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Monrovia was a growing regional business center over a century ago, and the Chamber worked hard through one decade after another as the community prospered. Today, Monrovia and the Chamber are home to hundreds of small stores, small industrial shops, professional service providers, large-sized retailers and corporations of nearly every size. Monrovia has a long, successful tradition as a business-friendly community, and the Monrovia Chamber of Commerce is dedicated to maintaining that tradition, as it has for more than 100 years. We are extremely proud of the businesses in this community that produce some of the most technologically advanced software, biotech products and research and equipment in the world to help shape, protect and ease our lives. Not just here in Monrovia, but all over the world people are benefiting from the great advances. The Chamber is the eyes, ears and voice of the business community. We work daily with local and regional governments and business-related agencies to protect business interests and to keep the community healthy through a vital commercial sector. The Chamber serves the business community through a wide variety of programs and services from monthly mixers, networking lunches and ribbon-cutting ceremonies for new businesses, to marketing assistance, business expos and business recruitment, which is the life blood of any prospering community. The community as a whole benefits from the Chamber’s attention as well, through sponsorship of town meetings, legislative luncheons, candidate forums and publication of business and community guides. The Chamber works closely with the City of Monrovia and the Monrovia Unified School District in a public-private partnership that has caught the attention of towns and cities across the nation. This community guide gives insight into the Monrovia community, its people and its businesses. We want you to use this booklet to seek out and utilize the businesses and organizations that support this great community. We also invite you to visit our website, www.monroviacc.com, to search for any business or services you need and check for events in the community. The Chamber can also be found on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ MonroviaChamber. Shanna Rockenbach B and H Sign Company 2010 Monrovia Chamber of Commerce President Monrovia is located 20 miles northeast of Los Angeles in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains in the San Gabriel Valley in the county of Los Angeles. Monrovia was founded May 17, 1886 and incorporated in 1887. Area — 13.73 sq. miles Median Age — 34.6 Population — 36,929 White — 46.6% Hispanic — 35.2% Black — 8.7% Asian — 7.02% Other — 1.5% Households — 13,662 Average Household Income — $45,300.00 Average Household Size — 3.29 Housing Units — 13,957 Business Establishments — 1,066 approx. total Retail Trade — 135 establishments Manufacturing — 128 establishments Professional/Technical/Scientific — 120 establishments Construction — 114 establishments Wholesale Trade — 103 establishments Accommodations/Food Services — 92 establishments Total Employment — 17,625 LEGISLATIVE DISTRICTS Congressional — 28th State Senatorial — 29th State Assembly — 59th State Assembly — 44th IMPORTANT PHONE NUMBERS CITY HALL — 626-932-5550 FIRE DEPT. — 626-256-8181 POLICE DEPT. — 626-256-8000 Monrovia Community Services Dept. Recreation & Senior Services — 626-256-8246 Monrovia Canyon Park — 626-256-8282 Historical Museum — 626-358-6192 KGEM Community Media of the Foothills — 626-357-4974 Library — 626-256-8274 Monrovia Unified School Dist. — 626-471-2000 Welcome to Monrovia The Monrovia Chamber of Commerce is a volunteer-based, nonprofit corporation comprised of the businesses in this community. The Chamber of Commerce harnesses the tremendous potential of the private enterprise system and enables its membership to accomplish collectively what no one could do individually. Founded in 1897 and incorporated in 1939, the Chamber continues to grow to meet the challenges of today's business climate. CHAMBER MISSION The objective of the Monrovia Chamber of Commerce is to promote and meet the needs of business and to make Monrovia the best possible community in which to live, work and do business.YOUR BUSINESS TO BUSINESS CONNECTION 620 S. Myrtle Avenue Monrovia, CA 91016 Telephone: 626-358-1159 Fax: 626-357-6036 Website: www.monroviacc.com Email: [email protected] All the warmth of Southern California and the advantages of a gorgeous natural environment unite to create a place that is at once beautiful, historic, cultural, economically diverse and inviting. Located 20 miles northeast of Los Angeles at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains, Monrovia is part of the San Gabriel Valley, just eight miles east of the City of Pasadena, in Los Angeles County. This growing city of nearly 40,000 residents distinguishes itself from other communities with its dynamic smalltown charm and collection of high-tech industry. A world of amenities is available here: everything from worldclass cultural facilities to glorious recreational outlets to top-rated education and healthcare is available right at residents’ fingertips. Monrovia is ideally positioned to continue its trend for controlled growth. The city’s vibrant economy fosters enhanced job creation while a commitment to revitalization and development ensures that Monrovia maintains its attractive neighborhoods. Visitors are encouraged to experience all that Monrovia has to offer: a welcoming community, the brilliant California backdrop and the promise for a prosperous future. During the late 1880s, a group of men who were successful in both banking and railroad building converted what had once been part of the vast lands of Mission San Gabriel into a community. With only scattered homes and several dirt roads, they managed to build a small town that was “typical of its time, yet unique in spirit.” It still is. On May 17, 1886, lots were sold for the first time at $100 or $150 each; however, to purchase a lot, each owner was required to build a house within the first six months (which cost at least $2,000). This protected the town from land speculators and allowed it to survive during the collapse of the land boom several years later. The founders, as officers and directors of the Monrovia Land and Water Company, promised to plant 8,000 pepper trees along the streets, provide free water to the town and install electric streetlights. The company’s president was William Monroe. Monroe was not the first settler in the City of Monrovia. He was, however, the most important of the founders and the town is named for him. Following the Civil War, Monroe was superintendent of construction for the Southern Pacific Railroad. In 1875, after several lines were built, he moved his family to Los Angeles. By 1880 he had become a member of the Los Angeles City Council and was very active in the community. He left Los Angeles in 1882 for another construction project, but returned in 1884. With money earned from the construction project and from the sale of a railroad car of mules, Monroe bought 210 acres of Rancho Santa Anita from E.J. “Lucky” Baldwin. He moved his family into a tent on the property until they built a small cottage where they lived until their permanent home, “The Oaks,” was completed. “The Oaks” is still standing at 250 N. Primrose Avenue. Myrtle Avenue, Monrovia's Main Street, is named for his elder daughter Myrtle. The Monroe family periodically returned to Monrovia many times over the years. Mrs. Monroe died at the age of 86 in 1932, and three years later Mr. Monroe died at the age of 94. William Monroe and his family are buried in Live Oak Cemetery on Duarte Road in Monrovia. William Monroe found success in a variety of careers, including school teacher, banker, hotel manager, mayor, council member, real estate developer, broker, railroad contractor and railroad superintendent. He will be remembered here, though, for the town he founded. Officially, the Historic Preservation movement started in 1966 with the passage of the National Historic Preservation Act. Since that time, the city has established protocol for documentation and designation for individual landmarks and historic districts. Wildrose Historic District has the distinction of being the first designated Historic District in Monrovia. There are 18 houses in the district located in the 300 Block of Wildrose Avenue; the district includes both sides of Wildrose Avenue bounded by California Avenue on the east, Canyon Boulevard on the west and the alleys to the north and south of Wildrose Avenue. The majority of the houses were built in the early part of the 20th century and are predominately Craftsman Bungalow style, with some designed by the Tifal brothers, Gustav, Charles and William. 236 East Foothill Boulevard The house is an 1,852-square- foot, two-story home built in 1906 in the Neo Classical Transitional Craftsman architecture. This is a style not commonly found in Monrovia. Architectural details include a cross-gabled roof and clapboard siding and wood shingles. There are overhanging eaves, exposed rafter tails, triangular knee braces, a shed dormer and lattice-work vents in the gable peaks. Windows are diamond-paned and fixed. A pair of nine-over-one windows with a decorative flower box is in the second story front-gable. A partial-width recessed wrap-around front entrance porch is located on the northeast corner of the primary (north) elevation. The porch has a flared hipped roof and is supported by round Tuscan wood posts atop square piers. Within the porch area is the front entrance and a small fixed window. An interior red brick chimney with corbelled cap emerges near the ridgeline. 433 Highland Place This house is a 2,285-square-foot Spanish Revival home built in 1925. It has many distinct characteristics of Spanish Revival architecture including plaster walls, parapet roof with red tile cap, little to no eave overhang and display niches. The home sits on a raised lot that has a one-car garage at street level and then a climbing concrete stairway that leads through a notched stucco archway to the covered front porch. There is a side-planked arched front door that is original to the house, as are the arched wood windows that flank the front door. The southern-most window at the front of the house is covered by an arched awning reminiscent of the period and encased by a wrought iron balcony. The wrought iron work around the porch, as well as that which leads down the first flight of exterior stairs and from the narrow kitchen door, is original to the house. All other iron work was installed by the current owners to match the original work. The interior of the house has several features of Spanish Colonial and/or Spanish Revival architecture. There are vaulted, elliptical ceilings, display niches and original woodwork. Of special significance is a Batchelder tile fireplace that has Mayan or Native American impressions etched into the tile.This house has many of the classic elements of Pueblo Revival, including plain stucco walls, a flat roof with a parapet, irregular rounded edges and a stepped roofline. Inspired by both Indian Pueblo and Spanish Colonial architectural forms, Pueblo Revival first appeared in California in the 1890s and reached its greatest widespread popularity in the 1920s. Several of the elevations of this house, including the front feature decorative ceramic projections below the parapet that appear as vigas. The footprint of the house is an irregular L-shape. Typical of the style, the front entry is not covered by a porch. Decorative exposed rough-hewn lintels above the wood casement divided light windows are incorporated throughout. Exterior doors also have lintels. A partially attached garage sits to the south of the house. The house was designed by Herbert J. Gerhardt and built for Frank E. Wood. Constructed in 1926, the contractor of record is Victor R. Bush who was very active in Monrovia during the 1920s. Mr. Bush was also the general contractor for the Municipal Plunge and Bathhouse (Historic Landmark HL-57). Located where the 210 Freeway crosses Huntington Drive in a safe, quiet and quaint corner of Los Angeles County, the area offers direct access to the San Gabriel and San Fernando Valleys, Long Beach and the Inland Empire. Providing convenient highway travel for commuting and business shipping alike, the 210 (Foothill) Freeway intersects Monrovia, with the 605 Freeway immediately to the east, connecting the city to the full metropolitan freeway system and transcontinental highways. A Transit Village to be built around Monrovia's historic train depot is in development. As the Metro Gold Line light-rail extension moves from its current terminus in East Pasadena through Monrovia in the next several years. Monrovia has always offered attractive and safe neighborhoods that reflect the residential character of the community. Here, turn-of-the-century Victorians and grand Craftsmen homes dot the neighborhoods, along with California bungalows and many other architectural styles. Homes come in all price ranges with plenty of moderate and executive housing available. Those with an interest in real estate investment will find that home values continue to be stable, thus ensuring both new and long-time residents a valuable return on property investments. There are complexes of rental apartments wrapped around recreational amenities; for those who enjoy home ownership without maintenance responsibilities. Paragon at Old Town, located at the gateway to Old Town, is Monrovia's new apartment community, a 163-unit, mixed-use community located on Myrtle Avenue between Walnut and Olive Avenues. Paragon at Old Town offers six one- and two-bedroom floor plans, high ceilings and great views. Paragon has fantastic amenities, a clubhouse with a fitness center, media lounge with entertaining kitchen, a game room and more. For information call, 1-866-844-9819. In addition, there are smartly-styled condominiums and townhomes around town. Monrovia and other neighboring areas also offer retirement villages reserved exclusively for seniors. With its top-rated schools, friendly faces, a quaint Old Town district and idyllic climate, Monrovia attracts upwardly mobile, energetic families from suburbs all over. The average resident age is 33. Statistics from 2000 indicate that the median household income was $45,375 and the median home value was $229,600. A temperate climate and the gorgeous California landscape provide Monrovia residents with innumerable yearround recreation opportunities. Monrovia alone has more than 140 developed acres of hiking and camping terrain, tennis courts, swimming pool and wading pools, a Community Center, YMCA, Boys and Girls Club and an Aquatics Center. The city’s Department of Community Services is dedicated to providing leisure time activities and services for residents and visitors to enjoy throughout the year. Monrovia offers a wide range of activities throughout the year, from annual festivals to art walks and family activities in Old Town to concerts in the park and historic home tours. Krikorian Monrovia Cinema 12 has become a popular entertainment venue in Monrovia’s Old Town. Many new restaurants and specialty shops have grown around the theatre to complete the Old Town Monrovia experience. DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY SERVICES Recreation and Library Divisions The Department of Community Services is in the business of serving people and creating an environment where people want to live, work and play. This is accomplished via leisure opportunities, access to knowledge and information, preservation of the natural resources and fostering a sense of community. This sense of community comes from the events that are designed to bring neighbors together to enjoy an evening of entertainment, take a class, join a book discussion group at the Library or hike the trails in Canyon Park. Monrovia Community Services provides residents with quality of life, year-round recreation and library services that are designed to meet the leisure, social, educational, physical and cultural needs of residents. The Community Services Department has rich and unique facilities available to rent for special occasion gatherings such as wedding receptions, birthday parties, family reunions and retirement parties. Facilities include the Monrovia Community Center and the Historical Museum. The Community Services Recreation Division also makes parks available to the public for drop-in and reservation based gatherings. There are seven City parks including Recreation Park, Library Park, Grand Avenue Park, Julian Fisher Park, Rotary Park, Olive Avenue Park and the crown jewel, Canyon Park, which is tucked into the foothills above Monrovia. Canyon Park’s hiking trails wind through wooded glens and along rippling streams to a mountain waterfall. When visitors step into the park they step away from the urban reality of Southern California into a timeless mountain environment rich in plant and animal life. Canyon Park also offers a cabin conference center. The cabin is a multi-purpose facility that accommodates rentals for business meetings, trainings and seminars in a beautiful outdoor setting. Recreation Park 22 acres . . . . . . . Shamrock at Lemon Monrovia Library Park 13 acres . . . . . . . Myrtle at Lime Julian D. Fisher Park 1.8 acres . . . . . . .901 S. California Rotary Park Half acre . . . . . . . California and Lime Grand Avenue Park 3.5 acres . . . . . . . Grand and Prospect Olive Avenue Park 1 acre . . . . . . . . . Olive and Mayflower Monrovia Canyon Park 80 acres (22 developed)….1200 N. Canyon Blvd. The Library Division serves the community’s needs through Adult Services, Youth Services, Circulation Services and Literacy. All these services are provided out of the new, state-of-the-art, 28,000-square-foot facility equipped with a technology center, community room ideal for meetings and special events, a children’s story time room, self-check machines and the Heritage Room, which houses special materials representing Monrovia’s history such as Monrovia High School Year Books and the Uptown Sinclair collection. The Library maintains a collection of more 120,000 volumes ranging from children’s picture and chapter books to adult best sellers and reference materials. Monrovia Unified School District (MUSD) is a K-12 district nestled in the San Gabriel Foothills in a region known as the “Foothill Corridor.” The District operates Bradoaks, Monroe, Wild Rose, Plymouth and Mayflower Elementary Schools; Clifton and Santa Fe Middle Schools; Monrovia High School and Canyon Oaks High School; Canyon Early Learning Center; Monrovia Community Adult School; ROP programs; and Mountain Community Park School. Monrovia Unified is an ethnically and culturally diverse district. The student population has educational needs that cover a broad spectrum. MUSD provides strong programs to help all students succeed and achieve, from preschool development programs to SAT preparation for college admission. Here are some examples of the instructional program: In 2006, Wild Rose Elementary became the 6th district school honored with a California Distinguished School Award. Both Plymouth and Wild Rose Elementary schools received the National Achieving Schools Award for the extraordinary academic performance of their students. • A year-round program is available at Plymouth Elementary School. • The Monrovia chapter of Vocational Industrial Clubs of America (VICA) is one of the largest and most active in the state, producing many competition winners. • The Language Arts program at Santa Fe Middle School was selected as being tops in the state.4 Clifton Middle School was the only middle school in the nation to participate in the Sandia National Laboratory simulation project. • Students from both middle schools participated in the Hubble Telescope downlink, viewing on-the-spot photos of Pluto and electronically communicating with the Goddard Space Center and NASA. The partnership shared with the schools, City and the Chamber of Commerce bring all community resources together for the benefit of the students. Thousands of adults and older teenagers are served annually by the community’s adult school classes that provide everything from high school completion courses to vocational training. The adult school, through its computer and business education classes, also serves as a major resource to the Monrovia business community, providing cost-effective employee training assistance. Like the community itself, Monrovia’s public schools have a long and proud history. With the passing of a recent bond, the Monrovia High School campus will receive a major upgrade. A first priority is a new science lab building to bring the facility into the 21st century. Other improvements will include modernized classrooms, a new regulation-size gym, a permanent stadium structure for Wildcat Field, a new or improved ceramics/fine arts building and an upgraded library/media center and auditorium. In addition, every school in the Monrovia Unified School District over the last few years has undergone modernization and repair. Quality education continues to earn Monrovia Schools many prestigious awards because the school district provides challenging programs, safe campuses and friendly, direct and respectful interaction for its many students. OFor a listing of public schools, go to www.monroviaschools.net. PRIVATE SCHOOLS Anita Oaks School 822 Bradbourne Ave., Duarte, CA 91010 626-301-1354 Barnhart School 240 W. Colorado Blvd., Arcadia, CA 91007 626-446-5588 Carden of the Foothills School 429 Wildrose Ave., Monrovia, CA 91016 626-358-9414 Childnet Youth & Family Services, Inc./ Vista Ridge Academy 1311 S. Shamrock Ave., Monrovia, CA 91016 626-303-4764 First Lutheran School 1323 S. Magnolia Ave., Monrovia, CA 91016 626-357-3596 Immaculate Conception School 726 S. Shamrock Ave., Monrovia, CA 91016 626-358-5129 Maranatha High School 169 S. St. John Ave., Pasadena, CA 91105 626-817-4010 Tzu Chi Great Love Preschool and Kindergarten 206 E. Palm Ave., Monrovia, CA 91016 626-305-1188 Citrus College has an outstanding reputation as an institution of higher learning, fully dedicated to student success. The college grants associate degrees in 24 subject areas and certificates of achievement in 46 career/ technical programs. Students can access a variety of support services, including advice on transferring to a fouryear college or university. Founded in 1915, Citrus College is the oldest community college in Los Angeles County and the fifth oldest in California. In 2010, the college received a six-year Reaffirmation of Accreditation from the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges, Western Association of Schools and Colleges (ACCJC/ WASC), validating its strong commitment and stellar ability to educate its students and serve the community. Founded in 1990, Mt. Sierra College is a private institution offering a variety of bachelor’s degree programs in the fields of Business, Media Arts and Technology. All degree programs can be completed in three years and focus on providing practical, real-world skills using current industry tools, technologies and methodologies. The College offers a free referral and placement service to employers looking to hire qualified, professional candidates and also offers the use of facilities for interviewing. Monrovia has become a regional shopping destination that includes more than just the typical department stores and large retailers. The walkable and quaint Old Town district offers exceptional shops in a “Main Street” atmosphere, with art galleries, gift shops, doll and toy emporiums, vintage boutiques and antique marts mixed among restaurants on pleasant, shaded streets. Fa•ade and streetscape improvements ensure that Old Town maintains its quaint atmosphere and remains not just a shopping district, but also a community gathering place. For daily necessities, as well as specialty items, The Huntington Oaks Shopping Center features Kohl’s and Marshall’s, the famous Trader Joe’s specialty food store, Toys R’ Us, a Bed, Bath & Beyond store and a restaurant row. Just off the 210 Freeway, the Monrovia Auto Mall spreads along Central Avenue, from Shamrock to Mountain Avenues, and runs north all the way to Huntington Drive. A wide variety of vehicle brands sold by several dealerships are available. The Mall adjoins dealerships to the east in the City of Duarte, extending its reach and its opportunities through two communities. Diners in Monrovia can choose from more than 100 restaurants. Diners can sample a vast culinary spectrum in Monrovia. Classics like steak and burgers, ethnic delicacies such as Thai, Meditereanean and French cuisine and gourmet treats can all be found. New additions to Old Town are London Gastropub and T. Phillips Ale House, giving residents and visitors night spots to frequent in town. Whether in Old Town, along Huntington Crossing’s Restaurant Row, spread out along Foothill Boulevard or scattered in business neighborhoods throughout town, there’s always someplace great to dine in Monrovia. The Shop Monrovia campaign is a collaborative effort of the City, Chamber of Commerce and Old Town businesses, urging local residents to spend their consumer dollars in their community and reap sales tax benefits as a result. "Put your money where your house is" is the tagline for the project and shows residents and business owners why it is important in dollar terms. Every dollar spent in the community on taxable items adds a penny to the City treasury. A new Shop in Monrovia Website, www.shopinmonrovia.com, points out that, “When you choose to spend money at local restaurants, merchants and businesses, you keep local dollars circulating in our community, rather than flowing out. This in turn helps maintain our parks, library and public spaces and funds vital services and programs.” Also included on the Website are links to directories of Chamber of Commerce members, Old Town merchants and the City of Monrovia’s business license list, to assist users in finding Monrovia businesses. Along with the official Website, a “Shop in Monrovia” page has also been created on Facebook, www.facebook. com/SHOPinMonrovia, which has already attracted scores of “friends” who are posting comments and information on local businesses. Shop Monrovia banners in Monrovia’s business districts and lawn signs will soon be decorating residential neighborhoods, urging Monrovians to keep their tax dollars at home. The economic outlook for Monrovia remains positive due to the remarkable diversity and balance of its business base and the planned fiscal responsibility of the city council. For more than 30 years, Monrovia has pursued an aggressive program of economic development and business retention that has created a diverse, balanced and successful local economy second to none in the region. The City of Monrovia is dedicated to serving the needs of existing and new businesses. There is no utility tax and city fees are 23 percent below the average of other San Gabriel Valley cities. Monrovia’s businesses serve local, regional, national and international customers. By pro-actively diversifying its business base and working hard to both attract and keep leading firms in a variety of industries, Monrovia has successfully maintained a reputation as a regional business center and remains one of the least expensive communities in the Los Angeles area in which to do business. Whether it’s an independent firm, a home-based business, national or international corporation, Monrovia offers a broad commerce base with countless amenities to ensure the prosperity of the region. Healthcare practitioners in Monrovia and surrounding area are among the best in the county. Providers of every medical specialty have offices within the area. Seniors will also find practitioners and facilities particularly suited to their special needs, such as assisted living and nursing services. Hospitals with nearby emergency facilities include Methodist Hospital of Southern California in Arcadia. Methodist Hospital, founded in 1903, is a 460-bed, not-for-profit hospital. Services provided include comprehensive acute-care such as medical, surgical, perinatal, pediatrics, oncology, intensive care (neonatal and adult) and complete cardiovascular services, including open-heart surgery. Methodist Hospital is accredited by the Joint Commission. For more information, please visit www.methodisthospital.org or call 626-898-8000. City of Hope National Medical Center is a National Cancer Institute (NCI) designated comprehensive cancer center and a founding member of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN). City of Hope recently completed its Helford Clinical Research Hospital, a $200 million facility designed to deliver among the safest, most advanced patient care while forging new breakthrough. Monrovia's municipal government dates back to 1887, when the community became the fourth incorporated city in Los Angeles County. Monrovia today is a general-law city with a City Council/City Manager form of government, adopted in 1923. It includes a mayor, four council members who are elected at-large, and a city manager. The mayor is elected separately every two years and council members every four years. The city clerk and the city treasurer are also elected positions. The city manager is appointed to run the day-to-day operations of a modern community. A full-service municipality, Monrovia funds and operates its own police and fire departments. Residents are served by a 911 emergency system. The city is the main supplier of water to the town's residents and businesses. The city also operates the community's public library, parks, Community Center and Aquatics Center, regulates trash removal, business licenses, zoning and building permits, cares for the community's streets and sewers, and takes a strong hand in a host of community-related projects and programs. Monrovia is home to many non-profit groups and organizations whose members voluntarily come together in good faith to serve and support the community and one another. They sponsor fundraisers, food pantries, assistance for the sick and homeless and countless other charitable causes. Non-profit organizations include the Boys and Girls Club, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Friends of the Monrovia Library, Foothills Wildlife Conservancy, Monrovia Old House Preservation Group, Foothill Unity Center, Monrovia Firefighter and Police Associations, Monrovia Historical Society, Monrovia Volunteer Center, Monrovia Schools Foundation, YMCA, American Red Cross and many more. Service Clubs include Kiwanis, Rotary and Quota Club. These are indeed dedicated and caring people whose efforts improve the quality of life in our community, and who are part of what makes Monrovia a richer, better place to call home. ABCEFHIPRST Accountants Business Communications/Broadcasting Community Center Computer Sales/Service Contractors/Construction Education Financial Health Industry Insurance Plumbing/Heating/AC Real Estate Restaurants Retail/Shopping Security System Senior Services Transportation Accountants Gentile, McCloskey & Company Julie Gentile Soldo, CPA 348 E. Foothill Blvd. Arcadia, CA 91006 626-256-9090 x101 Fax: 626-226-4036 [email protected] gmtaxes.com Accountants Andersen Horie & Company Karie Y. Horie 132 E. Lemon Ave. Monrovia, CA 91016 626-359-7448 [email protected] www.andersenhorie.com Business Samuelson & Fetter Blain Fetter 602 East Huntington Drive Monrovia, CA 91016 626-305-5530 Fax: 626-305-5541 Communications/Broadcasting Champion Broadband Ruben Garcia, CEO 911 S. Primrose Ave. Monrovia, CA 91016 328-908-1405 Fax: 323-908-1078 [email protected] www.championbroadband.com Community Center City of Monrovia Dick Singer 415 S. Ivy Avenue Monrovia, CA 91016 626-303-6609 Fax: 626-303-6619 [email protected] cityofmonrovia.org Computer Sales/Service Superior Computer Technology, Inc. Mike Pollard 837 W. Foothill Blvd. Monrovia, CA 91016 626-301-4255 Fax: 626-301-4256 www.superiorcomputer.net Contractors/Construction Contractors Carpet Center Ed Adams 622 E. Evergreen Monrovia, CA 91016 626-305-7472 Contractors/Construction Jan Harrington - J. Harrington Construction, Corp Jan Harrington 201 S. Shamrock Avenue Monrovia, CA 91016 626-791-5556 Fax: 626-358-3117 [email protected] www.janecoconstruction.com Education Carden of the Foothills School Ryan Soule 429 Wildrose Avenue Monrovia, CA 91016 626-358-9414 Fax: 626-358-5164 [email protected] cardenofthefoothills.com Financial SCE Federal Credit Union Javier Velasquez 1175 Huntington Dr. Duarte, CA 91010 626-960-6474 Fax: 626-646-4499 [email protected] www.scefcu.org Financial Foothill Workforce Investment Board Howard Luong 1207 E. Green St. Pasadena, CA 91106 626-584-8369 Fax: 626-584-8375 [email protected] www.foothilletc.org Health Monrovia Animal Medical Center Nicole Gueniat, DVM 1128 S. Myrtle Ave. Monrovia, CA 91016 626-358-1146 Fax: 626-303-0732 [email protected] www.monroviapet.com Health Teruo Watanbe, O.D. & Associates - Plaza Vision Optometry Tervo Watanabe, O.D. 525 S. Myrtle Avenue, #107 Monrovia, CA 91016 626-359-3939 Fax: 626-358-5030 [email protected] Health Royal Oaks Manor Tracy Pierce 1763 Royal Oaks Drive North Bradbury, CA 91010 626-359-9371 Fax: 626-303-3163 royaloaksmanor.com Health Nani Skin Care Nani Shonnard 403 S. Myrtle Ave. Monrovia, CA 91016 626-239-6262 [email protected] www.naniskincare.com Health Santa Anita Family Service Fred Loya, Ph.D. 605 S. Myrtle Ave. Monrovia, CA 91016 626-359-9358 Fax: 626-358-7647 www.santaanitafamilyservice.org Industry Your Realty Advisors / NAI Capital Dan Bacani 225 South Lake Avenue, Suite 1170 Pasadena, CA 91101 626-242-7790 Fax: 626-628-3022 [email protected] www.yourrealtyadvisors.com Insurance Nancy Bond Insurance Services Nancy Bond O'Neal 204 West Lemon Avenue Monrovia, CA 91016 626-599-8559 Fax: 626-599-8579 [email protected] nbondinsurance.com Plumbing/Heating/AC Kevin Shaw Plumbing Inc. Kevin Shaw 224 E. Foothill Blvd. Monrovia, CA 91016 626-359-1864 Fax: 626-359-1026 [email protected] www.kevinshawplumbing.com Plumbing/Heating/AC No-Clogg Plumbing Baron Van Burems 1191 Huntington Drive, #160 Duarte, CA 91016 626-794-5708 Fax: 626-301-1953 [email protected] noclogg.com Real Estate Donna Baker - Dickson Podley Realtors Donna Baker 242 W. Foothill Blvd. Monrovia, CA 91016 626-487-0820 Fax: 626-408-1409 [email protected] 4salebydonna.com Real Estate Cathy Teegarden - Distinctive Properties Cathy Teegarden 134 S. Myrtle Avenue Monrovia, CA 91016 626-808-8987 Fax: 626-303-7019 [email protected] distinctiveproperties.net Real Estate Paragon at Old Town Dan Deibel 777 S. California Ave. Palo Alto, CA 94304-1102 650-842-2424 Fax: 650-213-8183 www.urbanhousinggroup.com Restaurants Chang Thai Bistro Gof Chullanan 614 S. Myrtle Avenue Monrovia, CA 91016 626-357-9658 Fax: 626-256-3670 [email protected] www.changthaibistro.com Restaurants Rudy's Mexican Food Rutilio Castrellon 602 S. Myrtle Ave. Monrovia, CA 91016 626-303-3393 Fax: 626-303-0391 Restaurants Jake's Roadhouse Tony Banuelos 622 S. Myrtle Avenue Monrovia, CA 91016 626-599-9453 Fax: 626-599-9553 jakesrh.net Restaurants Chicken King Express Armen Kahouati 445 W. Foothill Blvd. Monrovia, CA 91016 626-305-3111 [email protected] Retail/Shopping Flossy Boutique Kim Worley 430 S. Myrtle Avenue Monrovia, CA 91016 626-969-8600 Fax: 626-969-8602 Retail/Shopping Bellisima Salon and Day Spa Maria Fajardo 501 S. Myrtle Avenue Monrovia, CA 91016 626-357-0017 [email protected] bellisimasalon.com Security System Post Alarm Systems Angela Post 47 E. St. Joseph Street Arcadia, CA 91016 626-446-7159 Fax: 626-446-5811 [email protected] www.postalarmsystems.com Senior Services Westminster Gardens Bernadette Chang 1420 Santo Domingo Ave. Duarte, CA 91010 626-358-2569 Fax: 626-359-7566 [email protected] www.westgardens.org Transportation Pacific Transportation Federal Credit Union Luis Garcia-Moreira 505 S. Monrovia Avenue, Suite A Monrovia, CA 91016 424-233-3016 Fax: 424-233-3058 [email protected] ptfcu.org Transportation Jan's Towing Annette Ousterhout 1045 W. Kirkwall Azusa, CA 91702 626-357-3220 www.janstowing.com Transportation Metro Gold Line Foothill Extension Linda Manning 406 E. Huntington Dr., #202 Monrovia, CA 91016 626-471-9050 Fax: 626-471-9049 [email protected] www.foothillextension.org Copyright © 2010 VillageProfile.com, Inc.® 33 N. Geneva St. Elgin, IL 60120 (800) 600 - 0134 www.villageprofile.com