional medical billing services (SV1). It contains charges, payments, and treatments billed on a CMS-1500 form by doctors and other health care professionals who treat injured employees, including ambulatory surgical centers, with dates of service for the last five years. For datasets going back to 2010, see professional medical billing services (SV1) detail information – historical.
The detail contains information to identify insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill details are individual line items that are grouped in the header section of a single bill. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our professional medical billing services (SV1) detail data dictionary.
See professional medical billing services (SV1) header information for the corresponding header records related to this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
Under SO2024-0008386, passed by City Council on 4/17/2024, the Department of Family and Support Services publishes data on the City-operated and City-funded emergency new arrivals shelters. This series of datasets contains data related to the Limited Stay Policy. This dataset shows the total number of migrants, by gender identity, who exited shelters under this policy, each week.
The first "week" listed (3/11/2024 to 5/5/2024) is actually cumulative since exits under the Limited Stay Policy began. All subsequent weeks will be individual weeks.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
This data set contains EIIHA populations who received services funded by Ryan White Part A Grant. EIIHA is Early Identification of Individuals with HIV/AIDS (EIIHA) The special populations (EIIHA) with HIV are: Black MSM = Black men and Black transgender women who have sex with men. Latinx MSM = Latinx men and Latinx Transgender women who have sex with men. Black Women - Black women Transgender - Transgender men and women. These populations have the biggest disparities of people living with HIV. Other data is the number of clients and units used in each service category in the Ryan White Part A, a grant that provides services for those with HIV.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This data was used to create the Economic Development Department's 2016 Creative Economy Snapshot Report available at http://www.austintexas.gov/page/creative-development.
Data was compiled by the CreativeVitality Suite from a variety of sources including Occupations & Demographic: Economic Modeling Specialists International, Industry Sales: Economic Modeling Specialists International, State Arts Agency Grants: National Assembly of State Arts Agencies (Final Descriptive Reports), Nonprofit Revenues: National Center for Charitable Statistics, NCCS.
This product has been produced by the Economic development Department of the City of Austin for the sole purpose of informational reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
This report is the result of Austin City Code 6-7’s Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 800 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2020. This report contains information on residential dwellings that have reported the results of the ECAD audit () to the City of Austin prior to 2014. For information on ECAD exemptions and other requirements, see Austin City Code Chapter 6-7. *Note – () Data reported by Residential Energy Auditors
Purpose: This data exists in order to track the number of cycles swept annually of protected bikeways. Source: Completed Protected Bike Lane reports are received from ATD. ARR then tracks internally the number of sweeping cycles completed. Contains: The linear miles (measured in curb miles) of protected bikeways swept by street sweepers. Curb miles represent the length of streets along the curb. Since bikeways can be one-way (one side of the street) or two-way (both sides of the street), curb miles count full distances (a two-way bikeway will measure both sides of the street, i.e. both curbs). Curb miles that were swept are counted monthly, and can exceed the available curb miles when bikeways are swept more than once in the same month. Available curb miles are counted quarterly. Usage: This data set can be used in determining budget and resource allocation. In addition, it is used to track how many full sweep cycles are completed in a given fiscal year. View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ks42-2pg8
This dataset provides an overall view of infrastructure condition for all assets included in the Comprehensive Infrastructure Assessment (CIA) for that year. Overall condition is calculated by multiplying condition percentages for each network by the current replacement value for that network. These values are then added up for each condition, and divided by the total current replacement value to calculate the percentage of all assets in each condition. Assets that do not have current replacement values or for which condition is unknown are excluded from these calculations.
Data comes from the survey of participating departments conducted every two years during the compilation of the CIA. Each row of the table shows the distribution of asset conditions for the CIA conducted for the year listed.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percentage-of-infrastructure-classified-as-poor-or/smwq-cx27/
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
The county and region of the workers are determined by the office to which they are assigned.
Adult Protective Services (APS): APS Investigations employees protect people age 65 and older and adults with disabilities from abuse, neglect, and financial exploitation by investigating and providing or arranging for services necessary to alleviate or prevent further maltreatment.
Child Protective Investigations (CPI/CCI): Counts the number of active CPI and CPS staff on the last day of the fiscal year by staff type and demographics. Child Care Investigations (CCI), which is a part of CPI and include Day Care Investigations (DCI) and Residential Child Care Investigations (RCCI) are only available from 2018 onward. This is due to the split of those job functions from Child Care Licensing, which was a part of DFPS until 2017, when it was transferred to the Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC).
Statewide Intake (SWI): Statewide Intake (SWI) serves as the “front door to the front line” for all DFPS programs. As the central point of contact for reports of abuse, neglect and exploitation of vulnerable Texans. SWI staff are available 24 hours a day, 7 days per week, 365 days per year. Prior to FY2018, all SWI staff were located in the Austin area.
Visit dfps.texas.gov for information on all DFPS programs
The total percent of available reservations at the Parks and Recreation Department Museums and Cultural Program sites (aggregate)
Data Source: RecTrac, a Recreation Systems Management Software that captures all transactions for all programs, events and facility rentals.
The data for this metric tracks the number of facility rentals offered by the Parks and Recreation Department. The Department offers two types of facility rentals, one with a fee for individual/private use, and the second type of facility rental is an approved use of the space at no charge or a waived fee for a community organization or non-profit that offers cultural, history and arts programming.
The data used for this outcome excludes the free programs offered by the department because free programs are either co-sponsored by the Parks & Recreation Department or are approved by council and logged as fee waivers, meaning that the fee is waived in order to support a city-wide community initiative or City of Austin priority.
Percentage of available reservations at Parks and Recreation Museums & Cultural Sites reflects the rate of private/individual facility reservations/usage.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/mzed-5b3e
Urban Roadways identified in the May 12, 2005 City Council Approved Design Standards Policy Document, with recommended amendments made August 4, 2006. A copy of the ordinance can be found at http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/development/downloads/final.pdf.Urban Roadways are roads other than those designated as Core Transit Corridors and Highways located within the following boundaries, as shown on Figure 2: • 183 from Burnet to Hwy 71 • Hwy 71 from 183 to Loop 1 • Loop 1 from Hwy 71 to Lake Austin • Lake Austin from Loop 1 to Exposition • Exposition from Lake Austin to 35th • 35th from Exposition to Loop 1 • Loop 1 from 38th to RM 2222 • RM2222 from Loop 1 to Mesa • Mesa from RM 2222 to Spicewood Springs Road • Spicewood Springs Road from Mesa to 360 • 360 from Spicewood Springs Road to Great Hills Trail • Great Hills Trail from 360 to 183 • 183 from Great Hills Trail to Braker • Braker from 183 to Burnet • Burnet from Braker to 183
This data represents the outputs and outcomes of the City funded digital literacy training and public access computer lab contract (Community Technology Access Lab Management & Digital Literacy Skills Training Services contract). This data shows the number of clients served and the percent of digital literacy training clients who increase their digital skill as well as data showing usage and availability of computer labs. Data is reported by contractors quarterly via a grant management system (PartnerGrants) and then transferred to this reporting format.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/muck-3gny
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
Data set of Health Equity Social Service Contracts and clients who have a better health outcome. Data set displays rate, percentage and number. Data is from the PartnerGrants software used for Social Service Contracts. This data contains quarterly level data of clients served.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/emj9-r2em
This report is the result of the Austin City Code 6-7’s Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 900 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2024. This report contains information on commercial facilities that have reported the EPA’s Energy Star Portfolio Manager benchmarking results in 2017 () to the City of Austin, as well as the calculated electric Energy Utilization Index (EUI). For information on ECAD exemptions and other requirements, see Austin City Code Chapter 6-7. Note – () Data reported by Commercial Customers
The polygon dataset contains information regarding the site plan cases that were submitted to the City of Austin's permit review process. Information in this dataset has been retrieved from the City's Application MANagement and Data Automation (AMANDA) database. The dataset contains information on location, proposed uses, proposed number of units, applicants, owners, case managers etc, if available.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
Deaths involving coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) reported to NCHS by time-period, HHS region, race and Hispanic origin, and age groups (<65, 65-74. 75-84, 85+, and 65+).
United States death counts include the 50 states, plus the District of Columbia and New York City. The ten (10) United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regions include the following jurisdictions. Region 1: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont; Region 2: New Jersey, New York, New York City; Region 3: Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia; Region 4: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee; Region 5: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin; Region 6: Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas; Region 7: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska; Region 8: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming; Region 9: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada; Region 10: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington.
This table contains data related to responses by regularly scheduled ambulances. Units that are not ambulances or are deployed on an irregular basis are excluded from this table.
A description of Neighborhood Services data with detail to blood pressure, diabetes, and tobacco usage.
ECAD Multifamily Audit and EUI Data as of November 13, 2019 This report is the result of the Austin City Code 6-7's Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 1200 megawatts of Peak Energy by 2025. The Audit results are averages of the energy efficiency measures evaluated on site during the audit.
About the Dataset This dataset contains: A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that had findings as a result of their most recent Administrative Review with TDA, including: List of findings Type of Findings Corresponding administrative review question This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
This dataset supports M.C.1.a of SD 2023. The data on permitted new residential units is collected by the Development Services Department and accessed by staff through the permit database known as AMANDA. Spatial data on existing high-frequency transit routes is provided by Capital Metro, while data on existing protected bicycle infrastructure is maintained by the Austin Transportation Department and the Public Works Department. Each row displays residential units permitted each fiscal year and how many are within a quarter mile of a high frequency transit route or protected bicycle facility.The dataset can be used to understand residential development trends in relation to high frequency transit routes. View more details at https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/e458-a9pt
This is a historical measure for Strategic Direction 2023.
The purpose of this dataset is to track various indicators for historic preservation activities.
The columns contain information for the following criteria: CC.D.2. is to account for the percentage of buildings, structures, and sites preserved as locally designated historic resources that represent the community heritages of African American, Asian, Hispanic/Latino, Indigenous, Pacific Islander, and/or other people of color. This dataset comes from City of Austin Historic Preservation records and staff contribution. The row level data contains the percentage number of buildings that meet the criteria, and the dataset can be used to see our current status for buildings that meet the criteria. This dataset will be updated as more information becomes available.
CLL.D.4. contains the number of potentially significant buildings, structures, or sites recommended for historic landmark designation by the Historic Landmark Commission, but for which a demolition permit was released. This data comes from City of Austin Historic Landmark Commission and Building Department records. The row level data displays the total number of demolition in question. It can be used to track the demolitions in question.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percentage-of-buildings-structures-and-sites-prese/t3y8-ur2q/
This dataset provides detailed data for urban trail segments constructed within the full purpose jurisdiction of the City of Austin starting in calendar year 2017.
This dataset supports the SD23 performance measure HE.C.5: Number and percentage of linear miles of newly constructed sidewalks and urban trails that lie within census tracts with no low levels of leisure-time physical activity among adults aged 18 years or older.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of institutional medical billing services (SV2). It contains charges, payments, and treatments billed on a CMS-1450 form (UB-92, UB-04) by hospitals and medical facilities that treat injured employees, excluding ambulatory surgical centers, with dates of service for the last five years. For datasets going back to 2010, see institutional medical billing services (SV2) detail information – historical.
The detail contains information to identify insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill details are individual line items that are grouped in the header section of a single bill. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our institutional medical billing services (SV2) detail data dictionary.
See institutional medical billing services (SV2) header information for the corresponding header records related to this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
This dataset provides insight into the City tax bill as a percentage of the full property tax bill (SD23 measure GTW.A.2). Tax rates from local taxing authorities, along with homestead exemption amounts, are used to calculate the components of the median property tax bill.
Property value data is collected from Travis County Appraisal District (TCAD). The full property tax bill includes the City of Austin, Travis County, Travis County Healthcare District, Austin Independent School District (AISD), and Austin Community College (ACC).
View more details and insights related to this dataset on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/6zse-f8st
This dataset contains information about Bluetooth devices detected by our Bluetooth travel sensors. Each record contains a detected device’s anonymized Media Access Control (MAC) address along with the time and location the device was detected. These records alone are not traffic data but can be post-processed to measure the movement of detected devices through the roadway network
How does the City of Austin use the Bluetooth travel sensor data? The data enables transportation engineers to better understand short and long-term trends in Austin’s traffic patterns, supporting decisions about systems planning and traffic signal timing.
What information does the data contain? The sensor data is available in three datasets:
Individual Address Records ( https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bluetooth-Travel-Sensors-Individual-Addresses/qnpj-zrb9/data ) Each row in this dataset represents a Bluetooth device that was detected by one of our sensors. Each record contains a detected device’s anonymized Media Access Control (MAC) address along with the time and location the device was detected. These records alone are not traffic data but can be post-processed to measure the movement of detected devices through the roadway network
Individual Traffic Matches ( https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bluetooth-Travel-Sensors-Individual-Traffic-Matche/x44q-icha/data ) Each row in this dataset represents one Bluetooth enabled device that detected at two locations in the roadway network. Each record contains a detected device’s anonymized Media Access Control (MAC) address along with contain information about origin and destination points at which the device was detected, as well the time, date, and distance traveled.
Traffic Summary Records ( https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bluetooth-Travel-Sensors-Match-Summary-Records/v7zg-5jg9 ) The traffic summary records contain aggregate travel time and speed summaries based on the individual traffic match records. Each row in the dataset summarizes average travel time and speed along a sensor-equipped roadway segment in 15 minute intervals.
Does this data contain personally identifiable information? No. The Media Access Control (MAC) addresses in these datasets are randomly generated.
Under SO2024-0008386, passed by City Council on 4/17/2024, the Department of Family and Support Services publishes data on the City-operated and City-funded emergency new arrivals shelters. This series of datasets contains data related to the Limited Stay Policy.
Under this policy, a shelter stay can be extended beyond the initial 60-day period under certain circumstances. This dataset shows the original exit date of those who have exited due to this policy. This dataset does not represent their actual exit date, but rather the date their initial 60-day stay would have ended barring any extensions.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
Tracking Austin's "score" on the Creative Vitality Suite Index (CVI Value) is a primary measure of the sustainability of Austin's creative industry ecosystem and the sector's share of the local economy. The CVI Value determines the per-capita concentration of creativity to determine how Austin compares, creatively to the US average and other regions within the US.
The Creative Vitality Index compares the per capita concentration of creative activity in two regions. Data on creative industries, occupations, and cultural nonprofit revenues are indexed using a population-based calculation. The resulting CVI Value shows a region’s creative vitality compared to another region.
The data is calculated and prepared by the Western States Arts Federation (WESTAF) for the CVSuite. www.cvsuite.org
This dataset supports measure CLL.B.3 of SD23.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/xjsh-9y46
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
Purpose: This data exists in order to establish a percentage of cycles swept annually of protected bikeways in relation to the department goal. Source: Completed Protected Bike Lane reports are received from ATD. ARR then tracks internally the number of sweeping cycles completed. Contains: The number of street sweeping cycles completed each fiscal year, where one "cycle" represents one full sweep of all protected bike lanes. Includes information on the cycles swept target, and the percent of the target cycles completed. Usage: This measure is used to determine the number of cycles swept in relation to the number of cycles swept goal that is established annually. By tracking this data, Austin Resource Recovery can meet community mobility needs and promote public safety. View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ks42-2pg8
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This is an internal dataset that shows the twenty-four hour counts from automated trail counter stations. It gives a count of pedestrians and bicyclists that passed by the device location sensor. Fetched from the eco-counter public data portal at https://data.eco-counter.com/ParcPublic/?id=89#. Device locations dataset (internal only): https://datahub.austintexas.gov/d/vxcr-pjs7
This table contains data describing ATCEMS management of stroke alert patients.
SMBR captures the percentage of prime contractors that meet solicitation goals on applicable City of Austin contracts. This is measured by the prime's utilization of certified minority-owned, women-owned, and disadvantaged businesses.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
The Pre-bid Q&A Packet dataset displays detailed questions and answers submitted before letting, including pre-bid questions, submission date and time, responder details, and other project information.
Its contents are refreshed daily with data from TxDOT’s transportation program management system, TXDOTCONNECT. The Project Information dataset includes all questions submitted by vendors and the responses provided by TxDOT.
This data is intended for reporting purposes only. Please visit SummerFood.org to find an open summer meal site near you or dial 2-1-1 to speak to an operator regarding food assistance.
Help us provide the most useful data by completing our ODP User Feedback Survey for Summer Meal Programs Data
About the Dataset This dataset contains contact and program participation information for summer meal sites approved by TDA to operate summer 2025. Changes in participant information can occur through August. Unless otherwise noted, summer meal programs operate mid-May through August. Under approved circumstances, summer meal programs may be used during the school year to prevent interruption in school meal service.
An overview of all summer meal program data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Summer Meal Programs page.
An overview of all TDA Food and Nutrition data available on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found at our TDA Data Overview - Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
More information about accessing and working with TDA data on the Texas Open Data Portal can be found on the SquareMeals.org website on the TDA Food and Nutrition Open Data page.
About Dataset Updates
TDA aims to post new program participation data by May 1 of the active program year. Data updates will occur daily and end 60 days after then close of the program year. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
About the Agency The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), and summer meal programs. TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.
For more information on these programs, please visit us at SquareMeals.org.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
Top five entities by reported 334 revenue per fiscal year
This dataset contains information about the annual Adopted Operations and Maintenance (O&M) Tax Rate as a Percentage of the Effective O&M Tax Rate for the same fiscal year (SD23 measure GTW.A.3).
The effective O&M tax rate is the tax rate that would produce the same amount of taxes as the previous year if applied to the same properties taxed in the previous year that are still on the tax roll. A percentage higher than 100% indicates the adopted O&M tax rate is higher than the effective O&M tax rate, whereas a percentage lower than 100% indicates the adopted O&M tax rate is lower than the effective O&M tax rate. This data is used for budget planning and review purposes.
View more details and insights related to this dataset on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/iis6-xsd9
This counts placement types, not unique children in substitute care. Children will be duplicated by moving from foster care to other substitute care or by relative to non-relative placements. For example, a child who spent a portion of the year with a relative, but the rest with a non-relative would be counted twice.
Children in DFPS custody are those for whom a court has appointed DFPS legal responsibility through temporary or permanent managing conservatorship or other court ordered legal basis. These children may be residing in substitute care or may be living with a parent, referred to as a return and monitor. DFPS legal responsibility terminates when a court orders DFPS custody ended or a youth turns 18, whichever comes first.
Substitute care - all children who are living in a DFPS out of home placement. It does not include children in DFPS custody who are living with a parent on a return and monitor. Unless otherwise noted, it does include youth over 18 who are in extended foster care but are not in DFPS custody.
Kinship care- a subset of substitute care that includes all children in DFPS custody who are living with a legal or blood relative or other individual who has a significant relationship with the child or the child's family known as "fictive kin."
Foster care - a subset of substitute care that includes all children living in a placement that has been verified to provide 24-hour residential care for a child, in accordance with Chapter 42 of the Human Resources Code and related regulations. These placements include foster homes, including kinship care where the caregiver has been verified, general residential operations (GRO), emergency shelters, residential treatment centers (RTC), and juvenile facilities.
Paid foster care - a subset of foster care where DFPS is making foster care payments.
Visit dfps.state.tx.us for information on substitute care placements and all DFPS programs.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
Technology ascertainment study administered in 2010 through the City’s Office of Telecommunications and Regulatory Affairs (TARA) in partnership with The University of Texas at Austin to better understand community technological needs and desires.
Download the attached files from the Metadata to view the survey questionnaire (PDF) or the Data Map (xls) which includes the variable names with labels from the questionnaire.
This dataset contains information on the various types of flashing beacons deployed across the City of Austin. The data is maintained by the Arterial Management Division of the City of Austin Transportation Department.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This report is the result of Austin City Code 6-7’s Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 800 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2020. This report contains information on residential dwellings that have reported the results of the ECAD audit () to the City of Austin during 2015. For information on ECAD exemptions and other requirements, see Austin City Code Chapter 6-7. *Note – () Data reported by Residential Energy Auditors
This table contains data describing ATCEMS management of Trauma Alert patients. In this setting, “Trauma Alert” refers to injured patients who meet Physiological or Anatomical criteria for transport to a Trauma Center per City of Austin/Travis County EMS System Clinical Operating Guidelines.
Parking transactions for street parking and city operated lots. This includes data from physical parking kiosks and app payments through ParkATX.
Spatial data of physical parking assets such as pay stations and meters are available on ArcGIS Online: https://austin.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=1882302d40784b94a9036260cf518a7c
The source code that processes the city's parking transaction data is available on GitHub: https://github.com/cityofaustin/atd-parking-data
This dataset supports measure M.A.2.b of SD 2023. The source of the data is the anonymized travel time data provided by the third party vendor INRIX. Each row represents the Buffer Time Index percentage for all critical arterial corridors on weekdays for each year. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page : https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/M-A-2-b_Vehicle-Travel-Time-Reliability-how-consis/m5qg-vzb9/
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Communications and Technology Management (CTM) Department asks customers to fill out a survey rating our customer service to gain valuable insights into their experiences and satisfaction levels. This feedback helps us identify areas where we excel and highlights opportunities for improvement, ensuring we consistently meet and exceed our customers' expectations. By understanding their perspectives, we can make informed decisions that enhance our services and foster stronger relationships. Ultimately, these surveys empower us to create a better experience for everyone, demonstrating our commitment to continuous growth and customer care. These questions have remained consistent year over year since 2015 through 2024.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
Priority ranking of HIV Medical and Support Services for the Austin Area. The HIV Planning Council, a City of Austin Board/Commission, completes an annual prioritization process for HIV services as a grant requirement for the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Part A. Results of the prioritization process are considered in the allocation of Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Part A funding. Priorities are determined using data including but not limited to: epidemiological overview and demographic information for people living with HIV (PLWH), service utilization data, and needs assessment data. The service category ranked "1" is the highest priority, the category ranked "2" is the second highest priority and so on.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This data set contains information about the subdivision case applications submitted for review to the City of Austin. The data set includes information about case status in the permit review system, case number, proposed use, applicant, owner, and location.
The dataset supports measure S.D.4.a of SD23.
The Austin Municipal Court offers services via in person, phone, mail, email, online, in the community, in multiple locations, and during non-traditional hours to make it easier and more convenient for individuals to handle court business. This measure tracks the percentage of customers that utilize court services outside of normal business hours, defined as 8am-5pm Monday-Friday, and how many payments were made by methods other than in person. This measure helps determine how Court services are being used and enables the Court to allocate its resources to best meet the needs of the public. Historically, almost 30% of the operational hours are outside of traditional hours and the average percentage of payments made by mail and online has been over 59%.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/c7z3-geii
Data source: electronic case management system and manual tracking of payments received via mail. Calculation: Business hours are manually calculated annually. - A query is run from the court’s case management system to calculate how many monetary transactions were posted. S.D.4.a: Numerator: Number of payments received by mail is entered manually by the Customer Service unit that processes all incoming mail. S.D.4.a Denominator: Total number of web payments is calculated using a query to calculate a total number of payments with a payment type ‘web’ in the case management system. Measure time period: Annual (Fiscal Year) Automated: No Date of last description update: 4/10/2020
This dataset shows new sidewalk added to the City of Austin's network by calendar year. Data in this table is limited to the full purpose jurisdiction of the City of Austin as of publication date. Sidewalk construction comes from many sources, including but not limited to the City of Austin, counties, state agencies, and private developers. Existing data does not support separating out city and non-city construction.
This dataset supports the SD23 performance measure M.C.6a: Percent of missing sidewalks completed. Detailed sidewalk segment data is available in the dataset Strategic Measure_Sidewalk Segment Data.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Percentage-of-Missing-Sidewalk-Network-Completed/ffkw-wkiv/
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
Tracker of Program data of the Austin Public Access Studio
This data set tracks the number of established businesses, non-profits, and startups that the City of Austin Economic Development and Small and Minority Business Resources departments supported each year. The data set lists the programs each business was served through, the race or ethnicity of the CEO or Executive supported, and zipcode, if available. This data can be used to distinguish areas of Austin and around the globe that have received small business services as well as the racial makeup of the executives of these established businesses, non-profits, and startups.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/hgbb-jkth
If a political committee has supported, opposed, or assisted a candidate, officeholder, or ballot measure during the reporting period, this activity will be reported in the Committee Purpose Dataset.
This dataset reports on the operation state of traffic signals in Austin, TX. Traffic signals enter flash mode when something is preventing the signal from operating normally. This is typically the result of a power surge, power outage, or damage to signal equipment. A signal may also be intentionally placed into flash mode for maintenance purposes or be scheduled to flash overnight.
You can view an interactive map of flashing traffic signals here:
https://data.mobility.austin.gov/signal-monitor
Approximately 90% of the City’s signals communicate with our Advanced Transportation Management System. When these signals go on flash, they will be reported in this dataset. Although we are extending communications to all signals, approximately 10% are not currently captured in this dataset. It also occasionally happens that the event that disables a traffic signal also disables network communication to the signal, in which case the signal outage will not be reported here.
In this dataset the distinction between scheduled and unscheduled flash is identified by the 'operation state' column. A signal that is in unscheduled flash mode will have a status of 2 or 7. A signal that is in in scheduled flash mode will have a status of 1.
This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for or be suitable for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. It does not represent an on-the-ground survey and represents only the approximate relative location of traffic signals.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This table shows ATCEMS fiscal year performance data that supports the ATCEMS annual report.
Bright Green Future Grants is a competitive program that provides funding for school-based sustainability projects up to $3,000. The program was designed to recognize and support innovative projects that will inspire students to become lifelong environmental stewards. This data set includes information about the schools and projects awarded, as well as the project outcomes and funding dollar amounts.
This data has been collected as part of a larger project by the City of Austin's Watershed Protection and Development Review Department to inventory its drainage infrastructure and create a GIS to store this information. The project includes an internal team developing a GIS based on record documents and an external team locating ground level appurtenances using GPS field collection units. The data in this data set represents the former.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This dataset contains records of work completed and in-progress work from June 2018 to present for the purpose of tracking the installation and maintenance of roadway markings across the City of Austin. The Jobs dataset is separated into four categories: Long Line, Short Line, Specialty Markings, and Raised Pavement Markings.
Long Line: Work group responsible for installing and maintaining lane lines, double yellow centerlines, bike lane lines, and turn bay.
Short Line: Work group responsible for installing and maintaining crosswalks, school zone lines, and stop lines.
Specialty Markings: Work group responsible for installing and maintaining arrows, words, bike symbols, pedestrian symbols, railroad crossings, yield triangles, parking stalls/Ls/Ts, green pads, and speed hump markings.
Raised Pavement Markings: Work group responsible for installing and maintaining delineators, raised pavement markings (RPMs), and concrete domes.
This work is managed by the Signs & Markings Division of the City of Austin Transportation Department.
You may also be interested in these related datasets, which can be joined together using the work order ID columns:
- Road Markings Work Orders: https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Roadway-Markings-Work-Orders/nyhn-669r
- Signs and Markings Time Logs: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Work-Order-Signs-Markings-Time-Logs/qvth-gwdv
- Signs and Markings Reimbursements: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Signs-and-Markings-Reimbursement-Tracking/pma8-yy5k
Division website: http://www.austintexas.gov/department/signs-markings
This dataset shows all high schools that were included in the 2020 TEA 4-year graduation rate report, and indicates their street address, zip code, district, and type of school (private/charter).
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This dataset is no longer actively maintained, because the devices referenced in this dataset have been removed from operation.
This dataset contains information about travel sensors in Austin, TX. Travel sensors are owned and operated by the City of Austin Transportation Department and are used to monitor traffic conditions across the city.
The output of these sensors is available for download in the following datasets:
Radar traffic counts related to this dataset with the 'KITS ID' value of a wavetronix travel sensor. ( https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Radar-Traffic-Counts/i626-g7ub )
Individual Address Records ( https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bluetooth-Travel-Sensors-Individual-Addresses/qnpj-zrb9/data )
Individual Traffic Matches ( https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bluetooth-Travel-Sensors-Individual-Traffic-Matche/x44q-icha/data )
Traffic Summary Records ( https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bluetooth-Travel-Sensors-Match-Summary-Records/v7zg-5jg9 )
For information about Austin's Advanced Transportation Management System, visit the department website, here: http://www.austintexas.gov/department/arterial-management
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
This dataset contains data about the Campaign Finance Report received by a filer. The Reports table contains information about the type of report filed, the due date, original filing date, and transaction totals.
To access the Transactions table, where individual transactions are listed, please go to: https://data.austintexas.gov/Government/Campaign-Finance-Transaction-Detail/g4yx-aw9r
A data dictionary for this dataset is available at http://services.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=247730
This dataset serves as a part of the development process for the Austin Vision Zero programs public facing reporting applications. It is not complete, nor intended for use outside of the department’s software development efforts. Please see the following link for complete data: https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Vision-Zero-Crash-Report-Data-Demographic-Statisti/xecs-rpy9.
About the Dataset
This dataset contains:
A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that have recently undergone Administrative Reviews with TDA, including:
Types of school nutrition program operated
Special provision programs utilized
Whether or not there were Findings
This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
Dataset that feeds the map of tennis centers operated by City of Austin.
Map link: https://datahub.austintexas.gov/Locations-and-Maps/Tennis-Center-Map/g5n8-ggmb
For more information, please visit PARD's Tennis webpage: https://www.austintexas.gov/department/tennis
About the Dataset
This dataset contains:
A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that have recently undergone Administrative Reviews with TDA, including:
Types of school nutrition program operated
Special provision programs utilized
Whether or not there were Findings
This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
This dataset shows detailed data for sidewalk network segments within the full purpose jurisdiction of the City of Austin. It includes constructed ('Existing') and planned ('Absent') sidewalk segments for the network as described in the Sidewalk Master Plan adopted by the Austin City Council in June 2016. Data in this dataset may change in the future following sidewalk plan updates, which may change the composition of the planned sidewalk network.
This dataset supports two SD23 performance measures: M.C.6a and HE.C.5. Data showing calendar year construction can be found in the dataset Strategic Measure_Aggregated Sidewalk Construction Data.
About the Dataset
This dataset contains:
A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that have recently undergone Administrative Reviews with TDA, including:
Types of school nutrition program operated
Special provision programs utilized
Whether or not there were Findings
This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This table contains data from the community survey conducted as part of an Audit of the City's Cultural Centers. We surveyed members of the Austin community using a survey developed by the audit team. Survey questions generally asked respondents' opinions on cultural center programs, staff, fees, and facilities. The survey opened January 3 and closed January 27, 2020. Austin community members were invited to take the survey through social media outreach and direct email invitations. The survey and outreach materials were written in English and translated into Spanish, Vietnamese, and Simplified Chinese. A total of 1,330 community members responded to the survey. Respondents were asked only to respond for centers they had visited in the last two years and could respond for more than one center. The comments detailed in this table were in response to open-ended survey items that allowed respondents to give opinions or suggestions about each center's programming, fees, staff, and facilities. Any open-ended responses answered in Spanish, Vietnamese, or Chinese were translated prior to analysis. To gauge the general sentiment of the responses, each was categorized as "Positive," "Negative," "Suggestion," or "N/A." During analysis, some comments were deemed more relevant to other open-ended survey items than the items for which they were originally written. These responses were re-assigned to the survey items that more closely aligned with their subject.
About the Dataset
This dataset contains:
A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that have recently undergone Administrative Reviews with TDA, including:
Types of school nutrition program operated
Special provision programs utilized
Whether or not there were Findings
This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
About the Dataset
This dataset contains:
A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that have recently undergone Administrative Reviews with TDA, including:
Types of school nutrition program operated
Special provision programs utilized
Whether or not there were Findings
This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This dataset supports measure M.A.5.b of SD 2023. The source of the data is the anonymous travel time data provided by third party vendor INRIX. Each row represents the average travel time for each hour in a day for major corridors on weekdays for each year. This dataset can be used to gain insight into the changes in average vehicle travel time along major City corridors.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/M-A-5-b-Percent-change-in-average-vehicle-travel-t/9f4v-kau2/
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This data is provided to help with analysis of various violations charged throughout the City of Austin.
Updated the Municipal Court Caseload: This data is provided to help with analysis of various violations charged throughout the City of Austin. "Case Status" and "Race" abbreviations go as follows: Fields for Race: A, Asian B, Black BA, Black or African American CD, Client does not know CR, Client refused DNC, Data not calculated H, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander L, Hispanic or Latino ME, Middle Eastern MR, Identified Multiple Races N, Native American or Alaskan O, Other U, Unknown W, White
Case Status (Closed Y/N) TERMINATED (TERM) and TERMINATED ADMINISTRATIVELY (TERMA) = Y ACTIVE (ACT) AND INACTIVE(IN) INACTIVE = N Active, Inactive, Terminated, Terminated Administratively Inactive doesn't mean the cases is closed only TERM and TERMA.
DATASET DESCRIPTION This dataset contains offense incidents where any physical contact with a subject was made by an officer using the body or any object, device, or weapon, not including un-resisted escorting or handcuffing a subject. Any complaint by a subject that an officer caused pain or injury shall be treated as a use of force incident, except complaints of minor discomfort from un-resisted handcuffing.
A response to resistance report is measured as a single subject officer interaction on a single case. A subject resistance may result in multiple types of force applied by an officer or multiple officers. Accordingly, the types of force used can be more than the total reports of response to resistance.
GENERAL ORDERS RELATING TO THIS DATA It is the policy of this department that officers use only that amount of objectively reasonable force which appears necessary under the circumstances to successfully accomplish the legitimate law enforcement purpose in accordance with this policy.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department crime data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
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Reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different systems of record may have been used.
4.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
APD Data Dictionary - https://data.austintexas.gov/Public-Safety/APD-Data-Dictionary/6w8q-suwv/about_data
About the Dataset
This dataset contains:
A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that have recently undergone Administrative Reviews with TDA, including:
Types of school nutrition program operated
Special provision programs utilized
Whether or not there were Findings
This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
This dataset supports S.D.6 of SD23. The Downtown Austin Community Court (DACC) was established to address quality of life and public order offenses occurring in the downtown Austin area utilizing a restorative justice court model. DACC offers alternatives to fines and fees for defendants to handle their cases such as community service restitution and participation in rehabilitation services. This measure highlights to what extent DACC motivates individuals to handle their cases in a manner that is non-punitive and does not create a barrier for individuals in their future endeavors. DACC’s priority population is individuals experiencing homelessness and the program’s main goal is to permanently stabilize individuals experiencing homelessness.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/c4qm-y2i6
the date range for this data is FY15 - March of FY2020.
Data source:electronic court case management platform. Calculation: numerator: number of cases with a disposition of an alternative form of adjudication Denominator: total number of cases with a disposition Measure time period: Annual (Fiscal Year) Automated: no
Date of last description update: 4/1/2020
About the Dataset
This dataset contains:
A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that have recently undergone Administrative Reviews with TDA, including:
Types of school nutrition program operated
Special provision programs utilized
Whether or not there were Findings
This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
DEPRECATED: Using LOCATION.WRM_SAMPLE_SITES.
https://data.austintexas.gov/Locations-and-Maps/LOCATION-WRM_sample_sites/mwu5-jd6h
Locations for water quality sampling performed in the Austin, TX area by the Watershed Protection Environmental Resource Management division.
This dataset contains segment-level data for construction of sidewalks and urban trails within the full purpose jurisdiction of the City of Austin beginning in calendar year 2017.
This dataset supports SD23 performance measure HE.C.5: Number and percentage of linear miles of newly constructed sidewalks and urban trails that lie within census tracts with no low levels of leisure-time physical activity among adults aged 18 years or older. View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/22ei-wafp
More detailed data for urban trail segments can be found in the dataset Strategic Measure_Urban Trails Segment Data. More details data for sidewalk segments can be found in the dataset Strategic Measure_Sidewalk Segment Data.
About the Dataset
This dataset contains:
A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that have recently undergone Administrative Reviews with TDA, including:
Types of school nutrition program operated
Special provision programs utilized
Whether or not there were Findings
This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
Austin Transportation & Public Works maintains road condition sensors across the city which monitor the temperature and surface condition of roadways. These sensors enable our Mobility Management Center to stay apprised of potential roadway freezing events and intervene when necessary.
This data is updated continuously every 5 minutes.
See also, the data descriptions from the sensor's instruction manual:
https://github.com/cityofaustin/atd-road-conditions/blob/production/5433-3X-manual.pdf
This table contains data describing ATCEMS performance in delivering patients with time-sensitive conditions (aka “Alert Patients”) to receiving facilities in a timely manner. The call-to-door interval begins when the first 911 call for an incident is answered in the Communications Center, and ends when the patient is recorded in CAD as arriving at a receiving facility.
About the Dataset
This dataset contains:
A list of School Food Authorities (SFAs) that have recently undergone Administrative Reviews with TDA, including:
Types of school nutrition program operated
Special provision programs utilized
Whether or not there were Findings
This report can be found on SquareMeals Compliance for NSLP for the current program year and will be posted to ODP within three months after the end of the program year.
DATASET DESCRIPTION This dataset includes the total number of complaints filed with the APD Internal Affairs Unit, categorized by the sector in which the complaint occurred.
GENERAL ORDERS RELATING TO ADMINISTRATIVE INVESTIGATIONS This document establishes the required process for the administrative investigation of alleged employee misconduct by Internal Affairs and the employee's chain-of-command. It also outlines the imposition of fair and equitable disciplinary action when misconduct is identified. Investigations conducted by APD Human Resources are governed by City Personnel Policies.
This document does not supersede any rights or privileges afforded civilian employees through City Personnel Policies or sworn employees through the Meet and Confer Agreement, nor does it alter or supersede the powers vested in the Civilian Oversight Process of the Austin Police Department (APD) through that Agreement. In addition, nothing in this document limits or restricts the powers vested in the Chief of Police as the final decision maker in all disciplinary matters.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
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Reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different systems of record may have been used.
4.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
DATASET DESCRIPTION This dataset includes the total number of complaints filed with the APD Internal Affairs Unit, categorized by current status.
GENERAL ORDERS RELATING TO ADMINISTRATIVE INVESTIGATIONS This document establishes the required process for the administrative investigation of alleged employee misconduct by Internal Affairs and the employee's chain-of-command. It also outlines the imposition of fair and equitable disciplinary action when misconduct is identified. Investigations conducted by APD Human Resources are governed by City Personnel Policies.
This document does not supersede any rights or privileges afforded civilian employees through City Personnel Policies or sworn employees through the Meet and Confer Agreement, nor does it alter or supersede the powers vested in the Civilian Oversight Process of the Austin Police Department (APD) through that Agreement. In addition, nothing in this document limits or restricts the powers vested in the Chief of Police as the final decision maker in all disciplinary matters.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
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Reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different systems of record may have been used.
4.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This data represents the outputs and outcomes of the City funded digital literacy training and public access computer lab contract (Community Technology Access Lab Management & Digital Literacy Skills Training Services contract). This data shows the number of clients served and the percent of digital literacy training clients who increase their digital skill as well as data showing usage and availability of computer labs.
This dataset supports measure EOA.F.5 of SD23.
Data Source: Data is reported by contractors quarterly via a grant management system (PartnerGrants) and then transferred to this reporting format.
Calculation: EOA.F.5 - Number of unduplicated workshop and structured curriculum training clients who increase their digital skills / Number of workshop and structured curriculum training clients
Measure Time Period: Quarterly (Fiscal Year)
Automated: no
Date of last description update: 2/21/2020
This dataset supports measure M.A.1 of SD 2023. The source of the data is the American Community Survey. Each row is the five year estimate for Means of Transportation to Work for Austin. This dataset can be used to gain insight into the estimated mode split for the commute to work in Austin.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/hm3r-8jfy
This report is the result of the Austin City Code 6-7’s Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 800 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2020. In addition, this report contains information on multi-family properties older than 10 years that are required to perform an energy audit and report the results to the City of Austin and all residents living in those communities. The Austin Energy report quantifies the 2015 energy efficiency findings and the progress towards meeting City Council goals of Resolution 20081106-048.
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This data set contains information about the site plan case applications submitted for review to the City of Austin. The data set includes information about case status in the permit review system, case number, proposed use, applicant, owner, and location.
** This dataset is currently under construction and subject to change at any time. The records in this dataset do not reflect actual business records and have been created for demonstration purposes only **
DATASET DESCRIPTION This dataset includes the total number of complaints filed with the APD Internal Affairs Unit, categorized by final resolution.
GENERAL ORDERS RELATING TO ADMINISTRATIVE INVESTIGATIONS This document establishes the required process for the administrative investigation of alleged employee misconduct by Internal Affairs and the employee's chain-of-command. It also outlines the imposition of fair and equitable disciplinary action when misconduct is identified. Investigations conducted by APD Human Resources are governed by City Personnel Policies.
This document does not supersede any rights or privileges afforded civilian employees through City Personnel Policies or sworn employees through the Meet and Confer Agreement, nor does it alter or supersede the powers vested in the Civilian Oversight Process of the Austin Police Department (APD) through that Agreement. In addition, nothing in this document limits or restricts the powers vested in the Chief of Police as the final decision maker in all disciplinary matters.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
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Reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different systems of record may have been used.
4.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This report is the result of the Austin City Code 6-7’s Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 800 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2020. This report contains information on commercial facilities that have reported the EPA’s Energy Star Portfolio Manager benchmarking results in 2013 () to the City of Austin. For information on ECAD exemptions and other requirements, see Austin City Code Chapter 6-7. Note – () Data reported by Commercial Customers.
This dataset entails the delineation of impervious surfaces and artificial land cover types extracted from aerial imagery captured in early 2021. Utilization within the City of Austin The dataset plays a pivotal role in several municipal functions, encompassing the computation of the Drainage Charge managed by the Watershed Protection Department, wildfire assessments, emergency operations planning, transportation asset monitoring, urban forest management, and more. Data Updates New aerial imagery and impervious cover data are acquired by the city every two years, resulting in distinct datasets for each capture. As of its initial capture in early 2021, there have been no subsequent updates to this dataset. Downloading Instructions Some users have reported issues downloading the data. Due to the large size of the dataset, downloading can take longer than expected. We recommend following these instructions to download the data.
Click on 'Export'. Choose the desired export format from the dropdown menu. Initiate the download by clicking 'Download'. It's essential to allow your browser ample time to process the download. Even if no immediate action appears to occur, please refrain from closing the browser window. Depending on your internet speed, the download process can take between 10 to 30 minutes due to the substantial size of the data. Once the download commences in your browser, allow it to finish entirely. Should you encounter any issues during the download process, kindly contact the dataset owner for assistance.
DATASET DESCRIPTION: Census Block Group polygons from the United States Census Bureau (2022) of the Austin area, including Hays, Travis and Williamson counties and a portion of western Bastrop County. Block groups are clusters of blocks within the same census tract that have the same first digit of their 4-character census block number (e.g., Blocks 3001, 3002, 3003 to 3999 in census tract 1210.02 belong to block group 3).
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
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The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This table contains data describing ATCEMS management of STEMI Alert patients.
This report is the result of Austin City Code 6-7’s Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 800 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2020. This report contains information on residential dwellings that have reported the results of the ECAD audit () to the City of Austin during 2016. For information on ECAD exemptions and other requirements, see Austin City Code Chapter 6-7. *Note – () Data reported by Residential Energy Auditors
For information about the City of Austin's Bluetooth travel sensor data, visit our documentation page: https://github.com/cityofaustin/hack-the-traffic/tree/master/docs
Each row in this dataset represents one Bluetooth enabled device that detected at two locations in the City of Austin's Bluetooth sensor network. Each record contains a detected device’s anonymized Media Access Control (MAC) address along with contain information about origin and destination points at which the device was detected, as well the time, date, and distance traveled.
How does the City of Austin use the Bluetooth travel sensor data? The data enables transportation engineers to better understand short and long-term trends in Austin’s traffic patterns, supporting decisions about systems planning and traffic signal timing.
What information does the data contain? The sensor data is available in three datasets:
Individual Address Records ( https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bluetooth-Travel-Sensors-Individual-Addresses/qnpj-zrb9/data ) Each row in this dataset represents a Bluetooth device that was detected by one of our sensors. Each record contains a detected device’s anonymized Media Access Control (MAC) address along with the time and location the device was detected. These records alone are not traffic data but can be post-processed to measure the movement of detected devices through the roadway network
Individual Traffic Matches ( https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bluetooth-Travel-Sensors-Individual-Traffic-Matche/x44q-icha/data ) Each row in this dataset represents one Bluetooth enabled device that detected at two locations in the roadway network. Each record contains a detected device’s anonymized Media Access Control (MAC) address along with contain information about origin and destination points at which the device was detected, as well the time, date, and distance traveled.
Traffic Summary Records ( https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Bluetooth-Travel-Sensors-Match-Summary-Records/v7zg-5jg9 ) The traffic summary records contain aggregate travel time and speed summaries based on the individual traffic match records. Each row in the dataset summarizes average travel time and speed along a sensor-equipped roadway segment in 15 minute intervals.
Does this data contain personally identifiable information? No. The Media Access Control (MAC) addresses in these datasets are randomly generated.
This is a listing of creative workspaces, performance venues, and exhibition venues collected through CAMP: The Cultural Asset Mapping Project. CAMP is an initiative of the Economic Development Department to map arts and cultural facilities in Austin. The entries in this dataset were compiled by the CAMP team within the Cultural Arts Division and collected through council district community mapping sessions and online surveys conducted over the summer of 2016. This dataset is only an excerpt of the complete CAMP dataset which will be available in early 2017. For more information on how this dataset was created, visit www.austintexas.gov/culturemapping or contact camp@austintexas.gov
This dataset represents only the information collected by Cultural Arts Division staff and community input through the 2016 Cultural Asset Mapping Project and does not represent an on-the-ground survey. This product has been produced by the Economic Development Department of the City of Austin for the sole purpose of informational reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
This dataset supports S.D.5 of SD23. This measure calculates how long it takes to adjudicate a case from the time when the case was filed. Austin Municipal Court is dedicated to processing cases efficiently and in alignment with nationally established time standards to reduce delay and ensure timely justice. Cases are typically adjudicated within 30-180 days. If case processing time standards are consistently exceeded, the overall administration of justice may be compromised resulting in inequitable outcomes and the loss of public trust. AMC monitors the length of time it takes to process cases and makes necessary adjustments to ensure compliance with time standards. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/99up-wwsi The dataset for court cases adjudicated within case processing time standards covers a time period of Fiscal years 2016-first quarter of Fiscal year 2020. Data source: court's electronic case management system Calculation: Numerator-case disposition date Denominator- the date the case was filed. Measure Time Period: Quarterly (Fiscal Year) Automated: no Date of last description update: 4/1/2020
This directory was compiled through a 2016 community mapping process as part of The City of Austin Cultural Arts Division's Cultural Asset Mapping Project (CAMP) and updated through Cultural Arts Division staff research in 2018. The directory is a comprehensive list of arts and cultural facilities, creative businesses and organizations, public art, and any other cultural or creative resources submitted by CAMP participants as cultural assets. For more information on CAMP and how you can use this directory, visit www.austintexas.gov/culturemapping.
This dataset was created by the City of Austin Economic Development Department for the sole purpose of informational reference and does not reflect an on the ground survey. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy of completeness.
Property Tax Relief (PT) Economic and Industrial Development (4A/4B) Sports and Community Venue (SCV) Municipal Development (MD) Street Maintenance and Repair (SMR) City Sales Tax (CST)
This table contains data from the community survey conducted as part of an Audit of the City's Cultural Centers. We surveyed members of the Austin community using a survey developed by the audit team. Survey questions generally asked respondents' opinions on cultural center programs, staff, fees, and facilities. The survey opened January 3 and closed January 27, 2020. Austin community members were invited to take the survey through social media outreach and direct email invitations. The survey and outreach materials were written in English and translated into Spanish, Vietnamese, and Simplified Chinese. A total of 1,330 community members responded to the survey. Respondents were asked only to respond for centers they had visited in the last two years and could respond for more than one center. In this summary of question responses, those who selected "strongly agree" or "agree" were included in the total for "agree" and those who selected "strongly disagree" or "disagree" were included in the total for "disagree." Percentages may not total 100 due to rounding.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department crime data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
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Reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different systems of record may have been used.
4.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
The Austin Police Department as of January 1, 2019, become a Uniform Crime Reporting -National Incident Based Reporting System (NIBRS) reporting agency. Crime is reported by persons, property and society.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj‐cccq
This dataset lists the public and internals datasets published on the City of Austin Open Data Portal filtered to the Austin Transportation and Public Works department. Dataset types include stories, charts, datasets, filters, embedded links, and files. This dataset is maintained by the Data and Technology Services division in the department.
This data is provided to help with analysis of various violations charged throughout the City of Austin's Downtown Community Court.
"Case Status" and "Race" abbreviations go as follows: Race - A, Asian B, Black BA, Black or African American CD, Client does not know CR, Client refused DNC, Data not calculated H, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander L, Hispanic or Latino ME, Middle Eastern MR, Identified Multiple Races N, Native American or Alaskan O, Other U, Unknown W, White
Case Status - Y = closed || N = Not closed TERMINATED (TERM) and TERMINATED ADMINISTRATIVELY (TERMA) = Y ACTIVE (ACT) AND INACTIVE(IN) INACTIVE = N Active, Inactive, Terminated, Terminated Administratively Inactive doesn't mean the cases is closed only TERM and TERMA.
This dataset contains information about pole attachments in Austin, TX.
The data is maintained by the Arterial Management Division of the City of Austin Transportation and Public Works Department.
This dataset is currently being developed and may change at any time. As a result, this may contain incomplete or inaccurate information.
VITAL SIGNS INDICATOR Home Prices (EC7)
FULL MEASURE NAME Home Prices
LAST UPDATED August 2019
DESCRIPTION Home prices refer to the cost of purchasing one’s own house or condominium. While a significant share of residents may choose to rent, home prices represent a primary driver of housing affordability in a given region, county or city.
DATA SOURCE Zillow Median Sale Price (1997-2018) http://www.zillow.com/research/data/
Bureau of Labor Statistics: Consumer Price Index All Urban Consumers Data Table (1997-2018; specific to each metro area) http://data.bls.gov
CONTACT INFORMATION vitalsigns.info@bayareametro.gov
METHODOLOGY NOTES (across all datasets for this indicator) Median housing price estimates for the region, counties, cities, and zip code come from analysis of individual home sales by Zillow. The median sale price is the price separating the higher half of the sales from the lower half. In other words, 50 percent of home sales are below or above the median value. Zillow defines all homes as single-family residential, condominium, and co-operative homes with a county record. Single-family residences are detached, which means the home is an individual structure with its own lot. Condominiums are units that you own in a multi-unit complex, such as an apartment building. Co-operative homes are slightly different from condominiums where the homeowners own shares in the corporation that owns the building, not the actual units themselves.
For metropolitan area comparison values, the Bay Area metro area’s median home sale price is the population-weighted average of the nine counties’ median home prices. Home sales prices are not reliably available for Houston, because Texas is a non-disclosure state. For more information on non-disclosure states, see: http://www.zillow.com/blog/chronicles-of-data-collection-ii-non-disclosure-states-3783/
Inflation-adjusted data are presented to illustrate how home prices have grown relative to overall price increases; that said, the use of the Consumer Price Index does create some challenges given the fact that housing represents a major chunk of consumer goods bundle used to calculate CPI. This reflects a methodological tradeoff between precision and accuracy and is a common concern when working with any commodity that is a major component of CPI itself.
This dataset contains records of in-progress and work completed from June 2018 to present for the purpose of tracking the installation and maintenance of roadway markings in the City of Austin full purpose jurisdiction. This work is managed by the Signs & Markings Division (SMD) of the City of Austin Transportation and Public Works (TPW) department.
The records are managed in a work management system tracker and the dataset is automatically updated twice per day.
You may also be interested in these related datasets, which can be joined together using the work order ID columns:
- Road Markings Jobs: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Work-Order-Markings-Jobs/vey3-7n3x
- Signs and Markings Time Logs: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Work-Order-Signs-Markings-Time-Logs/qvth-gwdv
- Signs and Markings Reimbursements: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Signs-and-Markings-Reimbursement-Tracking/pma8-yy5k
Division website: http://www.austintexas.gov/department/signs-markings
VITAL SIGNS INDICATOR Home Prices (EC7)
FULL MEASURE NAME Home Prices
LAST UPDATED August 2019
DESCRIPTION Home prices refer to the cost of purchasing one’s own house or condominium. While a significant share of residents may choose to rent, home prices represent a primary driver of housing affordability in a given region, county or city.
DATA SOURCE Zillow Median Sale Price (1997-2018) http://www.zillow.com/research/data/
Bureau of Labor Statistics: Consumer Price Index All Urban Consumers Data Table (1997-2018; specific to each metro area) http://data.bls.gov
CONTACT INFORMATION vitalsigns.info@bayareametro.gov
METHODOLOGY NOTES (across all datasets for this indicator) Median housing price estimates for the region, counties, cities, and zip code come from analysis of individual home sales by Zillow. The median sale price is the price separating the higher half of the sales from the lower half. In other words, 50 percent of home sales are below or above the median value. Zillow defines all homes as single-family residential, condominium, and co-operative homes with a county record. Single-family residences are detached, which means the home is an individual structure with its own lot. Condominiums are units that you own in a multi-unit complex, such as an apartment building. Co-operative homes are slightly different from condominiums where the homeowners own shares in the corporation that owns the building, not the actual units themselves.
For metropolitan area comparison values, the Bay Area metro area’s median home sale price is the population-weighted average of the nine counties’ median home prices. Home sales prices are not reliably available for Houston, because Texas is a non-disclosure state. For more information on non-disclosure states, see: http://www.zillow.com/blog/chronicles-of-data-collection-ii-non-disclosure-states-3783/
Inflation-adjusted data are presented to illustrate how home prices have grown relative to overall price increases; that said, the use of the Consumer Price Index does create some challenges given the fact that housing represents a major chunk of consumer goods bundle used to calculate CPI. This reflects a methodological tradeoff between precision and accuracy and is a common concern when working with any commodity that is a major component of CPI itself.
The name of each provider and and sublocations that offer HIV services in the Austin Transitional Grant area. This was generated by previous staff and is not a complete list.
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between March 19 to March 29 related to a upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset was created by the City of Austin to compile information regarding all sign/banner permits folders in AMANDA. The dataset contains information regarding the type, size, applicant, and location of the sign and permit. It also includes geographic information like Council District and Jurisdiction Type.
The point dataset contains information regarding issued sign/banner permits that were created if the permit is tied to a property. Information in this dataset has been retrieved from the City's Application MANagement and Data Automation (AMANDA) database. The dataset contains information on location, banner direction, illumination type, variance requirement, installation date, type of sign, and removal date.
Deaths from all causes and deaths involving coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) reported to NCHS by time-period, HHS region, race and Hispanic origin, and age group.
United States death counts include the 50 states, plus the District of Columbia and New York City. The ten (10) United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regions include the following jurisdictions. Region 1: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont; Region 2: New Jersey, New York, New York City, Puerto Rico; Region 3: Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia; Region 4: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee; Region 5: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin; Region 6: Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas; Region 7: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska; Region 8: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming; Region 9: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada; Region 10: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington.
This site provides historical data related to COVID-19 booster dose eligibility presented on two CDC COVID Data Tracker sites: Vaccinations in the US and Vaccination Equity. Data are updated weekly on Thursdays.Some COVID-19 vaccine recipients are eligible to receive booster doses, and criteria for booster eligibility may change over time. Data and footnotes will be updated to align with the current recommendations. CDC counts people as having “received a booster dose” if they are fully vaccinated and received another dose of any COVID-19 vaccine on or after August 13, 2021. This does not distinguish whether the recipient is immunocompromised and received an additional doseData Limitations: The booster eligibility metric excludes fully vaccinated recipients who have an “Other” primary series vaccine type. Booster eligibility counts and percentages exclude vaccine administrations reported by Texas as the primary series cannot be linked to booster dose in the aggregate data submitted by Texas. Footnotes:CDC counts people as being “eligible to get a booster dose<
This data is provided as a one-off project and there are no plans to update it. The data is collected from the 3 main appraisal districts and users may go to them to obtain land records and appraisal data, or contact HPD staff for assistance. This layer contains land use, zoning, and appraisal data for the purposes of long-range planning and scenario modelling, current to October 2016, but based on a variety of sources with different capture dates. The land use information and parcel geography are based on a land use inventory. It also includes estimates of residential units based on building permit, appraisal data, aerials, and a variety of other sources. An ArcGIS lyr file is also provided to allow users to draw this GIS layer in ArcMap.
Parcels affected by the adoption of the 2015 International Wildland Urban-Interface Code (WUIC), which was adopted by Austin City Council April9, 2020, and implementation beginning January 1st, 2021. Parcels that are within 1.5 miles of a wildland area greater than 750 acres and parcels within 150 feet of a wildland area greater than 40 acres are wildland_urban_interface_code parcels. Parcels designated as "preserves" have been removed and are not subject to the WUI code.Dataset was created in 2020 by Austin Fire Department Wildfire Division. It was derived from the most recent Travis County Appraisal District (TCAD) Parcels, and queried based upon their planar distance to wildland areas. Wildlands are defined as undeveloped continuous areas,. The wildlands feature class is maintained by the Austin Fire Department and is derived from the City of Austin Planimetric dataset, also known as impervious cover data, and are updated every two years. ArcGIS Pro version 2 software was used to create this dataset. The data is meant to be ingested by a GIS system. Changes to the City of Austin & LTD jurisdiction warrant an update to this dataset. The data is scheduled to be updated every two years.Included in the attributes are parcel condition variables that determine the parcel's "fire hazard severity' class. These include the composite score of three variables: slope score, fuel score, and WUI class (proximity). Slope score was determined by the average degree slope of the area within each parcel and classified as less than 10%, 10% to 25%, or greater then 25%. Fuel score was determined by the average fuel class area within each parcels as defined by the Austin Travis County Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP) and classified as light, medium, or heavy fuels. Proximity class was defined by the proximity of each parcel to wildlands, either as within 1.5 miles of wildlands greater than 750 acres, or within 150 feet of wildlands greater than 40 acres.Description of data fieldsGLOBALID_1 = Used for Global IdentificationOBJECTID = Object IdentificationSLOPE_DEGREE = The average slope of each parcel in degreesFIRE_HAZARD_SEVERITY = The "fire hazard severity" class of each parcelPROXIMITY_CLASS = The proximity class of each parcelSLOPE_CLASS = The slope classification of each parcelFUEL_CLASS = The fuel class of each parcelCREATED_BY = Creators nameCREATED_DATE = Date createdMODIFIED_BY = Modifiers nameMODIFIED_DATE = Date modifiedUNIQUE_ID = Unique Identification number (mirror object id)Shape_Area = Shape areaShape_Length = Shape lengthIteration ID: Parcels_AustinLTD4 2020Contact: Steven Casebeer at Steven.casebeer@austintexas.gov | Austin Fire Department Wildfire Division |
This dataset supports S.D.5 of SD23. This measure calculates how long it takes to adjudicate a case from the time when the case was filed.
The Downtown Austin Community Court (DACC) is dedicated to processing cases efficiently and in alignment with nationally established time standards to reduce delay and ensure timely justice, but cases related to individuals experiencing homelessness typically take longer than 180 days to adjudicate due to the case management activities associated with these cases. Case management activities include but are not limited to acquiring birth certificates, Social Security cards, accessing substance use, mental health and medical services and acquiring permanent housing. Cases related to non-homeless individuals are typically adjudicated within 30-180 days. DACC monitors the length of time it takes to process cases and makes necessary adjustments to ensure compliance with time standards.
View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/99up-wwsi
The dataset for court cases adjudicated within case processing time standards covers a time period of Fiscal years 2016-first quarter of Fiscal year 2020.
Data source: court's electronic case management system
Calculation: Numerator-case disposition date Denominator- the date the case was filed.
Measure Time Period: Quarterly (Fiscal Year)
Automated: no
Date of last description update: 4/1/2020
This is a test dataset for development only.
Our official crash record dataset is available here: https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Austin-Crash-Report-Data-Crash-Level-Records/y2wy-tgr5/about_data
Data for CDC’s COVID Data Tracker site on Rates of COVID-19 Cases and Deaths by Vaccination Status. Click 'More' for important dataset description and footnotes
Dataset and data visualization details: These data were posted on October 21, 2022, archived on November 18, 2022, and revised on February 22, 2023. These data reflect cases among persons with a positive specimen collection date through September 24, 2022, and deaths among persons with a positive specimen collection date through September 3, 2022.
Vaccination status: A person vaccinated with a primary series had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected on a respiratory specimen collected ≥14 days after verifiably completing the primary series of an FDA-authorized or approved COVID-19 vaccine. An unvaccinated person had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected on a respiratory specimen and has not been verified to have received COVID-19 vaccine. Excluded were partially vaccinated people who received at least one FDA-authorized vaccine dose but did not complete a primary series ≥14 days before collection of a specimen where SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen was detected. Additional or booster dose: A person vaccinated with a primary series and an additional or booster dose had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected on a respiratory specimen collected ≥14 days after receipt of an additional or booster dose of any COVID-19 vaccine on or after August 13, 2021. For people ages 18 years and older, data are graphed starting the week including September 24, 2021, when a COVID-19 booster dose was first recommended by CDC for adults 65+ years old and people in certain populations and high risk occupational and institutional settings. For people ages 12-17 years, data are graphed starting the week of December 26, 2021, 2 weeks after the first recommendation for a booster dose for adolescents ages 16-17 years. For people ages 5-11 years, data are included starting the week of June 5, 2022, 2 weeks after the first recommendation for a booster dose for children aged 5-11 years. For people ages 50 years and older, data on second booster doses are graphed starting the week including March 29, 2022, when the recommendation was made for second boosters. Vertical lines represent dates when changes occurred in U.S. policy for COVID-19 vaccination (details provided above). Reporting is by primary series vaccine type rather than additional or booster dose vaccine type. The booster dose vaccine type may be different than the primary series vaccine type. ** Because data on the immune status of cases and associated deaths are unavailable, an additional dose in an immunocompromised person cannot be distinguished from a booster dose. This is a relevant consideration because vaccines can be less effective in this group. Deaths: A COVID-19–associated death occurred in a person with a documented COVID-19 diagnosis who died; health department staff reviewed to make a determination using vital records, public health investigation, or other data sources. Rates of COVID-19 deaths by vaccination status are reported based on when the patient was tested for COVID-19, not the date they died. Deaths usually occur up to 30 days after COVID-19 diagnosis. Participating jurisdictions: Currently, these 31 health departments that regularly link their case surveillance to immunization information system data are included in these incidence rate estimates: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, New York City (New York), North Carolina, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania), Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, and West Virginia; 30 jurisdictions also report deaths among vaccinated and unvaccinated people. These jurisdictions represent 72% of the total U.S. population and all ten of the Health and Human Services Regions. Data on cases
This data set shows the planned funding allocations for HIV medical and support services in the Austin area from the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Part A. The HIV Planning Council, a City of Austin Board/Commission is the responsible body for the allocation of Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Part A funding. This program provides grant funding from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) for medical and support services to the Austin Area. Allocation Plans are developed using data including but not limited to: epidemiological overview and demographic information for people living with HIV (PLWH), service utilization data, needs assessment data, and expenditure trends. Allocation Plans are developed based on a maximum amount of funds that can be applied as dictated by HRSA for each grant year. Actual awarded Ryan White Part A amounts may differ from the plan. The HIV Planning Council sets alternative funding scenario plans to adapt the Allocation Plan to the actual amount of Part A funds awarded. The HIV Planning Council can re-allocate awarded funds at any time during the grant year to reflect changes in service needs or the ability to expend funds in each service category. Minority AIDS Initiative (MAI) funding is a subset of Ryan White Part A which funds services for populations disproportionately affected by HIV.
This file contains COVID-19 death counts and rates by month and year of death, jurisdiction of residence (U.S., HHS Region) and demographic characteristics (sex, age, race and Hispanic origin, and age/race and Hispanic origin). United States death counts and rates include the 50 states, plus the District of Columbia.
Deaths with confirmed or presumed COVID-19, coded to ICD–10 code U07.1. Number of deaths reported in this file are the total number of COVID-19 deaths received and coded as of the date of analysis and may not represent all deaths that occurred in that period. Counts of deaths occurring before or after the reporting period are not included in the file.
Data during recent periods are incomplete because of the lag in time between when the death occurred and when the death certificate is completed, submitted to NCHS and processed for reporting purposes. This delay can range from 1 week to 8 weeks or more, depending on the jurisdiction and cause of death.
Death counts should not be compared across jurisdictions. Data timeliness varies by state. Some states report deaths on a daily basis, while other states report deaths weekly or monthly.
The ten (10) United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regions include the following jurisdictions. Region 1: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont; Region 2: New Jersey, New York; Region 3: Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia; Region 4: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee; Region 5: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin; Region 6: Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas; Region 7: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska; Region 8: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming; Region 9: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada; Region 10: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington.
Rates were calculated using the population estimates for 2021, which are estimated as of July 1, 2021 based on the Blended Base produced by the US Census Bureau in lieu of the April 1, 2020 decennial population count. The Blended Base consists of the blend of Vintage 2020 postcensal population estimates, 2020 Demographic Analysis Estimates, and 2020 Census PL 94-171 Redistricting File (see https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/popest/technical-documentation/methodology/2020-2021/methods-statement-v2021.pdf).
Rate are based on deaths occurring in the specified week and are age-adjusted to the 2000 standard population using the direct method (see https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr70/nvsr70-08-508.pdf). These rates differ from annual age-adjusted rates, typically presented in NCHS publications based on a full year of data and annualized weekly age-adjusted rates which have been adjusted to allow comparison with annual rates. Annualization rates presents deaths per year per 100,000 population that would be expected in a year if the observed period specific (weekly) rate prevailed for a full year.
Sub-national death counts between 1-9 are suppressed in accordance with NCHS data confidentiality standards. Rates based on death counts less than 20 are suppressed in accordance with NCHS standards of reliability as specified in NCHS Data Presentation Standards for Proportions (available from: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_02/sr02_175.pdf.).
This table contains data that describes monthly patient contacts. It includes all incidents with a response priority between 1 and 5, inclusive.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of pharmacy medical billing services (SV4). It contains charges, payments, and prescriptions billed on a DWC Form-066, Statement of Pharmacy Services by pharmacies with dates of service more than five years old going back to 2010. For datasets from the past five years, see pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) detail information.
The detail section contains information to identify insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill details are individual line items that are grouped in the header section of a single bill. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) detail data dictionary.
See pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) header information - historical for the corresponding header records related this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
Top five entities over three succesive reporting periods with the greatest reported revenue collected by Cht. 351 and 352 Tax Code
Storm water control drainage areas were delineated using site plans, elevation contours, aerial photos, and drainage infrastructure GIS. These areas are used in land area and impervious cover level of treatment analysis.
Provisional deaths involving coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) reported to NCHS by time-period (week, month, year), HHS region, race and Hispanic origin, and age group (0-24, 25-64, 65+ years) for 2020-2021.
United States death counts include the 50 states, plus the District of Columbia and New York City. The ten (10) United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regions include the following jurisdictions. Region 1: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont; Region 2: New Jersey, New York, New York City, Puerto Rico; Region 3: Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia; Region 4: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee; Region 5: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin; Region 6: Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas; Region 7: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska; Region 8: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming; Region 9: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada; Region 10: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington.
This is a test asset only.
This dataset contains records of in-progress and work completed from June 2021 to present for the purpose of tracking the installation and maintenance of roadway markings by contractors in the City of Austin full purpose jurisdiction. This work is managed by the Signs and Markings Division of the City of Austin Transportation and Public Works Department. The records are managed in a work management system tracker.
You may also be interested in this related dataset to in-house work:
Roadway Markings Work Orders: https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Roadway-Markings-Work-Orders/nyhn-669r
Provisional deaths involving coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and deaths from all causes reported to NCHS by week the death occurred, HHS region of occurrence, race and Hispanic origin, and age group (0-24, 25-64, 65+ years), from 2015-2021.
United States death counts include the 50 states, plus the District of Columbia and New York City. The ten (10) United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regions include the following jurisdictions. Region 1: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont; Region 2: New Jersey, New York, New York City; Region 3: Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia; Region 4: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee; Region 5: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin; Region 6: Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas; Region 7: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska; Region 8: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming; Region 9: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada; Region 10: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington.
This dataset accounts for incidents where an APD officer discharged a firearm against a dog. APD is required to annually post this information as a result of the 2017 settlement of the lawsuit of Reyes vs. the City of Austin.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER
- The data provided are for informational use only and may differ from official APD crime data.
- APD’s crime database is continuously updated, so reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different data sources may have been used.
- The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
DATASET DESCRIPTION This dataset contains information on both 911 calls (usually referred to as Calls for Service or Dispatched Incidents) and officer-initiated incidents recorded in the Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD) system. These are differentiated by the Incident Type field, defined below.
This data excludes records that were cancelled after being identified as duplicates of the same incident, such as when two 911 calls are made for the same incident. It also excludes records that were cancelled because they were handled by another agency such as Austin Fire or Austin-Travis County Emergency Medical Services or because they were found to not require a police response.
GENERAL ORDERS RELATING TO THIS DATA: The Department has a responsibility to protect life and property and to provide service to the residents of Austin. To fulfill this obligation it must provide an appropriate response to calls.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department crime data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
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Reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different systems of record may have been used.
4.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset entails the delineation of impervious surfaces and artificial land cover types extracted from aerial imagery captured in early 2019. Utilization within the City of Austin The dataset plays a pivotal role in several municipal functions, encompassing the computation of the Drainage Charge managed by the Watershed Protection Department, wildfire assessments, emergency operations planning, transportation asset monitoring, urban forest management, and more. Data Updates New aerial imagery and impervious cover data are acquired by the city every two years, resulting in distinct datasets for each capture. As of its initial capture in early 2019, there have been no subsequent updates to this dataset. Downloading Instructions Some users have reported issues downloading the data. Due to the large size of the dataset, downloading can take longer than expected. We recommend following these instructions to download the data.
Click on 'Export'. Choose the desired export format from the dropdown menu. Initiate the download by clicking 'Download'. It's essential to allow your browser ample time to process the download. Even if no immediate action appears to occur, please refrain from closing the browser window. Depending on your internet speed, the download process can take between 10 to 30 minutes due to the substantial size of the data. Once the download commences in your browser, allow it to finish entirely. Should you encounter any issues during the download process, kindly contact the dataset owner for assistance.
VITAL SIGNS INDICATOR Home Prices (EC7)
FULL MEASURE NAME Home Prices
LAST UPDATED August 2019
DESCRIPTION Home prices refer to the cost of purchasing one’s own house or condominium. While a significant share of residents may choose to rent, home prices represent a primary driver of housing affordability in a given region, county or city.
DATA SOURCE Zillow Median Sale Price (1997-2018) http://www.zillow.com/research/data/
Bureau of Labor Statistics: Consumer Price Index All Urban Consumers Data Table (1997-2018; specific to each metro area) http://data.bls.gov
CONTACT INFORMATION vitalsigns.info@bayareametro.gov
METHODOLOGY NOTES (across all datasets for this indicator) Median housing price estimates for the region, counties, cities, and zip code come from analysis of individual home sales by Zillow. The median sale price is the price separating the higher half of the sales from the lower half. In other words, 50 percent of home sales are below or above the median value. Zillow defines all homes as single-family residential, condominium, and co-operative homes with a county record. Single-family residences are detached, which means the home is an individual structure with its own lot. Condominiums are units that you own in a multi-unit complex, such as an apartment building. Co-operative homes are slightly different from condominiums where the homeowners own shares in the corporation that owns the building, not the actual units themselves.
For metropolitan area comparison values, the Bay Area metro area’s median home sale price is the population-weighted average of the nine counties’ median home prices. Home sales prices are not reliably available for Houston, because Texas is a non-disclosure state. For more information on non-disclosure states, see: http://www.zillow.com/blog/chronicles-of-data-collection-ii-non-disclosure-states-3783/
Inflation-adjusted data are presented to illustrate how home prices have grown relative to overall price increases; that said, the use of the Consumer Price Index does create some challenges given the fact that housing represents a major chunk of consumer goods bundle used to calculate CPI. This reflects a methodological tradeoff between precision and accuracy and is a common concern when working with any commodity that is a major component of CPI itself.
Copy Of Brownfield Sites 2017- Without Long.lat
DATASET DESCRIPTION: This Dataset includes the average response time by Call Priority across days of the week and hours of the day. Response Times reflect the same information contained in the APD 911 Calls for Service 2019-2024 dataset.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
-
Reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different systems of record may have been used.
4.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use -https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
VITAL SIGNS INDICATOR Home Prices (EC7)
FULL MEASURE NAME Home Prices
LAST UPDATED August 2019
DESCRIPTION Home prices refer to the cost of purchasing one’s own house or condominium. While a significant share of residents may choose to rent, home prices represent a primary driver of housing affordability in a given region, county or city.
DATA SOURCE Zillow Median Sale Price (1997-2018) http://www.zillow.com/research/data/
Bureau of Labor Statistics: Consumer Price Index All Urban Consumers Data Table (1997-2018; specific to each metro area) http://data.bls.gov
CONTACT INFORMATION vitalsigns.info@bayareametro.gov
METHODOLOGY NOTES (across all datasets for this indicator) Median housing price estimates for the region, counties, cities, and zip code come from analysis of individual home sales by Zillow. The median sale price is the price separating the higher half of the sales from the lower half. In other words, 50 percent of home sales are below or above the median value. Zillow defines all homes as single-family residential, condominium, and co-operative homes with a county record. Single-family residences are detached, which means the home is an individual structure with its own lot. Condominiums are units that you own in a multi-unit complex, such as an apartment building. Co-operative homes are slightly different from condominiums where the homeowners own shares in the corporation that owns the building, not the actual units themselves.
For metropolitan area comparison values, the Bay Area metro area’s median home sale price is the population-weighted average of the nine counties’ median home prices. Home sales prices are not reliably available for Houston, because Texas is a non-disclosure state. For more information on non-disclosure states, see: http://www.zillow.com/blog/chronicles-of-data-collection-ii-non-disclosure-states-3783/
Inflation-adjusted data are presented to illustrate how home prices have grown relative to overall price increases; that said, the use of the Consumer Price Index does create some challenges given the fact that housing represents a major chunk of consumer goods bundle used to calculate CPI. This reflects a methodological tradeoff between precision and accuracy and is a common concern when working with any commodity that is a major component of CPI itself.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of professional medical billing services (SV1). It contains charges, payments, and treatments billed on a CMS-1500 form by doctors and other health care professionals who treat injured employees, including ambulatory surgical centers, with dates of service more than five years old going back to 2010. For datasets from the past five years, see professional medical billing services (SV1) detail information.
The detail contains information to identify insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill details are individual line items that are grouped in the header section of a single bill. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our professional medical billing services (SV1) detail data dictionary.
See professional medical billing services (SV1) header information – historical for the corresponding header records related to this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
Data collected from an annual street condition survey is used to classify the street condition where the streets rated fair to excellent are considered satisfactory (and everything below fair is unsatisfactory).
The measure's outcome reflects the ratio of satisfactory lane miles in the City's street inventory to the total number of lane miles in the City's street inventory. This measure is also a Key Performance Indicator for the Austin Transportation and Public Works Department (TPW), which means that it helps TPW gauge the quality of City's street network, identify priority areas that need work, and take data-informed decisions on keeping the street network in serviceable conditions.
This dataset is collected and compiled by the Street and Bridge Operations division under the Austin Transportation and Public Works Department. The measure time period is on an annual fiscal year basis.
Calculation: Ratio of satisfactory (fair to excellent) lane miles in the City's street inventory to the total number of lane miles in the City's street inventory.
DATASET DESCRIPTION: This dataset provides the case report number, the date the incident occurred, subject race and gender at the time of the interaction and the lead charge. This dataset contains only instances where a warning was issued to the subject of the interaction for a violation.
GENERAL ORDERS RELATING TO TRAFFIC ENFORCEMENT: After stopping the violator, officers shall exercise good judgment in deciding what enforcement action should be taken (e.g., warning, citation, arrest). Additionally, field release citations and warnings shall be completed as outlined in General Order 308, which permits law enforcement agencies to use citation release procedures in lieu of arrest for specified Class A or B misdemeanor offenses, and all Class C misdemeanor offenses with certain exceptions.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER:
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department crime data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
-
Reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different systems of record may have been used.
4.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
VITAL SIGNS INDICATOR Home Prices (EC7)
FULL MEASURE NAME Home Prices
LAST UPDATED August 2019
DESCRIPTION Home prices refer to the cost of purchasing one’s own house or condominium. While a significant share of residents may choose to rent, home prices represent a primary driver of housing affordability in a given region, county or city.
DATA SOURCE Zillow Median Sale Price (1997-2018) http://www.zillow.com/research/data/
Bureau of Labor Statistics: Consumer Price Index All Urban Consumers Data Table (1997-2018; specific to each metro area) http://data.bls.gov
CONTACT INFORMATION vitalsigns.info@bayareametro.gov
METHODOLOGY NOTES (across all datasets for this indicator) Median housing price estimates for the region, counties, cities, and zip code come from analysis of individual home sales by Zillow. The median sale price is the price separating the higher half of the sales from the lower half. In other words, 50 percent of home sales are below or above the median value. Zillow defines all homes as single-family residential, condominium, and co-operative homes with a county record. Single-family residences are detached, which means the home is an individual structure with its own lot. Condominiums are units that you own in a multi-unit complex, such as an apartment building. Co-operative homes are slightly different from condominiums where the homeowners own shares in the corporation that owns the building, not the actual units themselves.
For metropolitan area comparison values, the Bay Area metro area’s median home sale price is the population-weighted average of the nine counties’ median home prices. Home sales prices are not reliably available for Houston, because Texas is a non-disclosure state. For more information on non-disclosure states, see: http://www.zillow.com/blog/chronicles-of-data-collection-ii-non-disclosure-states-3783/
Inflation-adjusted data are presented to illustrate how home prices have grown relative to overall price increases; that said, the use of the Consumer Price Index does create some challenges given the fact that housing represents a major chunk of consumer goods bundle used to calculate CPI. This reflects a methodological tradeoff between precision and accuracy and is a common concern when working with any commodity that is a major component of CPI itself.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of pharmacy medical billing services (SV4). It contains charges, payments, and prescriptions billed on a DWC Form-066, Statement of Pharmacy Services by pharmacies with dates of service for the last five years. For datasets going back to 2010, see pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) header information – historical.
The header identifies insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill header information groups individual line items reported in the detail section. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) header data dictionary.
See pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) detail information for the corresponding detail records related to this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
This report is the result of the Austin City Code 6-7’s Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure Ordinance approved in November 2008 (amended in April 2011) to improve the energy efficiency of homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy. The ordinance meets one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan, which is to offset 800 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2020. In addition, this report contains information on multi-family properties older than 10 years that are required to perform an energy audit and report the results to the City of Austin and all residents living in those communities. The Austin Energy report quantifies the 2014 energy efficiency findings and the progress towards meeting City Council goals of Resolution 20081106-048.
DATASET DESCRIPTION: This dataset includes documented incidents in which APD inquired into a subject’s immigration status, in accordance with City of Austin Resolution 20180614-074.
GENERAL ORDERS RELATING TO THIS DATA: Officers who have lawfully detained a person to conduct a criminal investigation into an alleged criminal offense, or who have arrested a person for a criminal offense, may make an inquiry into the person’s immigration status.
Before officers inquire into immigration status, they must instruct the detainee or arrestee that the detainee or arrestee is not compelled to respond to the inquiry and that the detainee or arrestee will not be subjected to additional law enforcement action because of their refusal to respond.
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER:
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
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Reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different systems of record may have been used.
4.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
The Austin Police Department as of January 1, 2019, become a Uniform Crime Reporting -National Incident Based Reporting System (NIBRS) reporting agency. Crime is reported by persons, property and society.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This file contains COVID-19 death counts and rates by jurisdiction of residence (U.S., HHS Region) and demographic characteristics (sex, age, race and Hispanic origin, and age/race and Hispanic origin). United States death counts and rates include the 50 states, plus the District of Columbia.
Deaths with confirmed or presumed COVID-19, coded to ICD–10 code U07.1. Number of deaths reported in this file are the total number of COVID-19 deaths received and coded as of the date of analysis and may not represent all deaths that occurred in that period. Counts of deaths occurring before or after the reporting period are not included in the file.
Data during recent periods are incomplete because of the lag in time between when the death occurred and when the death certificate is completed, submitted to NCHS and processed for reporting purposes. This delay can range from 1 week to 8 weeks or more, depending on the jurisdiction and cause of death.
Death counts should not be compared across jurisdictions. Data timeliness varies by state. Some states report deaths on a daily basis, while other states report deaths weekly or monthly.
The ten (10) United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regions include the following jurisdictions. Region 1: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont; Region 2: New Jersey, New York; Region 3: Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia; Region 4: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee; Region 5: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin; Region 6: Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas; Region 7: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska; Region 8: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming; Region 9: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada; Region 10: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington.
Rates were calculated using the population estimates for 2021, which are estimated as of July 1, 2021 based on the Blended Base produced by the US Census Bureau in lieu of the April 1, 2020 decennial population count. The Blended Base consists of the blend of Vintage 2020 postcensal population estimates, 2020 Demographic Analysis Estimates, and 2020 Census PL 94-171 Redistricting File (see https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/popest/technical-documentation/methodology/2020-2021/methods-statement-v2021.pdf).
Rate are based on deaths occurring in the specified week and are age-adjusted to the 2000 standard population using the direct method (see https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr70/nvsr70-08-508.pdf). These rates differ from annual age-adjusted rates, typically presented in NCHS publications based on a full year of data and annualized weekly age-adjusted rates which have been adjusted to allow comparison with annual rates. Annualization rates presents deaths per year per 100,000 population that would be expected in a year if the observed period specific (weekly) rate prevailed for a full year.
Sub-national death counts between 1-9 are suppressed in accordance with NCHS data confidentiality standards. Rates based on death counts less than 20 are suppressed in accordance with NCHS standards of reliability as specified in NCHS Data Presentation Standards for Proportions (available from: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_02/sr02_175.pdf.).
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset was created by the City of Austin to compile information regarding all issued Tree Permit folders in AMANDA. The dataset contains information regarding the species, condition, and trunk diameter of the tree. It also includes geographic information like Council District and Jurisdiction Type. These permits are created throughout various review process at the City of Austin.
The point dataset contains information regarding active tree permits that were created throughout the City of Austin's review process. Information in this dataset has been retrieved from the City's Application MANagement and Data Automation (AMANDA) database. The dataset contains information on location, permit type, date of issue/expiration, heritage status, species, trunk diameter, condition, reason for request, council district, jurisdiction, associated fee, link to permit, and more.
The Environmental Integrity Index (EII) is a tool developed by the City of Austin’s Environmental Resource Management Division to monitor and assess the ecological integrity and the degree of impairment in Austin’s watersheds. This feature class provides the most recent results from the EII for the City of Austin Watershed Protection Department’s Masterplanning process. Similarly, the Austin Lakes Index was designed to provide a yearly assessment of the ecological integrity of Lake Austin, Lady Bird Lake, and Lake Long.
Index scores (from both the EII and ALI) are an integer between 0 and 100. Excellent 88-100 | Very Good 76-87 | Good 63-75 | Fair 51-62 | Marginal38-50 | Poor 26-37 | Bad 13-25 | Very Bad 0-12. |
Problem Scores are an integer between 1 and 100 with 1 being "No Problem" and 100 being a highest priority.
EII Methodology:
http://www.austintexas.gov/watershed_protection/publications/document.cfm?id=186267
Master Plan Problem Score Methodology:
http://www.austintexas.gov/watershed_protection/publications/document.cfm?id=186352
Lake Index Methodology:
http://www.austintexas.gov/watershed_protection/publications/document.cfm?id=196479
The CTM (Communications & Technology Management) Customer Satisfaction Survey is completed by City Employees once yearly and used by CTM to tracker deliverables and performance measures. For more information on CTM, please visit https://www.austintexas.gov/department/information-technology
This dataset holds responses from surveys completed 2020 - Present with comments removed. NOTE: No survey was conducted in the year 2023.
The Official and Unofficial Bid Items dataset displays advertisement and bidding information for the State and Local Lettings from the official sources of The Electronic State Business Daily (ESBD), the Electronic Bidding System, and the project proposal. Bidders should bid the project using the information found therein, including any addenda. These sources take precedence over information from other sources, including TxDOT webpages, which are unofficial and intended for informational purposes only. Official and Unofficial Bid Items dataset includes data in 42 forward days bid items.
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset was created to compile information about Plan Review (PR) cases filed with the City of Austin. The information is retrieved daily from the City's Application MANagement and Data Automation (AMANDA) database and includes information on location, proposed variances, applicants, owners, etc, if available. Note that many fields are intentionally left blank or are not filled out for various reasons.More information about the Plan Review process is available at https://austintexas.gov/buildingreview and by using the Austin Build and Connect portal https://abc.austintexas.gov/web/permit/public-search-other.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of institutional medical billing services (SV2). It contains charges, payments, and treatments billed on a CMS-1450 form (UB-92, UB-04) by hospitals and medical facilities that treat injured employees, excluding ambulatory surgical centers, with dates of service more than five years going back to 2010. For datasets from the past five years, see institutional medical billing services (SV2) detail information.
The detail contains information to identify insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill details are individual line items that are grouped in the header section of a single bill. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our institutional medical billing services (SV2) detail data dictionary.
See institutional medical billing services (SV2) header information – historical for the corresponding header records related to this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
This file contains COVID-19 death counts, death rates, and percent of total deaths by jurisdiction of residence. The data is grouped by different time periods including 3-month period, weekly, and total (cumulative since January 1, 2020). United States death counts and rates include the 50 states, plus the District of Columbia and New York City. New York state estimates exclude New York City. Puerto Rico is included in HHS Region 2 estimates.
Deaths with confirmed or presumed COVID-19, coded to ICD–10 code U07.1. Number of deaths reported in this file are the total number of COVID-19 deaths received and coded as of the date of analysis and may not represent all deaths that occurred in that period. Counts of deaths occurring before or after the reporting period are not included in the file.
Data during recent periods are incomplete because of the lag in time between when the death occurred and when the death certificate is completed, submitted to NCHS and processed for reporting purposes. This delay can range from 1 week to 8 weeks or more, depending on the jurisdiction and cause of death.
Death counts should not be compared across states. Data timeliness varies by state. Some states report deaths on a daily basis, while other states report deaths weekly or monthly.
The ten (10) United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regions include the following jurisdictions. Region 1: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont; Region 2: New Jersey, New York, New York City, Puerto Rico; Region 3: Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia; Region 4: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee; Region 5: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin; Region 6: Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas; Region 7: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska; Region 8: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming; Region 9: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada; Region 10: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington.
Rates were calculated using the population estimates for 2021, which are estimated as of July 1, 2021 based on the Blended Base produced by the US Census Bureau in lieu of the April 1, 2020 decennial population count. The Blended Base consists of the blend of Vintage 2020 postcensal population estimates, 2020 Demographic Analysis Estimates, and 2020 Census PL 94-171 Redistricting File (see https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/popest/technical-documentation/methodology/2020-2021/methods-statement-v2021.pdf).
Rates are based on deaths occurring in the specified week/month and are age-adjusted to the 2000 standard population using the direct method (see https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr70/nvsr70-08-508.pdf). These rates differ from annual age-adjusted rates, typically presented in NCHS publications based on a full year of data and annualized weekly/monthly age-adjusted rates which have been adjusted to allow comparison with annual rates. Annualization rates presents deaths per year per 100,000 population that would be expected in a year if the observed period specific (weekly/monthly) rate prevailed for a full year.
Sub-national death counts between 1-9 are suppressed in accordance with NCHS data confidentiality standards. Rates based on death counts less than 20 are suppressed in accordance with NCHS standards of reliability as specified in NCHS Data Presentation Standards for Proportions (available from: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_02/sr02_175.pdf.).
This dataset is collected & compiled by the Street & Bridge Operations division under the Public Works Department. The street network consisted of about 2525 miles of streets and just over 7863 lane miles of pavement in fiscal year 2019. Since many streets consist of multiple lanes, there are about three times as many lane miles as miles of streets. We report based on lane miles, rather than street miles in order to better capture the public's driving experience.
Data is collected by a contacted vendor, who drives the streets using a specially equipped vehicle that records the data used to determine street condition. The vendor drives every lane of every street in the city, covering about half of the city every year. Street condition is then classified as "Satisfactory" or "Unsatisfactory" based on national street engineering standards.
The measure's outcome reflects the ratio of satisfactory lane miles in the City's street inventory to the total number of lane miles in the City's street inventory. This measure is also a Key Performance Indicator for the Public Works Department, which means that it helps PWD constantly gauge the quality of City's street network, identify priority areas that need work, and take data-informed decisions on keeping the street network in serviceable conditions.
This dataset supports measure M.E.8 under the 'Mobility' outcome of Strategic Direction 2023.
Data Source: Street & Bridge Operations Calculation: Ratio of satisfactory (fair to excellent) lane miles in the City's street inventory to the total number of lane miles in the City's street inventory.
Measure Time Period: Annual (Calendar Year)
Automated: No Date of last description update:
List of all entities who either prepare or submit a report listed in Required Reports Prepared by State Agencies and Institutions of Higher Education (Fiscal Year 2025).
This dataset is comprised of issues received by the City of Austin's Mobility Management Center, which is operated by the Austin Transportation & Public Works Department's Arterial Management Division.
These records are comprised of both resident-reported issues via 311 as well as issues reported directly to the Mobility Management Center by staff or regional agencies.
This dataset is related to the Mobility Management Center Activities dataset, which captures specific actions taken in response to these issues.
See:
Activities dataset: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/-UNDER-CONSTRUCTION-Mobility-Management-Center-Act/p7pt-re4k
Arterial management division homepage: https://www.austintexas.gov/department/arterial-management
DATASET DESCRIPTION: When an officer finds it necessary to arrest an individual, such as upon witnessing a crime, having probable cause, or acting on a judge-issued arrest warrant, they are required to write an arrest report. The arrest report details the conditions of the arrest and directly pertains to the individual in question. Additionally, it includes specific details of the charges associated with the arrest.
GENERAL ORDERS RELATED TO ARRESTS Austin Police Department General Order 319 states, "This order outlines the guidelines for warrant and warrantless arrests. The following order cannot address every situation that an officer might encounter; however, in exercising arrest authority, officers should be guided by what is contained in this document. Nothing in this order should be interpreted as authorizing or restricting an officer's arrest authority as defined by the Code of Criminal Procedure."
AUSTIN POLICE DEPARTMENT DATA DISCLAIMER
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The data provided is for informational use only and may differ from official Austin Police Department data.
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The Austin Police Department’s databases are continuously updated, and changes can be made due to a variety of investigative factors including but not limited to offense reclassification and dates.
-
Reports run at different times may produce different results. Care should be taken when comparing against other reports as different data collection methods and different systems of record may have been used.
4.The Austin Police Department does not assume any liability for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the recipient in reliance upon any information or data provided.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use - https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This is a collection of data submitted to Trust for Public Land (TPL) as part of the scoring process for the annual TPL Park Score ranking.
Data for CDC’s COVID Data Tracker site on Rates of COVID-19 Cases and Deaths by Vaccination Status. Click 'More' for important dataset description and footnotes
Dataset and data visualization details: These data were posted on October 21, 2022, archived on November 18, 2022, and revised on February 22, 2023. These data reflect cases among persons with a positive specimen collection date through September 24, 2022, and deaths among persons with a positive specimen collection date through September 3, 2022.
Vaccination status: A person vaccinated with a primary series had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected on a respiratory specimen collected ≥14 days after verifiably completing the primary series of an FDA-authorized or approved COVID-19 vaccine. An unvaccinated person had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected on a respiratory specimen and has not been verified to have received COVID-19 vaccine. Excluded were partially vaccinated people who received at least one FDA-authorized vaccine dose but did not complete a primary series ≥14 days before collection of a specimen where SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen was detected. Additional or booster dose: A person vaccinated with a primary series and an additional or booster dose had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected on a respiratory specimen collected ≥14 days after receipt of an additional or booster dose of any COVID-19 vaccine on or after August 13, 2021. For people ages 18 years and older, data are graphed starting the week including September 24, 2021, when a COVID-19 booster dose was first recommended by CDC for adults 65+ years old and people in certain populations and high risk occupational and institutional settings. For people ages 12-17 years, data are graphed starting the week of December 26, 2021, 2 weeks after the first recommendation for a booster dose for adolescents ages 16-17 years. For people ages 5-11 years, data are included starting the week of June 5, 2022, 2 weeks after the first recommendation for a booster dose for children aged 5-11 years. For people ages 50 years and older, data on second booster doses are graphed starting the week including March 29, 2022, when the recommendation was made for second boosters. Vertical lines represent dates when changes occurred in U.S. policy for COVID-19 vaccination (details provided above). Reporting is by primary series vaccine type rather than additional or booster dose vaccine type. The booster dose vaccine type may be different than the primary series vaccine type. ** Because data on the immune status of cases and associated deaths are unavailable, an additional dose in an immunocompromised person cannot be distinguished from a booster dose. This is a relevant consideration because vaccines can be less effective in this group. Deaths: A COVID-19–associated death occurred in a person with a documented COVID-19 diagnosis who died; health department staff reviewed to make a determination using vital records, public health investigation, or other data sources. Rates of COVID-19 deaths by vaccination status are reported based on when the patient was tested for COVID-19, not the date they died. Deaths usually occur up to 30 days after COVID-19 diagnosis. Participating jurisdictions: Currently, these 31 health departments that regularly link their case surveillance to immunization information system data are included in these incidence rate estimates: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, New York City (New York), North Carolina, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania), Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, and West Virginia; 30 jurisdictions also report deaths among vaccinated and unvaccinated people. These jurisdictions represent 72% of the total U.S. population and all ten of the Health and Human Services Regions. Data on cases
There are five cemeteries currently operated by the City of Austin Parks and Recreation Department. List of the five cemeteries, their designations, and their addresses.
For more information, please visit https://www.austintexas.gov/department/cemeteries
This dataset supports measure S.D.4.b, S.D.6 of SD23. The Downtown Austin Community Court (DACC) was established to address quality of life and public order offenses occurring in the downtown Austin area utilizing a restorative justice court model. DACC offers alternatives to fines and fees for defendants to handle their cases such as community service restitution and participation in rehabilitation services. Defendants who reside outside of a 40-mile radius from DACC are offered an opportunity to handle their case through correspondence action, meaning the entire judicial process can be handled through email or postal mail. Correspondence action eliminates an undue burden requiring a defendant to travel back to Austin to appear for their case and it allows for quicker access to court services of Austin residents by reducing the number of individuals required to appear for their case. This measure tracks how many cases involving non-homeless individuals have been handled through correspondence action recorded in the court's case management system. The data source for number and percentage of instances where people access court services other than in person for DACC has a annual range based on fiscal year 2015- first quarter fiscal year 2020. View more details and insights related to this measure on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/vxci-zmm3
Data source: Data for this measure is collected by DACC staff inputting information from citations issued in DACC’s jurisdiction and from court processes. All data is entered in DACC’s electronic court case management platform.
Calculation S.D.4.b Numerator= number of cases with the correspondence action/Denominator= total number of cases involving non-homeless individuals.
Measure Time Period: Annually (Fiscal Year)
Automated: no
Date of last description update: 4/1/2020
VITAL SIGNS INDICATOR Time Spent In Congestion (T7) FULL MEASURE NAME Congested delay on regional freeways LAST UPDATED May 2017 DESCRIPTION Time spent in traffic congestion – also known as congested delay – refers to the number of minutes weekday travelers spend in congested conditions in which freeway speeds drop below 35 mph. Total delay, a companion measure, includes both congested delay and all other delay in which speeds are below the posted speed limit. DATA SOURCE Metropolitan Transportation Commission: Historical Congestion Analysis CONTACT INFORMATION vitalsigns.info@mtc.ca.gov METHODOLOGY NOTES (across all datasets for this indicator) Delay statistics only include freeway facilities and rely upon INRIX traffic data. They reflect delay on a typical weekday, which is defined as Tuesday through Thursday during peak traffic months. Delay statistics emphasize recurring delay - i.e. consistent delay greater than 15 minutes on a specific freeway segment. Congested delay is defined as congestion occurring with speeds less than 35 mph and is commonly recognized as inefficient delay (meaning that the freeway corridor is operating at speeds low enough to reduce throughput - as opposed to speeds greater than 35 mph which increase throughput). Data sources listed above were used to calculate per-capita and per-worker statistics; national datasets were used for metro comparisons and California datasets were used for the Bay Area. Top congested corridors are ranked by total vehicle hours of delay, meaning that the highlighted corridors reflect a combination of slow speeds and heavy traffic volumes. Historical Bay Area data was estimated by MTC Operations staff using a combination of internal datasets to develop an approximate trend back to 1998. The metropolitan area comparison was performed for the combined primary urbanized areas (San Francisco-Oakland and San Jose) as well as nine other major metropolitan areas' core urbanized area. Because the Texas Transportation Institute no longer reports congested freeway delay or total freeway delay (focusing solely on total regional delay), 2011 data was used to estimate 2014 total freeway delay for each metro area by relying upon the freeway-to-regional ratio from 2011. Estimated urbanized area workers were used for this analysis using the 2011 ratios, which accounts for slight differentials between Bay Area data points under the regional historical data and the metro comparison analysis. To explore how 2016 congestion trends compare to real-time congestion on the region’s freeways, visit 511.org.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This dataset represents areas of interest for construction plans within the City of Austin that have been used in the development of the Stormwater Infrastructure GIS by the Watershed Protection Department. This operational layer is used by staff for data entry purposes and is not guaranteed or intended to be a comprehensive layer of construction documents. This layer contains information about construction plans from a variety of sources including the AMANDA case management system, TxDOT, and Capital Improvement Projects.
To request construction plan sets, please submit a Public Information Request to the Transportation and Public Works department (https://www.austintexas.gov/services/submit-public-information-request).
VITAL SIGNS INDICATOR Time Spent In Congestion (T7)
FULL MEASURE NAME Congested delay on regional freeways
LAST UPDATED May 2017
DESCRIPTION Time spent in traffic congestion – also known as congested delay – refers to the number of minutes weekday travelers spend in congested conditions in which freeway speeds drop below 35 mph. Total delay, a companion measure, includes both congested delay and all other delay in which speeds are below the posted speed limit.
DATA SOURCE Metropolitan Transportation Commission/Iteris: Congested Corridor Analysis
CONTACT INFORMATION vitalsigns.info@mtc.ca.gov
METHODOLOGY NOTES (across all datasets for this indicator) Delay statistics only include freeway facilities and rely upon INRIX traffic data. They reflect delay on a typical weekday, which is defined as Tuesday through Thursday during peak traffic months. Delay statistics emphasize recurring delay - i.e. consistent delay greater than 15 minutes on a specific freeway segment. Congested delay is defined as congestion occurring with speeds less than 35 mph and is commonly recognized as inefficient delay (meaning that the freeway corridor is operating at speeds low enough to reduce throughput - as opposed to speeds greater than 35 mph which increase throughput). Data sources listed above were used to calculate per-capita and per-worker statistics; national datasets were used for metro comparisons and California datasets were used for the Bay Area. Top congested corridors are ranked by total vehicle hours of delay, meaning that the highlighted corridors reflect a combination of slow speeds and heavy traffic volumes. Historical Bay Area data was estimated by MTC Operations staff using a combination of internal datasets to develop an approximate trend back to 1998. The metropolitan area comparison was performed for the combined primary urbanized areas (San Francisco-Oakland and San Jose) as well as nine other major metropolitan areas' core urbanized area. Because the Texas Transportation Institute no longer reports congested freeway delay or total freeway delay (focusing solely on total regional delay), 2011 data was used to estimate 2014 total freeway delay for each metro area by relying upon the freeway-to-regional ratio from 2011. Estimated urbanized area workers were used for this analysis using the 2011 ratios, which accounts for slight differentials between Bay Area data points under the regional historical data and the metro comparison analysis. To explore how 2016 congestion trends compare to real-time congestion on the region’s freeways, visit 511.org.
Presents data related to the number and percentage of people who successfully complete workforce development training with one of the partnering community benefit organizations (CBOs), also known as "Community Partners" in the Austin Metro Area Master Community Workforce Plan.
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This data set contains information about sound ordinance permit applications that have been submitted for review to the City of Austin. The information is retrieved from the Application MANagement and Data Automation (AMANDA) database. AMANDA is managed by the Development Services Department. The data set includes information about the status of the application, the case number, the description of the proposed event, the applicant, the date the event will take place, and the location. Some examples of application for Sound Ordinance Permits include permits submitted for concrete pourings, amplified sound, outdoor music venues.
VITAL SIGNS INDICATOR Time Spent In Congestion (T7)
FULL MEASURE NAME Congested delay on regional freeways
LAST UPDATED May 2017
DESCRIPTION Time spent in traffic congestion – also known as congested delay – refers to the number of minutes weekday travelers spend in congested conditions in which freeway speeds drop below 35 mph. Total delay, a companion measure, includes both congested delay and all other delay in which speeds are below the posted speed limit.
DATA SOURCE Metropolitan Transportation Commission: Historical Congestion Analysis
California Department of Finance Forms E-5 and E-8 http://www.dof.ca.gov/research/demographic/reports/estimates/e-8/ http://www.dof.ca.gov/research/demographic/reports/estimates/e-5/2011-20/view.php
California Employment Development Department: Labor Market Information http://www.labormarketinfo.edd.ca.gov/
CONTACT INFORMATION vitalsigns.info@mtc.ca.gov
METHODOLOGY NOTES (across all datasets for this indicator) Delay statistics only include freeway facilities and rely upon INRIX traffic data. They reflect delay on a typical weekday, which is defined as Tuesday through Thursday during peak traffic months. Delay statistics emphasize recurring delay - i.e. consistent delay greater than 15 minutes on a specific freeway segment. Congested delay is defined as congestion occurring with speeds less than 35 mph and is commonly recognized as inefficient delay (meaning that the freeway corridor is operating at speeds low enough to reduce throughput - as opposed to speeds greater than 35 mph which increase throughput). Data sources listed above were used to calculate per-capita and per-worker statistics; national datasets were used for metro comparisons and California datasets were used for the Bay Area. Top congested corridors are ranked by total vehicle hours of delay, meaning that the highlighted corridors reflect a combination of slow speeds and heavy traffic volumes. Historical Bay Area data was estimated by MTC Operations staff using a combination of internal datasets to develop an approximate trend back to 1998. The metropolitan area comparison was performed for the combined primary urbanized areas (San Francisco-Oakland and San Jose) as well as nine other major metropolitan areas' core urbanized area. Because the Texas Transportation Institute no longer reports congested freeway delay or total freeway delay (focusing solely on total regional delay), 2011 data was used to estimate 2014 total freeway delay for each metro area by relying upon the freeway-to-regional ratio from 2011. Estimated urbanized area workers were used for this analysis using the 2011 ratios, which accounts for slight differentials between Bay Area data points under the regional historical data and the metro comparison analysis. To explore how 2016 congestion trends compare to real-time congestion on the region’s freeways, visit 511.org.
This site provides historical data beginning June 22, 2022, for the visualization presented on COVID-19 Data Tracker’s “Vaccinations in the United States” site titled “Primary Series Completion, Booster Dose Eligibility, and Booster Dose Receipt by Age, United States”.
Fully Vaccinated / Completed Primary Series: For surveillance purposes, COVID Data Tracker counts people as being "fully vaccinated" or as having "completed a primary series" if they received two doses on different days (regardless of time interval) of the two-dose mRNA series or received one dose of a single-dose vaccine. When the vaccine manufacturer is not reported, the recipient is considered fully vaccinated with two doses.First Booster Dose: For surveillance purposes, the count and percentage of people who received a first booster dose includes anyone who is fully vaccinated and has received another dose of COVID-19 vaccine since August 13, 2021. This includes people who received a first booster dose and people who received an additional primary series dose as this metric does not distinguish if the recipient is immunocompromised and received an additional dose. First booster dose eligibility: CDC counts people as being " eligible for a first booster dose" if it has been at least 5 months since completion of a Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna primary series or at least 2 months since receipt of a Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) singe-dose vaccine. Second Booster Dose:For surveillance purposes, the count and percentage of people who received a second booster dose includes anyone who is fully vaccinated and has received two subsequent doses of COVID-19 vaccine since August 13, 2021. This includes people who received two booster doses and people who received one additional dose and one booster dose. The count of people who received a second booster dose and the percentage of people with a first booster who received a second booster dose does not account for whether a person is immunocompromised or time interval since first booster dose. Second booster dose eligibility: CDC counts people as being "eligible for a second booster dose" if it has been at least 4 months since receiving a first booster dose. Limitations to counting people with a second booster dose: Due to the aggregate vaccination record reporting method used by Idaho for its residents under the age of 18 years and by Texas for all its residents, CDC counts all 4th doses received by these populations as a second booster dose. This includes immunocompromised individuals who received a three-dose primary series and only one booster dose. This limitation may lead to an undercount of people who received the single-dose J&J/Janssen vaccine as their primary series and two booster doses. Data represents all vaccine partners including jurisdictional partner clinics, retail pharmacies, long-term care facilities, dialysis centers, Federal Emergency Management Agency and Health Resources and Services Administration partner sites, and federal entity facilities.
for EDC dashboard
VITAL SIGNS INDICATOR Time Spent In Congestion (T7) FULL MEASURE NAME Congested delay on regional freeways LAST UPDATED May 2017 DESCRIPTION Time spent in traffic congestion – also known as congested delay – refers to the number of minutes weekday travelers spend in congested conditions in which freeway speeds drop below 35 mph. Total delay, a companion measure, includes both congested delay and all other delay in which speeds are below the posted speed limit. DATA SOURCE Metropolitan Transportation Commission: Historical Congestion Analysis CONTACT INFORMATION vitalsigns.info@mtc.ca.gov METHODOLOGY NOTES (across all datasets for this indicator) Delay statistics only include freeway facilities and rely upon INRIX traffic data. They reflect delay on a typical weekday, which is defined as Tuesday through Thursday during peak traffic months. Delay statistics emphasize recurring delay - i.e. consistent delay greater than 15 minutes on a specific freeway segment. Congested delay is defined as congestion occurring with speeds less than 35 mph and is commonly recognized as inefficient delay (meaning that the freeway corridor is operating at speeds low enough to reduce throughput - as opposed to speeds greater than 35 mph which increase throughput). Data sources listed above were used to calculate per-capita and per-worker statistics; national datasets were used for metro comparisons and California datasets were used for the Bay Area. Top congested corridors are ranked by total vehicle hours of delay, meaning that the highlighted corridors reflect a combination of slow speeds and heavy traffic volumes. Historical Bay Area data was estimated by MTC Operations staff using a combination of internal datasets to develop an approximate trend back to 1998. The metropolitan area comparison was performed for the combined primary urbanized areas (San Francisco-Oakland and San Jose) as well as nine other major metropolitan areas' core urbanized area. Because the Texas Transportation Institute no longer reports congested freeway delay or total freeway delay (focusing solely on total regional delay), 2011 data was used to estimate 2014 total freeway delay for each metro area by relying upon the freeway-to-regional ratio from 2011. Estimated urbanized area workers were used for this analysis using the 2011 ratios, which accounts for slight differentials between Bay Area data points under the regional historical data and the metro comparison analysis. To explore how 2016 congestion trends compare to real-time congestion on the region’s freeways, visit 511.org.
List of City of Austin Parks and Recreation Department golf courses.
For more information, please visit PARD Golf's website: https://www.austintexas.gov/department/golf-atx
List of Austin Parks and Recreation Department's nature-based centers.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of professional medical billing services (SV1). It contains charges, payments, and treatments billed on a CMS-1500 form by doctors and other health care professionals who treat injured employees, including ambulatory surgical centers, with dates of service for the last five years. For datasets going back to 2010, see professional medical billing services (SV1) header information – historical.
The header identifies insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill header information groups individual line items reported in the detail section. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our professional medical billing services (SV1) header data dictionary.
See professional medical billing services (SV1) detail information for the corresponding detail records related to this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of institutional medical billing services (SV2). It contains charges, payments, and treatments billed on a CMS-1450 form (UB-92, UB-04) by hospitals and medical facilities that treat injured employees, excluding ambulatory surgical centers, with dates of service for the last five years. For datasets going back to 2010, see institutional medical billing services (SV2) header information – historical.
The header identifies insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill header information groups individual line items reported in the detail section. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our institutional medical billing services (SV2) header data dictionary.
See institutional medical billing services (SV2) detail information for the corresponding detail records related to this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
Data for CDC’s COVID Data Tracker site on Rates of COVID-19 Cases and Deaths by Updated (Bivalent) Booster Status. Click 'More' for important dataset description and footnotes
Webpage: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#rates-by-vaccine-status
Dataset and data visualization details:
These data were posted and archived on May 30, 2023 and reflect cases among persons with a positive specimen collection date through April 22, 2023, and deaths among persons with a positive specimen collection date through April 1, 2023. These data will no longer be updated after May 2023.
Vaccination status: A person vaccinated with at least a primary series had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected on a respiratory specimen collected ≥14 days after verifiably completing the primary series of an FDA-authorized or approved COVID-19 vaccine. An unvaccinated person had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected on a respiratory specimen and has not been verified to have received COVID-19 vaccine. Excluded were partially vaccinated people who received at least one FDA-authorized vaccine dose but did not complete a primary series ≥14 days before collection of a specimen where SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen was detected. A person vaccinated with a primary series and a monovalent booster dose had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected on a respiratory specimen collected ≥14 days after verifiably receiving a primary series of an FDA-authorized or approved vaccine and at least one additional dose of any monovalent FDA-authorized or approved COVID-19 vaccine on or after August 13, 2021. (Note: this definition does not distinguish between vaccine recipients who are immunocompromised and are receiving an additional dose versus those who are not immunocompromised and receiving a booster dose.) A person vaccinated with a primary series and an updated (bivalent) booster dose had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected in a respiratory specimen collected ≥14 days after verifiably receiving a primary series of an FDA-authorized or approved vaccine and an additional dose of any bivalent FDA-authorized or approved vaccine COVID-19 vaccine on or after September 1, 2022. (Note: Doses with bivalent doses reported as first or second doses are classified as vaccinated with a bivalent booster dose.) People with primary series or a monovalent booster dose were combined in the “vaccinated without an updated booster” category.
Deaths: A COVID-19–associated death occurred in a person with a documented COVID-19 diagnosis who died; health department staff reviewed to make a determination using vital records, public health investigation, or other data sources. Per the interim guidance of the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE), this should include persons whose death certificate lists COVID-19 disease or SARS-CoV-2 as the underlying cause of death or as a significant condition contributing to death. Rates of COVID-19 deaths by vaccination status are primarily reported based on when the patient was tested for COVID-19. In select jurisdictions, deaths are included that are not laboratory confirmed and are reported based on alternative dates (i.e., onset date for most; or date of death or report date, where onset date is unavailable). Deaths usually occur up to 30 days after COVID-19 diagnosis.
Participating jurisdictions: Currently, these 24 health departments that regularly link their case surveillance to immunization information system data are included in these incidence rate estimates: Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, District of Columbia, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, New York City (NY), North Carolina, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and West Virginia; 23 jurisdictions also report deaths among vaccinated and unvaccinated people. These jurisdictions represent 48% of the total U.S. population and all ten of the Health and Human Services Regions. This list will be
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
List of Austin Parks and Recreation Department Senior Activity Centers.
For more information, please visit: https://www.austintexas.gov/department/seniors-programs-and-services
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Families Served by County data set includes demographic data of parents and families of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of pharmacy medical billing services (SV4). It contains charges, payments, and prescriptions billed on a DWC Form-066, Statement of Pharmacy Services by pharmacies with dates of service more than five years old going back to 2010. For datasets from the past five years, see pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) header information.
The header identifies insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill header information groups individual line items reported in the detail section. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) header data dictionary.
See pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) detail information – historical for the corresponding detail records related to this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
These are the data used for the Racial and Ethnic Diversity for the Austin MSA story map. The story map was published July 2024 but displays data from 2000, 2010, and 2020.
Decennial census data were used for all three years. 2000: DEC Summary File 1, P004 2010: DEC Redistricting Data (PL 94-171), P2 2020: DEC Redistricting Data (PL 94-171), P2
Geographic crosswalks were used to harmonize 2000, 2010, and 2020 geographies.
Racial and Ethnic Diversity Index for the Austin MSA Storymap: https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/88ee265f00934af7a750b57f7faebd2c
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use – https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
List of Austin Parks and Recreation Department's Museums and Cultural Centers.
For more information, please visit - https://www.austintexas.gov/department/museums-and-cultural-programs
This table contains data related to Clinical Performance Indicators (CPIs) used by the City of Austin/Travis County EMS System Office of the Medical Director (OMD). More information on CPIs can be found at http://www.austintexas.gov/page/performance-improvement.
This dataset contains information about long line markings work performed since 2019 by the Signs and Markings Division in the Transportation and Public Works Department. This roadway markings dataset contains long line assets based on the comprehensive transportation network polyline geometry (CTN). The last work dates originate from data tracker or were collected in GIS prior to the association of work order IDs to long line markings assets. Long line includes high level location information about which roadways have long line markings.
The spatial geometry of the Long Line Markings Data along with the related table holding the work dates information is available publicly in ArcGIS Online - https://austin.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=6fb83b60b8b841529336b5becbe9dd36
The spatial geometry of the CTN IDs are in ArcGIS Online - https://austin.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=627b6c805bb144beba870cad95baa108
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use – https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
Bid Tabulations dataset displays advertisement and bidding information for the State and Local Lettings from the official sources of The Electronic State Business Daily (ESBD), the Electronic Bidding System, and the project proposal. Bidders should bid the project using the information found therein, including any addenda. These sources take precedence over information from other sources, including TxDOT webpages, which are unofficial and intended for informational purposes only. Bid Tabulations dataset includes data in previous 24 months.
THE INFORMATION IS ONLY THE TOTALS OF THE BIDS AS RECEIVED AND DOES NOT REPRESENT THAT A CONTRACT HAS BEEN OR WILL BE AWARDED.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of professional medical billing services (SV1). It contains charges, payments, and treatments billed on a CMS-1500 form by doctors and other health care professionals who treat injured employees, including ambulatory surgical centers, with dates of service more than five years old going back to 2010. For datasets from the past five years, see professional medical billing services (SV1) header information.
The header identifies insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill header information groups individual line items reported in the detail section. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our professional medical billing services (SV1) header data dictionary.
See professional medical billing services (SV1) detail information – historical for the corresponding detail records related to this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
The annual City of Austin Community Survey measures success in key areas of our Strategic Plan and other City priorities. This data comes from a third party that administers the survey on behalf of the city. The city uses this information for performance measurement. This is a small portion of the full community survey dataset that can be found here: https://data.austintexas.gov/City-Government/Strategic-Measure_-Dataset-Name-/tpkc-tthx This data set is intended to power visualizations for related measures in the strategic plan.
Thirty one strategic measures are reported using this data set.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story pages: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/vhpk-mfsd https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/rzhz-fjps https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/3dbr-g3ga https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ecc5-fpih https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/yigs-zznh https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/4peq-swgv https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/kgai-y8vi https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/fb9k-gfz5 https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/epgk-j68z https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/hvdf-7j4n https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/nfcx-g3j5 https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/p2hz-spmf https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/su8r-wr2c https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/vdhi-bz8h https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/en8w-pzwk https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/h3ch-7b65 https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/3rz5-26z3 https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/jsbv-h3zh https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/e8bv-yc47 https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/nk97-it22 https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/4uke-bhq2 https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/6ywm-cejy https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/iq8c-z5dc https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/rs7k-ptem https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ca5r-kdf5 https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/adg9-7aik https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/vwkq-mns4 https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ezzw-84wr https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/vrqf-nr4j https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ucfh-heru https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/rine-sac9
Monthly Cumulative Number and Percent of Persons Who Receive ≥1 Influenza Vaccination Doses and Comparison Between 2023-2024 and Two Previous Seasons, by Jurisdiction, United States
• Influenza vaccination coverage for children and adults is assessed through U.S. jurisdictions’ Immunization Information Systems (IIS) data, submitted from jurisdictions to CDC monthly in aggregate by age group. More information about the IIS can be found at https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/programs/iis/about.html.
• Influenza vaccination coverage estimate numerators include the number of people receiving at least one dose of influenza vaccine in a given flu season, based on information that state, territorial, and local public health agencies report to CDC. Some jurisdictions’ data may include data submitted by tribes. Estimates include persons who are deceased but received a vaccination during the current season. People receiving doses are attributed to the jurisdiction in which the person resides unless noted otherwise. Quality and completeness of data may vary across jurisdictions. Influenza vaccination coverage denominators are obtained from 2020 U.S. Census Bureau population estimates.
• Monthly estimates shown are cumulative, reflecting all persons vaccinated from July through a given month of that flu season. Cumulative estimates include any historical data reported since the previous submission. National estimates are not presented since not all U.S. jurisdictions are currently reporting their IIS data to CDC. Jurisdictions reporting data to CDC include U.S. states, some localities, and territories.
• Because IIS data contain all vaccinations administered within a jurisdiction rather than a sample, standard errors were not calculated and statistical testing for differences in estimates across years were not performed.
• Laws and policies regarding the submission of vaccination data to an IIS vary by state, which may impact the completeness of vaccination coverage reflected for a jurisdiction. More information on laws and policies are found at https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/programs/iis/policy-legislation.html.
• Coverage estimates based on IIS data are expected to differ from National Immunization Survey (NIS) estimates for children (https://www.cdc.gov/flu/fluvaxview/dashboard/vaccination-coverage-race.html)
and adults (https://www.cdc.gov/flu/fluvaxview/dashboard/vaccination-adult-coverage.html) because NIS estimates are based on a sample that may not be representative after survey weighting and vaccination status is determined by survey respondent rather than vaccine records or administrations, and quality and completeness of IIS data may vary across jurisdictions. In general, NIS estimates tend to overestimate coverage due to overreporting and IIS estimates may underestimate coverage due to incompleteness of data in certain jurisdictions.
NOTE TO USERS – There may be disruption to this data set between April 9 to April 19 related to an upgrade. Please contact dsdopendata@austintexas.gov with questions.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
This dataset was created to compile information about Board of Adjustment (BOA) cases filed with the City of Austin. The information is retrieved daily from the City's Application MANagement and Data Automation (AMANDA) database and includes information on location, proposed variances, applicants, owners, case managers etc, if available. Note that many fields are intentionally left blank or are not filled out for various reasons.More information about the BOA process is available at http://www.austintexas.gov/boa and by using the Austin Build and Connect portal https://abc.austintexas.gov/web/permit/public-search-other.
Data for CDC’s COVID Data Tracker site on Rates of COVID-19 Cases and Deaths by Vaccination Status. Click 'More' for important dataset description and footnotes
Dataset and data visualization details: These data were posted on October 21, 2022, archived on November 18, 2022, and revised on February 22, 2023. These data reflect cases among persons with a positive specimen collection date through September 24, 2022, and deaths among persons with a positive specimen collection date through September 3, 2022.
Vaccination status: A person vaccinated with a primary series had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected on a respiratory specimen collected ≥14 days after verifiably completing the primary series of an FDA-authorized or approved COVID-19 vaccine. An unvaccinated person had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected on a respiratory specimen and has not been verified to have received COVID-19 vaccine. Excluded were partially vaccinated people who received at least one FDA-authorized vaccine dose but did not complete a primary series ≥14 days before collection of a specimen where SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen was detected. Additional or booster dose: A person vaccinated with a primary series and an additional or booster dose had SARS-CoV-2 RNA or antigen detected on a respiratory specimen collected ≥14 days after receipt of an additional or booster dose of any COVID-19 vaccine on or after August 13, 2021. For people ages 18 years and older, data are graphed starting the week including September 24, 2021, when a COVID-19 booster dose was first recommended by CDC for adults 65+ years old and people in certain populations and high risk occupational and institutional settings. For people ages 12-17 years, data are graphed starting the week of December 26, 2021, 2 weeks after the first recommendation for a booster dose for adolescents ages 16-17 years. For people ages 5-11 years, data are included starting the week of June 5, 2022, 2 weeks after the first recommendation for a booster dose for children aged 5-11 years. For people ages 50 years and older, data on second booster doses are graphed starting the week including March 29, 2022, when the recommendation was made for second boosters. Vertical lines represent dates when changes occurred in U.S. policy for COVID-19 vaccination (details provided above). Reporting is by primary series vaccine type rather than additional or booster dose vaccine type. The booster dose vaccine type may be different than the primary series vaccine type. ** Because data on the immune status of cases and associated deaths are unavailable, an additional dose in an immunocompromised person cannot be distinguished from a booster dose. This is a relevant consideration because vaccines can be less effective in this group. Deaths: A COVID-19–associated death occurred in a person with a documented COVID-19 diagnosis who died; health department staff reviewed to make a determination using vital records, public health investigation, or other data sources. Rates of COVID-19 deaths by vaccination status are reported based on when the patient was tested for COVID-19, not the date they died. Deaths usually occur up to 30 days after COVID-19 diagnosis. Participating jurisdictions: Currently, these 31 health departments that regularly link their case surveillance to immunization information system data are included in these incidence rate estimates: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, New York City (New York), North Carolina, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania), Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, and West Virginia; 30 jurisdictions also report deaths among vaccinated and unvaccinated people. These jurisdictions represent 72% of the total U.S. population and all ten of the Health and Human Services Regions. Data on cases
This is redistricting data from the 2020 census at the census tract level. Technical documentation for the decennial census is available here: https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/decennial-census/technical-documentation/complete-technical-documents.html
Currently, this dataset is undergoing review QA/QC.
This dataset contains records of street sign assets installed and maintained from June 2018 to present. Any signs installed or maintained before June 2018 was collected by a vendor (Roadway Asset Services) in November 2021.
You may also be interested in these related datasets for traffic signs:
- Street Signs Work Orders: https://data.austintexas.gov/Transportation-and-Mobility/Street-Sign-Work-Orders/ivss-na93
- Signs and Markings Time Logs: https://data.austintexas.gov/dataset/Work-Order-Signs-Markings-Time-Logs/qvth-gwdv
Monthly Cumulative Number and Percent of Persons Who Received ≥1 Influenza Vaccination Doses, by Flu Season, Age Group, and Jurisdiction
• Influenza vaccination coverage for children and adults is assessed through U.S. jurisdictions’ Immunization Information Systems (IIS) data, submitted from jurisdictions to CDC monthly in aggregate by age group. More information about the IIS can be found at https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/programs/iis/about.html.
• Influenza vaccination coverage estimate numerators include the number of people receiving at least one dose of influenza vaccine in a given flu season, based on information that state, territorial, and local public health agencies report to CDC. Some jurisdictions’ data may include data submitted by tribes. Estimates include persons who are deceased but received a vaccination during the current season. People receiving doses are attributed to the jurisdiction in which the person resides unless noted otherwise. Quality and completeness of data may vary across jurisdictions. Influenza vaccination coverage denominators are obtained from 2020 U.S. Census Bureau population estimates.
• Monthly estimates shown are cumulative, reflecting all persons vaccinated from July through a given month of that flu season. Cumulative estimates include any historical data reported since the previous submission. National estimates are not presented since not all U.S. jurisdictions are currently reporting their IIS data to CDC. Jurisdictions reporting data to CDC include U.S. states, some localities, and territories.
• Because IIS data contain all vaccinations administered within a jurisdiction rather than a sample, standard errors were not calculated and statistical testing for differences in estimates across years were not performed.
• Laws and policies regarding the submission of vaccination data to an IIS vary by state, which may impact the completeness of vaccination coverage reflected for a jurisdiction. More information on laws and policies are found at https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/programs/iis/policy-legislation.html.
• Coverage estimates based on IIS data are expected to differ from National Immunization Survey (NIS) estimates for children (https://www.cdc.gov/flu/fluvaxview/dashboard/vaccination-coverage-race.html) and adults (https://www.cdc.gov/flu/fluvaxview/dashboard/vaccination-adult-coverage.html) because NIS estimates are based on a sample that may not be representative after survey weighting and vaccination status is determined by survey respondent rather than vaccine records or administrations, and quality and completeness of IIS data may vary across jurisdictions. In general, NIS estimates tend to overestimate coverage due to overreporting and IIS estimates may underestimate coverage due to incompleteness of data in certain jurisdictions.
The Project Information dataset displays detailed project information such as location, type of work, and estimated cost for projects scheduled for letting within the designated two consecutive fiscal years.
Its contents are refreshed hourly with data from TxDOT’s transportation program management system, TXDOTCONNECT. Project Information dataset includes data in current fiscal year plus 3 years forward.
This shows redistricting data for the 2020 census at the block level. Full technical documentation for the census is available here: https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/decennial-census/technical-documentation/complete-technical-documents.html
Diagnosis entered during outpatient, inpatient, or Community Care that was paid for by VHA. This excludes Non-VA Care and Unknown.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of institutional medical billing services (SV2). It contains charges, payments, and treatments billed on a CMS-1450 form (UB-92, UB-04) by hospitals and medical facilities that treat injured employees, excluding ambulatory surgical centers, with dates of service more than five years old. For datasets from the past five years, see institutional medical billing services (SV2) header information.
The header identifies insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill header information groups individual line items reported in the detail section. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our institutional medical billing services (SV2) header data dictionary.
See institutional medical billing services (SV2) detail information- historical for the corresponding detail records related to this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
This dataset entails the delineation of impervious surfaces and artificial land cover types extracted from aerial imagery captured in 2023. Utilization within the City of Austin The dataset plays a pivotal role in several municipal functions, encompassing the computation of the Drainage Charge managed by the Watershed Protection Department, wildfire assessments, emergency operations planning, transportation asset monitoring, urban forest management, and more. Data Updates New aerial imagery and impervious cover data are acquired by the city every two years, resulting in distinct datasets for each capture. As of its initial capture in early 2023, there have been no subsequent updates to this dataset. Downloading Instructions Some users have reported issues downloading the data. Due to the large size of the dataset, downloading can take longer than expected. We recommend following these instructions to download the data.
Click on 'Export'. Choose the desired export format from the dropdown menu. Initiate the download by clicking 'Download'. It's essential to allow your browser ample time to process the download. Even if no immediate action appears to occur, please refrain from closing the browser window. Depending on your internet speed, the download process can take between 10 to 30 minutes due to the substantial size of the data. Once the download commences in your browser, allow it to finish entirely. Should you encounter any issues during the download process, kindly contact the dataset owner for assistance.
Diagnosis entered during outpatient, inpatient, or Community Care that was paid for by VHA. This excludes Non-VA Care and Unknown.
The Archived Project Information dataset displays detailed project information such as location, type of work, and estimated cost for projects scheduled for letting within the designated two consecutive fiscal years.
Its contents are refreshed hourly with data from TxDOT’s transportation program management system, TXDOTCONNECT. Archived Project Information dataset includes previous Project Information data outside of Project Information dataset.
Conducted by National Service Research. Participants rated various city services, quality of life issues, community characteristics, and project priorities.
Energy And The Environment
This dataset contains hazardous waste generation and disposal information in Pennsylvania. The source of data comes from a combination of EPA’s e-Manifest system and the Pennsylvania Waste Information Management System (PWIMS). Prior to July 2018, Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection maintained hazardous waste manifest information in PWIMS. EPA launched the e-Manifest system in July 2018 to modernize the national cradle-to-grave hazardous waste tracking system.
Refresh frequency is anticipated to occur quarterly, but may be delayed until the potential interruption in this service is resumed.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) maintains a list of Chemicals of Interest (COI). In cooperation with DHS this website excludes waste lines from the manifest, including the quantity, that contain COI. This website also excludes the manifest's shipped and received dates for manifests containing COI. These exclusions should be taken into account when using this data.
Resolution No. 20131024-084 directed the City Manager to “ . . . conduct facilitated discussions . . . about Asian American quality of life issues in Austin; to produce a Community Scorecard; to develop strategies to address the findings of Asian-American Health Assessment, the facilitated discussions, and the Community Scorecard; and to report back . . . with recommendations for enhanced or new City programs and practices.” For more information: marion.sanchez@AustinTexas.gov., https://asianlifeatx.bloomfire.com/, http://austintexas.gov/asianlifeaustin, https://www.facebook.com/AsianLifeATX.
Data for the Austin Council District Profiles, displayed on the Austin Demographics site, published in Spring 2023.
Data is from 2020-2022, depending on the data.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use – https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-ccc
The Austin Parks and Recreation System's ranking on the Trust for Public Land ParkScore Index. This index ranks the park systems of the 100 largest cities in the U.S. based on park acreage, park size, park funding, park access, and a variety of other factors.
This data set supports HE.C.2 of SD23.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/Austin-s-ParkScore-Ranking-absolute-score-and-rank/rnwr-4s4u/
*If a cell is blank, that means PARD did not have a response for that year or TPL removed the question for that
This dataset supports measure CLL.B.6, CLL.A.2 of SD23 and was collected from individual artists and arts organizations; both for-profit and non-profit. This data has very specific space needs by arts discipline. Data sourced from the Cultural Arts Space Survey.
View more details and insights related to this data set on the story page: https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/hfbb-kg6t
This dataset is comprised of arts organizations and businesses’ responses to the 2017 Creative Space Survey. This survey, conducted annually, provides a platform for Austin creatives to keep the City up-to-date on current space needs provides data to inform the Economic Development Department’s creative space development efforts and includes data on current costs, sizes, and ideal specifications for creative workspaces. The results captured here were collected over the course of 2018. The Creative Space Survey is comprised of two surveys- one for individual artists and one for arts organizations and businesses. For more information or to view the other survey results, visit www.austintexas.gov/creativespacesurvey. This survey is also used to capture Strategic Direction Metric CLL.B.6: Number and percentage of creatives who report having access to affordable creative space. This product has been produced by the Economic development Department of the City of Austin for the sole purpose of informational reference. No warranty is made by the City of Austin regarding specific accuracy or completeness.
These are the data for displayed in the Demographic Profiles displayed on austintexas.gov/demographics. These profiles were published in 2024, but display data from 2022 and 2023.
Most data are from the 2022 American Community Survey (the most recent available at the time of publication), but some data have other sources. All data come from the American Community Survey estimates except for:
Total Population - City of Austin Planning Department (2023) Population Low-Moderate Income - Dept. of Housing and Urban Development LMISD Summary Data (2022) Occupied Housing Units - City of Austin Planning Department (2023) Median Home Closing Price - Austin Board of Realtors (2023) Average Monthly Rent - Austin Investor Interests (Q4 2023) Income Restricted Units - City of Austin Affordable Housing Inventory Housing Units-City of Austin Planning Department (2023) Population Density - Esri Updated Demographics Daytime Population Density - Esri Updated Demographics Selected Land Use Percentages - City of Austin Land Use Inventory Transit Stops - Capital Metro (2023)
City, County, and MSA data are 1-Year ACS estimates. Council Districts are 5-year ACS estimates.
More information and links to these alternate sources, when available, can be found at austintexas.gov/demographics.
These profiles are updated annually.
City of Austin Open Data Terms of Use – https://data.austintexas.gov/stories/s/ranj-cccq
CPT frequency counts for encounters in outpatient and inpatient settings in the VA healthcare system. Does NOT include services provided in the community.
The Archived Project Information dataset displays detailed project information such as location, type of work, and estimated cost for projects scheduled for letting within the designated two consecutive fiscal years.
Its contents are refreshed hourly with data from TxDOT’s transportation program management system, TXDOTCONNECT. Archived Project Information dataset includes previous Project Information data outside of Project Information dataset.
Unique patient counts by location for encounters in outpatient and inpatient settings in the VA healthcare system. Does NOT include services provided in the community.
NOTE: National will NOT equal a sum of all locations.
The U.S. Census defines Asian Americans as individuals having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian subcontinent (U.S. Office of Management and Budget, 1997). As a broad racial category, Asian Americans are the fastest-growing minority group in the United States (U.S. Census Bureau, 2012). The growth rate of 42.9% in Asian Americans between 2000 and 2010 is phenomenal given that the corresponding figure for the U.S. total population is only 9.3% (see Figure 1). Currently, Asian Americans make up 5.6% of the total U.S. population and are projected to reach 10% by 2050. It is particularly notable that Asians have recently overtaken Hispanics as the largest group of new immigrants to the U.S. (Pew Research Center, 2015). The rapid growth rate and unique challenges as a new immigrant group call for a better understanding of the social and health needs of the Asian American population.