Five Reasons to Fill Out Your Census Questionnaire
Community

Five Reasons to Fill Out Your Census Questionnaire

1. Helps Build Prosperity in Your Community.

Does your neighborhood have traffic jams, elderly folks who live alone or overcrowded schools?  Census data can help define strategies to make necessary public improvements in your community. 

2. Help in a Time of Need

Many emergency services linked to 911 are structured based on maps developed with the data from the previous census.Census information helps health providers predict how a disease is spread through communities between members of the population. When natural tragedies like tornados and earthquakes occur, the census indicates to the rescue teams how many people may need aid.

3. Puts Government to Work for You

 It's a great way to let our leaders know who we are and what we need.  The numbers are used to help determine the distribution of more than $400 billion in federal and state funds.  The money will help to finance educational and school lunch programs, medical centers, emergency services, transportation and other needs in our community.

4. Reduces Risk for Businesses

Since census numbers help reduce the financial risk and allow the identification of potential markets, businesses can produce the products that you want and need.

5.  It Will Help You and Your Family

The individual data stay confidential for 72 years, but you can request a certificate of past censuses to use it as verification of your age, residence, or kinship.  This information can help you apply for a pension, establish citizenship or to obtain an inheritance.

In 2082 your great-grandchildren will be able to use census information to learn about the history of your family. 

Today your children can use the information to assist them with homework assignments.

Thanks to the fact that we have had a census every 10 years since 1790, we know how far we have come, and how much we have changed as a nation.

Be counted in the 2010 Census. The future is in our hands!

Crossover Special from the La Mirada Blog on Facebook: Growing Up in La Mirada
Nostalgia

Crossover Special from the La Mirada Blog on Facebook: Growing Up in La Mirada

This story is a compilation of several forms of correspondence sent in over the years, by former La Mirada resident Russ Tice. Russ is one of the very early "fans" of the La Mirada Blog, even before Facebook. He grew up in La Mirada in the 50's and 60's.

An Apple Valley resident now, I grew up in La Mirada. I have wonderful memories of La Mirada. My parents bought a brand new home on San Cristobal Drive in 1955 for $15,000, across from a vacant field. That vacant field soon became Rancho Elementary School.

Neff Park was truly a kid's adventure paradise in the late 50's and early 60's. Chickens, forest like trees, the main house, and best of all, the caretaker's house. A sweet older lady lived there, and she would sit and tell stories to we kids about the place. Even better, Neff Park was right next to Rancho School, which was across the street from my house.

I don't recall we kids needing much in the early 60's. We all had a bicycle, and some other toys of the day. It's all there was, and that looks better to me every day. We did fairly well, even without any wireless communication devices. We all had one phone, usually in the kitchen of our home. The lucky kids had two phones in their house. All, of course, were still on party lines. Two or three homes were hooked into one phone line. That seems scary....

La Mirada To Host Number One Team in Nation
Sports

La Mirada To Host Number One Team in Nation

La Mirada~After facing five Division I opponents to start the season--including a nationally ranked team in Edison--it might have seemed that things would get a little easier for the struggling La Mirada High School baseball team.

Think again.

Lakewood is the nation's new No. 1 squad in the maxprep.com rankings, and guess who the Matadores face in not one, but two games, at home Thursday?  Uhmm, Lakewood.

Yep, the same team that clobbered the Matadores, 10-0, in a second-round Loara Tournament contest March 6.

However, the doubleheader will be an opportunity for La Mirada (2-3), a multi-talented and experienced squad itself, to regroup and rebound and prove that its lofty rankings in numerous pre-season polls weren't without foundation.

The Lancers (5-0), fresh off winning the brutally tough Loara Tournament championship by outscoring their opponents 39-7, are led by a terrific player in senior Jeff Yamaguchi, a Long Beach St. signee who earned the event's MVP.

In the first meeting against La Mirada, Yamaguchi hit a monumental atomic blast to the top of Lakewood's leftfield Chainlink Monster, an entity which is cleared less than the times Godzilla destroyed Japan.

The first game is set for 12:30 p.m., with the nightcap approximately 3 p.m.

 

Not a Saturday at the Park
Sports

Not a Saturday at the Park

La Mirada~If the Matadores continue to hit and play defense as poor as it has the past two games, a promising season will not materialize.

La Mirada added another of its trademark Saturday clunkers with an uninspiring 5-1 loss to visiting Dana Hills to complete the Loara Tournament a very disappointing 2-3.

Four hits--4-for-24--and 11 strikeouts in a shocking and alarming trend doomed the Matadores even before two more late errors led to the defeat.

Totaling 12 strikeouts the previous game against reknown 6-foot-7 lefty Henry Owens of Edison was completely understandable.  The kid is ridiculously overpowering and polished and he will easily average double figures in K's a year before he's expected to be a first round draft pick in the 2011 amateur draft.

You Can See Ed Asner as FDR This Saturday in La Mirada
Arts & Entertainment

You Can See Ed Asner as FDR This Saturday in La Mirada

Multi-Award-Winning actor Ed Asner gives a Tour-de-Force performance as "FDR" Saturday Night at La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts

La Mirada~Ed Asner, recipient of seven Emmy Awards ("Mary Tyler Moore Show," "Lou Grant") and 16 nominations, five Golden Globe Awards, member of the TV Academy Hall of Fame, and the voice of Carl Fredricksen in Pixar's newest film, Up, will star in the solo performance drama, FDR based upon Dore Schary's Broadway hit Sunrise at Campobello, which ran 70 weeks on Broadway.

FDR explores the life of one of America's best-loved presidents and the events and decisions that shaped a nation. This powerful play follows the iconic president as he reflects on his years in office, from inauguration to the trials of World War II.

Sunrise at Campobello, Dory Schary's play depicting FDR's early battles with polio, made its Broadway debut on January 30, 1958. Later made into a successful  movie, the play chronicles FDR's personal journey.

This one-man show takes through FDR's White House years including the Depression, the steps leading up to WWII and the war years. Ed Asner shows us why this president was known as "that man in the White House," scorned by many and admired by most.

Ed Asdner is magnificent as FDR and elivers a fearless performance of this dynamic and powerful world leader.

Performance is scheduled for this Saturday, March 20, 8 p.m. at the La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts. Individual tickets are $65, $50 and $40. Call 562-944-9801 or visit www.lamiradatheatre.com

 

 

Matadores Miscues Prove Costly
Sports

Matadores Miscues Prove Costly

Huntington Beach~You don’t usually win with one hit but visiting La Mirada came oh so close Thursday in the Loara Tournament against Edison, a nationally ranked team which is also No. 1 in the state.

Senior righthander Mitch Petersen pitched his heart out and junior shortstop Andres Rodriguez homered off a projected first round pick in the 2011 amateur draft only to have the Matadores lose on the game’s final play, 2-1.

Jobs

The Chargers (3-1), rated No. 1 in the Los Angeles Times’ Preseason rankings, pushed across the winning run in the bottom of the seventh behind a pair of errors to drop the Times’ No. 20 La Mirada to 2-2 on the young season (all four against Division I opponents).

Senior reliever Kyle Harper, who entered the game in the bottom of the sixth inning with runners on the corners and came up with a huge strikeout, was hung with the unlucky loss to fall to 0-2.

Edison’s leadoff batter in the seventh hit a hot one right at the thirdbaseman, reaching second as the ball bounded softly into left. Harper then retired another expected first round pick next year, junior shortstop Christian Lopes, on a ground out to second that advanced the potential winning run to third base.

Baca Touts Decrease in Crime
News

Baca Touts Decrease in Crime

Monterey Park~“With the 15 percent reduction in homicides from 2008 to 2009, and their continued decrease over the past five years, homicides are at their lowest level in Sheriff’s patrol
areas since 1975,” said Sheriff Lee Baca.

During a press conference recently at the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Headquarters, Sheriff Baca discussed the continued decline in reported crimes for Sheriff’s contract cities and unincorporated areas. Overall, homicides, rapes, robberies, and aggravated assault crimes in Sheriff’s patrol areas decreased by over 11 percent between 2008 and 2009. Lancaster, Malibu/Lost Hills, Century, Compton, Norwalk, and Walnut Sheriff’s Stations showed the most substantial reduction in serious crimes,with decreases ranging between 12 and 21 percent.

Matadores Rout Golden Hawks
Sports

Matadores Rout Golden Hawks

La Mirada~That's more like it. 

Just a few days after a pathetic two-hit day at the plate against Lakewood, La Mirada High School stormed back to rout visiting El Dorado, 13-4, in Tuesday's third round of the Loara Baseball Tournament. 

It took only the third game for the Matadores (2-1), the Los Angeles Times' No. 20 pre-season squad and the Whittier Daily News' No. 2, to reach their low point of the season after giving up three runs in the first inning to the Golden Hawks following an 11-0 rout to Lakewood.  But just like that, the black clouds lifted and La Mirada put on its first display of offensive lightning. 

Torres Wins Game for Matadores
Sports

Torres Wins Game for Matadores

Anaheim~La Mirada’s baseball team wasted no time in taunting and thrilling its fans in the season opener of what could be a memorable one in a long history of great baseball squads at the campus.

Down and out not once but twice in a Loara Tournament game against Fountain Valley at Brookhurst Park, the Matadores got off the mat and escaped with a 5-4 victory in 10 innings.

J.T. Torres, fresh off CIF Player of the Year honors in football, came up Buffalo again by hitting a towering, game-winning double to the left-center fence for a 5-4 win over the snakebitten Barons.

If You’re Not Counted in the 2010 Census – You’re Invisible
Community

If You’re Not Counted in the 2010 Census – You’re Invisible

We all need to participate in the Census
The Constitution of the United States mandates that a count of the population of the be conducted every ten years.  This count, or census, is conducted at the beginning of every decade, usually on April 1st.    Our next Decennial Census is scheduled for April 1st, 2010. 

 

How does the Census Bureau accomplish this? 

Census operations are the largest non-war effort put forth by the Federal Government.  It will take approximately 1.5 million temporary workers to complete this enormous task.  All of the workers have to be hired, trained, given tools with which to complete their work (ie. computers, telephones, offices and supplies), and then after the Census process is complete, Decennial Census operations come to a close and the whole structure has to be dismantled. 

 

It begs the question, why do these workers want to be a part of the process?  “Census workers are passionate about ouir work because we believe what we’re doing is important,” says Sandra Alvarado, Media Specialist with the Census Bureau.  “Not to mention that 1.5 million people get to work and receive a paycheck which helps individual families who are struggling to get through these difficult times, and helps the economy at large.”

 

Participation in the Census is everyone’s civic duty and responsibility.  Furthermore, it is of vital importance to each individual, their families and their communities.  It is an opportunity, once every decade, to do something that will positively impact our lives for the next ten years.

LA MIRADA WEATHER

Explore