 | New Generation Flooring Owner:
Brian Belden License # 751565 |
| | |
 | Tel: (619) 843-9405 Fax: (951) 244-7923 | |
|
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|
New Generation Flooring of Anaheim, Orange County, CA
now offers Faux Rocks and Wall landscaping
services! |
Rock features are showing up
everywhere. Why not add them to your repertoire? The world's great deposits of
synthetic rock were once concentrated in zoos, theme parks and the occasional
museum exhibit. But times have changed, and these days, faux rock is cropping
up all over, from backyard pools and spas to shopping-mall waterfalls.
The demand for artificial rock is
booming just about everywhere. Only in parts of Southern California has it
peaked in popularity. But if someone wants to put in a sandstone waterfall, a
lava-rock barbeque, or a granite grotto, why not use real rock? There are a
number of reasons why faux is so popular.
- Cost is one big factor. For the
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- Weight is another
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- When it comes to water
features, which go hand in hand with rockwork, faux rock has no mortared joints
to leak and seep like real rock features do.
- Environmentally, faux
eliminates the need to tear up to the earth to mine real rock.
- It also offers versatility and
ease of use that real rock can't touch. You don't need to bore holes through
solid rock to hide the plumbing and electrical guts of a waterfall or hire a
crane to hoist boulders into place.
|
|
About Anaheim, Orange County, CA |
Anaheim (pronounced /
?æn?ha?m/ "ANNA-hime") is a city in
Orange County,
California. As of January 1, 2009, the city population was about 348,467,
making it the 10th most-populated city in California
and ranked 54th in the
United States. The city
anticipates that the population will surpass 400,000 by 2014 due to rapid
development in its
Platinum
Triangle area as well as in
Anaheim
Hills area. Anaheim is the second most populous city in Orange County
(after
Santa Ana) and
second largest in terms of land area (after
Irvine), and it is
known for its
theme parks, sports
teams, and
convention
center.
Founded by fifty
German
families in 1857 and incorporated on February 10, 1870, Anaheim developed into
an industrial center, producing
electronics,
aircraft
parts, and canned fruit. It is the site of the
Disneyland Resort, a
world-famous grouping of
theme parks and
hotels which
opened in 1955,
Angel Stadium of
Anaheim,
Honda
Center, and
Anaheim
Convention Center, the largest convention center on the American west
coast. Its name is a
blend of "Ana",
after the nearby
Santa Ana River, and
"heim", a common German place name compound originally meaning "home".
Anaheim's city limits stretch from
Cypress in the west
to the
Riverside
County line in the east and encompass a diverse collection of neighborhoods
and communities. Anaheim Hills is a highly wealthy master-planned community
that is home to many sports stars and executives located in the city's eastern
stretches. West Anaheim is notable for its more mature neighborhoods dating
from the 1950s, which comprise part of the continuous suburban sprawl extending
from Los
Angeles. The Anaheim Resort, a commercial district, includes Disneyland and
the neighboring hotel and retail complexes. The Platinum Triangle, a neo-urban
redevelopment district
surrounding
Angel Stadium, is planned
to be populated with mixed-use streets and
high-rises. Finally, The
Canyon is an industrial district north of the
Riverside Freeway and
east of the
Orange Freeway.
History
The city of Anaheim was founded in 1857 by grape farmers and wine makers
from Franconia in
Bavaria. The
first such settler was
Daniel Kraemer. The
colony was situated on 1,165 acres (4.71 km).
Settlers voted to call the community Annaheim, meaning "home by the
Santa Anna River" in German. The name later was changed slightly, to Anaheim.
To the Spanish-speaking neighbors, the settlement was known as Campo
Alemán (Spanish for German Camp). The grape industry was destroyed in
the 1880s by an insect pest. Other crops - walnuts, lemons, and of course
oranges - soon filled the void, fruits and vegetables having become viable cash
crops when the Los Angeles - Orange County region was connected to the
continental railroad network in 1886.
The famous Polish actress
Helena Modjeska settled
in Anaheim with her husband and various friends, among them
Henryk Sienkiewicz,
Julian
Sypniewski and ?ucjan Paprocki. While living in Anaheim, Helena Modjeska
became good friends with Clementine Langenberger, the second wife of
August Langenberger.
Helena Street and
Clementine Street are
named after these two ladies, and the streets are located adjacent to each
other as a symbol of the strong friendship which Helena Modjeska and Clementine
Lagenberger shared.
Modjeska Park in West
Anaheim, is also named after Helena Modjeska.
In the 1920s, the
Ku
Klux Klan, at the height of its influence and popularity, decided to make
Anaheim a "model" Klan city. In 1924, the Klan secretly managed to get four of
its members elected to the five-member Board of Trustees. Nine of the ten
members of the police force were also Klansmen. The four Klan trustees served
for nearly a year, until they were publicly exposed, and voted out in a recall
election in which 95% of the population participated.
During the first half of the 20th century, before
Disneyland
opened its doors to the public, Anaheim was a massive rural community inhabited
by orange
groves, and the
landowners who farmed them.
One of the landowners was a man by the name of Bennett Payne Baxter. He owned
much land in northeast Anaheim that today is the location of
Edison Park. He came up
with many new ideas for irrigating orange groves and shared his ideas with
other landowners. He was not only successful, he helped other landowners and
businesspeople succeed as well. Ben Baxter and other landowners helped to make
Anaheim a thriving rural community before Disneyland changed the city forever.
Today, a street runs along
Edison Park which is named
Baxter Street. Also during this time,
Rudolph Boysen served as
Anaheim's first Park
Superintendent from 1921
to 1950. Boysen created a hybrid berry which
Walter
Knott later named the
boysenberry, after Rudy
Boysen.
Boysen
Park in East Anaheim was also named after him.
The
Disneyland
theme park was constructed in Anaheim from July 16, 1954 to July 17, 1955 and
has since become Anaheim's largest tourist attraction. The location was
formerly 160 acres (0.65 km) of orange and walnut trees,
some of which remain inside Disneyland property. Hotels and motels began to
spread, and residential districts soon followed, with increasig property
values. In 2001,
Disney's
California Adventure, the most expansive project in the theme park's
history, opened to the public.
In the late 20th century, Anaheim grew rapidly in population. Today,
Anaheim has a diverse ethnic and racial composition.
During the large expansion of the Disneyland resort in the 1990s, the
city of Anaheim then recognized itself as a resort epicenter, thus creating the
Anaheim Resort. It
includes the
Disneyland Resort,
the
Anaheim
Convention Center, the
Honda
Center--home of the NHL
Anaheim Ducks (formerly
known as the "Mighty Ducks"), and
Angel Stadium, home to
the
Los Angeles
Angels of Anaheim. The city has undergone a rigorous transformation in
creating metropolitan beautification to attract tourism. In 2007, the city
celebrated its
sesquicentennial
(150th anniversary) by opening the Anaheim Walk of Fame near the
Harbor Boulevard
entrance to the Disneyland Resort. The first star to be placed on the Anaheim
Walk of Fame was
Walt
Disney, the man most responsible for making Anaheim the hugely popular
tourist destination it is today.
Law and
government
City government
Under its
city charter, Anaheim
operates under a
council-manager
government. Legislative authority is vested in a
city
council of five
nonpartisan members, who
hire a professional city manager to oversee day-to-day operations. The mayor
serves as the presiding officer of the city council in a
first among equals
role. All council seats are elected at large. Voters elect the mayor and four
other members of the city council to serve four-year staggered terms. Elections
for two council seats are held in years divisible by four while elections for
the mayor and the two other council seats are held during the intervening
even-numbered years. Under the city's
term
limits, an individual may serve a maximum of two terms as a city council
member and two terms as the mayor.
- Mayor:
Curt
Pringle (since 2002)
- City Manager: Thomas J. Wood (since 2009)
- City Council
- Lorri Galloway (since 2004)
- Bob Hernandez (since 2002)
- Lucille Kring (since 2006)
- Harry Sidhu (since 2004)
See also:
List
of mayors of Anaheim, California
Emergency
services
Anaheim Police Department's
MD500E
helicopter,
"Angel"
Fire protection is provided by the
Anaheim Fire
Department. Law enforcement is provided by the
Anaheim
Police Department.
Ambulance service is provided
by
Care Ambulance
Service.
Federal, state and county representation
In the
United
States House of Representatives, Anaheim is split among three Congressional
districts:
- 40th,
represented by Ed Royce (R)
since 1993
- 42nd,
represented by
Gary
Miller (R)
since 1999
- 47th,
represented by
Loretta Sanchez (D)
since 1997
In the
California State
Senate, Anaheim is split among three districts:
- 29th, represented by
Bob Huff
(R)
since 2008
- 33rd, represented by
Mimi
Walters (R)
since 2008
- 34th, represented by
Lou
Correa (D)
since 2006
In the
California State
Assembly, Anaheim is split among six districts:
- 60th, represented by
Curt
Hagman (R)
since 2008
- 67th, represented by
Jim
Silva (R)
since 2006
- 68th, represented by
Van Tran
(R)
since 2004
- 69th, represented by
Jose
Solorio (D)
since 2006
- 71st, represented by
Jeff
Miller (R)
since 2008
- 72nd, represented by
Mike
Duvall (R)
since 2006
On the
Orange
County Board of Supervisors, Anaheim is divided between two districts, with
Anaheim Hills lying in the 3rd District and the remainder of Anaheim lying in
the 4th District:
- 3rd, represented by
Bill
Campbell since 2003
- 4th, represented by
Chris
Norby since 2003
Geography
Anaheim is located at 33°50′10″N 117°53′23″W? / ?33.836165°N 117.889769°W? / 33.836165;
-117.889769..
anaheim is approximately 25 miles south east of downtown Los Angeles
According to the
United States
Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 130.7 km² (50.5
mi²).
126.8 km² (48.9 mi²) of it is land and 3.9 km² (1.5
mi²) of it (2.99%) is water.
In the western portion of the city (not including
Anaheim
Hills), the major surface streets run east to west, starting with the
northernmost, are La Palma Avenue, Orangethorpe Avenue, Lincoln Avenue, Ball
Road, and Katella Avenue. The major surface streets running north-south,
starting with the westernmost, are Knott Avenue, Beach Boulevard (SR 39),
Magnolia Avenue, Brookhurst Street, Euclid Street, Harbor Boulevard, Anaheim
Boulevard, and State College Boulevard.
The
Santa Ana Freeway
(I-5), the
Orange Freeway (SR 57),
the
Riverside Freeway (SR
91) all pass through Anaheim. The
Costa Mesa Freeway
(SR 55), and the
Eastern
Transportation Corridor (SR 241) also have short stretches within the city
limits.
Anaheim is served by rail by two major railroads, the
Union Pacific
Railroad and the
BNSF
Railway. In addition, Anaheim sees
Amtrak California and
Metrolink
services and hosts a major regional train station in the
Angel Stadium parking
lot.
The Anaheim Convention Center
The current federal
Office of
Management and Budget metropolitan designation for Anaheim and the
Orange County
Area is "Santa
Ana-Anaheim-Irvine, CA."
The city recognizes several
districts, including the
Anaheim Resort (the area surrounding Disneyland), The Canyon (an industrial
area north of the
Riverside Freeway and
east of the
Orange Freeway), and the
Platinum Triangle (the area surrounding
Angel Stadium).
Anaheim Hills also
maintains a distinct identity.
Downtown Anaheim is
located in the heart of the Colonial District. Downtown is the administrative
heart of the city where you find West City Hall, East City Hall, Anaheim Police
Headquarters, the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce, and the Main Library. Anaheim
Ice (formerly Disney Ice), Farmer's Market and the Center Street Promenade are
also located in Downtown Anaheim. In the Fall of 2007,
The
Muzeo, the newest major museum in Orange County, opened its doors for the
first time, and is located next to West City Hall.
Pearson Park is also
located in Downtown Anaheim, and is named after
Charles Pearson, who was
Mayor of Anaheim
during the time
Walt
Disney opened
Disneyland
in Anaheim. One of the major attractions located in Pearson Park is the
Pearson Park
Ampitheater. In the Colonial District just west of Downtown Anaheim, is the
Mother Colony House, which
was built by
George Hanson, the
Founder of Anaheim. Today, it is Anaheim's and Orange County's oldest museum,
which is still open to the public. The
Stoffel Houseis a
Victorian Mansion located next door to the Mother Colony House. Originally the
Victorian Home was occupied by the
Stoffel Family, early
pioneer residents of Anaheim. Today, this historic home is the local
headquarters for the American Red Cross.
Climate
| [hide]Weather data for Anaheim,
California |
| Month |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
Year |
| Average high °F (°C) |
69
(21) |
69
(21) |
70
(21) |
73
(23) |
75
(24) |
79
(26) |
84
(29) |
86
(30) |
85
(29) |
80
(27) |
74
(23) |
70
(21) |
76
(24) |
| Average low °F (°C) |
45
(7) |
47
(8) |
48
(9) |
51
(11) |
56
(13) |
60
(16) |
62
(17) |
63
(17) |
62
(17) |
56
(13) |
51
(11) |
46
(8) |
54
(12) |
| Precipitation
inches (mm) |
2.4
(61) |
2.8
(71.1) |
2.5
(63.5) |
0.6
(15.2) |
0.1
(2.5) |
0.1
(2.5) |
0.0
(0) |
0.0
(0) |
0.1
(2.5) |
0.2
(5.1) |
0.8
(20.3) |
1.3
(33) |
11.3
(287) |
| Source: U.S. Climate Data
27 February 2009 |
Economy
Sleeping Beauty Castle at
Disneyland
Anaheim's largest and most important industry is
tourism. Its
Anaheim
Convention Center is home to many national conferences, and the
Walt Disney Company
is by far the city's largest employer. Many hotels, especially in the city's
Resort district, serve theme park tourists and conventiongoers.
Several notable corporations have offices in Anaheim.
Banco Popular, a bank
based in Puerto Rico, has one of
their North American headquarters in Anaheim.
Crime
Anaheim ranks as one of the safest cities of its size in the nation. In
2003, Anaheim reported nine
murders, 35%
of the national average.
Rape within the
city is relatively low as well, but has been increasing, along with the
national average.
Robbery (410
reported incidents) and aggravated
assault (824
incidents) rank among the highest
violent crimes in the
city, but even at that, robbery rates are still only half of the national
average, and aggravated assaults are at 68% of the average. 1,971
burglaries
were reported, as well as 6,708
thefts, 1,767
car thefts, and 654 car accidents. All three types of crime were below average.
There were 43 cases of
arson reported
in 2003, 43% of the national average.[1]
Demographics
| Historical populations |
| Census |
Pop. |
|
%± |
| 1880 |
833 |
|
— |
| 1890 |
1,273 |
|
52.8% |
| 1900 |
1,456 |
|
14.4% |
| 1910 |
2,628 |
|
80.5% |
| 1920 |
5,526 |
|
110.3% |
| 1930 |
10,995 |
|
99.0% |
| 1940 |
11,031 |
|
0.3% |
| 1950 |
14,556 |
|
32.0% |
| 1960 |
104,184 |
|
615.7% |
| 1970 |
166,408 |
|
59.7% |
| 1980 |
219,494 |
|
31.9% |
| 1990 |
266,406 |
|
21.4% |
| 2000 |
328,014 |
|
23.1% |
| Est. 2008 |
346,823 |
|
5.7% |
As of the census
of 2000, there were 345,556 people, 96,969 households, and 73,502 families
residing in the city. The
population density
was 2,587.8/km² (6,842.7/mi²). There were 99,719 housing units at an
average density of 786.7/km² (2,037.5/mi²). The racial makeup of the
city was 55%
White,
3%
Black
or
African
American, 0.93%Native
American, 12%
Asian,
0.42%
Pacific
Islander, 24% from
other
races, and 5% from two or more races. 46% of the population were
Hispanic
or
Latino
of any race.
There were 96,969 households out of which 43.0% had children under the
age of 18 living with them, 56.3% were
married
couples living together, 13.1% had a female householder with no husband
present, and 24.2% were non-families. 18.1% of all households were made up of
individuals and 6.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older.
The average household size was 3.34 and the average family size was 3.75.
In the city the population was spread out with 30.2% under the age of
18, 10.5% from 18 to 24, 33.5% from 25 to 44, 17.7% from 45 to 64, and 8.2% who
were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 30 years. For every 100
females there were 100.1 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there
were 98.1 males.
The
median income for a
household in the city was $47,122, and the median income for a family was
$49,969. Males had a median income of $33,870 versus $28,837 for females. The
per capita income for
the city was $18,266. About 10.4% of families and 14.1% of the population were
below the
poverty line, including
18.9% of those under age 18 and 7.5% of those age 65 or over.
Education
As of May 2006, Anaheim is served by eight public school districts:
- Anaheim
City School District
- Anaheim
Union High School District
- Centralia
School District
- Magnolia School
District
- North
Orange County Community College District
- Orange
Unified School District
- Placentia-Yorba
Linda Unified School District
- Savanna
School District
The City of Anaheim hosts one private university:
Anaheim
University.
Transportation
Anaheim is served by two public bus transit systems (Metro and
OCTA)
and 2 rail systems (Amtrak and
Metrolink).
Anaheim is serviced by
John Wayne Airport
located 15 miles (24 km),
Long Beach Airport
located 18 miles (29 km) away,
Los
Angeles International Airport (LAX)located 30 miles (48 km) away
,
Ontario
Airport, located 34 miles (55 km) away and
San
Bernardino International Airport located about 51 miles (82 km)
away. Anaheim is serviced by five airports in all, but its primary airport is
the
John Wayne--Orange
County Airport. The John Wayne Airport carries "Orange County" as its
destination moniker, which is displayed on most arrival and departure monitors
and gate signs in airports throughout the country. Orange County is used as the
common name for the
Santa
Ana-Anaheim-Irvine Area.
Anaheim will soon be home to a regional transportation gateway (known as
"ARTIC"), which will connect many different types of transportation medians in
one location. A monorail has been proposed to connect the Artic transportation
hub to the resort district.
In addition, a not-for-profit organization called the "Anaheim
Transportation Network" provides local shuttle service in the Disneyland Resort
area serving local hotels and both the California Adventure and Disneyland
theme parks.
Disney GOALS, a major southern California not for profit organization
also operates daily free bus service for low income youth in the central
Anaheim area. This bus service enables access to local, high end athletic
competition for youth who would otherwise have no way to access those
activities (or venues).
Attractions
- Disneyland Resort
- Disneyland
park
- Disney's
California Adventure park
- Downtown
Disney district
- Adventure City
- Anaheim
GardenWalk
- Angel Stadium of
Anaheim
- Honda Center, formerly
called the "Arrowhead Pond"
- The Grove of
Anaheim, formerly the Sun Theater, formerly Tinseltown Studios
- Anaheim
Convention Center
Sports teams
Street banners promoting the
Ducks and
Angels.
Current teams
- NHL team:
Anaheim Ducks –
2007 Stanley Cup
Champions
- MLB team:
Los Angeles
Angels of Anaheim –
2002 World Series
Champions
Defunct teams
- NLL team:
Anaheim Storm (Folded
after 2004-2005 season due to low attendance)
- The
NFL's
Los Angeles Rams played
in Anaheim from 1980 through 1994 before moving to their current home of
St. Louis.
- World Football
League team: The
Southern California
Sun played at
Anaheim Stadium from
1974-1975.
- Arena Football
League team:
Anaheim Piranhas
played at the Arrowhead Pond from 1994 to 1997.
- Roller Hockey
International team:
Anaheim Bullfrogs
played in the RHI from 1993 to 1997 and 1999, winning the
Murphy Cup Championship
twice.
- American
Basketball Association team:
Anaheim Amigos played at
the
Anaheim
Convention Center during the 1967-68 Season, then moved to
Los
Angeles.
- ABA2000
team:
Southern
California Surf played at the
Anaheim
Convention Center from 2001-2002.
- NBADL team:
Anaheim Arsenal played
at the
Anaheim
Convention Center from 2006-2009. The team is moving to
Springfield,
Massachusetts and being renamed for the 2009-2010 season.
- World Team Tennis:
The
Anaheim Oranges
played in 1978.
- Continental
Indoor Soccer League Team: The
Anaheim Splash, played
from 1994 to 1997.
Court battle
against the Angels
Main article:
City
of Anaheim v. Angels Baseball LP
Angel Stadium of Anaheim
in 2003.
On January 3, 2005, Angels Baseball LP, the ownership group for the
Anaheim Angels, announced that it would change the name of the club to the Los
Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
Arturo Moreno believed
Team spokesmen pointed out that from its inception, the Angels had been granted
territorial rights by
Major League
Baseball to the counties of
Los Angeles,
Ventura,
Riverside, and
San Bernardino in
addition to
Orange
County. The new owner knew the name would help him market the team to the
entire Southern California region rather than just Orange County. The "of
Anaheim" was included in the official name to comply with a provision of the
team's lease at Angel Stadium which requires that "Anaheim be included" in the
team's name.
Mayor
Curt
Pringle and other city officials countered that the name change violated
the spirit of the lease clause, even if it were in technical compliance. They
argued that a name change was a major bargaining chip in negotiations between
the city and
Disney Baseball
Enterprises, Inc., then the ownership group for the Angels. They further
argued that the city would never have agreed to the new lease without the name
change, because the new lease required that the city partially fund the
stadium's renovation but provided very little revenue for the city. Anaheim
sued Angels Baseball LP in Orange County
Superior Court, and a
jury trial was completed in
early February 2006, resulting in a victory for the Los Angeles Angels of
Anaheim franchise.
Anaheim appealed the court decision with the
California Court
of Appeal in May 2006. The case was tied up in the Appeals Court for over
two years. In December 2008, the Appeals Court upheld the February 2006
Decision and ruled in favor of The Angels Organization. In January 2009, The
Anaheim City Council voted not to appeal the court case any further, bringing
an end to the four year legal dispute between the City of Anaheim and the
Angels Organization..
Disney vs. Suncal
vs. Anaheim
In March 2007 the
Disney corporation filed a
lawsuit against the City of Anaheim after the city approved a developer's plan
to construct 1,500 homes in the Resort Area, a 2.2-square-mile
(5.7 km) district surrounding
Disneyland.
Disney claims that the city
breached a contract signed between the city and Resort Area businesses in 1994
banning any housing to be constructed within the Resort Area thereby reserving
all land in the 2.2-square-mile (5.7 km) district for tourism
and commercial uses. By voting 3-2 to approve the housing development in April,
the city of Anaheim thereby violated the terms of the contract.
In response, Disney, Mayor
Curt
Pringle, and Council member Harry Sidhu formed a coalition called 'Save Our
Anaheim Resort' with the objective of overturning the zoning allowance thereby
keeping the initial plan for the Resort Area intact. The highly successful
group boasted support from several local politicians, many building trade
unions, the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce, the Anaheim Police Department, and the
Anaheim Fire Department, as well as 97% of all businesses within the Resort
Area. The group collected 21,000 petitions, 9,000 more than needed, to overturn
the council's decision to rezone the area with the option of either the council
turning the decision over or the city hold an election to vote on the
initiative.
In response, Council member Lorri Galloway, Council member Bob
Hernandez,
SunCal,
and some local affordable housing advocates came together to form a group known
as 'The Coalition to Protect and Defend Anaheim'. Their objective was to keep
the rezoning approved by the council as legitimate, and stop the so-called "Disney Takeover".
At the August 21, 2007 city council meeting, the council voted 4-1 to
place the zoning decision on the June 3, 2008 ballot (Ms. Galloway voted
against). This referendum would have overturned the zoning change on the
26 acres (110,000 m) of land SunCal wanted to build on.
On November 27, 2007 the City Council rescinded the decision on a 3-2 vote and
cancelled the zoning change, thereby eliminating the need for the
referendum.
The next day, August 22, 2007 had the Save Our Anaheim Resort group
submit 31,348 signatures for verification for an Initiative that would require
that any zoning change in the entire Anaheim Resort District for other than
commercial and tourist related uses to be approved by the voters. This
Initiative was placed on the June 3, 2008 ballot, and is separate from the
referendum. On March 4, 2008, the city council revisited the Initiative and
decided to adopt the measure outright by a 3-2 vote, saving about $250,000 in
election costs, since the measure no longer needs to be on the ballot. In
October 2007, SunCal defaulted on a payment for the property in question.
SunCal has also pulled funding for this legal suit.
[2]
[3]
Then in November 2007, The Frank Family, owners of the Mobile Home Park
land in dispute, filed a counter suit against SunCal for their failure to make
the required payment in October 2007.
[4]
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