Community Reporting Areas

Community reporting areas (CRAs) are designed to address a gap that existed in city geography. The task of reporting citywide information at a "community-like level" across all departments was either not undertaken or it was handled in inconsistent ways across departments. The CRA geography provides a "common language" for geographic description of the city for reporting purposes. Therefore, this geography may be used by departments for geographic reporting and tracking purposes, as appropriate. The following criteria for a CRA geography were defined for this effort: -no overlapping areas; -complete coverage of the city; -suitable scale to represent neighborhood areas/conditions; -reasonably stable over time; -consistent with census geography; -relatively easy to use in a data context; -familiar system of common place names; and, -respects neighborhood district geography. The following existing geographies were reviewed during this effort: -neighborhood planning areas (DON); -neighborhood districts (DON/CNC/Neighborhood District Councils); -city sectors/neighborhood plan implementation areas (DON); -urban centers/urban villages (DPD); -population sub-areas (DPD); -Neighborhood Map Atlas (City Clerk); -Census 2000 geography; -topography; and, -various other geographic information sources related to neighborhood areas and common place names. This is not an attempt to identify neighborhood boundaries as defined by neighborhoods themselves.

Data and Resources

Field Value
Groups
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tags
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • ckan
  • geo
  • geoss
  • national
  • north-america
  • united-states
isopen False
license_id other-license-specified
license_title other-license-specified
maintainer John Edwards
maintainer_email mapgis.mapgis@seattle.gov
metadata_created 2025-12-01T22:22:06.981359
metadata_modified 2025-12-01T22:22:06.981363
notes Community reporting areas (CRAs) are designed to address a gap that existed in city geography. The task of reporting citywide information at a "community-like level" across all departments was either not undertaken or it was handled in inconsistent ways across departments. The CRA geography provides a "common language" for geographic description of the city for reporting purposes. Therefore, this geography may be used by departments for geographic reporting and tracking purposes, as appropriate. The following criteria for a CRA geography were defined for this effort: -no overlapping areas; -complete coverage of the city; -suitable scale to represent neighborhood areas/conditions; -reasonably stable over time; -consistent with census geography; -relatively easy to use in a data context; -familiar system of common place names; and, -respects neighborhood district geography. The following existing geographies were reviewed during this effort: -neighborhood planning areas (DON); -neighborhood districts (DON/CNC/Neighborhood District Councils); -city sectors/neighborhood plan implementation areas (DON); -urban centers/urban villages (DPD); -population sub-areas (DPD); -Neighborhood Map Atlas (City Clerk); -Census 2000 geography; -topography; and, -various other geographic information sources related to neighborhood areas and common place names. This is not an attempt to identify neighborhood boundaries as defined by neighborhoods themselves.
num_resources 6
num_tags 8
title Community Reporting Areas