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Lake Oswego
Community Information
Lake
Oswego, OR, Website
Lake Oswego: Located in
the northwestern corner of Clackamas County, Lake Oswego is ideally situated
close to Oregon’s major metropolitan areas--just
eight miles south of downtown Portland and 45 minutes north of the state capitol
in Salem.
Lake Oswego is primarily a residential community (population 34,280), but there
is some commercial development and light manufacturing. The city’s largest
employers include the Lake Oswego School District, Safeco Insurance, the City
of Lake Oswego, Gage Industries, Inc. and Micro Systems Engineering, Inc. Most
of the businesses are located downtown near the Willamette River, which is
the city's eastern boundary, or on the west end in Lake Grove near Interstate
5.
In the 1990 U.S. Census, the median household income in Lake Oswego was $57,499--nearly
twice the income of other Portland suburbs. The average housing values were
also higher--$142,600 compared to $59,200 in Portland.
Lake Oswego’s original
neighborhoods reflect a glimpse of England, with English Cottage and Tudor
Revival homes designed by architect Richard Sundeleaf
between 1920 and 1940, but most residents live in new developments designed
to accommodate busy urban lifestyles.
The City has 17 neighborhood associations and more than 12 citizen advisory
boards. The Lake Oswego City Charter establishes a council-manager form of
government, which vests policy authority in a volunteer City Council and administrative
authority for day-to-day operations in an appointed, professional City Manager
(Douglas Schmitz). The Lake Oswego City Council consists of a mayor and six
councilors who serve four-year terms.
Lake Oswego has full-service police and fire departments, a heavily-used library
and an award-winning senior center. The City also provides planning, engineering,
water, sanitary sewer and surface water systems. In addition, there is a City-owned
water sports center on the Willamette River, two public swimming facilities
on the 405-acre Oswego Lake, a self-financed, 18-hole public golf course and
an indoor tennis center.
The city’s primary
sources of revenue are property taxes, sales and services, franchise fees
and intergovernmental agreements. The primary expenditures
are public safety, parks and recreation, debt service, redevelopment, library
and general administration.
The schools in Lake Oswego
rate among the best in the country. More than 80% of the high school students
attend college. The Lake Oswego School District
operates two high schools, two junior high schools and nine elementary schools.
There are several colleges in or near Lake Oswego--Lewis & Clark College
and its affiliate Northwestern School of Law, Marylhurst University, and Portland
Community College (Sylvania campus).
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