A-Z Directory
California directory, A-Z.
1,875 entries in one list: directory sections, guides, tools, topic pages, collections, and source-backed notes. Use Places for the full city, town, CDP, and county directory.
Type a place, office, map, form, topic, agency, or plain-language phrase.
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The A-Z list is useful when you know the word. These shelves are faster when you know the situation.
Start with the right office
Paperwork, notices, records, permits, complaints, benefits, and the public counter that owns the next step.
- Office router — Tool
- ID and records — Tool
- Consumer complaints — Tool
- Benefits and food help — Tool
Home, property, and maps
Property tax, reassessment, rent, ADUs, fire risk, coast, earthquake zones, and parcel-level checks.
- Prop 13 basics — Guide
- Supplemental tax estimator — Calculator
- Rent and legal help doorway — Tool
- Coast and quake maps — Tool
Cars, DMV, and tickets
Registration fees, smog, titles, dealer trouble, traffic tickets, parking citations, tolls, and car paperwork.
- DMV fees — Guide
- DMV calculator doorway — Tool
- Smog and title check — Tool
- Traffic, parking, and tolls — Tool
Outdoors and day-of checks
Parks, coast, campfires, fishing, tide pools, smoke, roads, reservations, and land-manager rules.
- Outdoors start here — Guide
- State parks — Guide
- Fire restrictions — Guide
- Emergency checks — Tool
Places and local layers
Cities, counties, towns, CDPs, county records, nearby places, special districts, and local routing.
- All places — Directory
- Los Angeles — Place
- San Diego — Place
- County layer — Tool
Stories and local context
Landmarks, Almanac notes, odd places, name origins, local history, and story shelves.
- California Almanac — Directory
- Interesting stories — Directory
- Almanac collections — Directory
- History and culture — Topic
A
- About California Porch [Directory] How the site explains official sources, points back to public agencies, and stays clear about what it is not.
- Access Hayward is the broad door for city help [Rules and licenses] Hayward residents can use Access Hayward to report many city problems, ask questions, or send suggestions, with code enforcement and appearance concerns routed from the same official service area.
- Access Redondo is the Public Works request path [Home and property] Redondo Beach routes non-emergency Public Works issues through Access Redondo, while pressing matters can use the Public Works department contacts listed by division.
- Access Rocklin is the everyday report-a-problem door [Rules and licenses] Rocklin residents can use Access Rocklin for many regular city issues, while utilities are mostly handled by outside providers listed on the city utilities page.
- ACE gives Stockton a rail front door to the Bay Area [Cars and driving] The ACE station at Robert J. Cabral Station ties Stockton's rail history to commuter service toward San Jose and nearby downtown transit links.
- ACT Bus gives Alhambra a local loop [Cars and driving] Alhambra Community Transit is the city's fixed-route local bus service, with Green and Blue lines that connect daily stops across town.
- ACT Chula Vista is the front door for many city service requests [Rules and licenses] ACT Chula Vista lets residents submit many non-emergency city service requests through a mobile app or web tool, including public works and other neighborhood issues.
- Adamson House keeps Malibu's tile story by the lagoon [History and culture] Adamson House and Malibu Lagoon Museum connect Malibu's rancho era, beach-house history, and the richly colored Malibu Potteries tile that still gives the place its look.
- ADU first-stop check [Checklist · Home projects] What to check before a garage, backyard, or spare room becomes a small second home.
- Alabama Hills makes Lone Pine look like a movie set for a reason [History and culture] Alabama Hills near Lone Pine mixes rounded desert rocks, views of the Sierra Nevada, natural arches, public land rules, and a long film-location story.
- Alameda business licenses can include district assessments [Rules and licenses] Alameda business licensing is online, and businesses in Business Improvement Areas may pay an added annual assessment through the license process.
- Alameda County FBN filings start with the business location [Rules and licenses] Alameda County fictitious business name filings usually start with the county clerk when the principal place of business is in Alameda County.
- Alameda County has named unincorporated communities to check first [Rules and licenses] Alameda County names places like Ashland, Castro Valley, Cherryland, Fairview, Hayward Acres, San Lorenzo, and Sunol as unincorporated communities.
- Alameda County property tax questions start with value or payment [Money and taxes] Alameda County property tax questions usually split between the Assessor for value and records, and the Treasurer-Tax Collector for bills and payments.
- Alameda County records start with the exact record type [Rules and licenses] Alameda County Clerk-Recorder errands are easier when you first name whether you need a birth, death, marriage, recorded property document, fictitious business name, notary filing, or public record search.
- Alameda permits now move through the online Permit Center [Rules and licenses] Alameda's Permit Center handles building, fire, planning, special events, public works permits, plan reviews, payments, permit records, zoning lookup, and older building records.
- Alameda service requests go through SeeClickFix [Home and property] Alameda uses SeeClickFix for service requests and quality-of-life reports, with an account prompt for first-time users and a mobile app option.
- Alarm checks are small home maintenance [Home and property] CAL FIRE and State Fire Marshal materials help households treat smoke alarms and carbon monoxide alarms as routine checks instead of move-in paperwork.
- Albany Bulb turned a rough bay edge into art, trail, and open sky [Outdoors] Albany Bulb blends Bay shoreline, old landfill history, informal art, dog walking, trails, and wide views across a changing waterfront.
- Alert LA County is the countywide emergency notification door [Home and property] Ready LA County explains how Alert LA County sends opt-in emergency alerts by text, email, or phone for people who live, work, or spend time in the county.
- AlertLongBeach is the city alert signup to know [Home and property] Long Beach's emergency alerts page explains how AlertLongBeach sends city emergency, severe weather, and operations alerts by text, voice, or email.
- Alerts, smoke, roads, and power check [Official link · Emergency and utilities] A calm first-stop starting point for local emergency alerts, evacuation words, wildfire smoke, road closures, and power shutoffs.
- AlertSF is San Francisco's official emergency text alert [Home and property] SF.gov explains that AlertSF sends official emergency notifications about earthquakes, fires, flooding, tsunamis, and other city conditions.
- Alex Theatre gives Glendale a Brand Boulevard movie-palace glow [History and culture] Glendale's Alex Theatre began as a 1925 vaudeville and movie palace, later gained its neon tower, closed, and returned as a performing arts center. Page title: The Alex Theatre gives Glendale a Brand Boulevard movie-palace glow.
- Alhambra keeps its memory in an eleven-room museum [History and culture] The Alhambra Historical Society Museum at Burke Heritage Park keeps local records, directories, newspapers, school yearbooks, photos, and artifacts in one neighborhood-scale place.
- Alhambra overnight parking permits are tied to the plate [Cars and driving] Alhambra uses virtual overnight parking permits, so the license plate number needs to be accurate for annual permits, temporary permits, and RV permits.
- Alhambra permits are easier when the project type is clear [Rules and licenses] Alhambra's building and applications pages route plan check, building permits, planning applications, home occupation permits, tree removal, and other forms through city online paths.
- Alhambra's name began with a book and a family idea [History and culture] Alhambra's name traces back to Benjamin Wilson's 1874 tract and a family reading of Washington Irving's stories about the palace in Granada, Spain.
- Aliso and Wood Canyons shape Aliso Viejo's open-space edge [Outdoors] Aliso Viejo's connection to Aliso and Wood Canyons gives the city a regional wilderness edge with trails, streams, habitat, closures, and planning needs.
- Aliso Viejo building permits run through the CSS portal [Home and property] Aliso Viejo uses the CSS portal for building permit applications and inspection scheduling, while business registration questions may need Planning review before filing.
- Aliso Viejo keeps a ranch story under its planned-community map [History and culture] Aliso Viejo grew from Moulton Ranch land into a master-planned community, and Aliso Viejo Ranch now preserves farm buildings, artifacts, and a small agricultural memory.
- Allensworth was built around a rare Black town dream [History and culture] Colonel Allensworth State Historic Park preserves the story of a Tulare County town planned, financed, and governed by African Americans in the early 1900s.
- Almaden Quicksilver gives Santa Clara County hills with history [Outdoors] Almaden Quicksilver has 4,163 acres of trails, spring wildflowers, mining history, and open hills near San Jose.
- Almanac [Directory] Story shelves, local context, landmarks, outdoor details, and sourced California notes. Page title: California Almanac.
- Almanac collections [Directory] Curated California story collections by place, landscape, and local pattern.
- Almanac notes [Directory] Short source-backed notes by topic, place, public office, rule, map, and local detail.
- Almanac stories [Directory] Local history, landmarks, geology, outdoor details, and odd California places.
- Alpine County is a whole county without a city layer [History and culture] Alpine County has no incorporated cities, so its history and daily services feel tied to county offices, Markleeville, old Silver Mountain, and mountain roads.
- Alturas gives far northeast California a practical high-desert center [History and culture] Alturas sits in far northeast California, with a small downtown, the Modoc County Historical Museum, and a wildlife refuge shaped by Pit River water.
- Alum Rock Park puts a canyon trip inside San Jose [Outdoors] Alum Rock Park is a 720-acre San Jose canyon park and California's oldest municipal park.
- Alvarado Adobe gives San Pablo an older California link [History and culture] Alvarado Adobe Museum connects San Pablo's civic center to Rancho San Pablo, Mexican Alta California, and Juan Bautista Alvarado.
- Alviso Adobe tells Pleasanton's valley story in layers [History and culture] Alviso Adobe Community Park connects Pleasanton to Native history, Spanish ranchos, cattle, Meadowlark Dairy, and a public park in the Amador Valley.
- Amador City packs a Mother Lode story into a tiny downtown [History and culture] Amador City is small today, but its creek, mines, old hotel, and Whitney Museum carry a deep Gold Country story in just a few blocks.
- American Canyon has a wetlands edge at the bottom of Napa County [History and culture] American Canyon's Wetlands and Napa River Bay Trail connect the city to marsh views, Napa River access, wildlife, the San Francisco Bay Trail, and Napa County's southern edge.
- American River Parkway is Sacramento's green corridor [Outdoors] The American River Parkway links Sacramento river parks, access points, nature areas, and the Jedediah Smith Memorial Trail. Page title: The American River Parkway is Sacramento's green corridor.
- AMOCA gives Pomona a downtown art stop made of clay [History and culture] Pomona's American Museum of Ceramic Art adds a hands-on arts layer downtown, with exhibitions, collections, studio programs, and ceramic history in one place.
- Anaheim Anytime is the front door for many city requests [Rules and licenses] Anaheim Anytime and Anaheim 311 help residents report many non-emergency city issues, including graffiti, abandoned items, streetlight outages, and other neighborhood service needs.
- Anaheim fire-weather alerts are local and specific [Home and property] Anaheim Public Utilities monitors fire-weather conditions, uses Anaheim Alert for notifications, and may take targeted steps in fire threat zones during high-risk conditions.
- Anaheim Packing House keeps citrus history busy [History and culture] Anaheim Packing House turns a 1919 orange packing facility into a lively food hall, keeping a piece of the city's citrus past in daily use.
- Anaheim permit questions start with the project and the property use [Home and property] Anaheim's Permit Assistance Center and Online Permit Center help route residential, commercial, industrial, building, plan check, record, and inspection questions.
- Anaheim resort-area shuttle plans changed after ART ended [Cars and driving] Anaheim Transportation Network announced the end of ART service on March 31, 2026, so resort-area trips need a fresh provider check.
- Anaheim utility moves start with Public Utilities [Home and property] Anaheim Public Utilities handles start, stop, and move service requests, with phone help and account details gathered before the change date.
- Anaheim was a vineyard colony before it was a theme-park city [History and culture] Anaheim's early story starts with German farmers, vineyards, the Santa Ana River name, and the farm town that came before modern tourism.
- Anderson River Park gives the city its Sacramento River backyard [History and culture] Anderson's 440-acre River Park ties the Shasta County city to the Sacramento River with trails, shade, fishing, sports, and summer events.
- Angel Island tells a quieter immigration story in the Bay [History and culture] Angel Island Immigration Station near Tiburon keeps Bay Area immigration history visible through detention barracks, Chinese poetry, exclusion-era rules, and family memory.
- Angels Camp still jumps because of a Mark Twain frog story [History and culture] Angels Camp keeps Mark Twain's jumping frog story alive through local history, a frog-jumping tradition, and a Gold Rush town that knows its odd claim to fame.
- Angels Flight is a tiny ride with a big Bunker Hill story [History and culture] Angels Flight opened in 1901 as an incline railway on Bunker Hill, and its short ride still carries a lot of downtown Los Angeles memory.
- Antioch BART is the end of the Yellow Line [Cars and driving] Antioch Station is a Yellow Line terminal with parking, Tri Delta Transit connections, bike lockers, restrooms, and a train transfer pattern riders should know.
- Antioch began as a river landing before it grew south [History and culture] Antioch's early story starts near the San Joaquin River, where settlers chose the name in 1851 and river travel shaped the town before roads took over.
- Antioch emergency prep starts with CWS and a home plan [Home and property] Antioch residents can pair the Contra Costa Community Warning System with a simple household plan for weather, power, road, and evacuation days.
- Antioch has coal-country trails and a protected dunes story [Outdoors] Black Diamond Mines is a large East Bay park near Antioch, while Antioch Dunes National Wildlife Refuge protects rare habitat that is mostly for learning, not wandering.
- Antioch permits can start in the Civic Access portal [Home and property] Antioch's Civic Access portal supports address or APN searches, building permits, planning permits, encroachment permits, inspection scheduling, invoice payments, and permit-service tasks.
- Antioch service requests start on the SeeClickFix map [Home and property] Antioch uses SeeClickFix for common local service requests, including potholes, graffiti, streetlights, and other neighborhood issues.
- Antioch water service questions start with Customer Service [Home and property] Antioch water service has online payment options, stop-service access, billing contacts, payment arrangement help, and address-change support through Customer Service.
- Apple Valley permit and license chores should be sorted early [Rules and licenses] Apple Valley has separate paths for business licenses and project permits, and some businesses may need planning, county, state, or inspection steps before opening.
- Apple Valley trash billing and trash service are not the same call [Rules and licenses] Apple Valley manages trash billing, while Burrtec handles missed pickups, containers, bulky items, and other trash or recycling service concerns.
- Applegate Park Zoo gives Merced a small rescue-animal stop [Outdoors] Merced Applegate Zoo sits inside Applegate Community Park and focuses on animals that need care, including California native species from wildlife rescue situations.
- Arboretum ties Arcadia's gardens to Rancho Santa Anita [History and culture] The Los Angeles County Arboretum gives Arcadia a garden, county park, and historic Rancho Santa Anita story in one well-known place. Page title: The Arboretum ties Arcadia's gardens to Rancho Santa Anita.
- Arcade-Cripple Creek Trail links Citrus Heights parks and schools [Outdoors] Citrus Heights' Arcade-Cripple Creek Trail is a 3.45-mile multi-use trail connecting neighborhoods with parks, schools, Sunrise MarketPlace, crossings, lighting, and landscaping.
- Arcadia business openings should check the location before the lease [Rules and licenses] Arcadia recommends checking with Planning before signing a lease so a proposed business use, home occupation, sign, or permit need fits the address.
- Arcadia's Santa Anita story has several chapters close together [History and culture] Arcadia's local history collections tie together Rancho Santa Anita, Lucky Baldwin, Santa Anita Park, the Balloon School, and the Santa Anita Assembly Center.
- Arcata Marsh turns a city chore into a wildlife walk [History and culture] Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary mixes wastewater treatment, constructed wetlands, birding, trails, mudflats, sloughs, and a practical civic idea that became a beloved outdoor place.
- Ardenwood keeps Fremont's farm layer alive [History and culture] Ardenwood Historic Farm gives Fremont a living farm history stop, with the Patterson estate, old farm work, and open East Bay space in one place.
- Arrow gives Redlands three local rail stops [Cars and driving] Arrow rail service connects Redlands and San Bernardino, with Redlands-Esri, Redlands-Downtown, and Redlands-University stations serving different parts of the city.
- Arroyo Grande's Swinging Bridge is small, old, and memorable [History and culture] Arroyo Grande's Swinging Bridge connects village history, a creek crossing, the Short family, restorations, and a simple walk with a lot of local memory.
- Arroyo Seco Parkway shows how the freeway age began [History and culture] The Arroyo Seco Parkway between Pasadena and Los Angeles was the first freeway in the West, and it still shows the early shape of car-era planning. Page title: The Arroyo Seco Parkway shows how the freeway age began.
- Artesia's name, tower, dairies, and food streets all connect [History and culture] Artesia's story includes artesian wells, early farming, Portuguese and Dutch dairy roots, the water tower, and Pioneer Boulevard's cultural district.
- ARTIC is Anaheim's rail-and-bus front door [Cars and driving] Anaheim's ARTIC station gives the city a regional travel door near Angel Stadium and Honda Center, with rail, bus, event, taxi, bike, and parking details to confirm.
- Arvin's farm-town story runs beside the packing houses [History and culture] Arvin grew from Staples Store, railroad-side farm shipping, and Kern County agriculture into a city with deep valley roots.
- Ask Lake Forest is the simple route for local questions [Rules and licenses] Lake Forest residents can use Ask Lake Forest to report issues or ask questions, while the Public Works maintenance pages explain the streets, landscaping, parks, and city upkeep work behind many requests.
- Ask MV routes questions and city requests [Rules and licenses] Mountain View residents can use Ask MV to send questions, concerns, compliments, requests, and field reports to the right city staff, then check request status online.
- Ask SLO is San Luis Obispo's service request door [Home and property] San Luis Obispo uses Ask SLO for routine city questions, service requests, and issue reports, while emergencies and non-emergency dispatch use separate phone paths.
- Ask Stockton is the front door for many city service requests [Rules and licenses] Ask Stockton gives residents one place to report many non-emergency city issues, find information, and send service requests with a location, photo, topic, and short description.
- At Point Reyes, the San Andreas Fault is easy to picture [Outdoors] The Earthquake Trail near Point Reyes Station gives visitors a calm, clear way to see where the San Andreas Fault shapes the landscape.
- Atascadero City Hall keeps the old colony center easy to see [History and culture] Historic Atascadero City Hall gives the planned colony a visible civic center, with restored fountains, tours, and a museum inside the building.
- Atherton began as Fair Oaks, a quiet rail stop for estate country [History and culture] Atherton's story starts with Fair Oaks, the San Francisco-to-San Jose rail line, large country estates, and Holbrook-Palmer Park's surviving estate buildings.
- Atlantis Play Center gives Garden Grove a playful local landmark [History and culture] Atlantis Play Center opened in 1963 and keeps Garden Grove's under-the-sea playground story alive with whale slides, sea-creature sculptures, a splash pad, rentals, and kid-focused rules.
- Austin Park is Clearlake's big lakeshore lawn [Outdoors] Austin Park gives Clearlake a broad public place on Lakeshore Drive, with beach space, play areas, courts, shade, paths, and community events.
- Avenal's name starts with oats, then oil changes the map [History and culture] Avenal's history moves from wild oats on the Kettleman Plains to an oil discovery that turned tents into a west-side Kings County town.
- Azusa is the San Gabriel Canyon check-in point [Outdoors] Azusa's San Gabriel Canyon Gateway Center helps visitors sort out Angeles National Forest trips, OHV rules, passes, hours, and canyon conditions.
- Azusa uses separate online forms for common repairs [Home and property] Azusa separates forms for potholes, streetlights, graffiti, code violations, traffic signals, trash pickup, and shopping carts, so the category matters.
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- Bair Island gives Redwood City a restored tidal-marsh walk [Outdoors] Bair Island sits beside Redwood City as a restored tidal-marsh area tied to Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge and state ecological reserve lands.
- Bakersfield building questions start with the map line [Rules and licenses] A Bakersfield mailing address does not always answer whether the city or Kern County is the first building-permit counter.
- Bakersfield bulky pickup is appointment based [Home and property] Bakersfield's bulky item program gives many homes an appointment path for large items that do not fit regular garbage carts.
- Bakersfield business tax certificate is a city step [Rules and licenses] Bakersfield business tax certificates start with the city, separate from county DBA filings, state seller's permits, and project permits. Page title: A Bakersfield business tax certificate is a city step.
- Bakersfield green carts are part of the trash routine [Home and property] Bakersfield's garbage and recycling pages split regular trash, blue-cart recycling, green-cart organics, SB 1383 organics information, and the city's composting facility into separate pieces.
- Bakersfield service requests start with the problem type [Rules and licenses] Bakersfield's report pages route residents toward animal complaints, code enforcement, non-emergency crime reports, service requests, website feedback, and the Bakersfield Mobile app.
- Bakersfield smoke and air days need a local check [Home and property] Bakersfield sits in the San Joaquin Valley air basin, where wildfire smoke, dust, and ozone can vary by day, so local air-quality forecasts are worth checking before outdoor plans.
- Balboa Island Ferry turns a short crossing into a tradition [History and culture] Since 1919, the Balboa Island Ferry has helped connect Balboa Island and the peninsula across a short Newport Harbor crossing. Page title: The Balboa Island Ferry turns a short crossing into a tradition.
- Balboa Park got much of its look from two big fairs [History and culture] Balboa Park's El Prado buildings, Cabrillo Bridge, planting story, and Spanish Colonial look trace back to early park planning and two expositions.
- Balboa Park is San Diego's all-day civic backyard [History and culture] Balboa Park has more than 1,000 acres with museums, gardens, arts groups, the San Diego Zoo, and room to wander.
- Balboa Peninsula Trolley can make Newport Beach easier [Cars and driving] Newport Beach runs a free seasonal Balboa Peninsula Trolley that can help with beach gear, parking pressure, and short trips along the Peninsula. Page title: The Balboa Peninsula Trolley can make Newport Beach easier.
- Baldwin Park business licenses start with zoning paperwork [Rules and licenses] Baldwin Park business license work starts at Finance, then moves through zoning review, a temporary certificate of occupancy step, trash verification, and any building-permit questions.
- Baldwin Park helped start a drive-thru habit [History and culture] In-N-Out began in Baldwin Park in 1948, where a small stand and two-way speaker helped shape California drive-thru food culture.
- Baldwin Park is a Metrolink and local shuttle stop [Cars and driving] Baldwin Park Station, city shuttle routes, Dial-A-Ride, Metro buses, Foothill Transit, and nearby transfers make the city a practical transit node.
- Baldwin Park museum keeps Vineland and Lucky Baldwin in view [History and culture] Baldwin Park Historical Museum connects the city to Vineland, Lucky Baldwin, San Gabriel Valley ranch land, local families, and a restored community museum space.
- Baldwin Park report issues is the local doorway [Home and property] Baldwin Park's Report Issues page sends residents toward city help for local concerns instead of making them guess which department to call first.
- Bale Grist Mill shows Napa County before the tasting rooms [History and culture] Bale Grist Mill State Historic Park near St. Helena keeps Napa County tied to grain, water power, early settlement, a big water wheel, and weekend milling demonstrations.
- Ballona Creek gives Culver City a watershed and bike-route clue [Outdoors] Ballona Creek connects Culver City's bike path, watershed history, channelized creek, and current access and habitat planning.
- BART and Tempo give Oakland a useful transit spine [Cars and driving] Oakland's downtown BART stations and AC Transit Tempo service make many local and regional trips easier to compare before choosing a car.
- Bass Lake gives Madera County a warm-water mountain day [Outdoors] Bass Lake sits in the Sierra National Forest above Oakhurst, with camping, boating, fishing, hiking, day-use areas, group areas, and accessible facilities at several recreation sites.
- Batiquitos Lagoon is Carlsbad's quieter coastal side [Outdoors] Batiquitos Lagoon Ecological Reserve protects coastal wetland habitat in Carlsbad, with trail access, wildlife viewing, limited parking, and rules that differ from the beach.
- Battery Point Lighthouse waits for low tide [History and culture] Battery Point Lighthouse in Crescent City turns a short walk into a tide lesson, a maritime history stop, and a far-north coast view shaped by rocks, waves, and harbor life.
- Bay Area bridge tolls use FasTrak, plates, or invoices [Cars and driving] Bay Area toll bridges use automatic toll collection, with FasTrak, License Plate Account, One-Time Payment, and invoice options depending on how the vehicle is set up.
- Bay Meadows still explains a big piece of San Mateo [History and culture] The former Bay Meadows racetrack site shows why part of San Mateo now mixes housing, offices, shops, parks, and Caltrain access in one busy rail-side area.
- bayfront gives Chula Vista a waterfront front door [Outdoors] The Chula Vista Bayfront has bay parks, marina views, a bike and pedestrian path, and a long-running waterfront plan. Page title: The bayfront gives Chula Vista a waterfront front door.
- Baylands Park gives Sunnyvale a wetland-and-picnic edge [Outdoors] Baylands Park in Sunnyvale has more than 70 acres of developed parkland, 105 acres of protected seasonal wetlands, picnic areas, trails, wildlife habitat, and San Francisco Bay Trail access.
- Beach water warnings can change after rain [Outdoors] California Beach Watch gathers beach water postings, closures, rain advisories, and permanent postings, so ocean plans should include a water-quality check.
- Beaches and coastal access [Field guide guide] Find public access, check water quality, and look at surf or rip-current warnings before a beach day.
- Beaumont commercial businesses start with zoning verification [Rules and licenses] Beaumont business licenses cover people and companies doing business in the city, and commercial business licenses start with a zoning verification form.
- Beaumont Transit mixes local routes, commuter links, and Dial-A-Ride [Cars and driving] Beaumont Transit includes fixed local routes, commuter connections, and Dial-A-Ride service for ADA-certified passengers in Beaumont and parts of Cherry Valley.
- Beaumont uses RequestTracker for city concerns [Home and property] Beaumont's RequestTracker is for reporting city concerns such as street lights that are out, potholes, and similar local issues.
- Bedwell Bayfront is Menlo Park's open bay edge [Outdoors] Bedwell Bayfront Park gives Menlo Park a wide bay-edge nature park with trails, bird watching, views, and a slower outdoor feel near Highway 101.
- Bellflower bulky pickup is scheduled through CR&R [Home and property] Bellflower residents can schedule bulky-item and e-waste pickup through CR&R, but the pickup needs a call before the regular collection day.
- Bellflower business license questions start with the permit directory [Rules and licenses] Bellflower keeps business license, building, block party, filming, massage, entertainment, and other local permit paths in one permit directory, with business license applications and renewals available online.
- Bellflower Connect adds an optional Wi-Fi layer around town [Rules and licenses] Bellflower Connect is an optional local Wi-Fi program for public spaces and some in-home connections, with low- or no-cost access described by the city.
- Bellflower is on Metro's future Southeast Gateway Line [Cars and driving] Bellflower is part of Metro's planned Southeast Gateway Line, a future light-rail project that could change transit access across southeast Los Angeles County.
- Bellflower still carries an apple-and-dairy name story [History and culture] Bellflower's name traces to the Belle Fleur apple, while its early community roots included Dutch dairy farmers before the city became a busy Southeast LA suburb.
- Bellflower's library story goes back to a 1914 branch [History and culture] Clifton M. Brakensiek Library gives Bellflower a long public-library thread, from a 1914 branch to a named community library on donated land.
- Belvedere is a tiny island city built around water and views [History and culture] Belvedere is one of California's smallest and oldest cities, with two islands, an artificial lagoon, little retail, yacht-club history, and San Francisco Bay views.
- Benicia's Arsenal turns old military ground into a layered district [History and culture] The Benicia Arsenal Historic District ties the city's waterfront history to old military buildings, the Carquinez Strait, World War II-era changes, artists, studios, and reuse.
- Berkeley bulky waste and mattress pickup are different [Home and property] Berkeley gives residents separate paths for prepaid extra bags, bulky waste pickup, mattress recycling, and Transfer Station drop-off, so the item type matters.
- Berkeley emergency info works best with AC Alert and the map [Home and property] Berkeley residents can pair AC Alert with the city's real-time emergency map, outdoor warning system, and neighborhood planning resources.
- Berkeley Report & Pay is the city services shortcut [Rules and licenses] Berkeley residents can use Report & Pay to find common city service tasks, report issues online, and handle frequent requests such as potholes, missed trash pickups, parking tickets, and permits.
- Berkeley residential parking permits start with the eligibility map [Rules and licenses] Berkeley residents should check address eligibility before applying for Residential Preferential Parking, then use the online, in-person, or mail path with ID, vehicle registration, and proof of residency.
- Berkeley Rose Garden turns a hillside into a bay-view pause [History and culture] Berkeley Rose Garden has terraced roses, a redwood pergola, Bay views, nearby tennis courts, and an accessible tunnel connection to Codornices Park.
- Berkeley utility questions split by provider [Home and property] Berkeley points residents to different providers for gas, electric, water, and telecommunications, while city service requests and city bills use city pages.
- Berkeley's Free Speech Movement still shapes Sproul Plaza [History and culture] UC Berkeley's Free Speech Movement began in 1964 and made Sproul Plaza one of California's clearest places to understand student protest, civil rights energy, and campus speech.
- Berkeley's garden and Campanile make campus feel like a place [History and culture] UC Botanical Garden and the Campanile give Berkeley visitors two different campus experiences, from plant collections to a high tower view with access limits.
- Bidwell Mansion is now part of Chico's recovery story [History and culture] Bidwell Mansion State Historic Park honors John and Annie Bidwell, but the park is closed after the December 2024 fire while State Parks works on what comes next.
- Bidwell Park gives Chico two very different kinds of green space [Outdoors] Bidwell Park in Chico stretches nearly 11 miles, with flatter shaded Lower Park and rougher Upper Park foothill terrain along Big Chico Creek.
- Big Bear Lake was made by a dam built for farm water [History and culture] Big Bear Lake's mountain-resort identity began with an 1884 dam that stored water for Redlands agriculture.
- Big Blue Bus fares work better when you tap [Cars and driving] Santa Monica's Big Blue Bus gives lower regular fares and transfer benefits to riders who use TAP, mobile tickets, or contactless payment instead of cash.
- Big Break is Oakley's close-up Delta classroom [Outdoors] Big Break Regional Shoreline gives Oakley public Delta access with water, trails, visitor displays, boat access, and estuary context.
- Big Dalton and South Hills give Glendora two trail personalities [Outdoors] Glendora's trail system has both foothill canyon routes and South Hills ridge walks, with sunrise-to-sunset hours, leash rules, and exposed stretches.
- Big League Dreams helps make Manteca a tournament-weekend stop [Outdoors] Big League Dreams Manteca gives the city a sports-tourism anchor, with tournament use, park amenities, indoor pavilion information, and event details to check before a visit.
- Biggs shows why rice works in the Sacramento Valley [History and culture] The Rice Experiment Station near Biggs connects a small Butte County city to rice breeding, valley water, farm research, seed work, and a crop many Californians do not expect.
- Bizz Johnson Trail turns Lassen County's old rail line into a ride [Outdoors] The Bizz Johnson National Recreation Trail follows an old Southern Pacific rail line from Susanville toward Mason Station, with river crossings, tunnels, and canyon views.
- Blackbird Airpark gives Palmdale the secret-aircraft close-up [History and culture] Blackbird Airpark gives Palmdale a rare outdoor look at Cold War flight-test aircraft, including an SR-71A, its A-12 predecessor, a D-21 drone, and a U-2D.
- Blue Lake keeps its Mad River railroad story close [History and culture] Blue Lake grew from a small Mad River resort idea into a railroad and logging town, and the old depot museum still makes that story easy to picture.
- Blythe Intaglios are desert figures best seen with respect [History and culture] The Blythe Intaglios north of Blythe are large desert geoglyphs tied to lower river Native traditions, with human and animal figures protected in open desert. Page title: The Blythe Intaglios are desert figures best seen with respect.
- Boating, paddling, and water safety [Field guide guide] The first checks for motors, life jackets, local launch rules, weather, and water conditions.
- Bodie is the ghost town California chose not to polish [History and culture] Bodie State Historic Park keeps a gold-rush ghost town in a weathered, preserved condition, which is why the visit feels different from a rebuilt attraction.
- Bogart Regional Park gives Beaumont a foothill camp and trail option [Outdoors] Bogart Regional Park sits in nearby Cherry Valley with camping, trails, equestrian areas, a pond, picnic space, and pass-area outdoor access.
- Bolsa Chica gives Huntington Beach a wild wetland edge [Outdoors] Bolsa Chica Ecological Reserve protects coastal wetland habitat near Huntington Beach, with trails, birdwatching, a nature center, and estuary views.
- Bommer Canyon access depends on the kind of visit [Outdoors] Bommer Canyon has daily self-guided trails, guided or pre-registered access for some areas, monthly Wilderness Access Days, Cattle Camp open days, and pet rules to check first.
- Bommer Canyon keeps Irvine's ranch edge close [Outdoors] Bommer Canyon Preserve links Irvine open space with old Irvine Ranch Cattle Camp, daily trails, guided-access areas, and wildlife habitat.
- Boron keeps California's borax story close to the mine [History and culture] Boron is tied to borates, a mine overlook, and the older Twenty Mule Team story from Death Valley.
- Boronda Adobe keeps older Salinas in view [History and culture] The Boronda Adobe near Salinas was built in the 1840s, before the city grew around it, and today it shows the Salinas Valley's rancho-era layer. Page title: The Boronda Adobe keeps older Salinas in view.
- Borrego Springs lets metal creatures wander the desert [History and culture] The Galleta Meadows sculptures around Borrego Springs turn desert roads into an outdoor art hunt, with Ricardo Breceda's metal creatures set against open sky.
- Bowers Museum gives Santa Ana a world-facing museum [History and culture] Bowers Museum began in 1936 as a city-run Orange County history museum and grew into a major Santa Ana cultural arts museum.
- Box Springs gives Moreno Valley a mountain edge [Outdoors] Box Springs Mountain Reserve overlooks Moreno Valley and Riverside, with multi-use trails, picnic tables, bathrooms, and wide Inland Empire views.
- Bradbury Building hides a bright ironwork court downtown [History and culture] The Bradbury Building in Downtown Los Angeles looks modest outside, then opens into a skylit court with ironwork, stairs, elevators, film memory, and landmark status. Page title: The Bradbury Building hides a bright ironwork court downtown.
- Bradbury stayed small on purpose in the foothills [History and culture] Bradbury is a small foothill contract city named for Louis Leonard Bradbury, with a long effort to keep a rural, equestrian feel below the San Gabriel Mountains.
- Brand Park gives Glendale a foothill arts stop [History and culture] Brand Park is Glendale's foothill park around Brand Library and Art Center, the 1904 Miradero mansion turned public arts library.
- Brea bulky pickup is scheduled through Republic [Home and property] Brea residents schedule curbside trash, bulky items, hazardous waste questions, and e-waste pickups through Republic Services, with three free bulky pickups each year.
- Brea has a canyon park and an everyday east-west trail [Outdoors] Brea pairs Carbon Canyon's redwood grove and regional park feel with The Tracks at Brea, a four-mile local path across town.
- Brea Tell Us keeps city requests in one tracker [Home and property] Brea's Tell Us tracker lets residents choose a request category and check existing requests, while Public Works handles many street and utility maintenance topics.
- Breaks, overtime, and off-clock work check [Checklist · Work] What to check when a shift skipped lunch, missed breaks, ran long, or included work off the clock.
- Brentwood businesses start with the tax certificate and the address [Rules and licenses] Brentwood uses a Business Tax Certificate for businesses operating in the city, while building work and inspections stay with the Building Inspection Division.
- Brentwood Connect 24/7 is the Public Works request door [Home and property] Brentwood Connect 24/7 links residents to Public Works service requests for streets, sewer, water, garbage, sweeping, streetlights, signs, and other local issues.
- Brentwood utility billing keeps water, sewer, and garbage together [Home and property] Brentwood Utility Billing is the place to start or stop water, sewer, and garbage service and to manage the monthly city utility bill.
- Brentwood's local history museum keeps East County farm memory close [History and culture] East Contra Costa Historical Museum in Brentwood gives the growing city a place for farm, school, family, and small-town history from the wider East County area.
- Buck Owens' Crystal Palace kept the Bakersfield Sound in one room [History and culture] Buck Owens' Crystal Palace helped turn Bakersfield's country music history into a landmark, museum-like venue tied to the Bakersfield Sound.
- Bud Bender Park keeps an older Rialto story in the middle of play space [History and culture] Bud Bender Park in Rialto combines sports fields, picnic space, a community garden, and an early adobe tied to the city's older local history.
- Buellton's pea-soup fame grew out of ranch and highway roots [History and culture] Buellton began with the Buell Ranch, then became a highway stop known for Pea Soup Andersen's and Central Coast road trips.
- Buena Park building permits start with the Building Division [Home and property] Buena Park's Building Division and Building Permits pages are the local doors for plan check, permit applications, inspections, and project questions.
- Buena Park bulky-item pickup needs an EDCO notice first [Home and property] Buena Park residential refuse customers can set out bulky items, but the pickup should be scheduled with EDCO before the regular trash day.
- Buena Park business license work can come before permit work [Rules and licenses] Buena Park business openings and changes often start with the business license path, and active license status can affect building permit processing.
- Bumpass Hell shows Lassen's volcano story still steaming [Outdoors] Bumpass Hell is the largest hydrothermal area in Lassen Volcanic National Park, with steam, boiling pools, and a trail that usually waits for late summer.
- Burbank has an aviation shrine tucked beside Valhalla [History and culture] The Portal of the Folded Wings at Valhalla Memorial Park is a 1924 landmark that connects Burbank's airport edge with Southern California aviation memory.
- Burbank Library keeps the city's local-history trail close at hand [History and culture] Burbank Public Library's Local History Collection gives residents a practical way to research old photos, city records, newspapers, and neighborhood stories.
- Burbank residential parking permits are tied to the street and plate [Cars and driving] Burbank residential parking permits apply only on posted permit streets, and the city now uses an online, license-plate-based permit system.
- Burbank trash service starts when BWP service starts [Home and property] Burbank's solid waste page explains that starting Burbank Water and Power service also starts solid waste service for trash, organics, and recycling.
- Burbank turned an old rail line into a neighborhood path [Outdoors] The Chandler Bikeway gives Burbank a 2.2-mile rail-to-trail path that links neighborhoods with walking, biking, scooters, and everyday community use.
- Burney Falls is loud, cold, and fed from hidden springs [Outdoors] Burney Falls drops 129 feet, but the surprising part is the spring water pouring from the basalt cliff around the main falls.
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- Cabazon's dinosaurs turn the freeway into a roadside memory [History and culture] The Cabazon Dinosaurs bring classic I-10 roadside fun to the San Gorgonio Pass, with huge concrete dinosaurs, movie memories, a small attraction, and desert-mountain backdrop.
- Cabrillo's tidepools show San Diego at low tide [Outdoors] Cabrillo National Monument's tidepools give San Diego a rocky, close-up look at ocean life, especially during fall and winter low tides.
- CAL FIRE incidents are only one part of the alert picture [Outdoors] CAL FIRE's incident page tracks active emergency responses, including larger wildfires, but local alerts and evacuation notices still matter for a specific address.
- CAL FIRE's 100-foot defensible-space guidance stops at the property line [Outdoors] CAL FIRE's public guidance points many fire-risk homes to 100 feet of defensible space, continuing to 100 feet or the property line.
- Calaveras Big Trees is the county's sequoia grove [Outdoors] Calaveras Big Trees State Park gives the county a reachable sequoia experience, with the North Grove, trails, camping, picnic areas, and seasonal access details.
- Calexico West is a border crossing and downtown infrastructure story [Cars and driving] The Calexico West Land Port of Entry modernization shapes city movement, Imperial Valley trade, pedestrian crossings, and long-term federal construction.
- CalFresh applications run through the state and the county [Rules and licenses] CalFresh is state-supervised and county-operated, with BenefitsCal serving as the online place to apply and manage a case.
- Calico gives Barstow a silver-rush ghost town nearby [History and culture] Calico Ghost Town near Barstow turns San Bernardino County's silver-mining history into a county park with old buildings, desert views, and visitor attractions.
- California auto repair problems start with the paper trail [Cars and driving] California auto repair complaints are easier to sort when you keep the estimate, invoice, authorization, messages, and shop details before contacting BAR.
- California City is much bigger on the map than it feels in town [History and culture] California City covers 203 square miles, which explains its wide desert roads, OHV riding area, and spread-out high desert feel.
- California Firsts [Collection] California starts for museums, tools, roads, machines, food names, and systems that later reached far beyond the place where they began.
- California move does not update every address at once [Rules and licenses] After a move in California, DMV records, voter registration, utilities, tax bills, and local accounts may each need their own address update. Page title: A California move does not update every address at once.
- California power outages start with your electric utility [Home and property] California outage checks usually start with the electric utility serving the address, then branch to local alerts, emergency information, or CPUC complaint and assistance pages when needed.
- California private car sale is mostly paperwork before money [Cars and driving] A California private vehicle sale goes smoother when the buyer and seller check title, smog, odometer, fees, plates, and the seller's release notice before the handoff. Page title: A California private car sale is mostly paperwork before money.
- California sales tax works best as an address check [Money and taxes] California has a statewide sales and use tax base rate, but city, county, and district taxes can make the right rate depend on the exact address.
- California State Parks campsites can need six-month planning [Outdoors] Popular California State Parks campgrounds can fill fast, and reservations may open up to six months in advance.
- California Surf Museum gives Oceanside a board-by-board timeline [History and culture] The California Surf Museum in Oceanside preserves surfboards, wave-riding culture, archives, exhibits, and the volunteer history behind a major coastal collection. Page title: The California Surf Museum gives Oceanside a board-by-board timeline.
- California Theatre keeps San Bernardino's movie-palace layer [History and culture] San Bernardino's California Theatre is a 1928 downtown landmark, with movie-palace roots, live performances, and a long civic role. Page title: The California Theatre keeps San Bernardino's movie-palace layer.
- Calimesa got its name because neighbors wanted a post office [History and culture] Calimesa grew from the South Bench area, stagecoach routes, ranch land, and a 1929 community naming vote tied to a new post office.
- Calistoga has hot springs, a geyser, and a name people remember [History and culture] Calistoga's spa-town story runs through Wappo history, Sam Brannan's resort dream, a famous name mix-up, and Old Faithful Geyser.
- calm beach day can still have a strong rip current [Outdoors] National Weather Service rip-current guidance is a useful check before swimming, surfing, wading, or letting kids play near moving surf. Page title: A calm beach day can still have a strong rip current.
- Camarillo Ranch keeps the city's old ranch story in view [History and culture] Camarillo Ranch centers on Adolfo Camarillo's 1892 ranch home, giving the city a visible link to its rancho, agriculture, and family-history roots.
- Camarillo uses OpenGov for many permits and licenses [Home and property] Camarillo's OpenGov customer portal lets residents and businesses apply for permits and licenses, make payments, track status, and request inspections online.
- Camarillo water service starts with the provider map [Home and property] Camarillo utility setup can involve city water, Camrosa, Pleasant Valley Mutual, California American Water, or Crestview, so the address decides the right first call.
- Camarillo's trolley helps connect shops, Metrolink, and local stops [Cars and driving] Camarillo's public transportation includes fixed routes, Dial-A-Ride, regional VCTC links, and a trolley loop that starts at the Metrolink station.
- Camellia Festival is Temple City's civic flower story [History and culture] Temple City's Camellia Festival began in 1944 and still ties the city to its Home of Camellias slogan, youth roles, themes, and community weekend. Page title: The Camellia Festival is Temple City's civic flower story.
- Camp Little Bear gives Bell a playful small-city park [History and culture] Camp Little Bear Park is one of Bell's clearest family stops, with play space, mini golf, and a summer water-play area in a very compact city.
- Campbell building permits run through MGO Connect [Home and property] Campbell uses MGO Connect for building permit applications and inspections, with checklists, property information, a permit map, and code complaint links nearby.
- Campfires and fire restrictions [Official link · Outdoors] A quick path for checking campfire permits, local fire restrictions, forest orders, and park rules before lighting anything.
- Camping and public lands [Cornerstone guide guide] How to check the manager, reservation, fire, food, pet, water, road, and closure rules before you camp.
- Cannery Row was a working fish street before it became a visitor street [History and culture] Monterey's Cannery Row carries layers of fishing, sardine canning, John Steinbeck, Ed Ricketts, and waterfront reuse.
- Canyon Lake became a city around a reservoir and a retreat idea [History and culture] Canyon Lake's story runs through Railroad Canyon, a San Jacinto River dam, a recreation community, and cityhood in 1990.
- Capitola's oldest-resort claim comes with a good seaside story [History and culture] Capitola has long claimed an old seaside resort role, with roots in an 1874 beach opening, 1880s camping, cottages, and summer visitors.
- Carlsbad Connects is for the small fixes you can pin on a map [Home and property] Carlsbad Connects handles local reports such as potholes, sidewalk cracks, traffic light outages, graffiti, and code enforcement issues.
- Carlsbad emergency prep starts with Genasys and AlertSanDiego [Home and property] Carlsbad residents can pair Genasys Protect evacuation zones with AlertSanDiego contact information and a simple household plan.
- Carlsbad RV parking has a separate overnight permit path [Cars and driving] Carlsbad restricts overnight street parking for recreational and oversized vehicles, with permit options for residents, guests, and some hotel or motel guests.
- Carlsbad saved an old Hollywood rancho dream [History and culture] Leo Carrillo Ranch Historic Park preserves a Carlsbad retreat where Hollywood, adobe architecture, family memory, and early California style come together.
- Carlsbad turns spring into rows of color [History and culture] The Flower Fields at Carlsbad Ranch keep the city's flower-growing story visible with 55 acres of ranunculus, a working farm, and seasonal hillside paths.
- Carmel-by-the-Sea grew as an artists' village by the water [History and culture] Carmel-by-the-Sea's cottages, theater history, Ocean Avenue, mission roots, and beach setting come from a village built around art and scenery.
- Carpinteria's seal rookery asks visitors to slow down [Outdoors] The Carpinteria Harbor Seal Rookery is a coastal place where bluff views, pupping season closures, and wildlife rules all matter.
- Cars and Driving [Topic] DMV fees, vehicle paperwork, insurance basics, smog checks, and local district fees.
- Carson building projects now start with Civic Access [Home and property] Carson Building and Safety uses the Civic Access portal for plan check applications, permits, inspection scheduling, and SolarAPP+ permit steps.
- Carson business plans should check zoning before the license [Rules and licenses] Carson's start-your-business page puts planning and zoning before the business license, then asks for business details, permits, employee counts, and possible health, fire, zoning, contractor, or building reviews.
- Carson code concerns start with a clear address [Home and property] Carson code concerns are reported through the Public Safety Department, and the city asks for the property address, a specific complaint description, and contact information.
- Carson has a business concierge for opening questions [Rules and licenses] Carson's Business Concierge Service gives current and future business owners one Economic Development contact while they sort opening and operating questions.
- Carson has a museum where printing history still moves [History and culture] The International Printing Museum in Carson keeps antique printing machinery, book history, hands-on workshops, field trips, and working demonstrations in one South Bay stop.
- Carson parks serve youth sports, seniors, and daily recreation [Outdoors] Carson Recreation points residents to youth sports, adult sports, aquatics, senior programs, parks, and Carson Park's 11-acre mix of pool, gym, splash pad, courts, and shelters.
- Casa Peralta gives San Leandro a painted-tile history house [History and culture] Casa Peralta connects San Leandro to Rancho San Antonio, a Spanish-style remodel, hand-painted Don Quixote tiles, and the city's museum district near downtown.
- Castle Air Museum keeps Atwater's air-base story visible [History and culture] Castle Air Museum gives Atwater a big aviation-history stop, with historic aircraft on original Castle Air Force Base ground.
- Castle Crags gives Siskiyou County a granite-and-river stop [Outdoors] Castle Crags State Park gives Siskiyou County a clear I-5 landmark, with granite spires, Sacramento River access, forest, campsites, and Mount Shasta views.
- Catalina Verdugo Adobe keeps Glendale's rancho layer close [History and culture] Catalina Verdugo Adobe is Glendale's oldest structure, tied to Rancho San Rafael, the Verdugo family, and a landmark oak remembered as the Oak of Peace.
- Catalina's bison are a movie-era surprise beyond Avalon [Outdoors] Catalina Island's bison are a memorable island fact: a non-native herd tied to old movie history and now managed carefully in the island interior.
- Cathedral City uses CSS for licenses and permits [Rules and licenses] Cathedral City's CSS portal can handle applications, license renewals, plan uploads, invoices, permits, licenses, and inspection scheduling in one online account.
- Central Library keeps a California story above the reading rooms [History and culture] Los Angeles Central Library opened in 1926, and its rotunda murals still turn a library visit into a small downtown art and history stop.
- Central Park gives Fremont its everyday lake loop [Outdoors] Fremont's Central Park centers on Lake Elizabeth, with room for walking, picnics, sports, water views, and regular city recreation.
- Central Park's Japanese Garden gives San Mateo a calm downtown stop [History and culture] San Mateo Central Park includes a Japanese Garden designed by Nagao Sakurai, with a koi pond, tea house, granite pagoda, bamboo grove, and no-dog rule inside the garden.
- Ceres carries its farm name right in the city story [History and culture] Ceres takes its name from the Roman goddess of agriculture, and the restored Whitmore home keeps the city's early farm-family roots visible near downtown.
- Ceres keeps many permit and license links in one center [Rules and licenses] Ceres has a Permit and License Center for building permits, business licenses, encroachments, planning, stormwater, block parties, parades, and garage sale permits.
- Cerritos pairs a civic library with public art [History and culture] Cerritos Library and the Sculpture Garden give the city a civic-culture note with exhibits, public art, and a carefully planned city-center feel.
- Cerritos routes reports by issue type [Home and property] Cerritos asks residents to pick the issue type first, because local street problems, freeway ramp concerns, and power outages may go to different agencies.
- Chaffey-Garcia House keeps Rancho Cucamonga close to its citrus roots [History and culture] Rancho Cucamonga's Chaffey-Garcia House gives Etiwanda a preserved home-and-citrus layer beside the city's newer foothill and Route 66 stories.
- Chain controls can change before the summit [Cars and driving] Caltrans road condition and chain-control pages help drivers check the exact highway before crossing snowy mountain routes.
- change in ownership can reset the property-tax number [Home and property] When California property changes ownership, the county assessor may reassess it to current fair market value. Page title: A change in ownership can reset the property-tax number.
- Channel Islands Harbor gives Oxnard a working-waterfront story [History and culture] Channel Islands Harbor gives Oxnard a waterfront layer with boating, public promenades, harbor businesses, water activities, and a county-managed working harbor feel.
- Channel Islands starts in Ventura, but it is not a quick beach errand [Outdoors] Channel Islands National Park's Ventura visitor center is the easy first stop for maps, exhibits, the park movie, and planning island transportation.
- Chaw'se keeps Amador County foothill history grounded [History and culture] Chaw'se Indian Grinding Rock State Historic Park gives Amador County an important Miwok cultural place, with a grinding rock, museum, village site, and roundhouse.
- Check a contractor license before the first deposit [Rules and licenses] Before hiring a California contractor, the CSLB license lookup helps you match the name, license number, trade, status, and complaint path.
- Check Lake Watch before a Lake Elsinore water day [Outdoors] Lake Elsinore's Lake Watch page is the practical first stop for current lake levels, algae advisories, dissolved oxygen, fish concerns, and water-use updates.
- Check the manager before the rule [Start here guide] Use this first when you are not sure who sets the rule for the place you want to visit.
- Chicano Park turns bridge columns into neighborhood memory [History and culture] Chicano Park in Barrio Logan grew from community action in 1970 and is now known for major murals, cultural memory, and public gathering.
- Chico building permits use online plans and eTRAKiT [Home and property] Chico's Building Division points people to online plan submittal and eTRAKiT for permit work, with a separate lane for encroachment work in the public right-of-way.
- Chico business licenses can touch home or downtown rules [Rules and licenses] Chico businesses inside city limits need a current business license, and home-based or downtown businesses may have added planning or district steps.
- Chico has a yo-yo museum with a giant working Big-Yo [History and culture] The National Yo-Yo Museum in downtown Chico holds a large public yo-yo display, contest history, memorabilia, club activity, and Big-Yo, a 256-pound working wooden yo-yo.
- Chico sewer billing is separate from the Cal Water bill [Home and property] Chico sewer customers may receive a separate city sewer bill through Util360, while water account changes still begin with Cal Water.
- Chico trash service is built around three carts [Home and property] Chico residential trash service uses garbage, recycling, and organics carts, with large items and hazardous waste handled through separate hauler or drop-off paths.
- Child care searches can start with the license record [Rules and licenses] The state child care facility search helps families find licensed child care records, facility details, and complaint or inspection information when available.
- China Alley keeps Hanford's rural Chinatown story visible [History and culture] Hanford's China Alley includes the 1893 Taoist Temple, surviving rural Chinatown features, railroad-era growth, and an important Kings County community story.
- China Camp gives San Rafael bay marsh, trails, and history [History and culture] China Camp State Park gives San Rafael a bayfront park with salt marsh, oak woodland, trails, beach access, and Chinese American fishing-village history.
- Chino business licenses come after a simple location check [Rules and licenses] Chino's business license page covers businesses inside city limits and businesses outside the city that still conduct business in Chino.
- Chino has an airport museum full of real aircraft [History and culture] Planes of Fame Museum gives Chino a strong aviation-history stop, with aircraft displays and exhibits tied to the city's airport museum cluster.
- Chino Hills CodeReport handles code concerns around town [Home and property] Chino Hills residents can use CodeReport for code enforcement concerns, while the City Hall Service Guide helps separate code, public works, utility, and planning contacts.
- Chino Hills permits and business licenses can overlap [Rules and licenses] Chino Hills has separate permit, business license, home occupation, and land use clearance paths that can overlap when a business operates from a home or commercial location.
- Chino Hills State Park is the city's big open-space edge [Outdoors] Chino Hills State Park gives the city a large state-managed open-space edge with trails, hills, spring flowers, rain closures, and fire-weather rules.
- Chino Hills utility and service requests split by the problem [Rules and licenses] Chino Hills sends water and sewer billing to Utility Billing, trash customer care to Waste Management, and many city fixes through Request Tracker or the city app.
- Chino parks and the Teen Center make local programs easier to find [Outdoors] Chino lists 26 city-maintained parks and the Chino Experience Teen Center at Monte Vista Park, giving families clear places to check for play, programs, and supervised teen space.
- Chino project questions can start with the permit portal [Home and property] Chino's Development Services permit page points residents to building permit guides, the permit portal, Building Division contacts, and Planning Division contacts.
- Chino water and trash service starts by phone or at City Hall [Home and property] Chino handles water and trash service requests by phone or at the public service counter, with service usually scheduled for the following workday unless otherwise specified.
- Chino's Old Schoolhouse Museum keeps the first classroom close [History and culture] Chino's Old Schoolhouse Museum began as the city's first schoolhouse in 1888, then became a social hall, historical society museum, and city-owned history stop.
- Chula Vista has a public window into elite training [History and culture] Chula Vista's Elite Athlete Training Center gives the city a sports identity tied to Olympic and Paralympic training, campus access rules, tours, events, and facility use.
- Chula Vista parking tickets have a city and downtown split [Rules and licenses] Chula Vista separates city-issued parking citations from ACE Parking citations inside the Downtown Parking District, so the citation number and location decide the right payment or appeal path.
- Chula Vista permits start with Citizen Access [Rules and licenses] Chula Vista Development Services uses Citizen Access for new submittals, permit research, inspection scheduling, fee payment, project tracking, and online permit help.
- Chula Vista trash questions usually start with Republic Services [Home and property] Chula Vista trash service is handled through Republic Services for many customer questions, with city pages explaining carts, extra trash, holiday delays, special items, and delinquent trash accounts.
- Chula Vista water service depends on the address [Home and property] Chula Vista works with Otay Water District and Sweetwater Authority, so water account help depends on which provider serves the property.
- Chula Vista wildfire prep is local, especially near open space [Home and property] Chula Vista Fire keeps wildfire-preparedness resources for hazard zones, defensible space, emergency alerts, and risk-reduction programs, especially useful near canyon and open-space edges.
- Citrus Heights building permits go through Citizen Access [Rules and licenses] Citrus Heights uses a Citizen Access portal for building permit applications, PDF uploads, payments, inspection requests, and permit status.
- Citrus Heights business licenses go through several city reviews [Rules and licenses] Citrus Heights lets businesses apply or renew online, but local licenses may still be reviewed by building, planning, police, and finance staff depending on the business.
- Citrus Heights service requests have a public-works lane [Home and property] Citrus Heights' Service Requests page gives residents a direct way to ask Public Works about street signs, street lights, transportation, stormwater, and other city-service issues.
- Citrus Heights trash service is built around Republic carts [Home and property] Citrus Heights residents use Republic Services for garbage, recycling, and organics, with cart choices and neighborhood clean-up schedules worth checking by street.
- City and county parks [First stop guide] How to check local park pages for reservations, dogs, sports fields, picnic sites, parking, hours, closures, and special-event rules.
- Civic Center Park is Apple Valley's big everyday park [Outdoors] Civic Center Park anchors Apple Valley's civic core with an amphitheater, aquatic center, playground, dog park, shade, walking paths, and family facilities.
- Claremont Hills Wilderness Park starts with the parking check [Outdoors] Claremont Hills Wilderness Park gives the city more than 2,000 acres of foothill trails, including the loop, with parking rules that matter before a visit.
- Clayton's town story starts with Joel Clayton in Diablo Valley [History and culture] Clayton was laid out in 1857 by Joel Clayton as a small Diablo Valley center for nearby mining, ranching, farming, and local trade.
- Clear Lake water days work better with a bloom check [Outdoors] Clear Lake is a Lake County landmark, but shoreline conditions and harmful algal bloom notices can change by season, weather, and location.
- Cloverdale's History Center gathers the river, roads, and town life [History and culture] Cloverdale's History Center and Gould-Shaw House Museum tie together Indigenous culture, lumber, citrus, stagecoaches, resorts, viticulture, and Russian River life.
- Clovis building permits run through Building and the CSS portal [Home and property] Clovis Building handles permits, inspections, plan review searches, online payments, forms, solar submittals, and inspection-day contact information through the Building page and CSS portal.
- Clovis fire prep pages gather the local safety basics [Home and property] Clovis residents can use the fire department's emergency-preparedness page for CERT information, safety resources, and a local door into household readiness.
- Clovis grew where a railroad and timber flume met [History and culture] Clovis began around railroad plans, grain shipping, Sierra timber, and a 42-mile flume that helped turn fields near Fresno into a working town.
- Clovis Rodeo keeps the farm-town week on the calendar [History and culture] The Clovis Rodeo grew from a 1914 community festival with horse races, picnics, games, and a parade into one of Fresno County's signature western events. Page title: The Clovis Rodeo keeps the farm-town week on the calendar.
- Clovis transit has Stageline and Round Up [Cars and driving] Clovis Transit splits local bus trips from Round Up paratransit, with route colors, senior services links, and fare-free rider information grouped together.
- Clovis trash container problems go to Solid Waste [Home and property] Clovis utility billing covers the account, while Solid Waste is the better start for recycling or organics collection problems and trash container repair or replacement.
- Clovis utility service starts at one billing page [Home and property] Clovis utility billing covers water, sewer, refuse, street sweeping, recycling, and organics, with online start and stop requests.
- Coachella business license questions go through Finance [Rules and licenses] Coachella routes business license questions through the Finance Department, with city business resources grouped near maintenance requests, utility contacts, and economic development help.
- Coachella Valley History Museum gives Indio a deeper desert story [History and culture] Coachella Valley History Museum in Indio connects desert agriculture, date palms, local families, schoolhouse history, gardens, and the wider valley story.
- Coalinga's name started with railroad fuel, then oil took over [History and culture] Coalinga began around coal and railroad service, then grew into a west-side San Joaquin Valley town with oil, agriculture, and local traditions.
- Coast and earthquake parcel map check [Checklist · Home risk checks] A quick way to see which map questions to ask before you buy or build near the coast or in a quake zone.
- Coast and Harbors [Collection] Lighthouses, working waterfronts, islands, dunes, and beaches where the backstory adds a lot.
- Coastal development permits [Rules signpost guide] A simple first pass before you build, grade, or change use in the coastal zone.
- Coastal Rec Trail makes Monterey Bay easy to follow [Outdoors] The paved Monterey Bay Coastal Recreation Trail runs 18 miles from Castroville to Pacific Grove and links waterfront stops along the bay. Page title: The Coastal Rec Trail makes Monterey Bay easy to follow.
- Coit Tower has a whole 1930s story at its base [History and culture] Coit Tower is a Telegraph Hill landmark with city views, a Lillie Hitchcock Coit backstory, and Depression-era murals that once stirred public debate.
- Colfax tells a sharper railroad story than the quick version [History and culture] Colfax grew where the Central Pacific Railroad reached the Sierra climb, with Illinoistown nearby, a restored passenger depot, and a museum on Railroad Street.
- Colma became the Bay Area town where cemeteries shaped the map [History and culture] Colma's cemetery story is unusual, memorable, and very local: a small town where burial grounds, flower shops, and monument businesses shaped the place.
- Colton business licenses start with the place [Rules and licenses] Colton business licenses often depend on a Business Occupancy Permit or Home Occupation Permit first, so the address and business type matter before the license application.
- Colton has a finished piece of the Santa Ana River Trail [Outdoors] Colton's Santa Ana River Trail segment gives the city a paved local route tied to a larger trail planned from mountain forest to Huntington Beach.
- Colton RequestTracker splits city issues by department [Home and property] Colton's RequestTracker accepts concerns by category, including water leaks, city services, streetlights, graffiti, street issues, and water or wastewater problems.
- Columbia keeps Tuolumne County's Gold Rush layer visible [History and culture] Columbia State Historic Park gives Tuolumne County a walkable Gold Rush setting with old streets, exhibits, living-history programs, shops, and event days.
- Columbia Memorial Space Center keeps Downey's aerospace link visible [History and culture] Columbia Memorial Space Center in Downey connects hands-on STEM programs with the city's aerospace history, including the Inspiration shuttle mock-up.
- Colusa National Wildlife Refuge turns valley fields into a bird stop [Outdoors] Colusa National Wildlife Refuge gives Colusa County an easy way to see Sacramento Valley wetlands, winter birds, and an auto tour close to farm country.
- Colusa's river bend explains why the old town mattered [History and culture] Colusa sits at Salmon Bend on the Sacramento River, where river travel, farming, historic buildings, and the Colusa-Sacramento River park all meet.
- Commerce was built around the idea of a model city [History and culture] Commerce incorporated to protect local identity, industry, services, parks, libraries, and an unusual free-bus tradition near downtown Los Angeles.
- Compton business license work has its own online lane [Rules and licenses] Compton's business license and online services pages separate business license applications, renewals, searches, building services, utilities, code reports, parking, and records.
- Compton Creek Natural Park adds green space and outdoor lessons [Outdoors] Compton Creek Natural Park at George Washington Elementary turns creekside land into paths, native habitat, shade trees, grass, seating, fitness equipment, stormwater features, and outdoor learning space.
- Compton permits and inspections run through Building and Safety [Home and property] Compton Building and Safety handles plan review, permit issuance, inspections, certificates of occupancy, and online services through Citizen Serve.
- Compton still has a small-airplane layer [History and culture] Compton/Woodley Airport gives the city a local aviation layer, with flight training, aviation clubs, community events, and a history that reaches back to 1924.
- Compton utility bills can include water, sewer, and trash [Home and property] Compton's Municipal Utilities billing page explains that customer bills can cover water service, sewer fees, and trash collection, so one bill may carry more than one service.
- Computer History Museum turns Silicon Valley into a walkable story [History and culture] Computer History Museum in Mountain View connects Silicon Valley to computing history through artifacts, exhibits, demos, software stories, and a former SGI building.
- Concord Connect is the city's report-a-problem path [Rules and licenses] Concord residents can use Concord Connect 2.0 to report non-emergency city issues by app or web, adding a photo, location pin, category, and request details.
- Concord emergency alerts start with the county warning system [Home and property] Concord residents can use Contra Costa County's Community Warning System, the city's OES page, and CERT information as the backbone for local emergency planning.
- Concord permit questions begin at the Permit Center [Rules and licenses] Concord's Permit Center gives residents and contractors a 24-hour portal for permits, inspection status, application status, and permit history.
- Concord picnic sites need the right reservation [Outdoors] Concord park picnics can be casual or reserved, but group sites, alcohol permits, inflatables, deposits, and special-event needs change the plan.
- Conejo Valley Botanic Garden gives Thousand Oaks a hillside garden walk [Outdoors] Conejo Valley Botanic Garden in Thousand Oaks has hillside plant collections, views, trails, a kids' garden, and community garden programs.
- Contra Costa County DBA filings are one business-start lane [Rules and licenses] Contra Costa County fictitious business name filings are handled through the Clerk-Recorder side and sit apart from city licenses, zoning, and other permits.
- Contra Costa County planning starts with the city line [Rules and licenses] Contra Costa County's planning agency reviews projects in unincorporated county areas, while cities and towns have their own planning agencies.
- Contra Costa property tax starts with assessor or tax collector [Money and taxes] Contra Costa County property tax questions usually split between the Assessor for property value and records, and the Treasurer-Tax Collector for bills and payment.
- Contra Costa records start with clerk or recorder [Rules and licenses] Contra Costa County record errands are easier when you split recorder documents, vital records, marriage services, fictitious business names, and other county clerk filings before you start.
- Contractor, mechanic, and complaint help [Official link · Start here] Find the safer first stop for contractor trouble, auto repair problems, licensed professional complaints, insurance claims, scams, refund disputes, business-name checks, or small claims questions.
- Cooley Landing gives East Palo Alto a public bay edge [Outdoors] Cooley Landing Park turns East Palo Alto's Bay Road peninsula into public open space with trails, marsh views, education space, and local history.
- Corcoran's name sits between railroad and Tulare Lake stories [History and culture] Corcoran's local history ties the city to a railroad junction, H. J. Whitley's development work, agriculture, the Tulare Lake Basin, and a name with two possible roots.
- Corning's olive story started with a railroad town and a stubborn tree [History and culture] Corning began with the railroad in 1882, then grew into the Olive City through Warren Woodson, Sevillano olives, table olives, prunes, walnuts, and almonds.
- Corona business licenses still need the location to fit [Rules and licenses] Corona business licenses go through an application path, but the city also points businesses to Community Development approval before opening.
- Corona emergency prep runs through the local fire department [Home and property] Corona's Emergency Management & Preparedness page gives residents a local fire-department page for planning around earthquakes, fires, storms, alerts, and household readiness.
- Corona has a music story hiding in plain sight [History and culture] The Fender Center story connects Corona to music education, Kids Rock Free lessons, and a larger local arts building that grew from the Fender Museum of Music and Arts.
- Corona has one permit directory for very different local questions [Home and property] Corona's permit directory points residents toward eTRAKiT, building permits, alarm permits, block party barricades, parking permits, and the right city department.
- Corona once turned Grand Boulevard into a famous race course [History and culture] Corona's circular Grand Boulevard hosted major early auto races, drawing top drivers before safety concerns ended the tradition.
- Corona service requests start with the issue type [Rules and licenses] Corona residents can start many city service requests online, but the best path depends on whether the issue is maintenance, water, power, sewer, billing, or another city service.
- Corona utility setup begins with Customer Care [Home and property] Corona's start and stop service page routes water utility setup through Customer Care and explains email, phone, and in-person contact choices.
- Corona's lemon-company store became a history park [History and culture] Corona Heritage Park keeps part of the old Foothill Lemon Ranch story alive through a former company store, historic homes, citrus pieces, gardens, and local exhibits.
- Corriganville lets Simi Valley keep its movie-ranch hills [History and culture] Corriganville Park preserves the Simi Valley movie-ranch landscape where western sets, television crews, weekend visitors, fires, and modern trails all share one story.
- Corte Madera's archive turns family memory into town memory [History and culture] Corte Madera's Archive and History Center grew from local photos and oral histories into a public way to share more than 100 years of town life.
- Costa Mesa 311 is the simple door for city service requests [Rules and licenses] Costa Mesa 311 lets residents submit, track, and view city service requests online or by app, including graffiti removal, pothole repairs, and other city service needs.
- Costa Mesa business plans should check both license and planning [Rules and licenses] Costa Mesa has online business license steps, but a real location also needs the right use, zoning fit, and planning question answered before opening.
- Costa Mesa projects usually start in TESSA [Home and property] Costa Mesa uses TESSA for building permit applications, licensing, inspections, and project updates, so it is the first place to check before a local project.
- Costa Mesa's arts district grew out of lima bean fields [History and culture] South Coast Plaza and the nearby arts district sit on a story that reaches back to the Segerstrom family's lima bean ranch.
- Cotati's six-sided plaza makes the whole town easier to remember [History and culture] Cotati's downtown plaza grew from Page's Station and the old Rancho Cotate into a rare six-sided town plan now listed as a California Historical Landmark.
- County alerts and phone alerts are two different layers [Home and property] CalAlerts explains Wireless Emergency Alerts and county signups, which work together but do not reach people in exactly the same way.
- Cove Oasis puts La Quinta right against the foothill trails [Outdoors] Cove Oasis and Bear Creek Trail give La Quinta a clear desert-foothill first stop with trails, picnic space, public art, and heat-aware planning.
- Covina business licenses need zoning clearance first [Rules and licenses] Covina business license applicants must get Planning zoning clearance before filing the business license application, and city building permits only cover addresses inside Covina.
- Covina's Citrus Avenue still carries the old-town feel [History and culture] Covina was founded in 1882, and its downtown Citrus Avenue District keeps early-1900s buildings, shops, dining, transit, civic uses, and entertainment close together.
- Covina's station area is a rail stop and a planning clue [Cars and driving] Covina Station gives the city a Metrolink stop, while nearby planning materials show how the station area fits into local growth.
- Cow Palace gives Daly City a big Bay Area memory [History and culture] The Cow Palace in Daly City began in 1941 and still carries a mix of rodeo, concert, sports, convention, and community history near the San Francisco line. Page title: The Cow Palace gives Daly City a big Bay Area memory.
- Coyote Lake-Harvey Bear Ranch is Gilroy's big lake-and-ranch park [Outdoors] Coyote Lake-Harvey Bear Ranch County Park gives Gilroy a large county park with a lake, ranchland trails, seasonal boating, fishing, and foothill views.
- Coyote Point shows San Mateo's busy Bay edge [Outdoors] Coyote Point Recreation Area brings together Bay views, a marina, marsh habitat, a beach promenade, windsurfing, playgrounds, CuriOdyssey, picnic areas, and SFO planes overhead.
- Crocker Art Museum grew from a family gallery into a public first [History and culture] The Crocker Art Museum traces its roots to Edwin and Margaret Crocker's 1800s gallery, which became a public art museum in Sacramento in 1885.
- Crown Beach and Crab Cove make Alameda's bayfront easy to read [Outdoors] Robert W. Crown Memorial State Beach gives Alameda a long bayfront beach, Crab Cove habitat, a visitor center, and simple water-quality checks.
- Crystal Cove lets Orange County shift from beach to canyon [Outdoors] Crystal Cove has open seashore, tide pools, sandy coves, historic cottages, 3.2 miles of beach, and 2,400 acres of backcountry.
- Cucamonga Station is becoming a bigger travel hinge [Cars and driving] Cucamonga Station connects Rancho Cucamonga to Metrolink service, Omnitrans, and the ONT Connect shuttle to Ontario International Airport.
- Cucamonga-Guasti gives Ontario a lake-and-picnic park [Outdoors] Cucamonga-Guasti Regional Park is a 150-acre urban park in Ontario with two fishing lakes, picnic shelters, splash-pad space, and event areas.
- Cudahy's small city story starts with a very large rancho [History and culture] Cudahy's name and layout trace back to Rancho San Antonio, Michael Cudahy, one-acre lots, and a small city beside the Los Angeles River.
- Cupertino splits permit submittals from business license service [Home and property] Cupertino uses email and online tools for building permit submittals, while business license services now run through HdL for applications, renewals, and account help.
- Cypress has dairy roots and a racetrack with another town's name [History and culture] Cypress grew from farmland and Dairy City into today's city, while Los Alamitos Race Course keeps a nearby-town name on one of its best-known landmarks.
- Cypress separates service requests from business and planning questions [Rules and licenses] Cypress residents can report city maintenance issues through service requests, while business licenses, building permits, code enforcement, engineering, and planning questions use separate city contacts.
- Cypress Town Center Commons is the local land-use story to watch [Rules and licenses] Cypress Town Center Commons shows how the Los Alamitos Race Course area is being evaluated for housing, nonresidential use, parks, and new streets.
D
- Daly City bulky goods go through Republic Services [Home and property] Daly City residents work with Republic Services for bulky goods collection, service starts and stops, billing questions, and some garbage pickup issues.
- Daly City separates quick permits from jobs with plans [Home and property] Daly City building pages separate eligible quick permits from permits involving plans, with online applications, invoices, records, inspections, and plan-review email steps.
- Daly City street sweeping is really a parking-window check [Cars and driving] Daly City's street sweeping rules depend on the posted block and time window, and citations can still happen after the sweeper has already passed.
- Daly City's old library sits near the city's first chapter [History and culture] The Daly City History Guild Museum uses the old John Daly Library near the dairy farm area where earthquake refugees helped the city take shape.
- Dam inundation maps are planning maps [Home and property] California dam inundation maps show hypothetical flooding from a dam failure and are meant for emergency planning, not a prediction that flooding will happen.
- Dana Point Headlands has views, rules, and rare habitat [Outdoors] Dana Point Headlands gives the city a coastal trail system with ocean views, public access, native habitat, and rules that protect a sensitive bluff landscape.
- Danville permit work starts with the address [Home and property] Danville's Permit Center ties project steps to the property address, with online permit applications, permit history search, zoning checks, inspections, and outside-agency review.
- Data breach notices deserve a slow read [Money and taxes] California Attorney General breach notices can help people confirm a real notice, understand what information may be involved, and avoid fake follow-up links.
- Davis business and building questions use different city desks [Rules and licenses] Davis residents and small businesses should separate business-license questions from building, planning, zoning, permit, and inspection questions.
- Davis helped make the tomato tough enough for a machine [History and culture] UC Davis researchers helped create the mechanical tomato harvester and a tougher processing tomato, changing California farm work, food processing, and the Central Valley tomato industry.
- Davis put America's first official bike lane on an ordinary street [History and culture] Davis became the first U.S. city to create official bicycle lanes in 1967, starting with Eighth Street and turning a college-town transportation problem into a lasting California first.
- Del Mar's fairgrounds turned a small beach town into a summer ritual [History and culture] Del Mar is small, but the fairgrounds, county fair, racetrack, Bing Crosby story, and beach setting give it a much bigger summer footprint.
- Del Rey Oaks has a small wetland with a big local job [History and culture] Frog Pond Wetland Preserve gives tiny Del Rey Oaks a protected wetland stop on the Monterey Peninsula, with habitat, oaks, willows, and careful public access.
- Delano utility setup includes trash contacts [Home and property] Delano's utility pages point new-service questions to city utility billing and trash questions to Public Works and South Tulare Richgrove Refuse.
- Delano's service request form is for physical city problems [Home and property] Delano's services page links to a service request form for physical problems in the community, while fire, police, and immediate assistance use separate contacts.
- Desert and Mountains [Collection] Places where land, weather, minerals, or old routes explain why the spot feels so unusual.
- Desert Hot Springs grew around its water story [History and culture] Desert Hot Springs has a local identity tied to hot mineral water, desert geology, hotels, and life at the north side of the Coachella Valley.
- DeTurk Round Barn gives Santa Rosa's West End a rare old shape [History and culture] DeTurk Round Barn sits in Santa Rosa's West End, tying the neighborhood to winery work, old industries, rail life, preservation, and a rare round-barn landmark.
- Devil's Slide Trail shows Pacifica's coastal trail edge [Outdoors] Near Pacifica, Devil's Slide Trail follows an old Highway 1 segment with coastal overlooks, signs, restrooms, and future trail-link context.
- Devils Postpile looks carved, but cooling lava made the columns [Outdoors] Near Mammoth Lakes, Devils Postpile shows how lava, cooling cracks, erosion, and glaciers made a wall of tall stone columns.
- Diamond Bar bulky pickup has a yearly limit [Home and property] Diamond Bar residents can schedule bulky item pickups for large household items, with up to four free pickups each year and extra pickups subject to charges.
- Diamond Bar concerns usually start with the exact location [Home and property] Diamond Bar's Report a Concern page supports maintenance reports and information requests, while Public Works handles streets, sidewalks, signs, storm drains, streetlights, and traffic signals.
- Dig tickets are for small yard projects too [Home and property] California 811 centers help people request utility marking before digging, even for ordinary yard work like fences, trees, and mailbox posts.
- Dinuba's walking tour starts with buildings people chose to keep [History and culture] Dinuba's Historic Preservation Commission points visitors toward a walking tour, the Nichols House, and the Alta District Historical Society museum at the old depot.
- Disabled parking placards have paperwork and limits [Cars and driving] California DMV separates disabled person parking placards, plates, replacements, and renewals, so the right path depends on the person, vehicle, and document needed.
- Disneyland began as a very different Anaheim story [History and culture] Before Disneyland opened in 1955, Anaheim still had open farmland and orange groves, making the city's later change feel even larger.
- Dixon May Fair keeps an old farm-town tradition alive [History and culture] Dixon May Fair connects the city to California fair history, agriculture, community events, nearby Solano and Yolo County towns, and a long-running local gathering.
- DMV fee calculators [Official link · Cars and tickets] Pick the right official form for new, used, out-of-state, renewal, or tax-time VLF questions.
- DMV registration fees [Guide] A practical guide to why the DMV fee number changes by vehicle, value, date, weight, county, and city. Page title: California DMV registration fees.
- Dogs and pets outdoors [Field guide guide] How to check dog rules for beaches, state parks, national parks, forests, campgrounds, trails, wildlife areas, heat, ticks, and posted signs.
- Dominguez Rancho Adobe keeps an older South Bay story close to Carson [History and culture] Dominguez Rancho Adobe Museum near Carson and Compton preserves an 1826 adobe tied to Rancho San Pedro, early land-grant history, gardens, and South Bay family memory.
- Don Edwards Refuge gives Fremont a front-row seat to the bay [Outdoors] Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge brings marshes, trails, birds, visitor information, and bay-edge open space into Fremont.
- Donner Memorial State Park holds beauty and hard history together [History and culture] Near Truckee, Donner Memorial State Park pairs lake recreation with careful Sierra history.
- Dorris greets Highway 97 with railroad roots and a tall flag [History and culture] Dorris grew where the Southern Pacific Railroad crossed Butte Valley, then became known to travelers for its Highway 97 setting and 200-foot flagpole.
- Dory Fleet keeps Newport Pier tied to working boats [History and culture] The Newport Dory Fishing Fleet near Newport Pier keeps a working fishing tradition beside the beach, McFadden Square, and the open-air fish market. Page title: The Dory Fleet keeps Newport Pier tied to working boats.
- Dos Palos has a name story locals still care about [History and culture] Dos Palos traces its name to two trees, then to a farm colony, a nearby Colony Center, and a local pronunciation that lasted for generations.
- Double Peak Park gives San Marcos a high lookout [Outdoors] Double Peak Park sits high above San Marcos with trail connections, picnic space, restrooms, a telescope, and a strong sense of the city's hills.
- Downey building permits can move through electronic plan check [Home and property] Downey uses Building and Safety, Accela Citizen Access, contractor license paperwork, business-license checks, and fee tables for many building permit questions.
- Downey bulky items should be listed before pickup [Home and property] Downey's bulky item page routes residents to Athens Services and asks people to schedule pickup for large items that do not fit regular containers.
- Downey business licenses should start before the lease [Rules and licenses] Downey business license work can start online, but the city also points new businesses to check the location with Planning before signing a lease or buying property.
- Downey Connect is the online service request start [Home and property] Downey Connect is the city's online service request system, with report links for residents, graffiti, streetlights, and other common local requests.
- Downey has the oldest Red and White McDonald's still operating [History and culture] The Lakewood Boulevard McDonald's in Downey keeps an early Golden Arches design alive, with a 1953 Red and White building tied to fast-food history.
- Downey Theatre keeps a civic stage on Firestone Boulevard [History and culture] Downey Theatre is the city's performing-arts stop on Firestone Boulevard, near the library and civic center area, with box-office hours, touring shows, local performances, and a long community-theater thread.
- Downtown Napa parking is easier with the map in hand [Cars and driving] Downtown Napa has garages, public lots, street spaces, permit spaces, and an interactive parking map, so a visitor or worker can check the city parking page before circling the blocks.
- Dry Creek and Garin give Union City a ranch-hills escape [Outdoors] Dry Creek Pioneer and Garin Regional Parks connect Union City to former ranch land, Bay Area views, rolling hills, gardens, barns, trails, and open space.
- Duarte's story runs from rancho land to City of Hope [History and culture] Duarte's local history connects Gabrielino/Tongva land, Rancho Azusa de Duarte, citrus-era growth, health seekers, and City of Hope's medical campus.
- Dublin business licenses cover in-city and out-of-city work [Rules and licenses] Dublin requires businesses doing work in the city to register, including commercial, home-based, and out-of-city businesses that conduct business inside city limits.
- Dublin Heritage Park keeps the old crossroads visible [History and culture] Dublin Heritage Park and Museums give fast-growing Dublin a concrete place to see schoolhouse, church, cemetery, and stage-route history.
- Dublin street sweeping follows the map and holiday trash delays [Cars and driving] Dublin sweeps residential and commercial streets on a regular schedule, with an online map and holiday changes tied to garbage collection delays.
- Dublin utilities are split by service [Home and property] Dublin new residents should sort electricity, waste, water, and sewer by provider, with PG&E, Amador Valley Industries, and Dublin San Ramon Services District serving different roles.
- Dunsmuir is a railroad town with waterfalls close to the tracks [History and culture] Dunsmuir sits on the Upper Sacramento River near Mount Shasta, with railroad history, an Amtrak stop, botanical gardens, and a careful plan for Mossbrae Falls access.
- Dusty places can carry Valley fever risk [Outdoors] CDPH Valley fever information helps people understand why dusty outdoor work, wind, and disturbed soil matter more in some California regions than others.
E
- Earthquake early warning is a setup task before shaking [Home and property] California's earthquake early warning system and MyShake app can send alerts after an earthquake starts, giving people possible seconds before shaking arrives.
- earthquake fault zone can become a permit question [Rules and licenses] CGS says local agencies regulate development projects inside Alquist-Priolo earthquake fault zones. Page title: An earthquake fault zone can become a permit question.
- Earthquake fault zones [Property safety guide guide] A practical first stop for Alquist-Priolo fault zones, seismic hazard zones, disclosure, and local planning-office checks before you buy or build. Page title: California earthquake fault zones.
- Earthquake maps show what was recorded [Home and property] USGS Latest Earthquakes can show recent earthquake locations and magnitudes, but it does not answer building damage, repair, insurance, or retrofit questions by itself.
- Earthquake retrofit home check [Checklist · Home risk checks] A quick home check for old houses, crawl spaces, soft stories, chimneys, water heaters, permits, and insurance proof.
- Eastvale park questions start with the right district [Rules and licenses] Eastvale park and recreation questions may point to JCSD or Jurupa Area Recreation and Park District, depending on the location and service area.
- Eastvale parks show a newer city built for everyday family life [Outdoors] Eastvale has a large local park network for a newer Inland Empire city, with neighborhood parks, sports fields, community centers, and open space woven into fast-growing subdivisions.
- Eastvale projects can touch planning, building, and public works [Home and property] Eastvale's fast-growing project path often starts by sorting whether the work belongs with planning review, building permits and inspections, or public works improvements.
- Eastvale street sweeping signs matter even when sweepers are hidden [Cars and driving] Eastvale enforces posted no-parking windows for street sweeping, including days when weather or route timing makes the sweeper hard to see.
- Eastvale trash service runs through WM [Home and property] Eastvale contracts with WM for trash, recycling, and organics service, while city cleanup events help residents handle bulky items at certain times of year.
- Eastvale's dairy past still shows under its newer city feel [History and culture] Eastvale grew from long-running farm and dairy country into one of Riverside County's newer cities, with a name tied to the old East Vale school district.
- Ed R. Levin Park climbs from Milpitas toward Monument Peak [Outdoors] Ed R. Levin County Park gives Milpitas a large foothill park with trails, picnic areas, fishing, dog-park space, and views toward the Bay.
- Edwards grew from the flight that broke the sound barrier [History and culture] At Muroc, later Edwards Air Force Base, Chuck Yeager's 1947 Bell X-1 flight became the first human flight faster than the speed of sound.
- El Cajon business licenses include a location review [Rules and licenses] El Cajon reviews in-city business license applications for zoning, and home businesses have their own home occupation requirements before the license path is settled.
- El Cajon requests and issues start by category [Home and property] El Cajon's request page is for non-emergency city issues, starts by category, and reminds people that the system is not monitored 24/7.
- El Cajon sewer billing is not the same as the water bill [Home and property] El Cajon handles sewer billing and wastewater questions, while water, trash, gas, and electric service run through separate providers.
- El Cajon trash service is an EDCO account [Home and property] El Cajon uses EDCO for residential trash, recycling, organics, new service, bulky-item pickup, and cleanup events.
- El Campanil Theatre keeps Antioch's Rivertown stage alive [History and culture] El Campanil Theatre opened in downtown Antioch in 1928 and now works as a restored cultural venue in the Rivertown district.
- El Centro street and utility problems have one maintenance page [Home and property] El Centro's Street and Utility Maintenance page covers many streets, alleys, signals, streetlights, potholes, hydrants, water leaks, and sewer problems.
- El Cerrito's Hillside Natural Area is open space inside the city [Outdoors] The Hillside Natural Area gives El Cerrito about 107 acres of city-owned open space, with trails, oak woodland, riparian areas, and wide Bay views.
- El Dorado East gives Long Beach lakes, trails, and picnic space [Outdoors] El Dorado East Regional Park has 388.2 acres with bike trails, fishing lakes, picnic areas, playgrounds, archery, and a nature center.
- El Dorado Nature Center gives Long Beach a quiet habitat pocket [Outdoors] El Dorado Nature Center sits between the San Gabriel River and the 605 Freeway, giving Long Beach trails, water, trees, and a calmer nature stop inside the city.
- El Mirage OHV Area starts near Adelanto [Outdoors] El Mirage gives the Adelanto area a major BLM off-highway recreation landscape with dry-lake rules, vehicle passes, camping, and changing access conditions.
- El Monte business licensing has a planning step built in [Rules and licenses] El Monte business license work can include a Business Occupancy Permit, planning review, special business permits, renewal steps, and city licensing contacts.
- El Monte keeps an End of the Santa Fe Trail marker [History and culture] Santa Fe Trail Historical Park points to El Monte's early pioneer layer, when some settlers called the area the End of the Santa Fe Trail.
- El Monte Public Works handles many everyday street issues [Home and property] El Monte's Public Works Maintenance page covers streets, sidewalks, signs, traffic signals, streetlights, graffiti, sewer maintenance, parkway trees, and street sweeping.
- El Monte still keeps the Gay's Lion Farm story [History and culture] El Monte's Historical Museum keeps photos and artifacts from Gay's Lion Farm, a once-famous local attraction that brought lions and visitors to town.
- El Monte trash and bulky pickup go through Valley Vista [Home and property] El Monte's residential trash page identifies Valley Vista Services as the curbside collection provider and gives a separate bulky pickup path.
- El Pueblo keeps early Los Angeles in one walkable place [History and culture] El Pueblo de Los Angeles, Olvera Street, the old plaza, and nearby historic buildings make early Los Angeles easier to picture on foot.
- El Segundo's name comes from being the second refinery [History and culture] El Segundo's name points to Standard Oil's second refinery, then the city grew into a South Bay place tied to industry, aviation, and aerospace.
- Elk Grove began with a stage stop and a name on a sign [History and culture] Before Elk Grove became a large Sacramento County city, its name was tied to an 1850 stage stop on the old road between Sacramento and Stockton.
- Elk Grove business licenses start with the location [Rules and licenses] Elk Grove's business-license page explains general and special licenses, online applications, renewals, active-license lookup, and the difference between tracking a business and meeting other rules.
- Elk Grove flood questions start with the address [Home and property] Elk Grove's flood control page gives residents a way to check FEMA flood zone information, ask Public Works for map help, and report storm-drain flooding through the 24-hour service number.
- Elk Grove Park is an everyday gathering green [Outdoors] Elk Grove Park has reservable picnic areas, a jogging and bike trail, and community space that works for both quick visits and planned gatherings.
- Elk Grove permit work now uses electronic submittals [Rules and licenses] Elk Grove handles building, plumbing, mechanical, electrical, plan review, inspections, minor permits, and electronic submittals through its Building Safety resources.
- Elk Grove separates SeeClickFix from urgent calls [Rules and licenses] Elk Grove residents can use SeeClickFix for regular online issue reports, while emergencies, police needs, and urgent infrastructure problems have direct phone paths.
- Elk Grove waste service has regular carts and extra cleanup paths [Home and property] Elk Grove recycling and waste service points residents to Republic Services, bulky item pickup, hazardous waste, large recyclables, and garbage-day tools.
- Elk Grove's giant pumpkins make the park feel like fall [History and culture] The Elk Grove Giant Pumpkin Festival began in 1994 and has grown into a playful fall tradition with giant pumpkin weigh-offs, food, crafts, rides, and a pumpkin regatta.
- Elk Grove's story starts before the stage stop [History and culture] Elk Grove is known for its 1850 stage stop, but the local story begins with Plains Miwok homelands and continues through Wilton Rancheria.
- Ellis Lake gives Marysville a quiet center [Outdoors] Ellis Lake is one of Marysville's community park anchors, giving the city a green middle between downtown streets, neighborhoods, and local gatherings.
- Emeryville's Shellmound story sits under a busy bay city [History and culture] The Emeryville Shellmound was a major Bay Area Indigenous site, later altered by recreation and rail activity, and it remains an important local memory.
- Empire Mine shows how much of Grass Valley's gold story was underground [History and culture] Empire Mine State Historic Park shows Grass Valley's deep hard-rock mining story through preserved buildings, gardens, mine features, and miles of old underground workings.
- Employee or contractor check [Checklist · Work] A plain first pass when a 1099, app, gig, freelance, or contractor label feels off.
- Encinitas business and permit chores both start online [Rules and licenses] Encinitas requires business registration for businesses based in or operating in the city, while planning, building, engineering, fire, and special event permits move through CSS.
- Encinitas trash and recycling questions usually run through EDCO [Home and property] Encinitas uses EDCO for solid waste collection, and the city's recycling guidance gives a few small sorting rules that can prevent common bin mistakes.
- Escalon keeps its rail-town memory close to Main Street [History and culture] Escalon's Main Street Park caboose and historical museum point back to the Santa Fe depot, the first train in 1896, and a town shaped by farm goods moving by rail.
- Escondido business planning starts before the license form [Rules and licenses] Escondido's business and planning pages help new businesses check the activity, location, online service path, permits, payments, and inspections before committing to a space.
- Escondido has separate doors for alerts, wildfire, and storm prep [Home and property] Escondido's emergency pages separate notification systems, general preparedness, wildfire guidance, and storms or flooding, which helps residents check the right page for the situation.
- Escondido permits and licenses start in the online services lane [Rules and licenses] Escondido separates permit applications, business license work, utility bill payments, and building inspections across its online services and Building Division pages.
- Escondido utilities, trash, and reports each have a clear lane [Rules and licenses] Escondido groups water billing, utility start and stop forms, water outage reporting, SDG&E, EDI trash service, and Report It links on its utility pages.
- Esperanza Park connects Cathedral City to CV Link [Outdoors] Esperanza Park gives Cathedral City's Dream Homes neighborhood a new park with shade, play areas, fields, dog parks, and a connection to the regional CV Link path.
- Estancia Park keeps Costa Mesa's old adobe layer in view [History and culture] Estancia Park pairs a regular neighborhood park with the Diego Sepulveda Adobe, a restored 1820 structure tied to the area's old cattle-ranch layer.
- Estudillo Mansion anchors San Jacinto's early city story [History and culture] Estudillo Mansion and Francisco Heritage Park give San Jacinto a concrete place to understand rancho history, early city growth, and local museum exhibits.
- Etna grew from mills, creek trouble, and a small Main Street [History and culture] Etna's story starts with Rough and Ready, Aetna Mills, Etna Creek, and a small Scott Valley town center that still keeps local history close.
- Euclid Avenue keeps Upland's citrus and Route 66 story visible [History and culture] Upland's historic Euclid Avenue carries a rare Madonna of the Trail monument, Route 66 ties, and pieces of the city's citrus-era identity.
- Eureka's Carson Mansion is redwood money turned into architecture [History and culture] The Carson Mansion in Eureka grew from Humboldt County redwood wealth into one of California's most recognizable Victorian buildings.
- Exeter turns downtown walls into a walking history gallery [History and culture] Exeter's mural trail makes downtown feel like an outdoor gallery, with art that points to local farming, heritage, community scenes, and small-town pride.
- Exposition Park makes a Los Angeles museum day feel close together [History and culture] Exposition Park gathers museums, the Rose Garden, sports venues, and historic Olympic places just south of Downtown Los Angeles.
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- Fairfax sits right by one of mountain biking's home hills [History and culture] Fairfax's bicycle story connects Mount Tamalpais, early off-road riders, the Repack races, and the Marin Museum of Bicycling on Sir Francis Drake Boulevard.
- Fairfield building permits move through BUILD Online [Rules and licenses] Fairfield BUILD Online is the city path for permit applications, plan uploads, invoices, inspections, and permit tracking.
- Fairfield FAST mixes fixed routes with FAST Connect [Cars and driving] Fairfield's FAST system combines fixed local bus routes, on-demand FAST Connect zones, real-time arrivals, and trip-planning tools.
- Fairfield residents should know their zone and AlertSolano setup [Home and property] Fairfield's emergency pages use evacuation zone names with AlertSolano, giving residents a simple way to connect an address with local emergency messages.
- Fairfield service requests can start in MyFairfieldCA [Rules and licenses] Fairfield's MyFairfieldCA portal sends local questions, complaints, and compliments to city staff, with categories for common public issues.
- Fairfield water and sewer bills have a few different payment paths [Home and property] Fairfield water and sewer customers can use city utility pages for starting service, paying bills, leak adjustments, cash payment options, and water-system information.
- Fairmead turned landfill work into an Ice Age fossil story [History and culture] The Fossil Discovery Center near Fairmead grew from fossils found at a Madera County landfill, including Ice Age animals from the San Joaquin Valley.
- Fairmount Park gives Riverside a historic lakefront pause [Outdoors] Fairmount Park is one of Riverside's historic public spaces, with lakefront recreation, shade, gathering areas, and a design story tied to the Olmsted Brothers.
- Fairplex gives Pomona a year-round fairgrounds landmark [History and culture] Fairplex in Pomona is home to the LA County Fair and a large event campus where fair days, shows, meetings, and community uses change through the year.
- Fairview Park mixes Costa Mesa trails with rare habitat care [Outdoors] Fairview Park is a 208-acre Costa Mesa park where public use, cultural resources, biological resources, vernal pools, and restoration planning all meet.
- Famous Places [Collection] Big-name landmarks with the story behind the view, building, bridge, or waterfront.
- Farmersville keeps its small-town year tied to parades and roots [History and culture] Farmersville sits between Visalia and the Sierra road, with a tight local identity built around farmland, a Memorial Day parade, and a fall festival.
- FAX is Fresno's first bus map [Cars and driving] Fresno Area Express groups routes, schedules, rider tools, fares, passes, and Handy Ride in one city transit system.
- Fenyes Mansion gives Pasadena history a front door [History and culture] Pasadena Museum of History uses Fenyes Mansion tours, changing exhibits, and local collections to explain the city's older civic, arts, and home-history story.
- Ferndale's Victorian look grew out of dairy money and a small town map [History and culture] Ferndale's Main Street Historic District keeps a North Coast dairy-town story visible through late-1800s and early-1900s buildings, storefronts, churches, and homes.
- Ferry Building keeps San Francisco tied to the bay [Cars and driving] San Francisco's Ferry Building is both a waterfront landmark and a transit hub, with ferry service, nearby rail links, food, markets, and bay walks. Page title: The Ferry Building keeps San Francisco tied to the bay.
- Fillmore's depot shows how the railroad made a valley town [History and culture] Fillmore's depot story connects the Southern Pacific route, a boxcar town name, the Santa Clara River Valley, and the local museum.
- Fire hazard zone maps are address tools [Home and property] The State Fire Marshal fire hazard zone viewer lets people enter an address to see Fire Hazard Severity Zone information for that property area.
- Fire restrictions and campfires [Safety guide guide] How to check campfire permits, forest and BLM fire restrictions, local bans, stoves, charcoal, fireworks, target shooting, and red-flag weather.
- Firebaugh began with a ferry, a stage stop, and a road west [History and culture] Firebaugh's early story runs through Andrew Firebaugh's San Joaquin River ferry, the Butterfield stage route, Pacheco Pass, and a small historic jail.
- first five feet around the house matter a lot in wildfire country [Outdoors] CAL FIRE calls the first five feet around buildings Zone 0, and it is where ember-resistant work starts. Page title: The first five feet around the house matter a lot in wildfire country.
- Fishing license, MPA, and tide pool check [Official link · Outdoors] A simple starting point for fishing licenses, ocean rules, marine protected areas, tide pools, and harvest limits.
- Fishing licenses and rules [Cornerstone guide guide] Start with the exact water and fish, then check the license, report card, current rule, and safe-eating advice.
- Fix It Dublin is public, so write requests carefully [Home and property] Dublin uses SeeClickFix for Fix It Dublin service requests, and the description is public unless the user chooses anonymous display options.
- Flabob Airport keeps old aviation close to the ground [History and culture] Flabob Airport in Jurupa Valley blends early Riverside-area flight history with aviation learning through the Tom Wathen Center.
- Fletcher Cove began with a bold cut through the bluff [History and culture] Solana Beach's Fletcher Cove story ties beach access, a 1920s land deal, La Colonia, and the town's older coastal roots together.
- Flood maps work best by address [Home and property] FEMA's Flood Map Service Center is the official public source for NFIP flood hazard mapping, and the address search is the better first move than relying on a city name.
- Flooded roads are a turn-around moment [Outdoors] NWS flood safety guidance is useful during atmospheric rivers, desert storms, burn-scar rain, and low-water crossings where the road can hide more than it shows.
- Florence Joyner Olympiad Park carries Mission Viejo's Olympic thread [Outdoors] Florence Joyner Olympiad Park in Mission Viejo connects everyday fields, playgrounds, picnic tables, a lake loop trailhead, and the city's Olympic history.
- Folsom Powerhouse helped electricity travel farther [History and culture] Folsom Powerhouse State Historic Park preserves an 1895 electric plant that helped show how power from a river could travel farther.
- Folsom utility bills sit beside water, sewer, and waste questions [Home and property] Folsom's utility billing page covers online, phone, text, and automatic payment options, while the Utilities Department handles water, sewer, garbage, recycling, organics, and related services.
- Folsom's parks and trails make outdoor errands feel close by [Outdoors] Folsom points residents to parks, trails, and open space, including neighborhood parks, picnic areas, paved recreation routes, and trail maps for planning.
- Fontana 311 is the front door for many city service requests [Rules and licenses] Fontana 311 lets residents submit and track city service requests for streets, trees, sidewalks, parks, graffiti, potholes, and other public works issues.
- Fontana business questions start with license and project type [Rules and licenses] Fontana's business page routes business-license applications, renewals, inspections, building permits, plan check, and development or zoning information through separate city links.
- Fontana Days Run is a community thread with long legs [History and culture] The Fontana Days Run began as a local half marathon in 1955 and now helps carry one of the city's best-known civic traditions.
- Fontana emergency prep has its own local guide [Home and property] Ready Fontana gives residents, workers, business owners, and visitors local preparedness guidance for wildfires, earthquakes, floods, severe windstorms, kits, plans, classes, and recovery.
- Fontana park shelters can be reserved, but the details matter [Outdoors] Fontana park shelter rentals can be reserved online or in person, with timing, resident rates, and extra rules for things like inflatables.
- Fontana trash service is handled through Burrtec [Home and property] Fontana contracts with Burrtec for trash and recycling service, while city utility and sewer questions may use different public works contacts.
- Fontana's Art Depot turns a freight stop into a local gallery [History and culture] Fontana's Art Depot Gallery began as a 1915 freight train depot and now gives the city a small arts anchor beside the Pacific Electric Trail.
- Food recalls are easier when you check the exact label [Home and property] CDPH and FDA food recall pages help shoppers compare the brand, product name, package size, date, and lot code before deciding what to do.
- Food, health coverage, and household help [Official link · Start here] Find the safer first stop for food help, CalFresh, Medi-Cal, Covered California, WIC, cash aid, county social services, IHSS, EBT card trouble, or local help.
- Foothill Boulevard keeps Rialto's Route 66 and rail layer visible [History and culture] Rialto's older story runs through ranching, the Santa Fe Railroad, Foothill Boulevard, Route 66, Pacific Electric rail, and downtown pieces that still help explain the Inland Empire city.
- For work at a Fontana address, Build Fontana is the permit front door [Home and property] Fontana uses Build Fontana and Building and Safety pages for permit applications, plan checks, inspection links, project updates, fees, and older permit research.
- Forbes Mill is a small clue to early Los Gatos [History and culture] Forbes Mill gives Los Gatos a simple origin clue: the town grew around a flour mill before the place became the Los Gatos people know today.
- Forest Home Farms keeps San Ramon's farm past in town [History and culture] Forest Home Farms gives San Ramon a 16-acre historic farm, with Boone family buildings, old outbuildings, a walnut-processing past, and valley agriculture still visible.
- Foresthill Bridge is a huge clue to a dam that never arrived [History and culture] Foresthill Bridge rises 720 feet above the valley floor and carries a big piece of the Auburn Dam story, even though the dam itself was never finished.
- Fort Jones keeps a Scott Valley army post in memory [History and culture] Fort Jones takes its name from an 1850s military post near town, and the local museum helps connect that short-lived fort to Scott Valley life.
- Fort Ord Dunes turns old base land into a Marina beach walk [History and culture] Fort Ord Dunes State Park near Marina turns former U.S. Army land into dunes, beach, trails, old bunkers, habitat, and a clear Monterey Bay view.
- Fort Ord gives Seaside a rare open-space edge [Outdoors] Seaside sits next to Fort Ord National Monument, where former Army land now gives the Monterey Bay area trails, grassland, oak woodland, and public-land rules to respect.
- Fort Point puts a brick fort under the Golden Gate [History and culture] Fort Point gives San Francisco a close-up military history stop, with Civil War-era brickwork sitting below the Golden Gate Bridge.
- Fort Ross adds Russian and Kashaya history to the Sonoma Coast [History and culture] Fort Ross State Historic Park near Jenner connects the Sonoma Coast to Russian settlement, Alaska trade routes, Kashaya Pomo homeland, ranching, archaeology, and ocean-edge history.
- Fortuna's Friendly City story starts in the Eel River Valley [History and culture] Fortuna grew from Springville, mills, rail, the Eel River Valley, and redwood-country travel into Humboldt County's Friendly City.
- Forty Acres keeps Delano's farmworker movement visible [History and culture] The Forty Acres and Delano grape strike sites connect the city to Filipino and Mexican American farmworker organizing, the UFW, contracts, boycott work, and national labor history. Page title: The Forty Acres keeps Delano's farmworker movement visible.
- Forum keeps Inglewood's older entertainment story in the mix [History and culture] The Forum opened in 1967 on Manchester Boulevard and remains a major Inglewood entertainment landmark near today's larger event district. Page title: The Forum keeps Inglewood's older entertainment story in the mix.
- Fossil Reef Park shows Laguna Hills' old ocean floor [History and culture] Fossil Reef Park protects a small piece of a 17-million-year-old reef, making Laguna Hills feel connected to an ancient tropical bay.
- Foster City's bay edge is a levee and trail story [Home and property] Foster City's waterfront is both public bay-edge trail space and flood-protection infrastructure, with levee work tied to FEMA accreditation and sea-level planning.
- Foster City's lagoon gives the city its quiet water thread [Outdoors] Foster City's lagoon winds through neighborhoods and gives the city a calm place for paddling, small boats, swimming, fishing, and summer evenings.
- Fountain Valley plan check runs through the Permit Center [Home and property] Fountain Valley's Permit Center handles electronic plan check, online building permit applications, PDF plan uploads, resubmittals, and common expedited permit types.
- Fountain Valley's report page sorts common city problems [Home and property] Fountain Valley's report page separates code complaints, graffiti, streetlights, traffic signals, water pollution, water waste, barking dogs, and police-related reports.
- Fowler grew from a cattle rail switch into a Blossom Trail town [History and culture] Fowler began around Thomas Fowler's rail spur south of Fresno, then grew into a farm town tied to Highway 99, vineyards, orchards, and the Fresno County Blossom Trail.
- Fox Theater is Bakersfield's downtown survivor [History and culture] Bakersfield's Fox Theater opened on Christmas Day 1930, survived hard years, and became a restored downtown stage with deep local affection. Page title: The Fox Theater is Bakersfield's downtown survivor.
- Fox Theatre keeps downtown Visalia tied to its 1930 stage [History and culture] The Visalia Fox Theatre first opened in 1930 and still gives downtown a restored performing-arts landmark with a strong local story. Page title: The Fox Theatre keeps downtown Visalia tied to its 1930 stage.
- Free South City Shuttle links the hill, downtown, and transit [Cars and driving] South San Francisco's free shuttle runs on weekdays and links local stops with SamTrans, BART, Caltrain, downtown, parks, stores, and civic destinations.
- Freedom Park is Westminster's civic memory place [History and culture] Sid Goldstein Freedom Park connects Westminster's Little Saigon community, Black April remembrance, Vietnam War memory, and everyday park space.
- Fremont App routes many everyday city reports [Rules and licenses] Fremont residents can use the Fremont App for many regular city reports, including dumping, street and sidewalk concerns, trees, graffiti, garbage, parks, and other neighborhood issues.
- Fremont evacuation zones are worth checking before you need them [Home and property] Fremont uses alert tools, evacuation terms, and more than 100 pre-planned evacuation zones, so residents should know their zone and alert path before fire, flood, tsunami, or storm trouble.
- Fremont permit work starts with Citizen Access [Home and property] Fremont uses Citizen Access for planning, building, fire, solar, and engineering permit requests, with permit types, inspections, records, and Development Services Center help.
- Fremont street sweeping is a monthly curb habit [Cars and driving] Fremont sweeps residential streets on set monthly days, so the safest routine is to check the schedule, move the car, and leave the curb clear.
- Fremont uses a business tax certificate, not a simple license label [Rules and licenses] Fremont businesses register for a business tax account, with separate checks for home-based work, out-of-town businesses doing work in Fremont, DBA filings, seller's permits, zoning, and permit needs.
- Fremont waste service starts with Republic for pickup issues [Home and property] Fremont routes waste collection starts, stops, missed pickups, bulky items, and cart issues to Republic Services, with other questions kept with Environmental Services.
- FresGO 311 is Fresno's non-emergency city request door [Rules and licenses] Fresno residents can use FresGO 311 for non-emergency city issues such as graffiti, dumping, potholes, sidewalks, roads, landscaping, water, sewer, solid waste, parking, and missed-bin questions.
- Fresno bulky pickup runs through Operation Clean Up [Home and property] Fresno residential solid waste customers can use Operation Clean Up for large household items, with pickup dates, account lookup, pile placement, and missed-service help handled through city trash pages.
- Fresno Chaffee Zoo grew from a very local beginning [History and culture] Fresno Chaffee Zoo grew out of Roeding Park, schoolchildren's donations, Nosey the elephant, and a long civic push to turn a small animal collection into a major valley landmark.
- Fresno County cooling centers can change with the heat [Home and property] Fresno County's extreme heat page explains that cooling center locations and hours can change, so residents should use the county page before relying on one.
- Fresno County DBA filing starts with the County Clerk [Rules and licenses] Fresno County fictitious business name filings start with the County Clerk, separate from city business tax, seller's permits, and state filings. Page title: A Fresno County DBA filing starts with the County Clerk.
- Fresno County has a Development Services first stop [Rules and licenses] Fresno County points land-use and planning questions through Public Works and Planning's Development Services pages.
- Fresno County keeps emergency and heat information in one county system [Home and property] Fresno County's emergency and extreme heat pages give residents current places to check emergency updates, cooling centers, and local heat resources.
- Fresno County property tax questions have a value side and a bill side [Money and taxes] Fresno County property tax questions usually start with the Assessor for value and records, or the Tax Collector for bills and payments.
- Fresno grew from a railroad stop into a streetcar downtown [History and culture] Fresno's early city story runs through the Central Pacific Railroad, a green wheat field, the county seat move, streetcars, and downtown buildings.
- Fresno has an underground garden built as a heat escape [History and culture] Forestiere Underground Gardens turns Fresno heat, hard soil, hand tools, tunnels, fruit trees, and one immigrant builder's long idea into a memorable local stop.
- Fresno heat days have a cooling-center routine [Home and property] Fresno opens cooling centers when forecast temperatures reach the city's threshold, and Fresno County keeps an extreme-heat page with locations and reminders.
- Fresno helped launch the card that became Visa [History and culture] The 1958 Fresno Drop tested BankAmericard with thousands of local customers, giving Fresno a surprising place in payment-card history.
- Fresno utility questions split between billing and service [Home and property] Fresno utility bills cover water, sewer, solid waste, and community sanitation, while water leaks, pressure, repairs, recycling, and hazardous waste questions use different contacts.
- Fresno's Water Tower tells a practical city story [History and culture] Fresno's old Water Tower grew from the city's early need for a permanent water system and became one of downtown's most recognizable landmarks.
- FTB tax notice deserves a dated paper trail [Money and taxes] The Franchise Tax Board payment-plan page gives Californians an official place to review installment options, but the notice date and account details still matter. Page title: An FTB tax notice deserves a dated paper trail.
- Fullerton Arboretum is a quiet garden loop by the campus [Outdoors] Fullerton Arboretum at Cal State Fullerton gives the city a plant-filled walking stop with themed gardens, visitor hours, and practical entry details.
- Fullerton downtown parking is posted lot by lot [Cars and driving] Downtown Fullerton has many free public parking spaces, but lots near downtown and the Transportation Center are individually posted with their own time limits.
- Fullerton emergency prep has AlertOC and a local planning desk [Home and property] Fullerton residents can use AlertOC, Fullerton emergency management pages, and the city's hazard-mitigation planning information to understand local alerts and preparedness before a problem is close by.
- Fullerton helped send the electric guitar around the world [History and culture] The Leo Fender Gallery at the Fullerton Museum Center connects the city to electric guitars, basses, local workshops, and a music story that reached far beyond Orange County.
- Fullerton permit questions usually start with the project type [Home and property] Fullerton's Building and Safety and permit pages point residents toward EasyDev, permit records, plan requirements, inspections, and business-related permits.
- Fullerton service requests start with myFullerton or Public Works [Rules and licenses] Fullerton residents can use myFullerton for photo-and-location reports and Public Works for non-emergency maintenance such as graffiti, potholes, storm drains, trees, sidewalks, and streetlights.
- Fullerton Transportation Center is both rail hub and local landmark [History and culture] Fullerton Transportation Center connects downtown to Amtrak, Metrolink, parking, public art, and a restored historic train depot.
- Fullerton water service setup also touches trash service [Home and property] Fullerton starts and stops water service through Utility Services, and residential trash service is tied into the city utility account path.
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- Galt Market turns shopping into a local tradition [History and culture] Galt Market grew from a 1950s farmers market into a large open-air market with produce, goods, food, and regular Tuesday and Wednesday shopping days.
- Garden Grove bulky pickup needs an appointment first [Home and property] Garden Grove trash pages explain weekly barrel pickup, holiday schedule changes, container placement, Republic Services contacts, and appointment-based bulky item pickup.
- Garden Grove business-license forms depend on where the business sits [Rules and licenses] Garden Grove separates business-license applications for commercial or industrial locations, home-based businesses, outside-city businesses, and residential rental businesses.
- Garden Grove has a glass landmark with two lives [History and culture] The former Crystal Cathedral, now Christ Cathedral, gives Garden Grove a rare landmark shaped by television religion, bold glass architecture, and a later Catholic reuse.
- Garden Grove permit applications use the Development Access path [Rules and licenses] Garden Grove's Development Access system handles new commercial, residential, engineering, and other permit applications online.
- Garden Grove storm drains and sewers are two different calls [Home and property] Garden Grove's storm drain page explains what belongs in storm drains, how storm drains differ from sewers, and where to report non-stormwater discharges, sewer spills, clogged drains, and pollution after hours.
- Garden Grove water and trash use separate service contacts [Home and property] Garden Grove handles water billing and water start-stop service through the city, while trash service points residents to Republic Services.
- Garden Grove's report page is for regular city issues, not emergencies [Rules and licenses] Garden Grove residents can use Report an Issue for regular city concerns, while police, fire, utility, trash, streetlight, animal, freeway, and county issues may need the listed phone or agency route.
- Garden Grove's Strawberry Festival keeps an old farm memory sweet [History and culture] Garden Grove's Strawberry Festival began in 1958, when local strawberry fields were still part of the city's identity, and grew into a major community tradition.
- Gardena Direct handles right-of-way maintenance requests [Home and property] Gardena Public Works sends right-of-way maintenance requests to Gardena Direct, covering graffiti, illegal dumping, parks, streets, sidewalks, storm drains, signs, signals, and trees.
- Gardena trash service now runs through WM [Home and property] WM handles Gardena waste hauling starting May 1, 2026, with separate contacts for household trash, hazardous waste, and construction or demolition debris.
- Gardena Willows keeps a piece of the Dominguez Slough alive [Outdoors] Gardena Willows is a small urban wetland preserve tied to the old Dominguez Slough, local stewardship, runoff, habitat, and community education.
- Garvey Ranch Park gives Monterey Park a public astronomy stop [History and culture] Garvey Ranch Park adds an observatory, museum, community center, sports fields, and public skywatching to Monterey Park's neighborhood park system.
- Gaslamp Museum gives downtown San Diego an older front door [History and culture] The Davis-Horton House is the oldest building in downtown San Diego and now anchors the Gaslamp Museum and neighborhood history tours. Page title: The Gaslamp Museum gives downtown San Diego an older front door.
- GEM Theatre gives Garden Grove's Main Street a stage story [History and culture] Garden Grove's historic GEM Theatre went from 1920s vaudeville to a neighborhood movie house and later returned as a live theater venue. Page title: The GEM Theatre gives Garden Grove's Main Street a stage story.
- General Sherman gives Sequoia a forest stop people remember [Outdoors] The General Sherman Tree stands at the north end of Giant Forest and is known as the largest tree in the world by volume.
- Generators need fresh air, not a cracked door [Home and property] Public health and fire safety guidance is clear that portable generators belong outside and away from openings during outages.
- George Key Ranch keeps Placentia's citrus past visible [History and culture] George Key Ranch Historic Park preserves a Placentia house, garden, orange grove, farm tools, and Sunkist-era citrus story in a compact OC Parks site.
- GET is Bakersfield's local bus map layer [Cars and driving] Golden Empire Transit gives Bakersfield its local bus maps, timetables, fare pages, and trip tools.
- Get It Done handles San Diego's everyday city requests [Rules and licenses] Get It Done gives San Diego residents one place to report many non-emergency city problems, request some services, and reach common city issue forms.
- Geysers turn mountain steam into power [History and culture] The Geysers near the Lake and Sonoma county line turned a long-known thermal area into one of California's most important geothermal power stories. Page title: The Geysers turn mountain steam into power.
- Gilman Ranch keeps Banning's stagecoach story close [History and culture] Banning's Gilman Ranch story ties the city to San Gorgonio Pass travel, stage routes, early landmarks, and the old movement between Southern California and the desert.
- Gilroy permits and business licenses use different online paths [Rules and licenses] Gilroy uses GO Permit for project permits and inspections, while business licenses are handled through the city's HdL business-license service.
- Gilroy signal and streetlight reports need the exact spot [Home and property] Gilroy routes streetlight and traffic signal problems through Gilroy Connect or the Engineering Division, with after-hours phone paths for down poles and signal problems.
- Gilroy's garlic story grew from real farm roots [History and culture] Gilroy is known for garlic because local farming, row crops, community volunteers, and the Garlic Festival turned an agricultural identity into a California food story.
- Gladding McBean keeps Lincoln's clay story alive [History and culture] Lincoln's Gladding McBean story ties local clay deposits, terra cotta, sewer pipe, roof tile, public art, and downtown identity into one long-running industry.
- Glass Beach is a pretty place with a cleanup story behind it [Outdoors] Fort Bragg's Glass Beach is known for sea glass, but the deeper lesson is how an old dump area became a protected coastal place.
- Glendale Beeline is the local layer under bigger bus and rail trips [Cars and driving] Glendale Beeline handles local movement inside Glendale, while regional rail and bus trips still need separate schedule checks.
- Glendale hillside brush checks are part of living near the canyons [Home and property] Glendale's Vegetation Management Program focuses on defensible space in hillside and canyon communities, with inspections, fuel-modification review, fire-hazard zones, and brush-clearance resources.
- Glendale parking permits begin with the district check [Cars and driving] Glendale's parking permit page separates permit purchases from questions about whether an address is inside a parking permit district.
- Glendale permits depend on the project type [Home and property] Glendale separates simple residential online permits from larger building, planning, zoning, licensing, and neighborhood services questions.
- Glendale Water & Power is the city utility front door [Home and property] Glendale Water & Power handles city water and power accounts, including bill pay, start service, stop or transfer service, outage reporting, outage maps, and customer service contacts.
- Glendora street work requests need a clear location [Home and property] Glendora street, curb, gutter, and sidewalk requests work best when the report names the nearest address, cross street, and exact side of the block.
- Go SBCity helps San Bernardino route everyday city requests [Rules and licenses] San Bernardino residents can use Go SBCity, SB Access Online, or SB Direct to report many non-emergency city issues, ask questions, and get service requests routed.
- Golden Gate Park gives San Francisco a long green day [Outdoors] Golden Gate Park gives San Francisco 1,017 acres of lakes, meadows, gardens, groves, activities, and major points of interest.
- Goleta's butterfly grove is a seasonal coastal treat [Outdoors] Goleta's butterfly grove and Ellwood Mesa are best approached as coastal open space with seasonal monarch habitat, not a promised butterfly show.
- GoModesto is for regular city problems you want tracked [Rules and licenses] Modesto residents can use GoModesto for non-emergency reports such as street flooding, light outages, illegal dumping, tagging, vandalism, playground issues, and progress notifications.
- GoMPK is Monterey Park's everyday request door [Home and property] GoMPK lets Monterey Park residents send service requests, receive notifications, and report issues such as potholes, sidewalk repairs, and graffiti.
- Gonzales grew from a rail stop into a Salinas Valley farm town [History and culture] Gonzales began around Southern Pacific tracks, a 50-block town plan, dairies, vegetables, and the farm-business strength of the Salinas Valley.
- Graber Olive House keeps Ontario's farm roots close [History and culture] Graber Olive House began from an early Ontario Model Colony farm lot, grew into a long-running olive business, and still helps the city remember its agricultural side.
- Grand Boulevard explains Corona's circle on the map [History and culture] Corona's Grand Boulevard was planned as a circular road around the original townsite, later tied to early road races, citrus groves, rail access, and the city's move from South Riverside to Corona.
- Grand Central Air Terminal keeps Glendale in the early flight story [History and culture] Glendale's Grand Central Air Terminal is a 1929 aviation building tied to transportation, architecture, and the early airport era.
- Grand Central Market keeps downtown Los Angeles hungry and busy [History and culture] Grand Central Market opened in 1917 inside the Homer Laughlin Building and still gives downtown Los Angeles a lively food-hall anchor.
- Grand Terrace carries its Blue Mountain story into city life [History and culture] Grand Terrace grew from terrace land, irrigation, citrus labels, and Blue Mountain into a small San Bernardino County city with a clear local identity.
- Grape Day Park keeps Escondido's harvest memory close [History and culture] Grape Day Park is Escondido's oldest park, with a harvest-festival name, historic buildings, a depot, a Victorian house, and the Escondido History Center.
- Great Park is Irvine's big park that is still taking shape [Outdoors] Great Park has more than 500 completed acres, with about 300 more acres still taking shape.
- Green Music Center gives Rohnert Park a campus arts anchor [History and culture] The Green Music Center at Sonoma State gives Rohnert Park a year-round performing arts place with halls, lawn seating, university ties, and regional music.
- Green water or lake scum deserves a pause [Outdoors] California's HABs portal and report map show reported harmful algal blooms in freshwater, estuarine, and marine environments, with reporting and health guidance.
- Greenfield began as Clark Colony with water rights in mind [History and culture] Greenfield's early story runs through Clark Colony, irrigation water, Salinas Valley farmland, and a town name that grew out of fields.
- Greystone Mansion gives Beverly Hills beauty and a quiet mystery [History and culture] Greystone Mansion is a public Beverly Hills landmark with gardens, grand architecture, film-location fame, and a sad 1929 story that should be told carefully.
- Gridley's museum sits inside an old bank building [History and culture] Gridley's museum uses the 1909 Veatch Building to tell the story of a Butte County farm town rooted in orchards, rice, local business, and Main Street memory.
- Griffith Observatory turns the night sky into a Los Angeles outing [History and culture] The city observatory in Griffith Park offers exhibits, sky reports, and public telescope viewing above Los Angeles.
- Grizzly Island shows Solano County's marsh side [Outdoors] Grizzly Island Wildlife Area sits in the Suisun Marsh, with wetland views, wildlife watching, trails, fishing, and seasonal hunting.
- Grover Beach was pitched as the place where tide lands met rails [History and culture] Grover Beach grew from D.W. Grover's 1887 town plan, a seaside railroad dream, a later incorporation, and a close 1992 name change.
- Guadalupe River Park gives downtown San Jose a green thread [Outdoors] Guadalupe River Park and Trail help connect downtown San Jose with a river corridor, parks, civic places, programs, and changing urban-trail conditions.
- Guadalupe's dunes hid part of a giant silent-movie set [History and culture] The Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes hold one of California's stranger film stories: pieces of Cecil B. DeMille's 1923 Ten Commandments set were buried in the sand.
- Guides [Directory] Longer explainers with the official source kept close by. Page title: California guides.
- Gustine's name and museum point back to Henry Miller country [History and culture] Gustine grew from railroad, dairy, and Henry Miller ranch land, with the Gustine Museum keeping early town, courthouse, jail, and farm-country history together.
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- Haggin Museum gives Stockton art and local memory together [History and culture] The Haggin Museum in Stockton brings fine art and local history into one place, with roots in the San Joaquin Pioneer and Historical Society. Page title: The Haggin Museum gives Stockton art and local memory together.
- Half Moon Bay turns pumpkin season into a Main Street event [History and culture] Half Moon Bay's pumpkin festival, weigh-off, farm fields, and coastal Main Street make the town's fall identity easy to see.
- Hamilton Wetlands turns a former airfield toward the bay [Outdoors] Hamilton Wetlands gives Novato a baylands restoration story where former military land, levees, public trails, habitat, and long-term monitoring meet.
- Hanford building permits need a complete submittal [Home and property] Hanford building permit applications use the Citizen Self Service Portal, and the city asks applicants to submit a complete package with the required documents.
- Hanford utility service starts at Utility Billing [Rules and licenses] Hanford Utility Billing handles customer billing for water, refuse, and sewer, and new service requires an application plus ID and lease or ownership paperwork.
- Hangar One is the giant shape on the South Bay skyline [History and culture] Hangar One at Moffett Field began as a Navy airship hangar in 1933 and remains one of Silicon Valley's most visible aviation landmarks.
- Harford Pier keeps Avila Beach tied to real harbor work [History and culture] Harford Pier at Port San Luis connects Avila Beach to shipping history, commercial fishing, public pier access, seafood stops, and a harbor district formed around practical waterfront needs.
- Hart Park gives Bakersfield a Kern River day outside town [Outdoors] Hart Memorial Park sits within the larger Kern River County Park complex, giving Bakersfield a nearby place for river-edge picnics, shade, and open-space time.
- Hawaiian Gardens fits a lot of city life into less than a square mile [History and culture] Hawaiian Gardens is one of Los Angeles County's smallest cities by land, with parks, city services, freeway access, and a casino district packed close together.
- Hawthorne bulky pickup starts with a call first [Rules and licenses] Hawthorne trash service is tied to Republic Services, street sweeping days, holiday delays, and scheduled bulky-item pickups.
- Hawthorne business tax certificates start with Licensing [Rules and licenses] Hawthorne Licensing handles business license and tax certificate questions, online applications, renewals, license copies, payments, and related finance contacts.
- Hawthorne has both sports legend and aircraft history [History and culture] Hawthorne's local history includes Jim Thorpe living in town, Jim Thorpe Park, Jack Northrop's aircraft work, and the city's South Bay aerospace identity.
- Hawthorne keeps the Beach Boys story close to home [History and culture] The Beach Boys Historical Landmark in Hawthorne marks the Wilson brothers' boyhood home site and keeps one of Southern California's best-known music stories rooted on a real block.
- Hawthorne permit records run through Citizen Self Service [Rules and licenses] Hawthorne's Citizen Self Service portal lets users work with permit and plan records, check status, request inspections, and review plan submittals.
- Hawthorne's C Line stop can help with LAX and event days [Cars and driving] Hawthorne sits on the Metro C Line, which now connects to the LAX/Metro Transit Center and can also help with some SoFi and Hollywood Park trips.
- Hay Tree explains Paramount's dairy-market past [History and culture] Paramount's Hay Tree landmark points back to the city's Hynes and Clearwater roots, dairy industry, hay prices, and 1948 unification story. Page title: The Hay Tree explains Paramount's dairy-market past.
- Hayward earthquake prep is a normal home habit [Home and property] Hayward sits in Bay Area earthquake country, so local preparedness is mostly about small home steps: a plan, a kit, alert signups, and a few checks around the house.
- Hayward emergency prep starts with AC Alert and a simple plan [Home and property] Hayward residents can use the Fire Department preparedness pages, AC Alert, CERT information, and the family preparedness guide to set up a calm household plan before a local emergency.
- Hayward project questions now run through e-Permits [Home and property] Hayward's online permitting system helps people submit permit applications, pay fees, download permits, schedule inspections, check results, and reach the right permit division.
- Hayward Regional Shoreline gives the city a bay-marsh edge [Outdoors] Hayward Regional Shoreline has 1,841 acres of salt, fresh, and brackish marshes, seasonal wetlands, public trails, birdwatching, shoreline history, and Bay Trail connections.
- Hayward residential parking permits begin with the permit area [Rules and licenses] Hayward residential parking permits apply only in established permit areas, and residents apply through the online vendor with vehicle information, proof of residency, and vehicle registration.
- Hayward water and sewer service may not cover every property [Home and property] Hayward's utility bill page notes that most properties receive city water and sewer, but some properties may have utilities from another provider.
- Hayward's Japanese Gardens give downtown a quiet green pause [History and culture] Hayward's Japanese Gardens sit near the Senior Center and offer a calm downtown stop with paths, water, plants, and simple daily access.
- Headwaters Forest gives Humboldt a careful old-growth redwood walk [Outdoors] Headwaters Forest Reserve protects coastal redwood forest near Eureka, with Elk River Trail access, sensitive habitat, storm-season cautions, and public-use limits.
- Healdsburg's Plaza goes back to Harmon Heald's town plan [History and culture] Healdsburg's old town plan, Plaza, Russian River setting, and 1871 railroad link explain why the city still feels like a valley crossroads.
- Health coverage can branch between Covered California and Medi-Cal [Rules and licenses] Covered California and DHCS both point people toward health coverage, but the right route can depend on income, household details, timing, and county follow-up.
- Hearst Castle turned a family ranch into an Enchanted Hill [History and culture] Hearst Castle near San Simeon grew from ranchland into a hilltop estate shaped by William Randolph Hearst and architect Julia Morgan.
- Heat plans should include a real cooling place [Home and property] CDPH extreme heat pages and cooling center guidance show why heat planning should include local public places, county resources, and a check-in plan.
- Hemet alerts and fire-zone pages belong in the same folder [Home and property] Hemet residents can pair the city's emergency alert page with its fire hazard severity zone information, especially when a home project, sale, or seasonal cleanup is on the calendar.
- Hemet building permits start with the online portal or City Hall [Home and property] Hemet's Building and Safety pages point people to the Community Development Web Portal, permit applications, plan review status, permit issuance steps, and Building staff.
- Hemet has a lake story full of fossils [History and culture] Western Science Center in Hemet connects Diamond Valley Lake to Ice Age fossils, local archaeology, and the museum work that grew out of the reservoir dig.
- Hemet library and parks pages separate city services from recreation [Rules and licenses] Hemet's city pages point residents to the public library and city parks, while organized recreation is handled separately by Valley-Wide Recreation and Park District.
- Hemet trash service has a provider step and a bulky-item path [Home and property] Hemet trash, recycling, organics, bulky items, cart repairs, and clean-up days work best when the service provider and address are clear.
- Hemet water and sewer accounts start with Utility Billing [Home and property] Hemet Utility Billing handles water and sewer service questions for many city residents and businesses, including connections, disconnections, payments, and billing questions.
- Henry Coe gives Santa Clara County a huge quiet backcountry [Outdoors] Henry W. Coe State Park protects wide Diablo Range hills, ridges, trails, and quiet open space east of Morgan Hill.
- Hercules got its name from a powder-company product [History and culture] Hercules began as a company town tied to California Powder Works, whose dynamite product name became the city's name.
- Heritage Hill keeps Lake Forest's El Toro story in four buildings [History and culture] Heritage Hill Historical Park gathers the Serrano Adobe, El Toro Grammar School, St. George's Mission, and the Bennett Ranch House into one small Lake Forest history walk.
- Heritage House keeps Compton's oldest home in view [History and culture] Compton's Heritage House was built in 1869, is listed by the city as the oldest house in Compton, and stands as a small landmark from the city's early settler period.
- Heritage Museum keeps a piece of old Santa Ana on a quiet campus [History and culture] Heritage Museum of Orange County grew from the saved Kellogg family home and now gives Santa Ana a hands-on local history place.
- Heritage Park keeps Santa Fe Springs' rancho and oil layers close [History and culture] Heritage Park gives Santa Fe Springs a clear place to see Tongva history, rancho layers, railroad memory, oil history, and community exhibits.
- Heritage Square gathers Oxnard's saved old homes in one walk [History and culture] Heritage Square brings together moved and restored Oxnard buildings, giving downtown a clear look at early homes, families, and civic preservation.
- Hermosa Beach's pier and courts carry a lot of beach culture [Outdoors] Hermosa Beach's pier, Strand, volleyball courts, and compact downtown show how a small beach city built a big public beach identity.
- Hesperia building projects should start at the Permit Center [Home and property] Hesperia's Permit Center, permit process, and Building Safety pages help residents sort plan review, inspections, building codes, and project paperwork before work begins.
- Hesperia bulky pickup needs an appointment, not a curb surprise [Rules and licenses] Hesperia's trash pages explain regular carts, bulky item appointments, extra green waste, and Advance Disposal's role in special pickups.
- Hesperia Lake Park is the high desert's easy day outside [Outdoors] Hesperia Lake Park gives the city a high-desert fishing, camping, picnic, and event spot, including a role in the annual Hesperia Days celebration.
- Hesperia riders should check city off-road rules before unloading [Rules and licenses] Hesperia restricts off-road vehicle riding inside city limits, with rules for streets, rights-of-way, private-property permission, nearby buildings, dust, speed, and noise.
- Hesperia water and sewer questions start at City Hall [Home and property] Hesperia Water and Sewer Billing handles account help, payments, start-or-stop service, leaks, and emergency service calls through the city utility billing counter.
- Hesperia's Civic Plaza Park puts town life behind City Hall [Outdoors] Civic Plaza Park gives Hesperia a central gathering space behind City Hall, with an amphitheater, lawn space, community events, and everyday room to walk.
- Hesperia's desert story runs through rail, wood, and Route 66 [History and culture] Hesperia's early growth connects to the Santa Fe railroad, juniper wood shipped to Los Angeles bakers, and Route 66 travel before the drop through Cajon Pass.
- Hi-Desert Nature Museum makes Yucca Valley feel rooted [History and culture] Hi-Desert Nature Museum in Yucca Valley explains the Morongo Basin through desert nature, local history, collections, homesteading, ranching, mining, art, and family exhibits.
- Hidden Falls gives Placer County a foothill trail day [Outdoors] Hidden Falls Regional Park near Auburn has multi-use trails, falls viewing decks, picnic areas, fishing, restrooms, and open space.
- Hidden Hills kept a horse-trail idea alive near the Valley [History and culture] Hidden Hills began as a one-acre-lot ranch-style community, then became its own city to protect a quiet, equestrian way of life near the San Fernando Valley.
- Highland building work has a plan-check rhythm [Home and property] Highland Building & Safety handles plan review, permits, and inspections for city-limit projects, with Planning and grading questions sorted before some plans move forward.
- Highland report requests should start with the city map [Home and property] Highland's report page routes public works and code concerns, but it also reminds residents to confirm whether the spot is inside Highland's city limits.
- Hilbert Museum puts California scenes in the frame [History and culture] Orange's Hilbert Museum focuses on California art, from everyday landscapes and city scenes to animation, illustration, and design tied to the state. Page title: The Hilbert Museum puts California scenes in the frame.
- Hill Canyon turns Thousand Oaks wastewater into reusable water [History and culture] Thousand Oaks' Hill Canyon Treatment Plant treats about 8 million gallons of wastewater each day and turns it into reusable water.
- Hiller Aviation Museum puts San Carlos in the flight story [History and culture] Hiller Aviation Museum at San Carlos Airport connects the city to helicopters, prototypes, aviation invention, hands-on exhibits, and Bay Area flight history.
- Hillsborough's quiet streets come from an old estate-town choice [History and culture] Hillsborough incorporated in 1910, then kept a spacious estate-town feel through large lots, winding roads, and careful residential zoning.
- Historic Folsom is easiest to read on foot [History and culture] Folsom's self-guided historic walking tour links Sutter Street, Leidesdorff Plaza, the railroad turntable and depot, the Truss Bridge, and the American River.
- History and Culture [Topic] Tribal homelands, Spanish and Mexican eras, the Gold Rush, ports, agriculture, film, technology, and public lands.
- History Park keeps old San Jose in walking distance [History and culture] History Park in Kelley Park gathers historic buildings, small museums, streetscapes, and everyday objects that help San Jose feel older than Silicon Valley.
- Hollister Hills is an off-highway park with its own rules [Outdoors] Hollister Hills State Vehicular Recreation Area gives the city a specialized State Parks neighbor with OHV trails, hiking, biking, camping, and clear operating rules.
- Hollister's Citizen Request Center sorts requests by category [Home and property] Hollister's Citizen Request Center separates routine city requests into categories such as code enforcement, parks, flooding, building, fire hazard, and animal services.
- Hollyhock House gives Los Angeles a garden-house landmark [History and culture] Hollyhock House in Barnsdall Art Park connects Frank Lloyd Wright, Aline Barnsdall, garden-house design, public tours, and Los Angeles's first UNESCO World Heritage Site.
- Hollywood Park turned racetrack land into Inglewood's event district [History and culture] Hollywood Park shows Inglewood's recent change from racetrack land into a large sports, entertainment, housing, park, office, and retail district.
- Hollywood Sign began as a hillside real-estate billboard [History and culture] Los Angeles' Hollywood Sign started as the Hollywoodland sign in 1923, a large electric billboard for a hillside real-estate development. Page title: The Hollywood Sign began as a hillside real-estate billboard.
- Holtville wears its Carrot Capital title with a smile [History and culture] Holtville's Carrot Capital identity fits its Imperial Valley farm setting, annual festival season, and small downtown gathering life.
- Home and Property [Topic] Prop 13, county assessors, wildfire risk, seismic zones, coastal rules, and local tax-rate areas.
- Home insurance fallback check [Checklist · Home risk checks] What to try when a home policy is dropped, not renewed, too pricey, or hard to get.
- Hotel del Coronado still carries the old resort dream [History and culture] Hotel del Coronado opened in 1888 and still stands out on Coronado Beach.
- Household movers have a state license check [Home and property] California household movers are handled through the Bureau of Household Goods and Services, with a license lookup and consumer information for moves.
- Hughson still feels tied to the railroad stop and the orchards [History and culture] Hughson began around Hiram Hughson's land and a railroad stop, then kept a Stanislaus County identity shaped by orchards, farm businesses, and local events.
- Hunting licenses and field rules [Cornerstone guide guide] Start with hunter education, licenses, tags, current rules, land access, and nonlead ammunition.
- Huntington Beach alert prep belongs with the beach plan [Home and property] Huntington Beach's emergency management pages cover earthquakes, floods, tsunamis, AlertOC, ReadyOC, and MyHazards, which makes them useful for residents and regular beach visitors.
- Huntington Beach has one report page for many city issues [Rules and licenses] Huntington Beach residents can start many city concerns on the Report An Issue page, but should remember that submitted complaints may become public records.
- Huntington Beach parking citations use the citation center [Rules and licenses] Huntington Beach parking citations can be paid, contested, or checked through the citation processing center, with phone and online options shown on the city's parking enforcement page.
- Huntington Beach permit work starts in HB ACA [Rules and licenses] Huntington Beach uses HB ACA for permit applications, plan check, project status, historical permit research, and recent permit records.
- Huntington Beach's surf story starts with a 1914 pier crowd [History and culture] Huntington Beach built its surf identity over many decades, starting with early demonstrations near the pier and growing into a major surf competition town.
- Huntington Central Park gives the beach city a big inland green [Outdoors] Huntington Central Park is the largest city-owned park in Orange County, giving Huntington Beach lakes, paths, open grass, trees, and everyday local space away from the sand.
- Huntington Park plan check comes before many business openings [Home and property] Huntington Park building and business work often begins with zoning and plan check questions before a business license can move forward.
- Huntington Park's name started as a streetcar bet [History and culture] Huntington Park took its name from an effort to bring Henry Huntington's Pacific Electric Railway through the young development, linking the city name to early streetcar growth.
- Huron calls itself the cornucopia of the San Joaquin Valley [History and culture] Huron's westside Valley story is tied to farm work, produce routes, Lassen Avenue, nearby Interstate 5, and a city identity built around agriculture.
- Hurst Ranch keeps West Covina's farm years in view [History and culture] Hurst Ranch in West Covina is a small historical center with ranching, schoolhouse, store, barn, and family-home pieces from the San Gabriel Valley.
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- ID, vital records, and address changes [Official link · Start here] Find the right first stop for a driver license, state ID, REAL ID, DMV address change, vital record, court name or gender update, voter address, Social Security card, passport, or mail forwarding.
- Imperial Beach Pier keeps the town pointed at the Pacific [History and culture] Imperial Beach's pier, plaza, surf history, and broad beach views make the city's small-town coast identity easy to understand.
- Imperial Beach water days need the county water check [Outdoors] Imperial Beach is a classic San Diego County beach town, but beach-water advisories and closures can change by day, weather, testing, and posted signs.
- In Carlsbad, first check whether a project is in the coastal zone [Home and property] Carlsbad coastal-zone projects can need extra permit checks, including whether the city or California Coastal Commission has approval authority.
- In Los Angeles city, ZIMAS is the first property map [Rules and licenses] Los Angeles City Planning says ZIMAS shows zoning and other property information for addresses in the city.
- In Los Angeles County, ask whether the county is your local layer [Rules and licenses] Los Angeles County has 88 cities and large unincorporated areas, so the first local question is which layer serves the address.
- In Orange County, your supervisor district is part of the local map [Rules and licenses] Orange County divides cities and unincorporated areas into five supervisorial districts, so the district layer can help route county questions.
- Indian Wells grew from a desert water stop into a tennis town [History and culture] Indian Wells began around desert water, stage travel, and date palms before becoming known for golf resorts and major tennis.
- Indio building permits and inspections run through CSS [Rules and licenses] Indio uses Citizen Self Service for building permit applications, tracking, management, and inspection scheduling for online permit work.
- Indio business licenses use the city service portal [Rules and licenses] Indio requires a business license for people or companies transacting business in the city, and Citizen Self Service handles business license and permit work.
- Indio event plans need the city permit calendar early [Rules and licenses] Indio's Special Events staff coordinates event permits, with major event review across city departments and extra attention near large music festival activity.
- Indio heat plans should include a real indoor backup [Home and property] Indio's desert heat is easier to manage when households know where the city posts cooling-center information and which indoor option works for their own family.
- Indio water bills go through the Indio Water Authority [Home and property] Indio Water Authority handles water billing, online payment, water usage review, customer service, forms, rates, fees, rebates, and start-stop service links.
- Industry has an old rancho story hiding in plain sight [History and culture] City of Industry is known for business, but the Workman and Temple Family Homestead Museum tells an older Rancho La Puente and Old Spanish Trail story.
- Inglewood alerts matter on regular days and event days [Home and property] Inglewood residents, workers, and visitors can use Alert SouthBay and event-day resources to follow emergency notices, traffic updates, weather alerts, and public safety information.
- Inglewood building permits begin with Building Safety [Rules and licenses] Inglewood's Building Safety Division handles plan review, permit issuance, and inspections for building projects inside the city.
- Inglewood event days go smoother when you check Park and Go first [Cars and driving] Inglewood's Park and Go event-parking program serves SoFi Stadium and Hollywood Park with remote lots, advance reservations, and shuttle service to the transit facility.
- Inglewood event parking works better when you plan before arrival [Cars and driving] Inglewood's SoFi Stadium and Hollywood Park event area has city parking pages, remote park-and-ride options, residential permit rules, and traffic planning details to check before a big event.
- Inglewood has a separate portal for visible city issues [Home and property] Inglewood's Report an Issue page routes service requests for missed trash pickup, bulky item pickup, illegal dumping, photos, landmarks, and request-number tracking.
- Inglewood separates business licenses from business tax certificates [Rules and licenses] Inglewood uses a business tax certificate for anyone doing business in the city, while some business types may also need a separate regulatory license.
- Inland Rail Trail gives Vista a calmer way across town [Outdoors] The Inland Rail Trail is a separated bikeway and walkway through North County, with Vista segments that help connect neighborhoods, streets, and daily destinations. Page title: The Inland Rail Trail gives Vista a calmer way across town.
- Integratron keeps Landers wonderfully hard to explain [History and culture] The Integratron in Landers is a wooden desert dome tied to George Van Tassel, UFO-era ideas, unusual acoustics, restoration work, and sound-bath visits. Page title: The Integratron keeps Landers wonderfully hard to explain.
- iPlacentia can send photos and locations with a request [Home and property] The iPlacentia app lets residents report issues such as potholes, graffiti, and streetlight outages, then tracks the request after it is sent to the right department.
- Iron Horse Trail gives Danville a regional walking and biking spine [Outdoors] The Iron Horse Regional Trail runs through Danville as a daily route tied to old rail right-of-way, parks, schools, transit, and downtown movement.
- Iron Horse Trail is San Ramon's everyday trail spine [Outdoors] The Iron Horse Trail runs through San Ramon as a flat paved route that links neighborhoods, schools, shopping areas, transit, and regional trails. Page title: The Iron Horse Trail is San Ramon's everyday trail spine.
- Irvine business licenses should start with the address [Rules and licenses] Irvine business owners should check the business address and zoning fit before treating a business license as the only step, with online application and renewal paths available through the city.
- Irvine emergency notices work better when your cell is registered [Home and property] Irvine uses AlertOC for time-sensitive emergency notifications, and residents can register home, mobile, business, email, text, and accessible-device contacts.
- Irvine grew from ranch land into a planned city [History and culture] Irvine's city shape comes from ranch land, UC Irvine planning, villages, greenbelts, business areas, and a master plan drawn before incorporation.
- Irvine service requests start with Access Irvine [Rules and licenses] Access Irvine and the city's service request pages help residents report non-emergency city issues such as potholes, graffiti, tree concerns, park maintenance, parking complaints, and streetlight outages.
- Irvine utilities are split across several providers [Home and property] Irvine residents usually use IRWD for water and sewer, Waste Management for trash and recycling, SCE or OCPA for electricity pieces, and SoCalGas for gas.
- Irvine's historical museum keeps one ranch house piece standing [History and culture] The Irvine Historical Museum sits in an old San Joaquin Ranch building, giving the planned city a small, physical link to its ranch past.
- Irwindale turned San Gabriel Valley rock into city history [History and culture] Irwindale's sand, gravel, and rock helped shape its economy, its cityhood, and the unusual quarry landscape people notice in the San Gabriel Valley.
- Isleton's Main Street remembers Delta farm work and community life [History and culture] Isleton's historic Main Street grew with Sacramento River trade, Delta farming, canneries, and Chinese and Japanese districts now recognized by the National Park Service.
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- Jackson has one of the Mother Lode's deepest mine stories [History and culture] Jackson's Kennedy Mine shows how deep, technical, and long-lasting the Mother Lode gold story became after the first rush.
- Jacob Myers Park gives Riverbank a Stanislaus River front yard [Outdoors] Jacob Myers Park is Riverbank's largest park, with Stanislaus River access, a paved trail, picnic areas, a playground, a dog park, and group camping.
- Japanese Tea Garden is a quiet Golden Gate Park story [History and culture] San Francisco's Japanese Tea Garden began as an 1894 fair exhibit and grew into the oldest public Japanese garden in the United States.
- Japantown gives San Jose a small district with a long memory [History and culture] San Jose Japantown is a compact neighborhood with food, shops, cultural anchors, and a deeper history tied to Japanese American life in Santa Clara Valley.
- Japantown's Peace Plaza sits at the center of a rare district [History and culture] San Francisco's Japantown is one of the few remaining Japantowns in the United States, with Peace Plaza serving as a central gathering place.
- Jelly Belly factory gives Fairfield a sweet factory-tour stop [History and culture] Fairfield's Jelly Belly Visitor Center connects candy history, self-guided factory tours, a public tour lane, and a family-friendly stop near I-80. Page title: The Jelly Belly factory gives Fairfield a sweet factory-tour stop.
- Jensen Alvarado Ranch keeps farm life close in Jurupa Valley [History and culture] Jensen Alvarado Ranch is a 30-acre historic county park where an 1870s ranch house, orchards, animals, and local landmark history sit inside a growing city.
- Joaquin Miller Park gives Oakland redwoods above the city [Outdoors] Joaquin Miller Park covers 500 acres of Oakland hills with redwood groves, oak woodlands, creeksides, wet meadows, trails, and picnic areas.
- Joe Davies Heritage Airpark shows Palmdale's aerospace side [History and culture] Joe Davies Heritage Airpark in Palmdale displays aircraft tied to Air Force Plant 42, including retired military aircraft, a B-2 Spirit model, a missile, aircraft components, and free admission.
- John Anson Ford Park is Bell Gardens' recreation campus [Outdoors] John Anson Ford Park gathers Bell Gardens sports, gym use, golf programs, youth and adult recreation, and a major aquatics project in one civic area.
- John Muir's Martinez home began as a fruit-ranch story [History and culture] John Muir National Historic Site in Martinez connects conservation history with orchards, family life, Mount Wanda, and the Strentzel-Muir home.
- John Muir's Martinez home opens into Mount Wanda hills [History and culture] John Muir National Historic Site ties a Martinez home site to Mount Wanda's oak woods, grasslands, family story, and short hill hikes.
- Johnny Cash Trail turns Folsom's prison edge into a public art walk [Outdoors] Folsom's Johnny Cash Trail is a paved bike and walking route near Folsom State Prison, with bridges, trail links, and a growing public art plan tied to Johnny Cash's local connection.
- Jose Higuera Adobe gives Milpitas a foothill history stop [History and culture] Jose Higuera Adobe Park connects Milpitas to Rancho Los Tularcitos, Calera Creek, old crops, cactus hedges, and a neighborhood park at the foothill edge. Page title: The Jose Higuera Adobe gives Milpitas a foothill history stop.
- Jurupa Mountains Discovery Center turns geology into a family stop [History and culture] Jurupa Mountains Discovery Center in Jurupa Valley has weekend hours, fossil exhibits, dinosaur eggs, minerals, mining displays, gardens, and a clear visit page.
- Jurupa Valley bulky pickup works best when Burrtec is scheduled first [Rules and licenses] Jurupa Valley residents can use Burrtec for bulky item pickup, street sweeping questions, battery recycling, used oil, and household hazardous waste links.
- Jurupa Valley projects may need planning before building [Home and property] Jurupa Valley separates building permits, planning permits, Accela submittals, inspections, and land-use review, so new development may need planning first.
- Jurupa Valley uses business registration, not a license [Rules and licenses] Jurupa Valley requires a Business Registration Certificate for local business activity, while permits, home occupations, building, planning, grading, and encroachment questions may be separate.
- Jury summons questions go through the local court [Rules and licenses] California jury service is handled through local courts, so the summons, court website, and jury portal matter ahead of a broad web search.
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- Kaiser Steel changed Fontana from farm town to industrial city [History and culture] Kaiser Steel opened in Fontana during World War II and left a lasting mark on local jobs, medicine, industry, and the Inland Empire's working landscape.
- Kearney Park gives Fresno a county-park day with a mansion story [History and culture] Kearney Park adds a Fresno-area park day with picnic space, sports fields, shade, and the Kearney Mansion Museum nearby.
- Kerman's first story is a water stop, a robbery, and farms [History and culture] Kerman grew from a Southern Pacific water stop named Collis into an irrigated farm town with one of the valley's memorable train robbery stories.
- Kern County has rural community plan maps to check [Rules and licenses] Kern County keeps planning documents and rural community plan maps for local land-use questions.
- Kern County property tax starts with the portal, then the right office [Money and taxes] Kern County's property tax portal connects the Assessor-Recorder, Treasurer-Tax Collector, and other offices so parcel value and bill questions do not get mixed together.
- Kern River Parkway gives Bakersfield a long outdoor thread [Outdoors] The Kern River Parkway, city parks, and biking resources give Bakersfield a clear outdoor line along the river. Page title: The Kern River Parkway gives Bakersfield a long outdoor thread.
- King City grew where wheat, rail, and the Salinas River met [History and culture] King City's story starts with Charles King, dry Salinas Valley land, wheat farming, the railroad, and a town that helped anchor southern Monterey County.
- King tides turn beach plans into a timing question [Outdoors] The California King Tides Project gives statewide king tide windows and a local tide map, so coastal visits work better when date, hour, and beach shape are checked together.
- Kingsburg keeps the Sun-Maid raisin story close to the fields [History and culture] Kingsburg's Sun-Maid connection ties the city to Central Valley raisins, grower cooperation, dried-fruit marketing, vineyard work, and a small-town food identity.
- Knights Ferry gives Stanislaus County an old river stop [Outdoors] Knights Ferry is a Stanislaus River stop with recreation areas, old settlement history, and a covered-bridge landmark.
- Knott's Berry Farm grew from berries, chicken dinners, and crowds [History and culture] Buena Park's Knott's Berry Farm story began with a family farm, boysenberries, Cordelia Knott's chicken dinners, and small attractions that grew into a major theme park.
- Knox House keeps El Cajon's old hotel story close [History and culture] The Knox House Museum is an old hotel building that El Cajon bought, moved, and kept as a local-history focus near downtown. Page title: The Knox House keeps El Cajon's old hotel story close.
- Kohl Mansion gives Burlingame a grand hilltop story [History and culture] Kohl Mansion, once called The Oaks, adds a layered Burlingame story of Peninsula wealth, school life, music, events, and a lasting brick landmark.
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- LA County business name filing starts with the County Clerk [Rules and licenses] Los Angeles County fictitious business name filings are handled by the Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk, separate from city business tax, seller's permits, and state business filings. Page title: An LA County business name filing starts with the County Clerk.
- LA County pet licenses start with Animal Care [Rules and licenses] Los Angeles County pet licensing can be handled online, by mail, or at an animal care center, with rabies and sterilization proof often part of the paperwork.
- LA County property tax questions split between value and payment [Money and taxes] Los Angeles County property tax questions usually split between the Assessor for value and ownership records, and the Treasurer and Tax Collector for bills and payments.
- LA County records start with the exact record type [Rules and licenses] Los Angeles County splits record errands between recorder services, county clerk services, and voter services, so the fastest first step is naming the record you need.
- La Habra building work starts in the online portal [Rules and licenses] La Habra routes plan submittals and building permit applications through its online portal, while business licenses and planning permits sit on separate city application paths.
- La Habra Heights has the hillside roots of the Hass avocado [History and culture] La Habra Heights grew as an avocado-and-citrus hillside community, and one lucky seedling here became the Hass avocado.
- La Habra reports split by what you need to tell the city [Home and property] La Habra's report page separates online police reports, graffiti, street light outages, and general online requests through its Citizen Request Management service.
- La Habra trash service and bulky pickup run through CR&R [Home and property] La Habra uses CR&R for waste collection, while residential accounts are billed by the city and bulky pickups are handled by appointment.
- La Habra's children's museum keeps a train-depot story alive [History and culture] The Children's Museum at La Habra gives the city a family stop inside a historic 1923 train depot, with hands-on exhibits and local history built in.
- La Mesa business licenses depend on how you work in the city [Rules and licenses] La Mesa business licensing covers in-city businesses, home occupations, out-of-city businesses working in La Mesa, contractors, delivery work, and new businesses before they open.
- La Mesa uses SeeClickFix for non-emergency reports [Home and property] La Mesa uses SeeClickFix for non-emergency city issues, while police concerns, sewer backups, overflows, and odors have separate phone paths.
- La Mesa's Secret Stairs turn the hills into a public walk [Outdoors] La Mesa's Secret Stairs in the Mt. Nebo and Windsor Hills area give walkers a steep public stair route with city-posted urban trail options.
- La Mirada Public Works is the first call for many street issues [Home and property] La Mirada Public Works handles many roads, storm drains, signals, streetlights, parks, facilities, encroachment permits, and graffiti removal questions.
- La Mirada Regional Park is the city and county outdoor anchor [Outdoors] La Mirada Regional Park brings together county parkland, a lake, sports fields, picnic areas, hills, trees, and the Splash! aquatics center next door.
- LA move-ins often start with LADWP service [Home and property] In the City of Los Angeles, LADWP is the key place to start, stop, or transfer water and power service, with some trash or sanitation steps depending on the address.
- La Palma was once Dairyland, and the old name still explains a lot [History and culture] La Palma began as Dairyland, with dairies packed into a small Orange County city before the name changed and civic spaces filled in.
- La Puente's name and walnut history still explain the city [History and culture] La Puente's old bridge name, Rancho La Puente roots, fruit and walnut groves, and packing-plant history give the city a clear local origin story.
- La Purisima gives Lompoc a full mission-park story [History and culture] La Purisima Mission State Historic Park near Lompoc has restored mission buildings, Chumash context, living-history programs, and a CCC restoration layer.
- LA River feels different in the Glendale Narrows [Outdoors] The Glendale Narrows shows the Los Angeles River as a real city river, with softer-bottom habitat, bike paths, bridges, and a recreation zone near Elysian Valley. Page title: The LA River feels different in the Glendale Narrows.
- La Verne began as Lordsburg, a railroad land-sale town [History and culture] La Verne's early story starts with Lordsburg, the Santa Fe Railroad, a big 1887 land sale, and a hotel that became a college building.
- Lafayette Reservoir is the city's easy outdoor escape [Outdoors] Lafayette Reservoir gives the city a close-in recreation area for walking, fishing, boating, picnics, and hillside views.
- LAFD brush clearance status can be checked by parcel [Home and property] LAFD has a parcel status page for brush clearance notices, photos, compliance status, and mailed APN or PIN information.
- Lagoon Valley gives Vacaville a lake, trails, and Pena Adobe history [Outdoors] Lagoon Valley Park in Vacaville combines a non-motorized lake, multi-use trails, dog space, picnic areas, and the Pena Adobe Historic Area.
- Laguna Beach has a summer show where paintings come alive [History and culture] The Pageant of the Masters grew from Laguna Beach's art colony roots and still stages famous artworks as live, carefully lit scenes.
- Laguna Niguel bulky pickup has a yearly free limit [Home and property] Laguna Niguel residents get two free bulky-item pickups per calendar year, with CR&R handling scheduling and extra pickups available for a charge.
- Laguna Niguel grew from rancho land into an early planned community [History and culture] Laguna Niguel's name reaches back to Rancho Niguel and a Juaneño village name, while the modern city grew from one of California's early master-planned community efforts.
- Laguna Niguel has a permit portal, but no city business license [Rules and licenses] Laguna Niguel uses an online Permit Center for building permits and inspections, while many business openings move through approvals rather than a city business license.
- Laguna Niguel Regional Park is the city's easy lake loop [Outdoors] Laguna Niguel Regional Park gives the city a central county park with a 44-acre lake, trails, fishing, picnic areas, and simple license checks.
- Laguna Niguel Regional Park puts a lake at the center of town life [Outdoors] Laguna Niguel Regional Park has a 44-acre lake, shaded turf, fishing, picnic shelters, trails, bridges, tennis and pickleball courts, and history tied to Rancho Niguel.
- Laguna Woods grew from ranch land into a city built around later life [History and culture] Laguna Woods connects Moulton Ranch, Leisure World Laguna Hills, retirement-community planning, and a 1999 cityhood vote.
- Lake Elsinore business licenses can be handled online [Rules and licenses] Lake Elsinore lets businesses apply for or renew a business license online, with separate paths for contractors and businesses based outside city limits.
- Lake Elsinore keeps its museum close to Main Street [History and culture] Lake Elsinore's Cultural Center and Historical Society Museum keep local artifacts, research materials, and Main Street history close to the city's lake-town core.
- Lake Elsinore lake days can need more than one pass [Outdoors] Lake Elsinore separates lake use, launch and park access, one-day passes, annual passes, vessel rules, and Lake Watch updates, so a boating day is worth checking before arrival.
- Lake Elsinore permits and inspections run through two steps [Home and property] Lake Elsinore uses its Citizen Self-Service Portal for permit applications and a separate inspection line for building inspection scheduling.
- Lake Elsinore problem reports need the subject address [Home and property] Lake Elsinore problem reports can be sent through Alert LE or by calling Code Enforcement, and the city asks for the subject location so the request can be processed.
- Lake Forest building permits can move through the city web portal [Home and property] Lake Forest encourages building permit applications and construction documents through its web portal, with the Permit Center still available for routing and counter questions.
- Lake Forest skips the business-license step, but not the zoning check [Rules and licenses] Lake Forest does not use a city business license, but new businesses may still need zoning review, special permits, or a home-occupancy self-check before opening.
- Lake Forest trash service comes with extra cleanout options [Home and property] Lake Forest uses CR&R for trash service, with bulky-item pickups, household hazardous waste options, compost events, and curb rules that help avoid missed pickup.
- Lake Merritt gives Oakland an everyday lake loop [Outdoors] Lake Merritt is one of Oakland's most accessible park loops, with trails, gardens, boating, and bird watching close to downtown.
- Lake Oroville gives Butte County a big Feather River water day [Outdoors] Lake Oroville State Recreation Area has a major reservoir, dam views, boating, trails, camping, swimming, fishing, and Feather River history.
- Lake Perris is Perris's state-park water day [Outdoors] Lake Perris State Recreation Area gives Perris a large state-managed outdoor anchor with swimming, boating, camping, trails, fishing, and seasonal access details.
- Lake Poway and Blue Sky are Poway's outdoor pair [Outdoors] Lake Poway and Blue Sky Ecological Reserve give the city water, trails, habitat education, family programs, and practical fee checks close together.
- Lakeport keeps its downtown turned toward Clear Lake [Outdoors] Lakeport's parks and lakefront gathering spaces show why the city works as a small county-seat town with a strong Clear Lake rhythm.
- Lakeport's old courthouse holds a county memory room [History and culture] The Historic Courthouse Museum in downtown Lakeport helps Lake County tell its Native American, geologic, pioneer, and courtroom stories in one place.
- Lakewood building permits use OpenGov and a contract-services layer [Home and property] Lakewood Building and Safety uses OpenGov for permit applications, plan review, comments, payments, status tracking, and resubmittals.
- Lakewood bulky-item pickup is scheduled through EDCO [Home and property] Lakewood trash customers can schedule bulky-item pickup through EDCO before their regular trash day, with city service staff available for local questions.
- Lakewood park gatherings use the reservation pages [Outdoors] Lakewood has community rooms, picnic shelters, athletic fields, pools, and park spaces with different reservation paths, resident priority, and rental details.
- Lakewood Plan explains why Lakewood works differently [History and culture] Lakewood's city story includes the Lakewood Plan, a contract-services model that helped shape how many California cities think about local government. Page title: The Lakewood Plan explains why Lakewood works differently.
- Lakewood service requests can start online [Home and property] Lakewood's Report an Issue / Request Service page gives residents an online, app, phone, and email path for common city-service questions.
- Lakewood's Pan Am Fiesta began with a handshake [History and culture] Lakewood's Pan Am Fiesta began in the mid-1940s as a neighborly friendship effort and grew into the city's longest-running community event.
- Lancaster alerts and cooling centers are high-desert basics [Home and property] Lancaster's alert and cooling-center pages help residents prepare for high winds, road closures, earthquakes, heat, and other local conditions common in the Antelope Valley.
- Lancaster building permits often start in Accela [Rules and licenses] Lancaster routes many building permit requests, fee payments, uploads, status checks, and inspection steps through the Accela Citizen Access portal.
- Lancaster has a road that plays music under your tires [History and culture] Lancaster's Musical Road began as a Honda ad project, became a noisy local problem, and survived as one of the Antelope Valley's strangest roadside stops.
- Lancaster has one report-a-problem page for many local issues [Rules and licenses] Lancaster's Report a Problem page routes questions, compliments, and concerns into topic forms so the right city team can respond.
- Lancaster utilities are a provider list, not one city counter [Rules and licenses] Lancaster residents may need different providers for power, water, gas, trash, recycling, and organics, with WM handling waste collection and many single-family trash charges appearing on the property tax bill.
- Lancaster's poppy reserve is worth checking before the drive [Outdoors] Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve is a signature Lancaster-area stop, but bloom strength, trail conditions, and timing should be checked before the drive.
- Lanterman House holds a La Canada Flintridge valley story [History and culture] Lanterman House connects La Canada Flintridge to early settlers, health seekers, reinforced concrete design, family life, gardens, archives, and local preservation.
- Larkspur's old downtown still carries the town's early shape [History and culture] Larkspur's Magnolia Avenue, City Hall, historic district, ferry landing, and brick kiln give the Marin town several easy history stops.
- Lathrop garbage service is billed apart from city utilities [Home and property] Lathrop uses Republic Services for residential garbage, with separate garbage billing from city utility billing, a three-cart system, and scheduled bulk item pickups.
- Lathrop's river-edge growth is organized around trails and parks [Home and property] River Islands and Mossdale Landing show how Lathrop's west-side growth uses lakes, trails, village centers, parks, and San Joaquin River edges.
- Lava Beds tells a Tulelake-area story written into rough ground [History and culture] Lava Beds National Monument near Tulelake combines lava tube caves, high desert, Modoc homeland, and Captain Jack's Stronghold, where the land itself shaped history.
- Lawndale began with a second try at an opening day [History and culture] Lawndale's early story starts with Charles B. Hopper, a 1905 town plan, and a second opening day in 1906 that finally drew the first settlers.
- Legacy Fields shows Tracy's sports side and its water-smart side [Outdoors] Legacy Fields Sports Complex in Tracy is a large north-side sports project where non-potable recycled water now irrigates fields while drinking-water fixtures stay on potable water.
- Lemon Creek Park keeps Walnut's ranch-house layer close [History and culture] Lemon Creek Park pairs picnic space with the restored William R. Rowland Adobe Ranch House and one very old wisteria vine.
- Leo J. Ryan Park gives Foster City a lagoon center [Outdoors] Leo J. Ryan Park brings Foster City's planned lagoon setting into one easy public place, with lawns, paths, water access, and a gazebo by the water.
- Leonis Adobe gives Old Town Calabasas a real anchor [History and culture] Leonis Adobe in Calabasas connects Old Town to 1800s ranch life, Miguel Leonis, Espiritu Chijulla, preservation, living history, and Los Angeles landmark status.
- Liberty Station gives San Diego a second life for Navy land [History and culture] Liberty Station grew from the former Naval Training Center San Diego, where recruits first arrived in 1923, into a public district for arts, food, parks, and history.
- License and ID renewals have a few paths [Cars and driving] DMV renewal pages help people sort online renewal, mail renewal, office visits, address updates, and renewal status without mixing them together.
- Lincoln separates public works, code, and police reports [Home and property] Lincoln's Report a Problem page separates Public Works issues, code concerns, railroad crossing emergencies, mosquito or standing water concerns, and police non-emergencies.
- Lincoln utility setup covers water, sewer, and garbage [Home and property] Lincoln utility service starts with a city utility request, and the same local system helps with garbage cans, green waste schedules, missed cans, and special waste questions.
- Lindsay's citrus story started with early orange trees [History and culture] Lindsay's orange, olive, rail, and farming history make the Tulare County city easier to picture beyond Highway 65.
- Little Manila keeps Stockton's Filipino story close to downtown [History and culture] Little Manila in Stockton remembers a Filipino American neighborhood shaped by farm labor, hotels, restaurants, dance halls, organizing, loss, and community work.
- Little Saigon gives Westminster a bright cultural center [History and culture] Little Saigon in Westminster connects Orange County to Vietnamese American food, shops, language, family trips, memory, and community identity around the Bolsa Avenue area.
- Live Oak grew from a rail stop, a store, and a few early houses [History and culture] Live Oak's early Sutter County story runs through A. M. McGrew's first home, the California and Oregon Railroad, and a small town center by the 1870s.
- Live Oak Park gives Sutter County a Feather River day-use anchor [Outdoors] Live Oak Park and Recreation Area in Sutter County has Feather River day use, a boat launch, camping stalls, picnic space, basic rules, and county-run hours to check.
- Livermore business licenses and permits split into two first stops [Rules and licenses] Livermore sends business license questions through Finance and building or project questions through the Permit Center, so a new business space may need both lanes.
- Livermore has a light bulb that became a tiny legend [History and culture] Livermore's Centennial Light Bulb has been shining since it was first installed at a fire department hose cart house in 1901.
- Livermore has a science doorway at the LLNL Discovery Center [History and culture] Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory's Discovery Center gives Livermore a public science stop with exhibits, hands-on displays, visitor rules, and a virtual tour.
- Livermore Public Works reports depend on the kind of issue [Rules and licenses] Livermore's Public Works report page separates water, street, landscaping, garbage, airport, and dumping concerns, with different phone or online paths depending on what is happening.
- Livermore water and sewer questions start with the provider [Home and property] Livermore utility billing covers Livermore Municipal Water and sewer charges, but some addresses need a provider lookup before opening or paying an account.
- Living Coast gives Chula Vista a close look at the marsh [Outdoors] The Living Coast Discovery Center sits on the San Diego Bay National Wildlife Refuge, where Chula Vista visitors can learn about Sweetwater Marsh and coastal wildlife. Page title: The Living Coast gives Chula Vista a close look at the marsh.
- Livingston turns sweet potato harvest into a family weekend [History and culture] Livingston's Sweet Potato Festival gives the Merced County farm town a harvest-centered tradition with food, family events, and local pride.
- Local office router [Official link · Start here] A practical map for deciding whether to start with a city, county, state agency, court, utility, or special district.
- Locke is a small Delta town with a rare Chinese American story [History and culture] Locke in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta is one of California's clearest places to see Chinese American agricultural, business, and community history in a still-standing rural town.
- Lodi has separate online paths for permits and fix-it reports [Rules and licenses] Lodi residents can use eTRAKiT for online permitting and the FixiT report form for local concerns, while Public Works keeps a 24/7 emergency number for urgent utility or street issues.
- Lodi Lake is the city's easy shade-and-water outing [Outdoors] Lodi Lake gives the city a practical outdoor stop with a shaded nature trail, beach season, water access, and simple pet and closure rules to check.
- Lodi special collection events handle the odd stuff [Home and property] Lodi residents can use special collection events for household hazardous waste, e-waste, curbside cleanup, and dollar dump day instead of guessing with regular carts.
- Lodi utility starts need ID and proof of the address [Home and property] Lodi utility start and stop requests use city applications, with new residential service asking for a completed application, picture ID, and rental agreement or proof of ownership.
- Lodi was where A&W started with a root beer stand [History and culture] A&W traces its start to Roy Allen's 1919 root beer stand in Lodi, a small roadside beginning that later grew into a national restaurant name.
- Loma Linda's Blue Zone reputation is part of its local identity [History and culture] Loma Linda is known as a Blue Zone city, with a health-focused culture tied to the local Seventh-day Adventist community and medical institutions.
- Lomita's railroad museum fits a lot of train story on one block [History and culture] Lomita Railroad Museum gives the South Bay a compact railroad stop with a depot-style building, locomotives, cabooses, and freight cars.
- Lompoc trash service starts with the utility account [Home and property] Lompoc solid waste service starts after the utility account is set up, then the Solid Waste Division handles carts, bulky pickup, landfill questions, and hazardous waste appointments.
- Long Beach business licenses start with the business type [Rules and licenses] Long Beach routes business-license questions through Financial Management, with different paths for online applications, in-person help, renewals, location changes, and required extra permits.
- Long Beach parking citations start with the city parking page [Cars and driving] Long Beach parking citations can be paid or contested through the city's parking citation page, with timing and documentation important for review requests.
- Long Beach permit projects work better when you pick the right counter [Home and property] Long Beach Permit Center services separate building permits, online submittals, plan review, status, records, payments, public works, right-of-way, sewer, water, and gas-line questions.
- Long Beach street sweeping depends on the posted curb [Cars and driving] Long Beach street sweeping parking rules depend on posted signs, weekday time windows, holiday exceptions, and colored curbs that may still be enforced on holidays.
- Long Beach Transit is its own local bus layer [Cars and driving] Long Beach Transit handles local bus trips, while TAP, Metro rail, visitor routes, and waterfront trips each need their own quick check.
- Long Beach trash questions have a request navigator [Home and property] Long Beach's refuse page separates special pickups, dumped items, cart changes, and missed pickups into separate online request forms.
- Long Beach tsunami planning starts with knowing the zone [Home and property] Long Beach encourages residents and workers to check whether a home, job, school, or regular stop is in a tsunami hazard area and to know the route out.
- Long Beach utility bills start with the city portal [Home and property] Long Beach utility customers can use the MyUtility Portal for bills, quick pay, start-stop-transfer service, payment plans, and account help; trash and recycling details sit with city environmental services.
- Loomis kept its fruit-shed heart when it became a town [History and culture] Loomis grew around the railroad, fruit packing sheds, and a local vote to protect its small-town character from being swallowed by nearby growth.
- Los Alamitos grew from sugar beets into an air-base town [History and culture] Los Alamitos has a layered story: rancho land, sugar beets, a worker township, Katella Avenue, a Navy airfield, and cityhood in 1960.
- Los Altos Hills uses pathways like rural sidewalks [History and culture] Los Altos Hills incorporated in 1956 and built its identity around a rural residential feel, open hills, and an 80-mile pathway system.
- Los Altos still has apricot roots under Silicon Valley [History and culture] Los Altos History Museum and the Heritage Orchard keep the city's apricot-growing past close to today's Silicon Valley setting.
- Los Angeles 311 is the first stop for many neighborhood fixes [Rules and licenses] MyLA311 gives Los Angeles residents one place to start many non-emergency city requests, including graffiti, potholes, bulky-item pickup, dumping, streetlights, parking enforcement, and city information.
- Los Angeles business registration starts with the Office of Finance [Rules and licenses] Los Angeles business owners usually start with the Office of Finance for a Business Tax Registration Certificate, then check whether the business needs other city permits.
- Los Angeles hillside brush clearance is an address-by-address check [Home and property] Los Angeles brush clearance rules matter most for properties in fire-prone hillside areas, and LAFD keeps parcel and requirement pages for owners to check.
- Los Angeles State Historic Park turns old rail land into open space [History and culture] Los Angeles State Historic Park sits on former Southern Pacific rail land near Chinatown, with landscape details that point back to river, rail, and arrival stories.
- Los Angeles transit works better when Metro and DASH are both on the map [Cars and driving] Metro handles the big bus and rail network, while LADOT DASH fills many shorter neighborhood trips inside the city.
- Los Banos street reports ask for the nearest cross street [Home and property] Los Banos has a street issue form for problems like illegal dumping, potholes, and streetlights, and the form works best with a cross street or pole detail.
- Los Gatos Creek Trail gives Campbell an everyday outdoor connector [Outdoors] Campbell's Los Gatos Creek Trail section links walking, biking, parks, dog rules, and creek-side movement through the city.
- Los Rios Historic District connects the mission, depot, and old streets [History and culture] San Juan Capistrano's Los Rios Historic District brings together adobe homes, railroad history, residential streets, planning maps, and mission-era context.
- Loyalton's old boom shows up in rail and timber stories [History and culture] Loyalton grew from a Sierra Valley settlement into a timber town after the Boca & Loyalton Railroad arrived, and that working history still explains the city.
- Luther Burbank's gardens keep Santa Rosa's plant story alive [History and culture] Luther Burbank Home and Gardens is a downtown Santa Rosa historic site tied to the horticulturist's home, gardens, plant-breeding work, and long local legacy.
- Lynwood Breeze and the C Line make local transit easier to read [Cars and driving] Lynwood has its own Breeze trolley routes, a C Line station identity, and local transfer details that can help riders avoid guessing.
- Lynwood separates business licenses from everyday service requests [Rules and licenses] Lynwood residents and businesses have separate doors for business licenses, online building permits, and everyday requests such as graffiti, bulky items, parking enforcement, water service, and animal control.
- Lynwood trash service changed hands in 2026 [Home and property] Lynwood's trash service provider changed to WM in May 2026, which can matter for bills, carts, missed pickups, and old contact information.
- Lynwood's name rides through its old rail-and-dairy story [History and culture] Lynwood's name is tied to the Lynwood Dairy and Creamery, while the Pacific Electric Railway helped turn the name into a community marker.
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- Madera business licenses usually need a planning check first [Rules and licenses] Madera asks local business license applicants to clear the proposed location and activity with Planning before the license application is processed.
- Madera County alerts work better when your phone is already signed up [Home and property] Madera County emergency pages point residents to MC Alert, which can send texts for a fire or emergency in their area.
- Madera County Museum keeps the old courthouse working as memory [History and culture] The old Madera County Courthouse now holds local museum rooms for farming, flumes, military history, family stories, and the original courtroom.
- Madera County Museum turns the old courthouse into a local memory house [History and culture] Madera County Museum sits in the old 1900 courthouse, with three floors of exhibits on agriculture, pioneer families, military history, water, and the original courtroom.
- Madera County permits work better with an address or APN [Rules and licenses] Madera County's online permit page asks people to have the property address or Assessor's Parcel Number ready before they apply, pay, or check permit status.
- Madera curbside cleanup has a set-out routine [Home and property] Madera's residential curbside cleanup helps with bulky household items, but it has city-limit, timing, pile-size, sorting, and hazardous-waste rules.
- Madera Metro covers fixed routes and curbside Dial-A-Ride [Cars and driving] Madera Metro provides fixed-route bus service plus Dial-A-Ride and ADA paratransit options, with route and scheduling help through the city's transit office.
- Madera outdoor watering starts with the current city stage [Rules and licenses] Madera posts outdoor water-use regulations by stage, including watering days, time windows, runoff limits, and hose rules for city residents.
- Madonna Inn made San Luis Obispo roadside style its own [History and culture] Madonna Inn in San Luis Obispo has used themed rooms, pink dining, cake, stone, color, and roadside hospitality to become a Central Coast landmark.
- Madrona Marsh gives Torrance a rare wetland walk in town [Outdoors] Madrona Marsh is a City of Torrance preserve and nature center where local rules, hours, programs, and restoration work shape a simple nature visit.
- Maidu Museum keeps Roseville connected to Nisenan Maidu history [History and culture] Maidu Museum and Historic Site in Roseville shares Nisenan Maidu history through museum exhibits, contemporary Native art, an outdoor trail, petroglyphs, bedrock mortars, and native plants.
- Malakoff Diggins shows what hydraulic mining left behind [History and culture] Malakoff Diggins State Historic Park near Nevada City preserves North Bloomfield and the landscape of California's largest hydraulic gold mine.
- Malibu alerts come through several official doors [Home and property] Malibu's alerts page separates website notifications, the city hotline, disaster notifications, and county alerts so residents can build a fuller alert plan.
- Malibu evacuation zones are meant to be checked before a bad day [Home and property] Malibu's evacuation pages use four official zones and a zone search tool, so residents can learn the zone before weather or fire conditions change.
- Manteca building permits run through Citizen Access [Home and property] Manteca uses the Citizen Access portal for building permits, permit history research, inspection scheduling, and questions through the permit office.
- Manteca business licenses depend on the kind of business [Rules and licenses] Manteca requires a business license for permanent, temporary, seasonal, and one-time business activity, with requirements that vary by business type.
- Manteca flood maps and storm drains explain rainy-day trouble spots [Home and property] Manteca's flood maps and storm drain information help residents understand address-level flood questions, stormwater flow, and who to call when local flooding shows up.
- Manteca reports work better when the problem goes to the right desk [Rules and licenses] Manteca separates general complaints from Public Works problems like potholes, storm drains, streetlights, traffic signals, and water system issues.
- Manteca utility questions split between billing and service pages [Home and property] Manteca provides water, garbage, sewer, and storm drainage information through city utility pages, with separate paths for billing, service requests, and public works questions.
- Manteca's name came from a railroad mix-up people kept [History and culture] Manteca grew from Cowell Station, then kept a railroad ticket spelling error that turned the chosen name Monteca into Manteca.
- Manzanar gives the Owens Valley a place to remember clearly [History and culture] Manzanar National Historic Site near Independence preserves the World War II incarceration story while also showing older Owens Valley layers tied to Native people, farms, water, and land.
- March Field keeps Inland Empire aviation history close to the runway [History and culture] March Field Air Museum sits beside March Air Reserve Base, where the field traces its roots to a 1918 Army flying training site near Riverside.
- March Field puts Moreno Valley beside a deep flight story [History and culture] March Field Air Museum sits near Moreno Valley and Riverside, adding early military aviation history to the area's everyday freeway-and-foothill map.
- Mare Island keeps Vallejo's naval story in everyday view [History and culture] Mare Island was the first U.S. naval station on the West Coast, and today Vallejo ties that history to reuse, businesses, trails, housing, schools, and open space.
- Maricopa sits beside one of California's biggest oil stories [History and culture] Maricopa grew with the Midway-Sunset oil fields, near the Lakeview Gusher site that became a California historical landmark.
- Marin County DBA starts with the County Clerk record [Rules and licenses] Marin County fictitious business name filings create a public DBA record, separate from city, county, and state business steps. Page title: A Marin County DBA starts with the County Clerk record.
- Marin County property tax starts with the roll or the bill [Money and taxes] Marin County property tax questions usually start with Assessor records for parcel and roll information, or the tax bill page for bills and payments.
- Marna O'Brien Park is Wildomar's main city-park anchor [Outdoors] Marna O'Brien Park gives Wildomar its largest city park, with fields, courts, picnic shelters, walking, lights, events, restrooms, and everyday recreation.
- Marsh Creek Trail links Brentwood toward the Delta [Outdoors] Brentwood's local trail network connects with Marsh Creek Regional Trail, a paved route that points west toward Big Break and the Delta edge.
- Marshall Gold Discovery keeps El Dorado County tied to 1848 [History and culture] Marshall Gold Discovery State Historic Park in Coloma marks the 1848 gold find on the South Fork of the American River, with a museum, sawmill replica, historic buildings, trails, and picnic areas.
- Martinelli's keeps Watsonville's apple story in a bottle [History and culture] S. Martinelli & Company began in Watsonville's Pajaro Valley apple country in 1868, giving the farm town a familiar California food-and-drink story.
- Mary Vagle Nature Center gives Fontana a quiet Jurupa Hills pocket [Outdoors] Mary Vagle Nature Center brings pond paths, native gardens, local geology, and hands-on nature programs into a city that is often seen first from busy roads.
- Marysville Bok Kai tradition ties water, luck, and Chinatown history [History and culture] Marysville's Bok Kai Temple and festival connect the city to Chinese California history, the water god Bok Eye, river memory, a long-running parade, and a rare surviving temple tradition.
- Mason Regional Park gives Irvine lake shade and easy breathing room [Outdoors] William R. Mason Regional Park gives Irvine 339 acres of trees, trails, picnic areas, a 9-acre lake, playgrounds, and calm outdoor space.
- Maturango Museum gives Ridgecrest a Northern Mojave lens [History and culture] Maturango Museum in Ridgecrest helps visitors understand the Northern Mojave Desert, local art, natural history, Death Valley routes, and Coso petroglyph access.
- Maywood Riverfront Park gives a dense city a Los Angeles River edge [Outdoors] Maywood Riverfront Park opened in 2008 with playground space, basketball courts, and a riverfront bike path along the Los Angeles River.
- McBean Park is Lincoln's in-town recreation anchor [Outdoors] McBean Park gathers Lincoln's pool, ballfields, stadium, dog park, picnic space, pavilion, and everyday recreation into one central city park.
- McClellan Ranch gives Cupertino a quiet creekside history [Outdoors] McClellan Ranch Preserve is an 18-acre former horse ranch in Cupertino with a nature trail, creekside habitat, an environmental education center, and blacksmith shop history.
- McCoy Equestrian Center keeps Chino Hills' horse side visible [History and culture] McCoy Equestrian and Recreation Center in Chino Hills combines a former McCoy family residence, barn, arenas, trail access, equestrian events, and community gatherings.
- McFarland grew as a farm town, then Highway 99 split the map [History and culture] McFarland's story starts with a 1909 townsite, growth during the Depression, incorporation in 1957, and Highway 99 dividing the city into east and west sides.
- McHenry Mansion gives Modesto a restored Victorian landmark [History and culture] McHenry Mansion was built in 1883, restored for public tours, and helps downtown Modesto keep a visible piece of its older city story.
- Meek Mansion remembers Hayward's orchard years [History and culture] Meek Mansion and the Alameda County Agricultural History Center help show Hayward's older orchard and farm story before the East Bay filled in around it.
- Mello-Roos tax check [Checklist · Home costs] A plain checklist for spotting Mello-Roos, CFDs, parcel taxes, and other add-on lines before you buy.
- Melody Ranch keeps Santa Clarita's western movie set alive [History and culture] Melody Ranch in the Newhall area carries Santa Clarita's film history, from early westerns to Gene Autry's television studio and later restoration work.
- Memorial Park keeps Chula Vista's downtown memory close [History and culture] Memorial Park is one of Chula Vista's older civic parks, with downtown gathering space, recreation features, and a monument tied to World War II memory.
- Mendocino Headlands wraps a village with bluff trails and lumber memory [History and culture] Mendocino Headlands State Park surrounds the village of Mendocino with bluff trails, ocean views, the Ford House, Pomo context, lumber history, and doghole schooner memory.
- Mendota's cantaloupe name sits on top of a railroad start [History and culture] Mendota is known as the Cantaloupe Center of the World, but its city story also starts with a Southern Pacific railroad site.
- Menifee business licenses can lead to occupancy checks [Rules and licenses] Menifee separates out-of-city, commercial, industrial, home occupation, and special business paths, with some in-city businesses needing a Certificate of Occupancy or added permits.
- Menifee emergency prep starts with routes and city updates [Home and property] Menifee residents can connect city emergency updates with basic route planning, sheltering, and household readiness.
- Menifee non-urgent issues can start in the city app [Home and property] Menifee routes non-urgent reports through the city app or online portal, while urgent non-emergency park safety or maintenance issues use the police non-emergency line.
- Menifee projects start with the Permit Center or permit portal [Rules and licenses] Menifee routes building, planning, fire, engineering, fees, inspections, and application tracking through its Permit Center and online permit portal.
- Menifee trash questions usually run through WM [Home and property] Menifee uses Waste Management for home trash service, including new service, billing, pickup days, bulky items, e-waste, and holiday changes.
- Menifee's name comes from a quartz-mine chapter [History and culture] Menifee grew from Native homelands, farming, a quartz lode tied to Luther Menifee Wilson, Sun City, Menifee Lakes, and later city growth.
- Mentryville gives Santa Clarita an old oil-canyon story [History and culture] Mentryville and Pico Canyon add an early California oil layer to Santa Clarita, with trails, old buildings, and the story of Pico No. 4.
- Merced Civic Access handles permits and licenses [Rules and licenses] Merced Civic Access handles permit, planning, and business license applications, with tools for fees, contractors, permits, inspections, and project status.
- Merced National Wildlife Refuge makes wetlands easy to see by car [Outdoors] Merced National Wildlife Refuge has wetlands, grasslands, vernal pools, riparian areas, a five-mile auto tour route, nature trails, cranes, and geese on the Pacific Flyway.
- Merced refuse questions start with city limits [Home and property] Merced Refuse handles solid waste collection inside city limits, including residential and commercial service, street sweeping, leaf collection, alley cleanup, tire amnesty, and bulky drop-off.
- Merced riders should know The Bus route map [Cars and driving] The Bus gives Merced County a fixed-route and paratransit system, with Merced, Atwater, Los Banos, and intercity route groups listed together.
- Merced utility and street questions still use phone lanes [Home and property] Merced's important-number page separates billing, water, sewer, storm drains, street maintenance, refuse, trees, signals, and other Public Works questions by phone line.
- Merced's old courthouse is now a county memory keeper [History and culture] The Merced County Courthouse Museum sits in an 1875 courthouse that served the county for a century before becoming one of Merced's key history stops.
- Metro Micro gives Compton another short-trip option [Cars and driving] Metro Micro serves the Watts/Compton zone with on-demand rides, app, web, or phone booking, posted hours, and pickup-dropoff points that should be checked before relying on it.
- Mile Square Regional Park explains Fountain Valley's open-space map [Outdoors] Mile Square Regional Park gives Fountain Valley a large county park with lakes, fields, golf, picnic areas, archery, and city recreation next door.
- Mill Valley starts its big trail story under redwoods [History and culture] Old Mill Park and the Dipsea Race give Mill Valley a compact story: redwoods, a historic mill, steep stairs, and a trail route to Stinson Beach.
- Millbrae's old depot keeps the railroad story near today's transit [History and culture] Millbrae's historic depot connects the city to early Peninsula rail service, Darius Mills, milk shipments, station life, preservation, Caltrain, and BART.
- Milpitas business licenses and building permits use different offices [Rules and licenses] Milpitas routes business license questions through its Business License Center, while building permit questions move through building resources and e-permit tools.
- Milpitas code questions have their own report path [Home and property] Milpitas has a separate city path for code reports, while permit, utility, garbage, and recycling questions use different city pages.
- Milpitas flood maps are a normal address check [Home and property] Milpitas has mapped FEMA flood hazard areas, so flood information, AlertSCC, and Valley Water resources are useful address checks for residents and buyers.
- Milpitas water and trash questions go to different counters [Rules and licenses] Milpitas water service starts with Finance Customer Service, while trash, recycling, street sweeping, bulky items, and cleanup questions go through Milpitas Sanitation or Public Works.
- Miner's Ravine Trail is Roseville's green line toward downtown [Outdoors] Miner's Ravine Trail helps Roseville connect parks, neighborhoods, bikes, walking trips, and downtown events without making every errand a car trip.
- Minter Field keeps Shafter's World War II aviation layer visible [History and culture] Minter Field near Shafter began as a U.S. Army flight training center in 1941 and is now remembered through the airport district and air museum.
- Mission Bay gives San Diego an easy water day [Outdoors] Mission Bay Park has shoreline, sandy beaches, bike paths, boat launches, playgrounds, picnic spots, and calm bay options.
- Mission Inn gives Riverside a downtown landmark [History and culture] Riverside's Mission Inn helps visitors picture downtown, connect local history with a walkable center, and understand a landmark shaped by Mission Revival style, tourism, art, and preservation. Page title: The Mission Inn gives Riverside a downtown landmark.
- Mission Plaza makes downtown San Luis Obispo feel older than the shops [History and culture] Mission San Luis Obispo, the creek, and Mission Plaza give downtown SLO an easy place to see mission-era history, civic gatherings, and everyday town life in one stop.
- Mission San Buenaventura still anchors old downtown Ventura [History and culture] Mission San Buenaventura was founded in 1782, where the coast, water, orchards, and old Ventura's town center came together.
- Mission San Jose gives Fremont a deep old-district layer [History and culture] Old Mission San Jose in Fremont is the 14th Alta California mission, built on the older Ohlone village site of Oroysom and now surrounded by a historic district.
- Mission San Miguel filled a quiet gap on the mission road [History and culture] Mission San Miguel Arcangel gives San Miguel a deep Central Coast history layer, with Salinan connections, original artwork, mission buildings, and a stop between bigger towns.
- Mission Santa Clara sits inside a working university campus [History and culture] Mission Santa Clara is on the Santa Clara University campus, where Ohlone history, mission-era change, rebuilding, worship, campus life, and California's first college overlap.
- Mission Soledad gives the valley a quiet restoration story [History and culture] Soledad's mission story includes a long abandoned period and a mid-1900s restoration effort that brought the old mission back into local life.
- Mission Viejo building permits are handled online first [Home and property] Mission Viejo Building Services uses its Client Self Service portal for permits, plans, fees, inspections, and next-business-day inspection requests.
- Mission Viejo bulky pickup has a free but scheduled routine [Rules and licenses] Mission Viejo residents can use Waste Management for bulky item pickup, with item limits, advance scheduling, and clear no-go categories.
- Mission Viejo permit work uses Client Self Service [Rules and licenses] Mission Viejo's Client Self Service system handles permit and plan requests, including applications, plan submittals, revisions, inspections, invoices, and status checks.
- Mission Viejo service requests have one simple city door [Home and property] Mission Viejo's Service Request page and MV Life app give residents a direct way to request city service, report issues, or report a problem within the city.
- Mission Viejo shows what a planned city can feel like [History and culture] Mission Viejo grew from a long-range master plan into a large Orange County city, with hills, roads, parks, homes, landscaping, and civic life designed together over decades.
- Mobilehome title work has its own state desk [Home and property] HCD handles many manufactured home and mobilehome title and registration questions, which are separate from ordinary DMV vehicle paperwork.
- Modesto building permits can start in eTRAKiT [Home and property] Modesto uses eTRAKiT and online services for building permit applications, plan uploads, permit history, inspections, code complaints, expedited permits, and zoning information.
- Modesto bulky pickup depends on your hauler [Home and property] Modesto residential solid waste customers can use bulky item pickup or a haul-it-yourself voucher, but the appointment starts with the correct garbage hauler for the address.
- Modesto business licenses start with the activity and address [Rules and licenses] Modesto business licensing gives owners application paths, license types, online renewal, and a search tool for current city business licenses.
- Modesto keeps its cruise-night story on the street [History and culture] Modesto's Graffiti Summer and cruise route keep the city's George Lucas and American Graffiti connection tied to real streets, cars, music, and summer nights.
- Modesto storm reports have a few different phone paths [Home and property] Modesto separates storm-related reports for street flooding, clogged storm drains, tree emergencies, signal outages, streetlight outages, and power issues, so the right contact matters during heavy rain.
- Modesto utility service changes go through Utility Billing [Home and property] Modesto's Utility Billing pages handle start, stop, and transfer service requests, with online and customer service options.
- Modesto's downtown arch still tells the old water story [History and culture] The Modesto Arch went up in 1912, and its famous motto still points back to how water helped shape the city and nearby farms.
- Modoc County's high desert story is easiest to feel near Alturas [History and culture] Modoc County is California's far-northeast corner, with Alturas, a county museum, Modoc National Wildlife Refuge, and a wide high-desert feel.
- Mojave Narrows gives Victorville a green desert edge [Outdoors] Mojave Narrows Regional Park sits along an old riverbed south of Victorville, where cottonwoods, willows, water, wildlife, camping, and trails soften the high desert.
- Mojave National Preserve is the big desert trip in San Bernardino County [Outdoors] Mojave is a remote preserve with desert habitats, long human history, and road conditions that visitors should check before they go.
- Money and Taxes [Topic] State income tax, sales and use tax, property-tax allocations, district taxes, and official calculators.
- Monrovia Canyon Park is a waterfall walk with access rules [Outdoors] Monrovia Canyon Park gives the city a popular canyon and waterfall route, but weekend reservations, parking, and recovery work need a current check.
- Montague has a rail-town story under Mount Shasta [History and culture] Montague began as a Shasta Valley rail hub, kept a redwood depot memory, and now adds color with its hot air balloon fair.
- Montaña de Oro gives San Luis Obispo County a wilder coast [Outdoors] Montaña de Oro State Park has rugged cliffs, sandy beaches, coastal plains, trails, tide pools, camping, and Spooner's Cove.
- Montclair TransCenter is the city's bus-and-rail hinge [Cars and driving] Montclair TransCenter explains the city's transit role, with Metrolink, regional buses, Greyhound service, and a future A Line extension still unresolved.
- Monte Sereno chose quiet hills over a town center [History and culture] Monte Sereno is mostly residential by design, with a story that includes orchards, annexation worries, John Steinbeck, and the Billy Jones Wildcat Railroad.
- Montebello bulky pickup and rollout help go through Athens [Home and property] Montebello trash customers can use Athens Services for bulky pickup scheduling, and some residents can request rollout help with the right documentation.
- Montebello Bus Lines is a city-run transit layer [Cars and driving] Montebello Bus Lines gives the city and nearby communities their own municipal bus system, with local routes, fare rules, and a Metrolink shuttle layer.
- Montebello business openings may need a fire inspection step [Rules and licenses] Montebello business license work runs through online business services, and businesses located in the city may need to schedule a fire inspection after submitting the application.
- Montebello's beautiful hills had adobe, farms, and oil [History and culture] Montebello's story runs from rancho land and the Juan Matias Sanchez Adobe to farms, flowers, and an oil boom that helped change the city in the early 1900s.
- Monterey County evacuation messages use zone codes [Home and property] Ready Monterey County's preparedness pages explain Know Your Zone, Alert Monterey County, zone codes, emergency updates, and alert signups for local incidents.
- Monterey Park business setup starts with zoning [Rules and licenses] Monterey Park puts zoning clearance before the business license, so a new storefront, office, or home business should check the location before the license application.
- Monterey's old capital story is easiest to read on foot [History and culture] Monterey's Path of History and State Historic Park connect old government buildings, homes, markers, museums, and plaza spaces into a walkable California history day.
- Mooney Grove lets Visalia tell the valley farm story up close [History and culture] The Tulare County Museum inside Mooney Grove Park gives Visalia a close-up way to understand county history, farm labor, agriculture, and older valley buildings.
- Moonlight Amphitheatre gives Vista a stage under the trees [History and culture] Moonlight Amphitheatre in Brengle Terrace Park gives Vista a roomy outdoor stage, lawn seating, summer theater, concerts, and a local arts tradition that began with city-backed productions in the early 1980s.
- Moorpark College's Teaching Zoo is a public-facing classroom [History and culture] America's Teaching Zoo at Moorpark College gives the city a distinctive education stop where animal care students learn in a public zoo setting.
- Moraga's name reaches back to a Californio rancho [History and culture] Moraga's name connects the town to Joaquin Moraga, Juan Bernal, Rancho Laguna de los Palos Colorados, and Contra Costa's older ranch landscape.
- Moreno Valley alerts and zones are worth saving by address [Home and property] Moreno Valley's Alert MoVal hub connects emergency signups, city updates, shelter and road information, fire partners, and Riverside County zone tools for address-specific notices.
- Moreno Valley building permits run through SimpliCITY [Home and property] Moreno Valley uses SimpliCITY for online permit submittals, digital plan review, permit searches, inspection information, and project records.
- Moreno Valley business licenses tie to location and use [Rules and licenses] Moreno Valley routes new and renewing business licenses online, with separate checks for commercial locations, home occupations, mobile or online businesses, certificates of occupancy, and annual renewals.
- Moreno Valley electric and trash use different service paths [Home and property] Moreno Valley Utility handles electric service in its service area, while trash, recycling, and special waste run through the city's Waste Management contract.
- Moreno Valley grew from three older communities [History and culture] Moreno Valley became a city in 1984, bringing together the older communities of Moreno, Sunnymead, and Edgemont during a major growth period.
- Moreno Valley street sweeping is also a parking reminder [Cars and driving] Moreno Valley street sweeping happens on community schedules, and parked vehicles can receive tickets on sweeping days.
- Moreno Valley trails are easier when you start with the map [Outdoors] Moreno Valley has foothill and neighborhood trail options, but the right plan depends on the route, user type, staging area, and current city program details.
- Morgan Hill uses SeeClickFix for maintenance requests [Home and property] Morgan Hill routes many maintenance requests through SeeClickFix, including water leaks, sidewalk repair, graffiti, traffic signals, streetlights, dumping, drainage, and park issues.
- Morro Bay is a working harbor behind the postcard rock [History and culture] Morro Bay's harbor mixes the famous rock with fishing boats, harbor patrol, public docks, boating help, wildlife watching, and a waterfront that still works.
- Mosquito season is local, but West Nile tracking is statewide [Home and property] California's West Nile Virus site gives residents a statewide place to check activity, report dead birds, and connect the issue back to local mosquito control.
- Moss Landing is small on land and busy on the water [History and culture] Moss Landing Harbor gives Monterey Bay a working middle point, with commercial fishing, harbor district history, Elkhorn Slough access, research boats, and a town that feels bigger on the water.
- Motte Historical Museum gives Menifee a car-barn landmark [History and culture] Motte Historical Museum sits along Highway 74 in Menifee with a vintage-car collection, family and valley history, and a barn setting that still points back to the area's farm roots.
- Mount Diablo gives Contra Costa County the big view [Outdoors] Mount Diablo pairs big summit views with trails, rock formations, varied habitats, camping, and a visitor center.
- Mount Rubidoux is Riverside's everyday hill [Outdoors] Mount Rubidoux is a 161-acre Riverside park and landmark west of downtown, with paved roads, dirt trails, and dawn-to-dusk access.
- Mount San Jacinto lets Riverside County change seasons fast [Outdoors] Mount San Jacinto State Park rises from the desert side and Idyllwild side, with high-country trails, campgrounds, views, and changing mountain conditions.
- Mount Shasta carries the Sisson story below the mountain [History and culture] Mount Shasta's town story runs through Strawberry Valley, Justin Sisson, a historic fish hatchery, the Sisson Museum, and a mountain that drew John Muir.
- Mount Wilson changed the size of the universe [History and culture] Mount Wilson Observatory above Los Angeles became a world-changing astronomy site, especially through the 100-inch telescope and Edwin Hubble's discoveries.
- Mountain House is a new city with an old road-stop name [History and culture] Mountain House became California's 483rd incorporated city in July 2024, but its name reaches back to a Gold Rush-era rest stop.
- mountain lion sighting calls for space and a calm report [Outdoors] CDFW's mountain lion conflict page gives Californians a practical way to think about sightings, pets, children, and when local help is needed. Page title: A mountain lion sighting calls for space and a calm report.
- mountain or coast drive deserves a road check first [Cars and driving] Caltrans QuickMap and Road Information pages show highway conditions, closures, cameras, lane closures, chain controls, and other travel details for California drives. Page title: A mountain or coast drive deserves a road check first.
- mountain train keeps Madera County's logging story moving [History and culture] The Yosemite Mountain Sugar Pine Railroad near Fish Camp gives Madera County a living link to Sierra logging country, with narrow-gauge track, Shay locomotives, and a small museum stop. Page title: A mountain train keeps Madera County's logging story moving.
- Mountain View utility questions split between billing and Public Works [Home and property] Mountain View utility service runs through city billing for water, wastewater, trash, and recycling, while Public Works contacts handle water, sewer, streets, and service questions.
- Mountain View's Permit Center handles licenses and project routing [Rules and licenses] Mountain View's Permit Center connects business licenses, home occupation, mobile vending, cottage food, and building permit questions that often overlap when a space changes use.
- mountains give San Bernardino an outdoor layer right above town [Outdoors] San Bernardino National Forest sits close to the Inland Empire, with hiking, scenic drives, picnic areas, winter sports, and mountain conditions to check ahead of time. Page title: The mountains give San Bernardino an outdoor layer right above town.
- MoVal 24/7 routes many Moreno Valley service requests [Rules and licenses] MoVal 24/7 lets Moreno Valley residents report many non-emergency city issues, including potholes, graffiti, streetlight outages, illegal dumping, park maintenance, code concerns, and some inspection requests.
- Move-out deposit record check [Checklist · Renting] A calm checklist for photos, keys, inspection notes, itemized deductions, receipts, and the first official help sources if the deposit gets messy.
- Muckenthaler puts Fullerton art on a hilltop estate [History and culture] The Muckenthaler Cultural Center turns a former family estate into a public arts place with exhibits, concerts, classes, and lawns above Fullerton. Page title: The Muckenthaler puts Fullerton art on a hilltop estate.
- Muni is San Francisco's everyday transit layer [Cars and driving] Muni ties together San Francisco buses, Metro trains, streetcars, cable cars, route pages, stops, fares, and alerts.
- Murphy Avenue shows Sunnyvale learning to linger downtown [History and culture] Historic Murphy Avenue is being reshaped as a pedestrian mall after a temporary 2020 outdoor-dining closure showed how much people liked a slower downtown street.
- Murrieta business licenses should start before the lease [Rules and licenses] Murrieta business applicants are steered to check building and zoning questions before submitting, and some businesses may later need fire, police, or facility review.
- Murrieta emergency alerts include zones and a radio backup [Home and property] Murrieta residents can use evacuation zones, the city Alert Center, Notify Me, RSS, and 1040 AM as part of a simple local emergency setup.
- Murrieta Fix It is for local problems you can point to [Home and property] Murrieta Fix It lets residents report local problems such as potholes, graffiti, damaged trees, playground equipment, street signs, sidewalks, and streetlights.
- Murrieta permits can move through the self-service portal [Home and property] Murrieta's Permit Center links residents to its self-service portal, permit processing, plan review, inspections, forms, SolarAPP+, and permit activity information.
- Murrieta trash service depends on WM and your address [Home and property] Murrieta contracts with Waste Management for trash and recycling, so bills, new service, schedules, missed pickup, carts, and holiday delays run through WM.
- Murrieta's hot springs helped turn a valley stop into a name [History and culture] Murrieta's older story runs through sheep ranching, railroad tracks, natural hot springs, a resort boom, and later freeway-era growth.
- Museum of Making Music gives Carlsbad a hands-on music story [History and culture] Carlsbad's Museum of Making Music looks at how musical instruments are made, sold, played, collected, and shared through exhibits, performances, education, and hands-on experiences. Page title: The Museum of Making Music gives Carlsbad a hands-on music story.
- Museum of Neon Art gives Glendale a glow-in-the-dark art stop [History and culture] Glendale's Museum of Neon Art preserves historic neon signs and electric art, adding a bright Los Angeles County story to Brand Boulevard. Page title: The Museum of Neon Art gives Glendale a glow-in-the-dark art stop.
- Mussel Rock Park is scenic, but check Daly City conditions [Outdoors] Mussel Rock Park in Daly City is public coastal open space on a closed landfill area, with hiking, beach access, dog walking, fishing, hang-gliding, and ongoing coastal monitoring.
- My Davis gives city requests a tracking number [Home and property] Davis lets residents submit comments, concerns, and service requests through the My Davis form or app, with routing to staff and a tracking number after submission.
- My Hanford is the city report path for everyday issues [Home and property] Hanford uses My Hanford, a web and mobile request system, for reports such as potholes, stray animals, code violations, graffiti, tripping hazards, and similar local issues.
- My Jurupa Valley turns local problems into service requests [Home and property] Jurupa Valley's app lets residents submit service requests for problems such as potholes, abandoned shopping carts, encampments, broken streetlights, and missed trash pickup.
- My Oceanside routes common city service requests [Rules and licenses] Oceanside residents can use the My Oceanside app, web tool, email, or Customer Care phone line for many city service requests, including potholes, litter, graffiti, and streetlights.
- My San Mateo keeps city service requests in one place [Rules and licenses] San Mateo residents can use My San Mateo to submit and track non-emergency city service requests, including streetlight outages, weeds, graffiti, and other local concerns.
- My Voter Status is the quick election check [Rules and licenses] The Secretary of State's My Voter Status tool can show registration status, party preference, language preference, vote-by-mail details, and county election office links.
- MYCCAPP handles Cathedral City maintenance reports [Home and property] Cathedral City's Public Works maintenance page points residents to MYCCAPP for 24/7 service requests with photos, videos, and map or GPS location.
- MyEncinitas requests work best with a category and photo [Home and property] Encinitas uses MyEncinitas for service requests, with category selection, address entry, optional photos, descriptions, email updates, and some request types that need a citizen complaint form.
- MyGlendale is the first stop for many city fixes [Rules and licenses] Glendale residents can use MyGlendale to report many non-emergency city concerns with a location, photo, and follow-up path, while police, freeway, utility, and urgent items may need a separate contact.
- myOntario is a first stop for many city service issues [Rules and licenses] Ontario residents can use the myOntario app and city contact pages to report maintenance issues, service concerns, and community improvement problems with a location, photo, and short form.
- myPalmSprings can send a photo with a service request [Home and property] Palm Springs' city app lets residents send maintenance and service issues with a photo and short form, then routes the request to the right department.
- MySantaClara is the city service request hub [Rules and licenses] Santa Clara residents can use MySantaClara by app or web to submit, track, and view city service requests, with photos, locations, and status updates built into the process.
- MySantaRosa is the easy door for many non-emergency issues [Rules and licenses] MySantaRosa lets people report and track non-emergency city issues such as potholes, street light outages, slides, trees in the roadway, litter, and other concerns.
- Mystery Spot is Santa Cruz's classic roadside oddity [History and culture] The Mystery Spot gives Santa Cruz a playful redwoods roadside attraction, best enjoyed as a curious tilted-room experience rather than a science answer. Page title: The Mystery Spot is Santa Cruz's classic roadside oddity.
- MySunnyvale is the new service request door [Rules and licenses] Sunnyvale shifted from Access Sunnyvale to MySunnyvale, a web and mobile service request system for reporting issues, requesting services, and sharing feedback with the city.
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- NAF El Centro explains the city's Blue Angels winter-training tie [History and culture] Naval Air Facility El Centro gives the city a federal aviation story, including Navy training history and the Blue Angels' winter practice connection.
- Napa permits depend on whether the city is the right agency [Home and property] Napa issues many city permits and licenses, but some permits belong with Napa County, the state, or another public agency, and building submittals do not use a city online portal.
- Napa service requests can be tracked in My Service Center [Home and property] Napa's My Service Center lets residents submit service requests, report issues, ask for city information, and choose whether to make an account for updates.
- Napa utility questions usually start with water or recycling [Home and property] Napa utility questions usually split between water billing, water service, recycling, and solid waste.
- Napa's Opera House keeps old Main Street in view [History and culture] The Napa Valley Opera House was built in 1879 and still helps show the older Main Street layer beneath Napa's modern food, wine, and riverfront scene.
- NAS Lemoore is a huge aviation neighbor in farm country [History and culture] Naval Air Station Lemoore gives the Kings County farm landscape a major Navy layer, with a base commissioned in 1961 and tied to carrier aviation.
- National City bulky pickup goes through EDCO [Home and property] Residential bulky-item pickup in National City goes through EDCO, while regular trash, recycling, and commercial recycling details live on the city's trash and recycling page.
- National City Connect is public, so write carefully [Home and property] National City Connect handles non-emergency reports such as graffiti, potholes, streetlights, and abandoned vehicles, and requests may include GPS location and photos.
- National Date Festival gives Indio a desert harvest party [History and culture] Indio's National Date Festival ties the Riverside County fairgrounds, Coachella Valley date palms, winter visitors, and local farm history into one bright desert tradition. Page title: The National Date Festival gives Indio a desert harvest party.
- Natural Bridges gives Santa Cruz a beach, arch, and butterfly stop [Outdoors] Natural Bridges State Beach is known for its sea arch, family-friendly beach, tide pools, and seasonal monarch butterfly viewing.
- Natural Parkland Trail shows Highland's citrus-era water layer [Outdoors] Highland's Natural Parkland Trail gives the city a foothill walk where orange-grove remnants, old irrigation pieces, and the Santa Ana River watershed story meet.
- Near the coast, ask who handles the coastal permit before you build [Rules and licenses] The California Coastal Commission has coastal development permit forms, but some areas route work through local coastal programs.
- Needles has a grand rail stop on the edge of Route 66 [History and culture] Needles' El Garces Hotel and Santa Fe Depot shows how rail travel, Route 66, and river-desert crossings met in one landmark.
- Nevada County Trail Finder helps sort public access ahead of time [Outdoors] Nevada County's Trail Finder uses GIS data to show trail details such as managing agency, surface type, and allowed uses like hiking, biking, equestrian use, and OHV use.
- Newark business and permit questions meet at Development Services [Rules and licenses] Newark's Development Services Center brings together building permits, business licenses, planning, engineering, payments, and fire code questions for projects that need more than one review.
- Newark's bay edge is a refuge and open-space planning question [Outdoors] Newark sits near Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge, where habitat, access, climate planning, and baylands all come together.
- Newark's roots run through bay landings, salt, and rail [History and culture] Newark's early story includes bay landings, Mayhew's Landing, Green Point Dairy, salt production, and railroad work before the city chose its own path to incorporation.
- Newland House shows Huntington Beach before the surf brand [History and culture] The 1898 Newland House is Huntington Beach's oldest residence and points back to ranch land, crop fields, and pioneer family life near Beach Boulevard.
- Newman has a founder, a festival, and a school-bus first [History and culture] Newman connects Simon Newman, West Side farm-town life, the Fall Festival, the West Side Theatre, and a converted Model T school-bus story.
- Newport Beach parking permits depend on the permit type [Cars and driving] Newport Beach has separate parking permit choices for residents, businesses, and visitors, so the right permit depends on where and why someone parks.
- Newport Harbor has its own permit map [Rules and licenses] Newport Beach separates harbor questions across dock and pier permits, dredging permits, moorings, anchorages, guest slips, live-aboard permits, and Harbor Department contacts.
- Niles gives Fremont an early-movie story before Hollywood took over [History and culture] Fremont's Niles district keeps an early film story alive, with Essanay studio history, silent movies, and Charlie Chaplin-era local memory.
- Nitt Witt Ridge is Cambria's closed-but-memorable folk art house [History and culture] Nitt Witt Ridge in Cambria is a California landmark built by Art Beal over decades from hand work, found materials, hillside terraces, and a strong outsider-art spirit.
- Nojoqui Falls is Santa Barbara County's short waterfall detour [Outdoors] Nojoqui Falls Park is a county park where a short trail leads visitors toward the falls.
- Norco's Horsetown identity is built into daily life [History and culture] Norco is known for animal keeping, hundreds of acres of parkland, and one of the largest horse-trail networks in the nation.
- North and Valley [Collection] Far-north towns, foothill engineering, and Central Valley places with stories that are easy to miss from the highway.
- North Etiwanda Preserve keeps Rancho Cucamonga close to the foothills [Outdoors] North Etiwanda Preserve is a protected foothill habitat area near Rancho Cucamonga, with more than 1,200 acres, a trail map, and rules that put the land first.
- Norwalk building permits still benefit from a counter check [Home and property] Norwalk's building permits page gives residents and contractors the Building and Safety contact, appointment path, permit help, and counter location for project questions.
- Norwalk bulky pickup needs a call before collection day [Home and property] Norwalk residents can schedule bulky item pickup through Athens Services, with the request made at least 24 hours before the regular collection day.
- Norwalk business licenses start with the use and address [Rules and licenses] Norwalk's business license page sends new businesses through zoning, home occupation, DBA, resale, and special-license checks before everything feels settled.
- Norwalk Community Link can help with short local rides [Cars and driving] Norwalk Community Link is the city's on-demand microtransit service, with app or phone booking, local trip connections, posted service hours, and a one-way fare to confirm.
- Norwalk's Cultural Arts Center gives local creativity a home base [History and culture] Norwalk's Cultural Arts Center offers classes, workshops, special events, Mariachi instruction, and the Mary Paxon Art Gallery beside the Norwalk Arts & Sports Complex.
- Norwalk's Hargitt House ties a family home to schools and cheese [History and culture] The D.D. Johnston-Hargitt House Museum links Norwalk's early family history with local schools, early industry, and volunteer-led tours.
- Novato Permits puts city project tracking in one portal [Home and property] Novato Permits is the city's online portal for building permits, planning projects, inspections, licensing, code requests, permit status, records search, and some express permits.
- Novato service requests are for non-emergencies [Home and property] Novato's service request tool routes non-emergency issues to the proper city department, while sewer backups, water main breaks, blocked streets, and life-safety issues use emergency contacts.
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- O'Neill Regional Park puts canyon open space on RSM's edge [Outdoors] O'Neill Regional Park gives Rancho Santa Margarita nearby canyon trails, picnic areas, camping, oaks, sycamores, and a county park close to town.
- Oak Canyon Nature Center gives Anaheim a quiet canyon side [Outdoors] Oak Canyon Nature Center is a 58-acre Anaheim Hills park with a stream, three canyons, four miles of trails, and an interpretive center.
- Oakdale's cowboy story has a museum behind the slogan [History and culture] Oakdale's Cowboy Museum gives the city's Cowboy Capital identity a real local frame through rodeo, ranching, saddles, photos, stories, and western heritage.
- Oakland 311 is where many street and property issues begin [Rules and licenses] OAK 311 routes many Oakland non-emergency requests, including potholes, abandoned vehicles, illegal dumping, graffiti, urgent infrastructure issues, and some code complaints.
- Oakland business tax starts before the certificate [Rules and licenses] Oakland businesses and many rental-property owners need to handle business tax registration, zoning clearance when needed, and annual renewal details.
- Oakland emergency updates start with AC Alert [Home and property] Oakland's Stay Informed page sends residents to AC Alert and other trusted sources for emergency updates, evacuation information, and public safety messages.
- Oakland has a quiet rose garden tucked into the city [Outdoors] Morcom Rose Garden gives Oakland a calm garden stop with thousands of roses, winding walkways, a reflecting pool, stairways, fountains, and a hillside feel.
- Oakland parking tickets start with the citation number [Cars and driving] Oakland parking ticket questions work best when you start with the citation number, then choose the payment or challenge path.
- Oakland permit questions usually start at the One-Stop Permit Center [Home and property] Oakland's One-Stop Permit Center and Online Permit Center bring together planning, building, fire, transportation, permit status, fees, records, and same-day digital permits.
- Oakland residential parking permits depend on the neighborhood [Cars and driving] Oakland's residential parking permit page covers applying or renewing online, by mail, or in person, and visitor permits are handled through the same permit area system.
- Oakland street sweeping is a sign-and-schedule habit [Cars and driving] Oakland street sweeping uses posted time windows, a schedule map, holiday changes, and parking rules that still matter even after the sweeper has already passed.
- Oakland wildfire inspections are tied to the WUI fire area [Home and property] Oakland's wildfire inspection pages focus on parcels in the WUI Fire Area and give property owners a current vegetation inspection checklist.
- Oakland's Jack London ferry is a different transit choice [Cars and driving] The Oakland ferry terminal gives Jack London Square a transbay option, with schedules, fares, terminals, bikes, and parking to check on the ferry pages.
- Oakland's Paramount Theatre still knows how to make an entrance [History and culture] Oakland's Paramount Theatre opened in 1931, survived hard years for old movie palaces, and remains one of downtown's grand Art Deco landmarks.
- Oakley OnDemand handles report-a-problem requests [Home and property] Oakley OnDemand is the city's online issue-report path, and it works best when the request includes an address, cross street, and photo if the spot is hard to find.
- Oasis Park and DryTown make Palmdale hot-day planning more concrete [Outdoors] Palmdale Oasis Park and DryTown Water Park give families a clearer summer plan, as long as hours, tickets, rules, and season details are checked first.
- OC Fairgrounds give Costa Mesa a year-round gathering place [History and culture] OC Fair & Event Center started with Orange County's early fair tradition and now works as a 130-acre public gathering place with the fair, Centennial Farm, Heroes Hall, concerts, markets, and events. Page title: The OC Fairgrounds give Costa Mesa a year-round gathering place.
- Oceanside beach days go smoother with two quick checks [Outdoors] Oceanside beach planning is easier when you look at San Diego County beach water postings and match your swim plans to lifeguard, surf, pier, and jetty guidance.
- Oceanside beach parking permits are separate from regular tickets [Cars and driving] Oceanside's annual beach lot parking permit covers designated beach and harbor pay lots, while enforcement and citations use separate parking pages.
- Oceanside building permits can move through eTRAKiT [Home and property] Oceanside's web permit page points applicants to electronic plan submittal, Box uploads, and eTRAKiT tools for inspections, plan status, and permit printing.
- Oceanside flood and tsunami routes are worth knowing by neighborhood [Home and property] Oceanside's floodplain page gives local flood-safety guidance, permit reminders for floodplain work, and tsunami evacuation routes for downtown, downtown south, and harbor areas.
- Oceanside Pier keeps the city pointed at the water [Outdoors] Oceanside Pier is a free waterfront walk for fishing, views, and beach time, with most of the pier open while the far west end is rebuilt.
- Oceanside utility service has a city side and a trash side [Home and property] Oceanside water and wastewater service starts through City utility billing, while landfill, recycling, and organics service is handled through Waste Management.
- Oceanside's mission was called the King of the Missions [History and culture] Mission San Luis Rey was the eighteenth California mission, and its size and setting give Oceanside a deep inland history beyond the beach.
- Oceanside's Top Gun House is really the old Graves cottage [History and culture] Oceanside's Top Gun House began as the 1888 Graves House, a rare oceanfront Folk Victorian cottage that later became a film landmark.
- OHV and off-road riding [Rules signpost guide] How to check stickers, permits, legal riding areas, maps, spark arresters, fire rules, and closures.
- Ojai's center changed when Nordhoff became Ojai [History and culture] Ojai's downtown story includes the Chumash name 'Awha'y, Rancho Ojay, the old town of Nordhoff, and Edward Libbey's 1910s Spanish-style civic center.
- Old California money may be sitting with the State Controller [Money and taxes] California unclaimed property searches start with the State Controller's official search and claim pages, not a paid finder letter.
- old courthouse shows why Santa Ana became a county center [History and culture] The Old Orange County Courthouse in Santa Ana began with county government needs in the 1890s and still anchors a historic civic story downtown. Page title: The old courthouse shows why Santa Ana became a county center.
- Old Mission Dam gives San Diego a very early water story [History and culture] Old Mission Dam in Mission Trails Regional Park connects San Diego trails, early mission water work, Kumeyaay labor, and a five-mile aqueduct.
- Old Mission Santa Barbara still shapes the city view [History and culture] Old Mission Santa Barbara ties the city to mission-era history, Chumash labor and community, Franciscan life, gardens, museum rooms, and a hillside view toward the ocean.
- Old Sacramento keeps the riverfront story close to downtown [History and culture] Old Sacramento State Historic Park preserves early commercial buildings, railroad history, and a riverfront district tied to the Gold Rush era.
- Old Shasta's brick ruins show where the northern road once mattered [History and culture] Shasta State Historic Park preserves brick ruins, streets, cemeteries, and courthouse history from a Gold Rush town that once anchored northern California travel and trade.
- old Torrance library now holds the town's early story [History and culture] Torrance Historical Society and Museum uses the former Post Avenue Library to tell the story of Old Torrance, the San Pedro Rancho, and the planned city that followed. Page title: The old Torrance library now holds the town's early story.
- Old Torrance was planned as a working city from the start [History and culture] The Olmsted Tract in Torrance shows how the city began as a planned modern industrial city with homes, business blocks, transit, and industry arranged on purpose.
- Old Town Elk Grove is a historic main-street layer, not the whole city [History and culture] Old Town Elk Grove gives the fast-growing city a smaller historic center, with planning rules and walking-tour history that help protect its older feel.
- Old Town keeps early San Diego in walking distance [History and culture] Old Town San Diego State Historic Park brings together adobe buildings, living history, museums, shops, food, and the layered beginning of the city.
- Old Town Newhall keeps Santa Clarita's western and arts side visible [History and culture] Old Town Newhall gives Santa Clarita a walkable arts, dining, and western-history center without making that one district stand in for the whole city.
- Old Town Temecula is deeper than the weekend storefronts [History and culture] Old Town Temecula connects Native, Spanish, Mexican, railroad, and cityhood history, with the Temecula Valley Museum as a practical place to start.
- Old Town Tustin turns Main Street into a short history walk [History and culture] Old Town Tustin centers on historic buildings around Main Street and El Camino Real, with a sidewalk tour and a 14-stop virtual walking tour.
- Old Towne Orange paid parking depends on the block and lot [Cars and driving] Old Towne Orange has paid parking around the Plaza during posted hours, while some nearby lots and the Lemon Street structure remain free.
- Old Towne Orange reaches beyond the Plaza [History and culture] Old Towne Orange is a recognized historic district where the Plaza area, older buildings, walkable blocks, and city design standards shape the town-center feel.
- Older homes can need a lead paint pause [Home and property] CDPH lead information helps homeowners and renters treat peeling paint, dust, and older-home repairs with care, especially around young children.
- Olivas Adobe gives Ventura a rancho-era house story [History and culture] Olivas Adobe Historical Park in Ventura preserves an 1847 rancho-era home tied to Rancho San Miguel, cattle, Gold Rush demand, drought, restoration, and local museum use.
- One address can have several hazard layers [Home and property] Cal OES MyHazards lets people enter an address, city, zip code, or map location to review earthquake, flood, fire, and tsunami hazard layers.
- One orange tree helped put Riverside on the citrus map [History and culture] Riverside's Parent Washington Navel Orange Tree is a small landmark with a big story: one tree helped launch a major Southern California citrus industry.
- Ontario airport works best when the ground trip is planned [Cars and driving] Ontario International Airport is a major Inland Empire travel anchor, and the easiest trip often depends on parking, pickup, rental cars, shuttles, or Omnitrans connections.
- Ontario building permits start with the permit portal [Rules and licenses] Ontario's building permit pages point residents to the permit portal for plan check status, permit status, and electronic building permit work.
- Ontario business licenses should match the real business setup [Rules and licenses] Ontario requires a business license before doing business in the city, and a new application is needed when the business changes location or ownership.
- Ontario emergency prep starts with AlertOntario [Home and property] Ontario's ReadyOntario and AlertOntario pages give residents a local way to prepare for emergencies, choose alert devices, and keep text or email notices close by.
- Ontario has a local history room for the Model Colony story [History and culture] Ontario's Model Colony History Room keeps books, maps, photos, yearbooks, directories, oral histories, and local records tied to Ontario and western San Bernardino County.
- Ontario Motor Speedway Park keeps a race-track name in the neighborhood [History and culture] Ontario Motor Speedway Park is a neighborhood park named for the former Ontario Motor Speedway, which closed after the 1980 race season.
- Ontario once had a mule car that coasted downhill [History and culture] Ontario's early Euclid Avenue line used mules to pull riders uphill, then let the mules ride a trailer back down while gravity did the easy part.
- Ontario street sweeping needs a real curb check [Cars and driving] Ontario street sweeping has posted routes and enforcement information, so drivers should match the curb sign, the schedule, and any citation details.
- Ontario uses one city counter for water, sewer, and waste billing [Home and property] Ontario Utilities Customer Service sets up service and handles billing for water, sewer, and integrated waste services.
- Ontario's Model Colony was built around water, roads, and citrus [History and culture] Ontario began as the Chaffey brothers' Model Colony, where water rights, Euclid Avenue, citrus, and careful planning shaped the city.
- Ontario's museum lives in the old City Hall [History and culture] Ontario Museum of History and Art is housed in the city's former City Hall, a WPA-funded landmark on Euclid Avenue.
- Orange 24/7 is the report-a-concern door [Rules and licenses] Orange 24/7 gives residents a city path for reporting concerns such as potholes, graffiti, broken streetlights, and code-related issues with a location and details.
- Orange building permits start in the Civic Portal [Rules and licenses] Orange building permit applications go through the Civic Portal, with account setup, a profile signature, application tracking, and inspection scheduling tied to the same online path.
- Orange County clerk-recorder errands start with the record type [Rules and licenses] Orange County Clerk-Recorder handles property records, vital records, marriage services, fictitious business names, notary filings, passports, and archives through different service paths.
- Orange County DBA names go through the Clerk-Recorder [Rules and licenses] Orange County fictitious business name filings are a county Clerk-Recorder task, separate from city business licenses, CDTFA seller's permits, and other permits.
- Orange County property tax starts with value or payment [Money and taxes] Orange County property tax errands usually split between the Assessor for assessed value and property records, and the Tax Collector for bills and payments.
- Orange County toll roads give you a short pay window [Cars and driving] Orange County's 73, 133, 241, and 261 toll roads use electronic tolling, with online and app payment options before or shortly after driving.
- Orange Cove still wears its citrus name honestly [History and culture] Orange Cove began in 1914, grew into a citrus-centered Fresno County city, and remains tied to orange groves, lemon groves, and the Blossom Trail.
- Orange emergency prep starts with alerts and a simple plan [Home and property] Orange residents can use the fire department's emergency-preparedness page to connect AlertOC, family planning, basic supplies, and local training in one place.
- Orange keeps a deep local-history drawer at the library [History and culture] Orange Public Library's History Center preserves the city's rancho, plaza, citrus, business, neighborhood, and Old Towne records for residents and curious visitors.
- Orange Plaza Park keeps Old Towne centered [History and culture] Orange Plaza Park is the small green center of Old Towne, where the traffic circle, historic district, shops, events, and local memory all meet.
- Orange utility starts are not the same as trash starts [Home and property] Orange handles water, sanitation, and trash through related but separate paths: city Utility Billing for water and sanitation, and CR&R for trash service starts or stops.
- Orinda's name, tunnel, and theater tell one hillside story [History and culture] Orinda's story connects a literary name, the Caldecott Tunnel, an art deco theater, and a hillside town that grew once travel got easier.
- Orland's queen bee story is a real North State farm skill [History and culture] Orland's Queen Bee Capital identity connects Glenn County agriculture, Northern California queen-bee rearing, Bee City USA work, and the Honeybee Discovery Center.
- Oroville's Chinese Temple keeps Gold Rush community history close [History and culture] Oroville's Chinese Temple is a city-owned museum and active worship place tied to Chinese community history in Northern California's Gold Rush era.
- Oso Creek Trail gives Mission Viejo several easy ways into a walk [Outdoors] Mission Viejo's Oso Creek Trail system has 5.5 miles of trails, city-listed trailheads, easy to moderate sections, and a city brochure for planning.
- Otay Valley gives Chula Vista a long green link [Outdoors] Otay Valley Regional Park connects Chula Vista, San Diego, the county, river habitat, trails, playing fields, and open space in one South Bay corridor.
- Our Burbank 311 handles many everyday city requests [Rules and licenses] Burbank residents can use the report-a-problem page and Our Burbank 311 app for many non-emergency city issues, including graffiti, potholes, street cleaning, sidewalks, bulky items, and streetlights.
- Outdoor weather and hazard checks [Safety hub guide] A last-check guide for weather, smoke, fire, heat, surf, rivers, snow, roads, earthquakes, and the live sources to trust before you leave.
- Outdoors [Directory] Parks, coast, public lands, fire rules, snow roads, licenses, and day-of checks. Page title: California outdoors.
- Outdoors [Topic] Coast, mountains, deserts, redwoods, rivers, parks, public lands, and safety rules.
- Oxbow Commons is Napa's riverfront park with room for the river [Outdoors] Oxbow Commons gives downtown Napa a riverfront park with trails, an amphitheater plaza, event use, and high-water access notes to check.
- Oxnard 311 is the local path for many visible city issues [Rules and licenses] Oxnard routes many local service concerns through its 311 app, while emergencies and department-specific questions still use separate contacts.
- Oxnard Beach Park gives the city an easy ocean front yard [Outdoors] Oxnard Beach Park is a 62-acre city beach park with picnic tables, a playground, volleyball, BBQs, lawn, and beach access.
- Oxnard park reservations depend on which space you want [Outdoors] Oxnard's park pages explain which picnic areas need reservations, which spaces are first come first served, and where sports field reservations split off.
- Oxnard parking citations have a short response window [Cars and driving] Oxnard parking citations can be paid or reviewed through the city's parking enforcement process, with a 21-day window shown on the city page.
- Oxnard permit and license questions start with Civic Access [Rules and licenses] Oxnard's permit page and Civic Access portal help residents and businesses submit applications, upload documents, pay fees or business taxes, and track status.
- Oxnard tsunami routes are a coastal address detail [Home and property] Oxnard's tsunami preparedness page tells residents and visitors to know whether they are in a tsunami hazard zone, identify high ground, review evacuation routes, and sign up for VC Alert.
- Oxnard utility billing covers water, wastewater, and trash [Home and property] Oxnard utility billing handles city water, wastewater, and trash accounts, including online bill pay, service sign-up forms, rate information, and Project Assist help.
- Oxnard's Carnegie building keeps Plaza Park's old civic feel [History and culture] The old Oxnard Carnegie Library near Plaza Park gives downtown a preserved civic landmark tied to books, public life, and later arts use.
- Oxnard's name grew from a sugar beet factory [History and culture] Oxnard grew around a large 1898 sugar beet factory, and the city later took its name from the Oxnard brothers who built it.
- Oyster Bay shows San Leandro's usable shoreline today [Outdoors] Oyster Bay Regional Shoreline gives San Leandro a paved Bay Trail segment today, while the city's Shoreline Park project points to more public waterfront access ahead.
- Oyster Point makes South San Francisco a ferry-and-rail commute stop [Cars and driving] South San Francisco has an Oyster Point ferry terminal and a Caltrain station, which shape the city's job-center commute geography.
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- Pacific Boulevard is Huntington Park's downtown and transit spine [Cars and driving] Pacific Boulevard connects Huntington Park's walkable shopping core, bus use, local planning history, and future Southeast Gateway Line context.
- Pacific Electric Trail gives Fontana a straight outdoor thread [Outdoors] The Pacific Electric Trail runs 7 miles through Fontana, linking parks, resource centers, scenery, and everyday walking or biking space.
- Pacific Electric Trail turns Rancho Cucamonga rail into a path [Outdoors] Rancho Cucamonga's Pacific Electric Trail follows an old railway corridor, giving walkers, runners, cyclists, and riders a public path with transportation history underneath.
- Pacific Grove's monarch sanctuary makes winter feel delicate [Outdoors] Pacific Grove's Monarch Grove Sanctuary protects an overwintering habitat where monarch numbers can change, but the town's care for the grove is part of the story.
- Palace of Fine Arts is San Francisco's world's-fair survivor [History and culture] The Palace of Fine Arts began with the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition and still gives San Francisco a public reminder of that huge world's-fair moment. Page title: The Palace of Fine Arts is San Francisco's world's-fair survivor.
- Palm Desert is the monument front door for the desert mountains [Outdoors] The Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains National Monument visitor center gives Palm Desert a federal way into desert trails, mountain views, and planning basics.
- Palm Desert links business licenses with permit readiness [Rules and licenses] Palm Desert business licenses run through HdL, while the Clariti permit portal handles permits, inspections, and project tracking for building and development work.
- Palm Desert puts art right into the everyday desert walk [History and culture] Palm Desert is known as a Coachella Valley cultural and retail center, and its public art program puts sculpture and artwork into streets, parks, libraries, shopping areas, and civic spaces.
- Palm Springs has a tram that climbs from desert heat to pine air [History and culture] The Palm Springs Aerial Tramway grew from a 1930s idea into a steep ride from Chino Canyon up toward the San Jacinto Mountains.
- Palmdale alerts fit the high-desert fire and wind setting [Home and property] Palmdale's Alert Palmdale, emergency preparedness, and local fire-hazard-zone pages give residents a clear way to track local messages and understand address-level fire-hazard mapping.
- Palmdale building projects start online with Accela [Home and property] Palmdale uses the Accela Citizen Portal for building permit applications, electronic plan review, inspections, and some building-related complaints.
- Palmdale business licenses can start online [Rules and licenses] Palmdale lets people apply for or renew a business license online, while city materials also point new businesses to confirm the location and zoning fit.
- Palmdale maintenance reports depend on what kind of issue it is [Rules and licenses] Palmdale's maintenance issue form covers public right-of-way, parks, basins, and green space concerns, while some code and parking issues use separate links.
- Palmdale's name story starts with Joshua trees, not palms [History and culture] Palmdale's early Palmenthal story connects the Antelope Valley to settlers, rail routes, Joshua trees, and a name that stuck in a surprising way.
- Palmdale's old schoolhouse keeps the first settlement story real [History and culture] The Old Palmdale Schoolhouse began with the Palmenthal settlement in 1888, moved more than once, and now helps McAdam Park tell the city's early story.
- Palo Alto Baylands is both a birding place and a shoreline-planning clue [Outdoors] Palo Alto Baylands Nature Preserve gives the city a large marsh-edge park while also pointing readers toward shoreline and sea-level planning.
- Palo Alto garage became shorthand for Silicon Valley [History and culture] The HP Garage in Palo Alto is tied to Hewlett-Packard's start in 1938 and to the larger story of Stanford, startups, and Silicon Valley. Page title: A Palo Alto garage became shorthand for Silicon Valley.
- Palo Alto parking permits start with the district [Cars and driving] Palo Alto has several residential parking permit districts, so residents should start with the neighborhood district before applying or changing a vehicle.
- Palo Alto utilities are unusually local [Rules and licenses] Palo Alto has a city-run utility system for electric, natural gas, water, wastewater, and fiber, while Public Works handles refuse, recycling, stormwater, and related services.
- Palos Verdes Estates was planned around roads, trees, and open land [History and culture] Palos Verdes Estates pairs Tongva history, Malaga Cove, Olmsted planning, early cityhood, and a large open-space promise on the peninsula.
- Palos Verdes Nature Preserve starts with the trail status page [Outdoors] Rancho Palos Verdes has a large coastal preserve system, where closures, habitat rules, and route conditions make the city status page the first stop.
- Paperwork & Money [Directory] Routers, calculators, checklists, and official-link doorways for practical tasks.
- Paradise Depot Museum keeps the ridge railroad story close [History and culture] Paradise Depot Museum carries the story of the Butte County Rail Road, logging, produce shipping, and the old route that later became a trail.
- Paramount bulky pickup needs the Athens call first [Home and property] Paramount residents can schedule bulky-item pickup through Athens Services, but items should not be set out without proper notice.
- Paramount Public Works handles many everyday requests [Home and property] Paramount's Public Works page links common requests such as general service requests, graffiti removal, streetlights, street sweeping, traffic safety, trees, and trash or recycling.
- Paramount Ranch made Agoura Hills look like many different worlds [History and culture] Paramount Ranch in Agoura Hills connects Santa Monica Mountains trails, movie sets, Westerns, television, and a careful rebuild after the Woolsey Fire.
- Parkfield became a small town science watch post [History and culture] Parkfield sits along the San Andreas Fault, where long-running USGS research has helped scientists study how earthquakes begin and repeat.
- Parlier grew from a family store into a raisin-country town [History and culture] Parlier's name, railroad, irrigation, grapes, raisins, and tree fruit make the town feel tied to the San Joaquin Valley's everyday farm story.
- Pasadena emergency prep should match the canyon and city mix [Home and property] Pasadena Fire's emergency preparedness pages give residents a local place to begin household planning for earthquakes, wind, fire, heat, storms, and neighborhood-level disruptions.
- Pasadena parking permits depend on what kind of parking you need [Cars and driving] Pasadena parking pages separate permits, citations, enforcement questions, towed vehicles, and public parking, with Parking Customer Service as the main help counter.
- Pasadena permit work can often begin online [Rules and licenses] Pasadena's Permit Center Online lets many project applicants submit permits, plans, and related materials without starting at the counter.
- Pasadena's City Service Center is the everyday city help desk [Rules and licenses] Pasadena residents can use the City Service Center by phone, web, app, or chat to ask city questions, submit regular requests, and find the right city service.
- Paso Robles water questions start under the street map [Rules and licenses] Paso Robles sits in a groundwater-basin setting where city water, county land, wells, farming, and parcel details can change the right next question.
- Patterson's apricot identity still sits near the town plaza [History and culture] Patterson's official history ties the city to a 1909 colony map, a 1919 incorporation, and its long identity as the Apricot Capital of the World.
- Paycheck, sick leave, and final pay check [Checklist · Work] A first-stop checklist for a short paycheck, sick time, final check, or wage claim.
- Pearson Park Amphitheatre keeps Anaheim's summer stage tradition close [History and culture] Pearson Park Amphitheatre has been part of Anaheim entertainment since 1933, giving the city an outdoor stage apart from its theme-park image.
- Pennypickle's Workshop gives Old Town Temecula a playful science corner [History and culture] Pennypickle's Workshop is Temecula's children's museum, with hands-on rooms, puzzles, machines, and Old Town energy for families.
- Pepper Park is National City's bayfront pocket [Outdoors] Pepper Park gives National City public bayfront access with a boat launch, fishing pier, picnic space, public art, playgrounds, and Bayshore Bikeway connections.
- Peralta Adobe and Fallon House keep early San Jose close [History and culture] The Gonzales/Peralta Adobe and Fallon House help show San Jose before cars, computers, and Silicon Valley, right near San Pedro Square.
- Peralta Hacienda keeps an older Oakland story in view [History and culture] Peralta Hacienda Historical Park in Fruitvale helps show Oakland before the modern city, with adobe traces, an 1870 house, and layered East Bay history.
- Perris business openings can need a building inspection [Rules and licenses] Perris business licensing and building permit questions can overlap when a business opens in a new or existing building and needs zoning, building, or inspection review.
- Perris home projects should start with the permit path [Home and property] Perris homeowners can use the permits page and building department page to sort home projects, online applications, and inspection timing before work begins.
- Perris keeps a big rail museum on the edge of town [History and culture] The Southern California Railway Museum gives Perris a major railroad collection, weekend train and trolley rides, and a link to the older Perris Depot story.
- Perris water questions may now point to EMWD [Home and property] Perris water and sewer service information notes that services transferred to Eastern Municipal Water District in 2024, so utility questions may need that district route.
- Petaluma Adobe shows the rancho story before downtown [History and culture] Petaluma Adobe State Historic Park preserves a rancho-era center tied to Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo, Mexican-period California, labor, livestock, and the older land story around Petaluma.
- Petaluma building permits depend on the project lane [Home and property] Petaluma's permit path splits building, zoning, right-of-way, fire, and business questions, so the project type matters as much as the address.
- Petaluma Public Works issues can go through EngagePetaluma [Home and property] Petaluma routes many Public Works and utilities problems through its report-an-issue path and EngagePetaluma app, with phone numbers for water and Public Works questions.
- Phillips Mansion keeps Pomona's Spadra story standing [History and culture] Phillips Mansion sits in what used to be Spadra, giving Pomona a visible link to an older ranch, stage-road, and early-town layer.
- Pico Rivera code reports need the property address [Home and property] Pico Rivera code enforcement reports focus on private-property issues such as overgrown vegetation, junk, outdoor storage, unpermitted work, signage, and inoperable vehicles.
- Pico Rivera express permits are for small home trade work [Home and property] Pico Rivera's express permit path is limited to certain residential plumbing, mechanical, and electrical work, with a separate online path for small rooftop solar.
- Piedmont's cityhood story has a firehouse at the center [History and culture] Piedmont's 1892 hotel fire, early fire department, City Hall firehouse, and Oakland-surrounded location help explain why it became its own city.
- pier is Huntington Beach's simplest first landmark [Outdoors] Huntington Beach's pier and beach make an easy first stop, but beach rules, state beach rules, parking, and surf conditions still need a fresh check. Page title: The pier is Huntington Beach's simplest first landmark.
- pier turns Manhattan Beach into a small marine classroom [History and culture] Manhattan Beach Pier and the Roundhouse Aquarium make the city's beach identity easy to understand, with ocean views and marine learning in one walk. Page title: The pier turns Manhattan Beach into a small marine classroom.
- Pinole's name comes from food shared near the bay [History and culture] Pinole's name, Old Town, bayfront setting, land grant history, and nearby industry tell a compact West Contra Costa story.
- Pio Pico is part of the Pico in Pico Rivera [History and culture] Pio Pico State Historic Park sits next to Pico Rivera's name story, connecting the city to Mexican California, rivers, and local place names.
- Pioneer Village makes Kern County history walkable in Bakersfield [History and culture] Kern County Museum's Pioneer Village gives Bakersfield a hands-on history stop with buildings, oil, farming, and local life gathered in one place.
- Pioneers' Museum makes Imperial Valley history easier to see [History and culture] Pioneers' Museum in Imperial tells the Imperial Valley story through irrigation, agriculture, ethnic community galleries, early settlers, archives, veterans, and desert life.
- Pismo's butterfly grove turns a winter beach trip into something quieter [Outdoors] The Pismo State Beach Monarch Butterfly Grove is a protected winter resting place where western monarchs cluster in coastal trees, usually from November through February.
- Pittsburg building and zoning questions should be sorted early [Home and property] Pittsburg separates building permits, engineering permits, zoning information, business license forms, and city standards, so the address and project type matter early.
- Pittsburg Marina is the city's Delta front door [Outdoors] Pittsburg Marina gives the city a public Delta waterfront with berths, boat launch access, kayak access, nearby BART connections, and park upgrades.
- Pittsburg Public Works problems need the right contact path [Home and property] Pittsburg residents can sort potholes, fallen trees, flooding, water or sewer emergencies, and dangerous road problems by using the Public Works and streets pages.
- Pittsburg water and sewer starts at the Payment Center [Home and property] Pittsburg starts water and sewer service through the Water Utility Billing Payment Center, with new service requests accepted close to the requested start date.
- Pittsburg's name changed with the work on the waterfront [History and culture] Pittsburg's history includes Rancho Los Medanos, fishing and canning, Black Diamond coal, waterfront shipping, industry, and Camp Stoneman.
- Pixie Woods keeps Stockton's story playful [History and culture] Pixie Woods Children's Park has welcomed Stockton families since 1954, with a small enchanted-forest feel that has drawn generations of visitors.
- Placentia permits use SmartGov, with a counter check [Home and property] Placentia's SmartGov portal can submit, research, and pay for permits, but the city asks applicants to contact Development Services while the system is still being finalized.
- Placerville's old nickname tells a rough Gold Rush story [History and culture] Placerville grew from Gold Rush traffic near Coloma, and its old Hangtown nickname points to a rough early chapter in the Mother Lode.
- Places [Directory] Cities, counties, towns, CDPs, local layers, and nearby place pages. Page title: California places.
- Playhouse mural turns Palmdale's stage into a city story [History and culture] The 152-foot mural on the Palmdale Playhouse blends theater scenes with local details, including the old schoolhouse, Joshua trees, and a small B-2 silhouette. Page title: A Playhouse mural turns Palmdale's stage into a city story.
- Pleasant Valley history widens Camarillo's ranch-house story [History and culture] Pleasant Valley Historical Society ties Camarillo to Chumash history, Rancho Calleguas, farming, the railroad, Camarillo State Hospital, Point Mugu, and local cityhood.
- Pleasanton permits move between the Permit Center and Accela [Home and property] Pleasanton's Permit Center helps route permits and forms, while Accela lets applicants apply for building permits and view building, engineering, fire, and planning permit details.
- Pleasanton Public Works requests run through Maintstar [Home and property] Pleasanton Public Works service requests can be submitted through the Maintstar portal, with the Customer Service Center as the phone path for normal business-hour help.
- Pleasanton utility and garbage questions use different offices [Home and property] Pleasanton utility billing covers water, sewer, irrigation, and recycled water charges, while garbage and recycling service questions go to Pleasanton Garbage Service.
- Pleasanton's west edge opens into ridge trails [Outdoors] Pleasanton connects city parks and local open space with Pleasanton Ridge, Augustin Bernal Park, and a larger East Bay trail landscape.
- Plymouth ties Gold Country mining to Shenandoah Valley wine [History and culture] Plymouth began with Gold Country mining camps, then grew into a small Highway 49 gateway to Amador County's Shenandoah Valley wine country.
- Point Arena's lighthouse grew from a hard-working coast [History and culture] Point Arena's wharf, redwood shipping, shipwreck worries, and rebuilt lighthouse all help explain why this small Mendocino Coast city has such a strong story.
- Point Reyes has a horse ranch near Bear Valley [History and culture] The Morgan Horse Ranch near Bear Valley adds a living animal story to Point Reyes, with park horses, exhibits, and a short walk from the visitor center.
- Point Reyes lets Marin County feel far away without leaving the coast [Outdoors] Point Reyes National Seashore has visitor centers, beaches, lighthouse views, trails, tule elk viewing, whale watching, and wide coastal drives.
- Poison Control is worth saving in the phone [Home and property] California Poison Control gives 24-hour help for poison questions, and the national 1-800-222-1222 number routes callers to local poison experts.
- Pomona building questions split between forms, counters, and inspections [Rules and licenses] Pomona's Building and Safety pages separate permit forms, plan handouts, counter hours, construction hours, and inspection requests, so the right step depends on the project.
- Pomona bulky items need a scheduled pickup [Home and property] Pomona's bulky item page gives households a scheduled pickup path for large items, with limits by calendar year and billing cycle.
- Pomona business licenses are tied to the activity and address [Rules and licenses] Pomona business license work can start online or at City Hall, and the same business question may also touch planning, permits, rentals, or contractor work.
- Pomona emergency planning connects to Ready LA County [Home and property] Pomona's emergency preparedness pages point residents to Ready LA County and basic family planning steps, including how people will communicate and meet if a local emergency interrupts a normal day.
- Pomona street service questions have a useful phone map [Rules and licenses] Pomona's Public Services and frequently called numbers pages split graffiti, potholes, street sweeping, traffic signals, streetlights, illegal dumping, sewer, storm drains, trees, and trash into clearer contact paths.
- Pools and spas work better with layers [Home and property] CDPH drowning prevention information frames pool and spa safety as layers: watching, barriers, alarms, covers, swimming skills, and emergency readiness.
- Port Chicago gives Concord a serious home-front memory [History and culture] Port Chicago Naval Magazine National Memorial near Concord remembers a 1944 home-front disaster, the sailors who served there, and the civil-rights questions that followed.
- Port Hueneme is the port that farm country built [History and culture] The Port of Hueneme links Ventura County farm country to a deepwater harbor, fresh produce, vehicles, Navy harbor history, and a smaller port role between larger coastal gateways.
- Port of Long Beach keeps the city tied to the working harbor [History and culture] The Port of Long Beach gives the city a working-harbor layer where ships, rail, trucks, jobs, air programs, public projects, and regional goods movement meet. Page title: The Port of Long Beach keeps the city tied to the working harbor.
- Porterville building questions start with the Building Division [Home and property] Porterville's Building Division handles plan checking, permits, and inspections for new construction, additions, and remodels inside the city.
- Porterville utility service starts with the address and the form [Rules and licenses] Porterville utility billing covers water, sewer, and refuse, with start and stop service handled through City Hall and collection zones tied to local pickup schedules.
- Portola Valley keeps old logging and open-space stories close [History and culture] Portola Valley's quiet roads make more sense when you know the story of Searsville, redwood logging, small farms, estates, and Windy Hill.
- Portola's railroad museum gives Plumas County a hands-on rail story [History and culture] The Western Pacific Railroad Museum in Portola connects Plumas County to mountain railroading, the Feather River route, locomotives, cars, and local preservation.
- Poway's old oak carries the City in the Country idea [History and culture] Poway's historic oak inspired the city logo and its City in the Country identity, tying local memory to oaks, open space, Kumeyaay-Ipai history, farming, and later cityhood.
- Poway's online services are the door for permits and records [Home and property] Poway requires electronic submittals for building permit work and uses online services for permit applications, plans, permit records, business certificates, and regulatory licenses.
- Presidio turned a military post into a public park [History and culture] San Francisco's Presidio served under three nations, became part of the National Park Service in 1994, and now mixes historic buildings, trails, beaches, and bay views. Page title: The Presidio turned a military post into a public park.
- Preston Castle gives Ione a hilltop landmark you remember [History and culture] Preston Castle rises above Ione with Romanesque Revival architecture, an 1890 cornerstone, state-school history, and a preservation story.
- Prime Desert Woodland Preserve keeps Lancaster's desert close [Outdoors] Prime Desert Woodland Preserve gives Lancaster about 120 acres of protected desert open space, with more than 3 miles of trails and the Elyze Clifford Interpretive Center.
- private well needs its own water-quality routine [Home and property] California Water Boards well-owner pages point private domestic well owners toward water-quality testing, treatment, protection, and basic groundwater information. Page title: A private well needs its own water-quality routine.
- Professional license lookups are split by job [Rules and licenses] California has separate lookup paths for many licensed workers, including DCA boards, real estate licensees, and insurance licensees.
- Property tax - Prop 13 and California property tax basics [Guide] A simple starting point for base-year value, the 1 percent tax limit, reassessment, and why your county assessor matters. Page title: Prop 13 and California property tax basics.
- Property tax - Prop 13 starts with the assessed value, not the Zestimate [Home and property] For many California property-tax questions, start with the county assessed value and the Prop 13 base-year value, not a market-price guess. Page title: Prop 13 starts with the assessed value, not the Zestimate.
- Property tax - Prop 13 tax reset estimator [Calculator · Home costs] Get a rough heads-up on how a purchase can reset the tax bill and cause a later supplemental bill. Page title: Prop 13 tax reset estimator.
- PSPS notice depends on your electric utility [Home and property] California Public Utilities Commission explains that utilities may use Public Safety Power Shutoffs in specific areas, so outage checks should start with the utility serving the address. Page title: A PSPS notice depends on your electric utility.
- Pueblo Viejo Art Walk gives Coachella a downtown thread [History and culture] Coachella's Pueblo Viejo Art Walk helps readers follow downtown murals, civic spaces, planning ideas, and local history without needing a formal tour.
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- Quarry Park turns Rocklin's granite past into a downtown gathering place [History and culture] Rocklin's Quarry District connects downtown gathering space, Quarry Park, the old Capitol Quarry, and the city's long granite-working history.
- Queen Califia's Magical Circle makes Kit Carson Park bright [History and culture] Escondido's Queen Califia's Magical Circle is a free sculpture garden in Kit Carson Park, with mosaic work, California symbols, and limited visiting hours to check ahead.
- Queen Mary gives Long Beach a ship with a whole second life [History and culture] The Queen Mary began as a grand 1930s ocean liner and has been part of the Long Beach shoreline since 1967. Page title: The Queen Mary gives Long Beach a ship with a whole second life.
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- Radon is checked with a test, not a guess [Home and property] CDPH radon pages explain testing, maps, and follow-up steps for a gas that can vary from house to house.
- Railroad Museum makes Sacramento's train story easy to see [History and culture] The California State Railroad Museum in Old Sacramento uses restored locomotives, cars, exhibits, and archives to show why railroads mattered so much here. Page title: The Railroad Museum makes Sacramento's train story easy to see.
- Railroad Square keeps Santa Rosa's depot-and-stonework story close [History and culture] Santa Rosa's Railroad Square grew around rail work, Italian stonework, warehouses, agriculture, the 1906 earthquake, restoration, and today's SMART station.
- Railtown 1897 keeps Jamestown's working railroad story alive [History and culture] Railtown 1897 State Historic Park in Jamestown keeps a historic railroad shop, roundhouse, steam engines, and movie-railroad history close enough to understand in one visit.
- Railyards are Sacramento's changing downtown edge [History and culture] Sacramento's Railyards area carries rail history, downtown growth, project planning, and a still-changing north edge of the central city. Page title: The Railyards are Sacramento's changing downtown edge.
- Rainy hillsides deserve a landslide map look [Home and property] California Geological Survey landslide tools can help people understand where past landslides and deep-seated landslide susceptibility have been mapped.
- Ralph B. Clark Park puts Buena Park on the fossil map [Outdoors] Ralph B. Clark Regional Park gives Buena Park a county park with trails, picnic space, lake views, and a fossil-focused interpretive center.
- Ramona Pageant keeps Hemet tied to a valley stage [History and culture] Hemet's Ramona Pageant has linked the city, San Jacinto, local volunteers, and an outdoor valley performance tradition since the 1920s. Page title: The Ramona Pageant keeps Hemet tied to a valley stage.
- Rancho Buena Vista Adobe keeps Vista's rancho layer visible [History and culture] Rancho Buena Vista Adobe is a city historic site from the 1800s where Vista students and visitors can still picture the old working-ranch landscape.
- Rancho Cordova Connect turns small fixes into trackable requests [Rules and licenses] Rancho Cordova Connect lets residents send photos and reports through the website or app, while Public Works keeps a direct phone path for after-hours issues like water mains, traffic signals, and road hazards.
- Rancho Cordova Online keeps permits and licenses together [Rules and licenses] Rancho Cordova Online is the city system for licenses, permit and plan submittals, payments, renewals, and some meeting or event space applications.
- Rancho Cordova trash service changed hands in 2025 [Home and property] Rancho Cordova residential garbage, recycling, organics, and street sweeping moved to Atlas Disposal, so residents should use the current city waste page.
- Rancho Cordova's story runs from the Gold Rush to cityhood [History and culture] Rancho Cordova became a city in 2003 after decades of local effort, with older roots tied to the river, Mather Field, and aerospace work.
- Rancho Cucamonga building permits are handled online [Rules and licenses] Rancho Cucamonga routes building permit applications through its Online Permit Center, with separate contacts for quick permit types and other technical questions.
- Rancho Cucamonga business licenses depend on where the business sits [Rules and licenses] Rancho Cucamonga business license applications can branch between home occupation, commercial or industrial location, short-term rental, street vendor, and special permit paths.
- Rancho Cucamonga keeps a Route 66 gas station story alive [History and culture] The Cucamonga Service Station began as a 1915 roadside stop and now helps Rancho Cucamonga show its place on old Route 66.
- Rancho Cucamonga still has old vines hiding in Central Park [History and culture] Central Park's historic grapevines connect Rancho Cucamonga to Cucamonga Valley winegrowing, old dry-farmed vines, Route 66, and an early commercial winery landmark.
- Rancho Cucamonga uses Burrtec for trash, recycling, and organics [Home and property] Rancho Cucamonga has Burrtec as its single franchised waste hauler, with city guidance for carts, food waste, green waste, bulky pickup, and special disposal items.
- Rancho Cucamonga uses RC2GO for many report-a-problem requests [Rules and licenses] Rancho Cucamonga's Report an Issue page routes local service requests through RC2GO, with separate city pages for permits, records, and public safety.
- Rancho Cucamonga's ReadyRC page fits the foothill setting [Home and property] Rancho Cucamonga's ReadyRC program covers local preparation for fire, flood, windstorm, earthquake, alerts, CERT, and emergency training, which is useful in a foothill city.
- Rancho Los Alamitos carries Tongva and rancho layers together [History and culture] Rancho Los Alamitos in Long Beach brings together Tongva place memory, the sacred village of Povuu'ngna, a rancho house, gardens, barns, and city-owned public history.
- Rancho San Antonio is Cupertino's foothill front door [Outdoors] Rancho San Antonio gives Cupertino a major foothill access point with open space, trails, Deer Hollow Farm, and heavy-use parking realities.
- Rancho Santa Margarita Community Connection handles city requests [Home and property] Rancho Santa Margarita separates general service requests, code concerns, and streetlight issues, with many streetlight outages routed through Southern California Edison.
- Rattlesnake season is mostly about space and attention [Outdoors] CDFW rattlesnake guidance is a useful reminder for trails, warm yards, woodpiles, pets, and kids during active snake weather.
- ReadySBC is the county door for Santa Barbara emergency alerts [Home and property] ReadySBC gives Santa Barbara County residents one official place to check alerts, emergency maps, road closures, hazard awareness, and preparedness resources.
- REAL ID works best when the documents match [Cars and driving] DMV's REAL ID page and checklist help people gather identity, Social Security, residency, and name-change documents before an office visit.
- Recall searches are useful after a secondhand buy [Home and property] Federal recall tools can help people check cribs, strollers, appliances, tools, furniture, bikes, and other household items before keeping them in regular use.
- Red Bluff Round-Up turns spring rodeo into a valley tradition [History and culture] Red Bluff Round-Up grew from Tehama County fair and rodeo roots into one of the far north's best-known spring events.
- Red Flag Warning is a weather signal, not an evacuation order [Outdoors] National Weather Service Red Flag Warnings point to fire-weather conditions, while evacuation orders and local safety steps come through local emergency officials. Page title: A Red Flag Warning is a weather signal, not an evacuation order.
- Redbud Park gives Clearlake an easy lakefront door [Outdoors] Redbud Park puts Clearlake close to the everyday side of Clear Lake, with a launch, pier, picnic space, shade, and room to watch the water.
- Redding business starts with the license and the location [Rules and licenses] Redding business owners may need a city business license, a home occupation affidavit, county or state permits, and a separate permit-center path for building work.
- Redding has a bridge that really works like a sundial [History and culture] The Sundial Bridge crosses the Sacramento River in Redding and uses its tall design to cast a moving time shadow.
- Redding project permits start at the Permit Center [Rules and licenses] Redding's Permit Center handles building and development questions, online permit checks, inspection requests, forms, parcel information, fee requests, and local agency contacts.
- Redding utilities are mostly under one city roof [Home and property] Redding is unusual because city public utilities cover electric, water, wastewater, storm drain, and solid waste service, with start, stop, and transfer links on the utility pages.
- Redlands Bowl made summer music feel open to everyone [History and culture] The Redlands Bowl Summer Music Festival is a long-running Inland Empire tradition built around outdoor performances with no admission charge, community support, and music under the stars.
- Redlands business openings may need zone clearance [Rules and licenses] Redlands in-town commercial business license applications require zone clearance, and some businesses may also need building or fire sprinkler permits.
- Redlands has a Lincoln shrine tucked beside Smiley Library [History and culture] The Lincoln Memorial Shrine in Redlands is a city-connected museum and research place dedicated to Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War.
- Redlands utility service has water and solid-waste contacts [Home and property] Redlands utility customer service separates water and sewer questions from solid-waste questions, while RedConnect handles account and payment access.
- Redondo Beach bulky pickup needs a little lead time [Home and property] Redondo Beach residents can schedule bulky-item and e-waste pickup through Athens Services, but the request needs to be made before collection day.
- Redondo Beach keeps local history in a Queen Anne house [History and culture] Redondo Beach Historical Museum sits in the 1904 Queen Anne House at Heritage Court, with local artifacts, photographs, school annuals, documents, and two historic houses near Dominguez Park.
- Redondo Beach parking permits depend on the exact curb [Cars and driving] Redondo Beach preferential parking permits depend on whether the address is in a qualifying zone, and the application asks for current registration plus proof of residency.
- Redondo Beach Pier and King Harbor are two pieces of the same coast [Outdoors] Redondo Beach's pier, King Harbor, and county beach access overlap, so it helps to know which agency page answers which kind of coastal question.
- Redwood City business starts with licenses and permits together [Rules and licenses] Redwood City requires most businesses to hold a business license, and the starting-a-business pages point owners toward other permits and approvals that may apply.
- Redwood City keeps old civic buildings in daily downtown life [History and culture] Redwood City's historic downtown includes the Historic San Mateo County Courthouse, Fox Theatre, Lathrop House, and Courthouse Square, where the old center still works as a public gathering place.
- Redwood City permit files work best with the address first [Home and property] Redwood City permit instructions encourage electronic submittals, address-based file naming, permit-status checks, and direct permit staff contact.
- Redwood City utility bills and garbage bills can split apart [Home and property] Redwood City bills water and sewer in some cases, while garbage collection and billing are handled through Recology, so residents should check which bill they are holding.
- Redwoods, deserts, mountains, and big parks [Where-to-go guide guide] A practical first stop for redwoods, Sierra parks, desert roads, islands, volcanoes, and the official pages that control roads, permits, weather, and access.
- Reedley's opera house rose from a downtown fire [History and culture] The 1903 Reedley Opera House Complex grew out of a downtown fire and became a brick center for theater, commerce, meetings, and community life.
- Rent board, court, and legal aid [Official link · Renting] Pick the safer first stop for a rent increase, deposit problem, repair issue, eviction notice, discrimination concern, or court paper.
- Rent, deposit, and notice check [Checklist · Renting] A first-stop checklist for a rent increase, move-out deposit, or notice from the landlord.
- Rialto business licenses have a portal and review window [Rules and licenses] Rialto business license applications move through the online permitting center, with home-based businesses needing both a home occupation permit and a home occupation license.
- Rialto Public Works concerns have a short form [Home and property] Rialto routes Public Works concerns through a service request form, which is the practical first stop for maintenance issues in the public area.
- Rialto puts trash day and sweeping reminders in one place [Home and property] Rialto residents can use city reminders for trash day and street sweeping, plus Burrtec rules for large items that do not fit in carts.
- Rialto saved a 1907 church and turned it toward community use [History and culture] Rialto's First Christian Church, now the Kristina Dana Hendrickson Cultural Center, is a saved 1907 landmark near the local history museum.
- Rialto Theatre gives South Pasadena a grand old Main Street face [History and culture] South Pasadena's Rialto Theatre was completed in 1925 and still gives the city one of its clearest early-20th-century landmarks. Page title: The Rialto Theatre gives South Pasadena a grand old Main Street face.
- Rialto utilities start with water, sewer, trash, and providers [Home and property] Rialto residents may deal with Rialto Water Services, sewer billing, Burrtec trash service, utility providers, rebates, and different water service areas.
- Rialto water and sewer questions may depend on the service area [Home and property] Rialto utility pages point residents to water and sewer service contacts, bill payment, rate information, service-area maps, and utility provider links.
- Richmond building permits now start in iMS [Home and property] Richmond has moved building permit applications to the iMS portal, and older eTRAKiT users can use the same email when setting up access.
- Richmond business licenses include a zoning check [Rules and licenses] Richmond requires businesses operating in the city to hold a business license, and new commercial business license applications need zoning compliance through Planning.
- Richmond code issue reports work best with a clear location [Rules and licenses] Richmond code issue reports start with the address or nearest cross streets, the type of problem, and enough detail for staff to route the request.
- Richmond has two alert paths worth knowing [Home and property] Richmond residents can use Everbridge/Nixle notifications and the Contra Costa Community Warning System for different kinds of local emergency messages.
- Richmond Plunge is a pool with a long memory [History and culture] The Richmond Plunge opened in 1926 as the Municipal Natatorium, later closed for major repairs, and reopened as a restored Point Richmond swim center. Page title: The Richmond Plunge is a pool with a long memory.
- Richmond's BART and Amtrak stop works like a small transit hub [Cars and driving] Richmond's Amtrak station sits beside BART and connects with bus and park-and-ride options, but parking rules differ by lot and trip type.
- Richmond's old Carnegie library now holds city history [History and culture] The Richmond Museum of History and Culture sits in the old Carnegie Library and connects Ohlone history, early city growth, and the WWII Homefront.
- Richmond's waterfront carries a national home-front story [History and culture] Rosie the Riveter/WWII Home Front National Historical Park and the Marina Bay Trail connect Richmond's shipyards, wartime workers, waterfront, and public trail stops.
- Rio Dell sits where redwoods, bluffs, and the Eel River meet [History and culture] Rio Dell's place story comes from Eagle Prairie, the Eel River, redwood country, Scotia next door, and a small downtown that grew fast enough to incorporate.
- Rio Vista kept its river-view name after moving to higher ground [History and culture] Rio Vista began near Cache Slough, later moved to higher ground, and grew into a Sacramento River Delta town with a bridge, fishing, and river traffic.
- Ripon started with a river crossing, then learned to bloom [History and culture] Ripon's story runs from a Stanislaus River claim and railroad station to almond orchards and a festival that turns bloom season into a town tradition.
- River Bluff Park gives Ceres fields and a lower-terrace clue [Outdoors] River Bluff Regional Park is Ceres's large sports park, with soccer fields, parking, picnic space, and a lower river terrace planned for future trail work.
- Riverside 311 is the first stop for many city service requests [Rules and licenses] Riverside 311 gives residents a web and app path for many non-emergency city service requests, with tracking, routing, and request numbers built into the process.
- Riverside building permits can be handled through the public portal [Home and property] Riverside's Public Permit Portal supports online applications, plan submittals, fee payments, permit tracking, issuance steps, inspections, and results.
- Riverside County DBA filings start with the county clerk-recorder [Rules and licenses] Riverside County fictitious business name filings start with the Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder, separate from city licenses, seller's permits, and state filings.
- Riverside County property tax has two main doors [Money and taxes] For Riverside County property tax, parcel value questions start with the Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder, while bills and payments start with the Tax Collector.
- Riverside County records start with the kind of paper [Rules and licenses] Riverside County record errands are easier when you first name whether you need a birth, death, marriage, recorded property document, clerk copy, or other filed county record.
- Riverside County unincorporated areas mean county-level government [Rules and licenses] Riverside County says an unincorporated area is governed at the county level rather than by a city, which changes where neighbors start.
- Riverside County uses zones for emergency notices [Home and property] Riverside County's Know Your Zone and Alert RivCo pages help residents look up zones and receive local public safety notifications for the addresses they care about.
- Riverside storm prep starts around the drains [Home and property] Riverside's stormwater and storm-prep pages explain the Santa Ana watershed, storm-drain care, yard drainage, sandbags, and simple steps before heavy rain.
- Riverside utilities use RPU for power and water [Home and property] Riverside Public Utilities handles start, stop, and transfer service for power and water accounts, with customer service also helping with billing, assistance programs, rebates, and account questions.
- Roadside Oddities [Collection] Roadside stops, handmade places, desert surprises, and local landmarks that are more interesting once you know the story.
- Rocklin eTRAKiT accounts are local to Rocklin [Home and property] Rocklin uses eTRAKiT for online permitting, and contractors need a Rocklin account and a valid city business license before permit work can move smoothly.
- Rocklin park pavilions are booked online [Outdoors] Rocklin uses an online reservation system for park pavilions and facility rentals, with park rental details tied to places like Johnson-Springview, Margaret Azevedo, and Whitney Park.
- Rocklin utility service is split among several providers [Home and property] Rocklin residents should know that water, sewer, garbage, gas, electricity, and other utility services are handled by separate providers.
- Rocklin's Finn Hall grew out of quarry life [History and culture] Finn Hall in Rocklin was built in 1905 by the Finnish Temperance Society, with local granite and deep ties to the city's quarry community.
- Rockville Hills gives Fairfield oak shade and volcanic rock [Outdoors] Rockville Hills Regional Park near Fairfield has grasslands, oak woodlands, volcanic rock, trails, picnic use, and simple day-use details to check first.
- Rodgers Ranch keeps Pleasant Hill's old farm layer visible [History and culture] Rodgers Ranch Heritage Center gives Pleasant Hill a small living-history stop built around the city's oldest farmhouse and its mid-1800s farm life.
- Rohnert Park's tracker lets you check existing requests [Home and property] Rohnert Park's Citizen Request Tracker lets residents report routine concerns and check existing requests later, which is useful for follow-up.
- Rolling Hills Estates built cityhood around horses and open space [History and culture] Rolling Hills Estates incorporated in 1957 to protect a rural Palos Verdes feel, with white fences, bridle trails, open spaces, and an equestrian lifestyle.
- Rolling Hills is a private-road city built around open space [History and culture] Rolling Hills is its own Palos Verdes city, with private roads, staffed gates, acre lots, bridle trails, and a long effort to keep a rural hilltop feel.
- Rose Bowl is Pasadena's famous stadium in the arroyo [History and culture] The Rose Bowl opened in 1922 and still anchors Pasadena's mix of sports, civic pride, hills, trails, and big public events. Page title: The Rose Bowl is Pasadena's famous stadium in the arroyo.
- Rosemead Round the Clock is the issue report page [Home and property] Rosemead's Report an Issue page is the city entry point for routine local concerns, and a clear address or landmark helps the request land well.
- Roseville emergency prep covers heat, storms, and flooding [Home and property] Roseville's emergency-preparedness pages cover general preparation, summer heat, winter storms, flooding, floodplain management, and evacuation terminology for residents.
- Roseville puts permits and licenses in one services menu [Rules and licenses] Roseville's online services menu brings together building permits, inspections, business licenses, planning permits, engineering permits, hydrant permits, and wastewater discharge permits.
- Roseville utility questions often start with the city [Home and property] Roseville runs community-owned utility services, so bill, service, outage, rebate, trash, water, sewer, and electric questions often start with the city.
- Roseville's Carnegie building still holds local memory [History and culture] Roseville's old Carnegie Library opened in 1912, later became a museum, and still anchors the city's rail-town and downtown story.
- Roseville's downtown still has an old-town spine [History and culture] Downtown Roseville links Historic Old Town, the Vernon Street District, Royer Park, Saugstad Park, transit, shops, and civic life into one walkable core.
- Roseville's myRSVL app is the everyday city request door [Rules and licenses] Roseville's myRSVL app and web page let residents report non-emergency issues, add photos, use location details, and track many routine city requests.
- Roseville's Utility Exploration Center makes hidden city systems visible [History and culture] Roseville's Utility Exploration Center helps people understand local water, energy, waste, watershed, and sewer systems through exhibits and programs.
- Ross grew around a creek, old land grants, and a protected tree canopy [History and culture] Ross in Marin County has Coast Miwok roots, Mexican land-grant history, James Ross's 1857 purchase, concrete creek bridges, and a long habit of protecting trees.
- Rossmoor Bar gives Rancho Cordova American River access [Outdoors] Rossmoor Bar in Rancho Cordova is part of the American River Parkway, with river access, pedestrian trail use, sunrise-to-sunset hours, and raft-planning details to check.
- Roy Rogers left Apple Valley with a Happy Trails layer [History and culture] Apple Valley's Roy Rogers story ties the high desert to the Apple Valley Inn, a family home, the first Roy Rogers Museum, and a lasting local cowboy-memory thread.
- RTD is Stockton's local bus and county transit layer [Cars and driving] San Joaquin RTD serves Stockton and the county with local routes, commuter routes, a trip planner, fares, and downtown transit center details.
- Rules and Licenses [Topic] Simple routes into state agencies, local permits, outdoor licenses, water rules, and paperwork.
- Rusch Home gives Citrus Heights an old ranch-house anchor [History and culture] Historic Rusch Home and Gardens connects Citrus Heights to the Volle and Rusch family story, a 1914 Craftsman home, Rusch Park, and a preserved garden setting.
- Ruth Bancroft Garden makes dry gardening feel alive [Outdoors] Ruth Bancroft Garden in Walnut Creek shows cacti, succulents, and drought-tolerant plants in a walkable garden that feels especially useful in a dry California climate.
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- Sacramento 311 is the city service request shortcut [Rules and licenses] Sacramento 311 handles non-emergency city service requests and questions, including potholes, abandoned vehicles, illegal dumping, and many other city-service problems.
- Sacramento County FBN filings go through the Business License Unit [Rules and licenses] Sacramento County fictitious business name statements are filed through the Business License Unit and are separate from city, county, and state business steps.
- Sacramento County planning starts with unincorporated status [Rules and licenses] Sacramento County tells applicants to check whether they are in the unincorporated area before using its planning path.
- Sacramento County property tax splits assessment from collection [Money and taxes] Sacramento County property tax questions usually start with the Assessor for value and parcel records, or Finance Tax Collection for bills and payments.
- Sacramento County recorded documents start with the index [Rules and licenses] Sacramento County Clerk/Recorder has an online recorded-document index that can help identify deeds, deeds of trust, liens, assignments, and other recorded papers before you order or visit.
- Sacramento flood maps are worth checking by address [Home and property] Sacramento's flood preparedness page gathers flood maps, evacuation maps, flood insurance information, and construction requirements for address-specific questions.
- Sacramento flood questions have one city preparedness page [Home and property] Sacramento's flood preparedness page gathers maps, insurance information, construction requirements, city preparation details, and staff contacts.
- Sacramento move-ins split city utilities from SMUD power [Home and property] A Sacramento move-in may involve City of Sacramento utility billing for water, wastewater, drainage, or trash, while SMUD handles electric service.
- Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge gives Glenn County an easy loop [Outdoors] Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge gives Glenn County a six-mile auto tour through wetlands, grasslands, vernal pools, and riparian habitat.
- Sacramento parking starts with the right parking lane [Rules and licenses] Sacramento parking questions can split between residential permit parking, parking tickets, event parking, meter rates, garages, and Parking Services contacts.
- Sacramento permit work has an online portal and a counter path [Home and property] Sacramento Permit Services supports building permit applications, plan review status, fee payment, permit history, open code-case searches, inspections, and public counter help.
- Sacramento raised its streets, and Old Sacramento still has the clues [History and culture] Old Sacramento's underground and hollow sidewalks tell the story of floods, raised streets, and a city that rebuilt its business district upward.
- Sacramento River Bend is Tehama County's quiet outdoor spine [Outdoors] Sacramento River Bend near Red Bluff gives Tehama County a river, oak, wildlife, and trail anchor that feels specific to the northern Sacramento Valley.
- Sacramento's Capitol took years and a lot of patience [History and culture] California's Capitol building in Sacramento took 14 years to complete, with money trouble, materials, politics, and the river setting all shaping the work.
- Sacramento's old city cemetery reads like an outdoor history walk [History and culture] Sacramento Historic City Cemetery is a 30-acre outdoor history museum, with old paths, monuments, gardens, and city memory near Broadway.
- SacRT is the bus-and-light-rail layer around Sacramento [Cars and driving] SacRT handles many Sacramento bus and light-rail trips, with routes, alerts, fares, mobile payment, and transfer details to check together.
- Safari Park makes Escondido a big outdoor day [Outdoors] The San Diego Zoo Safari Park is in Escondido, with large field habitats, tours, and add-on experiences that are worth checking before a visit. Page title: The Safari Park makes Escondido a big outdoor day.
- Salinas business licenses need an address and zoning check [Rules and licenses] Salinas requires business licenses for businesses operating in the city and adds home-occupation, zoning, seller's permit, contractor-license, health-permit, and fictitious-name checks when they apply.
- Salinas Connect is the useful door for many local reports [Rules and licenses] Salinas routes many sidewalk, parking, graffiti, street light, abandoned vehicle, and other local concerns through Salinas Connect.
- Salinas flood questions belong with the property address [Home and property] Salinas' flood-damage prevention page gives residents floodplain information and FEMA map links, which is useful for homes, businesses, and low-lying streets around heavy rain.
- Salinas keeps a rail-history cluster near the station [History and culture] The old Salinas Freight Depot, the train station area, and nearby rail museum pieces help show how the railroad helped shape Salinas.
- Salinas puts several project desks in one permit center [Home and property] Salinas Permit Center brings building, planning, fire prevention, engineering, code enforcement, business support, inspections, and permit contacts into one place.
- Salinas utilities split between water companies and city trash rules [Home and property] Salinas utility questions split between private water companies, PG&E electric service, and Republic Services for city-contracted trash and recycling service.
- Salinas' Big Week grew from a local wild west show [History and culture] The California Rodeo Salinas began as a 1911 wild west show and grew into Big Week, one of the city's strongest civic traditions.
- Salt Creek Trail shows how Menifee is still stitching routes together [Outdoors] Menifee's Salt Creek Trail study looks at active-transportation gaps near schools, jobs, retail, recreation, and the Menifee Valley Campus area.
- Salton Sea gives Imperial County a desert shoreline [Outdoors] Salton Sea State Recreation Area has desert shoreline, birdwatching, photography, camping, hiking, and wide low-desert views along the inland sea. Page title: The Salton Sea gives Imperial County a desert shoreline.
- Salvation Mountain turns desert paint into folk art [History and culture] Salvation Mountain near Niland is Leonard Knight's bright desert folk-art environment, built over decades with adobe, hay bales, donated paint, and a simple message.
- San Anselmo has a tiny park with a big movie-story wink [History and culture] Imagination Park puts Yoda, Indiana Jones, George Lucas, downtown San Anselmo, and Town Hall into one small Marin County stop.
- San Bernardino building questions split permits and inspections [Home and property] San Bernardino Building and Safety handles building permits, plan check, permit status, inspection status, and inspection scheduling through SB Direct.
- San Bernardino County DBA starts with the Recorder-Clerk [Rules and licenses] San Bernardino County fictitious business name filings start with the Recorder-Clerk, separate from city business licenses and state tax accounts. Page title: A San Bernardino County DBA starts with the Recorder-Clerk.
- San Bernardino County has a countywide role and a local role [Rules and licenses] San Bernardino County's Countywide Plan separates its regional county role from its local role in unincorporated communities.
- San Bernardino County mountain snow has its own road rhythm [Cars and driving] San Bernardino County Snow Information shares winter driving tips, road-status definitions, and snow-removal status for county mountain roads.
- San Bernardino County records start with recorder or clerk [Rules and licenses] San Bernardino County record errands are easier when you split official recorded documents, vital records, marriage services, fictitious business names, notary filings, and other clerk work before you start.
- San Bernardino County tax questions split between value and payment [Money and taxes] San Bernardino County property tax questions usually go to the Assessor-Recorder-Clerk for property information or the Tax Collector for bills and payments.
- San Bernardino emergency alerts run through county systems too [Home and property] San Bernardino residents can use city emergency management information and San Bernardino County alert systems, including TENS, for wildfire, evacuation, shelter, and public-safety messages.
- San Bernardino helped turn a drive-in into a fast-food model [History and culture] San Bernardino is where the McDonald brothers opened their early restaurant and later refined the Speedee Service System that shaped modern fast food.
- San Bernardino water and trash use two different counters [Home and property] San Bernardino Municipal Water Department handles water customer service, while Burrtec handles refuse collection and street sweeping through the city's solid waste contract.
- San Bernardino's Wigwam Village keeps Route 66 playful [History and culture] Wigwam Village No. 7 in San Bernardino is a Route 66 motel landmark, with cone-shaped rooms, roadside design, National Register status, and a vivid travel-era look.
- San Bruno building permits use MGO Connect [Home and property] San Bruno's Building Division uses MGO Connect for online permits, application tracking, documents, payments, and inspection scheduling.
- San Bruno Mountain gives San Mateo County a wild ridge in the city [Outdoors] San Bruno Mountain State and County Park has rugged open space, bay views, trails, picnic areas, rare plants, and butterfly habitat.
- San Clemente beach parking has meters, permits, and state lots [Outdoors] San Clemente beach parking works differently by lot, with city meters and pay stations, annual city permits, and separate state-operated beach lots.
- San Clemente permit work often starts in e-Trakit [Home and property] San Clemente offers building permit application paths through e-Trakit, in person, or by email, and many electrical, plumbing, mechanical, and structural projects need permits.
- San Clemente water bills and trash service split cleanly [Rules and licenses] San Clemente utility billing handles water, sewer, and storm drain bills, while CR&R is the city's franchise waste hauler for trash and recycling service.
- San Clemente's Beach Trail links the pier, T-Street, and the train [Outdoors] The San Clemente Beach Trail runs along the coast and helps connect North Beach, the pier, T-Street, Calafia, and rail access.
- San Diego city project questions start with Development Services [Rules and licenses] San Diego City Planning points building, zoning, and property questions to the Development Services Department.
- San Diego County FBN filings are a public name record [Rules and licenses] San Diego County fictitious business name filings are handled by the Recorder/County Clerk, and the filing does not approve the business or replace other permits.
- San Diego County property tax splits value from collection [Money and taxes] San Diego County property tax questions usually begin with the Assessor for value and records, or the Treasurer-Tax Collector for tax bills and payments.
- San Diego County records split between recorder, clerk, and assessor [Rules and licenses] San Diego County's Assessor/Recorder/County Clerk handles vital records, recording, property information, parcel maps, and clerk filings through related but separate service paths.
- San Diego County unincorporated plans have a county paper trail [Rules and licenses] San Diego County keeps community plans for unincorporated communities, so the county layer can matter even when a nearby city name is familiar.
- San Diego emergency alerts use the regional AlertSanDiego system [Home and property] San Diego's Stay Informed page routes residents to Genasys Protect and AlertSanDiego for safety information and evacuation notifications.
- San Diego parking citations start with the city parking page [Cars and driving] San Diego parking citation questions usually start with the city's citation page, then branch into payment, appeal, enforcement, or permit questions.
- San Diego transit usually comes down to MTS and PRONTO [Cars and driving] MTS runs many San Diego bus and Trolley trips, and PRONTO is the fare card or app layer riders use with those trips.
- San Diego water service starts with the move-in form [Home and property] San Diego Public Utilities handles water and wastewater accounts, with start and stop service pages, MyWaterSD, leak and pressure contacts, and special rules for some multi-unit properties.
- San Diego Zoo started with a roar in Balboa Park [History and culture] The San Diego Zoo grew from a Balboa Park animal collection left after the Panama-California Exposition, and the lion Rex became part of the city's origin story. Page title: The San Diego Zoo started with a roar in Balboa Park.
- San Diego's first bay light sat a little too high [History and culture] Old Point Loma Lighthouse is a San Diego landmark with a useful twist: the pretty high perch also made fog a real problem for ships.
- San Dimas depot still tells the railroad story [History and culture] The Pacific Railroad Society Museum gives San Dimas a hands-on rail history stop inside the historic Santa Fe Depot. Page title: The San Dimas depot still tells the railroad story.
- San Elijo Lagoon gives Encinitas a wetland front door [Outdoors] San Elijo Lagoon gives Encinitas and Cardiff-by-the-Sea a coastal wetland reserve with trails, a nature center, creek-to-ocean habitat, and tide-aware visits.
- San Fernando kept its own city identity inside the Valley [History and culture] San Fernando is the oldest city in the valley that bears its name, with Mission City roots, railroad growth, and a long independent identity.
- San Francisco business registration runs through the Treasurer [Rules and licenses] San Francisco businesses usually register with the Treasurer & Tax Collector within 30 days of starting business activity and renew each year.
- San Francisco county is the same local government as the city [Rules and licenses] San Francisco uses one city-and-county government, so local questions usually start on SF.gov or SF Planning.
- San Francisco parking permits start with the exact block [Cars and driving] San Francisco residential parking permits depend on posted permit areas, current documents, renewal timing, paid citations, and whether the vehicle is tied to the address.
- San Francisco parking tickets start with SFMTA [Cars and driving] San Francisco parking citations are handled through SFMTA, with separate paths for paying, contesting, checking status, and reading citation details.
- San Francisco property questions start at the city counter [Rules and licenses] SF.gov points property and project questions toward the San Francisco center and related city services.
- San Francisco property tax splits assessor records from payment [Money and taxes] San Francisco property tax questions usually split between the Assessor-Recorder for value and property records, and the Treasurer & Tax Collector for bills and payments.
- San Francisco public records start with the department [Rules and licenses] San Francisco's records index helps residents find the right city department, records policy, and request path before sending a public records request.
- San Francisco tsunami zones are a waterfront and low-area check [Home and property] San Francisco's tsunami page has a hazard zone map and alert information for people who live, work, visit, or travel through waterfront and low-lying areas.
- San Gabriel bulky items go through Athens [Home and property] San Gabriel uses Athens Services for bulky-item pickup, while illegally dumped items should be reported to Public Works.
- San Gabriel Mountains are close enough to feel local [Outdoors] The national monument north of the Los Angeles basin protects more than 452,000 acres of mountains, canyons, history, habitat, and recreation land. Page title: The San Gabriel Mountains are close enough to feel local.
- San Gabriel's Mission District carries water, civic, and mission layers [History and culture] San Gabriel's Mission District ties together Mission San Gabriel, the restored millrace, civic buildings, the Mission Playhouse, and the route story behind Los Angeles.
- San Jacinto street reports need the right road owner [Home and property] San Jacinto's Streets Department page covers city street issues such as signs, illegal dumping, sidewalk repair, streetlights, and potholes, with separate contacts for traffic signals.
- San Jacinto uses one online path for building and planning [Home and property] San Jacinto Connect Online is the city's permit and planning doorway for building permits, inspections, document uploads, payments, zoning questions, and planning applications.
- San Joaquin County planning starts with the Planning Division [Rules and licenses] San Joaquin County's Planning Division administers the General Plan, Development Title, and other adopted plans.
- San Joaquin County property tax splits value from payment [Money and taxes] San Joaquin County property tax questions usually split between the Assessor-Recorder-County Clerk for assessed value and property records, and the Treasurer-Tax Collector for tax bills and payment.
- San Joaquin grew from ranch land into a westside farm town [History and culture] The City of San Joaquin's story runs from James Ranch cattle land, high-water years, a planned colony town, and west Fresno County crops.
- San Joaquin Marsh gives Irvine a quiet wetland walk with firm rules [Outdoors] San Joaquin Marsh adds a calm wetland side to Irvine, with walking trails, wildlife viewing, and clear rules that keep the place from feeling like a regular park.
- San Jose 311 is the first stop for everyday city fixes [Rules and licenses] San Jose 311 gives residents one place to start many non-emergency city requests, including potholes, graffiti, illegal dumping, abandoned vehicles, streetlights, and some trash service issues.
- San Jose calls the local business license a tax certificate [Rules and licenses] San Jose businesses usually register for a Business Tax Certificate within 90 days, including many independent work, rental, and regular business activities.
- San Jose flood checks work best by address [Home and property] San Jose has city flood maps, storm preparedness guidance, AlertSCC signups, and creek monitoring links that help residents check flood questions by address.
- San Jose helped give computers a memory they could reach fast [History and culture] IBM's RAMAC work in San Jose produced the first computer to use a random-access disk drive, long before data storage became an everyday phrase.
- San Jose keeps planning questions close to City Hall [Rules and licenses] San Jose's Planning Division oversees the General Plan and zoning policies, with City Hall as a front door for many project questions.
- San Jose parking tickets use a city parking citation path [Rules and licenses] San Jose parking citations are handled through the city's parking ticket process, with separate paths for paying or contesting a ticket.
- San Jose trash service depends on the address [Rules and licenses] San Jose residents can use the city lookup and 311 to find the right trash, recycling, yard trimmings, junk pickup, street sweeping, and service contact for an address.
- San Jose utility bills may be city, PG&E, or both [Home and property] A San Jose move-in can involve city water or garbage billing plus PG&E electric and gas service, so the bill name is the best first clue.
- San Jose VTA trips need the route and fare layer together [Cars and driving] VTA is the main bus and light-rail layer around San Jose, with route pages, alerts, Clipper payment details, and transfer rules to check by trip.
- San Jose's rose garden grew from old orchard land [Outdoors] San Jose Municipal Rose Garden turns a former prune orchard into a public garden with thousands of rose plantings and a long neighborhood identity.
- San Jose's Winchester House is strange even before the ghost stories [History and culture] The Winchester Mystery House grew from an eight-room farmhouse into a huge, unusual San Jose mansion tied to Sarah Winchester's long building project.
- San Juan Bautista puts mission and plaza history side by side [History and culture] San Juan Bautista State Historic Park and the nearby mission make a small town feel like a crossroads of Native, Spanish, Mexican, American, and travel history.
- San Juan Capistrano's swallows made a mission town famous [History and culture] Mission San Juan Capistrano is tied to Orange County history and the annual Return of the Swallows tradition.
- San Leandro business licenses can trigger a zoning form [Rules and licenses] San Leandro businesses in city limits apply for a business license first, then may need zoning conformance before the application can move ahead.
- San Leandro has a 311-style path for local issues [Home and property] San Leandro's MySanLeandro system lets residents report non-emergency city issues through a mobile app or website, while department contacts still handle more specific needs.
- San Leandro permit work is easier when the portal comes first [Home and property] San Leandro uses an online permit portal for building permits, status checks, inspections, submittal guides, and permit-center routing.
- San Leandro trash service depends on the provider area [Home and property] San Leandro residents may need ACI or Waste Management, so bulky pickup, missed pickup, and recycling questions work better with the service provider first.
- San Luis Obispo building work runs through InfoSLO first [Rules and licenses] San Luis Obispo uses InfoSLO for many building permit and inspection tasks, while fire or demolition inspections still need a phone call.
- San Luis Refuge lets Merced County slow down for wildlife [Outdoors] San Luis National Wildlife Refuge has auto tour routes for wetland views, winter birds, tule elk, and quiet wildlife watching.
- San Luis Reservoir is both a park day and a water-project clue [Outdoors] Near Los Banos, San Luis Reservoir is a state recreation area and a major offstream reservoir tied to California's water system.
- San Marcos building permits now run through a newer portal [Home and property] San Marcos moved building permit applications to a newer portal, with account setup, permit guides, solar notes, PRADU information, and inspection links to check before applying.
- San Marcos has a deep parks, trails, and pool network [Outdoors] San Marcos lists 44 parks, more than 300 park acres, a 72-mile trail network, two pools, and recreation centers that support everyday North County outings.
- San Marcos has an app for local problem reports [Home and property] San Marcos uses an app and desktop option for reports such as graffiti, sidewalk cracks, park maintenance, code violations, and similar city concerns.
- San Marcos neighborhood traffic requests have a review path [Cars and driving] San Marcos has a neighborhood traffic process for concerns such as speeding, cut-through traffic, sign visibility, bike lanes, and crosswalks.
- San Marcos public records requests start with the City Clerk [Rules and licenses] San Marcos routes city public records requests through the City Clerk, with contact options and a response window that gives requesters a clear place to start.
- San Marino's ranch story leads straight to The Huntington [History and culture] San Marino's name, early ranch families, Henry Huntington, and the library and gardens make the city feel tied to a landmark and a larger land story.
- San Mateo County FBN filings start with ACRE [Rules and licenses] San Mateo County fictitious business name filings create a public business name record through ACRE, separate from business license and permit steps.
- San Mateo County planning starts with unincorporated areas [Rules and licenses] San Mateo County's Current Planning Section handles land-use planning for unincorporated areas.
- San Mateo County property tax has value, accounting, and bill lanes [Money and taxes] San Mateo County property tax questions usually start with the Assessor for value, the Controller for tax accounting, or the Tax Collector for bills and payments.
- San Mateo County records start with the paper you need [Rules and licenses] San Mateo County Clerk-Recorder errands are easier when you first name whether you need a recorded property document, vital record, marriage service, fictitious business name, or other registration.
- San Mateo County smoke days can be local or far away [Home and property] San Mateo County emergency preparedness materials explain that wildfire smoke and AQI problems can affect the county even when the fire is not nearby.
- San Mateo parking permits depend on your block first [Cars and driving] San Mateo residential parking permits use program areas, eligibility checks, a permit map, visitor permits, and limits tied to local parking pressure.
- San Ramon building submittals depend on the project type [Home and property] San Ramon's Building and Safety pages separate general building services, forms, handouts, and permit-plan submittal instructions by project type.
- San Ramon permits and business licenses start in CSS [Rules and licenses] San Ramon's CSS system is the first online stop for many permit and business license applications, inspection requests, invoices, and project status checks.
- San Ramon service requests get a tracking number [Rules and licenses] San Ramon's Citizen Request Management system lets residents submit non-emergency city service requests, track progress, and route issues to the right city staff.
- San Ramon trash questions usually run through ACI [Home and property] San Ramon residential garbage, recycling, organics, missed pickups, cart changes, billing issues, and cleanup days run through ACI of San Ramon.
- Sand City turned dunes and industry into an artsy coast stop [History and culture] Sand City started with coastal industry and sand mining, then grew into a small Monterey Bay city known for dunes, murals, studios, and West End arts energy.
- Sanger's Christmas Tree City name points up toward Grant Grove [History and culture] Sanger's identity as the Nation's Christmas Tree City comes from its long link to the General Grant Tree in Kings Canyon country.
- Santa Ana building permits have a few useful online lanes [Rules and licenses] Santa Ana's Building Safety Division points residents to online permits, inspection scheduling, permit history, plan check information, and electronic plan review.
- Santa Ana is where many Orange County errands land [Rules and licenses] Santa Ana's civic center area is important for Orange County offices, courts, and civic errands, but each task still needs the exact agency and building.
- Santa Ana parking permits are district based [Cars and driving] Santa Ana's permit parking program creates residential permit districts, so residents should check the district, documents, and Public Works process before applying.
- Santa Ana report requests have an urgent and non-urgent split [Rules and licenses] Santa Ana's report page and Public Works page help residents separate emergency calls, urgent city concerns, regular requests, and Public Works contact needs.
- Santa Ana storm drain problems have a report path [Home and property] Santa Ana's stormwater program gives residents a city contact path for storm-drain problems, debris blocking flow, flooding concerns, spills, odors, and trash in flood-control channels.
- Santa Ana water bills run through Municipal Utility Services [Home and property] Santa Ana's Municipal Utility Services office handles water account questions, online MUS accounts, payments, and after-hours water emergency contacts.
- Santa Ana Zoo keeps a family wildlife stop close to home [Outdoors] Santa Ana Zoo at Prentice Park is a close-to-home wildlife stop with daily hours, resident admission days, and family-friendly learning.
- Santa Ana's public art makes downtown easier to read [History and culture] Santa Ana's public art and self-guided tours help show the city's culture, history, artists, and neighborhood energy outside museum walls.
- Santa Barbara business tax certificate is not the same as a permit [Money and taxes] Santa Barbara treats its Business Tax Certificate as a city tax record, while separate business permits may still apply depending on the activity.
- Santa Barbara flood map questions should use the current city map [Home and property] Santa Barbara's FEMA mapping page gives residents a current place to review flood hazard map changes and the city's interactive flood hazard map.
- Santa Barbara permit applications use the Accela portal [Rules and licenses] Santa Barbara's Accela permit portal handles construction and land development applications, status checks, resubmittals, corrections, and payments.
- Santa Barbara residential parking permits are online now [Cars and driving] Santa Barbara residential parking permits use an online application system, and the permit is tied to the license plate rather than an old paper routine.
- Santa Barbara utilities split water, trash, and power [Home and property] Santa Barbara utility billing is the place for water and sewer account questions, while trash service, electric delivery, and water emergencies use separate contacts.
- Santa Clara County DBA starts with the Clerk-Recorder [Rules and licenses] Santa Clara County fictitious business name filings start with the Clerk-Recorder, with search, filing, renewal, and publishing steps to check. Page title: A Santa Clara County DBA starts with the Clerk-Recorder.
- Santa Clara County flood alerts are an address habit [Home and property] Santa Clara County's flood safety page points residents to AlertSCC for critical information when flooding may affect their area.
- Santa Clara County planning starts with unincorporated land [Rules and licenses] Santa Clara County points development work for unincorporated land through its Planning and Development office.
- Santa Clara County property tax splits value from payment [Money and taxes] Santa Clara County property tax questions usually split between the Assessor for assessed value and parcel records, and the Department of Tax and Collections for tax bills and payments.
- Santa Clara County records start with the kind of paper [Rules and licenses] Santa Clara County record errands are easier when you first name the paper: birth, death, marriage, deed, official record, fictitious business name, notary filing, or recorded real estate document.
- Santa Clara debris boxes are not a pick-any-hauler job [Home and property] Santa Clara has an exclusive waste-hauling franchise for most debris box service, so remodel and cleanup projects should use the city waste rules before ordering a bin.
- Santa Clara emergency prep has AlertSCC and local resources [Home and property] Santa Clara's emergency pages connect AlertSCC, emergency shelters, earthquake safety, flooding and storm-drain help, CERT, and household planning resources.
- Santa Clara has city-owned utilities behind the tech skyline [Home and property] Santa Clara owns and operates electric, water, and sewer utilities, with Silicon Valley Power serving as the city's municipal electric utility.
- Santa Clara keeps the tiny-chip story close to home [History and culture] Intel's 4004 began as a calculator project and became an early microprocessor story tied closely to Santa Clara and Silicon Valley.
- Santa Clara permit work runs through POP [Home and property] Santa Clara's Permitting Online Portal supports permit lookup, applications, revisions, fee payments, service requests, building permit information, simple permits, and status checks.
- Santa Clarita business license questions may go through the county [Rules and licenses] Santa Clarita does not issue city business licenses, so business owners should check Los Angeles County's license rules and confirm the address, activity, and jurisdiction before applying.
- Santa Clarita emergency prep is easier before the hills get busy [Home and property] Santa Clarita's emergency page brings together Nixle alerts, evacuation guidance, heat, outage, earthquake, wildfire, and animal-prep links, so it is worth saving before a fast-moving day.
- Santa Clarita has a silent-film star's hilltop home [History and culture] William S. Hart Park and Museum keeps Santa Clarita's western film history tied to a real Newhall home instead of stopping at movie posters and street names.
- Santa Clarita permit questions start at the Permit Center [Rules and licenses] Santa Clarita's Permit Center and eService system help route building, safety, engineering, planning, online submittal, and residential instant-permit questions.
- Santa Clarita Transit has local rides and commuter routes [Cars and driving] Santa Clarita Transit is the local bus system for the Santa Clarita Valley, with local service plus commuter routes for longer weekday trips.
- Santa Clarita trash runs through Burrtec [Home and property] Santa Clarita moved city waste service to Burrtec, with regular trash, recycling, organics, bulky item, and customer-service details tied to that hauler.
- Santa Clarita's Resident Service Center routes many city requests [Rules and licenses] Santa Clarita residents can use the Resident Service Center for many city service requests, including tree trimming, graffiti removal, potholes, permits, licenses, bulky-item information, and follow-up tracking.
- Santa Clarita's trails make the city feel stitched together [Outdoors] Santa Clarita has a large trail and paseo system for walking, biking, riding, jogging, skating, and everyday connections.
- Santa Cruz Boardwalk started with saltwater and seaside hopes [History and culture] The Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk grew from early bathhouse tourism into California's oldest amusement park, with seaside rides, public beach energy, and a long family-vacation memory. Page title: The Santa Cruz Boardwalk started with saltwater and seaside hopes.
- Santa Cruz County evacuation zones are worth saving ahead of time [Home and property] Santa Cruz County emergency pages ask residents to identify the evacuation zone for home and work and to set up an alert path before an emergency.
- Santa Cruz projects may use eTRAKiT and a business-license portal [Rules and licenses] Santa Cruz uses eTRAKiT for building, planning, and permit records, while new business license applications and zoning clearance start through a separate online path.
- Santa Cruz uses CRSP for mapped service requests [Home and property] Santa Cruz uses the Community Request for Service Portal for mapped reports, photo uploads, and notifications when an issue is resolved.
- Santa Fe Depot shows San Bernardino's rail city side [History and culture] San Bernardino's Santa Fe Depot gives the city a clear railroad landmark, a museum stop, and a reminder that its location has long mattered for movement.
- Santa Maria barbecue is a ranch-town food story [History and culture] Santa Maria-style barbecue connects the city to ranch gatherings, red oak fire, beef, pinquito beans, Central Coast foodways, and a local style that still feels tied to place.
- Santa Maria building permits move through plan review and inspections [Home and property] Santa Maria building projects can involve plan review, local and state code checks, permit counter questions, and inspections through the city's Building Division.
- Santa Maria business licenses move through planning first [Rules and licenses] Santa Maria routes in-city business license applications through Planning for zoning verification, with possible building inspection and certificate of occupancy steps.
- Santa Maria reports go through Neighborhood Connect [Home and property] Santa Maria routes non-emergency issue reports through Neighborhood Connect, while nearby city service links handle trash, recycling, permits, utility payments, and transit.
- Santa Maria utility changes run through Finance [Home and property] Santa Maria water, sewer, and trash billing questions run through Utility Billing, with service changes handled by Finance and online discontinuation available.
- Santa Maria's history museum keeps the Valley close [History and culture] The Santa Maria Valley Historical Society Museum pulls together ranch life, local families, early business, film memories, firefighting, and Allan Hancock history in one downtown stop.
- Santa Monica 311 keeps everyday city requests in one place [Rules and licenses] Santa Monica 311 gives residents one non-emergency door for city service requests, questions, compliments, maintenance issues, app reports, email, phone, and online contact.
- Santa Monica business licenses can need extra forms [Rules and licenses] Santa Monica's business-license page separates online applications, business types, regulatory permits, supplemental forms, zoning review, fees, and update forms, so the exact activity matters.
- Santa Monica Mountains give Ventura County coast and canyon choices [Outdoors] Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area links Ventura and Los Angeles county landscapes with beaches, canyons, trails, history, and mountain views. Page title: The Santa Monica Mountains give Ventura County coast and canyon choices.
- Santa Monica parking permits are really about the exact block [Cars and driving] Santa Monica preferential parking permits can help residents in posted zones, but they do not replace meters, curb rules, street sweeping, or other parking limits.
- Santa Monica State Beach is simple, but the rules still matter [Outdoors] Santa Monica State Beach stretches more than three miles, covers 245 acres of sand, and has city and State Parks management, amenities, dog limits, and e-scooter rules to know.
- Santa Monica tsunami routes are a coastal map habit [Home and property] Santa Monica's tsunami preparedness pages, evacuation route map, and SMAlerts signup make coastal planning easier for residents, workers, and beach visitors.
- Santa Monica's Camera Obscura is a tiny ocean-view surprise [History and culture] The Camera Obscura in Palisades Park connects Santa Monica's visitor history, ocean views, old optical tech, and today's community art space.
- Santa Paula keeps California's oil story on Main Street [History and culture] Santa Paula's former Union Oil headquarters shows how oil, agriculture, downtown buildings, and Ventura County history came together.
- Santa Rosa CityBus is built around routes that meet and transfer [Cars and driving] Santa Rosa CityBus has fixed routes inside city limits, a downtown Transit Mall, route maps, fares, passes, and paratransit links that make local bus trips easier to plan.
- Santa Rosa is home to a statewide California Indian cultural center [History and culture] The California Indian Museum and Cultural Center in Santa Rosa shares California Indian history, culture, leadership, and living knowledge from a Native-led home base.
- Santa Rosa is where Peanuts found a long home [History and culture] Charles M. Schulz lived in Santa Rosa for decades, and the museum there keeps Peanuts tied to the city where much of his later life and work took shape.
- Santa Rosa parking depends on downtown, garage, lot, or neighborhood [Rules and licenses] Santa Rosa separates downtown parking, garages, lots, meters, citations, permits, and residential parking zones, so the right page depends on where the car will sit.
- Santa Rosa permit work often runs through the Digital Plan Room [Home and property] Santa Rosa uses an online permitting system and Digital Plan Room for new applications, plan uploads, comments, fee payments, inspections, and stamped building plans.
- Santa Rosa Plateau gives Murrieta a wide-open nature edge [Outdoors] Santa Rosa Plateau Ecological Reserve near Murrieta protects about 7,500 acres of oak woodland, chaparral, native grassland, trails, wildlife viewing, and local history.
- Santa Rosa water and sewer questions have their own contacts [Home and property] Santa Rosa residents can use the city water page and service finder to route water bill pay, online accounts, water leaks, sewer maintenance, start-stop service, and connection-fee questions.
- Santa Rosa's old post office became a museum by moving [History and culture] The Museum of Sonoma County lives in Santa Rosa's historic 1910 post office, a building saved from demolition and moved to a new downtown spot.
- Santee building permits now run through the portal [Home and property] Santee building permit submittals go through the Santee Portal, and paper plans are no longer accepted for building permit applications.
- Santee code requests can use MySanteeCA [Home and property] Santee code compliance requests can be submitted through MySanteeCA, in person, or by phone, while some issues such as parking, landlord-tenant disputes, and substandard rentals go elsewhere.
- Santee emergency alerts use AlertSanDiego and Genasys [Home and property] Santee residents can use AlertSanDiego for emergency alerts and Genasys Protect for evacuation information, so it is worth setting up both before fire or storm season.
- Santee Lakes turns recycled water into a recreation preserve [Outdoors] Santee Lakes gives the city a park and campground built around seven recycled-water lakes, with fishing, cabins, trails, playgrounds, birds, and water reuse on display.
- Sausalito's waterfront still carries the Marinship story [History and culture] Sausalito's Marinship area connects World War II shipbuilding, Richardson Bay, historic exhibits, marinas, houseboats, and a working waterfront just north of the Golden Gate.
- Scam, identity theft, and fraud reports [Official link · Start here] Pick the right first stop for identity theft, fake sellers, online crime, crypto or investment trouble, tax scams, benefit fraud, DMV or toll texts, and Social Security impersonators.
- School, child care, and student paperwork [Official link · Start here] Find the right first stop for school enrollment, TK, school shots, records, meals, child care, student aid, and work permits.
- Scotts Valley keeps its namesake story behind City Hall [History and culture] Scotts Valley's Hiram Scott House gives the city a simple local history anchor: an 1853 home tied to the name of the valley.
- Seal Beach's wooden pier is the old-town anchor [History and culture] Seal Beach is known for its 1.5 miles of beach, Old Town Main Street, and a long wooden pier that anchors the town center.
- Sebastopol still keeps Luther Burbank's outdoor workshop [History and culture] Luther Burbank used his Gold Ridge farm in Sebastopol for decades of plant experiments, and the preserved farm still lets visitors walk through that living local history.
- SeeClickFix Folsom handles many regular city fixes [Rules and licenses] Folsom residents can use SeeClickFix Folsom for non-emergency maintenance reports, including potholes, sidewalk repair, drainage, streetlights, signs, trees, leaks, sewer concerns, graffiti, and dumping.
- seller's permit is not the same as a local business license [Rules and licenses] California businesses that sell goods may need a CDTFA seller's permit, but city or county business licenses, zoning, health, fire, and trade rules can still be separate. Page title: A seller's permit is not the same as a local business license.
- Selma still carries its Raisin Capital farm roots [History and culture] Selma's economic profile still ties the city to its older names as A Peach of a City and the Raisin Capital of the World.
- Shasta Dam puts California water in one big view [History and culture] Shasta Dam, built on the Sacramento River between 1938 and 1945, is a major Central Valley Project site for water storage, power, and recreation.
- Shinzen gives Fresno a garden built around friendship [History and culture] Shinzen Friendship Garden in Woodward Park grew from Fresno's sister-city ties with Kochi, Japan, and now gives the city a quieter place for garden paths, cultural events, and bonsai.
- Shipley Nature Center is Huntington Beach's quiet habitat pocket [Outdoors] Shipley Nature Center adds an 18-acre native-habitat stop inside Huntington Central Park, away from the pier-and-surf image.
- Shoreline gives Mountain View a bayfront park with room to breathe [Outdoors] Shoreline at Mountain View is a large bayfront park with trails, habitat, a sailing lake, Rengstorff House, and changing work along the Bay Trail.
- Sierra County keeps Gold Rush history close to the high country [History and culture] Sierra County's story connects Downieville, the Sierra Buttes, old mining roads, and the Kentucky Mine stamp mill in a small mountain county.
- Sierra Madre's famous wistaria vine began as a tiny purchase [History and culture] Sierra Madre's foothill story includes Nathaniel Carter's town site, Red Car service, a 75-cent wistaria vine, and a long-running public viewing tradition.
- Sierra National Forest is Fresno County's climb into high country [Outdoors] Sierra National Forest stretches from the Central Sierra foothills toward high lakes, wilderness areas, mountain roads, trails, and water recreation.
- Sign Hill turns South San Francisco's old slogan into a walk [History and culture] South San Francisco's Sign Hill carries the famous 'The Industrial City' sign, but the hillside is also a 65-acre open space with rare plants and habitat.
- Signal Hill's view and oil story are both in the name [History and culture] Signal Hill connects a high lookout, Indigenous signaling history, early Long Beach-area oil, and a small city surrounded by Long Beach.
- Simi Valley bulky pickup starts with Waste Management [Rules and licenses] Simi Valley trash, recycling, bulky items, household hazardous waste pickup, and electronic waste drop-off run through the city's Waste Management service setup.
- Simi Valley emergency info works best with VC Alert and a backup [Home and property] Simi Valley uses VC Alert for local emergency messages, but residents are also guided to keep a plan, a kit, and more than one way to get information.
- Simi Valley has a presidential plane on a hilltop [History and culture] The Reagan Library's Air Force One Pavilion gives Simi Valley a rare place where a real presidential aircraft, Cold War history, and wide valley views meet.
- Simi Valley has local on-demand rides and regional CONNECT service [Cars and driving] Simi Valley Transit offers same-day on-demand rides inside local service zones, while CONNECT InterCity serves older adults and ADA-approved riders across eastern Ventura County.
- Simi Valley home projects often start with Building and Safety [Home and property] Simi Valley's Building and Safety pages help residents sort construction permits, plan review, inspections, solar work, signs, and Planning Division questions.
- Simi Valley sits close to pass trails and presidential history [History and culture] Simi Valley readers can pair Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park with the Reagan Library, but each has different hours, access rules, and planning needs.
- Skyline Trail puts Corona's foothills on the everyday map [Outdoors] Skyline Trail gives Corona a visible foothill route, but the best first step is still the city trail map, current access notes, and a realistic plan.
- SLO's open-space map is the place to start before a hike [Outdoors] San Luis Obispo's open-space system includes thousands of acres and many trail areas, so the city trail map matters before picking a route.
- Small business, seller permits, and local licenses [Official link · Start here] Find the first official source for a small business paper. This can mean a local license, seller's permit, business filing, tax account, hiring step, food permit, special license, or EIN.
- small cemetery keeps an early Rancho Cordova promise [History and culture] Matthew Kilgore Cemetery in Rancho Cordova traces back to an 1888 community effort to care for a local burial ground. Page title: A small cemetery keeps an early Rancho Cordova promise.
- Small Towns [Collection] Local stories that make a town, district, or older downtown easier to remember.
- Smog checks start with the DMV renewal notice [Cars and driving] California smog-check timing depends on the vehicle and the DMV renewal notice, while BAR is the place to check Smog Check rules and station information. Page title: California smog checks start with the DMV renewal notice.
- Smog, title, and registration check [Checklist · Cars and tickets] A first-stop checklist for smog, title transfer, registration, and buying or bringing a car into California.
- Smoke can be local even when the fire is far away [Outdoors] The AirNow Fire and Smoke Map shows PM2.5 smoke and air-quality information from wildfires and other sources, which can help with outdoor plans.
- Sneath Lane climbs from San Bruno to ridge history [Outdoors] Sneath Lane Trail gives San Bruno a route toward Sweeney Ridge, where Bay views and Ohlone-Portola history need to be read together.
- Snow, chains, and winter roads [Safety guide guide] How to check chain controls, SNO-PARK permits, mountain road closures, winter weather, avalanche warnings, and safe snow-play spots before you drive.
- Solano County DBA starts with the County Clerk [Rules and licenses] Solano County fictitious business name filings start with the County Clerk and do not replace local license or permit checks. Page title: A Solano County DBA starts with the County Clerk.
- Solano County property tax questions split between record and bill [Money and taxes] Solano County property tax questions usually start with the Assessor-Recorder for value and records, or the Tax Collector for bills and collections.
- Solar, battery, and panel check [Checklist · Home projects] What to ask before you sign for roof solar, a home battery, or panel work.
- Solvang's Danish look started as a real immigrant town [History and culture] Solvang's windmills, bakeries, and Danish-style streets are easy to enjoy, but the place began with Danish immigrants building a real Santa Ynez Valley community.
- Some household waste should skip the regular bin [Home and property] CalRecycle separates regular recycling from items that need a local drop-off or household hazardous waste path, such as oil-based paint, chemicals, electronics, and batteries.
- Sonoma Coast is a string of beach stops [Outdoors] Sonoma Coast State Park runs from Bodega Bay toward the Russian River, with beaches, coves, headlands, tide pools, camping, and whale watching.
- Sonoma County evacuation zones work by address [Home and property] Sonoma County's emergency pages use a zone lookup tool and incident maps so residents can check evacuation status, road closures, shelter-in-place notices, and zone details by address.
- Sonoma Plaza holds mission, Vallejo, and Bear Flag history [History and culture] Sonoma Plaza was laid out in 1835, became a National Historic Landmark, and sits beside sites tied to Vallejo and the Bear Flag revolt.
- Sonora still carries its Queen of the Southern Mines name [History and culture] Sonora began as Sonoran Camp during the Gold Rush and still works as the county-seat center of Tuolumne County.
- South Gate bulky pickup needs a scheduled date [Home and property] South Gate's bulky item page routes residents to Universal Waste Management and asks items to be placed out on the confirmed collection date.
- South Gate business licenses begin with zoning clearance [Rules and licenses] South Gate's new business license process starts with a zoning clearance form that Community Development reviews before the license application moves ahead.
- South Gate's GATE buses fill in local trips [Cars and driving] South Gate's GATE bus system has Westside and Eastside routes serving the greater South Gate and Hollydale areas, with local transit office help nearby.
- South Gate's history has ranch land, flight, and factory roots [History and culture] South Gate's local history moves from Rancho San Antonio and South Gate Gardens to Amelia Earhart's flying lessons, early incorporation, and major industrial employers.
- South Gate's online permit counter helps you track the moving parts [Home and property] South Gate's online permit counter lets users check permit status, plan-check status, inspection schedules, inspection results, and project financial details.
- South Gate's park list helps families pick the right green space [Outdoors] South Gate lists 11 parks, including large South Gate Park, Hollydale Regional Park, a dog park area, Cesar Chavez Park, and smaller neighborhood spaces.
- South San Francisco permit work starts at the Permit Center [Home and property] South San Francisco routes building permits, plan submittals, inspections, business licenses, and many over-the-counter permit types through its Permit Center and online portal.
- South San Francisco's biotech story grew from an industrial city [History and culture] South San Francisco is known as the birthplace of biotechnology, with Genentech's 1976 start helping shift an older industrial city into a major life-science center.
- Sportsplex is West Covina's big weeknight field hub [Outdoors] West Covina Sportsplex at 2100 South Azusa Avenue has replica ballfields, a multi-sport pavilion, playgrounds, rentals, and adult softball programs. Page title: The Sportsplex is West Covina's big weeknight field hub.
- Spreckels Organ Pavilion gives Balboa Park a free music promise [History and culture] Spreckels Organ Pavilion began as a 1915 gift to San Diego, with free public concerts still tied to the original promise.
- Sproul Museum keeps Norwalk's town-start story close [History and culture] Norwalk's Gilbert Sproul Museum sits in Norwalk Park and points back to the Sproul family, the railroad stop, and the city's early townsite story. Page title: The Sproul Museum keeps Norwalk's town-start story close.
- St. Helena has a literary stop tucked near Main Street [History and culture] St. Helena's old valley-center role pairs with the Robert Louis Stevenson Museum, a small stop with a surprisingly deep collection.
- Stagecoach Inn gives Thousand Oaks an older road story [History and culture] The Stagecoach Inn Museum in Newbury Park helps Thousand Oaks tell the Conejo Valley's older travel, hotel, school, ranch, and community story.
- Stanford Mansion gives Sacramento a statehouse story in a home [History and culture] Leland Stanford Mansion began as an 1850s home, served governors, became a children's home, and now works as both a museum and state reception center. Page title: The Stanford Mansion gives Sacramento a statehouse story in a home.
- Stanislaus State is Turlock's public-university anchor [History and culture] Stanislaus State gives Turlock a public university campus with a long local history, a park-like setting, and a second campus connection in Stockton.
- Stanton bulky pickup needs a CR&R appointment [Home and property] Stanton bulky-item pickup is handled through CR&R, with different rules for curbside cart homes and multi-family properties.
- Stanton Central Park is the city's main park-and-event anchor [Outdoors] Stanton Central Park gathers water play, sports fields, courts, picnic shelters, skating, events, and family recreation into one 12-acre place.
- Star of India gives San Diego's harbor a ship with a long memory [History and culture] Star of India at the Maritime Museum of San Diego is an 1863 sailing ship with a hard-working global past and a strong local place on the waterfront.
- Stargazing and night sky [Where-to-go guide guide] How to plan a night-sky trip without guessing about gates, parking, clouds, smoke, roads, moonlight, or whether you can legally be there after dark.
- Starlight Bowl gives Burbank a hillside stage [History and culture] Burbank's Starlight Bowl is a hillside performance place with roots in older outdoor concerts, a 1951 dedication, and a current restoration effort. Page title: The Starlight Bowl gives Burbank a hillside stage.
- state park pass is not the same as every state park fee [Outdoors] California State Parks fees can depend on the park, the vehicle, and whether the site charges by vehicle or by person. Page title: A state park pass is not the same as every state park fee.
- State park passes and reservations [Cornerstone guide guide] Start here for day-use fees, annual passes, camping reservations, and the up-to-six-month booking window.
- State park passes and reservations [Official link · Outdoors] Pick the right California State Parks path for camping reservations, day use, passes, discounts, and trip notices.
- State Theatre gives Modesto a J Street glow [History and culture] Modesto's State Theatre opened on Christmas Day in 1934 and still gives downtown a warm film, music, and performance anchor. Page title: The State Theatre gives Modesto a J Street glow.
- Stearns Wharf is Santa Barbara's easy first waterfront walk [History and culture] Stearns Wharf dates to 1872 and gives Santa Barbara visitors a working waterfront stop with ocean views, shops, restaurants, the Dolphin Fountain, and Sea Center touch tanks.
- steep San Francisco street gave the cable car its start [History and culture] San Francisco's first cable car test ran on Clay Street in 1873, turning a steep-street problem into one of the city's most famous moving landmarks. Page title: A steep San Francisco street gave the cable car its start.
- Steinbeck landmarks keep Salinas tied to the valley story [History and culture] Salinas is John Steinbeck's birthplace, with literary landmarks, the Steinbeck House, the National Steinbeck Center, and a city history shaped by agriculture, railroads, and the Salinas Valley.
- Stockton is an inland city with a deepwater port [History and culture] Stockton's deepwater channel connects the city to ocean-going ships, Delta navigation, Central Valley farms, rail lines, and port work.
- Stockton puts several project questions at the Permit Center [Home and property] Stockton's Permit Center and Accela portal cover building, planning, transportation, encroachment, fire inspections, plan review, fees, status, inspections, and electronic plans.
- Stockton utility questions split billing from urgent field problems [Home and property] Stockton residents should separate water, sewer, and stormwater bill questions from urgent field problems like broken pipes, street flooding, sewer backups, and missing utility box covers.
- Strathearn Park gathers Simi Valley's older buildings in one place [History and culture] Strathearn Historical Park gives Simi Valley a small historic village, with early buildings, artifacts, and docent-led tours in a quiet park setting.
- Strauss Festival gives Elk Grove a waltz-on-the-water tradition [History and culture] Elk Grove's Strauss Festival grew from one resident's Vienna-inspired idea into a long-running local performance tradition in Elk Grove Park. Page title: The Strauss Festival gives Elk Grove a waltz-on-the-water tradition.
- Success Lake is Porterville's nearby federal lake day [Outdoors] Success Lake sits east of Porterville as a federal recreation area with water access, camping, fishing, and Tule River foothill scenery.
- Sue-meg State Park carries coast, redwoods, and Yurok place memory [History and culture] Sue-meg State Park near Trinidad blends Agate Beach, forested headlands, tidepools, trails, camping, and Sumeg Village, a reconstructed Yurok village with deep local meaning.
- Suisun City's marina opens right into the marsh [Outdoors] Suisun City Marina connects the downtown waterfront to Suisun Slough, the Delta, San Francisco Bay, and one of California's largest wetland landscapes.
- Sulphur Creek gives Hayward a hill-country nature room [Outdoors] Sulphur Creek Nature Center in the Hayward Hills adds wildlife education, animal rehabilitation, trails, and outdoor learning space to Hayward's local story.
- Summitridge shows Diamond Bar's rustic trail side [Outdoors] Diamond Bar's Summitridge Park Trail gives readers a clear look at the city's steep, rustic, unpaved trail network and the care it takes.
- Sunnylands gives Rancho Mirage a desert diplomacy story [History and culture] Sunnylands connects Rancho Mirage to desert design, the Annenberg estate, presidents, world leaders, gardens, and public tours.
- Sunnyvale emergency info works best with a few channels [Home and property] Sunnyvale points residents to AlertSCC, SunnyvaleDPS updates, and 1680 AM radio as local ways to stay informed during emergencies and disaster conditions.
- Sunnyvale permit work starts with e-OneStop or the Permit Center [Home and property] Sunnyvale's Permit Center connects online permit accounts, building permit submittals, OTC plan-check appointments, in-person kiosks, and larger project requirements.
- Sunnyvale tree work can start with a simple measurement [Home and property] Sunnyvale protects some private trees, and removal can require checking trunk measurements, permit rules, street-tree rules, and the city tree pages first.
- Sunnyvale utility billing splits city water from garbage service [Home and property] Sunnyvale provides water and wastewater directly, while garbage and recycling are handled by a contracted provider at city-approved rates.
- Sunnyvale's fruit-cocktail tower keeps the cannery years visible [History and culture] The Libby Water Tower in Sunnyvale keeps a playful fruit-cocktail label in view while pointing back to the city's cannery jobs, orchards, and office-park change.
- Sunnyvale's heritage orchard keeps the tech city tied to apricots [History and culture] Orchard Heritage Park and the Heritage Park Museum help Sunnyvale show its Santa Clara Valley orchard roots beside its newer technology identity.
- Sunnyvale's Heritage Park keeps the orchard-to-tech story visible [History and culture] Sunnyvale's Heritage Park Museum and Community Center campus help connect old fruit orchards, local families, and the city's high-tech turn.
- Sunol Water Temple turns water pipes into a landmark [History and culture] Sunol Water Temple is a 1910 Beaux Arts landmark tied to San Francisco's older water supply, Alameda Creek, and the hidden infrastructure behind Bay Area taps.
- Sunset Cliffs visits work better when the bluff edge is respected [Outdoors] San Diego's Sunset Cliffs materials show why public access, bluff erosion, roads, sidewalks, and barriers all matter along this popular coast.
- supplemental property tax bill can arrive after a home purchase [Money and taxes] California home buyers may see a supplemental property tax bill after a change in ownership or new construction, separate from the regular annual bill. Page title: A supplemental property tax bill can arrive after a home purchase.
- Sutro Baths turned the edge of San Francisco into a giant swim house [History and culture] The Sutro Baths ruins at Lands End are the remains of a huge oceanfront bathhouse that once mixed swimming, exhibits, restaurants, and Pacific views.
- Sutter Creek still has a water-powered foundry [History and culture] Knight Foundry in Sutter Creek keeps rare Gold Country machinery in place, including water-powered equipment from the mining era.
- Sutter's Fort shows why Sacramento grew where it did [History and culture] Sutter's Fort sits in Midtown Sacramento today, but its story reaches back to Nisenan homeland, New Helvetia, trade, labor, and the start of huge change in the Central Valley.
- Sycamore Grove is Livermore's easy open-space park [Outdoors] Sycamore Grove Park gives Livermore a large south-side open-space park for walking, biking, jogging, nature time, and quiet access to the valley edge.
- Sycamore Ranch and Hammon Grove give Yuba County two river-park choices [Outdoors] Yuba County's parks page points to Sycamore Ranch and Hammon Grove, with camping, day use, Yuba River access, trails, disc golf, and seasonal reservation details.
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- Taft's oil story is big enough to fill an outdoor museum [History and culture] Taft grew with the Midway-Sunset oil fields, and the West Kern Oil Museum keeps that boomtown story close to the rigs, tools, camps, and Lakeview Gusher history.
- Tallac Historic Site shows South Lake Tahoe's resort memory [History and culture] Tallac Historic Site near South Lake Tahoe preserves estate and resort history beside the lake, with restored buildings, paths, gardens, seasonal access, and forest land.
- Tehachapi Loop lets long trains cross over themselves [History and culture] The Tehachapi Loop solved a hard mountain railroad problem, letting trains gain elevation between the San Joaquin Valley and the Mojave. Page title: The Tehachapi Loop lets long trains cross over themselves.
- Tehama keeps early county and river history close [History and culture] Tehama sits by the Sacramento River with a first-county-courthouse marker, an old railroad bridge story, and practical river awareness built into daily life.
- Temecula alert days are easier when you know your zone [Home and property] Temecula residents can pair AlertRivCO or Temecula Alert with the city's Know Your Zone work so emergency messages are easier to understand.
- Temecula business licenses depend on the use and space [Rules and licenses] Temecula business license work can include agency checks, a detailed statement of operations, occupancy review, home occupation forms, or building permits.
- Temecula project questions start at the Permit Center [Rules and licenses] Temecula's Permit Center brings building permits, inspections, business license contacts, and other project questions into one easier first stop.
- Temecula service questions start by picking the issue type [Home and property] Temecula's Contact City Staff page routes requests by issue type and also points mobile users to the city app.
- Temecula Valley Museum makes Old Town easier to read [History and culture] Temecula Valley Museum is a self-guided stop with permanent and changing exhibits that help connect Old Town, Native history, ranching, railroads, families, and valley culture.
- Temecula's Wolf Store still anchors the old ranch story [History and culture] Vail Headquarters and the Wolf Store Adobe help Temecula show its older ranch, road, business, and community layers beyond Old Town weekends.
- temporary property-tax drop can climb back later [Home and property] California decline-in-value relief can lower an assessment for a while, but it can also rise again as the market recovers. Page title: A temporary property-tax drop can climb back later.
- Thousand Oaks bulky items go through Athens with yearly limits [Home and property] Thousand Oaks residents can schedule free bulky item collections through Athens, with limits on the number of collections and items each calendar year.
- Thousand Oaks emergency planning starts with VC Alert [Home and property] Thousand Oaks residents can use VC Alert, city emergency resources, and regional evacuation planning links to prepare for local alert days.
- Thousand Oaks permit files now lean digital [Home and property] Thousand Oaks uses TO/24 for permit applications, plan checks, inspections, payments, status, records, and digital plan uploads for building work.
- Thousand Oaks service requests can be tracked or sent anonymously [Rules and licenses] Thousand Oaks uses its service request tool for non-emergency city issues such as potholes or landscape problems, with account tracking or anonymous reporting options.
- Thousand Oaks water service uses a start-or-stop request [Home and property] Thousand Oaks water and wastewater service can be started or stopped online or through Finance Public Services, with request dates limited to city business days.
- Tick checks belong with trail days [Outdoors] CDPH tick information helps hikers, campers, gardeners, and pet owners make a simple after-outdoors habit without turning a nice day into a worry.
- Tide pools and marine protected areas [Field guide guide] How to enjoy tide pools, low tides, shellfish warnings, and marine protected areas without guessing what you can touch, take, or eat.
- Tijuana Estuary gives Imperial Beach a wild edge [Outdoors] The Tijuana Estuary Visitor Center in Imperial Beach helps people see coastal wetlands, birds, salt-tolerant plants, trails, and borderland ecology up close. Page title: The Tijuana Estuary gives Imperial Beach a wild edge.
- Title transfers have a seller step and a buyer step [Cars and driving] California vehicle sales work best when the buyer handles the title transfer and the seller sends the DMV Notice of Transfer and Release of Liability. Page title: California title transfers have a seller step and a buyer step.
- Todos Santos Plaza gives Concord a real center of town [History and culture] Todos Santos Plaza is a 2.5-acre downtown gathering spot near Concord BART, with trees, benches, picnic tables, a small play area, and easy transit context.
- Topic shelves [Directory] Subject shelves for Almanac notes, tools, guides, and related California paths.
- Torrance permit applications can begin in the online portal [Rules and licenses] Torrance's online permit portal accepts applications, plan uploads, payments, and status checks for several kinds of city permits.
- Torrance report links are split by problem type [Rules and licenses] Torrance residents should start with the city's report page or myTorranceCA app, then choose the closest issue type, such as graffiti, street trees, airport noise, large-item pickup, or other city requests.
- Torrance street issues can depend on who owns the road [Rules and licenses] Torrance maintains many local streets, curbs, gutters, sidewalks, parking lots, and stormwater basins, but some major routes use Caltrans, Los Angeles County, or Los Angeles reporting paths.
- Torrance Transit has local routes, L.A. Express fares, and TAP [Cars and driving] Torrance Transit riders should separate local routes, L.A. Express service, route schedules, fares, and TAP or pass questions.
- TorranceAlerts is a good setup before the busy day [Home and property] TorranceAlerts can send emergency notices by phone, email, text, or app, and Torrance's preparedness pages help residents set up family contacts, documents, and home safety basics.
- Torrey Pines feels wild without leaving San Diego [Outdoors] Torrey Pines State Natural Reserve protects rare coastal pines, cliffs, ravines, marsh habitat, and ocean-view trails inside urban San Diego.
- Tower Bridge makes Sacramento's river crossing feel ceremonial [History and culture] Sacramento's Tower Bridge was built in the 1930s as a lift bridge, a U.S. 40 crossing, and a formal gateway to the capital.
- Tower Theatre gave Fresno a district with a neon center [History and culture] Fresno's Tower Theatre and Tower District connect a 1939 theater, a streetcar-suburb past, Art Deco design, restaurants, entertainment, and neighborhood revival.
- Town Square Park gives Murrieta's historic downtown a gathering lawn [History and culture] Murrieta Town Square Park and Amphitheater adds a central lawn, tiered seating, events, concerts, and a civic gathering place beside City Hall in Historic Downtown Murrieta.
- TRACER is Tracy's local bus layer [Cars and driving] TRACER gives Tracy fixed-route bus service, paratransit and on-demand options, mobile ticketing, and route updates that are worth checking before a trip.
- Tracy residential permits run through eTRAKiT [Home and property] Tracy's eTRAKiT page covers select residential online permits, inspection scheduling, permit printing, payments, and help guides.
- Tracy separates the business license from the permit [Rules and licenses] Tracy businesses often start with the online business license tax filing, while building, plumbing, electrical, mechanical, demolition, and sign work belongs with Building Safety.
- Tracy utility service has separate start and stop forms [Home and property] Tracy utility customers use city Finance pages to start service, stop service, pay bills, and contact customer service, with move-out timing especially important.
- Tracy's Grand Theatre keeps a 1923 stage in daily use [History and culture] The Grand Theatre in downtown Tracy began as a 1923 vaudeville and movie house and now works as a city arts center with performances, classes, exhibits, and rentals.
- Traffic tickets and parking tickets do not start in the same place [Cars and driving] In California, a traffic citation usually starts with the county court, while a parking ticket usually starts with the city or agency that wrote it.
- Traffic, parking, and toll tickets [Official link · Cars and tickets] Pick the right first stop for a traffic ticket, fix-it ticket, traffic school question, parking citation, toll notice, DMV hold, or suspicious toll text.
- Trails, hiking, and biking [Field guide guide] How to check the trail manager, pets, bikes, e-bikes, permits, closures, weather, water, and road access.
- Transfer tax estimator [Calculator · Home costs] Get a rough transfer-tax number before escrow gives you the official closing statement.
- Travis gives Fairfield a major airlift story [History and culture] Travis Air Force Base began as Fairfield-Suisun Army Air Base in World War II, and the Heritage Center helps connect Fairfield to aircraft, airlift, and Pacific history.
- Trees of Mystery mixes redwoods with roadside wonder [History and culture] Trees of Mystery near Klamath has blended redwood trails, Paul Bunyan roadside scale, a gondola, canopy walks, and family travel memory since 1946.
- Treganza Heritage Park keeps Lemon Grove's older homes in view [History and culture] Treganza Heritage Park gives Lemon Grove a small civic green with lemon trees, a rose garden, and two historic homes used as museums.
- Trinidad Head Lighthouse uses a small tower on a big headland [History and culture] Trinidad Head Lighthouse shows how a modest tower can matter when it sits high above a rugged harbor, sea stacks, tribal homelands, and a far-north coast route.
- Triton Museum gives Santa Clara a local art room [History and culture] Santa Clara's Triton Museum of Art focuses on accessible exhibitions, education, community programs, and California artists near the city's civic center. Page title: The Triton Museum gives Santa Clara a local art room.
- Trona Pinnacles look like stone towers from an old lake [Outdoors] Near Trona, more than 500 tufa spires rise from the Searles Dry Lake basin, giving the desert one of its strangest skylines. Page title: The Trona Pinnacles look like stone towers from an old lake.
- Tsunami maps are coastal address checks [Home and property] California Geological Survey tsunami hazard maps show mapped tsunami hazard areas, but a real warning still depends on current emergency instructions and local evacuation routes.
- Tulare business tax certificates can trigger inspections [Rules and licenses] Tulare calls its business license a Business Tax Certificate, and new commercial businesses may need Building and Fire inspection steps before opening.
- Tulare citizen requests work best with a city-limit check [Home and property] Tulare's citizen request form is for concerns inside city limits and asks for the date, time, location, issue type, and a specific description.
- Tulare utility questions run through City Hall and Public Works [Home and property] Tulare utility service connects City Hall billing with Public Works divisions for water, sewer, solid waste, street sweeping, and wastewater.
- Tuolumne River Regional Park gives Modesto a river greenbelt [Outdoors] Tuolumne River Regional Park has more than 500 acres of river park frontage through Modesto, with trails, picnic areas, and places to watch the river corridor take shape.
- Turlock business licenses may need another review [Rules and licenses] Turlock requires a business license for businesses operating in the city, and some business types or home businesses need extra review before the license is issued.
- Turlock keeps water, sewer, and garbage on one utility path [Home and property] Turlock groups water, sewer, and garbage service together online, but billing, municipal service questions, and garbage service each have their own contact lane.
- Turlock neighborhood issues have their own report form [Home and property] Turlock's Citizen Report Form is built for neighborhood issues such as abandoned vehicles, graffiti, signs, weeds, property conditions, and similar concerns, while noise complaints use non-emergency dispatch.
- Turlock rebuilt its Carnegie library into an arts center [History and culture] Turlock's Carnegie Arts Center began as a 1916 Carnegie library, survived a major 2005 fire, and now keeps art close to downtown.
- Turlock Transit mixes fixed routes with on-demand rides [Rules and licenses] Turlock Transit has seven fixed routes, paratransit, on-demand rides, live route tools, and fare details that can change the best way to make a local trip.
- Tustin business licenses come with location questions [Rules and licenses] Tustin requires businesses operating in the city to get a business license, and city-limits businesses use zoning or home occupation questionnaires as part of the setup.
- Tustin Legacy keeps the blimp hangar story visible [History and culture] Tustin Legacy sits on the former Marine Corps Air Station Tustin, where giant World War II hangars still shape the city's redevelopment story.
- Tustin service requests work best with a clear location [Home and property] Tustin's Submit Service Request and Report An Issue pages give residents a way to send general concerns, comments, compliments, and public-resource reports to the city.
- Tustin water and trash chores use two different service doors [Rules and licenses] Tustin water billing runs through the city, while residential trash, recycling, cart changes, missed pickups, temporary bins, and bulky items run through CR&R.
- Two deserts meet at Joshua Tree National Park [Outdoors] Joshua Tree National Park brings the Mojave and Colorado deserts together, with Joshua trees, rock formations, dark skies, trails, camping, and desert travel rules.
- Tyler Avenue helps El Monte line up its civic story [History and culture] El Monte's Tyler Avenue Heritage District links the museum, community spaces, senior services, library area, pools, and older local history in one easy corridor.
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- UC Irvine turned ranch land into a campus around a green center [History and culture] UC Irvine opened in 1965 on former ranch land, with early planning that placed the campus around what became Aldrich Park.
- Ukiah's name and museum keep the valley story close [History and culture] Ukiah's name reaches back to the Yokaia people, while the Grace Hudson Museum keeps art, Pomo culture, natural history, and local memory in one place.
- Unemployment, disability, leave, and injury check [Checklist · Work] Find the right office after a layoff, cut hours, sickness, family care, a new child, or a work injury.
- Union City BART is the local bus-and-rail hinge [Cars and driving] Union City Station brings BART, Union City Transit, AC Transit, Dumbarton Express, and local fare rules together in one practical transfer point.
- Union City business licenses include a zoning review [Rules and licenses] Union City business license applications for locations inside city limits go through Planning for zoning compliance before Finance finishes the license side.
- Union City permits depend on what kind of work is happening [Rules and licenses] Union City separates building, fire, encroachment, grading, transportation, alarm, and City Clerk permits, so the permit type matters before applying.
- Union City still has Alvarado and Decoto under the map [History and culture] Union City was formed from older Alvarado and Decoto roots, with railroads, canneries, steel work, and historic district buildings still shaping the local story.
- Union Station gives Los Angeles one grand rail front door [History and culture] Los Angeles Union Station opened in 1939, joining older rail terminals into one landmark station that still anchors downtown transit.
- Upland building permit applications are online [Home and property] Upland's Building and Safety Division accepts building permit applications online, while business license work uses a separate online license path.
- Upland business licenses should match the real address [Rules and licenses] Upland's business-license page is the local first stop for opening or operating a business, especially when the address, activity, home-business status, or permits may change the path.
- Upland trash questions usually start with Burrtec or Public Works [Rules and licenses] Upland trash, recycling, food waste, holiday delays, service requests, and household hazardous waste questions split between Burrtec and the city Public Works Department.
- Upland's old districts still carry the lemon-grove years [History and culture] Upland's historic preservation program points to lemon-grove roots, nine local historic districts, and more than 580 listed historic and cultural resources.
- Use the DMV calculator before you trust someone else's registration bill [Cars and driving] California DMV registration fees can change by vehicle, value, timing, and local fees, so the DMV calculator is the safer first stop.
- Used car, dealer, and private sale problems [Official link · Cars and tickets] Pick the right first stop when a used car sale, dealer promise, private-party title, smog issue, repair bill, warranty question, recall, loan, or refund dispute gets messy.
- USS Hornet gives Alameda a ship with war and moon-mission stories [History and culture] The USS Hornet Museum in Alameda preserves an Essex-class aircraft carrier tied to World War II, Vietnam-era service, Apollo 11 and Apollo 12 recovery, aircraft, exhibits, and public tours.
- Utility bills, shutoffs, and outages [Official link · Emergency and utilities] Find the safer first stop for a late utility bill, shutoff notice, CARE or FERA discount, Medical Baseline, LIHEAP help, PSPS, outage map, gas smell, water bill, or utility complaint.
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- Vacaville building permits have a permit and inspection trail [Home and property] Vacaville's Building Division handles building permits, online permit applications, electronic plan review, inspections, forms, fees, and permit history for city projects.
- Vacaville business licenses can be handled online [Rules and licenses] Vacaville lets businesses apply, renew, pay fees, close a license, and search business licenses online, while still pointing owners to zoning, building, health, and other permit checks.
- Vacaville City Coach has routes plus on-demand City Coach Direct [Cars and driving] Vacaville City Coach includes fixed routes, City Coach Direct on-demand rides, paratransit, taxi scrips, and rider tools like Ride Pingo.
- Vacaville Museum widens the story beyond one town [History and culture] The Vacaville Museum preserves Solano County history and culture, giving Vacaville a local doorway into farms, towns, families, and change across the county. Page title: The Vacaville Museum widens the story beyond one town.
- Vacaville puts common city chores on one e-services page [Rules and licenses] Vacaville e-services links residents to utility payments, utility service requests, business licenses, parking tickets, building permits, dog licensing, fire permit fees, classes, and special events.
- Vacaville splits utility billing from water and sewer questions [Home and property] Vacaville residents use Utility Billing for water and sewer bills, but water and sewer service questions go through the Utilities Department contact paths.
- Vacaville's Nut Tree began as a roadside fruit stand [History and culture] The Nut Tree grew from a small 1921 fruit stand into a famous I-80 stop, making Vacaville part of California's roadside travel memory.
- Vallejo emergency prep can start with AlertSolano and CERT [Home and property] Vallejo residents can use AlertSolano for emergency alerts and CERT for local disaster-preparedness training.
- Vallejo SolTrans has local and express layers [Cars and driving] SolTrans gives Vallejo riders local routes, express options, day-pass fare tiers, youth fares, reduced fares, alerts, and customer service in one transit system.
- Vallejo uses SeeClickFix for non-emergency maintenance issues [Rules and licenses] Vallejo routes non-emergency maintenance issues such as potholes and graffiti through SeeClickFix, while water leaks and emergencies use faster contacts.
- Vallejo was part of California's floating capital years [History and culture] Before Sacramento became permanent, California's capital moved through several cities, and Vallejo twice held the Legislature while the young state searched for a workable home.
- Vallejo's old City Hall holds a Navy town's memory [History and culture] The Vallejo Naval and Historical Museum connects local life with Mare Island, U.S. Navy history, city stories, and downtown heritage.
- Valley Boulevard gives Alhambra a modern business spine [History and culture] Alhambra's three-mile Valley Boulevard corridor brings together markets, restaurants, banking, services, and cultural energy that help explain the city's modern San Gabriel Valley role.
- Ventura City Hall still feels like a courthouse on the hill [History and culture] Ventura City Hall began as the 1912-13 Ventura County Courthouse, with terra cotta, marble, a copper dome, public art, and school tour possibilities.
- Ventura Connects is for routine service requests, not emergencies [Rules and licenses] Ventura Connects lets people submit routine service requests anonymously or through an account, while urgent hazards and crimes need faster contacts.
- Ventura County beach water gets regular sampling [Outdoors] Ventura County's ocean water program monitors coastal water for bacteria and posts warnings when state standards are not met.
- Ventura County DBA is separate from the business license [Rules and licenses] Ventura County fictitious business name filings help create a public name record, separate from city or county business license steps. Page title: A Ventura County DBA is separate from the business license.
- Ventura County property tax starts with value or payment [Money and taxes] Ventura County property tax questions usually split between the Assessor for value and parcel records, and the Treasurer-Tax Collector for bills and payments.
- Ventura County zoning starts with unincorporated parcels [Rules and licenses] Ventura County Planning says its zoning tool is for parcels in unincorporated Ventura County.
- Ventura Pier carries the old wharf story into a beach walk [History and culture] Ventura Pier, once known as Ventura Wharf and San Buenaventura Wharf, is a wooden pier and historic landmark tied to trade, fishing, views, and community care.
- Vernon is built around work more than neighborhoods [History and culture] Vernon is one of California's unusual tiny-population cities: a 5.2-square-mile industrial place with thousands of businesses and a huge workday presence.
- Victorville emergency prep should fit the high desert [Home and property] Victorville's emergency-management and Public Works pages give residents a practical way to plan around heat, earthquakes, drainage, weeds, and local alerts.
- Victorville keeps Route 66 close to the old town center [History and culture] The California Route 66 Museum gives Victorville a natural stop for understanding how the desert road shaped travel, business, and memory.
- Victorville report-a-problem requests start by choosing the category [Rules and licenses] Victorville's Report page lets residents choose a category for local issues and also gives after-hours contacts for certain city services.
- Victorville trash questions split between the city and Burrtec [Home and property] Victorville residents use City Customer Service for trash billing or service changes, Burrtec for missed pickups or damaged carts, and Environmental Programs for organics questions.
- Victorville VVTA routes cover more than one kind of trip [Cars and driving] Victorville riders use VVTA routes for local trips, mall and college connections, High Desert links, and longer routes toward Barstow or San Bernardino.
- Victorville water and trash questions start with city Customer Service [Home and property] Victorville Customer Service handles water, sewer, household hazardous waste, trash, recycling, organics, billing, start-or-stop service, and service questions.
- Victorville's logistics airport grew from George Air Force Base [History and culture] Southern California Logistics Airport in Victorville uses part of the former George Air Force Base, turning a military airfield into a desert aviation and logistics site.
- Villa Montalvo gives Saratoga art, gardens, and a California twist [History and culture] Montalvo Arts Center ties Saratoga to a historic villa, public arts, wooded grounds, and the old story behind the name California.
- Villa Park's quiet streets grew out of citrus ranch country [History and culture] Villa Park kept a low-key residential shape from its citrus-ranch past, with half-acre zoning, old orchard names, and the Wanda Greenbelt story.
- Visalia flood prep works best when the map is checked early [Home and property] Visalia's emergency-preparedness and flood pages give residents household planning guidance, FEMA flood-map context, and address-level flood-hazard information.
- Visalia permits can use the counter, drop box, or online drop [Rules and licenses] Visalia's Permit Counter page gives several ways to submit permits and building plans, including in person, drop box, and online file drop.
- Visalia street and trash problems start with the right service line [Home and property] Visalia routes common street, sign, pothole, sewer smell, and trash pickup questions through different Public Works and Utility Billing lines, so the address matters before you call.
- Visalia transit has fixed routes, Connect, and Dial-A-Ride [Cars and driving] Visalia Transit works best when riders sort the trip by service type: fixed routes, on-demand Visalia Connect, or Dial-A-Ride.
- Visalia trash and sewer service starts with Utility Billing [Home and property] Visalia handles trash and sewer service changes through Utility Billing, including new service, transfers, bill questions, payments, and ending service.
- Vista building permits still start at the counter [Home and property] Vista building permit applications are submitted at the Development Services counter, with inspections requested by phone or online and contractor business-license status checked before issuance.
- Vista business licenses include a zoning check [Rules and licenses] Vista business license applications go through staff and Development Services for zoning clearance, with online options to apply, renew, close, or pay.
- Vista has an app for quick city problem reports [Rules and licenses] Vista residents can use Access Vista to report local issues such as graffiti, damaged signs, abandoned vehicles, dumped items, street lights, and other city problems.
- Vista trash and bulky pickup run through EDCO [Home and property] Vista's EDCO service pages cover trash, recycling, organics, service schedules, start-or-stop service, bulky-item pickup, and household hazardous waste limits.
- Vital records can start with the county or the state [Rules and licenses] California birth, death, marriage, and divorce records can involve CDPH Vital Records, county recorders, county clerks, or the court where the event was handled.
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- Wakamatsu Farm holds an early Japanese California story [History and culture] Wakamatsu Farm in El Dorado County keeps the story of an early Japanese colony, silk and tea hopes, farm life, and a small Gold Country place with national meaning.
- Waller Park gives Santa Maria shade, lakes, and room to gather [Outdoors] Waller Park is a Santa Barbara County day-use park in the Santa Maria area with 154 acres, lakes, lawns, shaded picnic areas, playgrounds, courts, and disc golf.
- Walnut Creek business licenses should start with the address [Rules and licenses] Walnut Creek business licenses can depend on city limits, zoning, home occupation permits, use permits, and online permit tools, so the address should be checked early.
- Walnut Creek downtown parking changes by block, meter, and garage [Cars and driving] Walnut Creek downtown parking has different meter zones, garage pricing, and a parking data map that helps show busy blocks by time and place.
- Walnut Creek open space has trail rules worth checking [Outdoors] Walnut Creek's open-space system covers thousands of acres, but trail use, dogs, bikes, e-bikes, fire, smoking, and daylight hours can vary by area.
- Walnut Creek parking permits depend on the neighborhood zone [Cars and driving] Walnut Creek residential parking permits apply only in listed PRPP neighborhoods, with resident permits tied to vehicles and guest permits handled separately.
- Walnut Creek report links work like a service directory [Home and property] Walnut Creek's contact page routes report-a-service questions by topic, with different phone paths for traffic, building inspections, code enforcement, graffiti, dumping, irrigation, and other issues.
- Wasco's rose festival keeps the Rose Capital name alive [History and culture] Wasco's Rose Festival began in 1969 and celebrates the city's rose-growing identity with a community event that still centers local pride.
- Water Conservation Garden makes El Cajon landscaping feel practical [Outdoors] The Water Conservation Garden near El Cajon has nearly six acres of displays, native plants, irrigation examples, mulch exhibits, classes, and visit information. Page title: The Water Conservation Garden makes El Cajon landscaping feel practical.
- Water notices do not all mean the same thing [Home and property] State Water Board drinking-water pages separate public notices, Consumer Confidence Reports, and unsafe-water notice types, so the wording matters.
- Water, sewer, septic, and well check [Checklist · Home projects] A plain first pass for finding who serves the address and what to ask before you buy or build.
- Waterdog Lake gives Belmont a trail loop with a local name [Outdoors] Waterdog Lake Open Space gives Belmont trails, lake views, and a name tied to a local salamander, all close to hillside neighborhoods.
- Waterford's name still points back to the river crossing [History and culture] Waterford began as Bakersville near the Tuolumne River, then took a name tied to crossing water, farming, rail service, and a memorable wine shipment.
- Watsonville uses SeeClickFix for non-emergency reports [Home and property] Watsonville's SeeClickFix tool accepts non-emergency reports within city jurisdiction, including potholes, graffiti, stormwater pollution, sidewalk damage, and damaged streetlights.
- Watsonville utilities and garbage use two close contacts [Home and property] Watsonville starts utility service through Utilities staff, while garbage containers and collection questions go through customer service and the garbage services page.
- Watsonville's city trails open the wetlands close to home [Outdoors] Watsonville's trail system gives everyday access to freshwater wetlands, neighborhood entrances, interpretive signs, leash rules, and gentle walks.
- Watts Towers is Los Angeles art built by one determined person [History and culture] Watts Towers turns one person's long backyard project into a Los Angeles landmark, with tile, glass, steel, concrete, and a strong neighborhood presence.
- Wave gives Dublin a summer waterpark and a year-round pool [Outdoors] The Wave in Dublin combines a seasonal outdoor waterpark with a year-round natatorium, lap swimming, swim lessons, fitness classes, slides, splash play, picnic areas, and locker rooms. Page title: The Wave gives Dublin a summer waterpark and a year-round pool.
- Wave Organ turns San Francisco Bay into a small instrument [History and culture] The Wave Organ is a wave-activated acoustic sculpture on a Marina District jetty, built from stone, pipes, tide, and bay movement. Page title: The Wave Organ turns San Francisco Bay into a small instrument.
- Weaverville Joss House keeps a Chinese Gold Rush story in the mountains [History and culture] Weaverville Joss House State Historic Park preserves a 1874 Taoist temple, Chinese immigrant history, Gold Rush-era community life, artifacts, worship, and mountain-town memory.
- Weber Point gives Stockton a downtown Delta view [Outdoors] Weber Point brings festivals, play space, a promenade, and Delta views into downtown Stockton.
- Weed's name comes from lumber, wind, and one founder [History and culture] Weed has a name people notice from the highway, but the local story starts with Abner Weed, strong mountain winds, and a lumber town below Mount Shasta.
- Weedpatch Camp tells a hard farmworker story with care [History and culture] Weedpatch Camp, officially the Arvin Farm Labor Supply Center, shows how Dust Bowl migration, farm work, and the Central Valley came together in the 1930s.
- West Covina became a city because neighbors wanted local control [History and culture] West Covina incorporated in 1923 after residents organized around a local land-use fight, then grew fast after World War II.
- West Covina building permits now use the portal first [Home and property] West Covina's Building Division routes applications, plans, and supporting documents through the One Stop Building Permit Center portal, with in-person counter help still available.
- West Covina business license work starts from the business page [Rules and licenses] West Covina's business page links the business license portal, permit pages, resource guides, and starting-a-business help in one place.
- West Covina issue reports need the place and the problem [Rules and licenses] West Covina takes service requests through a reporting portal and mobile app, with phone backup for details like location, contact information, and the issue being reported.
- West Covina trash service runs through Athens [Home and property] West Covina residents use Athens Services for household trash plus bulky-item pickup, move-in and move-out help, summer clean-up events, and compost events.
- West Hollywood parking permits are tied to the plate [Cars and driving] West Hollywood's Permit-by-Plate system links resident and visitor permits to license plates, while moving permits reserve curb space through a separate request.
- West Hollywood turns its small footprint into a walkable art map [History and culture] West Hollywood's walking tours, LGBTQ history route, public art, cultural resources, and historic districts make the city easy to explore without driving.
- West Sac Connect is for non-emergency city questions [Home and property] West Sac Connect routes non-emergency requests and questions, while police reports, officer response, and urgent animal issues use separate contacts.
- West Sacramento Citizen Access handles many permit and license tasks [Rules and licenses] West Sacramento's Citizen Access Portal is a useful first stop for permit status, inspections, and business license applications or renewals.
- Western Hotel Museum holds Lancaster's early desert-town story [History and culture] Lancaster's Western Hotel Museum is the city's oldest standing building and a California Historical Landmark tied to early Antelope Valley life. Page title: The Western Hotel Museum holds Lancaster's early desert-town story.
- Westlake shows Daly City's postwar growth story [History and culture] Westlake helps show how Daly City grew after World War II, when former dunes and farm edges became a large planned neighborhood west of the older city.
- Westlake Village went from Russell Ranch to city in the country [History and culture] Westlake Village's story runs from Chumash homeland and Russell Ranch to a 1960s master-planned lakeside community that became its own Los Angeles County city in 1981.
- Westminster building permits go smoother after planning is settled [Home and property] Westminster's building permit page starts after planning approval, then asks for clear construction plans, code details, possible licensed design work, and plan-check guidance for the project scope.
- Westminster business licenses run through HdL [Rules and licenses] Westminster business license forms go through HdL, and the city page also flags business-license questions for commercial property and larger residential rentals.
- Westminster trash, bulky items, and sweeping use different offices [Home and property] Westminster's maintenance page separates abandoned items, bulky item pickup, potholes, sidewalk repairs, street sweeping, graffiti, and trash pickup contacts.
- Westminster water bills and trash service use different desks [Home and property] Westminster water billing runs through the city, while solid waste, recycling, and sewer service point to Midway City Sanitary District.
- Westmorland shows how Imperial Valley towns turn water into farm life [History and culture] Westmorland is a small Imperial Valley city with farm-country roots, local public works, canal-fed water, and a honey festival tradition.
- Wheatland was once the place overland travelers reached first [History and culture] Wheatland's Johnson's Ranch story ties the town to emigrant travel, the Bear River, early freight routes, Chinatown, hops, and a remarkable mayor.
- Where's My Ballot can make mail voting less mysterious [Rules and licenses] The Secretary of State's Where's My Ballot tool lets California voters sign up for text, email, or voice updates about a vote-by-mail ballot.
- Whiskeytown gives Shasta County a clear lake and mountain park [Outdoors] Whiskeytown National Recreation Area sits west of Redding with a clear lake, waterfalls, mountain trails, Gold Rush history, and forested hills.
- White Mountains hold trees older than most history [History and culture] The Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest in Inyo National Forest protects high-elevation trees that can live for more than 4,000 years. Page title: The White Mountains hold trees older than most history.
- Whiting Ranch gives Lake Forest a foothill trail edge [Outdoors] Whiting Ranch Wilderness Park sits on Lake Forest's foothill edge, with county-managed trails, canyon scenery, and simple access rules to check before a hike.
- Whittier 365 handles requests and city updates in one app [Rules and licenses] Whittier 365 gives residents one place for city notifications and non-emergency requests, including categories for code enforcement, graffiti, traffic, public works, parks, trash, water, and sewer items.
- Whittier business licenses have online and counter paths [Rules and licenses] Whittier offers online renewal for many businesses, while new businesses, out-of-city contractors, and special situations may need the business license office or related city review.
- Whittier Narrows gives South El Monte a big river-park story [Outdoors] Whittier Narrows gives South El Monte a large public park, nature center, lakes, trails, and a clearer way to picture the San Gabriel Valley's river land.
- Whittier Narrows is Rosemead's park-edge recreation landscape [Outdoors] Near Rosemead, Whittier Narrows brings together county recreation, natural areas, rentals, event traffic, and federal water-management infrastructure.
- Whittier projects often need planning before plan check [Home and property] Whittier Building and Safety asks projects to be evaluated by Planning Services before Building and Safety plan review, then permits and inspections follow.
- Whittier trash questions run through Athens Services [Home and property] Whittier uses Athens Services as its citywide solid waste hauler, with trash, recycling, organics, containers, and bulky items handled through that service path.
- Whittier's Bailey House keeps the city's first-settler story close [History and culture] The Jonathan Bailey House is Whittier's oldest building, tied to the city's first settlers, early Friends meetings, and the local historic register.
- Whittier's Greenway Trail turns a rail corridor into a cross-town route [Outdoors] The Whittier Greenway Trail is a long commuter and recreation path built from a former rail corridor, with stations, public art, and a newer eastern extension.
- Wieghorst Museum gives El Cajon a western art anchor [History and culture] The Olaf Wieghorst Museum in downtown El Cajon honors a western artist who lived in the city, with galleries, his restored home, and garden spaces. Page title: The Wieghorst Museum gives El Cajon a western art anchor.
- Wild mushrooms are not a guess-and-cook food [Outdoors] CDPH and California Poison Control warn that wild mushrooms can be hard to identify, and mistakes can be serious even when mushrooms look familiar.
- Wildfire defensible space around the home [Safety guide guide] Start here before clearing plants, moving firewood, changing mulch, or checking whether a home is in a wildfire hazard zone.
- Wildfire home and insurance check [Checklist · Home risk checks] First checks for fire maps, yard work, home hardening, discounts, and FAIR Plan questions.
- Wildlife, birding, and viewing [Field guide guide] How to watch wildlife without crowding it, feeding it, or missing site rules, passes, closures, drones, and marine-life distance rules.
- Williams turned its old high school into a valley museum [History and culture] Williams is home to the Sacramento Valley Museum, a former 1911 high school that now tells regional farm, family, school, and valley history.
- Willits keeps the Skunk Train side of redwood rail history [History and culture] The Skunk Train traces its rail history to 1885, when the route served the redwood timber economy between the woods and the Fort Bragg mill.
- Willows is a farm town with a wildlife refuge next door [History and culture] Willows grew from a fertile Sacramento Valley farm town, and today it is also the easy front door to Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge.
- Windsor's name story starts with a green valley [History and culture] Windsor's town history starts with a valley of oak trees and tall grass, long before the modern Town Green became its civic center.
- Winter wood burning in the Valley gets a daily status [Rules and licenses] In the San Joaquin Valley, residential wood-burning rules can change by county and day during the winter Check Before You Burn season.
- Winters began when the railroad crossed Putah Creek [History and culture] Winters grew after the Vaca Valley Railroad crossed Putah Creek, shifting settlement from Buckeye into a busy farm and rail town by 1876.
- Woodlake Botanical Garden turns valley agriculture into a walk [History and culture] Woodlake Botanical Garden grew from local volunteer work into a 13-acre garden showing California fruits, vegetables, flowers, birds, blooms, and butterflies.
- Woodland business openings should check planning first [Rules and licenses] Woodland business licenses run through Community Development, and some uses or improvements need planning review before a building permit or business operation moves ahead.
- Woodland Opera House anchors a downtown walking-history stop [History and culture] Woodland Opera House State Historic Park and the city's walking-tour materials make downtown Woodland easy to explore by blocks, older buildings, routes, and local stories.
- Woodland service requests are moving to WeAreWoodland [Home and property] Woodland is replacing its older citizen problem reporter with WeAreWoodland, a web and mobile tool for non-emergency service requests, photos, locations, tracking, and updates.
- Woodland water bills and trash bills use different doors [Home and property] Woodland's online services separate water bills from Waste Management trash bills, so residents should pick the right payment path before paying.
- Woodside goes from redwood lumber to Filoli gardens [History and culture] Woodside's story runs from Ohlone homeland and redwood mills to the old Woodside Store, country estates, and Filoli's public gardens.
- Woodward Park puts Fresno right along the river edge [Outdoors] Woodward Park is a 300-acre Fresno regional park and bird sanctuary on the south bank of the San Joaquin River.
- Work at a Folsom address can need a Historic District check [Home and property] For work at a Folsom address, eTRAKiT may handle the regular permit path, but properties near the Historic District can need design review or extra checks.
- World Ag Expo makes Tulare a global farm stop [History and culture] World Ag Expo at the International Agri-Center gives Tulare a major annual agriculture event tied to equipment, technology, seminars, outdoor displays, and visitors from far beyond the Valley.
Y
- Yolo Bypass turns open lowland into a big wildlife view [Outdoors] Yolo Bypass Wildlife Area has wetlands, riparian habitat, birdwatching, wildlife viewing, seasonal uses, and broad open views near Davis and Sacramento.
- Yorba Linda business and building questions use two lanes [Rules and licenses] Yorba Linda business licenses cover local, home, contractor, and in-city work, while building permits, inspections, and plan review run through the Building Division and Accela portal.
- Yorba Linda MyCivic 311 requests need the right category [Home and property] Yorba Linda uses MyCivic 311 for service requests, with web and app options, category selection, address entry, photos, notes, and Public Works follow-up.
- Yorba Linda park and trail vehicle access needs the right permit [Outdoors] Yorba Linda has a separate permit path for limited motorized vehicle access on city parks and trails, including some trail-adjacent property and equestrian service needs.
- Yorba Linda trails connect neighborhoods to bigger open space [Outdoors] Yorba Linda's trail system links local routes with Chino Hills State Park, Carbon Canyon, the Santa Ana River Trail, and other regional open-space paths.
- Yorba Linda's Nixon Library is also a birthplace campus [History and culture] The Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum sits on nine acres in Yorba Linda, on the original site of Nixon's birthplace home, with museum galleries, gardens, and historic grounds.
- Yosemite Valley was Ahwahnee before it was a national park [History and culture] Yosemite Valley's older story begins with Ahwahneechee people, long Native life in the valley, village places, changed names, removal, and history that predates park maps.
- Yountville layers George Yount, wine history, and the Veterans Home [History and culture] Yountville's small-town center sits inside a bigger story of Caymus Rancho, early Napa Valley grapes, rail service, stone winery buildings, and the Veterans Home.
- Yreka keeps its Gold Rush story close to Miner Street [History and culture] Yreka's downtown, old homes, and museums help tell the story of a far-north Gold Rush town that stayed important after the first rush faded.
- Yuba City map questions start with levee basics [Home and property] Yuba City and Sutter County provide official map, levee, stream-gauge, insurance, and emergency information for readers who need the right first stops.
- Yuba City sits between river land, farm country, and the Sutter Buttes [History and culture] Yuba City's setting near the Feather River, the Sutter Buttes, downtown, and the Yuba-Sutter farm region gives the city more texture than a quick Sacramento Valley map label.
- Yuba City water rules are lighter now, but waste still counts [Home and property] Yuba City lifted mandatory water restrictions in 2023, but water waste is still prohibited and some conservation rebates are available for city water customers.
- Yuba City yc311 is for non-emergency city requests [Home and property] Yuba City's yc311 system lets residents send non-emergency service requests such as potholes, streetlights, drainage, water waste, and abandoned carts.
- Yuba City's Permit Planner can sort a project before you apply [Home and property] Yuba City offers a Permit Planner for zoning, permitting, license needs, and fee estimates before a building permit or business license question gets too far along.
- Yuba City's Sikh Parade is part of its Valley identity [History and culture] Yuba City's annual Sikh Parade grew from a local community tradition into one of the largest Sikh gatherings outside India, adding a major cultural layer to the Sacramento Valley city.
- Yucaipa Permit Exchange is the project doorway [Home and property] Yucaipa uses the Permit Exchange for building permits, planning applications, inspections, payments, project tracking, and many handouts that help shape a complete submittal.
- Yucaipa Regional Park turns the foothill edge into a lake day [Outdoors] Yucaipa Regional Park gives the city a county-run outdoor anchor with fishing lakes, camping, trails, picnic shelters, swim areas, and foothill views.
- Yucaipa's city app tracks reports from start to finish [Home and property] Yucaipa's official app accepts non-emergency reports for animal services, code enforcement, graffiti, parks, streetlights, street issues, traffic calming, and trails.
Z
- Zalud House gives Porterville a family time capsule [History and culture] Porterville's Zalud House Museum preserves an 1891 family home, original belongings, a rose garden, and a quieter look at the city's pioneer-era story.
- Zumwalt Park gives downtown Tulare a fresh gathering lawn [Outdoors] Zumwalt Park reopened in downtown Tulare with an amphitheater, splash pad, play areas, restrooms, a gazebo, and green space for community events.
- Zzyzx is more than the strange sign off I-15 [History and culture] Zzyzx near Baker went from a desert spring and health-resort scheme to an active Desert Studies Center inside Mojave National Preserve.