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Average Monthly Residential Water Consumption by Neighbourhood 2017 - Annual
data.edmonton.ca | Last Updated 2019-07-17T17:05:05.000ZThis dataset provides the average (annual, winter, summer) residential metered water consumption (2017) within residential neighbourhoods provided in m3/month for the City of Edmonton. Average monthly residential winter water consumption is the average consumption of the following months: January, February, March, April, October, November and December. Average monthly residential summer water consumption is the average consumption of the following months: May, June, July, August and September. Only those residential neighbourhoods with at least ten accounts are illustrated to ensure customer privacy. Residential consumption refers to water used primarily for domestic purposes, where no more than four separate dwelling units are metered by a single water meter. Thematic mapping is based on the following ranges: 0-10 m3/month – orange 10-20 m3/month – green 20-30 m3/month – purple 30-35 m3/month – blue 35-60 m3/month – red 60 m3/month and up – maroon Note: For 2017, there were no areas where the consumption was 60 m3/month and up - thus, the maroon colour would not appear in the legend.
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Annual Average Monthly Residential Water Consumption by City Block Area (Multi-Year)
data.edmonton.ca | Last Updated 2020-10-29T15:14:48.000ZThis dataset provides the average (annual, winter, summer) residential metered water consumption (by year) within 400 m x 400m hexagons (approximately two city blocks) provided in m3/month for the City of Edmonton. Average monthly residential winter water consumption is the average consumption of the following months: January, February, March, April, October, November and December. Average monthly residential summer water consumption is the average consumption of the following months: May, June, July, August and September. Only those hexagons that contain at least ten accounts are illustrated to ensure customer privacy. Residential consumption refers to water used primarily for domestic purposes, where no more than four separate dwelling units are metered by a single water meter. Thematic mapping is based on the following ranges: 0-10 m3/month – orange 10-20 m3/month – green 20-30 m3/month – purple 30-35 m3/month – blue 35-60 m3/month – red 60 m3/month and up – maroon
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Front Yard in Bloom Awards
data.edmonton.ca | Last Updated 2023-09-21T15:19:11.000ZAll addresses that received Awards as part of the Front Yards in Bloom program. Front Yards in Bloom is a partnership of the Edmonton Horticultural Society, the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, and the City of Edmonton. Front Yards in Bloom congratulates private landscapes that make the whole city more beautiful.
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July 2021 Mixed Topic - Sorting Waste in Public Spaces - Edmonton Insight Community
data.edmonton.ca | Last Updated 2021-07-27T17:48:45.000ZThis was one single topic among many, from the July 2021 Mixed Topic survey. To view the survey questions, click the following link: https://www.edmontoninsightcommunity.ca/c/a/6NKy8plNpEnE8sKG4CTYiO?t=1 Open from July 13-20, 2021. At the time the survey was launched survey invitations were sent to 13,553 Insight Community Members. 3322 members completed the survey which represents a completion rate of 24.51%. A total of 3326 respondents completed the survey: 3322 Insight Community Members, 1 from the call to action button on our webpage, and 3 using the anonymous link on Edmonton.ca/Surveys which will have no demographic info.
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Average Monthly Residential Water Consumption by City Block Area-Annual 2016
data.edmonton.ca | Last Updated 2023-12-13T02:26:26.000ZThis dataset provides the average (annual, winter, summer) residential metered water consumption (2016) within 400 m x 400m hexagons (approximately two city blocks) provided in m3/month for the City of Edmonton. Average monthly residential winter water consumption is the average consumption of the following months: January, February, March, April, October, November and December. Average monthly residential summer water consumption is the average consumption of the following months: May, June, July, August and September. Only those hexagons that contain at least ten accounts are illustrated to ensure customer privacy. Residential consumption refers to water used primarily for domestic purposes, where no more than four separate dwelling units are metered by a single water meter. Thematic mapping is based on the following ranges: 0-10 m3/month – orange 10-20 m3/month – green 20-30 m3/month – purple 30-35 m3/month – blue 35-60 m3/month – red 60 m3/month and up – maroon
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Edible Fruit Trees
data.edmonton.ca | Last Updated 2024-08-05T18:26:52.000ZPlease Note: Citizens are welcome to harvest from fruit trees on COE property with full understanding of the following: 1. No damage or harm is caused to the tree including broken branches, pruning or removal of any woody materials 2. Citizens assume responsibilities for their own safety: a) Possible injury from the harvesting activity, safety while working on or near boulevards or natural areas b) Possible mis-identification of berries and use of products from harvested product 3. Possible exposure: Residue of chemicals such as pesticides, herbicides or other chemicals from the environment or soil may be present on or in the fruit, as a result of over-spray from either public or private property. It is best to wash the fruit thoroughly before consumption. List of all trees owned and maintained by the City of Edmonton. Note - There are about 320,000 records. It may take some time to load everything. The following link: https://www.opentreemap.org/edmonton/map/ is an online map database of trees in Edmonton. Individuals, community groups, and government can collaboratively create an accurate and informative inventory of the trees in their communities.
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Edmontonians' Perception Survey - City Design And Attractiveness
data.edmonton.ca | Last Updated 2019-07-17T16:49:56.000ZIn 2014, the City of Edmonton contracted Leger to conduct a survey of Edmontonians designed to understand perceptions on key measures relating to the quality of life in Edmonton. This research is aimed at capturing citizen perception based performance measures which feed into the corporate performance reporting to achieve the City’s vision for 2040 (The Way Ahead). In recent years, Citizen Perception Surveys have been carried out annually to gather data and report on the measures. Taking into account the recent modifications in performance measures as well as the focus on continuous improvement, the 2014 research was designed to: - Measure the progress with respect to the key performance measures - Understand the drivers of the performance measures and provide recommendations about how the measures can be further improved. - Make comparisons with past measures wherever applicable
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Front Yards in Bloom Awards - Edible
data.edmonton.ca | Last Updated 2023-09-21T15:19:11.000ZAll addresses that received Awards as part of the Front Yards in Bloom program. Front Yards in Bloom is a partnership of the Edmonton Horticultural Society, the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, and the City of Edmonton. Front Yards in Bloom congratulates private landscapes that make the whole city more beautiful.
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Pet Licenses by Neighbourhood
data.edmonton.ca | Last Updated 2024-08-05T10:31:42.000ZDistribution of various currently-licensed pets (cats, dogs, pigeons) by neighbourhood. Note that this is a snapshot of pets that were licensed as of the last update date of this dataset; if a pet was licensed a number of years ago but that license has since expired and not been renewed, the details of that pet will not appear in this dataset. It is therefore not possible to use this dataset to see trends in pet licensing over time. The rows with a year value of '2017' for example do not represent a comprehensive list of all pets that were licensed in 2017, but rather the subset of those pets that are still licensed as of the last update date of this dataset.
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Environmental Sensitivity Project (2015)
data.edmonton.ca | Last Updated 2022-12-13T23:03:09.000ZHistorically, the City of Edmonton has managed ‘natural areas’ within the North Saskatchewan River Valley and the Tablelands separately, guided by inventories such as the Ribbon of Green and Geowest (1993). Over the past decade, City policy has shifted to manage natural areas with consideration of their role within an ecological network. Today, a goal of the City is to protect, preserve and enhance a functioning ecological network throughout the city limits. This network should include lands in both the river valley and the Tablelands. To further this goal, a model was developed in 2015 for determining environmental sensitivity scores across the entirety of the city. This model guided the collection of several digital data layers with coverage across the entire study area (including several ecological assets, threats to assets, and development and cultural constraints). Data layers were then used to develop spatial outputs that summarized the distribution of these assets, threats and constraints. These base layers have been compiled into this dataset to help inform planning, development and conservation throughout Edmonton. Environmental sensitivity analysis incorporated recent mapping of the ecological network of native and non-native vegetation, streams, wetlands and other waterbodies as much as possible, with practical limitations. The City’s urban Primary Land and Vegetation Inventory (uPLVI) and remote sensing data used for this assessment were completed in 2015 and 2013 respectively, which is relatively recent, but not current. Similarly, infrastructure data (roads, subdivision development and stormwater facilities) provided varied in month of acquisition from 2015. Some discrepancy between mapped and actual features may result, due to loss and changes from ongoing development activities.