Lodging and Accommodations

Best Western Luxury Inn
(209) 832-027

Fairfield Inn Tracy
(209) 833-0135

Hampton Inn Tracy
(209) 833-0483

Holiday Inn Express Hotel & Suites
(209) 830-8500

Motel 6
(209) 836-4900

Tracy Inn
(209) 835-4700


Legacy Fields

Legacy Fields creating an economic impact to Tracy

Located on the north side of Tracy, the Legacy Fields Sports Complex represents years of planning and partnerships between the City of Tracy and local youth sports leagues. The first phase consists of 72-acres, and includes nine baseball fields and six soccer fields, with one additional baseball field and two additional soccer fields to be completed by the fall of 2017.

At full build-out, Legacy Fields will consist of 166-acres of active sport areas. It will eventually serve as the largest multi-sport facility in the region and will aid in responding to the growing demand for sports facilities.

The name “Legacy Fields” touches on the history of Tracy and will provide opportunities for local and regional sports leagues to leave their legacy within the community. Part of that legacy includes the commitment Tracy Little League has made to the City of Tracy and Legacy Fields. Tracy Little League is responsible for the construction of two ball fields and has committed to the ongoing maintenance of five fields that they will operate under a set of lease agreements with the city.

Tracy Youth Soccer and Tracy Babe Ruth baseball will rent fields out at Legacy Fields for league play, while the city will market the soccer fields and ball fields rented by Tracy Babe Ruth for tournament play and other related sports events when the facility is not being rented to those two organizations.

The vision for Legacy Fields is that it will become a desired location for youth and adult sports tournaments, as well as local youth sports league play and related events. But in order for it to become the destination, the facility needs to be amenitized, which means adding the features, improvements and support facilities that will make tournament and program organizers put Legacy Fields on their list of “must book” facilities.

While it will be very playable, Legacy Fields needs to feel good to parents, coaches and tournament directors. It needs to feel welcoming and user friendly. Not only does it need to accommodate the players on the fields, but it also needs to provide an experience that makes kids and adults want to come back.

As we create a high quality sports facility that is aesthetically pleasing and popular with both residents and sports team across the region, it will lead to visitors – store shopping, gas tank filling, restaurant visiting and hotel staying visitors. Legacy Fields has the opportunity to become an economic engine, drawing in people from the West Coast region to compete in baseball, soccer and softball tournaments, as well as shop and buy.

In fact, we anticipate hosting as many as three tournaments per month all year round just with Phase 1. It is anticipated that there will be more than 350,000 visits to Legacy Fields annually once Phase 1 is complete. Parks have economic power, and Legacy Fields will be a benefit to kids in youth sports, local business owners, and the community.


Major Employers

Business Name — # Employees — Type

Amazon — 4437 — Distribution
Safeway Distribution Center — 2000 — Distribution Perishable
Tracy Unified School District — 1507 — Education
Defense Distribution Depot San Joaquin — 1375 — Government
Deuel Vocational Institute — 1300 — State Prison Facility
Taylor Farms Pacific — 691 — Food Processor
Sutter Tracy Community Hospital — 568 — Medical Care
City of Tracy — 550 — Municipal Services
Fed Ex Ground Package System — 416 — Freight Trucks
Restoration Hardware — 413 — Distribution
Owens-Illinois of NA — 400 — Glass Container Mfg.
Barbosa Cabinets — 382 — Cabinet Makers
Adesa Golden Gate — 360 — Car Auction
Costco Distribution Center — 329 — Distribution Perishable
Home Depot Distribution — 329 — Distribution
Leprino Foods — 305 — Mozzarella Cheese Processor
Orchard Supply Hardware — 302 — Distribution
Musco Olive Products — 230 — Ripe Olive Processor
Winco Foods — 200 — Retail
Temple Inland — 197 — Corrugated Containers
Yellow Freight — 195 — Trucking Freight
Ameron International — 192 — Concrete Pipe
Costco Meats — 182 — Wholesale Meat Processing
Macy’s — 159 — Retail
New Hope Post Acute Care — 149 — Skill Nursing/Rehabilitation
CA Department of Water Resources — 140 — Water Services
Save Mart — 139 — Retail
McLane Food Service — 137 — Distribution
Costco Cold Storage — 131 — Distribution Perishable
Texas Roadhouse — 126 — Restaurant
Kaiser Permanente – Tracy — 125 — Medical Care
Pepsi/Gatorade – Jacobson Distribution — 124 — Distribution
SMX Staffing — 122 — Employment Agency
Costo Wholesale — 121 — Retail
Basalite Block — 120 — Manufacturing
Glass Fab Tempering — 120 — Glass Manufacturing
Safeway — 110 — Retail
Kelloggs-Keebler/APL Logistics — 104 — Distribution
Target — 103 — Retail
American Truck & Trailer — 102 — Truck Bodies
Crate & Barrel — 98 — Distribution


Nonprofits and Organizations

CLUBS & CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS
Tracy African American Association — (209) 249-6644
Tracy Breakfast Lions Club — (209) 914-5533
Tracy Rotary Club — (209) 832-0111
Tracy Sunrise Rotary — (209) 815-5261
GFWC Tracy Woman’s Club — (209) 814-2988

Nonprofit Organizations
American Red Cross — (209) 644-2828
Animal Rescue of Tracy — (209) 642-4324
Central Valley Association of Realtors — (209) 858-1700
Chest of Hope — (209) 831-7889
Child Abuse Prevention Council of SJC — (209) 464-4524
Community Center for the Blind & Visually Impaired — (209) 466-3836
Community Hospice — (209) 578-6300
Community Partnership for Families SJC — (209) 229-4921
El Concilio Council for Spanish Speaking — (209) 820-5910
Emergency Food Bank — (209) 464-7369
Environmental Alternatives Foster Agency — (209) 839-8021
Give Every Child a Chance — (209) 823-6222
Grand Foundation — (209) 835-3900
Hearts of Harvest Foundation — (209) 613-2693
Here We Grow Again, Inc. — (209) 814-2944
Hospice of San Joaquin — (209) 957-3888
Jefferson 4-H Club — (925) 202-3027
McHenry House for the Homeless — (209) 835-2328
Mount Oso Building Association — (209) 835-7688
Pet Resources of Tracy — (209) 483-9613
Sabor del Valle — (408)464-3690
Salvation Army Tracy Service Center — (209) 836-2346
San Joaquin Historical Society — (209) 331-2055
San Joaquin Human Resource Assoc. — (844) 788-6882
Scoop Ministries, Inc. — (209) 613-2693
South Side Community Organization — (209) 607-5415
Sow A Seed Community Foundation — (209) 229-4559
T & J Educational Tutoring — (209) 914-5800
Tracy Branch Library – SJC — (209) 831-4255
Tracy Crime Stoppers — (209) 831-6582
Tracy Historical Museum — (209) 832-7278
Tracy Hospital Foundation — (209) 832-6052
Tracy Interfaith Ministries — (209) 836-5424
Tracy Volunteer Caregivers — (209) 835-2772
UNEED2, INC. — (209) 831-3550
United Cerebral Palsy — (209) 751-3017
University of San Francisco Pleasanton — (925)867-2711
Vets & Vines — (209) 855-6773
Women’s Center Youth & Family Services — (209) 467-2314
United Way — (209) 469-6980


Welcome to Tracy

The Chamber is pleased to present our 2017-18 Tracy Community Resource Guide and Membership Directory. This guide serves as a snapshot of a city that is setting the standard in the region and ripe with promise, a city that we lovingly call home.

You are here at an exciting time for Tracy. We are in the early stages of tremendous growth, business is thriving, and residents are enjoying a quality of life that is richer than ever. Tracy has taken advantage of its strategic location to grow into a major distribution hub. Amazon, FedEx, Medline and others have chosen to locate here, promising to bring tens of thousands of jobs to Tracy. Residential construction has followed suit, with thousands of new rooftops on the horizon. These new rooftops – paired with average household income numbers that dwarf the county average – are driving retail growth in the city. The overall health of Tracy’s economy is evidenced by upward-trending sales tax numbers that are the source of admiration in the region. These numbers aren’t just an indicator of an appetite for local shopping, they are the foundation for the many amenities that provide a rich quality of life for Tracy residents. We stroll the vibrant, historic downtown, sipping wine and leafing through fresh produce at the many events put on by the Tracy City Center Association. We sing along with headline performers and enjoy art classes with our children at the Grand Theatre Center for the Arts. And we play in the moderate, Mediterranean climate at the new 72-acre Legacy Fields Sports Complex and the many parks dotting the city.

Our beautiful city is the gem of the region and we are proud to boast its tremendous promise. I believe I speak on behalf of the entire Tracy Chamber of Commerce when I say Tracy is my home and a community that I love. Welcome to our town. I hope you are able to stay awhile and take part in its bright future.

Sincerely,

Nolan O’Brien
2017 Chamber Chairman

Tracy Chamber Staff

President
Sofia Valenzuela
svalenzuela@tracychamber.org

Membership/Event Services Coordinator
Maria Valenzuela
mvalenzuela@tracychamber.org

Hire Me First Program Coordinator
Alyssa Mupo
hiremefirst@tracychamber.org

Receptionist
Carol Neely

Outside Sales Coordinator
Ceci Haas
cecihaas@gmail.com

2017 Tracy Chamber Board

Board Chair:
Nolan O’Brien, Lawrence Livermore National Lab

Chair Elect:
Bill Fields, Surtec Systems, Inc

Past Chair:
Dan Greene, Bank of the West

Lisa Aguilera, Aspire Hometown Realty

Dan Arriola, District Attorney’s Office

Dan Ball, McLane Food Service

Dana Cooper, Pacific Gas & Electric Co.

Will Fleet, Tracy Press

Dave Garcia, Dave Garcia Designs

Joe Homen, Tracy Toyota

Cliff Hudson, Fresh Coat Painters

Brent Ives, BHI Management Consulting

Sherry Jones, Owens Illinois of North America

Robin Lopez, Taylor Farms

Patricia Alvarez Palma

Dr. Brian Stephens, Tracy Unified School District

Debbie Rinaldo, Sutter Tracy Community Hospital

Chad Wood, Willbanks & Wood PLC


Things to Do in Tracy

Things to Do in Tracy

When it comes to offering things to do, Tracy has a host of options for residents and visitors. Tracy has three main shopping areas: Historic Downtown Tracy, West Valley Mall, and the I-205 Corridor. Tracy has over 500 local businesses located in these three dynamic shopping areas, ranging from small mom-and-pop businesses to large retail stores like Macy’s, Home Goods and other national chain stores.

Tracy is also host to over 70 local restaurants, a 14-theater cinema in the mall and the Grand Theatre Center for the Arts with live performances. Tracy has an active youth and adult sports program with a major sports complex located at Corral Hollow and West 11th. Street and the newly constructed Legacy Fields located on North Tracy Boulevard.

In addition to shopping, dining, the theater and sporting activities, Tracy is home to over 50 service clubs and organizations. All are dedicated to helping make Tracy the best place to live, work and play in San Joaquin County.

Located strategically in the lush Northern San Joaquin Valley, Tracy is unique in that it lies in close proximity to beautiful lakes and snow-capped mountain resorts, towering giant sequoia redwood trees, the Pacific Ocean, wineries and the Delta River with over 1,000 miles of unspoiled waterways.

For tourists wanting to use Tracy as a hub for day trips, there are hotels and motels situated along I-205 with rates below those found in communities to the west or north. Day trips might include; the railroad museum to the north in Sacramento, Yosemite National Park to the southeast or the Bay Area and San Francisco to the west.

Tracy has a small town feeling with a friendly and welcome atmosphere, while providing many of the services and attractions of a major city. From shopping to cultural activities, sporting to golfing, Tracy has no shortage of things to do.