- API
Notifiable Invoices Register
www.data.act.gov.au | Last Updated 2024-05-21T06:27:08.000ZIn accordance with the Government Procurement Act 2001, from 1 July 2015, the Government is publishing relevant information about its notifiable invoices. The requirement is consistent with Open Government and applies to all Territory entities. The Notifiable Invoices Register, in conjunction with the ACT Government Contracts Register provides transparency about Government purchasing to the community. Notifiable Invoices are invoices with a value of $25,000 or more for goods, services or works received by the Territory or a Territory entity. The Territory publishes details of notifiable invoices within 21 days after the end of the month in which the invoice was paid. For reporting from July 1 2017, the Territory will be including date invoice received in the notifiable invoices register. A number of points should be taken into account when using this information: - For the June 2017 reporting period, this field is the date that a valid invoice was received by the responsible Territory entity, however in small number of cases, it relates to the date the invoices was initially entered into the financial processing system of the Territory entity where known. - A small proportion of notifiable invoices do not have date received information recorded. This is due to a variety of reasons including some cases of scheduled payments under agreements or contracts not having an explicit invoice received date, and several reporting entities not yet being able to transmit to the Territory central finance system the date invoice received. A new column titled ‘Procurement Unique Identifier’ has been added to the Notifiable Invoices Register. An initiative of the Procurement Reform Program to improve transparency of government procurement and contracting, the Procurement Unique Identifier was launched for new procurements entering into the planning phase in April 2023 to facilitate linkage of procurement activities across the procurement lifecycle. The Procurement Unique Identifier can be searched in the ‘Contract Number’ or ‘Contract Title’ field in the Notifiable Contracts Register. Reporting Entity Key ACT Legal Aid: ACT Legal Aid Commission ACTAO: ACT Audit Office ACTIA: ACT Insurance Authority ACTIC: ACT Integrity Commission BCIFA: Building and Construction Industry Fund Authority CFC: Cultural Facilities Corporation CMTEDD-SPA: Chief Minister, Treasury and Economic Development Directorate - Superannuation Provision Account CMTEDD-TBA: Chief Minister, Treasury and Economic Development Directorate - Territory Banking Account ICRC: Independent Competition and Regulatory Commission LSLA: ACT Long Service Leave Authority LTCS: Lifetime Care and Support Fund ACT MAI: Motor Accident Injuries Commission OLA: Office of the Legislative Assembly PTG: Public Trustee and Guardian for the Australian Capital Territory TCCS-Canberra Cemeteries: Canberra Memorial Parks/Australian Capital Territory Public Cemeteries Authority TQI: Teachers Quality Institute ACT Ombudsman: ACT Ombudsman ACT Electoral: ACT Electoral Commission AHD: ACT Health Directorate CHS: Canberra Health Services CIT: Canberra Institute of Technology CMTEDD: Chief Minister, Treasury and Economic Development Directorate CMTEDD-ACT Exec: ACT Executive CMTEDD-DDTS-ICT: Chief Minister, Treasury and Economic Development Directorate- Digital, Data and Technology Solutions CMTEDD-ED: Chief Minister, Treasury and Economic Development Directorate - Economic Development CMTEDD-SS: Chief Minister, Treasury and Economic Development Directorate - Shared Services CRA: City Renewal Authority CSD: Community Services Directorate CSD-Housing: Community Services Directorate - Housing ACT EPSDD: Environment Planning and Sustainable Development Directorate ETD: Education Directorate GRC: ACT Gambling & Racing Commission JACSD: Justice and Community Safety Directorate MPC: Major Projects Canberra SLA: Suburban Land Agency WorksafeACT: Office of th
- API
Notifiable Invoice Register - total amount by entity and supplier
www.data.act.gov.au | Last Updated 2024-05-21T06:27:08.000ZIn accordance with the Government Procurement Act 2001, from 1 July 2015, the Government is publishing relevant information about its notifiable invoices. The requirement is consistent with Open Government and applies to all Territory entities. The Notifiable Invoices Register, in conjunction with the ACT Government Contracts Register provides transparency about Government purchasing to the community. Notifiable Invoices are invoices with a value of $25,000 or more for goods, services or works received by the Territory or a Territory entity. The Territory publishes details of notifiable invoices within 21 days after the end of the month in which the invoice was paid. For reporting from July 1 2017, the Territory will be including date invoice received in the notifiable invoices register. A number of points should be taken into account when using this information: - For the June 2017 reporting period, this field is the date that a valid invoice was received by the responsible Territory entity, however in small number of cases, it relates to the date the invoices was initially entered into the financial processing system of the Territory entity where known. - A small proportion of notifiable invoices do not have date received information recorded. This is due to a variety of reasons including some cases of scheduled payments under agreements or contracts not having an explicit invoice received date, and several reporting entities not yet being able to transmit to the Territory central finance system the date invoice received.
- API
Groundwater Abstraction Bores
www.data.act.gov.au | Last Updated 2020-06-19T21:10:14.000ZThe ACT Groundwater Abstraction Bores are locations and drilling details of groundwater abstraction bores in the ACT collected since 1980's. The data set is updated approximately every 6 months or when a new bore completion report is received by the ACT Government. Creative Commons License Creative Common By Attribution 4.0 (Australian Capital Territory), Please read Data Terms and Conditions statement before data use.
- API
1 percent AEP Flood
www.data.act.gov.au | Last Updated 2020-06-19T22:31:26.000ZA flood is defined as the covering of normally dry land by water that has escaped or been released from the normal confines of a lake, river, creek or other natural watercourse, a reservoir, canal or dam. WHAT IS A FLASH FLOOD? - Flash flooding is localised flooding that occurs when heavy rain cannot drain away quicker than it falls. A flash flood is defined by the speed of flooding, not the source or location of flooding. Flash flooding is typically caused by short duration storms over a localised area or catchment. The Bureau of Meteorology describes flash flooding as "Flooding occurring within about six hours of rain, usually the result of intense local rain and characterised by rapid rises in water-levels." reference A local example of a flash flood is the "supercell" thunderstorm that hit Woden in January 1971 where the Canberra Times reported rainfalls up to 100mm in 1 hour were recorded by private rain gauges in the suburbs of Farrer and Torrens." reference WHAT IS FLOOD RISK? - Flood risk includes both the probability of a flood occurring and the consequences if a flood occurs. The consequences of a flood are in turn affected by the number of people and properties exposed to floodwater and the vulnerability of these people and properties. For example, a river might burst its banks regularly, but if this flooding occurs in an isolated area where there are no people or infrastructure, then the flood risk is considered to be low. Similarly, a river might flood very rarely, but if many people and properties are located near this river and they live in dwellings that are vulnerable to floodwater damage, then the flood risk will be higher. HOW PRONE IS CANBERRA TO FLOODS? - Canberra planning has always taken into account the need to avoid development in flood prone areas. Since the 1970s planning for new urban development in the ACT has kept development above the 1% Annual Exceedance Probability (AEP) flood level. The local storm water system is designed to cope with the 1% AEP storm flows through a combination of piped flows and overland flows. However, no areas are completely immune to flooding. Floods greater than the 1% AEP are possible, and extremely intense local rainfall can cause localised flash flooding. WHAT IS A 1% AEP FLOOD? - The 1% AEP flood is a theoretical flood that is estimated to have has a 1% chance of being equalled or exceeded in any year. For example, if you experienced a 1% AEP flood last year, the chance of experiencing a similar magnitude flood this year is still 1%, regardless of when the previous 1% AEP flood was experienced. The 1% probability is calculated using computer modelling, historic rainfall and runoff records and a range of other assumptions. The value of the 1% AEP is an estimate that will change as the climate changes and as more historic rainfall and flooding information is gathered over time that might change assumptions used in the modelling and estimations. WHAT DOES ACT FLOOD DATA SHOW? - The flood data map shows an estimate of the areas likely to be flooded during a 1% AEP flood - also previously known as the 100 year flood line. The ACT flood map shows flooding extents for riverine flooding only i.e. flooding from named watercourses such as rivers and creeks. WHEN IS ACT FLOOD DATA BEING RELEASED? - The ACT flood data show the 1% AEP flood for the Molonglo River from Yass Road downstream to the Lake Burley Griffin surrounds and further downstream to below Coppins Crossing. There is a program to update flood studies over the next three years for creeks and some major stormwater channels within and adjacent to urban areas. Once these studies are completed, the 1% AEP flood extents will be made available on the ACT Government's ACTMAPi website. DISCLAIMER The ACT Government is providing this flood data for information purposes only. This data is derived from the best available modelling of the catchments and watercourses. The ACT Government cannot and does not guarantee the accu
- API
ACT Blocks
www.data.act.gov.au | Last Updated 2020-06-19T23:06:50.000ZA parcel of land, usually the smallest unit of land that can be held under an individual lease without a requirement for further subdivision. Blocks in ACTMAPi are displayed as Urban and Rural blocks, and have been separated into individual layers based on its lifecycle stage (Registered, Approved, Proposed, Occupied and Retired). URBAN blocks are defined as blocks that appear within a division and have division and section identifiers. RURAL blocks do not usually appear within a division, but may do so if they remain from before the division was created. REGISTERED: The block appears on a Deposited Plan that has been registered with the Land Titles Office but is not RETIRED or DELETED. APPROVED: The block appears on an Approved Plan that has been signed by the Territory Planning Section and the Project Officer for the development, but the block is not REGISTERED, RETIRED or DELETED. PROPOSED: The block is proposed but has not reached any other stage. OCCUPIED: The block is leased, but does not appear on a registered plan. Leases over unregistered blocks may not be registered at the Land Titles Office, so this stage is used for unregistered blocks with unregistered leases. This normally only occurs in rural areas. RETIRED: Retirement of a block occurs when it is replaced by another block. Creative Commons License Creative Common By Attribution 4.0 (Australian Capital Territory), Please read Data Terms and Conditions statement before data use.
- API
ACTGOV BLOCK
www.data.act.gov.au | Last Updated 2021-07-30T10:58:47.000ZThe position and extents of a parcel of land, usually the smallest unit of land that can be held under an individual lease without a requirement for further subdivision. URBAN blocks are defined as blocks that appear within a division and have division and section identifiers. RURAL blocks do not usually appear within a division, but may do so if they remain from before the division was created. Blocks may have a lifecycle stage or Proposed, Registered, Approved, Occupied or Retired.PROPOSED: The block is proposed but has not reached any other stage.REGISTERED: The block appears on a Deposited Plan that has been registered with the Land Titles Office.APPROVED: The block appears on an Approved Plan that has been signed by the Territory Planning Section and the Project Officer for the development.OCCUPIED: The block is leased, but does not appear on a registered plan. Leases over unregistered blocks may not be registered at the Land Titles Office, so this stage is used for unregistered blocks with unregistered leases. This normally only occurs in rural areas.RETIRED: Retirement of a block occurs when it is replaced by another block.Note that block boundaries may not always align exactly. The legal definition of a block is defined in the Deposited plan.
- API
ACT Suburb Next Garbage, Recycling and Green Waste Collection Dates
www.data.act.gov.au | Last Updated 2024-06-07T07:30:36.000ZDisplays dates for ACT garbage and recycling collection by suburb, along with the collection week for each suburb. Missed collections can be reported through the Access Canberra Website here: https://www.accesscanberra.act.gov.au/app/answers/detail/a_id/37/~/recycling-and-waste-collection-problems
- API
Traffic camera offences and fines
www.data.act.gov.au | Last Updated 2024-06-06T21:33:19.000ZMonthly Infringement count and value displayed by camera location, penalty, vehicle type and client type. The penalty amount and the infringement count are penalties that occurred within the date described in the offence month. The withdrawal amount and the withdrawal count relate to the date the fine was withdrawn and not the date the original fine occurred
- API
Criminal Justice Statistical Profiles
www.data.act.gov.au | Last Updated 2017-07-31T02:31:23.000ZThe ACT Criminal Justice Statistical Profile (the Profile) is a historical series of crime data that is compiled twice a year by the Legislation, Policy and Programs Branch (LPP) of the ACT Government Justice and Community Safety Directorate and tabled in the Legislative Assembly. The profile contains data from ACT Policing, ACT Ambulance Service, Canberra and Calvary Hospitals’ Emergency Departments, ACT Sobering Up Shelter, Domestic Violence Crisis Service, Restorative Justice Unit, ACT Magistrates Court, Supreme Court of the ACT, Access Canberra, Office of Children, Youth and Family Support, Community Services Directorate, ACT Corrective Services, Galambany ‘Circle Sentencing’ Court and Victim Support ACT.
- API
Dog Parks
www.data.act.gov.au | Last Updated 2020-06-19T20:53:57.000ZLocation of Dog Parks that are managed by the ACT Government. Attributes include Suburb, Location and Creation date. Parks and City Services established a reference group of key community and government stakeholders to ensure that the fenced dog parks were the best fit for Canberra and best practice in dog exercise park design. This reference group included representatives from a number of dog associations and clubs, the RSPCA, Centre for Companion Animals in Society, Australian Veterinary Association, Guide Dogs Association and Council on the Aging. Transport Canberra and City Services (TCCS) is responsible for the installation and upkeep of Dog Parks across the ACT. These assets are captured and maintained in the TCCS asset database through the Works as Executed (WAE) process and field audits. Creative Commons License Creative Common By Attribution 4.0 (Australian Capital Territory), Please read Data Terms and Conditions statement before data use.