PERU —
The online Geographic Information System that provides tax and property information to Miami County residents is getting updated after years accumulating mapping errors.
39 Degrees North LLC, an Indiana-based company specializing in the design and implementation of GIS programs, agreed to revamp the maps for free if the county signed a two-year contract with the company to maintain the system. Miami County commissioners signed the $68,000 contract this week.
Auditor Jane Lilley said residents can use the maps to view property lines, tax payments and ownership information. She said county officials use it to document utility and property information.
Over the years, however, she said the maps have accumulated a slew of errors, like incorrect property lines which throw off lot sizes.
“These maps are pretty bad,” Lilley said. “There are a lot them that are just plain wrong. It’s especially horrible up around Mexico.”
She estimated it will take 39 Degrees around six months to fully update the maps.
“There are lots of different uses for this system,” Lilley said. “It’s going to be a great tool once we get it all corrected.”
View the GIS maps of Miami County at www.miamicountyin.gov.
Carson Gerber is a Kokomo Tribune reporter. He may be reached by phone at 765-854-6739, or by email at carson.gerber@kokomotribune.com.
Local News
Maps of property boundaries to be updated
Incorrect maps will be fixed for free.
- Local News
-
-
Bullying reporting now required
Oliver Jackson — known in the music world as DjBigO317 — remembers being bullied by the kids on his high school football team for being small.
He told his coaches about it, but they brushed it off and told him to do the same.
Now, his 6-year-old daughter is battling issues with bullies at her school in Indianapolis, and he won’t let it go.
He is on a crusade to end bullying, and he’s taking the message beyond his daughter’s school. -
The bully bashers speak out
Nineteen-year-old Trenton Lewis wants to change the message hip-hop music is sending to kids across the country.
The Kokomo High School graduate envisions songs that inspire change and songs that promote safer schools instead of ones that glorify drugs and violence. He wants to push the negativity out of music. - Bullying statistics - May 19, 2013
-
State to spend $2 million to clean up voter rolls
Indiana’s bloated voter registration rolls, which officials say make elections more susceptible to fraud, will soon come under more scrutiny by the state.
- Public Eye - May 19, 2013
-
Fallen comrades remembered
In the 148-year history of the Kokomo Police Department, two officers have died in the line of duty. Members of the department took part in a ceremony Friday to honor not only those two, but all fallen police officers.
-
Local deputies play key role in arrest
A mother and her infant son are now safe, thanks in part to the determination of deputies with the Howard County Sheriff’s Department. The officers worked from the time Kristy Redenbaugh was reported missing in September 2012 until the man police allege was her captor was arrested Thursday.
-
Charter school to open in August
Goodwill Education Initiatives will unveil the area’s first charter school for high school dropouts Aug. 15 in downtown Kokomo.
-
Districts call special board meetings
Northwestern School Corp. will likely reduce the hours of about a dozen instructional assistants to avoid having to provide them with insurance.
-
Windy debates
At least two central Indiana counties have established setbacks that are essentially prohibitive of wind farm developments. Counties between Indianapolis and Fort Wayne have debated whether to allow wind farms and how to regulate them. In Howard County, wind farm opponents are trying to reopen the discussion to increase setback requirements established in the county’s code.
- More Local News Headlines
-
Bullying reporting now required






