Kind of. As the name implies, a fenceline is a tactic to keep a neighboring municipality from encroaching on territory it wants to expand onto in the future. However, there’s a process for the affected property owners to force the city to move the fenceline so that they can get annexed by a different municipality, something that a national government would hardly conceive of.

Another difference is that a fenceline has a definite shape and size, whereas precise whereabouts of each corner of each dash of the Nine-Dash Line are essentially unknowable. (That said, the PRC’s Ministry of Natural Resources does require a particular line width and dash length at several scales as a condition for approving any map.)

Creative annexations aren’t unique to Oklahoma. Some California cities, such as San José where I live, were once notorious for intentionally spreading “tentacles” across the countryside to block neighboring cities from growing, until the state reined in such abuses. Now the focus is on filling in the “islands”, of which only a dozen or so remain.

@revent noticed that Gilbert, Arizona, did something similar to a fenceline in the 1970s, leading Arizona to ban the practice. He has also encountered some incredibly fragmented municipal boundaries throughout Alabama as he redrew them based on legal descriptions. For example, Hayden gained hundreds of exclaves that TIGER erroneously omitted.

So be careful what you wish for: cleaning up an import might well make boundaries even weirder.

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