SANTA CRUZ -- Want to know if the house you want to buy is in a flood plain? Or if a property falls within the monarch butterfly's protected habitat?

A new feature on the city's website puts layers of property information at the fingertips of current and prospective landowners alike, potentially saving them a lot of time and energy. Last week, the city announced its new Geographic Information System link, which has scads of detail and images pertaining to properties and neighborhoods.

Powered by the city's in-house GIS database and aerial photographs dating to 2007, the system provides a bird's eye view of parcels, as well as zoning restrictions, topography and historical or archeological status.

City planners and Public Works officials have been using the technology for years to make land-use and resource decisions, but now tech-savvy residents can also tap into the database's wealth of information before they decide to buy property or apply for building permits.

"For years, we wanted to put something out to public," said Rich Westfall, who has been working on putting the GIS system online since November. The county has a comprehensive GIS system linked to its website, as do many other Bay Area cities and counties, though sites have varying degrees of features.

On Santa Cruz's site, users can measure distances between points, view land-use constraints, mark up maps, report code violations and search census data. Adobe Flash Player 10


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is required to access all of the features, which can be layered on top of each other. The city has the capability to add even more features, even as specific as trash collection days for properties.

The technology has allowed Mary Alsip, a city planner for the last 10 years, to instantly show owners or prospective buyers or developers almost everything about a property.

"You're able to see things on a parcel that you just can't see when you're just looking at data," she said. "When you look at things from a bird's eye view, you see a different landscape."

Steve Allen, president of the Santa Cruz Association of Realtors, said expanded access to property information only benefits potential buyers, 85 percent of whom already use the Internet to search for homes. He frequently uses the county's GIS service to gain information for clients.

"I've compared the records to physical surveys, and they're amazingly accurate," he said. "In this day and age, the more information the consumer has, the better."

SANTA CRUZ

GIS SYSTEM
To view the city of Santa Cruz's new online Geographic Information System, visit http://gis.cityofsantacruz.com/Viewer/index.html. To contact the city's GIS coordinator, Rich Westfall, e-mail rwestfall@cityofsantacruz.com.

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