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In October 2014, the U.S. Labor Department's wage and hour division in San Francisco fined the company $3,500 and ordered it to pay more than $40,000 in back wages after it had employed eight people at its new location in Fremont and paid the workers $1.21 per hour to install the computer network. California minimum wage was then $8.00 an hour.
Aerial view of Fremont, California and Newark, California in 2021 with salt ponds. Items portrayed in this file depicts. California. San Francisco Bay. Alameda County.
Oakland ARTCC in Fremont, California. Oakland Air Route Traffic Control Center (ZOA), (radio communications, "Oakland Center") is one of 22 [1] Area Control Centers in the United States. It is located at 5125 Central Ave, Fremont, California, roughly 25 miles southeast of downtown Oakland in the East Bay. [2]
It was founded in 1980 by Robert T. Huang and based in Fremont, California. As an information technology supply chain services company, it offered services to original equipment manufacturers , software publishers and reseller customers.
The nascent company was concerned with providing billing and administrative services to large medical care providers, with the initial RadNet imaging center being located near Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. [2] In 1992 the company was bought by Primedex Health Systems, a California-based management company that catered to small medical clinics.
The Niles Film Museum in 2012. The Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum is located in what is now the Niles district in the city of Fremont, California. The museum is housed in the Edison Theater building, a century-old Nickelodeon movie theater, just half a block from the former site of the Niles Essanay Studios [1] where Broncho Billy and Charlie Chaplin made films in the 1910s.
It was founded in 2002, [2] [4] and went online at tricityvoice.com in 2004. [5]The paper covers local news, arts, history, and entertainment. [1] [6] It is designated a newspaper of general circulation by the cities of Fremont [7] [8] [9] and Union City. [10]
For many decades, Washington Township consisted of agricultural fields dotted with eight towns, many now part of Fremont and some with local historians publishing their stories. The eight towns were the town of Newark , the two towns that became Union City , viz., Alvarado and Decoto , and the five towns that became Fremont , viz., Centerville ...