Rural Utah Project

Navajo Nation Homes Get Addresses From Google Mapping Project

Dalene-credit-Madeline-McGill-RUP

Read the original post in KANU.

Many homes on the Navajo Nation don’t have street addresses, which can cause problems for voter registration and emergency services. That’s starting to change thanks to a first-of-its-kind partnership between the nonprofit Rural Utah Project and Google. KNAU’s Melissa Sevigny reports.

Google assigns a six digit code to every point on the planet which works just like an address in Google Maps. The Rural Utah Project has so far installed more than 500 signs displaying these “Plus Codes” on homes and businesses on the Navajo Nation.

Drew Cooper, the group’s deputy directorsays: “Google, we found out, was doing a large-scale addressing project using these things called Plus Codes in Kolkata, India, and wanted to find a place to maybe try to do it in the United States, and we thought there was no better place to try than in San Juan County.”

The codes will allow police and first responders to find houses more quickly, and the Rural Utah Project has used them to register more than 900 voters.

Dalene Redhorse, the group’s field organizer, says “Especially here on the reservation, we have ceremonies and different types of gatherings. A lot of people have posted the Plus Codes as directions to their home and people are finding their way to these places they need to go to.”

The Rural Utah Project plans to expand their voter registration effort with Plus Codes into the Arizona side of the Navajo Nation this year.

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