Rule1: The main objective is to provide clear street names for both citizens and emergency dispatch. Minimizing the possibility of emergency personnel being unable to find a location or showing up at a similar, but incorrect location, is a vital objective.
After checking your names against the 'Streets Lookup' database above, send a list by fax at
910-253-2399 or email to the attention of Jan Clemmons. The names will then be rechecked for any conflicts and a reply will show which names have been reserved to you.
Address Management Services reviews and reserves street names to be applied to right of way, easements or private drives throughout Travis County. Not all accesses may be named. Duplicate and/or similar-sounding street names are prevented and continuity with existing streets is maintained. For a complete list of street naming rules, as well as an explanation of the street name reservation process, see the Austin and Travis County Street Name Standards. To prevent duplication, 'Reserved' and 'Active' street names can be viewed below in the Street Name Database.
Street Name Database
The Street Name Database includes City of Austin and Travis County streets that are either in use or reserved for use. If a name appears in this list, it may not be used for another street. The database is updated on a nightly basis.
Developing, maintaining and enforcing addressing standards is in the best interest of public health, safety and the general welfare of the citizens of Manatee County. Additionally, addressing helps define educational and political districts and affects the quality of services available to citizens. A logical and consistent addressing system can improve the quality of life in a community.
Use the input box below to search for a street name using SOUNDEX or Reserved Street Name List in Manatee County (Unincorporated).
Note: Some of the street names listed do not have individual building forms and will return "no results"; they are included in area survey forms, or provide context for other forms. We will link these more appropriately when possible.
GIS / Addressing / Land Records is responsible for maintaining property information used in public inquiry and legal research. GIS / Addressing / Land Records uses public documents to create and maintain the official index of property ownership in the County. GIS / Addressing / Land Records handles the geographic information systems for Orange County.
Addresses are obtained by contacting the addressing authority for each address jurisdiction. In the County jurisdiction your new address is assigned when you apply for a building permit or when your road name changes. You can call the following numbers to obtain information on new or existing addresses:
The City's Daytime Neighborhood Street Cleaning program currently runs from April 1 through November 30 for all neighborhoods except the North End, the South End, and Beacon Hill. The daytime program parking restrictions are not in effect during the months of December and March except in the North End, the South End, and Beacon Hill. There will be no posted street sweeping or program related parking enforcement during the months of January and February.
Mechanical sweepers operate weather-permitting. During the winter, street cleaning and parking restrictions are nighttime-only except in the North End, the South End, and Beacon Hill neighborhoods.
In the event that Public Works decides to cancel street sweeping and parking enforcement for weather related reasons, notifications will be sent out by e-mail to NO-TOW subscribers or you may contact 311.
Use this form to search schedules for posted street sweeping, to see when parking restrictions take effect. You can find schedules by street name, or by a combination of neighborhood and day. Lookup results are presented by District (which approximates a neighborhood), Side (odd/even), and Section (for longer streets chopped up by cross streets).
Public Works has made several changes to this program to better align the sweeping schedule with trash/recycling days. Please check the posted signs in your area. The Night Street Cleaning program is focused on sections of the Downtown area and also main thoroughfares city-wide and the parking regulations are in effect year-round. All street sweeping schedules are dependent on weather and roadway conditions.
Among many things that I do for the City, I have the privilege of assigning 9-1-1 addresses and approving new street names in subdivision plats that come to my table. (I've been doing 9-1-1 addressing for about four years now, thanks to my previous position before working at the city)
After a bombardment of new plats coming to my office these last few months, I've decided to try and find a way to help speed the process of finding existing duplicate/similar sounding street names - as it takes so long to do this manually.
And I kinda understand in theory how these scripts and things work, but i'm not understanding how a user can input a name, like a form with a submit button to search for similar names in a streets list/database.
I then created a webpage that connects to this data and compares the user input. It prints out any name that sounds the same. I used resign so I could match the word DESIGN. You would have more words that match so it would print any that did.
then here is the code. The architecture is like REST. You write a server side script to query your DB and put out the info in JSON. then the website uses AJAX to get the data and do the work client side. In my first example I used ArcServer because then you dont have to write the server side. the HTML is below and below that I have attached a sample server side script that would generate the JSON.
I converted it to VB using a C# to VB tool, and fixed any conversion errors manually to make the program run correctly. (I needed to edit the code to personalize the program more, and I know VB more than C#)
I successfully converted the provided SoundEx code to VB, but couldn't figure out how to convert the supplied Metaphone code to VB. So I searched the internet and found a different Metaphone implementation and got it working that way. (Honestly, I cannot find where I found this since I lost all of my bookmarks.)
Click Add Street and a pop-up box will appear. In the Street Name field, enter the proposed name without the extension (St., Ln., Ct., Pl., etc.), then click Add. If the street name is available, it will appear in the box on the webpage. If the street name is not available, the names of the streets currently in use will show up in the pop up box and another name will need to be chosen.
Enter your street name in the search box below to find your voting ward. Street names marked with an asterisk (*) indicate streets that cover more than one ward. Please be certain to check the corresponding street numbers as odd and even street numbers are sometimes assigned to different wards. Visit our polling location page to find out where your poll is located.
This tool may take a moment to load depending upon your internet connection speed.
These instructions will help you locate your property information on our real property data system. You can search the online database by either the address, street name, account identifier or map reference. You can not search by owner's name, town, neighborhood, subdivision or zip code.
In the example above, the property account indentification number (ACCT #) consists of the county code 01, the assessment district 02 and account number 123456. The county code identifies the jurisdiction in which the property resides.
Select the county in which the property is located by matching the county code to the respective name from the above County Codes table. The county name can also be identified by looking at SDAT's return address on the assessment notice. The return address will be the SDAT office for the county in which the property is located, for example, property located in Garrett County will have the following return address:
State of Maryland
Department of Assessments and Taxation
GARRETT COUNTY
PO BOX 388
OAKLAND, MD 21550-0388
Anne Arundel County:
Following the ACCT# 02 are the two digit assessment district, the three digit subdivision code and the 8 digit account number. You will need the district, subdivision, and account numbers to search for your property
Baltimore City:
Following the ACCT# 03, are the two digit Ward, the two digit Section, the Block (which consists of four digits and in some cases followed by a letter), and the Lot (which consists of three digits and in some cases followed by a letter). Each of these indentifiers are separated with a space. You will need Ward, Section, Block and Lot to search your property.
If the information regarding your property is incorrect, or you have questions about your assessment contact the appropriate local Assessment office. A list of offices and contact information is available on the Maryland Assessment Offices page.
The State of Maryland pledges to provide constituents, businesses, customers, and stakeholders with friendly and courteous, timely and responsive, accurate and consistent, accessible and convenient, and truthful and transparent services.
If you are interested in obtaining a particular name for a particular street, please use both of the searches below. There are two searches -- the first search will allow you to see if your street name has already been used, and the second will search for existing street names that may sound similar to your proposed street name. Duplicate and similar-sounding names cannot be be approved. You may want to print the results of your searches and bring these with you to the Planning and Zoning Office when you apply for your street name.
If the search results do not show what you were expecting, enter less of the name.
For example, if you enter "Lee" for the street, you will see a list of all streets starting with "Lee". This includes Lee Youngblood Road, Lee Farm Road, Lee Street, etc. If you enter "Lee" in the Search for Similar-Sounding Names, your results will include Lee Road, Leah Road, Lee Circle, Lou Circle, etc.
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