{ "culture": "en-US", "name": "", "guid": "", "catalogPath": "", "snippet": "This dataset was generated to publish an aggregated set of parcel polygons for as many North Carolina counties as practical to serve business needs that require information from multiple counties, e.g., response to a natural disaster, analysis of economic development potential, environmental assessments, and highway planning to name a few. An aggregated cadastral dataset serves to support and assist governmental agencies and others in resource management decisions. Additionally, these data provide a set of core attributes defined by the Integrated Cadastral Data Exchange project with the intention of adoption by the North Carolina Geographic Information Coordinating Council to update the current North Carolina Content Elements for Statewide Publication of Core Geospatial Parcel Data. The aggregated dataset is intended to facilitate the sharing, display, and use of cadastral data across the state, with the goal of building a seamless parcel map for North Carolina.\n\nNOTE: To download parcels by county DO NOT use the map. Instead, click the Download button and then click \"Download parcels by county or all counties at once.\"", "description": "

NOTE<\/SPAN>: To download parcels by county DO NOT use the map. Instead, click the Download button and then click \"Download parcels by county or all counties at once.\"<\/SPAN><\/SPAN><\/P>

<\/P>

This digital geospatial dataset represents parcel boundaries with standard core attributes for a collection of parcel data from North Carolina county data producers and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. The Integrated Cadastral Data Exchange project transformed source datasets from county data producers to create a standardized dataset with consistent attributes (fields). The individual standardized county datasets were aggregated into a single dataset. The aggregated parcel dataset includes all 100 counties in North Carolina plus lands of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. The source geometry is retained as published by individual county data producers. This dataset includes attributes such as ownership, area in acres, assessed value, and other core cadastral attributes. Web services have both polygons (parcel boundaries) and points representing each property, placed at or near the geometric center, with the same set of attributes.<\/SPAN><\/P>

See the <\/SPAN>NC OneMap parcels page<\/SPAN><\/A> for much more information.<\/SPAN><\/P><\/DIV><\/DIV><\/DIV>", "summary": "This dataset was generated to publish an aggregated set of parcel polygons for as many North Carolina counties as practical to serve business needs that require information from multiple counties, e.g., response to a natural disaster, analysis of economic development potential, environmental assessments, and highway planning to name a few. An aggregated cadastral dataset serves to support and assist governmental agencies and others in resource management decisions. Additionally, these data provide a set of core attributes defined by the Integrated Cadastral Data Exchange project with the intention of adoption by the North Carolina Geographic Information Coordinating Council to update the current North Carolina Content Elements for Statewide Publication of Core Geospatial Parcel Data. The aggregated dataset is intended to facilitate the sharing, display, and use of cadastral data across the state, with the goal of building a seamless parcel map for North Carolina.\n\nNOTE: To download parcels by county DO NOT use the map. Instead, click the Download button and then click \"Download parcels by county or all counties at once.\"", "title": "North Carolina Parcels", "tags": [ "Land value", "Parcel data", "North America", "Ownership", "Land use", "Cadastre", "Owner", "Parcel ownership", "Parcel", "Planning", "Land", "Mapping", "planningCadastre", "Property boundaries", "Assessment", "Tax parcel", "Building value", "Assessed value", "Parcels", "Land records", "North Carolina", "Property", "USA", "Cadastral", "NC", "NC OneMap", "Department of Information Technology", "DIT", "Center for Geographic Information and Analysis", "CGIA" ], "type": "", "typeKeywords": [], "thumbnail": "", "url": "", "minScale": 50000, "maxScale": 5000, "spatialReference": "", "accessInformation": "This dataset was transformed by the Project Team and Vendor Team for the NC Integrated Cadastral Data Exchange Project, funded by US EPA Environmental Information Exchange Network. Source datasets were furnished by data managers in North Carolina Counties and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.", "licenseInfo": "

This dataset is an inventory of county representations of tax parcels. This dataset is not a survey document and should not be utilized as such. An excerpt from an opinion of the NC Attorney General in 1982 is relevant for this dataset and its constituent source datasets: North Carolina General Statutes 143-345.6(c) 92) provides that the Secretary of Administration shall, in cooperation with the Secretary of Revenue, conduct a program for the preparation of county property-line maps under the direction of qualified surveyors pursuant to standards prepared by the Departments of Revenue and Natural Resources and Community Development. The mapping program is part of the \"land records management program\" which the Legislature has directed the Secretary of Administration to establish \"for the purposes (i) of advising registers of deeds, local tax officials, and local planning officials about sound management practices; and (ii) of establishing greater uniformity in local land records systems\" G.S.143-345.6(a). Thus, the program's sole purposes are directed toward needs of units of government. There is not the least intimation that it is, or is intended to be, a substitute for the certificate of title provided by an attorney who has examined the record title to land for a client, or for a surveyor's certificate and plat provided by a professional engineer or registered land surveyor who has located the lines on the ground, examined the land for easements, encroachments, etc. and reported the same to his client. It is our opinion that by providing a copy of a map, prepared purely and simply for the purposes mandated by the land records management program, to one who purchases it for some other use, no unit of government or local official incurs any liability to the purchaser or user for errors on the map. See http://ncdoj.gov/About-DOJ/Legal-Services/Legal-Opinions/Opinions/52-13.aspx. Note: The Land Records Management Program was transferred from the Department of Administration to the Department of the Secretary of State after this opinion by the Attorney General.<\/SPAN><\/P>

https://www.nconemap.gov/pages/terms<\/SPAN><\/P><\/DIV><\/DIV><\/DIV>" }