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San Bernardino, CA Real Estate News

By raman kandola
(kandola mortgage services)
 Roughly one million illegal immigrants are thought to live in Los Angeles County, but the Urban Institute estimates that this number is declining. There are two reasons for this change. The first is that many illegal immigrants now avoid Los Angeles, and instead head to Midwestern and southern states such as Ohio, Georgia and Texas. The second reason is that many are leaving the city. San Bernardino, for example, is currently 56% Hispanic, and growing. The migrants are lured partly by a boom in unskilled jobs and since San Bernardino and Riverside Counties process much of the cargo that arrives in the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach they have created manufacturing jobs. Housing is less expensive elsewhere, and schools are better with fewer gang problems.
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By Inland Empire Real Estate Short Sale Pro, InlandHomeFinder.com
(InlandHomeFinder.com)
  Hospitals In San Bernardino, CaliforniaBallard Rehabilitation Hosp (909) 473-1200 1760 W 16th St San Bernardino, CA Center For Mental Health (909) 880-1735 1805 Medical Center Dr San Bernardino, CA Community Hosp-San Bernardino (909) 887-1234 1800 Medical Center Dr San Bernardino, CA Medical Center Convalescent (909) 884-4781 467 E Gilbert St San Bernardino, CA Rehabilitation Technology Wrks (909) 824-9675 2195 Club Center Dr # G San Bernardino, CA San Bernardino Community Hosp (909) 887-6333 1805 Medical Center Dr San Bernardino, CA San Gabriel Valley Medical Ctr (909) 883-8711 2101 N Waterman Ave San Bernardino, CA St Bernardine Medical Ctr (909) 883-8711 2101 N Waterman Ave San Bernardino, CA Valley Healthcare Ctr (909) 886-5291 1680 N Waterman Ave San Bernardino, CA Waterman Conva...
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By Inland Empire Real Estate Short Sale Pro, InlandHomeFinder.com
(InlandHomeFinder.com)
In 1910, the first National Orange Show was conceived by a group of civic-minded San Bernardino businessmen as a means of encouraging the culture of citrus fruits and promoting the distribution of the "exotic crop" throughout the world. That first tiny citrus fair was held March 6th through March 11th, 1911. Exhibits packed two canvas tents in a vacant lot at 4th & "E" Streets. The two tents covered about 8000 square feet. Rain fell continuously during the five-day event, but that didn't seem to have an affect. More than 3000 people attended that year. (Inside the First National Orange Show, 1911)(A citrus exhibit during the 1913, National Orange Show)In the following years, it came to be called "California's Greatest Midwinter Event." A permanent site was located at Mill & "E" Streets....
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