Nashville, Tennessee, where I live, is much the same way. In the last sixty years, Nashville has gone from being a city perhaps three or four miles across to being a metro area perhaps twenty-five miles across, swallowing up numerous smaller communities and subdivisions in the process. Those areas that have retained some degree of local government have formal boundaries, but there are disagreements about where one unincorporated area shades into another.
-- John F. Eldredge -- j...@jfeldredge.com "Reserve your right to think, for even to think wrongly is better than not to think at all." -- Hypatia of Alexandria -----Original Message----- From: Richard Weait <rich...@weait.com> Date: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 10:23:12 To: <talk@openstreetmap.org> Subject: Re: [OSM-talk] Q: Is OSM interested in neighborhood and regional boundaries for L.A.? On Wed, Jun 16, 2010 at 9:13 AM, Ben Welsh <ben.we...@gmail.com> wrote: > At the risk of over complicating things, let me give a little more info. > LA County is a fragmented place with many different cities and > unincorporated areas puzzled together. Our "neighborhoods" are in fact three > different types of areas consolidated. [ ... ] Dear Ben, It must have been great fun to participate in this project. I see that you and the Los Angeles Times understand the problems related to crowd sourcing neighborhood boundaries perfectly. See "You gotta stop is somewhere" http://www.latimes.com/includes/projects/img/thumb-westside-300x100.png Also this neighborhood map for Tarzana is wonderful. http://projects.latimes.com/mapping-la/neighborhoods/comments/11501/ Your consultation with the community in Los Angeles (650 user-generated maps, 100 revisions) sounds like you have substantial interest and perhaps even consensus locally. I think that's wonderful. Presuming that the participation in your project is likely to reduce border disagreements, I think it would be a nice addition to OSM. I notice that you publish your data as cc-nc-sa. To include it in OSM you would have to agree to allow OSM to publish it as cc-by-sa and then ODbL after the license upgrade. Of course you would lose the explicit Los Angeles Times credit as well since OSM expects a simplified "Maps and Data CCBYSA OpenStreetMap (and Contributors)" And again, I think it is important to get feedback from others in the Los Angeles OSM community. Have a look over at talk-us. They might have something similar in the works. I'm sure you find the conjecture by all of us "seagulls" interesting but we all know that one active local mapper on the ground is better than a self-important expert from Toronto. ;-) Best regards, Richard _______________________________________________ talk mailing list talk@openstreetmap.org http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk _______________________________________________ talk mailing list talk@openstreetmap.org http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk