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<text id=91TT2575>
<title>
Nov. 18, 1991: Close-Up -- Two Boom Towns
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Nov. 18, 1991 California:The Endangered Dream
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CITIES, Page 99
CALIFORNIA
Close-Up: Two Boom Towns
</hdr><body>
<p> FRESNO--The Last Real California
</p>
<p>By Garry Wills [Garry Wills' latest book is Under God.]
</p>
<p> To the astonishment of its citizens, who have maintained a
hangdog pride in being off the beaten path, Fresno has become one
of the fastest-growing major cities in America. In Fresno people
had always felt that they were in California but not of it--a
little bit of Iowa under the palm trees. Now their sleepy farm
town is growing nearly as fast as crops planted in the dull, rich
land of the surrounding San Joaquin Valley.
</p>
<p> Why the great influx? Fresno, so proudly un-Californian in
the past, is one of the few places in the state that have not
already reached a choke-off point for high prices, pollution,
crime or the fear of those things. The city is growing by fleeing
itself--in developments rising, tier on tier, northward toward
the banks of the San Joaquin River. A local columnist calls those
living in the posh new homes "branch and chain people";
executives for the local branch of whatever banks, credit
companies, insurance firms are represented here. Yet even less
affluent people are selling medium-size homes on expensive
property elsewhere to build bigger places for less money in
Fresno. Over and over one hears that the land and home bargains
are still here--though one hears just as often an apprehension
that they are about to run out. People repeat, almost like a
mantra, that this is a peaceful community, a good place to raise
kids. Mayor Karen Humphrey says, "The city is like the Midwest,
very family oriented, very friendly."
</p>
<p> Friendly it surely is. At the huge People's Church, presided
over by a local celebrity, G.L. Johnson, and his 16 assistant
pastors, I run a gauntlet of "greeters" using all their skills
for instant intimacy. Opening the service, Pastor Johnson says,
"Turn to your neighbor and smile, turn all around and smile. I
like fellowshipping. I like to see people hug a lot." As one
leaves the huge parking lot, a sign proclaims, YOU ARE NOW
ENTERING THE MISSION FIELD, and people drive out smiling the
gospel of Fresno. A prosperous-looking dentist's office has on
its sign: DR. SO-AND-SO, D.D.S., DENTISTRY FOR SMILES.
</p>
<p> Those smiles draw some people here, but others wonder how
long the small-town feeling, or the friendliness, can last. The
metropolitan area has a population of 477,400 (it was 358,800 a
decade ago), and the number is expected to double in the next 10
years. The U.S. government used Fresno as a dumping ground for
refugees created by its actions in Indochina, particularly the
mountain Laotians called Hmong. There are 31,000 Hmong in the
area, many clustered in a neighborhood known as Ban Vinai--for
the refugee camp some of them came from. The ethnic mix has
placed heavy burdens on the school system, and gangs are forming
among the young.
</p>
<p> One of the more endearing things about Fresno is its
combination of optimism and self-deprecation: when it turned up
at the bottom of a list of cities ranked according to
"livability" during the 1980s, it went along with CBS's spoof of
Dallas, the mini-series Fresno, starring Carol Burnett. Citizens,
including the former mayor, took parts.
</p>
<p> But city government is no laughing matter as Fresno faces
new problems like pollution, which has been added to the seasonal
scourges--droughts and freezes--that always imperil Fresno's
huge yields of cotton, grapes, nuts and cantaloupes. The struggle
for water is perennial here, as elsewhere in California. Russell
Fey, a former city planner in Modesto who now teaches urban
studies at California State University, Fresno, thinks the city
should prevent "leapfrog" growth by instituting zoning
regulations. But the electorate resents regulation; residential
water meters are only now being installed in older Fresno homes,
in part because voters have been so resistant.
</p>
<p> The city council currently sits in a small chamber, where
Mayor Humphrey presides over the other six members with
enthusiastic informality. Her council includes two Armenians, one
Hispanic and one African American. Mayor Humphrey sees the new
$33 million city hall being constructed as a riposte to those who
write off the downtown or who cling to the image of Fresno as an
agrarian market town. Despite her claim about the place's
Midwestern qualities, she sides with those who believe the city
can meet its challenges only if it thinks in terms as
cosmopolitan as its new population. The city hall is the very
model of a computerized managerial center. Its council chamber
has a Big Brother-like screen on which blueprints and other
exhibits can be projected. The building is meant to say that
Fresno, off in its corner, is becoming a crossroads of the world.
</p>
<p> The mayor's critics say Fresno should not get too big for
its britches. It remains a hick town in some ways, short on
cultural resources. The main entertainment events are football
games in the Fresno State Bulldogs' stadium, to which towns
people flock, all wearing red shirts, and tailgate parties are
the nearest thing to a town meeting.
</p>
<p> Is the flashy new city hall a space vehicle that has crashed
in a deserted spot, or a civic control ship about to take off?
The populace is divided on that. But even the gloomy ones are
surprisingly good-natured as they grumble. For in Fresno even
root-canal work can be dentistry for smiles. If loopy optimism
and defiance of the odds are what made this state in the first
place, then un-Californian Fresno may be the last real California
left.
</p>
<p> MORENO VALLEY:Home of the Y-Chop
</p>
<p>By Gus Lee [Gus Lee is the author of China Boy.]
</p>
<p> What is the California Dream? And whatever it is, where
can it be found? In the past seven years, 118,000 modern-day
pathfinders have located a form of it in Moreno Valley, a new
city 70 miles southeast of Los Angeles and 42 miles from
Disneyland.
</p>
<p> Stand in the Lake Perris foothills and look north to the
hard browns and purples of the Badland hills and the San
Gorgonios Mountains: between the lake and the peaks, Moreno
Valley sprawls across the desert floor. While dust devils dance
on the shimmering sand, summer heat relentlessly fills all
spaces. This is pioneer and pathfinder country, a desert that
developers turned into the mother of all real estate
opportunities by diverting water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin
Delta and the Oroville reservoir, far to the north. This is a
place for hardworking parents, with wagon-train hearts, seeking
picket-fenced yards, swing sets and quiet streets, for people
who can endure temperatures in the 100s and can drive three
hours a day to work and back.
</p>
<p> I call these people Y-CHOPs--Young Commuting Home-Owning
Parents--a new version of an old ideal of the American nuclear
family. They have come to Moreno Valley because a home in more
established California cities can cost as much as a space
shuttle. In "MoVal" a typical four-bedroom house on a
7,500-sq.-ft. lot costs $140,000. The affordable homes and
quality of life have made Mo reno Valley the fastest growing
city in America.
</p>
<p> Today three out of four working "MoVallers" merge with
thousands of other competitive freeway high achievers driving
on gas, caffeine, ambition, ozone depletion and sleep
deprivation for the two hours of freewaying to Los Angeles or
the 1 1/2-hour drive to Orange County. This mass evacuation
leaves MoVal half empty during the day. But the American urge
for home ownership and its coveted symbols--a swing in the
yard, idyllic neighborhoods and progressive public schools--is so powerful that the commute is accepted as part of the
natural price of the Dream, a bearable surcharge on happiness,
part of being a Y-CHOP.
</p>
<p> Most Y-CHOPs are white. The evolving MoVal family has one
parent commuting to work and one staying home with two children
in a single-family dwelling, in a safe neighborhood with church
and grandparents nearby. You can almost see Ward, June, Wally
and Beaver Cleaver in the house across the street and hear the
rush of a tail-finned T-Bird cruising by, with Elvis and Buddy
Holly blasting from the radio through tinny pre-Dolby speakers.
Many of the streets are laid out in that cookie-cutter pattern
of curves and cul-de-sacs familiar from Steven Spielberg
movies. You know the scene: a tract-house version of the Norman
Rockwell family seated at the breakfast table, dog in the corner
waiting breathlessly for some scraps. In the congestion of all
these American icons, say hello to Moreno Valley in the 1990s.
</p>
<p> Kristin and Bo Knutson are Y-CHOPs who came to Moreno
Valley in 1988. They were looking for a place for Kristin's
parents to retire, but it was so beguilingly peaceful and
appealingly inexpensive that they decided to stay. Now Kristin's
parents provide a presence for Zak, 17, and help raise Alana,
1. Kristin believes that the combination of town and school is
better for her children than that in their former home. She
commutes three hours a day to her neonatal intensive-care
nursing job at Childrens Hospital of Orange County. For the
first time, the Knutsons have enough living space; at night they
hear crickets. Kristin is articulate, insightful, responsible--though Y-CHOPs is an anagram for psycho, Y-CHOPs are anything
but. "This is a new community," Kristin says. "We have an
opportunity to influence the future, to shape it. Older cities
are set and hard to change." The order of their home, the
front-yard bougainvillea, the serenity of the neighborhood--all say, as emphatically as her words, that moving to MoVal was
the right thing for her and her family.
</p>
<p> One reason is that MoVal is also a place for PY-CHOPs--the Parents of Young Commuting Home-Owning Parents. Ivy
Crawford, a retired county senior-citizen outreach worker, moved
from Los Angeles to MoVal in 1984 for "peace and quietness" and
the pleasure of being near her two granddaughters. How would
she feel if she were unable to spend as much time with a second
generation of children? She smiles and says, "I'd go crazy if I
couldn't see them every day."
</p>
<p> For MoVal's mayor, Judy Nieburger, and her staff of
professional managers and energetic volunteers, the big
challenge is protecting the quality of life while the population
expands. Two-thirds of MoVal workers have some college
education, and the percentage of residents with bachelor's
degrees is increasing. Three out of four workers are between the
ages of 25 and 44. They are neatly distributed among blue
collar, technical, professional and management, with the vast
majority full-time workers. The city has attracted a business
from Asia--Borneo International Furniture--but is still
seeking major American companies that will help MoVal dedicate
its human energy to work and home, rather than to work, home and
the freeways. Having a big employer in the neighborhood would
help eliminate the Y-CHOP dilemma: families need safety and
community, but to attain them, one or both parents must spend
a major portion of life on the road.
</p>
<p> It is self-evident that children need time with parents,
that sons need the time of their fathers. The failure to
universally fulfill these needs represents the high price
Y-CHOPs pay to live like Ward, June, Wally and the Beave. So far
the trade seems worth it, but they would much rather not have
to make the choice. Until they can drop the c from their
acronym, the Y-CHOPs' version of the California Dream will not
be complete.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>