Victoria County, Verona

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Victoria County
Comarca de Victoria
Victoria County Images
Flag of Victoria County
Official seal of Victoria County
Official logo of Victoria County
Country Cartadania
State Verona
RegionNortheast
Metro areaPalm Coast Metro Area
Chartered1710
County seat and largest cityLa Joya
Incorporated cities9
Government
 • BodyBoard of Supervisors
 • Chief Executive OfficerOskar Schall (SDP)
Area
 • Total5,020.2 km2 (1,938.3 sq mi)
 • Land5,003.1 km2 (1,931.7 sq mi)
 • Water17.1 km2 (6.6 sq mi)
 • Rank2nd
Population
 (2023)
 • Total5,990,018
 • Density1,200/km2 (3,100/sq mi)
Area code(s)213/326/804, 770, 932
WebsiteVictoria County Website

Victoria County, officially the County of Victoria (Cartadanian: Comarca de Victoria), is a county in the Commonwealth of Verona. It is situated in northeastern Verona and is the 43rd-largest county by area in Verona. In 2023, the county's population was estimated to sit at 5,990,018, making it the third-most populous county in Verona. It is the 11th highest-income county in Verona by median family income. It is home to the state's 5th- and 6th-largest cities, La Joya and Los Sueños, respectively, of which, La Joya, is also the county seat. Because both of their populations sit just below 1 million, and both cities have approximately the same area, they are sometimes referred to as the "Twin Cities".

History

Victoria County was created from a portion of Sierra County in 1731 following Lynnhaven County's separation as a result of a land grant to a local family. The Verona General Assembly created it as a charter county from existence and it was the first county to do so. Prior to its establishment in 1731, it was known as the Rancho Victoria. At the time, Sierra County was relatively large, and included a large portion of northeastern Verona, with all of what are now Andina, Lynnhaven, Santa Rosa, and Victoria Counties.

Prior to the creation of Georgetown and efforts to create a more centralized location, Los Sueños was the seat of the Commonwealth's government. The old capitol building became Victoria County's legislature building until it was demolished and replaced by a different building. Los Sueños is one of the oldest continuously inhabited, inland settlements in Verona.

Geography

According to the Cartadanian Institute of Geography and Statistics, the county has a total area of 5,020.2 square kilometres (1,938.3 sq mi), of which 5,003.1 square kilometres (1,931.7 sq mi) are land and 17.1 square kilometres (6.6 sq mi) are covered by water. The county is bounded by the Natua River on its southern border, while the San Miguel River cuts west to east through the county.

Adjacent counties

Government and politics

County politics in Victoria County, as in all Verona counties, center around a Board of Commissioners. It is composed of eight popularly elected county commissioners, one representing each precinct drawn decennially on the basis of population, and a county judge elected to represent the entire county. The county judge functions as the chairman (how it is termed in other counties) elected by the county at-large, bringing total board membership to 9. An associate judge is selected by the county judge and has historically been a judge from the county superior court. The board appoints a professional, nonpartisan county executive to manage operations of each government agency.

In other elected County offices, the Victoria County Commonwealth's Attorney, Sara Capra, the Victoria County Clerk of Superior Court, Ileana Sidoti, and the Victoria County Sheriff, Ivori Lusardi, are all SDPs.

Board of County Supervisors
Name Party First Election District
  Davinia Marcelin, County Judge SDP 2019 At-Large
  Octavia Adjutor Progressista 2015 1st
  Vega Burgos SDP 2019 2nd
  Naia Fidalgo SDP 2011 3rd
  Celia Bacque UCon 2019 4th
  Louie Woods Progressista 2019 5th
  Morgan Belenus SDP 2019 6th
  Emery Avila SDP 2019 7th
  Emil Popa SDP 2019 8th
Constitutional Officers
Position Name Party First Election
  Sheriff Aurelio Neyra SDP 2020
  Commonwealth Attorney Keahi Akina SDP 2020
  Clerk of Superior Court Adrianos Kairallis SDP 2020

Economy

Top employers

Demographics

Education

Victoria County is home to multiple school districts–three to be exact, of which, Twin Cities Independent School District is the largest, serving all of La Joya and Los Sueños, as well as neighboring portions of unincorporated Victoria County. It enrolls around 290,000 students in its 281 schools. The county is also home to Victoria Independent School District and Westside Independent School District, both of which enroll around 180,000 students.

The county is home to several institutions of higher learning, and there are a two major public universities located within the county lines: Verona Commonwealth University, Twin Cities (VCU Twin Cities) and the Verona Institute of Technology, which has its primary campus in La Joya where it serves as the anchor for the Palm Coast Tech Center.

The community college system consists of thirteen campuses governed by the trustees of the Victoria Community College District, including La Joya College (LJC), Los Sueños College (LSC), Twin Cities College, Rylander Mission College, Victoria Ames College, Torino College, Victoria Northwest College, Victoria Trade-Technical College and West Victoria College.

Transportation

The Palm Coast Metropolitan Transit Authority (METRO or PCMTA) is the metropolitan transit authority for Victoria County as well as the entirety of the Palm Coast metro area. It operates the bus, light rail, and metrorail systems within the county and is an arm of the Palm Coast Consortium of Metropolitan County Governments. It has the largest transit fleet in Verona.

PCMTA also operates all of the major airports in the area via the Palm Coast Airport Authority (except Rosslyn International Airport, which is maintained by the city), including Silvain Rosetta International Airport, which sits in an unincorporated section of the county between the cities of La Joya and Los Sueños.

Parks

Sister counties

Communities

Cities

Census-designated places

  • Ariza
  • Balderas
  • Bolea
  • Carlito
  • Castrillón
  • Cleostrata
  • Ferrón
  • Lightfoot
  • Maciel
  • Melero
  • Mendoza
  • Poma
  • Pérezton
  • Queiros
  • Rancho Alypius
  • Sartori
  • Zarrilli

Planned communities

The city of Edair was a planned residential city, originally with seven communities, while the city of Commerce is a planned industrial/commercial blend city, where 91% of the city is zoned to industry and 8% is zoned to commercial. The remaining 1% are small communities that existed before the city's current zoning code took affect. Other planned communities exist within the other cities and CDPs, but no other master-planned cities are currently incorporated in the county.

Notable people