Paradise, NV Open Data Publication Bylaw Guide
This guide explains how public bodies serving Paradise, Nevada publish open data sets and provide API access under county and municipal rules. It covers roles, submission steps, metadata and privacy checks, enforcement pathways, and appeals so departments and contractors can comply with local requirements and best practices.
Publication overview
Paradise is an unincorporated town in Clark County; publishing official open data and APIs generally follows Clark County policies and technical standards. Departments that hold records must coordinate with the county Information Technology office to confirm hosting, metadata, and access controls. For technical publication venues the county operates or endorses an open data portal and GIS hub; your department should request onboarding from the county IT team.[2]
Legal basis and responsibilities
There is no separate Paradise municipal code for open data; the controlling instruments are county ordinances, administrative policies, and department-level rules. Where a statutory or code section applies it will appear in the Clark County Code or department policy pages. If a specific requirement, fee, or fine is needed and not published by the county, it is not specified on the cited county code page.[1]
Penalties & Enforcement
Enforcing authority and remedies for noncompliance with open-data publication responsibilities are handled through Clark County departments and, where applicable, the county code enforcement or legal offices. Specific monetary fines, escalation tiers, and time limits for appeals are not specified on the cited county code pages or the IT policy pages; readers must consult the enforcing office for case-specific guidance.[1]
- Fine amounts: not specified on the cited page.
- Escalation (first/repeat/continuing offences): not specified on the cited page.
- Non-monetary sanctions: orders to remove or correct published records, administrative directives, and referral to county legal counsel are possible; specific remedies are not fully itemized on the cited pages.
- Enforcer and inspection: Clark County Department of Information Technology manages technical compliance and onboarding; legal enforcement and code violations fall to the county legal or code enforcement offices. Contact the IT onboarding page for technical enforcement pathways and the county code pages for legal processes.[2]
- Appeals and review: specific appeal time limits and formal review routes are not specified on the cited pages; contact the enforcing office for deadlines.
Applications & Forms
Official onboarding, API key requests, or dataset publication requests are handled by the Clark County IT department. A standardized online form or application number is not specified on the cited IT page; departments should contact IT to obtain the current submission method and any required internal approvals.[2]
Technical standards and metadata
Follow common open-data technical standards: machine-readable formats (CSV, GeoJSON), clear field-level metadata, standard CRS for spatial data, and API documentation with rate limits and example queries. Coordinate with county IT for required metadata fields and approved hosting endpoints. Maintain privacy impact assessments where datasets may include personal data.
- Metadata fields: title, description, update frequency, license, contact point.
- Formats: CSV, JSON, GeoJSON, shapefile for archival use when required.
- Versioning and provenance: include source, date published, and change log.
How-To
- Plan: identify dataset owner, sensitive fields, and publication goals.
- Prepare: clean data, apply privacy redaction, and create metadata.
- Request onboarding: contact Clark County IT for hosting and API key procedures.[2]
- Publish: upload to the county open data portal or agreed hosting, register API endpoints and documentation.
- Maintain: monitor usage, update datasets on schedule, and respond to takedown or correction requests.
FAQ
- Who is responsible for publishing open data for Paradise?
- The Clark County department that holds the records is responsible for preparing data; technical publication and hosting are coordinated through Clark County Information Technology.[2]
- Are there published fines for failing to publish or for improper publication?
- Specific fines and penalties for open-data publication failures are not specified on the cited county code or IT pages; contact county legal or code enforcement for enforcement details.[1]
- How do I request an API key or technical onboarding?
- Submit a request to Clark County Information Technology through the department contact page for onboarding and API access instructions.[2]
Key Takeaways
- Coordinate with Clark County IT before publishing to ensure compliance and correct hosting.
- Redact sensitive information and provide clear metadata and update schedules.
- Enforcement details and monetary penalties are not specified on the cited pages; consult county legal if needed.
Help and Support / Resources
- Clark County Department of Information Technology
- Clark County Code (Municode)
- Clark County Open Data / GIS Hub
- Clark County Community Development (Planning & Building)