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Santa Clara County, California

Santa Clara County, officially the County of Santa Clara, is the sixth-most populous county in the U.S. state of California, with a population of 1,936,259, as of the 2020 census.[4] Santa Clara County and neighboring San Benito County together form the U.S. Census Bureau's San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara metropolitan statistical area, which is part of the larger San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland combined statistical area. Santa Clara is the most populous county in the San Francisco Bay Area and in Northern California. The county seat and largest city is San Jose; with about 1,000,000 residents, it is the 10th-most populous city in the United States, California's third-most populous city and the most populous city in the San Francisco Bay Area. The second- and third-largest cities are Sunnyvale and Santa Clara.

Santa Clara County
Interactive map of Santa Clara County
Location in the state of California
Coordinates: 37°14′N 121°43′W / 37.233°N 121.717°W / 37.233; -121.717Coordinates: 37°14′N 121°43′W / 37.233°N 121.717°W / 37.233; -121.717
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
RegionSan Francisco Bay Area
IncorporatedFebruary 18, 1850[1]
Named forMission Santa Clara de Asís, St. Clare of Assisi
County seat
and largest city
San Jose
Government
 • TypeCouncil–CEO
 • BodyBoard of Supervisors
 • Board PresidentSusan Ellenberg
 • Board Vice PresidentOtto Lee
 • Board of Supervisors[2]
Supervisors
  • Sylvia Arenas
  • Cindy Chavez
  • Otto Lee
  • Susan Ellenberg
  • Joe Simitian
 • Chief executive officerJeffrey V. Smith, M.D., J.D.
Area
 • Total1,304 sq mi (3,380 km2)
 • Land1,290 sq mi (3,300 km2)
 • Water14 sq mi (40 km2)
Highest elevation4,216 ft (1,285 m)
Population
 • Total1,936,259
 • Density1,500/sq mi (570/km2)
Time zoneUTC−8 (Pacific)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−7 (Pacific Daylight Time)
Area codes408/669, 650
FIPS code06-085
GNIS feature ID277307
Websitewww.sccgov.org

Home to Silicon Valley, Santa Clara County is an economic center for high technology, and in 2015 had the third-highest gross domestic product (GDP) per capita in the world (after Zürich, Switzerland and Oslo, Norway), according to the Brookings Institution.[5][6] Located on the southern coast of San Francisco Bay, the urbanized Santa Clara Valley within Santa Clara County contains most of the county's population. More recently, extensive droughts in California, further complicated by drainage of the Anderson reservoir within the county for seismic repairs, have strained the county's water security.[7][8]

The county's concentration of wealth, primarily due to the tech industry, has made it the most affluent county on the West Coast of the United States and the most affluent outside the Washington metropolitan area[9] and one of the most affluent places in the United States.[10]

Etymology

 
Santa Clara County Government Center in central San Jose

Santa Clara County is named for Mission Santa Clara, which was established in 1777, and was in turn named for Saint Clare of Assisi.[11]

History

Santa Clara County was one of the original counties of California, formed in 1850 at the time of statehood. The original inhabitants included the Ohlone, residing on Coyote Creek and Calaveras Creek. Part of the county's territory was given to Alameda County in 1853.

In 1882, Santa Clara County tried to levy taxes upon property of the Southern Pacific Railroad within county boundaries. The result was the U.S. Supreme Court case of Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad, 118 U.S. 394 (1886), in which the court extended due-process rights to artificial legal entities.

In the early 20th century, the area was promoted as the "Valley of the Heart's Delight" due to its natural beauty, including a significant number of orchards.[12]

The first major technology company to be based in the area was Hewlett-Packard, founded in a garage in Palo Alto in 1939. IBM selected San Jose as its West Coast headquarters in 1943. Varian Associates, Fairchild Semiconductor, and other early innovators were in the county by the late 1940s and 1950s. The U.S. Navy had a large presence in the area and began giving large contracts to Silicon Valley electronics companies. The term "Silicon Valley" was coined in 1971. The trend accelerated in the 1980s and 1990s, and agriculture has since been nearly eliminated from the northern part of the county.

Today, Santa Clara County is the headquarters for about 6500 high-technology companies, including many of the largest ones in the world, among them hardware manufacturers AMD, Nvidia, Cisco Systems, and Intel, computer and consumer electronics companies Apple Inc. and Hewlett-Packard, and internet companies eBay, Google, and Yahoo!. Most of what is considered to be Silicon Valley is within the county, although some adjoining tech regions in San Mateo (e.g., Facebook), Alameda, and Santa Cruz counties are also considered part of Silicon Valley.

Geography

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 1,304 square miles (3,380 km2), of which 14 square miles (36 km2) (1.1%) are covered by water.[13]

Counties which border with Santa Clara County are, clockwise, Alameda County, San Joaquin (within a few hundred feet at Mount Boardman), Stanislaus, Merced, San Benito, Santa Cruz, and San Mateo County. Santa Clara County formerly shared borders with Contra Costa, San Francisco, Mariposa, Monterey, and Tuolumne counties until 1853, 1856, 1874, and 1854 respectively (Monterey County currently comes within a few miles of Santa Clara).

The San Andreas Fault runs along the Santa Cruz Mountains in the south and west of the county.

National protected area

Fauna

 
Tule elk roam the Diablo Range and are often seen on Coyote Ridge from U.S. Highway 101 - courtesy Bill Leikam
 
Three tule elk just north of U. S. Highway 101 in Basking Ridge Park. The freeway is a barrier to elk migration to the Coast Range. Courtesy Craige Edgerton

Both tule elk (Cervus canadensis nannodes) and pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) were historically native to Santa Clara County. In June 1776, Lieutenant Commander Don José Joaquín Moraga led a group of soldiers and colonists from the Presidio of Monterey to establish Mission San Francisco de Asis and encountered both tule elk and pronghorn, and clearly distinguished these two species from deer.[14] The deer in California being California mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus).

Regarding elk, Moraga wrote: "In the great plain called San Bernardino (the Santa Clara Valley which stretches from south San Jose to Gilroy), while the expedition was strung out at length, we descried in the distance a herd of large animals that looked like cattle, but we could not imagine where they belonged or from whence they had come...with horns similar in shape to those of the deer, but so large that they measured sixteen palms from tip to tip." Upon measurement, Morago reported the elk horns as four varas [11 feet] across… "These animals [elk] are called ciervos in order to differentiate them from the ordinary Spanish variety of deer, here called venados, which also exist in abundance and of large size in the vicinity."[14]

Regarding pronghorn, Moraga reported: "In the said plains of San Bernardino (Santa Clara Valley)…there is another species of deer about the size of three-year-old sheep. They are similar in appearance to the deer, except they have short horns and also short legs like the sheep. They live in the plains where they go in herds of 100, 200, or more. They run all together over the plains so fast that they seem to fly…These animals are called berrendos and there are many of them also in the southern Missions wherever the country is level."[14]

Herbert Eugene Bolton also wrote of elk reports from another Spanish expedition, from the De Anza Expedition on March 23, 1776: " In Gilroy Valley (Santa Clara Valley) Moraga 's larder was replenished by three elks which the men killed without leaving the road."[15] General John Bidwell, of the 1841 Bartleson-Bidwell Party wrote: "In some of the fertile valleys, such as Napa and Santa Clara, there were elk literally by the thousand."[16]

In 1978, California Department of Fish and Game warden Henry Coletto urged the department to choose the Mount Hamilton area as one of California's relocation sites under a new statewide effort to restore tule elk. While other ranchers refused, tech pioneers Bill Hewlett and David Packard allowed Coletto and state biologists to translocate the initial 32 tule elk from the Owens Valley in the eastern Sierra onto the 28,000-acre (11,000 ha) San Felipe Ranch, which the families jointly own, in the hills east of Morgan Hill.[17] From the three original 1978–1981 translocations (totaling 65 animals) to the Mount Hamilton region of the Diablo Range, there are multiple herds in different locations including the Isabel Valley, San Antonio Valley, Livermore area, San Felipe Ranch, Metcalf Canyon, Coyote Ridge, Anderson Lake, and surrounding areas such as the Sunol and Cottonwood Creek (near San Luis Reservoir in western Merced County, California) herds.[18] As of 2012, an estimated 400 tule elk roam 1,875 square kilometres (724 sq mi) in northeastern Santa Clara County and southeastern Alameda County.[19] In March 2014 CDFW translocated nine bull elk from the San Luis National Wildlife Refuge to add genetic diversity to the San Antonio Valley Ecological Reserve herd in San Antonio Valley in extreme eastern Santa Clara County.[20] As of 2017 there were four herds in the Coyote Ridge area, often visible from U. S. Highway 101, according to Craige Edgerton, recently retired executive director of the Silicon Valley Land Conservancy and local naturalist Michael Hundt.[21] In 2019, a fifth herd of tule elk was documented by local naturalist Roger Castillo, likely having split from the Coyote Ridge herd and established itself in Silver Creek Valley around the closed Ranch Golf Club.[22] The elk herds in eastern Santa Clara County are blocked from dispersal to the west by U.S. Highway 101, with environmentalists advocating re-purposing the Metcalf Road bridge at the Coyote Gap into a wildlife overcrossing.[18] This would enable elk to recolonize rural southwestern Santa Clara County, as well as Santa Cruz and San Mateo Counties.

In 1990, the California Department of Fish and Game's Henry Coletto translocated excess pronghorn from Modoc County to six locations in California, including 51 animals to the San Felipe Ranch in Santa Clara County, where the swift-footed ungulates had not lived for generations.[23] The animals left the San Felipe Ranch for the Isabel and San Antonio Valleys, as well as an area near Lake Del Valle in Alameda County may now be extirpated by poaching, highway vehicle collisions, and insufficient numbers to defend pronghorn fawns against coyote predation.[24] As of 2012, the Isabel Valley Ranch herd had dwindled to 3 animals, and the Lake del Valle herd to 13.[25] Currently, iNaturalist.org has zero observer records of pronghorn in Santa Clara County.[26]

The Nature Conservancy "Mount Hamilton Project" has acquired or put under conservation easement 100,000 acres (40,000 ha) of land towards its 500,000 acres (200,000 ha) goal for habitat conservation within a 1,200,000 acres (490,000 ha) area encompassing much of eastern Santa Clara County as well as portions of southern Alameda County, western Merced and Stanislaus Counties, and northern San Benito County. Acquisitions to date include the 1,756-acre (711 ha) Rancho Cañada de Pala, straddling the Alameda Creek and Coyote Creek watersheds for California tiger salamander habitat; a conservation easement on the 3,259-acre Blue Oak Ranch Reserve, which abuts the north side of Joseph D. Grant County Park; a conservation easement on the 28,359-acre San Felipe Ranch, connecting Joseph D. Grant County Park with Henry W. Coe State Park; the 2,899-acre South Valley Ranch which protects a tule elk herd in the San Antonio Valley, and other properties.[27][28]

As of 1980, Santa Clara County had the highest number of Superfund Sites of any county in the United States, accounting for 25 polluted locations requiring a long-term response to clean up hazardous material contaminations.[29][30] As of 2019, Santa Clara County has 23 active Superfund Sites, still more than any other county in the United States.[31] The vast majority of these Superfund sites were caused by firms associated with the high tech sector in Silicon Valley.[32]

Demographics

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
186011,912
187026,246120.3%
188035,03933.5%
189048,00537.0%
190060,21625.4%
191083,53938.7%
1920100,67620.5%
1930145,11844.1%
1940174,94920.6%
1950290,54766.1%
1960642,315121.1%
19701,064,71465.8%
19801,295,07121.6%
19901,497,57715.6%
20001,682,58512.4%
20101,781,6425.9%
20201,936,2598.7%
U.S. Decennial Census[33]
1790–1960[34] 1900–1990[35]
1990–2000[36] 2010[37] 2020[38]

2020 census

Santa Clara County, California - Demographic Profile
(NH = Non-Hispanic)
Race / Ethnicity Pop 2010[37] Pop 2020[38] % 2010 % 2020
White alone (NH) 626,909 555,708 35.19% 28.70%
Black or African American alone (NH) 42,331 42,148 2.38% 2.18%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH) 4,042 3,240 0.23% 0.17%
Asian alone (NH) 565,466 753,399 31.74% 38.91%
Pacific Islander alone (NH) 6,252 5,945 0.35% 0.31%
Some other race alone (NH) 3,877 10,195 0.22% 0.53%
Mixed Race/multiracial (NH) 53,555 78,267 3.01% 4.04%
Hispanic or Latino (any race) 479,210 487,357 26.90% 25.17%
Total 1,781,642 1,936,259 100.00% 100.00%

Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos can be of any race.

2018

Census demographics data released in 2019 show Asian Americans have had the plurality of Santa Clara's population since 2014.[39]

2011–2014

 
Thematic map showing median household income across central Santa Clara County

As of 2013, Santa Clara County has the highest median household income of any county in California at $84,741.[40]

Places by population, race, and income

2010 census

The 2010 United States census reported that Santa Clara County had a population of 1,781,642. The racial makeup of Santa Clara County was 836,616 (47.0%) White, 46,428 (2.6%) African American, 12,960 (0.7%) Native American, 7,060 (0.4%) Pacific Islander, 570,524 (32.0%) Asian, 220,806 (12.4%) from other races, and 87,248 (4.9%) from two or more races. Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 479,210 persons (26.9% of the population).[48]

2010
Total Population 1,781,642 - 100.0%
One Race 1,694,394 - 95.1%
Not Hispanic or Latino 1,302,432 - 73.1%
White alone 626,909 - 35.2%
Black or African American alone 42,331 - 2.4%
American Indian and Alaska Native alone 4,042 - 0.2%
Asian alone 565,466 - 31.7%
Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander alone 6,252 - 0.4%
Some other race alone 3,877 - 0.2%
Two or more races alone 53,555 - 3.0%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 479,210 - 26.9%

Demographic profile[49]

The largest ancestry groups were:

2000

As of the census[50] of 2000, 1,682,585 people, 565,863 households, and 395,538 families were residing in the county. The population density was 503/km2 (1,304/mi2). The 579,329 housing units had an average density of 173/km2 (449/sq mi). The ethnic makeup of the county was 53.8% White, 2.8% African American, 0.7% Native American, 25.6% Asian, 0.3% Pacific Islander, 12.1% from other races, and 4.7% from two or more races. About 24.0% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.

Of the 565,863 households, 34.9% had children under 18 living with them, 54.9% were married couples living together, 10.0% had a female householder with no husband present, and 30.1% were not families. About 21.4% of all households were made up of individuals, and 5.9% had someone living alone who was 65 or older. The average household size was 2.92, and the average family size was 3.41.

In the county, the age distribution was 24.7% under 18, 9.3% from 18 to 24, 35.4% from 25 to 44, 21.0% from 45 to 64, and 9.5% who were 65 or older. The median age was 34 years. For every 100 females,there were 102.80 males. For every 100 females 18 and over, there were 101.90 males.

The median income for a household in the county was $74,335, and for a family was $81,717. Males had a median income of $56,240 versus $40,574 for females. The per capita income for the county was $32,795. About 4.9% of families and 7.5% of the population were below the poverty line, including 8.4% of those under age 18 and 6.4% of those age 65 or over.

2020 religion census

Santa Clara County is among the most religiously diverse counties in the US. A 2020 census by the Public Religion Research Institute (unconnected to the official US census) calculates a religious diversity score of 0.876 for Santa Clara County, where 1 represents complete diversity (each religious group of equal size) and 0 a total lack of diversity. Only four counties in the US have higher diversity scores than Santa Clara County.[51]

Government

Santa Clara County has five elected supervisors, elected within their districts.

The county is one among three counties in California (with Napa and Madera) to establish a separate department, the Santa Clara County Department of Corrections, to deal with corrections pursuant to California Government Code §23013.

The county operates the Santa Clara County Health System of medical centers and clinics.

The county also pays the $340,000 salary and benefits of the California state Department of Social Services director, which is reimbursed by the state, skirting the $165,000 state law cap for the position.[52]

In the United States House of Representatives, Santa Clara County is split among 4 congressional districts:[53]

In the California State Senate, the county is split among 4 legislative districts:[54]

In the California State Assembly, the county is split among 6 legislative districts:[55]


Voters in the county also elect a number of other officials to county-wide positions, including the Santa Clara County District Attorney, the Santa Clara County Sheriff, and a large number of criminal and civil judges that serve in courts throughout the county.

Politics

Historically, Santa Clara County was a Republican stronghold in presidential elections. From 1872 through 1984, the only Democrats to carry Santa Clara County were Franklin Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson, and Hubert Humphrey. However, 1988 would begin to mark a significant shift in the county's political leanings, starting with Michael Dukakis' narrow win and culminating in Bill Clinton's substantial 20-point victory in 1992. Since then, the Democratic presidential candidate has won Santa Clara County by large margins, and also remains solidly blue in congressional elections, as all politicians representing the county at the state and federal level are known to be Democrats . The last Republican to win a majority in the county was Ronald Reagan in 1984. While Republicans remained competitive at the state and local level throughout the 1990s, there are currently no elected Republicans representing the county above the local level.

United States presidential election results for Santa Clara County, California[56]
Year Republican Democratic Third party
No.  % No.  % No.  %
2020 214,612 25.23% 617,967 72.64% 18,162 2.13%
2016 144,826 20.58% 511,684 72.71% 47,199 6.71%
2012 174,843 27.14% 450,818 69.97% 18,616 2.89%
2008 190,039 28.55% 462,241 69.45% 13,309 2.00%
2004 209,094 34.63% 386,100 63.94% 8,622 1.43%
2000 188,750 34.44% 332,490 60.66% 26,889 4.91%
1996 168,291 32.16% 297,639 56.88% 57,361 10.96%
1992 170,870 28.38% 296,265 49.21% 134,920 22.41%
1988 254,442 46.99% 277,810 51.30% 9,276 1.71%
1984 288,638 54.81% 229,865 43.65% 8,136 1.54%
1980 229,048 48.02% 166,995 35.01% 80,960 16.97%
1976 219,188 49.46% 208,023 46.94% 15,927 3.59%
1972 237,334 51.90% 208,506 45.60% 11,453 2.50%
1968 163,446 45.61% 173,511 48.42% 21,410 5.97%
1964 117,420 36.63% 202,249 63.10% 858 0.27%
1960 131,735 52.67% 117,667 47.05% 690 0.28%
1956 105,657 59.09% 72,528 40.56% 633 0.35%
1952 91,940 59.74% 61,035 39.66% 932 0.61%
1948 52,982 53.25% 41,905 42.11% 4,615 4.64%
1944 39,409 47.04% 43,869 52.36% 499 0.60%
1940 40,100 49.20% 40,449 49.63% 947 1.16%
1936 26,498 40.41% 38,346 58.48% 732 1.12%
1932 27,353 47.54% 28,272 49.14% 1,906 3.31%
1928 31,710 63.81% 17,589 35.39% 395 0.79%
1924 20,056 58.02% 2,560 7.41% 11,952 34.58%
1920 19,565 68.09% 6,485 22.57% 2,682 9.33%
1916 16,592 50.77% 14,185 43.40% 1,904 5.83%
1912 173 0.75% 9,173 39.64% 13,793 59.61%
1908 7,950 58.88% 3,836 28.41% 1,716 12.71%
1904 8,274 66.10% 3,100 24.77% 1,143 9.13%
1900 7,107 58.25% 4,607 37.76% 486 3.98%
1896 6,315 53.51% 5,191 43.99% 295 2.50%
1892 4,620 44.48% 4,167 40.12% 1,600 15.40%
1888 4,457 49.94% 3,972 44.51% 495 5.55%
1884 3,840 52.91% 3,172 43.70% 246 3.39%
1880 3,113 51.50% 2,821 46.67% 111 1.84%
Gubernatorial election results
Santa Clara County vote
by party in gubernatorial elections
Year GOP DEM
2018 28.6% 175,791 71.4% 438,758
2014 27.1% 107,113 72.9% 288,732
2010 34.9% 178,695 61.3% 314,022
2006 52.2% 225,132 42.9% 185,037
2003 39.2% 160,807 39.9% 163,768
2002 32.4% 116,862 55.3% 199,399
1998 31.7% 133,015 64.3% 270,105
1994 47.5% 212,075 47.5% 211,904
1990 42.6% 178,310 52.2% 218,843
1986 59.9% 227,285 37.6% 142,907
1982 44.0% 180,232 52.9% 216,781
1978 29.8% 110,444 61.4% 227,493
1974 46.7% 153,761 50.6% 166,760
1970 51.5% 172,562 46.1% 154,570
1966 55.4% 164,970 44.6% 132,793
1962 47.6% 112,700 51.2% 121,149

According to the California Secretary of State, as of February 10, 2019, Santa Clara County has 895,965 registered voters. Of those, 405,470 (45.3%) are registered Democrats, 151,213 (16.9%) are registered Republicans, and 308,769 (35.4%) have declined to state a political party.[57]

As of November 2012, all of the cities, towns, and the unincorporated areas of Santa Clara County have more registered Democrats than Republicans.[58] In the 2008 US Presidential Election, Democratic nominee Barack Obama carried every city and town in the county, as well as the unincorporated areas.[59]

Following the passage of Proposition 8, Santa Clara County joined San Francisco and Los Angeles in a lawsuit, becoming, along with San Francisco and Los Angeles, the first governmental entities in the world to sue for same-sex marriage.[60]

Voter registration

Cities by population and voter registration

Crime

The following table includes the number of incidents reported in 2009 and the rate per 1,000 persons for each type of offense. Law Enforcement in Santa Clara County is handled by the Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office and local police departments.

Cities by population and crime rates

Economy

The county's economy is heavily services-based. Technology, both hardware and software, dominates the service sector by value, but like any other county, Santa Clara has its share of retail and office support workers.

The San Jose/Sunnyvale/Santa Clara metropolitan region, comprising Santa Clara County and San Benito County, was ranked as the highest performing metropolitan area in the US in 2012, ahead of Austin, Texas and Raleigh, North Carolina, according to the Milken Institute.[64] The GDP of the metro area reached $176.7 billion in 2011, or $94,587 per capita,[65] roughly on par with Qatar in both total GDP and per capita (nominal).[66] GDP grew a strong 7.7% in 2011, and in contrast with most of California, GDP and per capita GDP (nominal) is well above 2007 (financial crisis) levels. Despite relative wealth vis a vis other regions nationally, a large underclass exists whose income is roughly equivalent to that elsewhere in the country, despite extreme land prices. The surge in metro GDP is highly correlated with home prices, which for average single-family homes passed $1 million ($1,017,528) in August 2013.[67] As of the fourth quarter of 2021, the median value of homes in Santa Clara County was $1,253,400, an increase of 11.9% from the prior year, and ranking fourth in the US for highest median home value.[68]

Education

K-12 schools

School districts include:[69]

Unified
Secondary
Elementary
Defunct

Libraries

Santa Clara County Library is a public library system serving the communities and cities of Campbell, Cupertino, Gilroy, Los Altos, Los Altos Hills, Milpitas, Monte Sereno, Morgan Hill, Saratoga, and all unincorporated areas of the county.[70] Other cities run their own library systems.

Transportation

Air

 
San Jose International Airport is ranked as the best-run airport in the United States by the ACBJ.[71]

The county's main airport is Norman Y. Mineta San José International Airport (SJC). It is a U.S. Customs and Border Protection port of entry[72] and as of 2019 has five international routes (two to Canada, one to England, one to Japan, seven to Mexico, and one to China) but the airport's busiest routes are all to cities in the western United States. San Francisco International Airport (SFO) is also often used for commercial services by residents of Santa Clara County.

Moffett Federal Airfield (NUQ), a former U.S. Naval Air Station, is used by the Air National Guard, NASA, Lockheed Martin, Google, and by the San Jose Police and Santa Clara County Sheriff's Department as an air operations base.[73] There are also smaller general aviation airports in Palo Alto (PAO), San Jose (Reid-Hillview) (RHV), and San Martin(E16)

Rail

 
 
The VTA light rail serves 11 million people annually in Silicon Valley

Santa Clara County is served by Caltrain commuter rail from Gilroy through San Jose and Silicon Valley north to San Francisco Airport and San Francisco. The Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority operates the VTA light rail system, which primarily serves San Jose, with one line continuing as far north as Mountain View. Santa Clara and San Jose are also served by the Altamont Corridor Express commuter rail line which provides services to Stockton, and Amtrak which provides service to Sacramento and Oakland. The Amtrak Coast Starlight train between Seattle and Los Angeles also stops in San Jose. BART currently services Milpitas and North San Jose, with plans to extend to downtown San Jose and Santa Clara.

Road

 
VTA bus arriving at Foothill College in Los Altos Hills

Buses

Santa Clara County has consolidated its transportation services into the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority, which operates a bus system.

Bicycle network

The Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority is establishing a bicycle network throughout the county. Santa Clara County Bicycle network is part of the San Francisco Bay Area Regional Bikeway Network.

  • Bikeways Map (Effective April 2011)

Freeways and expressways

The county has an extensive freeway system and a separate expressway system (though it's not as extensive as those in Southern California). Expressways in California are distinct from freeways; although access to adjoining properties is eliminated, at-grade intersections are allowed. However, unlike expressways virtually everywhere else in California, the Santa Clara County expressways were built, signed, and maintained as county roads; they are not maintained by Caltrans, although they are patrolled by the California Highway Patrol.

There is also a large street network dominated by four- and six-lane arterials. Some of the newer boulevards (primarily in the West Valley) are divided with landscaped medians.

Major highways
County routes
Other roads

Sea

The county has no commercial seaports, although small boats can access San Francisco Bay from several points. Like many other Bay Area counties, it is dependent upon the Port of Oakland for transport of ocean cargo.

Jails

Santa Clara County Department of Correction is administered by the county's sheriff's office and supervises the following facilities:

  • Santa Clara County Main Jail[74]
    • Main Jail South (up to 674 men)
    • Main Jail North (up to 919 men)
  • Elmwood Correctional Facility (up to 600 women, 2,500 men)[75]
  • North County Jail (day use only for Palo Alto courthouse)
  • Juvenile Detention[76]
    • Santa Clara County Juvenile Hall (up to 390 boys and girls)
    • William F. James Boys Ranch (up to 96 teenage boys)

Parks

Santa Clara County has an extensive park system, much of it founded in the major park expansion of the late 1970s. Parks within the county include:

Open space preserves include:

Santa Clara County also contains Ulistac Natural Area, a volunteer maintained natural open space. Foreign and invasive species are removed when possible as native plants are introduced. Migratory birds and butterflies often use this area.

Climate

Santa Clara County
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
30
 
 
13
4
 
 
51
 
 
15
4
 
 
46
 
 
20
6
 
 
28
 
 
24
7
 
 
1
 
 
31
12
 
 
2
 
 
37
14
 
 
1
 
 
38
15
 
 
1
 
 
37
17
 
 
4
 
 
34
14
 
 
9
 
 
28
10
 
 
63
 
 
18
7
 
 
106
 
 
13
4
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm
Source: [77]
Imperial conversion
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
1.2
 
 
55
39
 
 
2
 
 
59
39
 
 
1.8
 
 
68
43
 
 
1.1
 
 
75
45
 
 
0
 
 
88
54
 
 
0.1
 
 
99
57
 
 
0
 
 
100
59
 
 
0
 
 
99
63
 
 
0.2
 
 
93
57
 
 
0.4
 
 
82
50
 
 
2.5
 
 
64
45
 
 
4.2
 
 
55
39
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches

Sister counties

To promote friendship and understanding and to build bridges with countries of origin for various ethnic populations in the county, the County of Santa Clara has created a Sister County Commission to coordinate the program. As of 2009, there are three sister counties:[78]

Communities

 
Los Altos is the 3rd most expensive zip code in the United States.[79]
 
Palo Alto is the 5th most educated city[80] and the 5th most expensive zip code in the United States.[81]
 
Morgan Hill is the 17th most expensive place to live in the United States.[85]
 
Los Gatos is the 33rd wealthiest city in the United States.[84]
 
Saratoga is the 16th most educated and the 8th wealthiest city in the United States.[82][83]

Cities

There are 15 incorporated places in Santa Clara County:

Towns

Census-designated places

Unincorporated communities

Census county divisions

Former townships

Population ranking

The population ranking of the following table is based on the 2020 census of Santa Clara County.[86]

county seat

Rank City/Town/etc. Municipal type Population (2020 Census)
1 San Jose City 1,013,240
2 Sunnyvale City 155,805
3 Santa Clara City 127,647
4 Mountain View City 82,376
5 Milpitas City 80,273
6 Palo Alto City 68,572
7 Cupertino City 60,381
8 Gilroy City 59,520
9 Morgan Hill City 44,686
10 Campbell City 43,959
11 Los Gatos Town 33,529
12 Los Altos City 31,625
13 Saratoga City 31,051
14 Stanford CDP 21,150
15 Alum Rock CDP 12,042
16 Los Altos Hills Town 8,489
17 San Martin CDP 7,008
18 East Foothills CDP 6,803
19 Burbank CDP 4,940
20 Cambrian Park CDP 3,719
21 Loyola CDP 3,491
22 Monte Sereno City 3,479
23 Lexington Hills CDP 2,492
24 Fruitdale CDP 989

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Other = Some other race + Two or more races
  2. ^ Native American = Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander + American Indian or Alaska Native
  3. ^ a b Percentage of registered voters with respect to total population. Percentages of party members with respect to registered voters follow.
  4. ^ Only larceny-theft cases involving property over $400 in value are reported as property crimes.

References

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External links

  • Official website
    • Santa Clara County Planning Office
  • Santa Clara Valley Water District - Drinking Water
  • List of special districts in Santa Clara County (LAFCo)
  • Santa Clara County Library
  • Santa Clara County: California's Historic Silicon Valley, a National Park Service Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary

santa, clara, county, california, santa, clara, county, officially, county, santa, clara, sixth, most, populous, county, state, california, with, population, 2020, census, santa, clara, county, neighboring, benito, county, together, form, census, bureau, jose,. Santa Clara County officially the County of Santa Clara is the sixth most populous county in the U S state of California with a population of 1 936 259 as of the 2020 census 4 Santa Clara County and neighboring San Benito County together form the U S Census Bureau s San Jose Sunnyvale Santa Clara metropolitan statistical area which is part of the larger San Jose San Francisco Oakland combined statistical area Santa Clara is the most populous county in the San Francisco Bay Area and in Northern California The county seat and largest city is San Jose with about 1 000 000 residents it is the 10th most populous city in the United States California s third most populous city and the most populous city in the San Francisco Bay Area The second and third largest cities are Sunnyvale and Santa Clara Santa Clara CountyCountyClockwise Downtown San Jose skyline Hillsides in Morgan Hill Alviso San Jose View of Santa Clara Valley Almaden Reservoir in South San Jose Stanford University FlagSealInteractive map of Santa Clara CountyLocation in the state of CaliforniaCoordinates 37 14 N 121 43 W 37 233 N 121 717 W 37 233 121 717 Coordinates 37 14 N 121 43 W 37 233 N 121 717 W 37 233 121 717CountryUnited StatesStateCaliforniaRegionSan Francisco Bay AreaIncorporatedFebruary 18 1850 1 Named forMission Santa Clara de Asis St Clare of AssisiCounty seatand largest citySan JoseGovernment TypeCouncil CEO BodyBoard of Supervisors Board PresidentSusan Ellenberg Board Vice PresidentOtto Lee Board of Supervisors 2 Supervisors Sylvia ArenasCindy ChavezOtto LeeSusan EllenbergJoe Simitian Chief executive officerJeffrey V Smith M D J D Area Total1 304 sq mi 3 380 km2 Land1 290 sq mi 3 300 km2 Water14 sq mi 40 km2 Highest elevation 3 4 216 ft 1 285 m Population 2020 4 Total1 936 259 Density1 500 sq mi 570 km2 Time zoneUTC 8 Pacific Summer DST UTC 7 Pacific Daylight Time Area codes408 669 650FIPS code06 085GNIS feature ID277307Websitewww wbr sccgov wbr orgHome to Silicon Valley Santa Clara County is an economic center for high technology and in 2015 had the third highest gross domestic product GDP per capita in the world after Zurich Switzerland and Oslo Norway according to the Brookings Institution 5 6 Located on the southern coast of San Francisco Bay the urbanized Santa Clara Valley within Santa Clara County contains most of the county s population More recently extensive droughts in California further complicated by drainage of the Anderson reservoir within the county for seismic repairs have strained the county s water security 7 8 The county s concentration of wealth primarily due to the tech industry has made it the most affluent county on the West Coast of the United States and the most affluent outside the Washington metropolitan area 9 and one of the most affluent places in the United States 10 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Geography 3 1 National protected area 3 2 Fauna 4 Demographics 4 1 2020 census 4 2 2018 4 3 2011 2014 4 3 1 Places by population race and income 4 4 2010 census 4 5 2000 4 6 2020 religion census 5 Government 6 Politics 6 1 Voter registration 6 1 1 Cities by population and voter registration 7 Crime 7 1 Cities by population and crime rates 8 Economy 9 Education 9 1 K 12 schools 9 2 Libraries 10 Transportation 10 1 Air 10 2 Rail 10 3 Road 10 3 1 Buses 10 3 2 Bicycle network 10 3 3 Freeways and expressways 10 3 3 1 Major highways 10 3 3 2 County routes 10 3 3 3 Other roads 10 4 Sea 11 Jails 12 Parks 13 Climate 14 Sister counties 15 Communities 15 1 Cities 15 2 Towns 15 3 Census designated places 15 4 Unincorporated communities 15 5 Census county divisions 15 6 Former townships 15 7 Population ranking 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 External linksEtymology Edit Santa Clara County Government Center in central San Jose Santa Clara County is named for Mission Santa Clara which was established in 1777 and was in turn named for Saint Clare of Assisi 11 History EditMain article History of Santa Clara County California Mission Santa Clara de Asis in 1849 Santa Clara County was one of the original counties of California formed in 1850 at the time of statehood The original inhabitants included the Ohlone residing on Coyote Creek and Calaveras Creek Part of the county s territory was given to Alameda County in 1853 In 1882 Santa Clara County tried to levy taxes upon property of the Southern Pacific Railroad within county boundaries The result was the U S Supreme Court case of Santa Clara County v Southern Pacific Railroad 118 U S 394 1886 in which the court extended due process rights to artificial legal entities In the early 20th century the area was promoted as the Valley of the Heart s Delight due to its natural beauty including a significant number of orchards 12 The first major technology company to be based in the area was Hewlett Packard founded in a garage in Palo Alto in 1939 IBM selected San Jose as its West Coast headquarters in 1943 Varian Associates Fairchild Semiconductor and other early innovators were in the county by the late 1940s and 1950s The U S Navy had a large presence in the area and began giving large contracts to Silicon Valley electronics companies The term Silicon Valley was coined in 1971 The trend accelerated in the 1980s and 1990s and agriculture has since been nearly eliminated from the northern part of the county Today Santa Clara County is the headquarters for about 6500 high technology companies including many of the largest ones in the world among them hardware manufacturers AMD Nvidia Cisco Systems and Intel computer and consumer electronics companies Apple Inc and Hewlett Packard and internet companies eBay Google and Yahoo Most of what is considered to be Silicon Valley is within the county although some adjoining tech regions in San Mateo e g Facebook Alameda and Santa Cruz counties are also considered part of Silicon Valley Geography EditAccording to the U S Census Bureau the county has a total area of 1 304 square miles 3 380 km2 of which 14 square miles 36 km2 1 1 are covered by water 13 Counties which border with Santa Clara County are clockwise Alameda County San Joaquin within a few hundred feet at Mount Boardman Stanislaus Merced San Benito Santa Cruz and San Mateo County Santa Clara County formerly shared borders with Contra Costa San Francisco Mariposa Monterey and Tuolumne counties until 1853 1856 1874 and 1854 respectively Monterey County currently comes within a few miles of Santa Clara The San Andreas Fault runs along the Santa Cruz Mountains in the south and west of the county National protected area Edit Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge part Fauna Edit Tule elk roam the Diablo Range and are often seen on Coyote Ridge from U S Highway 101 courtesy Bill Leikam Three tule elk just north of U S Highway 101 in Basking Ridge Park The freeway is a barrier to elk migration to the Coast Range Courtesy Craige Edgerton Both tule elk Cervus canadensis nannodes and pronghorn Antilocapra americana were historically native to Santa Clara County In June 1776 Lieutenant Commander Don Jose Joaquin Moraga led a group of soldiers and colonists from the Presidio of Monterey to establish Mission San Francisco de Asis and encountered both tule elk and pronghorn and clearly distinguished these two species from deer 14 The deer in California being California mule deer Odocoileus hemionus Regarding elk Moraga wrote In the great plain called San Bernardino the Santa Clara Valley which stretches from south San Jose to Gilroy while the expedition was strung out at length we descried in the distance a herd of large animals that looked like cattle but we could not imagine where they belonged or from whence they had come with horns similar in shape to those of the deer but so large that they measured sixteen palms from tip to tip Upon measurement Morago reported the elk horns as four varas 11 feet across These animals elk are called ciervos in order to differentiate them from the ordinary Spanish variety of deer here called venados which also exist in abundance and of large size in the vicinity 14 Regarding pronghorn Moraga reported In the said plains of San Bernardino Santa Clara Valley there is another species of deer about the size of three year old sheep They are similar in appearance to the deer except they have short horns and also short legs like the sheep They live in the plains where they go in herds of 100 200 or more They run all together over the plains so fast that they seem to fly These animals are called berrendos and there are many of them also in the southern Missions wherever the country is level 14 Herbert Eugene Bolton also wrote of elk reports from another Spanish expedition from the De Anza Expedition on March 23 1776 In Gilroy Valley Santa Clara Valley Moraga s larder was replenished by three elks which the men killed without leaving the road 15 General John Bidwell of the 1841 Bartleson Bidwell Party wrote In some of the fertile valleys such as Napa and Santa Clara there were elk literally by the thousand 16 In 1978 California Department of Fish and Game warden Henry Coletto urged the department to choose the Mount Hamilton area as one of California s relocation sites under a new statewide effort to restore tule elk While other ranchers refused tech pioneers Bill Hewlett and David Packard allowed Coletto and state biologists to translocate the initial 32 tule elk from the Owens Valley in the eastern Sierra onto the 28 000 acre 11 000 ha San Felipe Ranch which the families jointly own in the hills east of Morgan Hill 17 From the three original 1978 1981 translocations totaling 65 animals to the Mount Hamilton region of the Diablo Range there are multiple herds in different locations including the Isabel Valley San Antonio Valley Livermore area San Felipe Ranch Metcalf Canyon Coyote Ridge Anderson Lake and surrounding areas such as the Sunol and Cottonwood Creek near San Luis Reservoir in western Merced County California herds 18 As of 2012 update an estimated 400 tule elk roam 1 875 square kilometres 724 sq mi in northeastern Santa Clara County and southeastern Alameda County 19 In March 2014 CDFW translocated nine bull elk from the San Luis National Wildlife Refuge to add genetic diversity to the San Antonio Valley Ecological Reserve herd in San Antonio Valley in extreme eastern Santa Clara County 20 As of 2017 there were four herds in the Coyote Ridge area often visible from U S Highway 101 according to Craige Edgerton recently retired executive director of the Silicon Valley Land Conservancy and local naturalist Michael Hundt 21 In 2019 a fifth herd of tule elk was documented by local naturalist Roger Castillo likely having split from the Coyote Ridge herd and established itself in Silver Creek Valley around the closed Ranch Golf Club 22 The elk herds in eastern Santa Clara County are blocked from dispersal to the west by U S Highway 101 with environmentalists advocating re purposing the Metcalf Road bridge at the Coyote Gap into a wildlife overcrossing 18 This would enable elk to recolonize rural southwestern Santa Clara County as well as Santa Cruz and San Mateo Counties In 1990 the California Department of Fish and Game s Henry Coletto translocated excess pronghorn from Modoc County to six locations in California including 51 animals to the San Felipe Ranch in Santa Clara County where the swift footed ungulates had not lived for generations 23 The animals left the San Felipe Ranch for the Isabel and San Antonio Valleys as well as an area near Lake Del Valle in Alameda County may now be extirpated by poaching highway vehicle collisions and insufficient numbers to defend pronghorn fawns against coyote predation 24 As of 2012 the Isabel Valley Ranch herd had dwindled to 3 animals and the Lake del Valle herd to 13 25 Currently iNaturalist org has zero observer records of pronghorn in Santa Clara County 26 The Nature Conservancy Mount Hamilton Project has acquired or put under conservation easement 100 000 acres 40 000 ha of land towards its 500 000 acres 200 000 ha goal for habitat conservation within a 1 200 000 acres 490 000 ha area encompassing much of eastern Santa Clara County as well as portions of southern Alameda County western Merced and Stanislaus Counties and northern San Benito County Acquisitions to date include the 1 756 acre 711 ha Rancho Canada de Pala straddling the Alameda Creek and Coyote Creek watersheds for California tiger salamander habitat a conservation easement on the 3 259 acre Blue Oak Ranch Reserve which abuts the north side of Joseph D Grant County Park a conservation easement on the 28 359 acre San Felipe Ranch connecting Joseph D Grant County Park with Henry W Coe State Park the 2 899 acre South Valley Ranch which protects a tule elk herd in the San Antonio Valley and other properties 27 28 As of 1980 Santa Clara County had the highest number of Superfund Sites of any county in the United States accounting for 25 polluted locations requiring a long term response to clean up hazardous material contaminations 29 30 As of 2019 update Santa Clara County has 23 active Superfund Sites still more than any other county in the United States 31 The vast majority of these Superfund sites were caused by firms associated with the high tech sector in Silicon Valley 32 Demographics EditHistorical population CensusPop Note 186011 912 187026 246120 3 188035 03933 5 189048 00537 0 190060 21625 4 191083 53938 7 1920100 67620 5 1930145 11844 1 1940174 94920 6 1950290 54766 1 1960642 315121 1 19701 064 71465 8 19801 295 07121 6 19901 497 57715 6 20001 682 58512 4 20101 781 6425 9 20201 936 2598 7 U S Decennial Census 33 1790 1960 34 1900 1990 35 1990 2000 36 2010 37 2020 38 2020 census Edit Santa Clara County California Demographic Profile NH Non Hispanic Race Ethnicity Pop 2010 37 Pop 2020 38 2010 2020White alone NH 626 909 555 708 35 19 28 70 Black or African American alone NH 42 331 42 148 2 38 2 18 Native American or Alaska Native alone NH 4 042 3 240 0 23 0 17 Asian alone NH 565 466 753 399 31 74 38 91 Pacific Islander alone NH 6 252 5 945 0 35 0 31 Some other race alone NH 3 877 10 195 0 22 0 53 Mixed Race multiracial NH 53 555 78 267 3 01 4 04 Hispanic or Latino any race 479 210 487 357 26 90 25 17 Total 1 781 642 1 936 259 100 00 100 00 Note the US Census treats Hispanic Latino as an ethnic category This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category Hispanics Latinos can be of any race 2018 Edit Census demographics data released in 2019 show Asian Americans have had the plurality of Santa Clara s population since 2014 39 2011 2014 Edit Thematic map showing median household income across central Santa Clara County As of 2013 Santa Clara County has the highest median household income of any county in California at 84 741 40 Population race and incomeTotal population 41 1 762 754 White 41 896 937 50 9 Black or African American 41 45 219 2 6 American Indian or Alaska Native 41 9 906 0 6 Asian 41 560 362 31 8 Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander 41 6 445 0 4 Some other race 41 171 082 9 7 Two or more races 41 72 803 4 1 Hispanic or Latino of any race 42 468 262 26 6 Per capita income 43 40 698Median household income 44 89 064Median family income 45 103 255Places by population race and income Edit Places by population and racePlace Type 46 Population 41 White 41 Other 41 note 1 Asian 41 Black or AfricanAmerican 41 Native American 41 note 2 Hispanic or Latino of any race 42 Alum Rock CDP 11 814 60 5 25 7 11 3 2 0 0 5 73 0 Burbank CDP 5 827 67 3 19 2 11 6 1 5 0 3 48 5 Cambrian Park CDP 3 581 78 6 9 0 3 9 0 3 8 2 16 8 Campbell City 39 108 68 7 12 0 16 9 1 4 0 9 16 8 Cupertino City 57 459 34 6 3 9 60 7 0 4 0 4 4 3 East Foothills CDP 6 983 67 3 17 4 13 4 1 9 0 1 31 4 Fruitdale CDP 1 087 82 9 1 0 9 6 3 2 3 3 7 2 Gilroy City 47 808 70 4 19 3 6 4 2 0 1 9 56 0 Lexington Hills CDP 2 298 88 7 3 4 6 4 0 4 1 1 2 3 Los Altos City 28 752 71 4 6 2 21 6 0 6 0 3 5 9 Los Altos Hills Town 7 912 66 2 1 9 31 7 0 1 0 0 1 9 Los Gatos Town 29 165 84 0 4 3 9 2 1 6 0 8 5 6 Loyola CDP 3 747 74 0 3 9 20 9 0 0 1 2 2 3 Milpitas City 66 038 21 8 14 6 59 0 3 5 1 1 17 1 Monte Sereno City 3 338 80 0 3 5 14 3 2 2 0 0 6 1 Morgan Hill City 37 278 69 2 15 9 11 5 2 4 1 0 34 9 Mountain View City 73 394 58 8 12 8 25 1 2 6 0 8 21 0 Palo Alto City 63 475 65 5 5 5 25 4 3 3 0 3 7 6 San Jose City 939 688 47 6 16 2 32 1 3 0 1 0 33 0 San Martin CDP 6 799 66 8 21 0 10 5 0 8 0 9 39 3 Santa Clara City 114 482 46 0 12 0 38 2 2 5 1 3 19 4 Saratoga City 29 781 51 8 3 6 44 0 0 5 0 1 3 0 Stanford CDP 13 416 59 9 8 3 26 2 4 6 1 0 12 2 Sunnyvale City 138 436 44 6 12 3 40 6 1 8 0 8 17 8 Places by population and incomePlace Type 46 Population 47 Per capita income 43 Median household income 44 Median family income 45 Alum Rock CDP 11 814 19 409 62 884 63 098Burbank CDP 5 827 30 919 51 623 50 720Cambrian Park CDP 3 581 44 782 102 825 110 054Campbell City 39 108 44 354 82 687 97 703Cupertino City 57 459 51 965 124 825 146 601East Foothills CDP 6 983 41 571 105 050 111 250Fruitdale CDP 1 087 57 675 76 058 100 508Gilroy City 47 808 28 719 75 483 86 658Lexington Hills CDP 2 298 74 185 126 696 157 632Los Altos City 28 752 77 267 151 856 180 238Los Altos Hills Town 7 912 109 694 218 077 230 000Los Gatos Town 29 165 69 134 122 875 156 197Loyola CDP 3 747 87 773 190 724 189 583Milpitas City 66 038 32 465 94 589 100 768Monte Sereno City 3 338 94 727 181 719 245 417Morgan Hill City 37 278 39 433 94 301 106 659Mountain View City 73 394 51 635 91 446 110 657Palo Alto City 63 475 72 199 122 532 161 373San Jose City 939 688 33 770 80 764 89 500San Martin CDP 6 799 37 094 77 188 87 731Santa Clara City 114 482 39 523 89 004 105 100Saratoga City 29 781 71 223 155 182 183 776Stanford CDP 13 416 31 942 60 189 161 818Sunnyvale City 138 436 44 617 93 292 106 9222010 census Edit The 2010 United States census reported that Santa Clara County had a population of 1 781 642 The racial makeup of Santa Clara County was 836 616 47 0 White 46 428 2 6 African American 12 960 0 7 Native American 7 060 0 4 Pacific Islander 570 524 32 0 Asian 220 806 12 4 from other races and 87 248 4 9 from two or more races Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 479 210 persons 26 9 of the population 48 2010Total Population 1 781 642 100 0 One Race 1 694 394 95 1 Not Hispanic or Latino 1 302 432 73 1 White alone 626 909 35 2 Black or African American alone 42 331 2 4 American Indian and Alaska Native alone 4 042 0 2 Asian alone 565 466 31 7 Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander alone 6 252 0 4 Some other race alone 3 877 0 2 Two or more races alone 53 555 3 0 Hispanic or Latino of any race 479 210 26 9 Demographic profile 49 The largest ancestry groups were 22 5 Mexican 8 6 Chinese 8 2 German 7 1 Vietnamese 6 6 Indian 6 0 English 6 0 Irish 4 9 Filipino 4 6 Italian 2 0 French 1 6 Portuguese 1 6 Korean 1 4 American 1 4 Japanese 1 4 Scottish 1 2 Polish 1 2 Swedish 1 1 Russian 1 1 Norwegian 1 0 Dutch Population reported at 2010 United States CensusThe County TotalPopulation White AfricanAmerican NativeAmerican Asian PacificIslander otherraces two ormore races Hispanicor Latino of any race Santa Clara County 1 781 642 836 616 46 428 12 960 570 524 7 060 220 806 87 248 479 210Incorporatedcities and towns TotalPopulation White AfricanAmerican NativeAmerican Asian PacificIslander otherraces two ormore races Hispanicor Latino of any race Campbell 39 349 26 315 1 158 275 6 320 161 2 713 2 407 7 247Cupertino 58 302 18 270 344 117 36 895 54 670 1 952 2 113Gilroy 48 821 28 674 942 831 3 448 111 12 322 2 493 28 214Los Altos 28 976 20 459 148 48 6 815 59 195 1 252 1 132Los Altos Hills 7 922 5 417 37 4 2 109 8 50 297 213Los Gatos 29 413 24 060 269 86 3 203 52 462 1 281 2 120Milpitas 66 790 13 725 1 969 309 41 536 346 5 811 3 094 11 240Monte Sereno 3 341 2 698 14 12 464 0 28 125 162Morgan Hill 37 882 24 713 746 335 3 852 125 5 779 2 332 12 863Mountain View 74 066 41 468 1 629 344 19 232 391 7 241 3 761 16 071Palo Alto 64 403 41 359 1 197 121 17 461 142 1 426 2 697 3 974San Jose 945 942 404 437 30 242 8 297 303 138 4 017 148 749 47 062 313 636Santa Clara 116 468 52 359 3 154 579 43 889 651 9 624 6 212 22 589Saratoga 29 926 16 125 94 41 12 376 23 202 1 065 1 034Sunnyvale 140 081 60 193 2 735 662 57 320 638 12 177 6 356 26 517Census designatedplaces TotalPopulation White AfricanAmerican NativeAmerican Asian PacificIslander otherraces two ormore races Hispanicor Latino of any race Alum Rock 15 536 6 581 207 298 2 039 70 5 466 875 10 977Burbank 4 926 2 994 135 64 379 16 1 049 289 2 509Cambrian Park 3 282 2 598 26 29 221 19 190 199 591East Foothills 8 269 4 853 205 78 1 445 41 1 219 428 3 118Fruitdale 935 633 31 11 110 4 88 58 244Lexington Hills 2 421 2 148 10 5 90 0 59 109 193Loyola 3 261 2 291 19 1 760 2 37 151 114San Martin 7 027 4 329 27 71 470 18 1 752 360 3 249Stanford 13 809 7 932 651 86 3 777 28 263 1 072 1 439Otherunincorporated areas TotalPopulation White AfricanAmerican NativeAmerican Asian PacificIslander otherraces two ormore races Hispanicor Latino of any race All others not CDPs combined 30 494 21 985 439 256 3 175 84 3 234 1 321 7 6512000 Edit As of the census 50 of 2000 1 682 585 people 565 863 households and 395 538 families were residing in the county The population density was 503 km2 1 304 mi2 The 579 329 housing units had an average density of 173 km2 449 sq mi The ethnic makeup of the county was 53 8 White 2 8 African American 0 7 Native American 25 6 Asian 0 3 Pacific Islander 12 1 from other races and 4 7 from two or more races About 24 0 of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race Of the 565 863 households 34 9 had children under 18 living with them 54 9 were married couples living together 10 0 had a female householder with no husband present and 30 1 were not families About 21 4 of all households were made up of individuals and 5 9 had someone living alone who was 65 or older The average household size was 2 92 and the average family size was 3 41 In the county the age distribution was 24 7 under 18 9 3 from 18 to 24 35 4 from 25 to 44 21 0 from 45 to 64 and 9 5 who were 65 or older The median age was 34 years For every 100 females there were 102 80 males For every 100 females 18 and over there were 101 90 males The median income for a household in the county was 74 335 and for a family was 81 717 Males had a median income of 56 240 versus 40 574 for females The per capita income for the county was 32 795 About 4 9 of families and 7 5 of the population were below the poverty line including 8 4 of those under age 18 and 6 4 of those age 65 or over 2020 religion census Edit Santa Clara County is among the most religiously diverse counties in the US A 2020 census by the Public Religion Research Institute unconnected to the official US census calculates a religious diversity score of 0 876 for Santa Clara County where 1 represents complete diversity each religious group of equal size and 0 a total lack of diversity Only four counties in the US have higher diversity scores than Santa Clara County 51 Government EditSanta Clara County has five elected supervisors elected within their districts The county is one among three counties in California with Napa and Madera to establish a separate department the Santa Clara County Department of Corrections to deal with corrections pursuant to California Government Code 23013 The county operates the Santa Clara County Health System of medical centers and clinics The county also pays the 340 000 salary and benefits of the California state Department of Social Services director which is reimbursed by the state skirting the 165 000 state law cap for the position 52 In the United States House of Representatives Santa Clara County is split among 4 congressional districts 53 California s 16th congressional district represented by Democrat Anna Eshoo California s 17th congressional district represented by Democrat Ro Khanna California s 18th congressional district represented by Democrat Zoe Lofgren and California s 19th congressional district represented by Democrat Jimmy Panetta In the California State Senate the county is split among 4 legislative districts 54 the 10th Senate District represented by Democrat Aisha Wahab the 13th Senate District represented by Democrat Josh Becker the 15th Senate District represented by Democrat Dave Cortese and the 17th Senate District represented by Democrat John Laird In the California State Assembly the county is split among 6 legislative districts 55 the 23rd Assembly District represented by Democrat Marc Berman the 24th Assembly District represented by Democrat Alex Lee the 25th Assembly District represented by Democrat Ash Kalra the 26th Assembly District represented by Democrat Evan Low the 28th Assembly District represented by Democrat Gail Pellerin and the 29th Assembly District represented by Democrat Robert Rivas Voters in the county also elect a number of other officials to county wide positions including the Santa Clara County District Attorney the Santa Clara County Sheriff and a large number of criminal and civil judges that serve in courts throughout the county Politics EditHistorically Santa Clara County was a Republican stronghold in presidential elections From 1872 through 1984 the only Democrats to carry Santa Clara County were Franklin Roosevelt Lyndon Johnson and Hubert Humphrey However 1988 would begin to mark a significant shift in the county s political leanings starting with Michael Dukakis narrow win and culminating in Bill Clinton s substantial 20 point victory in 1992 Since then the Democratic presidential candidate has won Santa Clara County by large margins and also remains solidly blue in congressional elections as all politicians representing the county at the state and federal level are known to be Democrats The last Republican to win a majority in the county was Ronald Reagan in 1984 While Republicans remained competitive at the state and local level throughout the 1990s there are currently no elected Republicans representing the county above the local level United States presidential election results for Santa Clara County California 56 Year Republican Democratic Third partyNo No No 2020 214 612 25 23 617 967 72 64 18 162 2 13 2016 144 826 20 58 511 684 72 71 47 199 6 71 2012 174 843 27 14 450 818 69 97 18 616 2 89 2008 190 039 28 55 462 241 69 45 13 309 2 00 2004 209 094 34 63 386 100 63 94 8 622 1 43 2000 188 750 34 44 332 490 60 66 26 889 4 91 1996 168 291 32 16 297 639 56 88 57 361 10 96 1992 170 870 28 38 296 265 49 21 134 920 22 41 1988 254 442 46 99 277 810 51 30 9 276 1 71 1984 288 638 54 81 229 865 43 65 8 136 1 54 1980 229 048 48 02 166 995 35 01 80 960 16 97 1976 219 188 49 46 208 023 46 94 15 927 3 59 1972 237 334 51 90 208 506 45 60 11 453 2 50 1968 163 446 45 61 173 511 48 42 21 410 5 97 1964 117 420 36 63 202 249 63 10 858 0 27 1960 131 735 52 67 117 667 47 05 690 0 28 1956 105 657 59 09 72 528 40 56 633 0 35 1952 91 940 59 74 61 035 39 66 932 0 61 1948 52 982 53 25 41 905 42 11 4 615 4 64 1944 39 409 47 04 43 869 52 36 499 0 60 1940 40 100 49 20 40 449 49 63 947 1 16 1936 26 498 40 41 38 346 58 48 732 1 12 1932 27 353 47 54 28 272 49 14 1 906 3 31 1928 31 710 63 81 17 589 35 39 395 0 79 1924 20 056 58 02 2 560 7 41 11 952 34 58 1920 19 565 68 09 6 485 22 57 2 682 9 33 1916 16 592 50 77 14 185 43 40 1 904 5 83 1912 173 0 75 9 173 39 64 13 793 59 61 1908 7 950 58 88 3 836 28 41 1 716 12 71 1904 8 274 66 10 3 100 24 77 1 143 9 13 1900 7 107 58 25 4 607 37 76 486 3 98 1896 6 315 53 51 5 191 43 99 295 2 50 1892 4 620 44 48 4 167 40 12 1 600 15 40 1888 4 457 49 94 3 972 44 51 495 5 55 1884 3 840 52 91 3 172 43 70 246 3 39 1880 3 113 51 50 2 821 46 67 111 1 84 Gubernatorial election resultsSanta Clara County vote by party in gubernatorial elections Year GOP DEM2018 28 6 175 791 71 4 438 7582014 27 1 107 113 72 9 288 7322010 34 9 178 695 61 3 314 0222006 52 2 225 132 42 9 185 0372003 39 2 160 807 39 9 163 7682002 32 4 116 862 55 3 199 3991998 31 7 133 015 64 3 270 1051994 47 5 212 075 47 5 211 9041990 42 6 178 310 52 2 218 8431986 59 9 227 285 37 6 142 9071982 44 0 180 232 52 9 216 7811978 29 8 110 444 61 4 227 4931974 46 7 153 761 50 6 166 7601970 51 5 172 562 46 1 154 5701966 55 4 164 970 44 6 132 7931962 47 6 112 700 51 2 121 149 According to the California Secretary of State as of February 10 2019 Santa Clara County has 895 965 registered voters Of those 405 470 45 3 are registered Democrats 151 213 16 9 are registered Republicans and 308 769 35 4 have declined to state a political party 57 As of November 2012 all of the cities towns and the unincorporated areas of Santa Clara County have more registered Democrats than Republicans 58 In the 2008 US Presidential Election Democratic nominee Barack Obama carried every city and town in the county as well as the unincorporated areas 59 Following the passage of Proposition 8 Santa Clara County joined San Francisco and Los Angeles in a lawsuit becoming along with San Francisco and Los Angeles the first governmental entities in the world to sue for same sex marriage 60 Voter registration Edit Population and registered votersTotal population 41 1 762 754 Registered voters 61 note 3 817 310 46 4 Democratic 61 372 979 45 6 Republican 61 177 268 21 7 Democratic Republican spread 61 195 711 23 9 Independent 61 17 009 2 1 Green 61 4 326 0 5 Libertarian 61 4 843 0 6 Peace and Freedom 61 1 950 0 2 Americans Elect 61 36 0 0 Other 61 1 542 0 2 No party preference 61 237 357 29 0 Cities by population and voter registration Edit Cities by population and voter registrationCity Population 41 Registered voters 61 note 3 Democratic 61 Republican 61 D R spread 61 Other 61 No party preference 61 Campbell 39 108 53 4 45 3 23 8 21 5 7 3 26 2 Cupertino 57 459 48 2 37 0 20 0 17 0 4 0 40 4 Gilroy 47 808 42 7 48 5 25 2 23 3 6 8 22 1 Los Altos 28 752 67 4 41 5 29 4 12 1 4 3 26 2 Los Altos Hills 7 912 73 6 34 9 33 6 1 3 4 3 28 7 Los Gatos 29 165 65 0 41 0 31 5 9 5 6 2 23 7 Milpitas 66 038 40 4 42 5 19 2 23 3 5 3 35 0 Monte Sereno 3 338 73 7 37 1 36 9 0 2 6 1 22 3 Morgan Hill 37 278 52 6 40 9 32 0 8 9 6 9 23 0 Mountain View 73 394 46 0 49 1 16 4 32 7 5 3 30 8 Palo Alto 63 475 59 7 52 6 15 5 37 1 3 8 29 2 San Jose 939 688 44 6 46 8 20 6 26 2 6 0 28 8 Santa Clara 114 482 41 9 46 5 19 9 26 6 6 1 29 7 Saratoga 29 781 66 8 34 2 31 5 2 7 3 9 31 8 Sunnyvale 138 436 41 1 45 0 19 9 25 1 5 0 31 8 Crime EditThe following table includes the number of incidents reported in 2009 and the rate per 1 000 persons for each type of offense Law Enforcement in Santa Clara County is handled by the Santa Clara County Sheriff s Office and local police departments Population and crime ratesPopulation 41 1 762 754Violent crime 62 5 013 2 84 Homicide 62 46 0 03 Forcible rape 62 387 0 22 Robbery 62 1 499 0 85 Aggravated assault 62 3 081 1 75Property crime 62 23 790 13 50 Burglary 62 7 094 4 02 Larceny theft 62 note 4 28 303 16 06 Motor vehicle theft 62 7 356 4 17Arson 62 403 0 23Cities by population and crime rates Edit Cities by population and crime ratesCity Population 63 Violent crimes 63 Violent crime rateper 1 000 persons Property crimes 63 Property crime rateper 1 000 personsCampbell 41 339 90 2 23 1 649 40 88Cupertino 59 769 58 0 97 797 13 33Gilroy 50 042 159 3 18 1 788 35 73Los Altos 29 704 6 0 20 299 10 07Los Altos Hills 8 121 5 0 62 45 5 54Los Gatos 30 161 38 1 26 629 20 85Milpitas 68 433 81 1 18 2 023 29 56Monte Sereno 3 426 3 0 88 35 10 22Morgan Hill 38 834 50 1 29 695 17 90Mountain View 75 933 155 2 04 1 419 18 69Palo Alto 66 019 53 0 80 1 409 21 34San Jose 976 459 3 547 3 63 28 463 29 15Santa Clara 119 360 221 1 85 3 306 27 70Saratoga 30 683 9 0 29 231 7 53Sunnyvale 143 606 170 1 18 2 555 17 79Economy EditThe county s economy is heavily services based Technology both hardware and software dominates the service sector by value but like any other county Santa Clara has its share of retail and office support workers The San Jose Sunnyvale Santa Clara metropolitan region comprising Santa Clara County and San Benito County was ranked as the highest performing metropolitan area in the US in 2012 ahead of Austin Texas and Raleigh North Carolina according to the Milken Institute 64 The GDP of the metro area reached 176 7 billion in 2011 or 94 587 per capita 65 roughly on par with Qatar in both total GDP and per capita nominal 66 GDP grew a strong 7 7 in 2011 and in contrast with most of California GDP and per capita GDP nominal is well above 2007 financial crisis levels Despite relative wealth vis a vis other regions nationally a large underclass exists whose income is roughly equivalent to that elsewhere in the country despite extreme land prices The surge in metro GDP is highly correlated with home prices which for average single family homes passed 1 million 1 017 528 in August 2013 67 As of the fourth quarter of 2021 the median value of homes in Santa Clara County was 1 253 400 an increase of 11 9 from the prior year and ranking fourth in the US for highest median home value 68 Education EditK 12 schools Edit School districts include 69 UnifiedGilroy Unified School District Milpitas Unified School District Morgan Hill Unified School District Palo Alto Unified School District Patterson Joint Unified School District San Jose Unified School District Santa Clara Unified School District SecondaryCampbell Union High School District East Side Union High School District Fremont Union High School District Los Gatos Saratoga Joint Union High School District Mountain View Los Altos Union High School District ElementaryAlum Rock Union Elementary School District Berryessa Union Elementary School District Cambrian Elementary School District Campbell Union Elementary School District Cupertino Union Elementary School District Evergreen Elementary School District Franklin McKinley Elementary School District Lakeside Joint Elementary School District Loma Prieta Joint Union Elementary School District Los Altos Elementary School District Los Gatos Union Elementary School District Luther Burbank Elementary School District Moreland School District Mountain View Whisman Elementary School District Mount Pleasant Elementary School District Oak Grove Elementary School District Orchard Elementary School District Saratoga Union Elementary School District Sunnyvale Elementary School District Union School District DefunctMontebello Elementary School DistrictLibraries Edit Santa Clara County Library is a public library system serving the communities and cities of Campbell Cupertino Gilroy Los Altos Los Altos Hills Milpitas Monte Sereno Morgan Hill Saratoga and all unincorporated areas of the county 70 Other cities run their own library systems Transportation EditAir Edit San Jose International Airport is ranked as the best run airport in the United States by the ACBJ 71 The county s main airport is Norman Y Mineta San Jose International Airport SJC It is a U S Customs and Border Protection port of entry 72 and as of 2019 has five international routes two to Canada one to England one to Japan seven to Mexico and one to China but the airport s busiest routes are all to cities in the western United States San Francisco International Airport SFO is also often used for commercial services by residents of Santa Clara County Moffett Federal Airfield NUQ a former U S Naval Air Station is used by the Air National Guard NASA Lockheed Martin Google and by the San Jose Police and Santa Clara County Sheriff s Department as an air operations base 73 There are also smaller general aviation airports in Palo Alto PAO San Jose Reid Hillview RHV and San Martin E16 Rail Edit The VTA light rail serves 11 million people annually in Silicon Valley Santa Clara County is served by Caltrain commuter rail from Gilroy through San Jose and Silicon Valley north to San Francisco Airport and San Francisco The Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority operates the VTA light rail system which primarily serves San Jose with one line continuing as far north as Mountain View Santa Clara and San Jose are also served by the Altamont Corridor Express commuter rail line which provides services to Stockton and Amtrak which provides service to Sacramento and Oakland The Amtrak Coast Starlight train between Seattle and Los Angeles also stops in San Jose BART currently services Milpitas and North San Jose with plans to extend to downtown San Jose and Santa Clara Road Edit VTA bus arriving at Foothill College in Los Altos Hills Buses Edit Santa Clara County has consolidated its transportation services into the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority which operates a bus system Bicycle network Edit The Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority is establishing a bicycle network throughout the county Santa Clara County Bicycle network is part of the San Francisco Bay Area Regional Bikeway Network Bikeways Map Effective April 2011 Regional Bicycle Plan for the San Francisco Bay Area 2009 UpdateFreeways and expressways Edit The county has an extensive freeway system and a separate expressway system though it s not as extensive as those in Southern California Expressways in California are distinct from freeways although access to adjoining properties is eliminated at grade intersections are allowed However unlike expressways virtually everywhere else in California the Santa Clara County expressways were built signed and maintained as county roads they are not maintained by Caltrans although they are patrolled by the California Highway Patrol There is also a large street network dominated by four and six lane arterials Some of the newer boulevards primarily in the West Valley are divided with landscaped medians Major highways Edit Main article State highways in California Interstate 280 Interstate 680 Interstate 880 U S Route 101 State Route 9 State Route 17 State Route 25 State Route 35 State Route 82 State Route 85 State Route 87 State Route 130 State Route 152 State Route 156 State Route 237 County routes Edit See also List of county routes in Santa Clara County California Santa Clara County expressway system County Route G2 Lawrence Expressway County Route G3 Page Mill Road Oregon Expressway County Route G4 San Tomas Expressway Montague Expressway County Route G5 Foothill Expressway County Route G6 Central Expressway County Route G7 Bloomfield Avenue County Route G8 Almaden Expressway County Route G9 Leavesly Road Ferguson Road County Route G10 Blossom Hill Road County Route G21 Capitol Expressway Other roads Edit The AlamedaSea Edit The county has no commercial seaports although small boats can access San Francisco Bay from several points Like many other Bay Area counties it is dependent upon the Port of Oakland for transport of ocean cargo Jails EditSanta Clara County Department of Correction is administered by the county s sheriff s office and supervises the following facilities Santa Clara County Main Jail 74 Main Jail South up to 674 men Main Jail North up to 919 men Elmwood Correctional Facility up to 600 women 2 500 men 75 North County Jail day use only for Palo Alto courthouse Juvenile Detention 76 Santa Clara County Juvenile Hall up to 390 boys and girls William F James Boys Ranch up to 96 teenage boys Parks EditMain article Santa Clara County Parks and Recreation Department Santa Clara County has an extensive park system much of it founded in the major park expansion of the late 1970s Parks within the county include Almaden Quicksilver County Park Grant Ranch Park Henry W Coe State Park Sanborn Park Vasona ParkOpen space preserves include El Sereno Open Space PreserveSanta Clara County also contains Ulistac Natural Area a volunteer maintained natural open space Foreign and invasive species are removed when possible as native plants are introduced Migratory birds and butterflies often use this area Climate EditSanta Clara CountyClimate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 30 13 4 51 15 4 46 20 6 28 24 7 1 31 12 2 37 14 1 38 15 1 37 17 4 34 14 9 28 10 63 18 7 106 13 4 Average max and min temperatures in C Precipitation totals in mmSource 77 Imperial conversionJFMAMJJASOND 1 2 55 39 2 59 39 1 8 68 43 1 1 75 45 0 88 54 0 1 99 57 0 100 59 0 99 63 0 2 93 57 0 4 82 50 2 5 64 45 4 2 55 39 Average max and min temperatures in F Precipitation totals in inchesSister counties EditTo promote friendship and understanding and to build bridges with countries of origin for various ethnic populations in the county the County of Santa Clara has created a Sister County Commission to coordinate the program As of 2009 there are three sister counties 78 Province of Florence Italy Moscow Area Russia Hsinchu County Taiwan Republic of China Communities Edit Los Altos is the 3rd most expensive zip code in the United States 79 Palo Alto is the 5th most educated city 80 and the 5th most expensive zip code in the United States 81 Morgan Hill is the 17th most expensive place to live in the United States 85 Los Gatos is the 33rd wealthiest city in the United States 84 Saratoga is the 16th most educated and the 8th wealthiest city in the United States 82 83 Cities Edit There are 15 incorporated places in Santa Clara County Campbell Cupertino Gilroy Los Altos Milpitas Monte Sereno Morgan Hill Mountain View Palo Alto San Jose county seat Santa Clara Saratoga Sunnyvale Towns Edit Los Altos Hills Los GatosCensus designated places Edit Alum Rock Burbank Cambrian Park East Foothills Fruitdale Lexington Hills Loyola also known as Loyola Corners San Martin Stanford Unincorporated communities Edit Bell Station also known as Bell s Station and Hollenbeck s Station Casa Loma Chemeketa Park Coyote also known as Burnett c 1860 1882 East San Jose Llagas Uvas Madrone now part of Morgan Hill Redwood Estates Rucker San Antonio also known as Deforest c 1892 1924 Sveadal Census county divisions Edit Diablo Range Llagas Uvas South Santa Clara Valley West Santa ClaraFormer townships Edit Almaden Township Present day Almaden Valley Cambrian Park and portions of Campbell and Los Gatos Alviso Township Present day Alviso Burnett Township Present day Coyote Santa Teresa and Morgan Hill Fremont Township Present day Palo Alto Sunnyvale Mountain View Los Altos Los Altos Hills and part of Cupertino Gilroy Township Present day Gilroy and San Martin Milpitas Township Present day Milpitas Redwood Township Present day Los Gatos Monte Sereno Saratoga Redwood Estates and portions of Cupertino and Campbell San Jose Township Most of present day San Jose Santa Clara Township Present day Santa Clara and portions of San Jose Cupertino and Campbell Population ranking Edit The population ranking of the following table is based on the 2020 census of Santa Clara County 86 county seat Rank City Town etc Municipal type Population 2020 Census 1 San Jose City 1 013 2402 Sunnyvale City 155 8053 Santa Clara City 127 6474 Mountain View City 82 3765 Milpitas City 80 2736 Palo Alto City 68 5727 Cupertino City 60 3818 Gilroy City 59 5209 Morgan Hill City 44 68610 Campbell City 43 95911 Los Gatos Town 33 52912 Los Altos City 31 62513 Saratoga City 31 05114 Stanford CDP 21 15015 Alum Rock CDP 12 04216 Los Altos Hills Town 8 48917 San Martin CDP 7 00818 East Foothills CDP 6 80319 Burbank CDP 4 94020 Cambrian Park CDP 3 71921 Loyola CDP 3 49122 Monte Sereno City 3 47923 Lexington Hills CDP 2 49224 Fruitdale CDP 989See also Edit San Francisco Bay Area portal California portal United States portalList of attractions in Silicon Valley List of school districts in Santa Clara County California National Register of Historic Places listings in Santa Clara County California Santa Clara County expressway system Santa Clara County Health System Santa Clara County Federal Credit Union Santa Clara Valley Second Harvest of Silicon ValleyNotes Edit Other Some other race Two or more races Native American Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander American Indian or Alaska Native a b Percentage of registered voters with respect to total population Percentages of party members with respect to registered voters follow Only larceny theft cases involving property over 400 in value are reported as property crimes References Edit Chronology California State Association of Counties Retrieved February 6 2015 Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors board sccgov org Mount Hamilton Peakbagger com Retrieved May 13 2015 a b 2020 Population and Housing State Data United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 17 2021 Silicon Valley Business Journal San Jose Area has World s Third Highest GDP Per Capita Brookings Says Levy Francesca March 4 2010 America s 25 Richest Counties Forbes 1 Anderson Reservoir will close to public through 2030 Accessed March 30 2022 2 Dire situation Silicon Valley cracks down on water use as California drought worsens Accessed June 23 2022 The 20 wealthiest counties in the U S including these Washington DC suburbs Report Fox Business December 18 2019 Richest Counties In The United States April 25 2017 Shortridge Charles Morris 1895 Santa Clara County and Its Resources Historical Descriptive Statistical a Souvenir of the San Jose Mercury 1895 San Jose Mercury Pub amp Print Company p 16 Automobiles Good Roads Sunset Vol 32 1914 p 918 2010 Census Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau August 22 2012 Retrieved October 4 2015 a b c George Ezra Dane and Francisco Palou June 1 1935 The Founding of the Presidio and Mission of Our Father Saint Francis California Historical Quarterly 14 2 102 110 doi 10 2307 25160571 JSTOR 25160571 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Herbert Eugene Bolton 1930 Anza s California Expeditions Volume I An Outpost of Empire Berkeley California University of California Press p 393 Rockwell D Hunt 1942 John Bidwell Prince of California Pioneers Caldwell Idaho The Caxton Printers Ltd p 75 Restoration of tule elk California success story Billings Gazette December 6 2006 Retrieved January 27 2013 a b Lisa M Krieger November 27 2017 The elk are coming back even to San Jose San Jose Mercury News Retrieved November 28 2020 Julie Phillips Ryan Phillips Neela Srinivasan Deborah Aso Wendy Lao amp Pat Cornely 2012 Safe Passage for the Coyote Valley A Wildlife Linkage for the Highway 101 Corridor PDF Report De Anza College Archived from the original PDF on September 27 2013 Retrieved January 27 2013 Elk Conservation and Management Plan Report California Department of Fish and Wildlife December 1 2018 Retrieved February 3 2020 Lisa M Krieger November 27 2017 With elk on rebound California releases new management plan The San Jose Mercury News Retrieved February 18 2018 Matt Bigler March 4 2019 documented by local naturalist Roger Castillo on video KCBS Radio Retrieved February 2 2020 Bruce Webber April 18 1990 Works in Progress Oh Give Me a Home New York Times Retrieved February 2 2020 Gilroy Dispatch Staff December 10 1999 A little bit of yesterday today Gilroy Dispatch Retrieved February 2 2020 California Department of Fish and Game 2012 California Pronghorn Antelope Status Report and Management Plan Update Report Pronghorn in Santa Clara County February 2 2020 California Mount Hamilton The Nature Conservancy Retrieved January 27 2013 Draft Environmental Impact Report and Environmental Impact Statement for the Santa Clara Valley Habitat Plan PDF Report County of Santa Clara City of San Jose City of Morgan Hill City of Gilroy Santa Clara Valley Water District Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority December 2010 Retrieved January 27 2013 P L 96 510 42 U S C 9601 9675 December 11 1980 US Superfund Sites Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved August 7 2013 Schlossberg Tatiana September 22 2019 Silicon Valley Is One of the Most Polluted Places in the Country The Atlantic Retrieved August 3 2022 EPA Region 9 Superfund Site Overview Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved August 13 2013 Census of Population and Housing from 1790 2000 US Census Bureau Retrieved January 24 2022 Historical Census Browser University of Virginia Library Retrieved October 4 2015 Forstall Richard L ed March 27 1995 Population of Counties by Decennial Census 1900 to 1990 United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 4 2015 Census 2000 PHC T 4 Ranking Tables for Counties 1990 and 2000 PDF United States Census Bureau April 2 2001 Retrieved October 4 2015 a b P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE 2010 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Santa Clara County California United States Census Bureau a b P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE 2020 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Santa Clara County California United States Census Bureau Asians are now largest group in these two Bay Area counties new data shows The Mercury News June 20 2019 Retrieved July 3 2019 Median household income County Health Rankings Retrieved March 15 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Table B02001 U S Census website Retrieved October 26 2013 a b U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Table B03003 U S Census website Retrieved October 26 2013 a b U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Table B19301 U S Census website Retrieved October 21 2013 a b U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Table B19013 U S Census website Retrieved October 21 2013 a b U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Table B19113 U S Census website Retrieved October 21 2013 a b U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates U S Census website Retrieved October 21 2013 U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates 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Alto Ranks No 5 as Most Educated in the U S Mercury News Palo Alto Atherton Crack Top 10 Priciest Zip Codes in US Mercury News Saratoga Among the Most Educated Small Towns in America Top Wealthiest Cities in America America s Richest Zip Codes 2011 Bloomberg News December 7 2011 Retrieved June 21 2012 Business Insider Most Expensive Housing Markets 2014 By Decade External links EditOfficial website Santa Clara County governmental committee agendas Santa Clara County Planning Office Santa Clara Valley Water District Drinking Water List of special districts in Santa Clara County LAFCo Santa Clara County Library Santa Clara County California s Historic Silicon Valley a National Park Service Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Santa Clara County California amp oldid 1144912039, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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