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A new bill pay portal was released for customers of Hanover Borough's garbage or water utilities, featuring among other new features, autopay options.
The Jacoby Building was built of brick and stone, and thus survived the 1875 fire that swept through the adjacent Arcata Plaza area. Jacoby sold the building to Alexander Brizard in 1880. A number of general stores operated out of the building, continuing to supply goods to mining camps in the Klamath and Trinity Mountains. Second and third ...
Arcata (/ ɑːr ˈ k eɪ. t ə /; [7] Wiyot: Goudi’ni; [8] Yurok: Oket'oh) [9] is a city adjacent to the Arcata Bay (northern) portion of Humboldt Bay in Humboldt County, California, United States. At the 2020 census, Arcata's population was 18,857. Arcata was first founded in 1850 as Union, was
The Arcata Community Recycling Center (ACRC), founded in 1971 as part of the Northcoast Environmental Center, is one of America's oldest non-profit recycling facilities. [ citation needed ] The center promotes environmental awareness in the North Coast and facilitates diversion of materials from landfills in Arcata and Eureka , California .
Sewage from the city of Arcata is treated and released to Humboldt Bay via complex flow routing through a number of contiguous ponds, wetlands, and marshes. Resemblance of treatment features to natural bay environments may cause potential ambiguity about where wastewater ceases to be considered partially treated sewage and meets enhancement objectives of the California Bays and Estuaries ...
The Arcata Transit Center is a bus station in Arcata, California. It is located at 925 E Street, between 9th and 10th Streets. It is located at 925 E Street, between 9th and 10th Streets. The center is served by six fixed-route local and inter-city transit services.
The Arcata Eye was a newspaper which describing itself as "the mildly objectionable weekly newspaper for Arcata, California." The paper was started, owned and edited by Kevin L. Hoover, a former founding member of Michigan band, The Sparklers. It covered news relevant to citizens of the City of Arcata and surrounding environs.
Because of this relationship, Arcata has relatively reliable transit service for a city its size. In 1974, the City Council of Arcata chose to use its allotment of SB 325 money for a public mass transit system. In April 1975, the new bus service within Arcata city limits was inaugurated and named the Arcata & Mad River Transit System.