People of Phoenix

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The population of Phoenix is predominantly white (i.e., generally of European ancestry); the site was settled largely by Midwesterners in several waves of migration. More than two-fifths of the people identify themselves as Hispanic. A large proportion of the city’s Hispanic population is from Mexico, and Hispanics constitute a significant segment of the unskilled labour force. Other minorities in the city are Asians, African Americans, and Pacific Islanders.

The Hohokam were the earliest permanent Native American inhabitants of the Phoenix area. After them came the Akimel O’odham (Pima), Maricopa, Yavapai, and Yaqui groups. The U.S. government sent many of these peoples to nearby reservations in the 19th century. Although only a fraction of the city’s population is Native American, Phoenix still has one of the largest urban concentrations of Native Americans in the country. Several reservations are located to the south and northeast of the metropolitan area.

African Americans, Hispanics, and Native Americans live primarily in the southern portion of the city, below the downtown district. Open ethnic conflict is rare, except as it is played out by rival gangs of mostly young inner-city residents.

Despite the large number of retirement communities in the area, the overwhelming majority of the population is under the age of 45. The majority of the people also tend to be relatively new to the region, many residents having lived in Phoenix for less than a decade.

Economy

Phoenix’s economy was once dominated by ranching and farming, but it shifted in the mid-20th century to one based on services, technology, and, more notably, tourism. Maricopa county was one of the top urban agricultural producers in the country in 1980, but farming has since steadily lost ground to urban growth; now only a small portion of the labour force is engaged in food production.

About three-fourths of the state’s manufacturing jobs are located in the Phoenix area. Light industry is predominant, especially the manufacture of electronics, transportation equipment, aerospace technology, foodstuffs, and cosmetics. The principal crops are cotton, durum wheat, fruits, and vegetables. Only a small proportion of the workforce in the private sector belongs to labour unions, which, along with tax incentives, has made Phoenix attractive to relocating corporations, many of them engaged in the manufacture of semiconductors and other electronic components. The region has thus emerged as a centre of high-technology production. A well-developed electronics infrastructure also has made Phoenix a capital of the telecommunications industry. More than half the labour force works in banking, finance, and other service activities. For the most part, however, the city’s economy still depends on tourism, especially in the winter months.

Phoenix is well served by roads, railways, and airlines. Automobiles are the most popular method of transportation, which has led to severe air pollution. All streets within the city limits were paved by 1920, far ahead of many metropolitan areas in the country. Phoenix is served by a system of freeways, most of which were built in the last two decades of the 20th century to alleviate congestion. Construction of a light-rail system began in 2006. A branch line of the Union Pacific Railroad connects the city to the main line between Los Angeles and El Paso. Regular airline connections to Phoenix began in the late 1920s. Several airports serve the metropolitan area; the most important of these is Sky Harbor International, southeast of downtown.

Administration and society

Government

Phoenix has operated on a council-manager system since 1914; it was one of the first cities in the country to adopt this now-common method of governance. Until the late 1940s, powers were evenly divided between the two entities, with council members able to reward political patronage. Vulnerable to corruption, this system ended when the Charter Government Committee—led by department store executive and later Republican Party presidential nominee Barry M. Goldwater, who became a member of the city council in 1949—implemented several key organizational reforms.

By the late 1990s, Phoenix had developed a business-oriented city government headed by a city manager appointed by the city council. The council, made up of eight elected members, sets city policy, enacts ordinances, and appropriates funds for long-term city projects. The mayor, elected at large, serves as the head of the council for a four-year term. Individual members are elected by district; they initially serve two-year terms and can be reelected to serve subsequent four-year terms.

Municipal services

Phoenix, in concert with the Maricopa Association of Governments and the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, provides a range of services for its citizens. The city has an extensive network of public parks, notably Encanto and Papago parks and the Phoenix Mountains Preserve, a 6,000-acre (2,400-hectare) natural park in a desert-foothills setting. The 17,000-acre (6,900-hectare) South Mountain Park, one of the largest city parks in the country, lies on the south side of the city.

Health

The system of health care in the Phoenix area has experienced severe setbacks, especially since the 1980s. Managed-care corporations have assumed control of most medical facilities and imposed cutbacks on services. Residents may receive care at the area’s public hospital, the Maricopa County Medical Center. The Arizona State Hospital provides inpatient mental health care. The Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale (opened 1987) includes medical research facilities.

Education

Until the mid-1980s the educational system was characterized by inadequate funding, overcrowding, and poorly trained staff. In later years additional funding, stricter requirements, and the development of specialized magnet schools yielded some positive results, with students scoring well above national averages on several standardized tests.

Several public and private institutions of higher learning are located in and around Phoenix. Arizona State University (1885), a state land-grant institution, has three campuses in the Phoenix-Tempe area. Other institutions include the University of Phoenix (1976), Grand Canyon University (1949), Southwestern College (1960), Western International University (1978), and Thunderbird, the Garvin School of International Management (1946), in Glendale. The Maricopa Community College District is one of the largest community college systems in the country.