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Although
not a fledged city for too many years, Mission Viejo is steeped in a
tradition that dates back to the vanishing days of men on horses
driving cattle.
Nearly 25 years ago, the Mission
Viejo Co. bought a 10,000-acre section of Rancho Mission Viejo from
the O'Neill family, which once owned much of the land from Oceanside
to El Toro.
The company would create a master
plan for a community, specifying the number of parks, homes,
recreational activities and retail spaces.
The rolling hills of the valley,
home to a sea of grazing cattle, soon would also become home to
seekers of "The California Promise."
The vision for the community
began in 1963 with a planners blueprint. The general development
plan wound its way through the maze of county permits and by 1966
the first homes were sold, according to the Mission Viejo Co.
Fewer than a handful of changes -
among them the additions of Saddleback College and lake Mission
Viejo - have been made to that initial plan.
Currently, over 96,000 people
call Mission Viejo home.
Through it all there has been the
powerful guiding hand of the Mission Viejo Co. The company not only
laid the groundwork for a planned city, but also helped to develop
community activities and created a Mission Viejo identity.
The company was a major sponsor
of floats in the Rose Parade, Fourth of July displays at Lake
Mission Viejo, St. Patrick's Day parades and the internationally
recognized Nadadores swim team.
But since Mission Viejo became a
city on March 31, 1988, the company has begun withdrawing its heavy
financial support of community activities. And with Mission Viejo
development nearly completed, the company has begun looking across
the San Diejo (I-5) Freeway to nurture its new planned community of
Mission Viejo.
In 1974, the community formed a
Municipal Advisory Council to keep track of local issues and serve
as the eyes and ears of the County Board of Supervisors.
Eleven years later, as county
funds became scarcer, the county prompted the community to form a
service district which would be able to apply to the state for funds
to help pay for services such as roads and parks.
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