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Website. www .cvesd .org. Chula Vista Elementary School District ( CVESD) is a school district in California, headquartered in Chula Vista, [2] in the South Bay area of San Diego County . The 103-square-mile (270 km 2) district, the largest Kindergarten through Grade 6 elementary school district in the State of California, is located between ...
San Diego County. Population. 453,901. The South Bay, also known as South County, is a region in southwestern San Diego County, California consisting of the cities and unincorporated communities of Bonita, Chula Vista, East Otay Mesa, Imperial Beach, Lincoln Acres, National City, and South San Diego. [1]
The Gauntlet. Website. www .materdeicatholic .org. Mater Dei Catholic (MDCHS) is a private, Roman Catholic TK-12 school in Chula Vista, California, United States. It is located in the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego. In 1960, Bishop Charles F. Buddy founded the first co-educational Catholic high school in the Diocese of San Diego.
The Sweetwater Union High School District, headquartered in Chula Vista, serves as the secondary school district. The Chula Vista Elementary School District, the largest K-6 district in the State of California, with 44 campuses, serves publicly educated kindergarten through sixth grade students.
Bonita, California. / 32.65833°N 117.03528°W / 32.65833; -117.03528. Bonita ( Spanish for "Beautiful") is a census-designated place (CDP) in southern San Diego County, California, nestled between the cities of Chula Vista, National City, and San Diego. The population was 12,538 at the 2010 census .
National School District is a public elementary schools district based in National City, in the South Bay region of San Diego County, California. In addition to almost all of National City, the district includes a small section of San Diego and a small piece of Chula Vista .
The first motor bus hit the San Diego area streets in 1922, operating between National City and Chula Vista. Over the next two decades, the rail lines would gradually be replaced by motor buses, and on April 24, 1949, the last rail service was discontinued, making San Diego the first major city in California to convert to an all-bus system.
There are 85 "MTS Bus" fixed-route services, nine "Rapid" bus rapid transit routes, and the "MTS Access" paratransit service. In 2023, the system had a ridership of 33,068,400, or about 121,200 per weekday as of the fourth quarter of 2023. Routes are operated by private contractors and by the San Diego Transit Corporation (SDTC), a subsidiary ...