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April
17

Flyer belongs to Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce

April
17

Manage Debt Smartly to Boost Your Chances of Buying a Home Soon

For first-time homebuyers preparing financing on a 6–12 month timeline, everyday debt challenges before a mortgage can quietly become the biggest housing affordability barrier. Carrying balances, juggling payments, or leaning on cards for surprises can shrink what a monthly payment can safely handle, even when income looks solid. Just as important, the credit score impact on a home loan can turn routine debt into higher costs or a delayed approval when lenders take a snapshot of finances. A little short-term financial planning for a home purchase can bring the numbers back into range fast.

Quick Summary: Debt Moves That Help You Buy Sooner

  • Review your credit basics so lenders see strong, reliable borrowing habits.
  • Build a simple homebuyer budget that accounts for debt payments and savings goals.
  • Pay down high-interest balances first to reduce costs and improve cash flow.
  • Use smart, realistic ways to earn more income to strengthen your buying power.

Do These 8 Fixes to Shrink Balances and Lift Credit

When you're trying to buy a home soon, debt payoff works best when it's organized like a simple home project: clear zones, a short checklist, and weekly check-ins. Use these fixes to shrink balances, protect your credit, and keep momentum.

  1. Build a homebuying budget (the "mortgage-ready" version): Start with your take-home pay, then list your fixed bills, minimum debt payments, and the savings you must keep (even if it's small). Give every dollar a job, and add one new line item called "Home Prep" for extra debt payoff. If your budget feels tight, cap "nice-to-haves" at a specific weekly number so you stop renegotiating with yourself daily.
  2. Pick a payoff order and automate it: Choose either avalanche (highest APR first) or snowball (smallest balance first) and stick to it for 90 days. Pay minimums on everything else, then send your extra "Home Prep" money to the target debt within 24 hours of payday. This matches the quick-plan idea of focusing on one high-impact move at a time, instead of spreading effort too thin.
  3. Protect your credit utilization ratio like it's a fragile shelf: Keep card balances low relative to limits, especially on any single card, because utilization can swing your score even when you pay on time. If you can't pay in full, aim to pay cards down before the statement closes (not just before the due date) so lower balances get reported. If you're making a large purchase, split it across payment methods or pre-pay part of it to avoid a sudden spike.
  4. Call creditors and ask for easier terms: Set a 20-minute "debt admin" block and call one lender at a time. Many issuers are open to negotiation and may reduce an interest rate, waive a fee, or offer a structured plan if you explain you're stabilizing payments for a home goal. Get any agreement in writing and immediately update your autopay settings.
  5. Consider a debt consolidation loan, but run it like a safety inspection: Consolidation can help if it lowers your interest rate and turns multiple payments into one, but it only works if you stop adding new card debt. Before applying, compare the APR, term length, fees, and whether the payment fits your budget even in a "rough month." A good test: if you can't commit to keeping credit cards at (or near) zero after consolidation, pause and focus on payoff first.
  6. Add side income with a 4-week experiment: Look for work you can start quickly and control, extra shifts, weekend gigs, selling unused items, or a skill-based freelance task. The point isn't perfection; it's consistent extra cash to accelerate the target debt. Plenty of people do this already, 53% of full-time employees earn income from sources other than their main employment, so treat it as a normal short-term tool, not a forever lifestyle.
  7. Build a small emergency fund to prevent backsliding: Start with a mini-goal like $500–$1,000 in a separate savings account so surprise expenses don't land on a card. Contribute a tiny amount weekly (even $10–$25) while you're paying down debt; consistency matters more than size at first. This is the "floor" that keeps your progress from getting wrecked by car repairs or a medical copay.
  8. Do a weekly 15-minute money reset: Once a week, review balances, confirm autopays, and reassign any leftover money to your top-priority debt. Keep a simple one-page tracker: target debt, current balance, next milestone, and one action for the week. These small check-ins make it easier to map a realistic 6–12 month payoff pace and stay steady while your credit improves.

Plan → Pay → Report → Review

This workflow turns debt payoff into a 6 to 12 month roadmap you can repeat without burnout. You will know what to do each week, what to check each month, and what progress should look like before you talk to a lender.

 

Stage

Action

Goal

Map the next 30 days

Confirm due dates, cash flow, and one target balance

A realistic plan that fits your paycheck cycle

Schedule the paydown

Automate minimums; send extra money within 24 hours of payday

Fewer missed steps and faster principal reduction

Control what gets reported

Pay cards before statement close; avoid sudden utilization spikes

Lower reported balances and steadier score movement

Run a monthly check-in

Compare balances to last month; adjust budget caps and payoff target

Clear milestones and quick course corrections

Prep for pre-approval

Gather statements, verify income, and review credit report basics

Cleaner paperwork and fewer underwriting surprises

 

Each stage feeds the next: planning makes payments easier, payments make reporting cleaner, and cleaner reporting makes reviews more encouraging. Repeat the loop monthly and you will see your debt and your readiness move in the same direction.

Common Debt Questions Before You Buy a Home

Q: What are the best strategies to reduce debt before buying a home in the next 6 to 12 months?
A: Focus on one payoff target while keeping every other account current to avoid late marks. Use a simple two-step routine: automate minimum payments, then send extra money within a day of payday. If you carry credit cards, consider paying twice per month to keep reported balances lower.

Q: How can creating a budget help me manage my spending and improve my chances of mortgage approval?
A: A budget turns "I think I can afford it" into numbers a lender can trust. It helps you cap discretionary spending, free up cash for debt paydown, and prevent new balances from creeping in. Keep it simple: fixed bills, debt minimums, savings, then a weekly spending limit.

Q: Which types of debt should I prioritize paying off first when planning to purchase a house soon?
A: Prioritize high-interest revolving debt first, especially credit cards, because it can hurt cash flow and reported utilization. Next, tackle smaller balances you can clear quickly to reduce the number of monthly obligations. Keep installment loans current and avoid taking on new financing right before applying.

Q: What are effective ways to boost my income temporarily to accelerate debt reduction before a home purchase?
A: Look for short-term, trackable income you can commit entirely to debt, like overtime, a seasonal role, or selling unused items. Set a weekly transfer rule so extra earnings go straight to your target balance, not everyday spending. Save pay stubs or deposit records so you can document the income clearly.

Q: If I work with a financial advisor or mortgage specialist, how can they assist me in managing my debt for home buying readiness?
A: They can help you choose a payoff order that improves your application profile, not just your total balance. They can also spot paperwork issues early, including credit file mix-ups like wrong name, phone number, and tell you what statements to gather. For organization, keep a single folder of lender-ready PDFs, correct small form errors with a basic online PDF editing tool, and file everything by the requested deadline.

Turn Debt Progress Into Faster Mortgage Approval Momentum

Buying a home can feel like a race against time, especially when balances, paperwork, and credit worries pile up at once. The steadier path is a proactive debt-management mindset, stay organized, make intentional choices, and keep your plan moving even when it's not perfect. That kind of financial discipline supports long-term credit health, helps a lender see consistency, and strengthens successful home purchase planning on your timeline. Proactive debt management turns today's payments into tomorrow's approval. Choose three immediate actions, one debt move, one document check, and one credit follow-up, and do them this week. That momentum builds stability and resilience that lasts well beyond closing day

Article provided Suzie Wilson

April
17

March 17, 2026

     California home sales, prices rise in February as mortgage rates ease, C.A.R. reports

  • Existing, single-family home sales totaled 274,820 in February on a seasonally adjusted annualized rate, up 7.0 percent from 256,910 in January and down 0.3 percent from 275,600 in February 2025.

  • February's statewide median home price was $830,370, up 0.9 percent from $822,630 in January and up from $829,060 in February 2025.

  • Year-to-date statewide home sales were down 0.7 percent in February.

SACRAMENTO (March 17) – California home sales perked higher in February as slightly more favorable mortgage rates improved affordability and encouraged more buyers to reenter the market, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) said today.

Infographic: https://www.car.org/Global/Infographics/2026-02-Sales-and-Price

 

Closed escrow sales of existing, single-family detached homes in California reached a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 274,820 in February, according to data collected by C.A.R. from more than 90 local REALTOR® associations and MLSs statewide. This annualized figure reflects the number of homes that would be sold in 2026 if February's sales pace continued throughout the year, with adjustments made for typical seasonal patterns. February sales were up from 256,910 in January and down 0.3 percent from 275,600 in February 2025.

Despite the uptick, the streak of sub-300,000 seasonally adjusted annualized sales continued for the 41st consecutive month, underscoring the market's persistent weakness over the past few years. While the stronger-than-usual, month-to-month increase in pending sales provides some hope that closed transactions could improve in March, the recent spike in mortgage rates may dampen buyer momentum and keep sales activity subdued in the near term.

"Following a soft start to the year, the housing market regained momentum in February, with both sales and prices showing solid gains," said 2026 C.A.R. President Tamara Suminski, a Southern California broker and REALTOR®. "The conflict in the Middle East is creating some uncertainty for the broader economy and financial markets, which could lead to some short-term hesitation in the housing market. We remain hopeful though that the situation will stabilize in the weeks ahead, allowing market fundamentals and buyer and seller confidence to reassert themselves."

California's median home price increased in February from both the prior month and year ago, bouncing back to $830,370 from a 23-month low reached a month ago. The statewide median price rose 0.9 percent from January, outpacing the long-run average of -0.3 percent observed between January and February. On a year-over-year basis, the median price rose following two consecutive months of annual declines and posted its best growth rate in five months. While prices are expected to climb as the market approaches the spring homebuying season, lingering concerns about the broader economy and the market condition could constrain the pace of price gains in the months ahead.

"While mortgage rates remain below year-ago levels, they recently jumped to their highest level in seven months and could temper buyer momentum as we head into the spring homebuying season," said C.A.R. Senior Vice President and Chief Economist Jordan Levine. "However, many homeowners remain locked in to historically low rates, and inventory remains tight, so any stabilization in rates could help bolster home prices in the spring market despite ongoing affordability and economic challenges."

Other key points from C.A.R.'s February 2026 resale housing report include:

  • At the regional level, three of California's five major regions recorded year-over-year increases in non-seasonally adjusted home sales. The Central Coast led with a solid 6.2 percent gain from a year earlier, followed by the San Francisco Bay Area (4.0 percent) and the Central Valley (0.6 percent). Meanwhile, the Far North posted a modest sales decline, falling 2.9 percent from its year-ago level, followed by Southern California (-0.6 percent).

  • At the county level, 27 of the 53 counties tracked by C.A.R. posted year-over-year sales gains in February, with 14 recording double-digit increases. Mariposa led with a 57.1 percent increase from a year earlier, followed by Tehama (53.8 percent) and Santa Cruz (53.6 percent). Meanwhile, sales in two counties, Contra Costa and Sonoma, remained flat, and 24 counties experienced annual sales declines, including 15 that fell by more than 10 percent. Mono led the pack with a -57.1 percent drop, Plumas (-28.6 percent) having the second biggest drop, and Siskiyou (-20.8 percent) recording the third largest dip.

  • Only two of California's five major regions recorded year-over-year median home price growth. The San Francisco Bay Area led with a 2.8 percent gain from February 2025, followed by the Central Coast with a 0.8 percent increase. In contrast, the Far North recorded the largest annual decline at 2.1 percent, followed by the Central Valley (-2.0 percent) and Southern California (-0.5 percent).

  • At the county level, 24 of the 53 counties tracked by C.A.R. recorded year-over-year median home price increases. Trinity led with a 225.4 percent increase, followed by Mono (74.1 percent); the gains in both counties largely reflected a shift in the mix of homes sold, which skewed the upturn in their median prices. Plumas ranked third with a solid annual growth rate of 34.9 percent. Conversely, 28 counties registered price declines from a year earlier, while Siskiyou remained unchanged. Lassen recorded the steepest price drop (-30.1 percent), followed by Santa Barbara (-19.8 percent) and Napa (-17.8 percent), underscoring continued price softness in many markets across the state.
  • Housing inventory pulled back in February, receding from the prior month and staying unchanged from a year earlier as slower market activity and growing economic uncertainty weighed on seller confidence. The Unsold Inventory Index was 4.0 months in February, down from 4.4 months in January and unchanged from February 2025. While total active listings increased from the previous month, they fell from a year ago for the first time in 25 months. With the streak of inventory expansion broken in February, the first dip in supply in slightly more than two years suggests that some homeowners may be delaying their listing decisions as mortgage rates continue to climb amid a tense geopolitical environment that has clouded the near-term economic outlook. As a result, while the number of properties for sale remains relatively high compared to levels observed a couple of years ago, the housing supply growth rate may begin to moderate in the months ahead.
  • The median number of days it took to sell a California single-family home was 29 days in February, up from 26 days in February 2025.
  • C.A.R.'s statewide sales-price-to-list-price ratio* was 99.3 percent in February 2026 and 98.0 percent in February 2025.

  • The statewide median price per square foot** for an existing single-family home was $424, up from $421 in February a year ago.

  • The 30-year, fixed-mortgage interest rate averaged 6.05 percent in February, down from 6.84 percent in February 2025, according to C.A.R.'s calculations based on Freddie Mac's weekly mortgage survey data.

Note:  The County MLS median price and sales data in the tables are generated from a survey of more than 90 associations of REALTORS® throughout the state and represent statistics of existing single-family detached homes only. County sales data is not adjusted to account for seasonal factors that can influence home sales. Movements in sales prices should not be interpreted as changes in the cost of a standard home. The median price is where half sold for more and half sold for less; medians are more typical than average prices, which are skewed by a relatively small share of transactions at either the lower end or the upper end. Median prices can be influenced by changes in cost, as well as changes in the characteristics and the size of homes sold. The change in median prices should not be construed as actual price changes in specific homes.

*Sales-to-list-price ratio is an indicator that reflects the negotiation power of home buyers and home sellers under current market conditions. The ratio is calculated by dividing the final sales price of a property by its original list price and is expressed as a percentage. A sales-to-list ratio with 100 percent or above suggests that the property sold for more than the list price, and a ratio below 100 percent indicates that the price sold below the asking price.

**Price per square foot is a measure commonly used by real estate agents and brokers to determine how much a square foot of space a buyer will pay for a property. It is calculated as the sale price of the home divided by the number of finished square feet. C.A.R. currently tracks price-per-square foot statistics for 53 counties.

Leading the way…® in California real estate for 120 years, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (www.car.org) is one of the largest state trade organizations in the United States with nearly 190,000 members dedicated to the advancement of professionalism in real estate. C.A.R. is headquartered in Sacramento.

# # #

February 2026 County Sales and Price Activity
(and condo sales data not seasonally adjusted)

February 2026

Median Sold Price of Existing Single-Family Homes

Sales

State/Region/County

February

2026

January

2026

 

February

2025

 

Price MTM% Chg

Price YTY% Chg

Sales MTM% Chg

Sales YTY% Chg

Calif. Single-family home

$830,370

$822,630

r

$829,060

 

0.9%

0.2%

7.0%

-0.3%

Calif. Condo/Townhome

$645,000

$625,000

 

$675,000

 

3.2%

-4.4%

28.0%

1.2%

Los Angeles Metro Area

$812,950

$808,000

 

$824,880

 

0.6%

-1.4%

11.5%

-1.8%

Central Coast

$1,047,500

$1,091,180

 

$1,039,500

 

-4.0%

0.8%

21.2%

6.2%

Central Valley

$485,000

$480,000

 

$495,000

 

1.0%

-2.0%

15.4%

0.6%

Far North

$378,000

$379,950

 

$386,000

 

-0.5%

-2.1%

-12.6%

-2.9%

Inland Empire

$601,350

$595,000

 

$611,290

 

1.1%

-1.6%

9.0%

-3.7%

San Francisco Bay Area

$1,285,000

$1,127,000

 

$1,250,000

 

14.0%

2.8%

44.1%

4.0%

Southern California

$861,880

$845,530

 

$866,360

 

1.9%

-0.5%

13.7%

-0.6%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

San Francisco Bay Area

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alameda

$1,303,500

$1,120,010

 

$1,300,000

 

16.4%

0.3%

33.8%

-4.5%

Contra Costa

$819,000

$802,000

 

$841,000

 

2.1%

-2.6%

31.2%

0.0%

Marin

$1,575,000

$1,527,000

 

$1,675,000

 

3.1%

-6.0%

58.3%

17.3%

Napa

$837,000

$1,002,500

 

$1,018,500

 

-16.5%

-17.8%

30.0%

18.2%

San Francisco

$1,976,000

$1,653,320

 

$1,600,000

 

19.5%

23.5%

93.3%

4.3%

San Mateo

$2,250,000

$2,000,000

 

$2,200,000

 

12.5%

2.3%

39.9%

12.9%

Santa Clara

$2,016,000

$1,807,500

 

$2,000,000

 

11.5%

0.8%

70.1%

13.7%

Solano

$565,400

$552,500

 

$600,000

 

2.3%

-5.8%

41.4%

0.4%

Sonoma

$809,500

$799,000

 

$852,560

 

1.3%

-5.1%

28.3%

0.0%

Southern California

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Imperial

$447,500

$455,000

 

$394,000

 

-1.6%

13.6%

22.9%

-10.4%

Los Angeles

$842,660

$879,720

 

$852,190

 

-4.2%

-1.1%

14.2%

-0.3%

Orange

$1,432,500

$1,410,000

 

$1,465,500

 

1.6%

-2.3%

9.3%

-3.6%

Riverside

$631,000

$639,440

 

$646,840

 

-1.3%

-2.4%

20.4%

-4.0%

San Bernardino

$510,000

$500,990

 

$490,000

 

1.8%

4.1%

-14.7%

0.5%

San Diego

$1,050,000

$1,050,000

 

$1,040,000

 

0.0%

1.0%

22.2%

4.6%

Ventura

$930,000

$917,500

 

$969,500

 

1.4%

-4.1%

16.8%

7.3%

Central Coast

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monterey

$880,000

$998,750

 

$900,000

 

-11.9%

-2.2%

17.3%

7.5%

San Luis Obispo

$990,000

$950,000

 

$967,500

 

4.2%

2.3%

15.1%

-5.8%

Santa Barbara

$1,215,000

$1,475,000

 

$1,515,000

 

-17.6%

-19.8%

15.5%

-0.7%

Santa Cruz

$1,275,000

$1,237,500

 

$1,260,000

 

3.0%

1.2%

53.6%

53.6%

Central Valley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fresno

$426,250

$429,990

r

$442,850

 

-0.9%

-3.7%

27.7%

8.3%

Glenn

$370,000

$340,000

 

$335,000

 

8.8%

10.4%

100.0%

40.0%

Kern

$410,000

$398,220

 

$409,900

 

3.0%

0.0%

5.9%

-12.4%

Kings

$356,990

$383,000

 

$375,000

 

-6.8%

-4.8%

0.0%

23.3%

Madera

$435,000

$412,000

 

$425,000

 

5.6%

2.4%

64.4%

-9.3%

Merced

$402,990

$409,750

 

$414,500

 

-1.6%

-2.8%

23.9%

38.3%

Placer

$639,980

$625,000

 

$649,000

 

2.4%

-1.4%

16.7%

-4.2%

Sacramento

$545,000

$540,000

 

$550,000

 

0.9%

-0.9%

20.7%

8.0%

San Benito

$821,000

$859,900

 

$780,000

 

-4.5%

5.3%

12.0%

3.7%

San Joaquin

$525,000

$530,000

 

$540,000

 

-0.9%

-2.8%

11.8%

-15.1%

Stanislaus

$462,500

$477,000

 

$460,000

 

-3.0%

0.5%

1.4%

8.0%

Tulare

$381,000

$375,000

 

$380,000

 

1.6%

0.3%

-8.8%

-8.3%

Far North

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Butte

$435,750

$445,000

 

$449,000

 

-2.1%

-3.0%

-7.7%

-17.8%

Lassen

$199,000

$255,000

 

$284,500

 

-22.0%

-30.1%

-10.0%

12.5%

Plumas

$485,000

$350,000

 

$359,500

 

38.6%

34.9%

-28.6%

-28.6%

Shasta

$386,500

$386,000

 

$386,000

 

0.1%

0.1%

-6.6%

5.2%

Siskiyou

$285,000

$359,000

 

$285,000

 

-20.6%

0.0%

-9.5%

-20.8%

Tehama

$323,630

$347,000

 

$360,000

 

-6.7%

-10.1%

-37.5%

53.8%

Trinity

$374,250

$290,000

 

$115,000

 

29.1%

225.4%

-50.0%

-20.0%

Other Calif. Counties

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Amador

$445,000

$430,000

 

$460,000

 

3.5%

-3.3%

22.2%

-15.4%

Calaveras

$452,920

$475,000

r

$415,000

 

-4.6%

9.1%

2.3%

7.1%

Del Norte

$335,000

$460,000

 

$352,000

 

-27.2%

-4.8%

66.7%

25.0%

El Dorado

$700,000

$705,380

 

$677,000

 

-0.8%

3.4%

17.7%

-11.0%

Humboldt

$430,000

$384,000

 

$431,000

 

12.0%

-0.2%

-21.5%

-15.1%

Lake

$338,950

$312,000

 

$352,500

 

8.6%

-3.8%

25.0%

-13.0%

Mariposa

$520,000

$369,750

 

$410,000

 

40.6%

26.8%

-8.3%

57.1%

Mendocino

$481,500

$480,000

 

$535,500

 

0.3%

-10.1%

0.0%

18.5%

Mono

$2,350,000

$1,564,500

 

$1,350,000

 

50.2%

74.1%

-50.0%

-57.1%

Nevada

$532,000

$578,500

 

$512,950

 

-8.0%

3.7%

1.5%

11.3%

Sutter

$464,040

$460,000

 

$417,500

 

0.9%

11.1%

25.9%

-19.0%

Tuolumne

$362,500

$420,000

 

$381,000

 

-13.7%

-4.9%

-10.2%

7.3%

Yolo

$600,000

$559,200

 

$633,500

 

7.3%

-5.3%

0.0%

-10.8%

Yuba

$430,000

$449,950

 

$459,000

 

-4.4%

-6.3%

32.5%

-18.5%

r = revised
NA = not available

 

February 2026 County Unsold Inventory and Days on Market
(Regional and condo sales data not seasonally adjusted)

February 2026

Unsold Inventory Index

Median Time on Market

State/Region/County

Feb.

2026

Jan.

2026

 

Feb.

2025

 

Feb.

2026

Jan.

2026

 

Feb.

2025

 

Calif. Single-family home

4.0

4.4

 

4.0

 

29.0

40.0

r

26.0

 

Calif. Condo/Townhome

4.7

5.6

 

4.2

 

35.0

49.0

 

28.0

 

Los Angeles Metro Area

4.3

4.6

 

4.3

 

36.0

41.0

 

34.0

 

Central Coast

3.9

4.5

 

4.1

 

31.5

37.5

 

26.5

 

Central Valley

4.0

4.4

 

3.9

 

30.0

39.0

 

26.0

 

Far North

6.2

5.3

 

5.8

 

45.5

55.0

 

42.5

 

Inland Empire

4.9

5.3

 

5.1

 

48.0

49.0

 

43.0

 

San Francisco Bay Area

2.8

3.5

 

3.2

 

14.5

32.0

 

13.0

 

Southern California

4.1

4.4

 

4.1

 

32.0

39.0

 

30.0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

San Francisco Bay Area

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alameda

2.5

2.8

 

3.0

 

12.0

17.0

 

11.0

 

Contra Costa

3.0

3.6

 

3.4

 

13.0

29.0

 

11.5

 

Marin

2.8

3.8

 

3.5

 

63.0

95.0

 

52.0

 

Napa

7.3

8.6

 

8.4

 

105.0

112.5

 

99.5

 

San Francisco

1.6

2.4

 

2.2

 

29.0

23.0

 

37.0

 

San Mateo

2.4

2.5

 

2.5

 

9.0

13.0

 

9.0

 

Santa Clara

2.4

2.9

 

2.5

 

8.0

11.0

 

8.0

 

Solano

3.3

4.2

 

3.2

 

55.0

59.0

 

46.0

 

Sonoma

4.0

4.5

 

4.3

 

79.5

95.0

 

73.5

 

Southern California

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Imperial

3.9

5.1

 

3.2

 

18.0

23.0

 

33.5

 

Los Angeles

4.2

4.5

 

4.1

 

32.0

38.0

 

30.0

 

Orange

3.5

3.4

 

3.4

 

24.0

35.0

 

23.0

 

Riverside

4.7

5.6

 

4.9

 

50.0

50.0

 

45.0

 

San Bernardino

5.6

4.9

 

5.7

 

47.0

49.0

 

39.0

 

San Diego

3.2

3.6

 

3.4

 

18.0

29.0

 

16.0

 

Ventura

3.9

4.2

 

4.0

 

35.5

52.0

 

36.0

 

Central Coast

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monterey

4.4

4.9

 

4.5

 

33.0

39.0

 

19.0

 

San Luis Obispo

3.9

4.1

 

3.6

 

51.0

55.0

 

48.0

 

Santa Barbara

3.6

4.1

 

3.6

 

18.5

22.0

 

18.0

 

Santa Cruz

3.6

5.1

 

5.8

 

21.5

43.0

 

18.0

 

Central Valley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fresno

4.6

5.6

 

4.4

 

27.0

34.0

 

26.5

 

Glenn

2.8

5.4

 

4.9

 

89.0

41.0

 

56.5

 

Kern

4.2

4.5

 

3.7

 

32.0

38.0

 

22.0

 

Kings

3.7

3.5

 

4.4

 

40.0

33.0

 

30.0

 

Madera

5.4

9.1

 

5.7

 

51.0

35.0

 

32.0

 

Merced

3.4

4.3

 

4.3

 

39.0

29.0

 

32.0

 

Placer

3.6

3.8

 

3.5

 

32.0

51.0

 

27.0

 

Sacramento

3.0

3.3

 

3.1

 

25.0

40.0

 

21.0

 

San Benito

4.2

4.2

 

4.6

 

41.0

58.0

 

22.0

 

San Joaquin

5.2

5.3

 

4.1

 

44.0

42.0

 

31.0

 

Stanislaus

4.0

3.9

 

4.2

 

26.5

32.0

 

26.0

 

Tulare

4.1

4.5

 

4.0

 

26.0

33.0

 

39.0

 

Far North

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Butte

5.3

4.3

 

4.0

 

28.5

37.0

 

30.0

 

Lassen

4.2

5.3

 

11.3

 

268.0

141.5

 

85.5

 

Plumas

9.0

5.9

 

7.7

 

190.0

99.5

 

130.5

 

Shasta

5.2

5.0

 

5.2

 

36.5

49.0

 

27.0

 

Siskiyou

10.8

8.9

 

7.1

 

103.0

35.0

 

138.5

 

Tehama

7.4

4.7

 

9.1

 

61.0

99.0

 

35.0

 

Trinity

22.5

12.3

 

19.2

 

195.5

85.0

 

250.0

 

Other Calif. Counties

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Amador

7.3

9.1

 

5.6

 

69.0

73.0

 

65.0

 

Calaveras

8.4

7.5

r

7.0

 

40.0

54.0

r

75.0

 

Del Norte

5.2

8.4

 

6.8

 

63.0

73.0

 

34.5

 

El Dorado

4.8

5.4

 

4.8

 

59.5

59.5

 

45.5

 

Humboldt

7.2

5.7

 

7.0

 

52.0

31.0

 

69.0

 

Lake

10.3

12.6

 

8.3

 

71.5

50.5

 

37.0

 

Mariposa

9.0

7.9

 

13.3

 

127.0

5.0

 

64.0

 

Mendocino

10.3

10.1

 

12.4

 

131.5

168.0

 

116.0

 

Mono

4.7

3.2

 

3.0

 

77.0

29.0

 

106.0

 

Nevada

4.1

4.0

 

5.6

 

62.0

82.5

 

52.0

 

Sutter

4.9

5.6

 

3.1

 

41.5

43.0

 

61.5

 

Tuolumne

6.3

6.0

 

9.0

 

85.0

75.0

 

92.0

 

Yolo

3.5

3.5

 

3.2

 

26.5

47.0

 

39.0

 

Yuba

4.5

5.8

 

4.3

 

28.0

53.0

 

49.0

Article belongs to CAR.org

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