- API
FAC Facilities Assessment
internal.open.piercecountywa.gov | Last Updated 2024-07-01T16:27:42.000ZA facility condition assessment is a process of analyzing the condition of a facility or a group of facilities. A facility condition assessment is crucial in monitoring a building’s health and performance, and help prevent a maintenance emergency that could negatively impact your operations and those you serve. FM's goal is to assess every building once every three years. Our target is 100% Completion.
- API
FAC Facilities Assessment
internal.open.piercecountywa.gov | Last Updated 2024-07-01T16:42:07.000ZA facility condition assessment is the process of analyzing the condition of a facility or group of facilities. A facility condition assessment is crucial in capturing the current state of a building and its systems and helps to focus and prioritize resources for needed repairs and projects. Facilities Management's goal is to assess every building once every three years. In order to achieve this goal, we are scheduling 7-9 assessments per year. For 2023, our goal is 9 assessments.
- API
FAC-Facilities Assessment
internal.open.piercecountywa.gov | Last Updated 2024-07-01T16:27:42.000ZA facility condition assessment is a process of analyzing the condition of a facility or a group of facilities. A facility condition assessment is crucial in monitoring a building’s health and performance, and help prevent a maintenance emergency that could negatively impact your operations and those you serve. FM's goal is to assess every building once every three years. Buildings assessments for the 2020 budget are scheduled through March of 2019. Target is 100% Completion.
- API
Address Points
internal.open.piercecountywa.gov | Last Updated 2024-09-27T14:44:20.000ZThis is a comprehensive building address point layer for Pierce County, Washington. Every unique house number has a point located within the building footprint of the addressed structure (where possible). Multi-unit structures, mobile home parks, and buildings with the same street address are further identified by mailstop in the attribute table. Some vacant parcels may or may not have an assigned temporary address point. A permanent address will be assigned to a vacant parcel if a permitted structure is built on that parcel. Please read metadata for additional information (https://matterhorn.piercecountywa.gov/GISmetadata/pdbis_buildingaddress_public.html). Any use or data download constitutes acceptance of the Terms of Use (https://matterhorn.piercecountywa.gov/disclaimer/PierceCountyGISDataTermsofUse.pdf).
- API
COM - Point-in-Time Volunteer Recruitment Online Registrants
internal.open.piercecountywa.gov | Last Updated 2020-02-14T15:54:30.000ZWhat is the Point-In-Time Count? The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and Washington State Department of Commerce require communities to conduct a one-day Point-In-Time (PIT) Count to survey individuals experiencing homelessness. PIT Counts are one source of data among many that help us understand the magnitude and characteristics of people who are homeless in our community. The Point-In-Time (PIT) Count is a one-day snapshot that captures the characteristics and situations of people living here without a home. The PIT Count includes both sheltered individuals (temporarily living in emergency shelters or transitional housing) and unsheltered individuals (those sleeping outside or living in places that are not meant for human habitation). The annual PIT Count happens the last Friday in January, and is carried out by volunteers who interview people and asks where they slept the night before, where their last residence was located, what may have contributed to their loss of housing, and disabilities the individual may have. It also asks how long the individual has been homeless, age and demographics, and whether the person is a veteran and/or a survivor of domestic violence. Like all surveys, the PIT Count has limitations. Results from the Count are influenced by the weather, by availability of overflow shelter beds, by the number of volunteers, and by the level of engagement of the people we are interviewing. Comparisons from year to year should be done with those limitations in mind.
- API
Median Home Price
internal.open.piercecountywa.gov | Last Updated 2024-05-20T15:35:33.000ZThis dataset uses data provided from Washington State’s Housing Market, a publication of the Washington Center for Real Estate Research (WCRER) at the University of Washington. Median sales prices represent that price at which half the sales in a county (or the state) took place at higher prices, and half at lower prices. Since WCRER does not receive sales data on individual transactions (only aggregated statistics), the median is determined by the proportion of sales in a given range of prices required to reach the midway point in the distribution. While average prices are not reported, they tend to be 15-20 percent above the median. Movements in sales prices should not be interpreted as appreciation rates. Prices are influenced by changes in cost and changes in the characteristics of homes actually sold. The table on prices by number of bedrooms provides a better measure of appreciation of types of homes than the overall median, but it is still subject to composition issues (such as square footage of home, quality of finishes and size of lot, among others). There is a degree of seasonal variation in reported selling prices. Prices tend to hit a seasonal peak in summer, then decline through the winter before turning upward again, but home sales prices are not seasonally adjusted. Users are encouraged to limit price comparisons to the same time period in previous years.
- API
PPW Development Center Customers Served
internal.open.piercecountywa.gov | Last Updated 2023-10-06T18:14:51.000ZThe Development Center processes and distributes all applications reviewed by various divisions within Planning and Public Works. These applications include all unincorporated Pierce County Building Permits, Site Development Permits, Land Use Permits, Fire Code Permits and Sign Permits.
- API
PPW Development Tech Support
internal.open.piercecountywa.gov | Last Updated 2021-09-21T16:04:42.000ZThe Development Center processes and distributes all applications reviewed by various divisions within Planning and Public Works. These applications include all unincorporated Pierce County Building Permits, Site Development Permits, Land Use Permits, Fire Code Permits and Sign Permits.
- API
PPW Permit Activity by Month
internal.open.piercecountywa.gov | Last Updated 2023-04-04T16:44:49.000ZThe Development Center processes and distributes all applications reviewed by various divisions within Planning and Public Works. These applications include all unincorporated Pierce County Building Permits, Site Development Permits, Land Use Permits, Fire Code Permits and Sign Permits.
- API
Veterans Employment
internal.open.piercecountywa.gov | Last Updated 2024-02-16T18:24:00.000ZEmployment levels and percentages of veterans and non-veterans in the labor force over time.