Turlock, CA Facts, Population, Income, Demographics, Economy

Population (male): 36,121

Cost of Living: March 2019 cost of living index in Turlock: 98.5 (near average, U.S. average is 100)

Poverty (breakdown): (12.2% for White Non-Hispanic residents, 40.8% for Black residents, 20.4% for Hispanic or Latino residents, 9.9% for American Indian residents, 47.4% for Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander residents, 18.3% for other race residents, 17.3% for two or more races residents)

Sex Offenders: According to our research of California and other state lists, there were 99 registered sex offenders living in Turlock, California as of January 18, 2021. The ratio of all residents to sex offenders in Turlock is 734 to 1.The ratio of registered sex offenders to all residents in this city is near

Elevation: 101 feet

Races:
      White alone - 36,354 - 49.4%
      Hispanic - 28,651 - 39.0%
      Asian alone - 3,973 - 5.4%
      Two or more races - 2,081 - 2.8%
      Black alone - 1,575 - 2.1%
      American Indian alone - 224 - 0.3%
      Native Hawaiian and Other
>Pacific Islander alone - 169 - 0.2%
      Other race alone - 11 - 0.01%

While it grew to be a relatively prosperous and busy hub of activity throughout the end of the 19th century, it was not incorporated as a city until February 15, 1908. By that time intensive agricultural development surrounded most of the city (agriculture remains the major economic force in the region in current times). Many of the initial migrants to the region were Swedish. As an early San Francisco Chronicle article stated of the region and this community's lacteal productivity, "you have to hand it to the Scandinavians for knowing how to run a dairy farm." Turlock went on to become known as the "Heart of the Valley" because of its agricultural production. With the boom came racial and labor strife. In July 1921, a mob of 150 white men evicted 60 Japanese cantaloupe pickers from rooming houses and ranches near Turlock, taking them and their belongings on trucks out of town. The white men claimed the Japanese were undercutting white workers by taking lower wages per crate of fruit picked. In protest, fruit growers briefly threatened not to hire the white workers behind the eviction, preferring to let melons rot on vines than hire such characters. As a result of this stance, the eviction had the opposite effect of what the mob had intended. By August, Japanese workers had returned, and, moreover, they were nearly the only people employed to pick melons. The affair gained national attention, and California's Governor William Stephens vowed that justice would be served. Six men were quickly arrested, though they were apparently untroubled by the charges, stating that leaders of Turlock's American Legion and Chamber of Commerce had told them no trouble would come of their actions. Although a former Turlock night watchman testified that one of the accused had disclosed a plan "to clean up Turlock of the Japs," all those arrested were later acquitted of charges. The San Francisco Chronicle's editorial line was opposition to both the evictions and Japanese labor, with one column stating "we in California are determined that Oriental workers shall be kept out of the state. But that does not mean that the decent citizens of California will tolerate for one moment such proceedings as the attack of a mob on the Japanese cantaloupe workers in the Turlock district."

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Recognitions and Certifications

Accredited Drug Testing has been recognized as one of the "Top 10 drug testing companies" for excellent customer service and we have received TPA Accreditation from the National Drug and Alcohol Screening Association. We are active in all drug testing industry associations and our staff are trained and certified as drug and alcohol testing specialists.

Important Links

National Drug and Alcohol Screening Association (https://ndasa.com/)

National Drug Free Workplace Alliance (https://www.ndwa.org/)

Substance Abuse Program Administrators Association (https://www.sapaa.com/)

Substance Abuse Mental Health Safety Administration (https://www.samhsa.gov/)

US Drug Enforcement Administration (https://www.dea.gov/)

Office of Drug alcohol Policy Control (https://www.transportation.gov/odapc)

Hair Follicle Drug Testing 1

Hair Follicle Drug Testing Turlock, CA

Accredited Drug Testing Inc provides Hair Follicle drug testing Turlock, CA for individuals and employers needing a drug test utilizing the hair follicle analysis process. To schedule a hair follicle drug test in Turlock, CA, Call (800) 221-4291. Most testing centers are within minutes of your home or office.


Hair follicle drug testing Turlock, CA is available for 5, 10, and 12 panel drug screenings.

To schedule a Hair Follicle Drug Test at one of our testing centers in the Grady county area, Call (800) 221-4291, Same Day Service Available. Testing centers do not require an appointment, but you must call and register for the test.

Hair follicle drug testing is becoming a more popular method by employers and individuals in need of a drug test due to the detection time frame being longer than a standard urine test.

Local Hair follicle drug testing Turlock, CA centers are available to assist our clients throughout the entire process and all of our hair follicle drug testing Turlock, CA facilities have certified drug testing technicians available to conduct a hair follicle drug test collection.

Hair Follicle Drug Test

In recent years the method to conduct drug testing has more frequently included a hair follicle drug test. Many employers, courts and Substance Abuse Professionals are requiring a hair follicle drug test instead of a standard urine test. Hair follicle drug tests are used by employers who have zero-tolerance drug use policies, courts and individuals on probation. The primary benefit of a hair follicle drug test includes a much longer detection period for drug use which typically is up to 90 days. However, when screening drug use within the last 5 days the urine test continues to be the most accurate test.

Hair Follicle Drug Test Process

The procedure used to perform a hair follicle test is simple, the drug testing specialist will cut approximately 120 strands of hair (not really a lot) utilize a chain of custody procedure and send the hair to a certified laboratory for analysis. Drug testing centers require at least 1.5 inches of hair to perform this test and the hair generally needs to come from the head, however if the donor does not have head hair certain testing centers can use hair from chest, leg or arm pit.

If a donor has no hair on their body, than a hair test cannot be performed!

Hair Follicle Drug Test Results

Once the hair follicles have been analyzed by a certified laboratory they will then be reviewed and then verified by a Medical Review Officer (licensed Physician) who will than release the results. Generally a negative hair follicle drug test result is available in 2-3 days. A non-negative hair follicle drug test is available in approximately 5 days.

Urine cut-off levels are expressed in nanograms per milliliter (ng/mL) or as a weight of drug per unit volume of urine. Hair cut-off levels are expressed in picograms per milligram (pg/mg) or as a weight of drug per unit weight of hair

5 Panel Hair Follicle Drug Test

The 5 panel hair follicle drug test screens for the following

  • Amphetamine
  • Cocaine
  • Marijuana
  • Opiates
  • Phencyclidine

5 Panel w/ Expanded Opiates Hair Follicle Drug Test

The 5 panel w/ expanded Opiates hair drug test screens for the standard 5 drugs but will also screen for Opiate class drugs such as pain killers, which may indicate abuse of prescription drugs

  • Amphetamine
  • Cocaine
  • Codeine
  • Marijuana
  • Morphine
  • Phencyclidine
  • Hydrocodone
  • Hydromorphone
  • Oxycodone
  • Oxymorphone
  • 6 AM- Heroine

10 Panel Hair Follicle Drug Test

The 10 panel hair follicle drug test screens for the following

  • Amphetamines
  • Barbiturates
  • Benzodiazepines
  • Cocaine
  • Marijuana
  • Methadone
  • Methamphetamine
  • Opiates
  • Phencyclidine
  • Propoxyphene

12 Panel Hair Follicle Drug Test

The 12 panel hair follicle drug test screens for the following

  • Amphetamines
  • Barbiturates
  • Benzodiazepines
  • Cocaine
  • Marijuana
  • Meperidine
  • Methadone
  • Opiates
  • Oxycodone
  • Phencyclidine
  • Propoxyphene
  • Tramadol

To schedule a Hair follicle Drug Testing Turlock, CA Call (800)221-4291.

Accredited Drug Testing Inc. is pleased to provide hair follicle drug testing, alcohol testing, occupational health and DNA testing services in Turlock, CA.


1048 GEER RD 0.6 miles

1048 GEER RD
TURLOCK, CA 95380
Categories: TURLOCK CA

1801 COLORADO AVE STE 130 1.2 miles

1801 COLORADO AVE STE 130
TURLOCK, CA 95382
Categories: TURLOCK CA

2000 PAULSON RD 1.4 miles

2000 PAULSON RD
TURLOCK, CA 95380
Categories: TURLOCK CA

911 E TUOLUMNE RD 1.5 miles

911 E TUOLUMNE RD
TURLOCK, CA 95382
Categories: TURLOCK CA

1340 MITCHELL RD 9.5 miles

1340 MITCHELL RD
MODESTO, CA 95351
Categories: MODESTO CA

400 12TH ST STE 23 12.6 miles

400 12TH ST STE 23
MODESTO, CA 95354
Categories: MODESTO CA

400 12th St Suite 23 12.6 miles

400 12th St Suite 23
Modesto, CA 95354
Categories: Modesto CA

600 COFFEE RD 13.0 miles

600 COFFEE RD
MODESTO, CA 95355
Categories: MODESTO CA

1700 COFFEE RD 13.9 miles

1700 COFFEE RD
MODESTO, CA 95355
Categories: MODESTO CA

1524 MCHENRY AVE STE 500 14.3 miles

1524 MCHENRY AVE STE 500
MODESTO, CA 95350
Categories: MODESTO CA

1524 MCHENRY AVE STE 160 14.3 miles

1524 MCHENRY AVE STE 160
MODESTO, CA 95350
Categories: MODESTO CA

1524 McHenry Ave. Ste 120, 14.3 miles

1524 McHenry Ave. Ste 120,
Modesto, CA 95350
Categories: Modesto CA

1441 FLORIDA AVE 14.4 miles

1441 FLORIDA AVE
MODESTO, CA 95350
Categories: MODESTO CA

1541 FLORIDA AVE STE 102 14.5 miles

1541 FLORIDA AVE STE 102
MODESTO, CA 95350
Categories: MODESTO CA

1064 Woodland Ave Ste F 14.6 miles

1064 Woodland Ave Ste F
Modesto, CA 95351
Categories: Modesto CA

2112 MCHENRY AVE 14.8 miles

2112 MCHENRY AVE
MODESTO, CA 95350
Categories: MODESTO CA

1248 Main St, 15.7 miles

1248 Main St,
Newman, CA 95360
Categories: Newman CA

801 E ST 15.9 miles

801 E ST
PATTERSON, CA 95363
Categories: PATTERSON CA

3125 CONANT AVE 16.9 miles

3125 CONANT AVE
MODESTO, CA 95350
Categories: MODESTO CA

3605 HOSPITAL RD STE H 17.3 miles

3605 HOSPITAL RD STE H
ATWATER, CA 95301
Categories: ATWATER CA

1700 KEYSTONE PACIFIC PKWY 17.5 miles

1700 KEYSTONE PACIFIC PKWY
PATTERSON, CA 95363
Categories: PATTERSON CA

1390 W H ST STE C 18.2 miles

1390 W H ST STE C
OAKDALE, CA 95361
Categories: OAKDALE CA

4601 DALE RD FL 4 18.4 miles

4601 DALE RD FL 4
MODESTO, CA 95356
Categories: MODESTO CA

333 MERCY AVE 23.5 miles

333 MERCY AVE
MERCED, CA 95340
Categories: MERCED CA

3070 M ST STE 11 23.6 miles

3070 M ST STE 11
MERCED, CA 95348
Categories: MERCED CA

374 W OLIVE AVE STE A 23.7 miles

374 W OLIVE AVE STE A
MERCED, CA 95348
Categories: MERCED CA

394 E YOSEMITE AVE 23.8 miles

394 E YOSEMITE AVE
MERCED, CA 95340
Categories: MERCED CA

510 W MAIN ST STE E 24.0 miles

510 W MAIN ST STE E
MERCED, CA 95340
Categories: MERCED CA

1550 COLONY RD STE B 24.1 miles

1550 COLONY RD STE B
RIPON, CA 95366
Categories: RIPON CA

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Alcohol Testing Turlock, CA Services

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Local Area Info: Turlock, California

Founded on December 22, 1871, by prominent grain farmer John William Mitchell, the town consisted of a post office, a depot, a grain warehouse and a few other buildings. Mitchell declined the honor of having the town named for himself. The name "Turlock" was then chosen instead. The name is believed to originate from the Irish village “Turlough”. In October 1870, Harper's Weekly published an excerpt from English novelist James Payn's story Bred in the Bone, which includes the mention of a town named "Turlough" (translated from Gaelic as "Turlock"). Local historians believe that this issue of Harper's Weekly was read by early resident H.W. Lander who suggested the alternate name. Mitchell and his brother were successful businessmen, buying land and developing large herds of cattle and sheep that were sold to gold miners and others as they arrived. They were also leaders in wheat farming and cultivated tracts of land under the tenant system. Eventually, the Mitchells owned most of the area, over 100,000 acres, from Keyes to Atwater. In the early 20th century, 20-acre lots from the Mitchell estate were sold for $20 an acre.

While it grew to be a relatively prosperous and busy hub of activity throughout the end of the 19th century, it was not incorporated as a city until February 15, 1908. By that time intensive agricultural development surrounded most of the city (agriculture remains the major economic force in the region in current times). Many of the initial migrants to the region were Swedish. As an early San Francisco Chronicle article stated of the region and this community's lacteal productivity, "you have to hand it to the Scandinavians for knowing how to run a dairy farm." Turlock went on to become known as the "Heart of the Valley" because of its agricultural production. With the boom came racial and labor strife. In July 1921, a mob of 150 white men evicted 60 Japanese cantaloupe pickers from rooming houses and ranches near Turlock, taking them and their belongings on trucks out of town. The white men claimed the Japanese were undercutting white workers by taking lower wages per crate of fruit picked. In protest, fruit growers briefly threatened not to hire the white workers behind the eviction, preferring to let melons rot on vines than hire such characters. As a result of this stance, the eviction had the opposite effect of what the mob had intended. By August, Japanese workers had returned, and, moreover, they were nearly the only people employed to pick melons. The affair gained national attention, and California's Governor William Stephens vowed that justice would be served. Six men were quickly arrested, though they were apparently untroubled by the charges, stating that leaders of Turlock's American Legion and Chamber of Commerce had told them no trouble would come of their actions. Although a former Turlock night watchman testified that one of the accused had disclosed a plan "to clean up Turlock of the Japs," all those arrested were later acquitted of charges. The San Francisco Chronicle's editorial line was opposition to both the evictions and Japanese labor, with one column stating "we in California are determined that Oriental workers shall be kept out of the state. But that does not mean that the decent citizens of California will tolerate for one moment such proceedings as the attack of a mob on the Japanese cantaloupe workers in the Turlock district."

In 1930, Turlock's population was 20% Assyrian. They were such a significant part of the population that the southern part of town even became referred to as Little Urmia, referring to the region of northwestern Iran from which they largely came. In the 1930s Turlock was cited by Ripley's Believe It or Not as having the most churches per capita in the U.S.; this had partly to do with the variety of ethnic churches, which were established for the relatively small settler population. Various religious centers reflecting a diverse population, such as Sikh Gurdwaras, various Assyrian Christian churches, and many mainline Protestant, Mormon and Roman Catholic churches have been built.

Show Regional Data

Population (male): 36,121

Cost of Living: March 2019 cost of living index in Turlock: 98.5 (near average, U.S. average is 100)

Poverty (breakdown): (12.2% for White Non-Hispanic residents, 40.8% for Black residents, 20.4% for Hispanic or Latino residents, 9.9% for American Indian residents, 47.4% for Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander residents, 18.3% for other race residents, 17.3% for two or more races residents)

Sex Offenders: According to our research of California and other state lists, there were 99 registered sex offenders living in Turlock, California as of January 18, 2021. The ratio of all residents to sex offenders in Turlock is 734 to 1.The ratio of registered sex offenders to all residents in this city is near

Elevation: 101 feet

Races:
      White alone - 36,354 - 49.4%
      Hispanic - 28,651 - 39.0%
      Asian alone - 3,973 - 5.4%
      Two or more races - 2,081 - 2.8%
      Black alone - 1,575 - 2.1%
      American Indian alone - 224 - 0.3%
      Native Hawaiian and Other
>Pacific Islander alone - 169 - 0.2%
      Other race alone - 11 - 0.01%

While it grew to be a relatively prosperous and busy hub of activity throughout the end of the 19th century, it was not incorporated as a city until February 15, 1908. By that time intensive agricultural development surrounded most of the city (agriculture remains the major economic force in the region in current times). Many of the initial migrants to the region were Swedish. As an early San Francisco Chronicle article stated of the region and this community's lacteal productivity, "you have to hand it to the Scandinavians for knowing how to run a dairy farm." Turlock went on to become known as the "Heart of the Valley" because of its agricultural production. With the boom came racial and labor strife. In July 1921, a mob of 150 white men evicted 60 Japanese cantaloupe pickers from rooming houses and ranches near Turlock, taking them and their belongings on trucks out of town. The white men claimed the Japanese were undercutting white workers by taking lower wages per crate of fruit picked. In protest, fruit growers briefly threatened not to hire the white workers behind the eviction, preferring to let melons rot on vines than hire such characters. As a result of this stance, the eviction had the opposite effect of what the mob had intended. By August, Japanese workers had returned, and, moreover, they were nearly the only people employed to pick melons. The affair gained national attention, and California's Governor William Stephens vowed that justice would be served. Six men were quickly arrested, though they were apparently untroubled by the charges, stating that leaders of Turlock's American Legion and Chamber of Commerce had told them no trouble would come of their actions. Although a former Turlock night watchman testified that one of the accused had disclosed a plan "to clean up Turlock of the Japs," all those arrested were later acquitted of charges. The San Francisco Chronicle's editorial line was opposition to both the evictions and Japanese labor, with one column stating "we in California are determined that Oriental workers shall be kept out of the state. But that does not mean that the decent citizens of California will tolerate for one moment such proceedings as the attack of a mob on the Japanese cantaloupe workers in the Turlock district."

(800) 221-4291