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Inland Empire

The Inland Empire (commonly abbreviated as the IE) is a metropolitan area or region inland of and adjacent to coastal Southern California, centering around the cities of San Bernardino and Riverside, and bordering Los Angeles County to the east. The bulk of the population is centered in the cities of northwestern Riverside County and southwestern San Bernardino County, and is sometimes considered to include the desert communities of the Coachella and Victor Valleys, respectively on the other sides of the San Gorgonio Pass and San Bernardino Mountains from the Santa Ana River watershed that forms the bulk of the Inland Empire; a much broader definition includes all of Riverside and San Bernardino counties.[4] The combined land area of the counties of the Inland Empire is larger than ten U.S. statesWest Virginia, Maryland, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Connecticut, Delaware and Rhode Island.

Inland Empire
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
Counties
Ten largest cities by population (2010 U.S. Census)
Area
 • Metro
27,298 sq mi (70,669 km2)
Elevation
−220 – 11,499 ft (−67.1 – 3,507 m)
Population
 (2020)[2]
 • Density147.5/sq mi (56.9/km2)
 • Urban
1,932,666 (22nd)
 • Urban density3,434.1/sq mi (1,325.9/km2)
 • Metro
4,599,839 (12th)
 • Combined Statistical Area (CSA)
18,710,563 [1] (2nd)
GDP
 • MSA$237.9 billion (2022)
Time zoneUTC−08:00 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−07:00 (PDT)

The U.S. Census Bureau–defined Riverside–San Bernardino–Ontario metropolitan area, which comprises Riverside County and San Bernardino County, California, covers more than 27,000 sq mi (70,000 km2) and had a population of about 4.6 million in 2020.[5] At the end of the 19th century, the Inland Empire was a major center of agriculture, including citrus, dairy, and winemaking. Agriculture declined through the 20th century, and since the 1970s a rapidly growing population, fed by families migrating in search of affordable housing, has led to more residential, industrial, and commercial development.

Etymology edit

 
Yucca Valley, within the Morongo Basin, is halfway between the San Bernardino Valley and the Arizona state line.
 
A map of the United States, highlighting the twin counties of the Inland Empire

The term "Inland Empire" is documented to have been used by the Riverside Enterprise newspaper (now The Press-Enterprise) as early as April 1914.[6] Developers in the area likely introduced the term to promote the region and to highlight the area's unique features. The "Inland" part of the name is derived from the region's location, generally about 60 miles (97 km) inland from Los Angeles and the Pacific Ocean. Originally, this area was called the Orange Empire due to the acres of citrus groves that once extended from Pasadena to Redlands during the first half of the 20th century.[4][7] The boundaries of the Inland Empire are nebulous, but the region is generally defined as the cities of western Riverside County and southwestern San Bernardino County, adjacent to the Los Angeles metropolitan area. A broader definition includes Palm Springs and the surrounding desert communities, and a much more widespread definition includes all of San Bernardino and Riverside counties.[4]

History edit

 
Drawing of San Bernardino (1852)

What is now known as the Inland Empire was inhabited for thousands of years, prior to the late 18th century, by the Tongva, Taaqtam, Ivilyuqaletem and Payómkawichum Native Americans. With Spanish colonization and the subsequent Mexican era the area was sparsely populated at the land grant Ranchos, considering it unsuitable for missions.[citation needed] The first American settlers, a group of Mormon pioneers, arrived over the Cajon Pass in 1851. Although the Mormons left a scant six years later, recalled to Salt Lake City by Brigham Young during the church's Utah War with the U.S. government, other settlers soon followed.

The entire landmass of Southern California was subdivided according to the San Bernardino Meridian, which was first plotted as part of the Public Land Survey System in November 1852, by Col. Henry Washington. Base Line Road, a major thoroughfare, today runs from Highland to San Dimas, intermittently along the absolute baseline coordinates plotted by Col. Washington.[8] San Bernardino County was first formed out of parts of Los Angeles County on April 26, 1853. While the partition once included what is today most of Riverside County, the region is not as monolithic as it may sound. Rivalries between Colton, Redlands, Riverside and San Bernardino over the location of the county seat in the 1890s caused each of them to form their own civic communities, each with their own newspapers. On August 14, 1893, the state Senate allowed Riverside County to form out of land previously in San Bernardino and San Diego counties, after rejecting a bill for Pomona to split from L.A. County and become the seat of what would have been called San Antonio County.[9]

 
Arlington Heights Citrus Groves, Riverside circa 1903

The arrival of rail and the importation of navel and Valencia orange trees in the 1870s touched off explosive growth, with the area quickly becoming a major center for citrus production.[10][11][12] This agricultural boom continued with the arrival of water from the Colorado River and the rapid growth of Los Angeles in the early 20th century, with dairy farming becoming another staple industry. In 1926, Route 66 (now known as Foothill Boulevard and Interstate 215) came through the northern parts of the area, bringing a stream of tourists and migrants to the region. Still, the region endured as the key part of the Southern California "citrus belt" until the end of World War II, when a new generation of real-estate developers bulldozed acres of agricultural land to build suburbs.[10] The precursor to the San Bernardino Freeway, the Ramona Expressway, was built in 1944, and further development of the freeway system in the area facilitated the expansion of suburbs and human migration throughout the Inland Empire and Southern California.

The region experienced significant economic and population growth through most of the latter half of the 20th century. In the early 1990s, the loss of the region's military bases and reduction of nearby defense industries due to the end of the Cold War led to a local economic downturn.[13][14] The region as a whole had partially recovered from this downturn by the start of the 21st century through the development of warehousing, shipping, logistics and retail industries, primarily centered around Ontario.[15] During the 2008 Recession, industry suffered heavily but had begun to recover by 2010.[16][17]

Geography edit

Physical geography edit

 
View of the San Bernardino Valley from the San Bernardino Mountains. The Santa Ana Mountains are visible in the distance.

Physical boundaries between Los Angeles and the Inland Empire from west to east are the San Jose Hills splitting the San Gabriel Valley from the Pomona Valley, leading to the urban populations centered in the San Bernardino Valley.[18] From the south to north, the Santa Ana Mountains physically divide Orange County from Riverside County. The Santa Rosa Mountains, as well as the Southern California portion of the Sonoran Desert, physically divide Riverside County from San Diego County.[19] Some definitions for the IE include the Chino Valley, Coachella Valley, Cucamonga Valley, Menifee Valley, Murrieta Valley, Perris Valley, San Jacinto Valley, Temecula Valley, and Victor Valley.[citation needed]

Elevations range from 11,499 ft (3,505 m) at the top of the San Gorgonio Mountain to −220 ft (−67 m) at the Salton Sea. The San Bernardino mountains are home to the San Bernardino National Forest and the resort communities of Big Bear Lake, Lake Arrowhead, and Running Springs. The Santa Ana River extends from Mt. San Gorgonio for nearly 100 miles (160 km) through San Bernardino, Riverside, and Orange counties before it eventually spills into the Pacific Ocean at Newport Beach and Huntington Beach. While temperatures are generally cool to cold in the mountains, it can get hot in the valleys. In the desert resort of Palm Springs, near Joshua Tree National Park, summer temperatures can reach well over 110 °F (43 °C).

Political geography edit

Unlike most metropolitan areas that have grown up around a central city, the Inland Empire has no one main focus city. Major cities in the region include Riverside, San Bernardino, Rancho Cucamonga, Ontario, and Corona. Suburban sprawl spreads out to form a connection with the Los Angeles metropolitan area. Further development is steadily, if not heavily, encroaching past the mountains into the outlying desert areas. The Inland Empire borders both Los Angeles and Orange counties. Freeways in Southern California are heavily used, but this comprehensive freeway system has made travel between the Inland Empire and these two counties generally direct, especially to and from Los Angeles County.

The Inland Empire has also been referred to as the 909, after one of the region's most used area codes.[4][20] In 2004, because of growing demand for telephone numbers, most of western Riverside County was granted a second area code, 951, which is overlayed with the 909 area code (they have the same physical boundaries and new telephone subscribers likely receive a 951 area code telephone number).[20]

The Coachella Valley region of Palm Springs, Palm Desert, and Indio is located much farther east in Riverside County (the distance between the city of San Bernardino and Palm Springs is approximately 50 miles) and is part of the much larger 760 area code. This area is sometimes considered a sub-region of the Inland Empire or its own separate region. This is to help differentiate it from the urbanized area containing the cities of San Bernardino and Riverside.

 
This map, created by the Regional Plan Association, illustrates the Southern California megaregion.
 
Regional Plan Association map of the USA showing the eleven emerging megaregions

The RPA definition includes the Inland Empire (San BernardinoRiverside) in the Southern California Megaregion, alongside Anaheim, Bakersfield, Huntington Beach, Long Beach, Los Angeles, San Diego, the geographically separate Las Vegas Valley, as well as the Tijuana area in Mexico. Orange County and San Diego County are completely encompassed within the megaregion.

Boundaries and definitions edit

There is no universally accepted definition for the boundaries of the Inland Empire region. Some sources such as the Los Angeles Times[21][22][23][24][25] have referred to Riverside County and San Bernardino County as the Inland Empire, mirroring the Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario metropolitan area.

Some residents of certain areas, such as Twentynine Palms or the Coachella and Temecula valleys, may consider themselves separate from the IE.[4] The California Travel and Tourism Commission (CTTC), a not-for-profit, nongovernmental[26] entity that promotes tourism in California,[27] divides the state into several regions for its own purposes. The CTTC defines the Inland Empire as being bounded by Los Angeles County and Orange County on the west and San Diego County on the south, stretching as far north as the Victor Valley area and as far east as Idyllwild in the San Jacinto Mountains.[28] The state of California's official website links to the CTTC's map with the description "Map of the Inland Empire region".[29]

Other sources, including Kevin Starr, former state librarian of California, include the eastern Los Angeles County cities of the Pomona Valley, such as Claremont, Pomona, La Verne, San Dimas, and Diamond Bar.[30] Other sources also include cities in Los Angeles County within the boundaries.[31][32][verification needed][33]

Economy edit

 
Boxcars, Rialto, California

Inexpensive land prices (compared with Los Angeles and Orange counties), a large supply of vacant land, and a transport network where many highways and railroads intersect have made the Inland Empire a major shipping hub.[34] Some of the nation's largest manufacturing companies have chosen the Inland Empire for their distribution facilities including Toyota Motor Corporation's North American Parts and Logistics Distribution (NAPLD) center in Ontario and APL Logistics in Rancho Cucamonga. In 2007, Whirlpool Corporation leased a 1,700,000-square-foot (160,000 m2) distribution center in Perris that is larger than 31 football fields but, more recently, 5,000,000 sqft warehouses are common.[35] These centers operate as part of the system that transports finished goods and materials from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach to destinations to the north and east such as Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Denver. More than 80 percent of the state's imported cargo is shipped through the Los Angeles/Inland Empire Corridor.[36] During the late 2010s and early 2020s, Amazon, the largest private employer in the region, has rapidly expanded its facilities and warehouses there, responding to explosive growth in online retailing and shipping and increasing traffic and air pollution.[37]

Like most industrial areas, the Inland Empire is vulnerable to the effects of economic recessions. For example, during the global economic downturn of 2008–2009, industrial vacancies doubled from 6.2 percent in 2007 to 12.4 percent to 2008. In San Bernardino and Redlands, vacancies reached 22 percent.[38]

The Inland Empire area is one of the least educated areas of the state with the lowest average in annual wages in the country.[39] A 2006 study of salaries in 51 metropolitan areas of the country ranked the Inland Empire second to last, with an average annual wage of $36,924.[39] Nonetheless, inexpensive land prices and innovative institutional support networks have attracted some small businesses and technology startups into the area.[16]

While urbanization continues to cut into agricultural lands, the Inland Empire still produces substantial crops. Although 10,000 acres (40 km2) of irrigated land was lost between 2002 and 2004, agriculture still brought in more than $1.6 billion in revenues to the two-county region in 2006.[11]

Being a MSA, aggregate GDP figures are reported by the Bureau of Economic Analysis annually. The Inland Empire ranks 25th in the nation with a 2011 GDP of $109.8 billion, roughly a third of San Francisco–Oakland–Berkeley, CA Metropolitan Statistical Area despite their close population numbers. Per capita GDP was $25,993.34 in 2011, nearly half among the nation's top 50 Gross Metropolitan Product.[40] Due to the housing crisis, the GDP fell from $114.8 billion in 2007, despite a heavy influx of residents.

The unemployment rate in the Inland Empire has been consistently over the national average since 2007. 10.4 percent of Inland residents were unemployed as of August 2013, compared with the national rate of 7.3 percent. Due to the high unemployment and housing foreclosure rates, a higher percentage of Inland residents rely on public assistance. According to the Press-Enterprise, "twelve percent of Riverside County and 17 percent of San Bernardino County residents used food stamps in January 2012", as compared with "11 percent of those living in Los Angeles County, 8 percent of San Diego County residents and 7 percent of Orange County residents".[41]

Housing edit

 
Housing construction in Fontana, looking northeast along Interstate 15 during 2007. Since 1980, the city's population has grown by 170,000.

Since the 1950s, the area has changed from a rural to a suburban environment. The region now comprises numerous cities known as bedroom communities that are suburban cities to Los Angeles, Orange County, and San Diego. Affordable home ownership is the primary motivation behind the growth in these Inland Empire cities as homes in the region are generally less expensive than comparable homes in Los Angeles and Orange counties, but the pricing gap continues to shrink each year due to migration and increasing population. The steady rise in population and the demand for housing has led to a dramatic increase in the building of single-family homes on parcels of 0.25 acres (1,000 m2) or more, as opposed to the construction of high-density development such as multi-story apartment or condominium buildings. This low-density development has caused sprawl in the Inland Empire. Additionally, land that was used for agriculture is now being sold by owners for conversion to shopping centers, industrial warehouses, and more. Due to the lack of one central city in the Inland Empire, and the smaller geographical footprint that suburban cities tend to have, this continuous development has become seemingly unplanned suburban sprawl as local interest and zoning laws may quickly change from one city to the next city.[42] The Inland Empire was declared the nation's worst example of sprawl according to a study by Smart Growth America in 2002.[43][44]

During the housing bubble collapse of the late 2000s, foreclosures rose by 3,500 percent.[45] In 2010, the area ranked fourth in the nation in the number of foreclosures, with one filing for every 133 households.[46] The problem of abandoned homes became so great that the city of Perris initiated a program to paint the brown lawns of abandoned homes green as a way to reduce the appearance of blight.[47]

In 2019, the "bedroom community" nature of the Inland Empire led to a plan to increase the construction of new housing in coastal cities (known as "job centers") preferentially versus building more housing in the Inland Empire areas. Meghan Sahli-Wells, mayor of Culver City, said that she supported the coastal plan because of the urgent nature of climate change. However, the plan was described as "toothless".[48]

The attractiveness of Inland Empire cities for warehousing and logistics has resulted in warehouses being built incrementally closer and closer to residential areas. With air pollution from diesel-powered transport trucks being a serious and cumulative concern for human health, an effort was made to impose a 1,000-foot buffer zone (separation distance between residential and commercial land uses) for new construction. However, this effort was not successful, due to local municipal officials giving priority to maximizing the construction of both housing and warehouse facilities, with the goal of maximizing employment as well as property-tax revenue from both the residential and the commercial/industrial sectors.[49]

Retail edit

Retailing in the area has increased to try to keep abreast with the growing suburban population. The region is home to several large shopping malls, including the Promenade Shops at Dos Lagos and the Crossings in Corona; Ontario Mills in Ontario; Promenade Mall in Temecula; Galleria at Tyler, Riverside Plaza, and Canyon Crossings in Riverside; The Shoppes at Chino Hills in Chino Hills; Moreno Valley Mall in Moreno Valley; Victoria Gardens in Rancho Cucamonga; Montclair Place in Montclair; and the Inland Center mall in San Bernardino. In fiscal year 2006, retail sales in San Bernardino County grew by 11.9 percent to $31.2 billion, while sales in Riverside County were up 11.3 percent to $29.6 billion.[50]

 
Panorama of the "Town Square" at Victoria Gardens in Rancho Cucamonga

Environmental quality edit

 
The Inland Empire is subject to smog conditions on a regular basis as seen here, looking south, from the north terminus of Haven Avenue in Rancho Cucamonga. Note how the street "fades" into the smoggy haze and the Santa Ana Mountains are completely obscured.
 
The Inland Empire is also subject to Santa Ana Winds that lead to generally clear days, free of smog or the marine layer. Note how the street that "faded" into the smoggy haze and the Santa Ana Mountains that were completely obscured in the adjacent image are now visible.

The result of this ongoing development has resulted in greater homeownership for the region. Although the region saw an uptick in jobs over the past decade, it is not a heavy employment center, and many residents commute to Los Angeles and Orange counties for their work. With a lack of substantial public transportation in the Greater Los Angeles Area, this has led to traffic congestion and degradation in air quality for the Inland Empire.[51] The solution to these problems is not simple. The presence of so many city governments within the Inland Empire, which often have different 'visions' for their own municipalities, means that two cities in the region rarely agree on a solution; just as common, they may have unequal means for implementing one even if they were to agree. Having no region-wide governmental planning organization may undermine any solution that could be proposed. Lastly, the fast pace at which development occurs versus the limited ability of government to respond to changes means that it could easily take years, if not decades, for a viable solution (such as new roads, transit systems, or pollution controls) to go into effect.[52]

Air pollution edit

The Inland Empire routinely has some of the worst air quality in the United States. San Bernardino County and Riverside County are the first and second worst counties in the United States for tropospheric ozone air pollution.[53][54] Pollution in Southern California mostly is blown from the coast towards the mountains. Inland Empire counties are downwind of the highly populated counties of Los Angeles and Orange County. The largest sources of air pollution affecting the Inland Empire include off-road equipment (e.g., construction equipment, cargo-handling equipment), heavy-duty diesel trucks, ocean-going vessels, passenger vehicles, locomotives, aircraft, and industrial fuel combustion.[55] Southern California is in extreme nonattainment for ozone and severe nonattainment for particle pollution.

Multiple state and local efforts are underway to clean up the air, primarily focused on zero emissions vehicles. California has implemented some of the most aggressive vehicle electrification rules in the country, including the Advanced Clean Cars II rule that will mandate 100% zero-emission passenger vehicle sales in 2035, [56] and the Advanced Clean Fleets rule for trucks that will require all drayage trucks to be zero-emissions starting in 2024 and all trucks to ZEV by 2036. [57]

Water pollution edit

Water pollution has also been found in the Santa Ana River and Cajon wash, and pollutants from the March Air Reserve Base and Stringfellow Acid Pits have contaminated groundwater in parts of Riverside County.[19] In 1997, perchlorate, a chemical used to produce explosives, was discovered to be seeping into the groundwater under Rialto in a plume that continues to grow. In 2007, the Rialto city council petitioned the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for Superfund status to clean up the origin site. The sites comprising March Air Reserve Base, Norton Air Force Base and the Stringfellow Acid Pits have already been classified as EPA Superfund toxic waste sites.[58]

Transportation edit

 
I-10I-215 Interchange traffic, south of downtown San Bernardino

Traffic congestion is a major issue in the Inland Empire. Many of the existing freeways were completed in the late 1970s with the exception of the segment of the Foothill Freeway, State Route 210 (SR 210) between San Dimas and San Bernardino, which was completed in July 2007. New freeways or highway "fix-ups" are either in progress or being planned, such as the construction of Mid County Parkway between Perris and San Jacinto or the addition of toll lanes on both I-15 and I-10 through heavily urbanized portions of Riverside and San Bernardino counties. Other problems exist, however, including the imbalance between housing and job availability. The Inland Empire population grew as a result of affordable housing, at least relative to the rest of Southern California, but most of the higher paying jobs are located in Los Angeles, San Diego and Orange counties. Thus, many workers must commute daily from the Inland Empire to their jobs in these counties—sometimes up to two hours each direction—and even longer if by public transportation. As the population increases, the problem is most certainly going to get worse. Forbes magazine ranked the area first in its 2007 list of most unhealthy commutes in the United States, beating out every other metropolitan area in the country, as Inland area drivers breathe the unhealthiest air and have the highest rate of fatal auto accidents per capita.[59]

According to a 1999 report by the Surface Transportation Policy Project, the Inland Empire leads in fatal crashes caused by road rage.[60][61] The theft of copper, brass and other metals from highway and road fixtures has also led to decreased public safety on IE roads and freeways.[62] Gas siphoning has also been noted as a problem for vehicles left unattended in the region.[63]

Public transportation edit

 
sbX Green Line's Civic Center station in downtown San Bernardino
 
sbX Hospitality West Station, downtown San Bernardino

The Inland Empire does not have a particularly extensive or robust public transportation system. Due to the large physical size and sprawl of the region, the primary means of transportation in the region is the automobile. Less than five percent of the IE's 1,249,224 working-age residents use public transportation to get to work.[64]

Omnitrans is the largest bus agency in San Bernardino County, while the Riverside Transit Agency (RTA) is the largest in Riverside County. Currently, some of Omnitrans' bus routes run on headways of an hour or more, and some routes stop service in the early evening or may not run on weekends. SunLine Transit Agency provides bus service in the Coachella Valley while the Victor Valley Transit Authority (VVTA) provides transit service in the High Desert, including to Barstow after the transit systems in the latter was merged into VVTA in 2015. Other operators in the region include Pass Transit serving the Banning Pass area, Needles Area Transit serving the city of Needles, Mountain Transit serving the communities in the San Bernardino Mountains including Lake Arrowhead, Big Bear, Running Springs, and Crestline, and the MBTA serving the Morongo Basin and Yucca Valley portions of San Bernardino County.

Although transit usage and infrastructure remains weak, several projects have moved forward and opened in the 2010s to improve transit accessibility in the region. Major projects include the Perris Valley portion of the Metrolink 91/Perris Valley Line, the San Bernardino Transit Center, and the Omnitrans sbX Green Line, which connects the cities of Loma Linda and San Bernardino, two universities, and the Loma Linda VA Hospital to the San Bernardino Transit Center.[65] In addition to sbX, there are other express services available to public transportation users in the region. RTA operates a BRT-lite system in the RapidLink Gold Line, which runs from UCR to the Corona Transit Center.[66]

Due to the physical size of the Inland Empire, transit connections between the nodes of the region are primarily served by freeway express services. Transit operators of the IE provide service between major destinations and transit centers around Southern California including the San Bernardino Transit Center, the Montclair Transcenter, Disneyland, Pomona–Downtown station, and Oceanside.

The region is also part of the five-county Southern California Regional Rail Authority (SCRRA) "Metrolink" commuter rail system. Of the seven lines that Metrolink operates, four of them directly serve the Inland Empire:

  • San Bernardino Line: provides daily service from San Bernardino to Los Angeles (busiest route of the system)
  • 91/Perris Valley Line: provides weekday service from Perris to Los Angeles and weekend service between Riverside and Los Angeles
  • Riverside Line: provides weekday commuter service from downtown Riverside to Los Angeles
  • Inland Empire-Orange County Line: provides daily service from San Bernardino to Oceanside in San Diego County

Future projects edit

Although a robust transit network has been lacking in the region for decades, steps are being made toward developing one in the future. The councils of governments and transportation commissions in both IE counties have identified and are working on future expansions of transit to better serve the region. These include the sbX West Valley Connector,[67][68] Arrow, the extension of the L Line to Montclair (to become part of the A Line), and daily train service to the Coachella Valley.[69] Additional routes have also been studied including extending the Metrolink's Perris Valley Line to San Jacinto and Temecula,[70] a passenger rail spur along I-15 to Lake Elsinore,[71] BRT routes throughout the respective service areas of Omnitrans and RTA,[72] and an aerial tram from Highland to Big Bear.[73]

The Inland Empire is the chosen route for connecting California High-Speed Rail service to San Diego. While a final alignment has yet to be finalized, concepts include stops at the Ontario International Airport, in Riverside, San Bernardino, Corona, and Temecula or Murrieta. These would occur as part of Phase II, however, which currently remains unfunded.[74][75][76]

Airports edit

Several airports are located in the Inland Empire. San Bernardino International Airport, Ontario International Airport and Palm Springs International Airport are commercial airports in their respective cities. A local joint powers agency has redeveloped the decommissioned Norton Air Force Base into San Bernardino International Airport. There are also several general aviation airports in the region.

Active transportation edit

The region is making some progress in developing dedicated bicycle commuter and recreation trails. The largest of these, the Santa Ana River bicycle path, currently connects Corona to Huntington Beach, and is eventually projected to stretch for 84 miles all the way to Redlands when completed.[77] A shorter trail exists along the former path of the Pacific Electric Railway from Claremont to Rialto.[78] A number of communities have also built trails along the levees and maintenance roads of other waterways in the region, including the CV Link, which is under construction in the Coachella Valley area of the region. Other plans also exist to provide feeder trails to meet the main backbones such as the PE Trail and provide a network of connectivity to nonmotorized users throughout the region.

Demographics edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
190045,826
191091,40299.5%
1920123,69835.3%
1930214,92473.7%
1940266,63224.1%
1950451,68869.4%
1960809,78279.3%
19701,143,14641.2%
19801,558,18236.3%
19902,588,79366.1%
20003,254,82125.7%
20104,224,85129.8%
20204,599,8398.9%
U.S. Decennial Census[79]
1790–1960[80] 1900–1990[81]
1990–2000[82]

The population of the Greater Los Angeles area (which includes the Inland Empire) is about 18 million people according to the 2010 United States Census, and is the second largest metropolitan region in the country. The Metropolitan Statistical Area population of the Inland Empire (Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA Metropolitan Statistical Area) itself is more than 4.2 million people and is the 13th largest metropolitan area in the United States. According to the 2000 U.S. Census, it is the fastest growing area in the state. Between 1990 and 2000, Riverside and San Bernardino counties added 700,000 to their population totals, an increase of 26 percent.[64] Between 2000 and 2010 Inland Empire's population expanded by 970,000 or 30 percent, and between 2010 and 2020 it expanded by a further 375,000 or another 9 percent to reach 4.6 million. According to census bureau's 2005–2007 estimates 61.8 percent of the population was White (40.4 percent White Non-Hispanic), 7.5 percent Black, 5.7 percent Asian and 25.0 percent of other or mixed race. 43.9 percent were Hispanic of any race. 21.9 percent of the population was foreign born.

There is a large Mexican community in Inland Empire. Filipinos are the largest Asian immigrant group in Inland Empire.[84]

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that in 2006, 33.1 percent of people in the Greater San Bernardino Area were overweight, and 30.8 percent were obese. In 2019, San Bernardino County found that 34.1% of the county's population were obese, with an additional 34.5% being overweight.[85]

A substantial majority of residents (76.6 percent), last comparatively surveyed in 2001, rated their respective counties as good places to live. Over 81 percent of Riverside County residents indicated that their county is a very good or fairly good place to live, while about 72 percent of residents in San Bernardino County felt the same way. Survey respondents cited "nice living area", "good climate", and "affordable housing" as the top positive factors in assessing their respective communities. Smog was by far the most important negative factor affecting respondents' ratings in both counties, while traffic was the second highest concern in Riverside County and crime the second highest concern among San Bernardino County residents.[86]

Politics edit

While the region as a whole had traditionally leaned more Republican than the rest of California, newer[when?] residents are less likely to identify with the Republican party than longer-term residents (36 percent to 42 percent), and the total number of residents identifying with the Democrats (34 percent) slightly edged over the number identifying with the Republican party (33 percent).

In the 2008 presidential election, Democratic candidate Barack Obama carried both Riverside and San Bernardino counties, becoming only the second Democrat to carry both counties since Lyndon Johnson in 1964. In 2012, Obama repeated this feat and again carried both counties, and the two Inland Empire counties have stayed in the Democratic column in presidential elections since. Nonetheless, the area continues to be far friendlier to Republicans than Los Angeles County or the San Francisco Bay Area.

Non-Hispanic Whites and non-Hispanic Blacks have the highest participation rates for nearly every type of political activity, while Latinos and Asian Americans lag significantly behind those groups in terms of volunteerism and organizational membership. The 2006 immigration protests have significantly boosted political participation among Latinos.[87]

Religion edit

 
The Redlands California Temple is one of four LDS temples in Southern California.

Many faiths and denominations are found and represented in the area. The Roman Catholic parishes in the region belong to the church's Diocese of San Bernardino.[88]

Mormons and Seventh-day Adventists have communities in the towns of Loma Linda and Redlands near San Bernardino. Mormons also have congregations in the High Desert region.[citation needed] Seventh-day Adventists operate Loma Linda University.[89]

The Inland Empire has a Jewish community, and additionally a Jewish American community is in and around the Sun City neighborhood of Menifee. According to the United Jewish Citizens of the Desert, the Coachella Valley has an estimated 20,000 American Jews, one of California's largest Jewish communities, as a result of being a major retirement destination.[90]

There are also some fast-growing Muslim communities with around 30,000 American Muslims in 2019, mostly concentrated around the UCR campus in Riverside, Irvine and central Corona. All locations have well-established Islamic Centers gathering faith members for weekly Juma prayers as well as other Islamic holidays.

Crime edit

While the crime index in Riverside and Ontario trends slightly over the state average, San Bernardino has a crime index consistently near or over twice that of the national average.[91][92][93][94] Reflecting nationwide trends, violent crime in the region overall declined or remained consistent in 2009, despite the recession. In the city of Riverside, 10 homicides occurred in 2005, down from 24 in 2003, its highest total since 2003. All but three cases resulted in arrests. In San Bernardino, by contrast, 58 killings occurred in 2005, but only a third of cases in San Bernardino led to arrests, due to a lack of witness cooperation in that city.[95]

Latino gangs have been active in the region since the area's citrus days while a continual migration of numerous African American gangs from the inner city of South LA have flowed into the region since the Watts Riots and 1992 Los Angeles Riots.[9][96] The increased diversity in the region between 1990 and 2000 is also associated with a 20 percent increase in hate crime in the same period, mostly ascribed to increased gang activity.[97][98] According to data from the FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting program, taken together, Riverside and San Bernardino counties showed a total of 51,237 crimes reported to county police/sheriffs (but not to city or other agencies) in 2006; this combined total exceeded the totals for all other California counties – considered individually – except for Sacramento.[99]

The region has also been noted as a center of methamphetamine drug production.[100] The Riverside and San Bernardino county sheriffs' departments busted 635 meth labs in 2000; law enforcement has driven most of the meth production industry to Mexico since 2007, but many of the homes discovered to have been used as meth labs before 2006 have since been sold on the market before California law required rigorous decontamination, leading to a legacy of health hazards for unsuspecting renters and home-buyers in the area.[101]

In 2016 federal crime statistics stated that San Bernardino was ranked the most dangerous city in California.[102]

Education edit

 
California State University, San Bernardino
 
University of California, Riverside

There is a trend of lower educational attainment in the IE, which starts early. Only 37 percent of 3- and 4-year-olds in the region are enrolled in pre-school, with only one school in the region for every 343 children, as compared with 48 percent enrollment in San Diego County. Thirty-five percent of the IE's ninth graders do not graduate from high school, and only 37 percent of its college age residents enroll in a post-secondary education program of some sort. Only 24 percent of the IE's adult residents have attained a college degree or better. Twenty-five percent do not possess a high school diploma.[64] According to past CSUSB President Al Karnig, "We have a very low college attendance rate that is scantly above half of what the average is in other states. We have only have about 20 percent college graduates in the Inland Empire while the average in other states is 38 percent."[103][104] 21 inland area high schools rank in the top 100 in California for producing dropouts.[105]

Of Inland Empire residents 25 years and over in 2004, 44.4 percent of Asians had bachelor's or higher degrees, and nearly 70 percent had at least attended college. 21.3 percent of Blacks had a bachelor's degree or higher, and 65.2 percent had either a community degree or had attended college. 22.8 percent of Whites had a bachelor's degree or higher, and 60.8 percent had attended college. Of Hispanics, 6.9 percent had a bachelor's or higher degree, and 30.2 percent attended college.[106]

Among students transferring from Inland community colleges to private schools in 2004–05, the most frequent choice was the University of Phoenix.[107]

Employment edit

While the Inland Empire led the state in job-growth with 275,000 new jobs between 1990 and 2000, most are in comparatively low-tech fields. San Bernardino and Riverside counties are primarily host to service and manufacturing- or warehousing-oriented industries. Food and administrative services employ the most people in the Inland Empire, while for the state of California, the top industries are in administrative services and professional, scientific and hi-tech-oriented fields. 79.8% of the IE's job growth from 1990 to 2003 was in service-sector jobs.[108] Low-wage industries are abundant in the IE, and the area's high-tech and professional industries pay less than in other regions of California. As many as one-third of working adults commute out of the 27,000-square-mile (70,000 km2) region to find work, the highest proportion of any area in the country. Adding to gridlock, fewer than 5% of the IE's 1,249,224 working-age residents use public transportation to get to work each day. 14.5% carpool, while 79.7% typically drive alone to work in their cars.[64]

In 2007, the region had an unemployment rate of 6.1%, while overall jobless claims in California were at 5.4% and 4.4% nationally.[109] In 2008, unemployment in the area increased to 9.5%, at a time when the state average was 8.2% and the national average approximately 6.5%.[110] Unemployment reached an all-time high of 15% in 2010, second in the nation only to Detroit among metropolitan areas with populations over 1 million.[111]

County 2016 estimate 2010 census Change Area Density
Riverside County, California 2,387,741 2,189,641 +9.05% 7,206.47 sq mi (18,664.7 km2) 331/sq mi (128/km2)
San Bernardino County, California 2,140,096 2,035,210 +5.15% 20,056.92 sq mi (51,947.2 km2) 107/sq mi (41/km2)
Total 4,527,837 4,224,851 +7.17% 27,263.39 sq mi (70,611.9 km2) 166/sq mi (64/km2)

Culture edit

 
Lamb of God playing at Ozzfest at the San Manuel Amphitheater in Devore, San Bernardino, 2007

The Inland Empire sits adjacent to the San Bernardino Mountains. Lake Arrowhead and Big Bear are just some of the lakes located in the mountains. Lake Arrowhead becomes very popular in the summertime, while Big Bear becomes popular in the winter for skiing and snowboarding activities. Various locations in the Inland Empire provide venues for cultural performances and entertainment.[112] The Victoria Gardens Cultural Center, which is owned and operated by the City of Rancho Cucamonga, opened in the Fall of 2006 providing theatre, concerts and family entertainment to the region. The San Manuel Amphitheater in San Bernardino's Devore neighborhood is the nation's largest outdoor amphitheater.[citation needed] San Bernardino's "Route 66 Rendezvous (the largest classical carshow in the US)", an annual street fair and classic car show, draws a half-million people from around the world.[113] The Palm Springs Aerial Tramway in Palm Springs is a popular attraction, rising to more than 8500 feet.

Music edit

 
At 330 feet (100 m) high, the Morongo Casino, Resort & Spa tower is the tallest building in the Inland Empire. Concerts and events are booked inside.

Established bands from the IE include Alien Ant Farm, Hepcat, The Bellrays, and the Voodoo Glow Skulls, from Riverside, and Cracker from Redlands, and The Mountain Goats from Chino. House music artist DJ Lynnwood got his start at the age of ten spinning records at KUOR-FM in Redlands. girafa is another local electronic artist from Corona. Local hip-hop artists such as Miah Lanski, Suga Free, Saint Dog, 40 Glocc, Young Noble from the Outlawz, J.J. Fad, Raje, Noa James, Xydewayz8, The Faze, Lil Xan and A Lighter Shade of Brown have brought about attention to the growing Hip hop community in and around the region. The Jerkin' street dance culture originated from the Inland Empire-based hip-hop groups New Boyz and Audio Push. A number of artists associated with the Palm Desert Scene forged the genre of desert rock as well as playing a large role in the genre of stoner rock. A Danish record label, Musikministeriet, recently opened up an office in Redlands in hopes of further cultivating the IE music scene.[114]

Frank Zappa performed in Upland on Foothill Boulevard during the early 1960s where he played shows on a makeshift stage for college crowds. Zappa also purchased Pal Recording Studio on Archibald Avenue in Rancho Cucamonga where the Surfaris had recorded the surf music classic "Wipe Out". He dubbed it Studio Z and began making recordings that eventually led to the founding of Zappa's group The Mothers of Invention. Until his death in December 2012, singer Ray Collins of the Mothers of Invention lived in the area. Zappa mentions the Inland Empire in the song "Billy the Mountain".

From the late 80s until the late 90s, many up-and-coming musical acts, such as Rage Against the Machine, Blink-182 and No Doubt cut their teeth playing venues in Riverside.[115] These historic venues (Spanky's Cafe and the De Anza Theatre) have since been closed and converted to other purposes. The Barn at UCR was closed as a music venue for 10 years but beginning in October 2008 KUCR Radio 88.3 FM, ASPB The Associated Student Program Board with funding from UCR Housing began having a free concert series once a week during the school quarter. Emerging music venues in the IE include the Showcase Theatre in Corona (recently closed), Red Planet Records in Riverside, the Vault in Redlands, the Buffalo Inn and The Wire (now closed) in Upland, the Twins Club in Rancho Cucamonga, the Press Restaurant in Claremont, the Glass House in Pomona, Back To The Grind Coffee Shop in Riverside, Liam's Irish Pub in Colton, and CommonGround Soundstage in Riverside.[116]

Performing arts edit

 
California Theatre in downtown San Bernardino

Orchestras in the IE include the Redlands Symphony, which performs at the University of Redlands, the Riverside County Philharmonic, which performs at the Riverside Municipal Auditorium, the San Bernardino Symphony, which performs at the California Theatre, and the Victor Valley Symphony, which performs at Victor Valley College. Theatrical Arts International is housed at the California Theatre as well. With the largest subscriber base in the Inland Empire, Theatrical Arts International presents the largest caliber tours available including such blockbusters as Cats, Hairspray, Mamma Mia, and Miss Saigon. There are many other large theater programs in the community. The Riverside Fox Theater, also known as the Fox Performing Arts Center, was built in 1929, and is a Spanish Colonial Revival style building in the heart of downtown Riverside, California. The theater is the centerpiece of Riverside's Arts & Culture initiative and underwent a major renovation and restoration to become a regional performing arts facility. Renovation was completed in the Fall 2009, with a grand-reopening in January 2010. At Chaffey High School in Ontario, they have a very large theater program that puts on shows in the fall and in the spring on one of the largest high school stages in the Inland Empire. The Inland Empire Harmony Carousel Chorus provides music in Barbershop Quartet productions.[117]

Sports edit

 
Inland Empire 66ers playing at San Manuel Stadium in downtown San Bernardino

The Inland Empire is the largest metropolitan area in the United States without a major professional sports team. However, it is part of the Greater Los Angeles area which includes teams in Los Angeles and Orange counties. The area is home to numerous minor league baseball, basketball, and ice hockey teams. The Inland Empire team with the most championships is the Inland Empire 66ers of San Bernardino, who won their most recent championship in 2013.[118][119]

The Auto Club Speedway, located in Fontana, opened in 1997. It contains an oval, a road course, and a dragstrip for auto racing. The Speedway is located approximately 2 miles (3.2 km) from the former Ontario Motor Speedway site, the latter of which is currently the site of the Toyota Arena. The Riverside International Raceway, another defunct motorsport venue, was located about 7 miles (11 km) east of Riverside.

In college sports, the Inland Empire features five four-year institutions that represent all three NCAA divisions, as well as the NAIA.

Media edit

Newspapers edit

The Inland Empire is served by four major local newspapers:

There is also an Inland Empire edition of the Los Angeles Times. For the segments of the Inland Empire surrounding San Bernardino and Riverside cities, regional newspapers include:

  • Inland Empire: The Inland Empire Community News, provides online and print reporting for various cities in the Inland Empire.
  • High Desert: the Victor Valley is served by both the Victor Valley News and the Daily Press. Other newspapers include the Antelope Valley Press, and the Barstow Desert Dispatch. Both Victorville and Barstow have a Sunday edition circulated across both areas called the Press-Dispatch.
  • Palm Springs & Coachella Valley: The Desert Sun

Radio edit

The Inland Empire is ranked 26th (June 2008) in the national radio market as a stand-alone market. When combined with the Greater Los Angeles Area, it is part of the second largest radio market.[120]

Format stations Public and college Talk radio
KOLA-FM 99.9 Classics KVCR-FM 91.9 NPR KCAA-AM 1050 NBC Radio
KFRG-FM 95.1 Country KUCR-FM 88.3 UC Riverside KTIE-AM 590 Conservative talk
KHTI-FM 103.9 Adult Top 40
KCAL-FM 96.7 Rock KUOR-FM 89.1 NPR KMET-AM 1490 Conservative
KGGI-FM 99.1 Hip-Hop/R&B
KLRD-FM 90.1 Christian contemporary

Due to the various mountain ranges including San Bernardino, San Gabriel, and Idyllwild, it may be difficult to receive a single station throughout the entire Inland Empire area without interference.

Television edit

PBS member station KVCR-TV[121] broadcasts directly to the Inland Empire.[122] The station covers all of Riverside County and San Bernardino County with some Los Angeles area overlap. The station is located on the campus of San Bernardino Valley College. In addition to PBS and original, local content, First Nations Experience (FNX),[123] KVCR's sister station, also broadcasts programming about the indigenous peoples and Native Americans to the Inland Empire.

The current TLC TV series Dr. Pimple Popper, a spin-off of the YouTube channel of dermatologist Sandra Lee, is shot mainly at Skin Physicians & Surgeons, a clinic in Upland run by Lee and her husband Jeffrey Rebish, also a dermatologist.[124][125]

Film edit

While there are no large film production companies or studios based in the Inland Empire, on-location shoots accounted for a total economic impact of $65.2 million in the two-county region in 2006.[126] From 1994 to 2005, filming accounted for over a billion dollars ($1,228,977,456) in total revenues spent in the area. Some famous films shot in the Inland Empire include Executive Decision, U Turn, Erin Brockovich, and The Fast and the Furious.[127] Select scenes from the films Tough Guys, Constantine,[128] The Island, and Tenet[129] were also shot in the Inland Empire's ghost town of Eagle Mountain.

While the 2006 David Lynch film Inland Empire is named after the region, no scenes were actually shot in the Inland Empire.[4]

Ann Lerner, Albuquerque's film liaison, told the L.A. Times about the AMC cable TV series Breaking Bad producers wanted to film the series in California's Inland Empire but switched to New Mexico because of New Mexico's tax incentives.[130]

Shot Caller (2017) has scenes set in the Inland Empire, called "I.E." in the film.

Incorporated cities edit

Riverside County
cities[131]
Year
incorporated
Population,
2020
Median income,
2018
Banning 1913 31,125 $41,038
Beaumont 1912 51,475 $78,111
Blythe 1916 19,255 $43,141
Calimesa 1990 9,329 $53,366
Canyon Lake 1990 11,000 $97,237
Cathedral City 1981 53,580 $46,370
Coachella 1946 47,186 $33,870
Corona 1896 168,248 $86,790
Desert Hot Springs 1963 29,660 $34,814
Eastvale 2010 66,413 $114,230
Hemet 1910 85,175 $39,653
Indian Wells 1967 5,403 $104,522
Indio 1930 90,751 $74,774
Jurupa Valley 2011 107,083 $76,090
La Quinta 1982 40,660 $79,889
Lake Elsinore 1888 63,453 $77,090
Menifee 2008 97,093 $77,033
Moreno Valley 1984 208,838 $65,449
Murrieta 1991 115,561 $100,080
Norco 1964 27,564 $95,441
Palm Desert 1973 52,986 $57,578
Palm Springs 1938 47,427 $50,361
Perris 1911 80,201 $66,545
Rancho Mirage 1973 19,114 $71,227
Riverside 1883 328,155 $71,967
San Jacinto 1888 51,028 $50,483
Temecula 1989 111,970 $95,918
Wildomar 2008 37,183 $73,282
San Bernardino County
cities[131]
Year
incorporated
Population,
2020
Median income,
2018
Adelanto 1970 35,663 $40,018
Apple Valley 1988 74,394 $51,314
Barstow 1947 24,268 $39,585
Big Bear Lake 1981 5,206 $51,014
Chino 1910 89,109 $87,090
Chino Hills 1991 82,409 $103,473
Colton 1887 54,118 $50,063
Fontana 1952 213,000 $80,800
Grand Terrace 1978 12,426 $66,912
Hesperia 1988 96,393 $50,271
Highland 1987 55,323 $59,395
Loma Linda 1970 24,535 $53,371
Montclair 1956 39,490 $58,012
Needles 1913 5,248 $31,843
Ontario 1891 182,871 $75,266
Rancho Cucamonga 1977 175,522 $92,773
Redlands 1888 70,952 $72,410
Rialto 1911 104,553 $70,188
San Bernardino 1854 217,946 $49,721
Twentynine Palms 1987 29,258 $41,668
Upland 1906 78,814 $82,426
Victorville 1962 126,432 $60,391
Yucaipa 1989 55,712 $63,657
Yucca Valley 1991 22,236 $45,277

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External links edit

  •   Inland Empire travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Inland Empire at Curlie

inland, empire, this, article, about, region, california, region, washington, idaho, inland, northwest, other, uses, disambiguation, commonly, abbreviated, metropolitan, area, region, inland, adjacent, coastal, southern, california, centering, around, cities, . This article is about the region in California For the region in Washington and Idaho see Inland Northwest For other uses see Inland Empire disambiguation The Inland Empire commonly abbreviated as the IE is a metropolitan area or region inland of and adjacent to coastal Southern California centering around the cities of San Bernardino and Riverside and bordering Los Angeles County to the east The bulk of the population is centered in the cities of northwestern Riverside County and southwestern San Bernardino County and is sometimes considered to include the desert communities of the Coachella and Victor Valleys respectively on the other sides of the San Gorgonio Pass and San Bernardino Mountains from the Santa Ana River watershed that forms the bulk of the Inland Empire a much broader definition includes all of Riverside and San Bernardino counties 4 The combined land area of the counties of the Inland Empire is larger than ten U S states West Virginia Maryland Hawaii Massachusetts Vermont New Hampshire New Jersey Connecticut Delaware and Rhode Island Inland EmpireRegion of CaliforniaSan Bernardino ValleyJoshua TreeSan Gorgonio MountainRiversideBig Bear LakeCoachella Festival in IndioCountryUnited StatesStateCaliforniaCountiesRiverside San BernardinoTen largest cities by population 2010 U S Census Riverside RV San Bernardino SB Fontana SB Moreno Valley RV Rancho Cucamonga SB Ontario SB Corona RV Victorville SB Murrieta RV Temecula RV by city size Palm Springs RV 94 98 sq mi area and Twentynine Palms SB 59 50 sq mi area Area Metro27 298 sq mi 70 669 km2 Elevation 220 11 499 ft 67 1 3 507 m Population 2020 2 Density147 5 sq mi 56 9 km2 Urban1 932 666 22nd Urban density3 434 1 sq mi 1 325 9 km2 Metro4 599 839 12th Combined Statistical Area CSA 18 710 563 1 2nd GDP 3 MSA 237 9 billion 2022 Time zoneUTC 08 00 PST Summer DST UTC 07 00 PDT The U S Census Bureau defined Riverside San Bernardino Ontario metropolitan area which comprises Riverside County and San Bernardino County California covers more than 27 000 sq mi 70 000 km2 and had a population of about 4 6 million in 2020 5 At the end of the 19th century the Inland Empire was a major center of agriculture including citrus dairy and winemaking Agriculture declined through the 20th century and since the 1970s a rapidly growing population fed by families migrating in search of affordable housing has led to more residential industrial and commercial development Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Geography 3 1 Physical geography 3 2 Political geography 3 3 Boundaries and definitions 4 Economy 4 1 Housing 4 2 Retail 5 Environmental quality 5 1 Air pollution 5 2 Water pollution 6 Transportation 6 1 Public transportation 6 2 Future projects 6 3 Airports 6 4 Active transportation 7 Demographics 7 1 Politics 7 2 Religion 7 3 Crime 7 4 Education 7 5 Employment 8 Culture 8 1 Music 8 2 Performing arts 8 3 Sports 8 4 Media 8 4 1 Newspapers 8 4 2 Radio 8 4 3 Television 8 4 4 Film 9 Incorporated cities 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEtymology edit nbsp Yucca Valley within the Morongo Basin is halfway between the San Bernardino Valley and the Arizona state line nbsp A map of the United States highlighting the twin counties of the Inland EmpireThe term Inland Empire is documented to have been used by the Riverside Enterprise newspaper now The Press Enterprise as early as April 1914 6 Developers in the area likely introduced the term to promote the region and to highlight the area s unique features The Inland part of the name is derived from the region s location generally about 60 miles 97 km inland from Los Angeles and the Pacific Ocean Originally this area was called the Orange Empire due to the acres of citrus groves that once extended from Pasadena to Redlands during the first half of the 20th century 4 7 The boundaries of the Inland Empire are nebulous but the region is generally defined as the cities of western Riverside County and southwestern San Bernardino County adjacent to the Los Angeles metropolitan area A broader definition includes Palm Springs and the surrounding desert communities and a much more widespread definition includes all of San Bernardino and Riverside counties 4 History editSee also History of Riverside California and History of San Bernardino California nbsp Drawing of San Bernardino 1852 What is now known as the Inland Empire was inhabited for thousands of years prior to the late 18th century by the Tongva Taaqtam Ivilyuqaletem and Payomkawichum Native Americans With Spanish colonization and the subsequent Mexican era the area was sparsely populated at the land grant Ranchos considering it unsuitable for missions citation needed The first American settlers a group of Mormon pioneers arrived over the Cajon Pass in 1851 Although the Mormons left a scant six years later recalled to Salt Lake City by Brigham Young during the church s Utah War with the U S government other settlers soon followed The entire landmass of Southern California was subdivided according to the San Bernardino Meridian which was first plotted as part of the Public Land Survey System in November 1852 by Col Henry Washington Base Line Road a major thoroughfare today runs from Highland to San Dimas intermittently along the absolute baseline coordinates plotted by Col Washington 8 San Bernardino County was first formed out of parts of Los Angeles County on April 26 1853 While the partition once included what is today most of Riverside County the region is not as monolithic as it may sound Rivalries between Colton Redlands Riverside and San Bernardino over the location of the county seat in the 1890s caused each of them to form their own civic communities each with their own newspapers On August 14 1893 the state Senate allowed Riverside County to form out of land previously in San Bernardino and San Diego counties after rejecting a bill for Pomona to split from L A County and become the seat of what would have been called San Antonio County 9 nbsp Arlington Heights Citrus Groves Riverside circa 1903The arrival of rail and the importation of navel and Valencia orange trees in the 1870s touched off explosive growth with the area quickly becoming a major center for citrus production 10 11 12 This agricultural boom continued with the arrival of water from the Colorado River and the rapid growth of Los Angeles in the early 20th century with dairy farming becoming another staple industry In 1926 Route 66 now known as Foothill Boulevard and Interstate 215 came through the northern parts of the area bringing a stream of tourists and migrants to the region Still the region endured as the key part of the Southern California citrus belt until the end of World War II when a new generation of real estate developers bulldozed acres of agricultural land to build suburbs 10 The precursor to the San Bernardino Freeway the Ramona Expressway was built in 1944 and further development of the freeway system in the area facilitated the expansion of suburbs and human migration throughout the Inland Empire and Southern California The region experienced significant economic and population growth through most of the latter half of the 20th century In the early 1990s the loss of the region s military bases and reduction of nearby defense industries due to the end of the Cold War led to a local economic downturn 13 14 The region as a whole had partially recovered from this downturn by the start of the 21st century through the development of warehousing shipping logistics and retail industries primarily centered around Ontario 15 During the 2008 Recession industry suffered heavily but had begun to recover by 2010 16 17 Geography editPhysical geography edit nbsp View of the San Bernardino Valley from the San Bernardino Mountains The Santa Ana Mountains are visible in the distance Physical boundaries between Los Angeles and the Inland Empire from west to east are the San Jose Hills splitting the San Gabriel Valley from the Pomona Valley leading to the urban populations centered in the San Bernardino Valley 18 From the south to north the Santa Ana Mountains physically divide Orange County from Riverside County The Santa Rosa Mountains as well as the Southern California portion of the Sonoran Desert physically divide Riverside County from San Diego County 19 Some definitions for the IE include the Chino Valley Coachella Valley Cucamonga Valley Menifee Valley Murrieta Valley Perris Valley San Jacinto Valley Temecula Valley and Victor Valley citation needed Elevations range from 11 499 ft 3 505 m at the top of the San Gorgonio Mountain to 220 ft 67 m at the Salton Sea The San Bernardino mountains are home to the San Bernardino National Forest and the resort communities of Big Bear Lake Lake Arrowhead and Running Springs The Santa Ana River extends from Mt San Gorgonio for nearly 100 miles 160 km through San Bernardino Riverside and Orange counties before it eventually spills into the Pacific Ocean at Newport Beach and Huntington Beach While temperatures are generally cool to cold in the mountains it can get hot in the valleys In the desert resort of Palm Springs near Joshua Tree National Park summer temperatures can reach well over 110 F 43 C Political geography edit Unlike most metropolitan areas that have grown up around a central city the Inland Empire has no one main focus city Major cities in the region include Riverside San Bernardino Rancho Cucamonga Ontario and Corona Suburban sprawl spreads out to form a connection with the Los Angeles metropolitan area Further development is steadily if not heavily encroaching past the mountains into the outlying desert areas The Inland Empire borders both Los Angeles and Orange counties Freeways in Southern California are heavily used but this comprehensive freeway system has made travel between the Inland Empire and these two counties generally direct especially to and from Los Angeles County The Inland Empire has also been referred to as the 909 after one of the region s most used area codes 4 20 In 2004 because of growing demand for telephone numbers most of western Riverside County was granted a second area code 951 which is overlayed with the 909 area code they have the same physical boundaries and new telephone subscribers likely receive a 951 area code telephone number 20 The Coachella Valley region of Palm Springs Palm Desert and Indio is located much farther east in Riverside County the distance between the city of San Bernardino and Palm Springs is approximately 50 miles and is part of the much larger 760 area code This area is sometimes considered a sub region of the Inland Empire or its own separate region This is to help differentiate it from the urbanized area containing the cities of San Bernardino and Riverside nbsp This map created by the Regional Plan Association illustrates the Southern California megaregion nbsp Regional Plan Association map of the USA showing the eleven emerging megaregionsThe RPA definition includes the Inland Empire San Bernardino Riverside in the Southern California Megaregion alongside Anaheim Bakersfield Huntington Beach Long Beach Los Angeles San Diego the geographically separate Las Vegas Valley as well as the Tijuana area in Mexico Orange County and San Diego County are completely encompassed within the megaregion Boundaries and definitions edit There is no universally accepted definition for the boundaries of the Inland Empire region Some sources such as the Los Angeles Times 21 22 23 24 25 have referred to Riverside County and San Bernardino County as the Inland Empire mirroring the Riverside San Bernardino Ontario metropolitan area Some residents of certain areas such as Twentynine Palms or the Coachella and Temecula valleys may consider themselves separate from the IE 4 The California Travel and Tourism Commission CTTC a not for profit nongovernmental 26 entity that promotes tourism in California 27 divides the state into several regions for its own purposes The CTTC defines the Inland Empire as being bounded by Los Angeles County and Orange County on the west and San Diego County on the south stretching as far north as the Victor Valley area and as far east as Idyllwild in the San Jacinto Mountains 28 The state of California s official website links to the CTTC s map with the description Map of the Inland Empire region 29 Other sources including Kevin Starr former state librarian of California include the eastern Los Angeles County cities of the Pomona Valley such as Claremont Pomona La Verne San Dimas and Diamond Bar 30 Other sources also include cities in Los Angeles County within the boundaries 31 32 verification needed 33 Economy editThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information October 2020 nbsp Boxcars Rialto CaliforniaInexpensive land prices compared with Los Angeles and Orange counties a large supply of vacant land and a transport network where many highways and railroads intersect have made the Inland Empire a major shipping hub 34 Some of the nation s largest manufacturing companies have chosen the Inland Empire for their distribution facilities including Toyota Motor Corporation s North American Parts and Logistics Distribution NAPLD center in Ontario and APL Logistics in Rancho Cucamonga In 2007 Whirlpool Corporation leased a 1 700 000 square foot 160 000 m2 distribution center in Perris that is larger than 31 football fields but more recently 5 000 000 sqft warehouses are common 35 These centers operate as part of the system that transports finished goods and materials from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach to destinations to the north and east such as Las Vegas Phoenix and Denver More than 80 percent of the state s imported cargo is shipped through the Los Angeles Inland Empire Corridor 36 During the late 2010s and early 2020s Amazon the largest private employer in the region has rapidly expanded its facilities and warehouses there responding to explosive growth in online retailing and shipping and increasing traffic and air pollution 37 Like most industrial areas the Inland Empire is vulnerable to the effects of economic recessions For example during the global economic downturn of 2008 2009 industrial vacancies doubled from 6 2 percent in 2007 to 12 4 percent to 2008 In San Bernardino and Redlands vacancies reached 22 percent 38 The Inland Empire area is one of the least educated areas of the state with the lowest average in annual wages in the country 39 A 2006 study of salaries in 51 metropolitan areas of the country ranked the Inland Empire second to last with an average annual wage of 36 924 39 Nonetheless inexpensive land prices and innovative institutional support networks have attracted some small businesses and technology startups into the area 16 While urbanization continues to cut into agricultural lands the Inland Empire still produces substantial crops Although 10 000 acres 40 km2 of irrigated land was lost between 2002 and 2004 agriculture still brought in more than 1 6 billion in revenues to the two county region in 2006 11 Being a MSA aggregate GDP figures are reported by the Bureau of Economic Analysis annually The Inland Empire ranks 25th in the nation with a 2011 GDP of 109 8 billion roughly a third of San Francisco Oakland Berkeley CA Metropolitan Statistical Area despite their close population numbers Per capita GDP was 25 993 34 in 2011 nearly half among the nation s top 50 Gross Metropolitan Product 40 Due to the housing crisis the GDP fell from 114 8 billion in 2007 despite a heavy influx of residents The unemployment rate in the Inland Empire has been consistently over the national average since 2007 10 4 percent of Inland residents were unemployed as of August 2013 compared with the national rate of 7 3 percent Due to the high unemployment and housing foreclosure rates a higher percentage of Inland residents rely on public assistance According to the Press Enterprise twelve percent of Riverside County and 17 percent of San Bernardino County residents used food stamps in January 2012 as compared with 11 percent of those living in Los Angeles County 8 percent of San Diego County residents and 7 percent of Orange County residents 41 Housing edit nbsp Housing construction in Fontana looking northeast along Interstate 15 during 2007 Since 1980 the city s population has grown by 170 000 Since the 1950s the area has changed from a rural to a suburban environment The region now comprises numerous cities known as bedroom communities that are suburban cities to Los Angeles Orange County and San Diego Affordable home ownership is the primary motivation behind the growth in these Inland Empire cities as homes in the region are generally less expensive than comparable homes in Los Angeles and Orange counties but the pricing gap continues to shrink each year due to migration and increasing population The steady rise in population and the demand for housing has led to a dramatic increase in the building of single family homes on parcels of 0 25 acres 1 000 m2 or more as opposed to the construction of high density development such as multi story apartment or condominium buildings This low density development has caused sprawl in the Inland Empire Additionally land that was used for agriculture is now being sold by owners for conversion to shopping centers industrial warehouses and more Due to the lack of one central city in the Inland Empire and the smaller geographical footprint that suburban cities tend to have this continuous development has become seemingly unplanned suburban sprawl as local interest and zoning laws may quickly change from one city to the next city 42 The Inland Empire was declared the nation s worst example of sprawl according to a study by Smart Growth America in 2002 43 44 During the housing bubble collapse of the late 2000s foreclosures rose by 3 500 percent 45 In 2010 the area ranked fourth in the nation in the number of foreclosures with one filing for every 133 households 46 The problem of abandoned homes became so great that the city of Perris initiated a program to paint the brown lawns of abandoned homes green as a way to reduce the appearance of blight 47 In 2019 the bedroom community nature of the Inland Empire led to a plan to increase the construction of new housing in coastal cities known as job centers preferentially versus building more housing in the Inland Empire areas Meghan Sahli Wells mayor of Culver City said that she supported the coastal plan because of the urgent nature of climate change However the plan was described as toothless 48 The attractiveness of Inland Empire cities for warehousing and logistics has resulted in warehouses being built incrementally closer and closer to residential areas With air pollution from diesel powered transport trucks being a serious and cumulative concern for human health an effort was made to impose a 1 000 foot buffer zone separation distance between residential and commercial land uses for new construction However this effort was not successful due to local municipal officials giving priority to maximizing the construction of both housing and warehouse facilities with the goal of maximizing employment as well as property tax revenue from both the residential and the commercial industrial sectors 49 Retail edit Retailing in the area has increased to try to keep abreast with the growing suburban population The region is home to several large shopping malls including the Promenade Shops at Dos Lagos and the Crossings in Corona Ontario Mills in Ontario Promenade Mall in Temecula Galleria at Tyler Riverside Plaza and Canyon Crossings in Riverside The Shoppes at Chino Hills in Chino Hills Moreno Valley Mall in Moreno Valley Victoria Gardens in Rancho Cucamonga Montclair Place in Montclair and the Inland Center mall in San Bernardino In fiscal year 2006 retail sales in San Bernardino County grew by 11 9 percent to 31 2 billion while sales in Riverside County were up 11 3 percent to 29 6 billion 50 nbsp Panorama of the Town Square at Victoria Gardens in Rancho CucamongaEnvironmental quality edit nbsp The Inland Empire is subject to smog conditions on a regular basis as seen here looking south from the north terminus of Haven Avenue in Rancho Cucamonga Note how the street fades into the smoggy haze and the Santa Ana Mountains are completely obscured nbsp The Inland Empire is also subject to Santa Ana Winds that lead to generally clear days free of smog or the marine layer Note how the street that faded into the smoggy haze and the Santa Ana Mountains that were completely obscured in the adjacent image are now visible The result of this ongoing development has resulted in greater homeownership for the region Although the region saw an uptick in jobs over the past decade it is not a heavy employment center and many residents commute to Los Angeles and Orange counties for their work With a lack of substantial public transportation in the Greater Los Angeles Area this has led to traffic congestion and degradation in air quality for the Inland Empire 51 The solution to these problems is not simple The presence of so many city governments within the Inland Empire which often have different visions for their own municipalities means that two cities in the region rarely agree on a solution just as common they may have unequal means for implementing one even if they were to agree Having no region wide governmental planning organization may undermine any solution that could be proposed Lastly the fast pace at which development occurs versus the limited ability of government to respond to changes means that it could easily take years if not decades for a viable solution such as new roads transit systems or pollution controls to go into effect 52 Air pollution edit The Inland Empire routinely has some of the worst air quality in the United States San Bernardino County and Riverside County are the first and second worst counties in the United States for tropospheric ozone air pollution 53 54 Pollution in Southern California mostly is blown from the coast towards the mountains Inland Empire counties are downwind of the highly populated counties of Los Angeles and Orange County The largest sources of air pollution affecting the Inland Empire include off road equipment e g construction equipment cargo handling equipment heavy duty diesel trucks ocean going vessels passenger vehicles locomotives aircraft and industrial fuel combustion 55 Southern California is in extreme nonattainment for ozone and severe nonattainment for particle pollution Multiple state and local efforts are underway to clean up the air primarily focused on zero emissions vehicles California has implemented some of the most aggressive vehicle electrification rules in the country including the Advanced Clean Cars II rule that will mandate 100 zero emission passenger vehicle sales in 2035 56 and the Advanced Clean Fleets rule for trucks that will require all drayage trucks to be zero emissions starting in 2024 and all trucks to ZEV by 2036 57 Water pollution edit Water pollution has also been found in the Santa Ana River and Cajon wash and pollutants from the March Air Reserve Base and Stringfellow Acid Pits have contaminated groundwater in parts of Riverside County 19 In 1997 perchlorate a chemical used to produce explosives was discovered to be seeping into the groundwater under Rialto in a plume that continues to grow In 2007 the Rialto city council petitioned the United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA for Superfund status to clean up the origin site The sites comprising March Air Reserve Base Norton Air Force Base and the Stringfellow Acid Pits have already been classified as EPA Superfund toxic waste sites 58 Transportation editMain article Transportation in the Inland Empire nbsp I 10 I 215 Interchange traffic south of downtown San BernardinoTraffic congestion is a major issue in the Inland Empire Many of the existing freeways were completed in the late 1970s with the exception of the segment of the Foothill Freeway State Route 210 SR 210 between San Dimas and San Bernardino which was completed in July 2007 New freeways or highway fix ups are either in progress or being planned such as the construction of Mid County Parkway between Perris and San Jacinto or the addition of toll lanes on both I 15 and I 10 through heavily urbanized portions of Riverside and San Bernardino counties Other problems exist however including the imbalance between housing and job availability The Inland Empire population grew as a result of affordable housing at least relative to the rest of Southern California but most of the higher paying jobs are located in Los Angeles San Diego and Orange counties Thus many workers must commute daily from the Inland Empire to their jobs in these counties sometimes up to two hours each direction and even longer if by public transportation As the population increases the problem is most certainly going to get worse Forbes magazine ranked the area first in its 2007 list of most unhealthy commutes in the United States beating out every other metropolitan area in the country as Inland area drivers breathe the unhealthiest air and have the highest rate of fatal auto accidents per capita 59 According to a 1999 report by the Surface Transportation Policy Project the Inland Empire leads in fatal crashes caused by road rage 60 61 The theft of copper brass and other metals from highway and road fixtures has also led to decreased public safety on IE roads and freeways 62 Gas siphoning has also been noted as a problem for vehicles left unattended in the region 63 Public transportation edit nbsp sbX Green Line s Civic Center station in downtown San Bernardino nbsp sbX Hospitality West Station downtown San BernardinoThe Inland Empire does not have a particularly extensive or robust public transportation system Due to the large physical size and sprawl of the region the primary means of transportation in the region is the automobile Less than five percent of the IE s 1 249 224 working age residents use public transportation to get to work 64 Omnitrans is the largest bus agency in San Bernardino County while the Riverside Transit Agency RTA is the largest in Riverside County Currently some of Omnitrans bus routes run on headways of an hour or more and some routes stop service in the early evening or may not run on weekends SunLine Transit Agency provides bus service in the Coachella Valley while the Victor Valley Transit Authority VVTA provides transit service in the High Desert including to Barstow after the transit systems in the latter was merged into VVTA in 2015 Other operators in the region include Pass Transit serving the Banning Pass area Needles Area Transit serving the city of Needles Mountain Transit serving the communities in the San Bernardino Mountains including Lake Arrowhead Big Bear Running Springs and Crestline and the MBTA serving the Morongo Basin and Yucca Valley portions of San Bernardino County Although transit usage and infrastructure remains weak several projects have moved forward and opened in the 2010s to improve transit accessibility in the region Major projects include the Perris Valley portion of the Metrolink 91 Perris Valley Line the San Bernardino Transit Center and the Omnitrans sbX Green Line which connects the cities of Loma Linda and San Bernardino two universities and the Loma Linda VA Hospital to the San Bernardino Transit Center 65 In addition to sbX there are other express services available to public transportation users in the region RTA operates a BRT lite system in the RapidLink Gold Line which runs from UCR to the Corona Transit Center 66 Due to the physical size of the Inland Empire transit connections between the nodes of the region are primarily served by freeway express services Transit operators of the IE provide service between major destinations and transit centers around Southern California including the San Bernardino Transit Center the Montclair Transcenter Disneyland Pomona Downtown station and Oceanside The region is also part of the five county Southern California Regional Rail Authority SCRRA Metrolink commuter rail system Of the seven lines that Metrolink operates four of them directly serve the Inland Empire San Bernardino Line provides daily service from San Bernardino to Los Angeles busiest route of the system 91 Perris Valley Line provides weekday service from Perris to Los Angeles and weekend service between Riverside and Los Angeles Riverside Line provides weekday commuter service from downtown Riverside to Los Angeles Inland Empire Orange County Line provides daily service from San Bernardino to Oceanside in San Diego CountyFuture projects edit Although a robust transit network has been lacking in the region for decades steps are being made toward developing one in the future The councils of governments and transportation commissions in both IE counties have identified and are working on future expansions of transit to better serve the region These include the sbX West Valley Connector 67 68 Arrow the extension of the L Line to Montclair to become part of the A Line and daily train service to the Coachella Valley 69 Additional routes have also been studied including extending the Metrolink s Perris Valley Line to San Jacinto and Temecula 70 a passenger rail spur along I 15 to Lake Elsinore 71 BRT routes throughout the respective service areas of Omnitrans and RTA 72 and an aerial tram from Highland to Big Bear 73 The Inland Empire is the chosen route for connecting California High Speed Rail service to San Diego While a final alignment has yet to be finalized concepts include stops at the Ontario International Airport in Riverside San Bernardino Corona and Temecula or Murrieta These would occur as part of Phase II however which currently remains unfunded 74 75 76 Airports edit Several airports are located in the Inland Empire San Bernardino International Airport Ontario International Airport and Palm Springs International Airport are commercial airports in their respective cities A local joint powers agency has redeveloped the decommissioned Norton Air Force Base into San Bernardino International Airport There are also several general aviation airports in the region Airport IATA code ICAO code CountyOntario International Airport ONT KONT San BernardinoPalm Springs International Airport PSP KPSP RiversideSan Bernardino International Airport SBD KSBD San BernardinoActive transportation edit The region is making some progress in developing dedicated bicycle commuter and recreation trails The largest of these the Santa Ana River bicycle path currently connects Corona to Huntington Beach and is eventually projected to stretch for 84 miles all the way to Redlands when completed 77 A shorter trail exists along the former path of the Pacific Electric Railway from Claremont to Rialto 78 A number of communities have also built trails along the levees and maintenance roads of other waterways in the region including the CV Link which is under construction in the Coachella Valley area of the region Other plans also exist to provide feeder trails to meet the main backbones such as the PE Trail and provide a network of connectivity to nonmotorized users throughout the region Demographics editHistorical population CensusPop Note 190045 826 191091 40299 5 1920123 69835 3 1930214 92473 7 1940266 63224 1 1950451 68869 4 1960809 78279 3 19701 143 14641 2 19801 558 18236 3 19902 588 79366 1 20003 254 82125 7 20104 224 85129 8 20204 599 8398 9 U S Decennial Census 79 1790 1960 80 1900 1990 81 1990 2000 82 The population of the Greater Los Angeles area which includes the Inland Empire is about 18 million people according to the 2010 United States Census and is the second largest metropolitan region in the country The Metropolitan Statistical Area population of the Inland Empire Riverside San Bernardino Ontario CA Metropolitan Statistical Area itself is more than 4 2 million people and is the 13th largest metropolitan area in the United States According to the 2000 U S Census it is the fastest growing area in the state Between 1990 and 2000 Riverside and San Bernardino counties added 700 000 to their population totals an increase of 26 percent 64 Between 2000 and 2010 Inland Empire s population expanded by 970 000 or 30 percent and between 2010 and 2020 it expanded by a further 375 000 or another 9 percent to reach 4 6 million According to census bureau s 2005 2007 estimates 61 8 percent of the population was White 40 4 percent White Non Hispanic 7 5 percent Black 5 7 percent Asian and 25 0 percent of other or mixed race 43 9 percent were Hispanic of any race 21 9 percent of the population was foreign born There is a large Mexican community in Inland Empire Filipinos are the largest Asian immigrant group in Inland Empire 84 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that in 2006 33 1 percent of people in the Greater San Bernardino Area were overweight and 30 8 percent were obese In 2019 San Bernardino County found that 34 1 of the county s population were obese with an additional 34 5 being overweight 85 A substantial majority of residents 76 6 percent last comparatively surveyed in 2001 rated their respective counties as good places to live Over 81 percent of Riverside County residents indicated that their county is a very good or fairly good place to live while about 72 percent of residents in San Bernardino County felt the same way Survey respondents cited nice living area good climate and affordable housing as the top positive factors in assessing their respective communities Smog was by far the most important negative factor affecting respondents ratings in both counties while traffic was the second highest concern in Riverside County and crime the second highest concern among San Bernardino County residents 86 Politics edit While the region as a whole had traditionally leaned more Republican than the rest of California newer when residents are less likely to identify with the Republican party than longer term residents 36 percent to 42 percent and the total number of residents identifying with the Democrats 34 percent slightly edged over the number identifying with the Republican party 33 percent In the 2008 presidential election Democratic candidate Barack Obama carried both Riverside and San Bernardino counties becoming only the second Democrat to carry both counties since Lyndon Johnson in 1964 In 2012 Obama repeated this feat and again carried both counties and the two Inland Empire counties have stayed in the Democratic column in presidential elections since Nonetheless the area continues to be far friendlier to Republicans than Los Angeles County or the San Francisco Bay Area Non Hispanic Whites and non Hispanic Blacks have the highest participation rates for nearly every type of political activity while Latinos and Asian Americans lag significantly behind those groups in terms of volunteerism and organizational membership The 2006 immigration protests have significantly boosted political participation among Latinos 87 Religion edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The Redlands California Temple is one of four LDS temples in Southern California Many faiths and denominations are found and represented in the area The Roman Catholic parishes in the region belong to the church s Diocese of San Bernardino 88 Mormons and Seventh day Adventists have communities in the towns of Loma Linda and Redlands near San Bernardino Mormons also have congregations in the High Desert region citation needed Seventh day Adventists operate Loma Linda University 89 The Inland Empire has a Jewish community and additionally a Jewish American community is in and around the Sun City neighborhood of Menifee According to the United Jewish Citizens of the Desert the Coachella Valley has an estimated 20 000 American Jews one of California s largest Jewish communities as a result of being a major retirement destination 90 There are also some fast growing Muslim communities with around 30 000 American Muslims in 2019 mostly concentrated around the UCR campus in Riverside Irvine and central Corona All locations have well established Islamic Centers gathering faith members for weekly Juma prayers as well as other Islamic holidays Crime edit While the crime index in Riverside and Ontario trends slightly over the state average San Bernardino has a crime index consistently near or over twice that of the national average 91 92 93 94 Reflecting nationwide trends violent crime in the region overall declined or remained consistent in 2009 despite the recession In the city of Riverside 10 homicides occurred in 2005 down from 24 in 2003 its highest total since 2003 All but three cases resulted in arrests In San Bernardino by contrast 58 killings occurred in 2005 but only a third of cases in San Bernardino led to arrests due to a lack of witness cooperation in that city 95 Latino gangs have been active in the region since the area s citrus days while a continual migration of numerous African American gangs from the inner city of South LA have flowed into the region since the Watts Riots and 1992 Los Angeles Riots 9 96 The increased diversity in the region between 1990 and 2000 is also associated with a 20 percent increase in hate crime in the same period mostly ascribed to increased gang activity 97 98 According to data from the FBI s Uniform Crime Reporting program taken together Riverside and San Bernardino counties showed a total of 51 237 crimes reported to county police sheriffs but not to city or other agencies in 2006 this combined total exceeded the totals for all other California counties considered individually except for Sacramento 99 The region has also been noted as a center of methamphetamine drug production 100 The Riverside and San Bernardino county sheriffs departments busted 635 meth labs in 2000 law enforcement has driven most of the meth production industry to Mexico since 2007 but many of the homes discovered to have been used as meth labs before 2006 have since been sold on the market before California law required rigorous decontamination leading to a legacy of health hazards for unsuspecting renters and home buyers in the area 101 In 2016 federal crime statistics stated that San Bernardino was ranked the most dangerous city in California 102 Education edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2021 nbsp California State University San Bernardino nbsp University of California RiversideThere is a trend of lower educational attainment in the IE which starts early Only 37 percent of 3 and 4 year olds in the region are enrolled in pre school with only one school in the region for every 343 children as compared with 48 percent enrollment in San Diego County Thirty five percent of the IE s ninth graders do not graduate from high school and only 37 percent of its college age residents enroll in a post secondary education program of some sort Only 24 percent of the IE s adult residents have attained a college degree or better Twenty five percent do not possess a high school diploma 64 According to past CSUSB President Al Karnig We have a very low college attendance rate that is scantly above half of what the average is in other states We have only have about 20 percent college graduates in the Inland Empire while the average in other states is 38 percent 103 104 21 inland area high schools rank in the top 100 in California for producing dropouts 105 Of Inland Empire residents 25 years and over in 2004 44 4 percent of Asians had bachelor s or higher degrees and nearly 70 percent had at least attended college 21 3 percent of Blacks had a bachelor s degree or higher and 65 2 percent had either a community degree or had attended college 22 8 percent of Whites had a bachelor s degree or higher and 60 8 percent had attended college Of Hispanics 6 9 percent had a bachelor s or higher degree and 30 2 percent attended college 106 Among students transferring from Inland community colleges to private schools in 2004 05 the most frequent choice was the University of Phoenix 107 Employment edit While the Inland Empire led the state in job growth with 275 000 new jobs between 1990 and 2000 most are in comparatively low tech fields San Bernardino and Riverside counties are primarily host to service and manufacturing or warehousing oriented industries Food and administrative services employ the most people in the Inland Empire while for the state of California the top industries are in administrative services and professional scientific and hi tech oriented fields 79 8 of the IE s job growth from 1990 to 2003 was in service sector jobs 108 Low wage industries are abundant in the IE and the area s high tech and professional industries pay less than in other regions of California As many as one third of working adults commute out of the 27 000 square mile 70 000 km2 region to find work the highest proportion of any area in the country Adding to gridlock fewer than 5 of the IE s 1 249 224 working age residents use public transportation to get to work each day 14 5 carpool while 79 7 typically drive alone to work in their cars 64 In 2007 the region had an unemployment rate of 6 1 while overall jobless claims in California were at 5 4 and 4 4 nationally 109 In 2008 unemployment in the area increased to 9 5 at a time when the state average was 8 2 and the national average approximately 6 5 110 Unemployment reached an all time high of 15 in 2010 second in the nation only to Detroit among metropolitan areas with populations over 1 million 111 County 2016 estimate 2010 census Change Area DensityRiverside County California 2 387 741 2 189 641 9 05 7 206 47 sq mi 18 664 7 km2 331 sq mi 128 km2 San Bernardino County California 2 140 096 2 035 210 5 15 20 056 92 sq mi 51 947 2 km2 107 sq mi 41 km2 Total 4 527 837 4 224 851 7 17 27 263 39 sq mi 70 611 9 km2 166 sq mi 64 km2 Culture edit nbsp Lamb of God playing at Ozzfest at the San Manuel Amphitheater in Devore San Bernardino 2007The Inland Empire sits adjacent to the San Bernardino Mountains Lake Arrowhead and Big Bear are just some of the lakes located in the mountains Lake Arrowhead becomes very popular in the summertime while Big Bear becomes popular in the winter for skiing and snowboarding activities Various locations in the Inland Empire provide venues for cultural performances and entertainment 112 The Victoria Gardens Cultural Center which is owned and operated by the City of Rancho Cucamonga opened in the Fall of 2006 providing theatre concerts and family entertainment to the region The San Manuel Amphitheater in San Bernardino s Devore neighborhood is the nation s largest outdoor amphitheater citation needed San Bernardino s Route 66 Rendezvous the largest classical carshow in the US an annual street fair and classic car show draws a half million people from around the world 113 The Palm Springs Aerial Tramway in Palm Springs is a popular attraction rising to more than 8500 feet Music edit nbsp At 330 feet 100 m high the Morongo Casino Resort amp Spa tower is the tallest building in the Inland Empire Concerts and events are booked inside Established bands from the IE include Alien Ant Farm Hepcat The Bellrays and the Voodoo Glow Skulls from Riverside and Cracker from Redlands and The Mountain Goats from Chino House music artist DJ Lynnwood got his start at the age of ten spinning records at KUOR FM in Redlands girafa is another local electronic artist from Corona Local hip hop artists such as Miah Lanski Suga Free Saint Dog 40 Glocc Young Noble from the Outlawz J J Fad Raje Noa James Xydewayz8 The Faze Lil Xan and A Lighter Shade of Brown have brought about attention to the growing Hip hop community in and around the region The Jerkin street dance culture originated from the Inland Empire based hip hop groups New Boyz and Audio Push A number of artists associated with the Palm Desert Scene forged the genre of desert rock as well as playing a large role in the genre of stoner rock A Danish record label Musikministeriet recently opened up an office in Redlands in hopes of further cultivating the IE music scene 114 Frank Zappa performed in Upland on Foothill Boulevard during the early 1960s where he played shows on a makeshift stage for college crowds Zappa also purchased Pal Recording Studio on Archibald Avenue in Rancho Cucamonga where the Surfaris had recorded the surf music classic Wipe Out He dubbed it Studio Z and began making recordings that eventually led to the founding of Zappa s group The Mothers of Invention Until his death in December 2012 singer Ray Collins of the Mothers of Invention lived in the area Zappa mentions the Inland Empire in the song Billy the Mountain From the late 80s until the late 90s many up and coming musical acts such as Rage Against the Machine Blink 182 and No Doubt cut their teeth playing venues in Riverside 115 These historic venues Spanky s Cafe and the De Anza Theatre have since been closed and converted to other purposes The Barn at UCR was closed as a music venue for 10 years but beginning in October 2008 KUCR Radio 88 3 FM ASPB The Associated Student Program Board with funding from UCR Housing began having a free concert series once a week during the school quarter Emerging music venues in the IE include the Showcase Theatre in Corona recently closed Red Planet Records in Riverside the Vault in Redlands the Buffalo Inn and The Wire now closed in Upland the Twins Club in Rancho Cucamonga the Press Restaurant in Claremont the Glass House in Pomona Back To The Grind Coffee Shop in Riverside Liam s Irish Pub in Colton and CommonGround Soundstage in Riverside 116 Performing arts edit nbsp California Theatre in downtown San BernardinoOrchestras in the IE include the Redlands Symphony which performs at the University of Redlands the Riverside County Philharmonic which performs at the Riverside Municipal Auditorium the San Bernardino Symphony which performs at the California Theatre and the Victor Valley Symphony which performs at Victor Valley College Theatrical Arts International is housed at the California Theatre as well With the largest subscriber base in the Inland Empire Theatrical Arts International presents the largest caliber tours available including such blockbusters as Cats Hairspray Mamma Mia and Miss Saigon There are many other large theater programs in the community The Riverside Fox Theater also known as the Fox Performing Arts Center was built in 1929 and is a Spanish Colonial Revival style building in the heart of downtown Riverside California The theater is the centerpiece of Riverside s Arts amp Culture initiative and underwent a major renovation and restoration to become a regional performing arts facility Renovation was completed in the Fall 2009 with a grand reopening in January 2010 At Chaffey High School in Ontario they have a very large theater program that puts on shows in the fall and in the spring on one of the largest high school stages in the Inland Empire The Inland Empire Harmony Carousel Chorus provides music in Barbershop Quartet productions 117 Sports edit nbsp Inland Empire 66ers playing at San Manuel Stadium in downtown San BernardinoThe Inland Empire is the largest metropolitan area in the United States without a major professional sports team However it is part of the Greater Los Angeles area which includes teams in Los Angeles and Orange counties The area is home to numerous minor league baseball basketball and ice hockey teams The Inland Empire team with the most championships is the Inland Empire 66ers of San Bernardino who won their most recent championship in 2013 118 119 The Auto Club Speedway located in Fontana opened in 1997 It contains an oval a road course and a dragstrip for auto racing The Speedway is located approximately 2 miles 3 2 km from the former Ontario Motor Speedway site the latter of which is currently the site of the Toyota Arena The Riverside International Raceway another defunct motorsport venue was located about 7 miles 11 km east of Riverside Club League Sport Venue Founded TitlesInland Empire 66ers Low A West Baseball San Manuel Stadium 1941 6Lake Elsinore Storm Low A West Baseball Lake Elsinore Diamond 1994 2Rancho Cucamonga Quakes Low A West Baseball LoanMart Field 1993 1High Desert Yardbirds Pecos League Baseball Stater Bros Stadium in Adelanto 2017 0Ontario Clippers NBA G League Basketball Toyota Arena 2017 0Ontario Reign American Hockey League Ice hockey Toyota Arena 2015 0Ontario Fury MASL Indoor soccer Toyota Arena 2013 0SoCal SC NPSL Soccer San Bernardino Soccer Complex 2016 0Redlands FC USL2 Soccer Dodge Stadium 2022 0In college sports the Inland Empire features five four year institutions that represent all three NCAA divisions as well as the NAIA Program School Location Division Main conferenceCalifornia Baptist Lancers California Baptist University Riverside NCAA Division I Western Athletic ConferenceUC Riverside Highlanders University of California Riverside Riverside NCAA Division I Big West ConferenceCal State San Bernardino Coyotes California State University San Bernardino San Bernardino NCAA Division II California Collegiate Athletic AssociationRedlands Bulldogs University of Redlands Redlands NCAA Division III Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceLa Sierra Golden Eagles La Sierra University Riverside NAIA California Pacific ConferenceMedia edit Newspapers edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Inland Empire is served by four major local newspapers The InlandEmpirePress com provides online only reporting for the Riverside County amp San Bernardino Valley region The San Bernardino County Sun which serves primarily the San Bernardino Valley region The Inland Valley Daily Bulletin which serves the southwestern San Bernardino County and eastern Los Angeles County cities of Claremont La Verne Pomona San Dimas Upland Rancho Cucamonga Ontario Montclair Chino and Chino Hills The Riverside based Press Enterprise also has a few editions over the area There is also an Inland Empire edition of the Los Angeles Times For the segments of the Inland Empire surrounding San Bernardino and Riverside cities regional newspapers include Inland Empire The Inland Empire Community News provides online and print reporting for various cities in the Inland Empire High Desert the Victor Valley is served by both the Victor Valley News and the Daily Press Other newspapers include the Antelope Valley Press and the Barstow Desert Dispatch Both Victorville and Barstow have a Sunday edition circulated across both areas called the Press Dispatch Palm Springs amp Coachella Valley The Desert SunRadio edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2017 The Inland Empire is ranked 26th June 2008 in the national radio market as a stand alone market When combined with the Greater Los Angeles Area it is part of the second largest radio market 120 Format stations Public and college Talk radioKOLA FM 99 9 Classics KVCR FM 91 9 NPR KCAA AM 1050 NBC RadioKFRG FM 95 1 Country KUCR FM 88 3 UC Riverside KTIE AM 590 Conservative talkKHTI FM 103 9 Adult Top 40KCAL FM 96 7 Rock KUOR FM 89 1 NPR KMET AM 1490 ConservativeKGGI FM 99 1 Hip Hop R amp BKLRD FM 90 1 Christian contemporaryDue to the various mountain ranges including San Bernardino San Gabriel and Idyllwild it may be difficult to receive a single station throughout the entire Inland Empire area without interference Television edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message PBS member station KVCR TV 121 broadcasts directly to the Inland Empire 122 The station covers all of Riverside County and San Bernardino County with some Los Angeles area overlap The station is located on the campus of San Bernardino Valley College In addition to PBS and original local content First Nations Experience FNX 123 KVCR s sister station also broadcasts programming about the indigenous peoples and Native Americans to the Inland Empire The current TLC TV series Dr Pimple Popper a spin off of the YouTube channel of dermatologist Sandra Lee is shot mainly at Skin Physicians amp Surgeons a clinic in Upland run by Lee and her husband Jeffrey Rebish also a dermatologist 124 125 Film edit While there are no large film production companies or studios based in the Inland Empire on location shoots accounted for a total economic impact of 65 2 million in the two county region in 2006 126 From 1994 to 2005 filming accounted for over a billion dollars 1 228 977 456 in total revenues spent in the area Some famous films shot in the Inland Empire include Executive Decision U Turn Erin Brockovich and The Fast and the Furious 127 Select scenes from the films Tough Guys Constantine 128 The Island and Tenet 129 were also shot in the Inland Empire s ghost town of Eagle Mountain While the 2006 David Lynch film Inland Empire is named after the region no scenes were actually shot in the Inland Empire 4 Ann Lerner Albuquerque s film liaison told the L A Times about the AMC cable TV series Breaking Bad producers wanted to film the series in California s Inland Empire but switched to New Mexico because of New Mexico s tax incentives 130 Shot Caller 2017 has scenes set in the Inland Empire called I E in the film Incorporated cities editRiverside Countycities 131 Yearincorporated Population 2020 Median income 2018Banning 1913 31 125 41 038Beaumont 1912 51 475 78 111Blythe 1916 19 255 43 141Calimesa 1990 9 329 53 366Canyon Lake 1990 11 000 97 237Cathedral City 1981 53 580 46 370Coachella 1946 47 186 33 870Corona 1896 168 248 86 790Desert Hot Springs 1963 29 660 34 814Eastvale 2010 66 413 114 230Hemet 1910 85 175 39 653Indian Wells 1967 5 403 104 522Indio 1930 90 751 74 774Jurupa Valley 2011 107 083 76 090La Quinta 1982 40 660 79 889Lake Elsinore 1888 63 453 77 090Menifee 2008 97 093 77 033Moreno Valley 1984 208 838 65 449Murrieta 1991 115 561 100 080Norco 1964 27 564 95 441Palm Desert 1973 52 986 57 578Palm Springs 1938 47 427 50 361Perris 1911 80 201 66 545Rancho Mirage 1973 19 114 71 227Riverside 1883 328 155 71 967San Jacinto 1888 51 028 50 483Temecula 1989 111 970 95 918Wildomar 2008 37 183 73 282San Bernardino Countycities 131 Yearincorporated Population 2020 Median income 2018Adelanto 1970 35 663 40 018Apple Valley 1988 74 394 51 314Barstow 1947 24 268 39 585Big Bear Lake 1981 5 206 51 014Chino 1910 89 109 87 090Chino Hills 1991 82 409 103 473Colton 1887 54 118 50 063Fontana 1952 213 000 80 800Grand Terrace 1978 12 426 66 912Hesperia 1988 96 393 50 271Highland 1987 55 323 59 395Loma Linda 1970 24 535 53 371Montclair 1956 39 490 58 012Needles 1913 5 248 31 843Ontario 1891 182 871 75 266Rancho Cucamonga 1977 175 522 92 773Redlands 1888 70 952 72 410Rialto 1911 104 553 70 188San Bernardino 1854 217 946 49 721Twentynine Palms 1987 29 258 41 668Upland 1906 78 814 82 426Victorville 1962 126 432 60 391Yucaipa 1989 55 712 63 657Yucca Valley 1991 22 236 45 277See also edit nbsp Greater Los Angeles portalList of California urban areas List of museums in the Inland Empire California References edit USA Combined Metropolitan Areas CityPopulation de August 2021 Retrieved November 19 2021 2020 Census US Census Bureau Archived from the original on August 12 2021 Retrieved August 13 2021 Total Gross Domestic Product for Riverside San Bernardino Ontario CA MSA fred stlouisfed org a b c d e f Rosenblatt Susannah November 27 2006 Inland for sure Empire maybe Where s the boundary Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved July 8 2009 Annual Estimates of the Population of Combined Statistical Areas April 1 2000 to July 1 2010 2006 Population Estimates U S Census Bureau Population Division April 7 2010 Archived from the original CSV on September 14 2007 Retrieved December 2 2007 Wagner Rob Leicester 2005 Sleeping Giant An illustrated history of Southern California s Inland Empire Stephen s Press LLC ISBN 1 932173 07 2 Giovannini Joseph July 7 1985 An inland empire built on oranges The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 8 2009 Davis Mike April 7 2003 The Inland Empire The Nation Archived from the original on September 14 2012 Retrieved November 25 2007 The baseline and meridian intersect at 34 7 17 7996 N 116 55 48 W 34 121611000 N 116 93000 W 34 121611000 116 93000 a b History timeline of the Inland Empire California San Bernardino County Sun October 30 2007 Archived from the original on December 14 2007 Retrieved November 15 2007 a b Ruther Walter Calavan E Clair Carman Glen E 1989 The Origins of Citrus Research in California PDF The Citrus Industry Oakland Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources University of California V Chapter 5 Archived from the original PDF on August 8 2007 Retrieved August 21 2007 a b Petrix Mark October 30 2007 From two orange trees Sprang an Empire Daily Bulletin Archived from the original on March 24 2008 Retrieved November 15 2007 Sorba Michael October 30 2007 Rails reach the Inland Empire Daily Bulletin Archived from the original on December 8 2007 Retrieved November 27 2007 Mydans Seth August 26 1993 With a Boom in the Desert Over Transplants Are Feeling Stranded The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 8 2009 Rundel Rhonda October 7 2008 California Officials Try to Avoid Second Housing Hit The Wall Street Journal Dow Jones amp Company Inc pp A8 ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved July 23 2009 Howard Bob October 2 2001 Building on Ontario s Success Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved July 8 2009 a b Flanigan James January 15 2009 Businesses Find a Silver Lining in Inland California s Downturn The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 8 2009 City Poised to Lead as Panel Predicts Recovery GlobeSt Retrieved November 13 2023 Where is the IE About The Inland Empire Business Atlas business redlands edu Archived from the original on April 20 2010 Retrieved September 18 2015 a b Mian Lal S December 2000 Inland Empire Environmental Quality Paradigm PDF San Bernardino Department of Health Science and Human Ecology California State University San Bernardino Archived from the original PDF on September 9 2006 Retrieved December 16 2007 a b Lopas Matthew July 12 2004 Some Flee the 909 to a New Area Code Los Angeles Times pp B 1 Sahagun Louis August 11 1988 L A Gangs Drugs Invade Inland Empire Los Angeles Times Semuels Alana December 18 2010 California s recovery might not mean a robust job market Los Angeles Times Semuels Alana August 9 2010 Where recession s effects are magnified Los Angeles Times Hirsch Jerry January 9 2006 Dairies Moving Out of Inland Empire Los Angeles Times Willon Phil January 20 2008 Inland Empire ballot guide Los Angeles Times Welcome to the California Tourism Industry Website Archived November 27 2010 at the Wayback Machine Tourism visitcalifornia com Retrieved on 2013 08 17 About Visit California California Tourism Industry Website Archived March 13 2011 at the Wayback Machine Inland Empire PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 14 2012 Retrieved November 11 2012 Cal gov CA Gov State of California About Region Maps State of California Archived from the original on January 30 2011 Starr Kevin Golden dreams California in an age of abundance 1950 1963 Oxford University Press 2009 See e g Harris David Money and Harris Jennifer Money Afoot and Afield Inland Empire Wilderness Press 2009 See also Cortes Carlos E CHICOP A Response to the Challenge of Local Chicano History AZTLAN Chicano Journal of the Social Sciences and the Arts vol 1 n 2 1970 See also Cosgrove Denis E From Palladian Landscape to the Citta Diffusa The Veneto and Los Angeles Archived January 21 2011 at the Wayback Machine from European Landscapes and Lifestyles The Mediterranean and Beyond Edicoes universitarias Lusofonas 2007 Kirkham Chris April 17 2015 Inland Empire sees surge in warehouse jobs but many are low pay temporary Los Angeles Times Vincent Roger November 15 2007 Inland Empire warehouse deals Los Angeles Times Retrieved December 1 2007 Pitchford Phil Miller Jim November 28 2007 1 7 billion allotted to five county region for highway rail projects Press Enterprise Archived from the original on July 5 2008 Retrieved December 1 2007 Singh Maanvi December 11 2021 Pollution everywhere how one click shopping is creating Amazon warehouse towns The Guardian Retrieved December 12 2021 Vincent Roger February 3 2009 Boom in Inland Empire industrial space is beginning to go bust Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved July 8 2009 a b Kelly David April 10 2008 Inland Empire s growth to continue Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved July 8 2009 Top 50 US Metro Areas by Gross Metropolitan Production Economic Output Archived May 9 2013 at the Wayback Machine Shnugi 2011 09 25 Retrieved on 2013 08 17 Horseman Jeff August 18 2012 REGION Inland welfare food stamp usage soars Press Enterprise Retrieved August 20 2012 Conference Transcripts 2005 Smart Growth on the Edge Suburban Planning and Development for the Next 20 Years Opolis Berkeley and Oakland bepress and eScholarship Repository California Digital Library 1 2 62 68 Retrieved December 17 2007 Gould Scott October 18 2002 Swallowed by Sprawl Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved July 8 2009 MEASURING SPRAWL AND ITS IMPACT The Character amp Consequences of Metropolitan Expansion Smart Growth America 2002 ISSN 0458 3035 Archived from the original on October 31 2002 Retrieved July 8 2009 Kelly David October 30 2008 Inland Empire economic outlook is grim Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved July 8 2009 Berkman Leslie March 11 2010 Fewer foreclosures despite mortgage trouble Press Enterprise Archived from the original on March 13 2010 Retrieved March 11 2010 W Gang Duane June 27 2009 Inland region battles for image amid media attention Press Enterprise ISSN 0746 4258 Retrieved July 14 2009 permanent dead link Dillon Liam November 7 2019 Coastal cities give in to growth Southern California favors less housing in Inland Empire Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved June 8 2021 Esquivel Paloma December 1 2019 Efforts to rein in the Inland Empire s warehouse industry fall flat Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved June 8 2021 Husing John October 2007 Inland Empire City Profile 2007 PDF Inland Empire Quarterly Economic Report Redlands Economics amp Politics Inc 19 4 Archived from the original PDF on February 27 2008 Retrieved December 1 2007 Oversight Field Hearing Committee on Resources U S House of Representatives September 10 2004 Examining Impacts of the Endangered Species Act on Southern California s Inland Empire PDF One Hundredth Eighth Congress Second Session Washington D C U S Government Printing Office Retrieved December 17 2007 a href Template Cite conference html title Template Cite conference cite conference a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Newell Jason November 11 2006 Inland Empire faces challenges opportunities in years ahead San Bernardino County Sun Retrieved November 26 2007 https www lung org research sota city rankings msas los angeles long beach ca ozone http www aqmd gov docs default source air quality historical data by year aq card 2022 final pdf sfvrsn 2 http www aqmd gov docs default source clean air plans air quality management plans 2022 air quality management plan final 2022 aqmp 03 es pdf sfvrsn 6 https ww2 arb ca gov news california moves accelerate 100 new zero emission vehicle sales 2035 https ww2 arb ca gov our work programs advanced clean fleets about Pesick Jason December 4 2007 Rialto seeks Superfund designation for perchlorate Press Enterprise Archived from the original on February 14 2009 Retrieved December 16 2007 Van Dusen Alison November 26 2007 America s Unhealthy Commutes Forbes Retrieved December 9 2007 Larry Gordon March 9 1999 Inland Empire Leads in Fatal Road Rage Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved July 9 2009 Aggressive Driving Where you live Matters Surface Transportation Policy Project April 1 1999 Archived from the original on October 4 2009 Retrieved July 9 2009 Kelly David April 30 2008 Thefts of copper brass and other metals hit Inland Empire freeways Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved July 8 2009 Hennessy Fiske Molly September 25 2008 Gas siphoning a growing problem in Inland Empire Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved July 8 2009 a b c d Tornatzky Louis Barreto Matt A 2004 Economic Development and the Knowledge Economy in California s Inland Empire Progress or Stagnation PDF Los Angeles Thomas Rivera Policy Institute University of Southern California School of Policy Planning and Development Archived from the original PDF on October 11 2007 Retrieved November 10 2007 About sbX Archived August 23 2013 at the Wayback Machine Estreet sbx com Retrieved on 2013 08 17 RapidLink www riversidetransit com Retrieved July 19 2019 West Valley Connector Project Omnitrans San Bernardino County Public Transit www omnitrans org Retrieved July 19 2019 SBCTA West Valley Connector BRT Project SBCTA Retrieved July 19 2019 RCTC Studying Options to Expand Rail Service to Coachella Valley San Gorgonio Pass RCTC Commuter Rail Feasibility Study PDF Retrieved July 19 2019 Metrolink Lake Elsinore Corona Commuter Rail Spur Retrieved July 19 2019 Bus Rapid Transit Route Planning Project Executive Summary PDF Retrieved July 19 2019 San Bernardino County Long Range Transit Plan PDF Los Angeles to San Diego Project Section California High Speed Rail Authority State of California hsr ca gov Retrieved July 19 2019 CAHSR Statewide EIR Summary Volume I PDF Retrieved July 19 2019 Los Angeles to San Diego Section map PDF Retrieved July 19 2019 Begley Doug March 22 2012 Trail making progress and impression on users The Press Enterprise Retrieved May 15 2012 Leung Wendy December 7 2011 Officials dedicate new bridge carrying the Pacific Electric Trail over Foothill Boulevard Daily Bulletin Retrieved May 15 2012 U S Decennial Census United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 3 2015 Historical Census Browser University of Virginia Library Retrieved October 3 2015 Forstall Richard L ed March 27 1995 Population of Counties by Decennial Census 1900 to 1990 United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 3 2015 Census 2000 PHC T 4 Ranking Tables for Counties 1990 and 2000 PDF United States Census Bureau April 2 2001 Retrieved October 3 2015 American FactFinder Archived from the original on June 2 2013 Retrieved April 19 2019 http socialinnovation ucr acsitefactory com sites g files rcwecm2981 files immigrants by ethnicity SOI png Overweight amp Obesity San Bernardino County Community Indicators Archived from the original on May 8 2023 Retrieved May 8 2023 Bockman Shell Neiman Max Sirotnik Barbara 2001 2001 Inland Empire Annual Survey PDF San Bernardino Inland Empire Research Consortium Retrieved December 17 2007 Ramakrishnan Karthick July 2007 Survey of Civil and Political Engagement in the Inland Empire PDF Riverside Department of Political Science University of California Riverside Archived from the original PDF on February 27 2008 Retrieved November 27 2007 Welcome to the Diocese of San Bernardino Sbdiocese org Retrieved on 2013 08 17 Loma Linda University Llu edu 2009 06 01 Retrieved on 2013 08 17 Contact Us Archived August 28 2012 at the Wayback Machine Jewishfederations org Retrieved on 2013 08 17 San Bernardino California Detailed Profile City Data com Retrieved November 24 2007 Riverside California Detailed Profile City Data com Retrieved November 24 2007 Ontario California Detailed Profile City Data com Retrieved November 24 2007 Rogers Robert November 27 2007 Experts advise SB leaders on parolees San Bernardino County Sun Retrieved November 27 2007 Larocco Paul January 8 2010 Inland s largest cities log lower or near identical killing totals in 2009 Press Enterprise A H Belo Archived from the original on September 7 2012 Matthews Will September 26 2004 Roots of youth violence San Bernardino County Sun Archived from the original on October 28 2007 Retrieved November 27 2007 Holthouse David Fall 2005 California Conflict Intelligence Report Southern Poverty Law Center Archived from the original on March 21 2008 Retrieved November 27 2007 Silva David May 3 2007 War on Hate Brian Levin and the changing face of extremist groups in the IE Inland Empire Weekly Retrieved December 12 2007 Table 10 California Crime in the United States 2006 Retrieved July 19 2019 Shafer Jack August 4 2005 The Meth Capital of the World Where is it Slate The Washington Post Company Retrieved April 30 2009 Quan Douglas Jose Arballo Jr May 16 2008 METH S LEGACY Most drug labs may be gone from the Inland area but the contamination remains Press Enterprise A H Belo Archived from the original on October 10 2008 Retrieved April 30 2009 Study San Bernardino Is California s Most Dangerous City May 18 2016 Retrieved July 19 2019 Kennedy Ross Selicia October 17 2007 What s in the future for I E universities San Bernardino County Sun Retrieved October 20 2007 An Caroline November 10 2006 Inland Empire college going rate among California s lowest San Bernardino County Sun Retrieved November 25 2007 Parsavand Shirin February 21 2008 21 Inland schools rank in top 100 for dropouts Press Enterprise Archived from the original on February 14 2009 Retrieved February 21 2008 Husing John July 2006 Inland Empire s Growing Diversity PDF Inland Empire Quarterly Economic Report Redlands Economics amp Politics Inc 18 3 Archived from the original PDF on February 27 2008 Retrieved December 1 2007 Regus Elaine December 31 2007 Inland Higher Education Notes Press Enterprise Archived from the original on February 14 2009 Retrieved December 31 2007 Husing John January 2004 New Data provide detailed look at Inland Empire s Looming Strengths amp Difficulties PDF Inland Empire Quarterly Economic Report Redlands Economics amp Politics Inc 16 1 Archived from the original PDF on February 27 2008 Retrieved December 1 2007 Brown Josh November 16 2007 Inland job growth remains steady in October according to state Press Enterprise Retrieved November 25 2007 Pierson David November 22 2008 Surge in unemployment puts California s Inland Empire in tailspin Los Angeles Times Retrieved December 19 2008 Katzanek Jack March 11 2010 Unemployment rate hits record high Press Enterprise Archived from the original on March 14 2010 Retrieved March 11 2010 Things To Do Inland Empire February 10 2011 Retrieved February 10 2011 Weeks John November 10 2006 Inland Empire a pop culture bastion San Bernardino County Sun Retrieved December 17 2007 Flansburg Darcie September 21 2006 Musikministeriet new music label in town Redlands Daily Facts Archived from the original on March 21 2008 Retrieved December 11 2007 Franko Vanessa September 21 2007 Riverside record shop turns the tables Press Enterprise Archived from the original on February 14 2009 Retrieved December 11 2007 Novick La Rue May 17 2005 Oh what a night Inland Valley Daily Bulletin Archived from the original on March 24 2008 Retrieved December 11 2007 Inland Empire Harmony Carousel Chorus welovetosing com Archived from the original on November 16 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link THE 66ERS ARE CALIFORNIA LEAGUE CHAMPIONS milb com by Sam Farber Inland Empire 66ers History Inland Empire 66ers Stadium Info Retrieved July 19 2019 Radio and Records Ratings Archived from the original on March 21 2008 Retrieved June 20 2008 About KVCR Empire Network Retrieved July 19 2019 KVCR DT TV Station Profile FCC Public Inspection Files publicfiles fcc gov Retrieved July 19 2019 About Us FNX Retrieved July 19 2019 Copelton Melissa July 12 2018 For YouTube Star Dr Sandra Lee Pimple Popping Runs in the Family In Touch Weekly Retrieved August 11 2018 Bever Lindsey July 20 2018 The grossest show on TV stars a dermatologist known as Dr Pimple Popper Here s why people like it The Washington Post Retrieved August 11 2018 Pierceall Kimberly November 6 2007 Writer s Guild strike felt to lesser extent in Inland area Press Enterprise Retrieved November 26 2007 permanent dead link Davis Sherri January 2007 Economic Impact Report PDF Film Inland Empire News Riverside Inland Empire Film Commission 2 1 Archived from the original PDF on February 27 2008 Retrieved November 25 2007 Constanstine Archived from the original on October 13 2008 Where Was Tenet Filmed John M Glionna January 31 2014 Column One Breaking Bad is still cooking in Albuquerque Los Angeles Times a b Husing John October 2020 Inland Empire City Profile 2020 PDF Inland Empire Quarterly Economic Report Redlands Economics amp Politics Inc 163 92 100 doi 10 1016 j carbpol 2017 01 060 PMID 28267522 Retrieved April 16 2021 External links edit nbsp Inland Empire travel guide from Wikivoyage Inland Empire at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Inland Empire amp oldid 1201592652, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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