It may take a few minutes for your registration to be activated. If you have registered and cannot login after 20 minutes, please send an email to homeowne...@habitatnashville.org from the address you registered with. Or you can leave a voice message at 615-942-1226 stating your email address.
For each critical habitat dataset, the proposed or final rule and Code of Federal Regulations (see attribute table within Mapper, Geodatabase, or web services for individual species) should be consulted for the complete description of the proposed or final critical habitat.
Habitat does not recommend paying mortgage payments with credit cards. Beginning July 1, this portal will no longer accept credit cards. Beginning July 1, this portal will only accept payments made through your bank account. If you'd like to set up ACH payments through the office, please contact Beth McDowell at 919-736-9592 x2 or emcd...@habitatgoldsboro.org.
Restoration of riparian vegetation and re-establishing floodplain connectivity.
Active or passive restoration that may include an element of invasive plant removal and control.
Installation of fencing along the riparian corridor to manage livestock or wildlife and reduce impacts to streams or riparian vegetation.
Reconfigure degraded, incised, or undefined streams to restore natural hydrology and encourage reestablishment of native riparian habitat.
Habitat-Portal is a web portal that digitalizes the entire application process, applicants can easily fill, sign, and upload all the required documents digitally and efficiently. This system ensures all documents are uploaded and instantly stored in the admin portal database for instant access and review. By giving families around the world a standardized and efficient digital application method, Habitat-Portal will reduce wait times, prevent ineligible or unreadable applications and save over 2 million pieces of paper for 175000+ families annually.
Habitat-Portal provides families applying for a Habitat for Humanity home a digitalized system for securely signing and uploading all their documents in one place. The web application leverages DocuSign's eSignature API for embedded signing so that an applicant can securely fill out home application forms for their family and upload all the documents that need to be submitted with it. It uses the eSignature API to accomplish this entirely through the web, and the application portal enables authentication that only allows a user to access the DocuSign embedded form as long as all the required documents have been uploaded.
Any location can adopt this portal to their liking, and any location's application form can be embedded with this portal. All documents must be uploaded before continuing to sign the form, taking the burden off applicants worrying about forgetting any documents as the portal takes care of the confirmation for them, and by digitalizing the process the need for printing, struggles of reading handwriting, and the fear of an application getting lost in the inbox disappears. My e-signing platform rids these burdens by providing a simple paperless system where applications can easily be submitted and instantly reviewed, all while ensuring any submitted files are securely stored in a database.
The frontend was developed with a React.js frontend and Axios for API methods, and the backend was written in node.js with MongoDB to store the files users upload, all files and form information is organized and stored by user/submissions. There is also an Admin portal which is linked in the Navbar with both admin login and registration functionality using JWT authentication. This is only for demo purposes, and in the future the workflow will be updated such that the Admin portal is independent from the Habitat Portal, so that only admin's can create admin accounts and the portal and admin registration system is hidden from users. Admin's have access to the user/submission info stored in the database, and is displayed on the admin page for the frontend in an organized dashboard-like manner. I leveraged the DocuSign eSignature API for the form to be fillable and allow for embedded signing.
I'm proud of successfully integrating the backend and deploying it to production and for refactoring my schema to load and store applicant information and files into a MongoDB cluster in an organized and easily retrievable manner. I am also happy about implementing the DocuSign eSignature API for embedded signing, as well as implementing an encrypted login system for admins for accessing submissions for their instant viewing and review. I am glad I had this opportunity to create a novel approach for one of the largest registered 501(c)3 non-profits to help reduce the burden of families trying to find a new and affordable home. I hope to continue to stay in touch with Habitat for Humanity to see this application reach more scalable production systems and be used in the non-profit's actual application system.
I got a significant refresher on the React development lifecycle and learned how to successfully integrate a backend with multiple integrations into a single port for databases, authorization, and API implementation. Learning how to independently develop a full stack application from start to finish has given me critical insights into the development life cycle, and these are skills I can carry with me throughout my career life. Furthermore, understanding customer needs for a good cause taught me how to understand customers and translate client needs into reliable, efficient software systems as solutions to their problems.
The maps are free for use in outreach and educational presentations and free publications in the resolution and format provided above as long as its origin, ArcticPortal.org, is clearly accounted for.
Any commercial use of our free maps, which includes and/or not limited to presentations or publication in reports, books, online media or commercial applications is NOT permitted. For any commercial use the maps are available for purchase via the download option. For other use, special requests or modifications please contact RegularLabs.EmailProtector.unCloak("ep_c33ff573");RegularLabs.EmailProtector.unCloak("ep_c40eb6d7", true);. Any third party amendments, copying or resale of the Arctic Portal maps, is not permitted without a written agreement with the Arctic Portal.
For purchasing commercial use and/or the higher resolution of maps please follow the Buy Map link which also indicates the price. You will be directed to a secure payment form at Rapyd, registered to the Arctic Foundation, the official operator of the ArcticPortal.org. After payment a zip folder with the purchased map will be downloaded to your browser and you will receive an invoice to your email address provided in the registration form or simply email RegularLabs.EmailProtector.unCloak("ep_174d2afe");RegularLabs.EmailProtector.unCloak("ep_ec4f90f3", true);. To locate your zip file, open the downloads directory for the browser that you used to perform the payment. If you have any problems with this process please contact RegularLabs.EmailProtector.unCloak("ep_6b5d60a5");RegularLabs.EmailProtector.unCloak("ep_4735f860", true);
The Arctic Portal.org is operated by the Arctic Foundation. Arctic Foundation is registered in Akureyri, Iceland, according to Icelandic Act no. 119/2019 on not-for-profit organizations operating across borders. Registration nr. 610721-1090.
When quoting, reusing or copying any material on the arcticportal.org or any of its sub-sites including but not limiting to: information, news, articles, data, maps or images, in part or in full, a citation stating the origin and a hyperlink to www.arcticportal.org is required.
Consultation Package Builder (CPB) replaces and improves on the original Impact Analysis by providing an interactive, step-by-step process to help you prepare a full consultation package leveraging U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service data and recommendations, including conservation measures designed to help you avoid or minimize effects to listed species.
10-minute tour of IPaC's tools: Official Species Lists, Determination Keys, and the Consultation Package Builder (intended for Action Agency partners). The original recording took place during a demo of tools for the DOD.
IPaC is available to everyone, whether private citizens or public employees, who needs information to assist in determining how activities being proposed may impact sensitive natural resources, and who would like to obtain suggestions for ways to address these impacts.
If you have a project that could potentially affect USFWS trust resources, such as migratory birds, species and critical habitat proposed or listed under the Endangered Species Act, inter-jurisdictional fishes, certain marine mammals, wetlands, coastal barrier units, or National Wildlife Refuge lands, IPaC can help you determine what impacts are likely to occur from the project and provide suggestions for addressing them.
By obtaining this information early in the project development process, it can be easier for project proponents to incorporate measures to minimize or avoid impacts into their project planning, thereby avoiding potential project delays and saving time and money.
The information you receive from IPaC is generated by USFWS field offices. The benefit of getting the information directly from IPaC is that the information is available to anyone over the internet whenever it is needed rather than only when USFWS personnel are available.
Our goal is to help improve the efficiency of project planning by providing information during the earliest planning stages. Subsequent discussions with USFWS staff regarding your specific project (e.g., scope, scale, timing, etc.) may result in modifications of IPaC-generated Biological Assessments, determination key documents, conservation measures, or other recommendations specific to your project.
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