Pacifica, California, United States

Overview | Districts | History | Geography | Economy : Top employers | Government | Departments | Media | Education | Public libraries

🇺🇸 Pacifica, is a city in San Mateo County, California, on the coast of the Pacific Ocean between San Francisco and Half Moon Bay.

Overview The City of Pacifica is spread along a 6-mile (9.7-kilometer) stretch of sandy coastal beaches and hills in north central California. The city comprises several small valleys spread between Sweeney Ridge in the east, Montara Mountain to the south, and the Pacific Ocean's rocky bluffs to the west.

Pacifica is well known regionally as a popular surfing destination. Surfers and families often visit Linda Mar Beach. Rockaway Beach is a scenic location and offers recreation, shopping and dining. 2005 marked the opening of the top ranked Pacifica Skatepark. Pacifica is also a popular mountain biking destination, with many trails crossing the hillsides that surround the city, including Pedro Mountain Road, Sweeney Ridge, and areas of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. Fishermen frequent the local beaches and the Pacifica Pier, often catching striped bass and salmon. Pacifica is also a popular place to hike, with many trails that wind along the beaches and bluffs, including Mori Point, San Pedro Valley County Park, Frontierland Park, the Sanchez Adobe, Milagra Ridge, and the privately owned Rockaway Quarry. For live local theater and performing arts, Pacifica Spindrift Players is a local and popular favorite, in addition to Pacifica Performances which regularly provides both musical presentations and performing arts as well. Pacifica is also home to the Sharp Park Golf Course, which was designed in 1931 by architect Alister MacKenzie. The world class bromeliad nursery, Shelldance Orchid Gardens is located just off Highway 1 in Pacifica, adjacent to the Sweeney Ridge hiking trailhead.

Districts Pacifica is divided into roughly eleven districts from north to south: 1 Fairmont; 2 Westview (Pacific Highlands); 3 Pacific Manor (Manor); 4 Edgemar; 5 Sharp Park; 6 Fairway Park; 7 Vallemar; 8 Rockaway Beach; 9 Pedro Point and Shelter Cove in the south west; 10 Linda Mar, Linda Mar Valley, (formerly Pedro Valley or San Pedro Valley) in the south; 11 Park Pacifica in south east portions of the city (called the Back of the Valley).

History Before European settlers arrived, Pacifica was home to two significant Ohlone Indian villages: Pruristac located at San Pedro Creek near present-day Adobe Drive, and Timigtac on Calera Creek in the Rockaway Beach neighborhood.

Pacifica is the location of the oldest European encounter with the San Francisco Bay. An expedition led by Gaspar de Portolà sighted the bay by climbing the hills of Sweeney Ridge in Pacifica on November 4, 1769. Before then, earlier Spanish maritime explorers of the California coast Juan Cabrillo and Sebastian Vizcaino had missed the San Francisco Bay because heavy fog so frequently shrouded its entrance from the Pacific Ocean (the Golden Gate). Sighting the San Francisco Bay accelerated the Spanish colonization of Alta California because it was the only large, safe, centrally located harbor on the Alta California coast. The Spanish had known about Monterey Bay since the sixteenth century, but, unlike San Francisco Bay, it was too exposed to rough currents and winds to be used as major harbor for their trade between Asia and Mexico. In the Spanish era, Pacifica was the site of the San Pedro Valley Mission Outpost (1786–1793) of Mission Dolores. That was dissolved when a newly independent Mexico secularized the mission system. Pacifica is also the site of the still-extant Mexican-era Sánchez Adobe, built in 1846. The city is located on a part of the Mexican land grant Rancho San Pedro given to Francisco Sanchez in 1839.

During World War II, the area around the present-day Sharp Park recreational area held the Sharp Park Detention Station, an INS processing facility for Japanese Americans, Japanese nationals, and other "foreign enemies" during Japanese internment. The Stanford professor Yamato Ichihashi spent six weeks in Sharp Park. He described the facility, writing, "The ground is limited by tall iron net-fences and small in area; barracks 20' x 120' are well-built and painted outside and inside and are regularly arranged; there are 10 of these for inmates, each accommodating about 40, divided into 5 rooms for 8 persons each; if double-decked (beds), 80 can be put in".

On February 20, 1956, the Hazel's Inn raid occurred in Sharp Park. Sheriff Earl Whitmore told the San Mateo County Times at the time, "The purpose of the raid was to let it be known that we are not going to tolerate gatherings of homosexuals in this county". Ninety people were arrested that night, and the majority were San Francisco residents.

Pacifica was incorporated in 1957, relatively recently in the history of San Mateo County. Its first elected mayor was Jean Fassler, one of the first women mayors in California. It was the union of nine previously separate, unincorporated communities–Fairmont, Westview, Pacific Manor (or just Manor), Sharp Park, Fairway Park, Vallemar, Rockaway Beach, Linda Mar and Pedro Point–some of which were stops on the short-lived Ocean Shore Railroad. The name "Pacifica" was chosen from Thomas Barca, by vote; "Coastside" was a close runner-up. In 1960, the city seal was designed by resident Ralph Barkey, who was inspired by Ralph Stackpole's towering "Pacifica" statue produced for the 1939–1940 Golden Gate International Exposition on Treasure Island in the San Francisco Bay.

Geography Pacifica straddles San Pedro Creek which flows from the western slope of Sweeney Ridge. The far eastern portion of Pacifica includes San Andreas Creek which flows down the eastern slope of Sweeney Ridge. The Portola expedition followed these two creeks in the discovery of San Francisco Bay. Calera Creek runs through Pacifica Quarry and is protected as ESHA Environmentally Sensitive Habitat.

Economy: Top employers According to a recent Financial Report, the top employers in the city include: 1 Pacifica School District; 2 City of Pacifica; 3 Safeway; 4 Jefferson Union High School District; 5 Oceana Market; 6 Ace Hardware; 7 Recology of the Coast; 8 Rite Aid; 9 Ross; 10 North Coast County Water District.

Government Governed by a city council of five elected members, with each council seat in turn serving as mayor for a one-year term. A city manager, city attorney and city clerk are appointed and serve in support of the council to enact the ordinances passed by the council, which meets biweekly on the second and fourth Mondays of the month.

Departments The major City departments, ranked by cost: • 32% - Police and Communication Services • 23% - Fire and Emergency Services • 6% - Development and Engineering • 6% - Childcare programs • 5% - City Attorney • 5% - Public Works • 5% - Parks, Beach & Recreation • 5% - Finance and MIS

As of August 1, 2011, the South San Francisco Police Department took over the Pacifica emergency calls dispatch.

Media The local weekly newspaper, the Pacifica Tribune, is mailed out every Wednesday. It is part of Coastside News Group, a locally-owned California Benefit Corporation that includes the Half Moon Bay Review and Coastside Magazine. It originated as the Coastside Tribune early in the twentieth century.

Other media include: • The San Mateo Daily Journal • The Coastsider, • Coastside Magazine, published by the award-winning Half Moon Bay Review, • Pacificariptide, • Peninsula Press - a project of Stanford_journalism.

Pacifica Community Television, Pacifica's Emmy Award-winning local public-access television cable TV channel 26, has continuously operated for 30 years, featuring community based television. On national television, Guy Fieri visited Gorilla BBQ for the fifth season of Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives in 2009.

The final scene of Harold and Maude in which Harold makes the leap off a cliff was filmed at Mori Point in Pacifica. The 2003 film House of Sand and Fog and the 2012 Chasing Mavericks were also filmed in Pacifica.

The 2007 National Book Award finalist Story of a Girl by Sara Zarr is set in Pacifica. In 2017, it was adapted into a Lifetime movie.

Education Primary and secondary schools The public elementary and middle school district, known as Pacifica School District, (formerly the Laguna Salada School District), consists of Vallemar, Cabrillo, Ingrid B. Lacy, Sunset Ridge, Ortega, Linda Mar and Ocean Shore schools, and also a home schooling program. The administration office is located at 375 Reina del Mar Avenue, adjacent to Vallemar School. Each school enrolls about 550-600 students. There are two private K-8 schools, Good Shepherd School and Pacific Bay Christian School, a K-12 school which was founded as a segregation academy.

Pacifica also previously had an established elementary school from 1969 - 2005 known as Oddstad (Oddstad Andres) Elementary located in the Park Pacifica neighborhood. Though now non-operational, the campus site has been host to numerous community events, and private courses as well as sporting events and leisure.

Pacifica has one private high school and two public high schools which are part of the Jefferson Union High School District. Oceana High School in the central part of the city while Terra Nova High School and Pacific Bay Christian School are in the south. Many students in the northern part of Pacifica attend Jefferson High School or Westmoor High School nearby in adjacent Daly City. Oceana's teaching paradigm is geared toward longer classes, senior exhibitions, and mandated community service. Much larger Terra Nova is a more traditional institution, featuring numerous sports, clubs, and a broad-based and enriching educational experience.

Public libraries San Mateo County Libraries, a member of the Peninsula Library System, operates the Pacifica-Sanchez Library and the Pacifica-Sharp Park Library.[

Pacifica, California, United States 

Pacifica has a population of over 38,130 people. Pacifica also forms part of the wider San Mateo County which has a population of over 764,442 people. Pacifica is situated 10 km south of Daly City.

Twin Towns, Sister Cities Pacifica has links with:

🇪🇸 Balaguer, Spain
Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

East of: -122.483

🇺🇸 Daly City -122.475

🇺🇸 Bellingham -122.467

🇺🇸 Sonoma -122.45

🇺🇸 Belvedere Tiburon -122.45

🇺🇸 Tacoma -122.442

🇺🇸 San Francisco -122.429

🇺🇸 Gresham -122.42

🇺🇸 South San Francisco -122.417

🇺🇸 Richmond -122.343

🇺🇸 Redding -122.337

West of: -122.483

🇺🇸 Lakewood -122.504

🇺🇸 San Rafael -122.517

🇺🇸 Novato -122.567

🇺🇸 Oregon City -122.597

🇨🇦 Maple Ridge -122.604

🇺🇸 Petaluma -122.617

🇺🇸 Anacortes -122.617

🇺🇸 Vancouver -122.633

🇺🇸 Port Orchard -122.633

🇺🇸 Oak Harbor -122.65

Antipodal to Pacifica is: 57.517,-37.617

Locations Near: Pacifica -122.483,37.6167

🇺🇸 South San Francisco -122.417,37.65 d: 6.9  

🇺🇸 Daly City -122.475,37.692 d: 8.4  

🇺🇸 San Francisco -122.429,37.68 d: 8.5  

🇺🇸 San Mateo -122.315,37.548 d: 16.7  

🇺🇸 Belvedere Tiburon -122.45,37.867 d: 27.9  

🇺🇸 Alameda -122.267,37.75 d: 24.1  

🇺🇸 Alameda County -122.272,37.805 d: 28  

🇺🇸 Oakland -122.267,37.8 d: 27.9  

🇺🇸 Redwood City -122.233,37.467 d: 27.6  

🇺🇸 Berkeley -122.271,37.87 d: 33.7  

Antipodal to: Pacifica 57.517,-37.617

🇫🇷 Saint-Pierre 55.478,-21.342 d: 18194.8  

🇫🇷 Le Tampon 55.515,-21.278 d: 18188.1  

🇫🇷 Réunion 55.532,-21.133 d: 18172.3  

🇫🇷 Saint-Benoît 55.713,-21.034 d: 18163  

🇫🇷 Saint-Paul 55.27,-21.01 d: 18155.8  

🇫🇷 Saint-Paul 55.279,-21 d: 18154.8  

🇫🇷 Saint-Denis 55.457,-20.867 d: 18142.1  

🇲🇺 Mahébourg 57.7,-20.407 d: 18101.4  

🇲🇺 Curepipe 57.517,-20.317 d: 18091.4  

🇲🇺 Vacoas-Phoenix 57.493,-20.3 d: 18089.6  

Bing Map

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