Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN><SPAN>Government Code 51175-89 directs the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) to identify areas of very high fire hazard severity zones within Local Responsibility Areas (LRA). Mapping of the areas, referred to as Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones (VHFHSZ), is based on data and models of, potential fuels over a 30-50 year time horizon and their associated expected fire behavior, and expected burn probabilities to quantify the likelihood and nature of vegetation fire exposure (including firebrands) to buildings. Details on the project and specific modeling methodology can be found at </SPAN></SPAN><A href="http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/methods.html"><SPAN><SPAN>http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/methods.html</SPAN></SPAN></A><SPAN><SPAN>. Local Responsibility Area VHFHSZ maps were initially developed in the mid-1990s and are now being updated based on improved science, mapping techniques, and data. This specific geographic information system dataset depicts final CAL FIRE recommendations for Very High FHSZs within the local jurisdiction. The process of finalizing these boundaries involved an extensive local review process, the details of which are available at </SPAN></SPAN><A href="http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/btnet/"><SPAN><SPAN>http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/btnet/ </SPAN></SPAN></A><SPAN><SPAN>(click on "Continue as guest without logging in"). Local government has 120 days to designate, by ordinance, very high fire hazard severity zones within its jurisdiction after receiving the recommendation. Local government can add additional VHFHSZs. There is no requirement for local government to report their final action to CAL FIRE when the recommended zones are adopted. Consequently, users are directed to the appropriate local entity (county, city, fire department, or Fire Protection District) to determine the status of the local fire hazard severity zone ordinance. To display the areas of VHFHSZ recommended by CAL FIRE, simply display on the attribute HAZ_CLASS, as that has been filtered to represent only areas in the Very High Class, and only for areas that are in Local Responsibility Area (LRA) status.</SPAN></SPAN></P><P><SPAN /></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: de8575ede83842ee9469a2d987cb62bb
Copyright Text: CAL FIRE recoginzes the important contribution of various local government entities that contributed data, maps, and comments that were critical components of the FHSZ mapping process.
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN><SPAN>Government Code 51175-89 directs the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) to identify areas of very high fire hazard severity zones within Local Responsibility Areas (LRA). Mapping of the areas, referred to as Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones (VHFHSZ), is based on data and models of, potential fuels over a 30-50 year time horizon and their associated expected fire behavior, and expected burn probabilities to quantify the likelihood and nature of vegetation fire exposure (including firebrands) to buildings. Details on the project and specific modeling methodology can be found at </SPAN></SPAN><A href="http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/methods.html"><SPAN><SPAN>http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/methods.html</SPAN></SPAN></A><SPAN><SPAN>. Local Responsibility Area VHFHSZ maps were initially developed in the mid-1990s and are now being updated based on improved science, mapping techniques, and data. This specific geographic information system dataset depicts final CAL FIRE recommendations for Very High FHSZs within the local jurisdiction. The process of finalizing these boundaries involved an extensive local review process, the details of which are available at </SPAN></SPAN><A href="http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/btnet/"><SPAN><SPAN>http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/btnet/ </SPAN></SPAN></A><SPAN><SPAN>(click on "Continue as guest without logging in"). Local government has 120 days to designate, by ordinance, very high fire hazard severity zones within its jurisdiction after receiving the recommendation. Local government can add additional VHFHSZs. There is no requirement for local government to report their final action to CAL FIRE when the recommended zones are adopted. Consequently, users are directed to the appropriate local entity (county, city, fire department, or Fire Protection District) to determine the status of the local fire hazard severity zone ordinance. To display the areas of VHFHSZ recommended by CAL FIRE, simply display on the attribute HAZ_CLASS, as that has been filtered to represent only areas in the Very High Class, and only for areas that are in Local Responsibility Area (LRA) status.</SPAN></SPAN></P><P><SPAN /></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: de8575ede83842ee9469a2d987cb62bb
Copyright Text: CAL FIRE recoginzes the important contribution of various local government entities that contributed data, maps, and comments that were critical components of the FHSZ mapping process.
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN><SPAN>Government Code 51175-89 directs the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) to identify areas of very high fire hazard severity zones within Local Responsibility Areas (LRA). Mapping of the areas, referred to as Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones (VHFHSZ), is based on data and models of, potential fuels over a 30-50 year time horizon and their associated expected fire behavior, and expected burn probabilities to quantify the likelihood and nature of vegetation fire exposure (including firebrands) to buildings. Details on the project and specific modeling methodology can be found at </SPAN></SPAN><A href="http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/methods.html"><SPAN><SPAN>http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/methods.html</SPAN></SPAN></A><SPAN><SPAN>. Local Responsibility Area VHFHSZ maps were initially developed in the mid-1990s and are now being updated based on improved science, mapping techniques, and data. This specific geographic information system dataset depicts final CAL FIRE recommendations for Very High FHSZs within the local jurisdiction. The process of finalizing these boundaries involved an extensive local review process, the details of which are available at </SPAN></SPAN><A href="http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/btnet/"><SPAN><SPAN>http://frap.cdf.ca.gov/projects/hazard/btnet/ </SPAN></SPAN></A><SPAN><SPAN>(click on "Continue as guest without logging in"). Local government has 120 days to designate, by ordinance, very high fire hazard severity zones within its jurisdiction after receiving the recommendation. Local government can add additional VHFHSZs. There is no requirement for local government to report their final action to CAL FIRE when the recommended zones are adopted. Consequently, users are directed to the appropriate local entity (county, city, fire department, or Fire Protection District) to determine the status of the local fire hazard severity zone ordinance. To display the areas of VHFHSZ recommended by CAL FIRE, simply display on the attribute HAZ_CLASS, as that has been filtered to represent only areas in the Very High Class, and only for areas that are in Local Responsibility Area (LRA) status.</SPAN></SPAN></P><P><SPAN /></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: de8575ede83842ee9469a2d987cb62bb
Copyright Text: CAL FIRE recoginzes the important contribution of various local government entities that contributed data, maps, and comments that were critical components of the FHSZ mapping process.
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P STYLE="margin:0 0 0 0;"><SPAN>This is the road linework for Riverside County, including cities. This data layer replaces centerlines as the main cartographic and geocoding engine in analysis and mapping. The differences between this layer and TLMA's centerline data are as follows:</SPAN></P><UL><LI><P><SPAN>This layer follows aerial photos as evidence of street existence.</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>This layer tries to eliminate "paper streets", which appear in legal documents but does not exist in real life.</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>Graded tracts with centerlines will be considered as "tentative" rather than full validated streets.</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>This layer will contain address ranges.</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>This layer will update city streets as needed.</SPAN></P></LI></UL><P><SPAN>CLASS: Roads classification.</SPAN></P><UL><LI><P><SPAN>1 - Interstate</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>2 - Interstate Ramp</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>3 - US Highway</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>4 - US Highway Ramp</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>5 - CA Highway</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>6 - CA Highway Ramp</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>7 - Expressway</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>8 - Expressway Ramp</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>9 - Major Road</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>10 - Arterial Street</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>11 - Collector Street</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>12 - Residential Street</SPAN></P></LI><LI><P><SPAN>13 - Tentative</SPAN></P></LI></UL><P /><P /><P /></DIV></DIV></DIV>