Community Profile: Fountain Valley
Government
City Council: Barbara Brown (mayor), George Scott (mayor pro tem), Fred Voss, Jim Neal, Laurann Cook
City Manager: Judy Kelsey
Fire Chief: Richard E. Jorgensen
Chief of Police: Elvin Miali
City Services
City Hall
10200 Slater Ave.
(714) 963-8321
Police (business)
10200 Slater Ave.
(714) 965-4485
Fire (business)
17737 Bushard St.
(714) 965-4436
Post Office
17227 Newhope
(714) 966-0580
In Emergency, Dial: 911
Statistics
Population: (1986 est.): 55,551
Area: 9.75 square miles
Incorporation: June 13, 1957
Median household income: $43,217
Median home value: $126,322
Racial/ethnic mix: white, 90.6%; Latino, 8.9 %; black, 1.0%; other, 8.4 %
(Total is more than 100% because racial/ethnic breakdowns overlap)
Employment status
Employed persons: 27,539
Unemployed: 1,037
Not in labor force: 10,698
Per capita income: $9,387
Travel time to work
0-14 minutes: 25.2%
15-29 minutes: 38.2%
30-59 minutes: 27.1%
60+ minutes: $9.6%
Population
By sex and age In thousands
MALES: 14-17,25-34,45-54,65+
FEMALES: 6-13,18-24,35-44,55-64
Median Age: 31.7 years
Education
Adults over 25 Years of school completed:
0-11 years: 13.0%
12 years: 32.6%
13-15 years: 28.3%
16+ years: 26.0%
Median years completed: 13.4
FOCUS
Careful Planning
Fountain Valley is considered by some to be the best orginially planned and developed community in Orange County. In June, to commemorate the city’s 30th anniversary, a $20,000 fountain was built in front of city hall. Mile Square Park, which was a U.S. Naval Air Base during World War II, is one of the largest county parks in southern California, with tennis, basketball, volleyball and racquetball courts, ,12 baseball diamonds, a gymnasium, soccer and two utility fields. A new David Baker Memorial Golf Course is slated to open this summer. Fountain Valley Regional Hospital and Medical Center, one of the county’s four regional trauma centers, opened in 1980.
In the mid-1800s Fountain Valley was known as Gospel Swamp . The landscape was then dominated by swamp, and the area was frequented by itinerate preachers who sermonized from make-shift tent churches. Later, when businessman Tom Talbert opened a general store and a post office, the community was called the “Village of Talbert.†As the town developed, its need for water supply increased. By driving a pipe into the ground, free-flowing artesian wells were discovered, giving the town its present name.
Statistics: Donnelley Demographics
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