File Keepers is proud to provide Shredding, Document Storage, Document Scanning, Inbound Mail Processing, and Electronic Content Management [ECM] services throughout Los Angeles County, including to Maywood. This makes us a convenient source for all of your Digital Transformation service needs. Our extensive fleet of trucks is ready to pick up your shredding – we can even do onsite shredding, and or we can bring back your records, documents, CDs, hard drives, and x-rays for secure destruction in our certified facilities. We can even provide Certificates of Destruction or provide witnessed destruction. All shredded paper documents are processed into post-consumer fiber to maximize our environmental impact. Our offsite document storage capabilities are second to none. You can archive records, request file retrieval, and we even have climate-controlled storage areas to help you preserve vital records. We can also scan selected documents on demand, or perform high volume document imaging service through our state-of-the-art scanning bureau to convert entire cabinets and storage rooms of documents into searchable electronic images. We can scan any documents, from books and magazines, to large-format blueprints and maps, all the way down to century-old onionskin archives. Our ECM department uses Laserfiche software to create a secure repository for all of your organization’s information. We can create e-forms and automated workflows to help you go paperless while we automatically name and organize your folder structure and build granular access and security levels for all your users. Finally, we can handle all of your inbound mail processing needs by creating a Digital Mailroom – we can receive, sort, scan, and securely distribute your mail so that you get all of your critical information in a timely fashion, even if your employees are working remotely.
Maywood is a small town in Los Angeles County. In Los Angeles County, Maywood is the third-smallest incorporated city at 1.18 square miles (3.1 km2). Bell is bordered by Vernon on the north and west, Huntington Park on the southwest, and Commerce on the east. The city is the most densely populated in California, and Latinos, immigrants, and undocumented immigrants dominate the population.
Maywood became the first municipal government in California to outsource all of its city services on July 1, 2010, disbanding its police department, laying off its employees except the city manager, city attorney, and elected officials, and contracting with outside agencies to provide all of its municipal services. At the 2010 census, the population was 27,395.
Each Memorial Day weekend, the City of Maywood holds its annual Street Fair. Family, friends, and neighbors enjoy a variety of food, music, games, raffles, rides, and multicultural activities at the festival. You can purchase street fair pre-sale ride tickets at City Hall until they are sold out. It is located between Pine Avenue and Loma Vista Avenue on Slauson. Over 600 people attended the First Annual 4 July Family Fun Day Celebration at the Maywood Activities Center in honor of the country’s declaration of independence. The fair had been on hiatus for a couple of years.
There are two major parks in Maywood, as well as two smaller pockets of green space. Maywood Park and Maywood Riverfront Park, both located on the east side of the city at 5000 Slauson Avenue, are currently the city’s largest parks. Besides the baseball field, Maywood Park has the Maywood Activity Center, which opened in 1999. All of the parks in the city are maintained by the Parks and Recreation Department, and there are many activities for people of all ages, seniors, adults, and children alike. The Director of Parks and Recreation is Aldo Perez. There are two pocket parks in the City: Pixely Park and Pine Avenue Park.
The Maywood Activities Center (M.A.C. ), a public facility, offers a wide variety of classes, specialty rooms, an indoor basketball court, a gymnasium, a pool, and meeting rooms for clubs and classes.
The Riverfront Park offers handball courts, a basketball court, and a soccer field next to the Los Angeles River. The path also includes an access point to the LA River Bike Path, which runs through 40 miles (64 km) of Los Angeles County, including Griffith Park and Long Beach. On the west side of the city, at 3626 56th Street, there is a small pocket park called Pixley Park. In 2008, two small pocket parks were proposed to the city, Maywood Avenue Park and Pine Avenue Park. Both are to be developed on the west side of the city in the near future. The city is currently reorganizing, which has delayed future plans.
Mail Processing is also available to pickup, scan and digitize to the cloud. Call us today to learn more at Toll-Free: 800.332.3453