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Brevard County, Florida
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Brevard County (/brəˈvɑːrd/ brə-VARD) is a county in the U.S. state of Florida. It is on the Atlantic coast of eastern Central Florida.[1] As of the 2020 census, the population was 606,612, making it the 10th-most populated county in Florida.[2][3] The official county seat is located in Titusville.[4] A secondary center of county administration, including a circuit courthouse, was built in 1989 in the planned community of Viera, Florida, the geographic center of the county.[5]
Key Information
History
[edit]The first Paleoindians arrived in the area near Brevard county between 12,000 and 10,000 years ago.[6] Before the arrival of non-indigenous settlers in the 16th century, the area was inhabited by Native Americans. The county is the site of the Windover Archeological Site, which contained evidence of habitation over 7,000 years ago. Brevard County was established in 1855 and is named after Theodore Washington Brevard, an early Florida settler and state comptroller. The county's boundaries were changed and reduced numerous times, resulting in the current boundary since 1907.
The Paleoindians were semi-nomadic people who lived in smaller groups. After a few thousand years, a new group of settlers appeared known as "the archaic people."[6][7] These people were primarily fishermen, as opposed to the hunting and gathering way of life which characterized the Paleoindians.[6] The Windover Archeological Site, discovered in 1982, was found during excavation to have the largest collection of human remains and artifacts of the early Archaic Period (6,000–5,000 BC), or more than 8,000 years ago. It has been designated as a National Historic Landmark.[6] The Windover pond, which would have been a woody marsh at the time, was used by the Archaic Floridians as a burial ground, with the bodies being wrapped in fabric and submerged in the peaty soil. The pond was used for interments for around a thousand years (circa 8,000–7,000 BC).[8]
The Ais and the Jaega were the dominant tribes in the area when it is thought that Ponce De Leon landed on the shores near Melbourne Beach in 1513.[6][9] There were about 10,000 of these natives in the area.[10] Pedro Menéndez de Avilés gave an early account of the Ais people in 1570 when he was shipwrecked off of Cape Canaveral. He faced hostile natives but through the use of a bluff was able to escape from them and get back to St. Augustine.[11] In 1605, Alvero Mexia was dispatched from St. Augustine to the Indian River area on a diplomatic mission to the Ais Indian Nation. He helped establish a "Period of Friendship" with the Ais Caciques(Chiefs) and made a color map of the area.[12]
During the 19th century, the state of Florida frequently changed the names and borders of counties. St. Lucie County was split off from Mosquito County in 1844.[13] St. Lucie County was renamed Brevard County in 1855 after Theodore Washington Brevard, who served as Florida Comptroller from 1854 to 1860. This "Brevard County" contained very little of present-day Brevard County. Most of present-day Brevard north of Melbourne was part of either Volusia or Orange counties.[13] Brevard County in 1856 extended as far west as Polk County and as far south as coastal Dade County. Complicating the discussion of Brevard County in the 19th century is that the boundaries have shifted such that the southernmost parts of present-day Brevard, were originally the northernmost parts.[14] The original county seat was located at Susannah, an early name for present day Fort Pierce.[14] Later the southern part of Brevard split off to form a new county, St. Lucie County in 1905. Gradually, the borders of Brevard County were shifted northward while the county got "pinched" eastward.[13] The portions of Brevard County in present-day Broward and Palm Beach counties were given to Dade County, western areas of the county were given to Polk and Osceola County, and parts of Volusia and Orange Counties were given to Brevard including the eventual county seat of Titusville. Later, the southern portion of the county was cut off to form St. Lucie County, which in turn spawned Martin and Indian River County.[13]
The first concerted development the area occurred with the extension of Henry Flagler's Florida East Coast Railroad into the area.[7] The railroad reached Titusville in 1886 and Melbourne in 1894. With the railroad came increased settlement and the first tourists. The first major land boom began in the 1920s after the end of World War I.[6] People flooded into the state of Florida, both tourists from northern winters and new full-time residents, and land prices soared. The Great Depression temporarily stopped growth in Florida. Before the start of World War II, the largest industries in Brevard were commercial fishing, citrus, and tourism.[7]
Beginning in the 1930s, Harry T. Moore was a civil rights leader, teacher, and founder of the Brevard County NAACP. After the war he became president of the state NAACP. After the Supreme Court had ruled in 1944 that white primaries were unconstitutional, he conducted voter registration drives and succeeded in registering 31% of black voters in Florida, a higher percentage than in any other southern state. The white establishment resisted, firing both him and his wife Harriette in 1946 from their teaching positions. On Christmas night, 1951, a bomb exploded under their home, fatally injuring both of them. Four separate investigations were conducted, including the first by the FBI in 1951–1952, and the last in 2005 by the state. No one was ever prosecuted.[15][16]
In 1940, the United States federal government built Naval Air Station Banana River. Patrick Air Force Base was renamed to Patrick Space Force Base on December 9, 2020, as part of the establishment of the U.S. Space Force. This military installation was the first of major federal investment in projects to aid the development of Brevard County.[17] In the late 1950s, the government opened the Long Range Proving Ground.[6] This later became the Kennedy Space Center. The establishment of the Kennedy Space Center, originally known as Launch Operations Center, significantly impacted the area's identity and prominence, it attracted more educated workers and scientists associated with the program. In 1962, NASA acquired more than 200 square miles (518 square km) of land on Merritt Island to facilitate the recently announced lunar program of operations. The preceding year, U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy had pledged to get the first American astronaut on the Moon by 1970. The Launch Operations Center name was changed to honor President Kennedy following his assassination in 1963. Work immediately began on a new launch complex—Launch Complex 39. In addition, the Vehicle Assembly Building, for the construction of spacecrafts, was built by 1966. The first launch from the new facility was the Saturn V rocket launch of the Apollo 4 mission on November 9, 1967. Twelve more Saturn V launches followed, including the historic Apollo 11 mission in 1969 that landed astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on the Moon. The final Saturn V launch, in 1973, carried the Skylab space station to orbit. The launch complex was then adapted for the space shuttle program, and each shuttle, from 1981 until the final mission in 2011, launched from this complex.[Britannica] Beginning in the 1960s, new bridges were constructed across the waterways designed as high-rise steel, designed to be high enough to allow passage of boats underneath.[18] Brevard County is known as the Space Coast due to the influence of the John F. Kennedy Space Center and the aerospace industry on its economy. As such, it was designated with the telephone area code 321, as in "3, 2, 1 liftoff". The county has several incorporated cities and towns, primarily along the coast of the Atlantic Ocean and is mostly suburban west of Interstate 95. Brevard County comprises the Cities of Palm Bay– Melbourne– Titusville, FL Metropolitan Statistical Area.
Attributed to the length of the county, people in the southern portion of the county complained about being so distant from the county seat. The county seat of Titusville was 50 miles (80 km) from Palm Bay. Palm Bay is the largest city in Brevard County and the second largest in Central Florida, by population. The county decided to build a new county administration complex at Viera near the geographical center of the county. This complex was started in 1989 and completed in 1994. Residents in the north threatened secession.[19] Their proposal to form a new county, to be called Playalinda, had some momentum in the early 90s. The county made a few concessions to the people in the northern part of the county, and agreed not to officially move the county seat. Since construction of the new center, Viera has been for all intents and purposes the de facto seat of Brevard County.[19]
Geography
[edit]
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 1,557 square miles (4,030 km2), of which 1,016 square miles (2,630 km2) is land and 541 square miles (1,400 km2) (34.8%) is water.[20] Most of the water is the Atlantic Ocean, the St. Johns River and the Indian River Lagoon. The county is larger in area than the nation of Samoa and nearly the same size, and population, as Cape Verde.[21]
Located halfway between Jacksonville and Miami, Brevard County extends 72 miles (116 km) from north to south, and averages 26.5 miles (42.6 km) wide. Emphasizing the position halfway down Florida are two state roads that have been numbered at the midpoint of Florida's numbering system, State Road 50 and State Road 500. Marshes in the western part of this county, together with those in neighboring Indian River country, are the source of the St. Johns River, which becomes navigable within the county.[22]
The Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway along the eastern edge of Brevard County is the major waterway route in Brevard County. It includes the Indian River. Additional waterways include Lake Washington, Lake Poinsett, Lake Winder, Sawgrass Lake, the St. Johns River, and the Banana River. Dredging for the Intracoastal created 41 spoil islands in the Brevard portion of the Indian River.[23]
Brevard County is the sole county in the Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville, Florida Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA). Palm Bay, Melbourne, and Titusville are designated as principal cities in the MSA.[24] The MSA was created as the Melbourne-Titusville-Cocoa, Florida Standard MSA in 1972, renamed the Melbourne-Titusville-Palm Bay, Florida MSA in 1983, and given its current title in 2003.[25]
The county is unofficially divided into three sections: North County, comprising Titusville, Mims and Port St. John; Central Brevard, which includes Cocoa, Rockledge, Merritt Island, and Cocoa Beach; and South County, which includes Melbourne, Palm Bay, Grant-Valkaria, and the South Beaches. There are also several beaches along the coast of the county. The North Reach includes 9.4 miles (15.1 km) of coastline from Cape Canaveral, through Cocoa Beach, to Patrick Space Force Base. The Patrick Space Force Base beach is 4.1 miles (6.6 km) long. South of Patrick SFB, the Mid Reach includes the 7.6 miles (12.2 km) of coastline in Satellite Beach. The South Reach includes 3.8 miles (6.1 km) of beach in the communities of Indialantic and Melbourne Beach. At the southern end of the county, the South Beaches are the final 14.5 miles (23.3 km) of beach south of Melbourne Beach to Sebastian.[26]
The United States Board on Geographic Names considered two proposals in 2012 to officially name the barrier island extending from Port Canaveral to Sebastian Inlet. The 45-mile-long (72 km) island includes the cities of Cape Canaveral, Cocoa Beach, Indialantic, Melbourne Beach, Patrick Space Force Base, Indian Harbour Beach, and Satellite Beach. The American Indian Association of Florida submitted in October 2011 a proposal to name the island after the Ais people. In January 2012 the United Third Bridge and the Florida Puerto Rican/Hispanic Chamber of Commerce in Melbourne submitted a proposal to name the island Ponce de León Island, after Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León.[27] In December 2012, the island was ultimately not named.[28]
Communities
[edit]Brevard County has 16 municipalities. The largest by population is Palm Bay and the smallest is Melbourne Village.[29]
Cities
[edit]Towns
[edit]Census-designated places
[edit]Other unincorporated communities
[edit]Metropolitan Statistical Area
[edit]The United States Office of Management and Budget has designated Brevard County as the Palm Bay–Melbourne–Titusville, FL Metropolitan Statistical Area.[30] The United States Census Bureau ranked the Palm Bay–Melbourne–Titusville, FL Metropolitan Statistical Area as the 90th most populous metropolitan statistical area and the 96th most populous primary statistical area of the United States as of July 1, 2012.[31][32]
Climate
[edit]The county has a Köppen climate classification of Cfa, with a year-round distribution of rainfall. This means a humid subtropical climate with hot, humid summers and mild winters.[33] There are distinct wet and dry seasons. The dry lasts from December through May, the wet from June through November. During the dry season, periods of drought often occur, and can lead to a persistent and high wild land fire threat.[34] In numerous instances these fires have caused property damage. Several fires in 2008 forced the evacuation of Bayside High School, in the town of Palm Bay. In that particular event, 162 homes were damaged.[35]
January is the coldest month, with an average low of 50.7 °F (10.4 °C) and an average high 71 °F (22 °C). The warmest months are July and August with average highs of 90 °F (32 °C) and average lows of 72.2 °F (22.3 °C). The driest month is April with 1.6 inches (4.1 cm) of rainfall; the wettest is September, with 6.6 inches (17 cm). Offshore ocean temperatures have averaged: January – 64 °F (18 °C), February – 62 °F (17 °C), March – 67 °F (19 °C) and April – 72 °F (22 °C).[36] In federal maps printed before 2012, nearly half of Brevard was classified as prone to flooding. Most of this was in the relatively undeveloped low-lying areas, west of Interstate 95, on the banks of the St. Johns River. About 18,900 homes out of 164,000 single-family homes were in that area.[37]
Environment
[edit]
Brevard County works together with the federal and state government to control pollution and preserve wetlands and coastal areas through lands dedicated to conservation and wildlife protection. There are 250 square miles (650 km2) of federally protected wildlife refuges.[38] These lands include Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, the Canaveral National Seashore, the St. Johns National Wildlife Refuge, the Archie Carr National Wildlife Refuge, several conservation areas managed by the St. Johns River Water Management District, Brevard County's Environmentally Endangered Lands Program Sanctuaries,[39] and lands dedicated by the State as conservation areas. The underlying limestone in the county is relatively young at 150,000 years old. This means that the ground will not develop the sinkholes that are prevalent in the spine of Florida, where limestone is from 15 to 25 million years old.[40]
Adjacent counties
[edit]- Volusia County – north
- Indian River County – south
- Osceola County – southwest
- Orange County – west
Fauna
[edit]There are 4,000 species of animals locally.[41] Common mammals include North American river otters, bobcats, white-tailed deer, raccoons, marsh rabbits,[42] scrub lizards,[43] rat snakes,[44] and opossum.[45] Feral pigs, introduced by Europeans, present an occasional traffic hazard. There are an estimated 3,500 endangered gopher tortoises in the county.[46]
There were 1,677 manatees in Brevard County in 2015, out of a total of 6,063 in the state. This was an increase from 2014 when there was a total of 612 in Brevard County.[47] Manatees experience numerous threats within Brevard, where 312 died in the first half of 2021.[48] Bottlenose dolphin are commonly seen in the Intracoastal Waterway.[49] Fish and reptiles include alligators, red snapper, sea turtles,[45] North Atlantic right whales, a rare protected species, give birth near the coast of Brevard, among other places, from November 15 to April 15.[50]
The venomous brown recluse spider is not native to the area but has found the environment congenial.[51] The Florida Butterfly Monitoring Network has counted species of butterflies monthly for a year since 2007. In 2010, it counted 45 species.[52] Included are zebra swallowtail butterflies.[43] Lovebug season occurs twice annually in May and August–September. Motorists encounter swarms of these while driving during a four-week period.[53][54] Deer flies are particularly noticeable from April through June.[55]
Avian
[edit]Local bird counts indicate that there are at least 163 species of birds in the county.[56] Turkey vultures, a migrating species, are protected by federal law. They migrate north in the summer and return in September.[57] The county's most common winter bird is the lesser scaup, a diving duck. In 2008, half a million were counted. In 2010, 15,000 were estimated.[58] Other birds include the red-shouldered hawk,[59] the loggerhead shrike,[60] the endangered red-cockaded woodpecker,[61] Cooper's hawks, pileated woodpeckers, Savannah sparrows,[43] rails (which also includes coots), Florida scrub jays (an endangered species), wood storks, grackles,[45] great horned owls,[62] northern mockingbirds, brown thrashers, catbirds,[63] green-winged teals, greater yellowlegs, western sandpipers, least sandpipers, dowitchers, and American white pelicans.[44] Peak migration in the fall is from the last week in September through the first week in October. Fall migration tends to be stronger than spring because birds typically take different flyways.[64]
Flora
[edit]Native trees include cabbage palm (the state tree of Florida), fringetree, coral bean, sweet acacia, geiger tree,[65] firebush, beautyberry, coral honeysuckle, and blanket flower.[66] Other native plants include sea grape, red mulberry, purslane, dandelion, Spanish bayonet, blackberry, Jerusalem artichoke, dogwood, and gallberry.[67] On the east coast of the state, mangroves have normally dominated the coast from Cocoa Beach southward. Northward these may compete with salt marshes moving in from the north, depending on the annual weather conditions.[68] Live oak trees, various grasses, and juniper plants were sufficiently common to generate pollen noticeable by some people in February 2011.[69]
Demographics
[edit]| Census | Pop. | Note | %± |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1860 | 246 | — | |
| 1870 | 1,216 | 394.3% | |
| 1880 | 1,478 | 21.5% | |
| 1890 | 3,401 | 130.1% | |
| 1900 | 5,158 | 51.7% | |
| 1910 | 4,717 | −8.5% | |
| 1920 | 8,505 | 80.3% | |
| 1930 | 13,283 | 56.2% | |
| 1940 | 16,142 | 21.5% | |
| 1950 | 23,653 | 46.5% | |
| 1960 | 111,435 | 371.1% | |
| 1970 | 230,006 | 106.4% | |
| 1980 | 272,959 | 18.7% | |
| 1990 | 398,978 | 46.2% | |
| 2000 | 476,320 | 19.4% | |
| 2010 | 543,376 | 14.1% | |
| 2020 | 606,612 | 11.6% | |
| 2023 (est.) | 643,979 | [70] | 6.2% |
| U.S. Decennial Census[71] 1790–1960[72] 1900–1990[73] 1990–2000[74] 2010–2015[3] 2020–2022[75] | |||
| Race | Pop 2010[77] | Pop 2020[78] | % 2010 | % 2020 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| White (NH) | 421,466 | 430,936 | 77.56% | 71.04% |
| Black or African American (NH) | 52,677 | 56,498 | 9.69% | 9.31% |
| Native American or Alaska Native (NH) | 1,709 | 1,569 | 0.31% | 0.26% |
| Asian (NH) | 11,098 | 15,587 | 2.04% | 2.57% |
| Pacific Islander (NH) | 385 | 482 | 0.07% | 0.08% |
| Some Other Race (NH) | 1,075 | 3,389 | 0.2% | 0.56% |
| Mixed/Multi-Racial (NH) | 11,023 | 30,244 | 2.03% | 4.99% |
| Hispanic or Latino | 43,943 | 67,907 | 8.09% | 11.19% |
| Total | 543,376 | 606,612 |
Non-Hispanic White 30–40%40–50%50–60%60–70%70–80%80–90%>90%Black or African American30–40%50–60%60–70%Hispanic30–40%50–60%No PopulationEqual
As of the 2020 United States census, there were 606,612 people, 236,005 households, and 148,934 families residing in the county. The population density was 597.7 inhabitants per square mile (230.8/km2). As of 2021, 18.2% of residents were under the age of 18 and 24.2% were age 65 and over. There were 294,224 housing units and 76.2% of them were owner-occupied. There were 242,657 households in which the average household size was 2.46.[79]
In 2015, interracial marriage constituted 29% of all marriages, the fourth highest in the nation, which averaged 17%.[80] The population was distributed by age with 19.8% under the age of 18, 7.9% from 18 to 24, 21.5% from 25 to 44, 30.4% from 45 to 64, and 20.4% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 45.5 years. For every 100 females there were 96.1 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 93.9 males.[81]
In 2010, there were 229,692 households, out of which 23.20% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 48.28% were married couples living together, 11.80% had a female householder with no husband present, and 35.40% were non-families. 28.44% of all households were made up of individuals, and 12.53% (4.00% male and 8.53% female) had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.33 and the average family size was 2.84.[82][81] There were 74,000 veterans who lived in Brevard in 2010, accounting for 21% of the adults in the county.[83] Of those, a local agency counted in 2010 that 225 of the veterans were homeless.[84]
In 2012, the Urban Institute ranked the Brevard metro fourth in the country for racial equality. Criteria were integration of neighborhoods, income, and the quality of schools minorities attend. The area was ranked first for Hispanic equality with whites.[85]
In 2010, the median income for a household in the county was $49,523, and the median income for a family was $60,842. Males had a median income of $48,191 versus $33,276 for females. The per capita income for the county was $27,606. About 7.2% of families and 10.5% of the population were below the poverty line, including 14.4% of those under age 18 and 6.9% of those aged 65 or over.[86]
In 2010, 8.6% of the county's population was foreign born, with 59.4% being naturalized American citizens. Of foreign-born residents, 49.1% were born in Latin America, 22.9% were born in Europe, 18.3% born in Asia, 6.4% in North America, 2.4% born in Africa, and 0.9% were born in Oceania.[87]
In 2010, 90% of residents had a high school degree, compared with 85% statewide.[88] In 2009, 25.7% of residents had an undergraduate degree, below the national average of 27.7%,[89] but the same as the rest of Florida.[88] 14.7% of residents over 25 had undergraduate degrees in engineering. This is almost twice the national average.[90]
Languages
[edit]In 2010, 90.20% of residents spoke only English at home, while 5.29% spoke Spanish, 0.62% German, 0.61% French, and 0.47% French Creole (mostly Haitian Creole) at home.[91] In total, 9.80% of the population spoke languages other than English in their household.[91]
Government
[edit]Brevard county is run by a commission–manager government. The county commission comprises five members elected from single-member districts in four-year staggered terms. Commissioners are elected by the public to establish ordinances and policies for the county. The county employed about 2,900 workers in 2009.[92]
There are 16 autonomous municipal governments within the county. The various cities, towns and villages of Brevard have varying reliance on county-provided services. About 100,000 households are located outside organized municipalities, and their occupants are directly served by the county government.[93]
A centrally located County Government Center in Viera was established to provide more accessible services to residents in the southern part of the county. It houses the various county government branches, including Housing and Human Services, Juvenile Justice, Public Safety, Public Works and Solid Waste Management.
The Brevard County government had annual expenditures just over $1 billion in the fiscal year 2009–2010, exclusive of the municipalities.[94] In 2009, real estate taxes for homesteaded property averaged 0.83% of the value of the property.[95] Real estate taxes are levied by each authority. They are collected by the County Tax Collector.[96] The total taxable real estate base was $33.7 billion in 2009.[97] County taxes rose 26.5% in total per capita revenue from 2002 to 2007, and 49.8% in property tax per capita in the same time frame.[98] Delinquent taxes were $36 million in 2008.[99]
Brevard County has two unique election districts. One governs Port Canaveral; the other, the maintenance of the Sebastian Inlet.
Government districts
[edit]Prior to the creation of districts in 1967, state representatives were elected by county. This geographic representation resulted in a longstanding domination of the state legislature by rural interests, as it did not recognize changing patterns of settlement and business in the state. Since redistricting following the 2010 U.S. census, Brevard County has been part of Florida's 8th congressional district.
The county lies within two state senatorial districts:
- the 8th (covering the northern part of the county)
- the 19th (covering the southern part of the county)
The county lies within five state representative districts:
- the 30th (covering the northernmost part of the county)
- the 31st (covering the north-central part of the county)
- the 32nd (covering the central part of the county)
- the 33rd (covering most of the southern part of the county)
- the 34th (covering the southeastern part of the county)
Justice system
[edit]
The county has centralized most county and circuit courts in Viera which try a variety of cases including felonies, misdemeanors, traffic, and domestic. The courthouse in Titusville provides the venue for circuit and county cases arising in the north part of the county while the courthouse in Melbourne is the venue for county cases arising in the southern portion of the county. An elected State Attorney prosecutes criminal cases for the State of Florida. Indigent defendants can be represented by the office of the elected Public Defender. The 18th Circuit Court includes Seminole County as well as Brevard and includes not only the court itself but the State Attorney and the Public Defender.[100] In 2008, the public defender had a staff of 45 lawyers in Brevard who handled about 24,000 cases annually.[101]
The States Attorney's Office sponsors the Victim/Witness Services. This provides advocates to alleged victims of violent crime and their families. The advocate helps the family understand the legal system as they navigate through it. They also seek out financial assistance or counseling they might need.[102]
Public services
[edit]Public safety
[edit]
The County elects a sheriff, directly responsible to the courts but also to the state for the enforcement of state laws. Police chiefs, appointed by their cities or towns, perform the same function locally.[citation needed]
Most municipalities are located on at least one waterway. This has resulted in the county and seven cities having a boat or access to one to aid boaters, or to enforce the law in the water in their jurisdiction.[103]
Since the founding of the Brevard County Sheriff's Office, 7 officers have been killed in the line of duty.[104]
The county jail is a 1976 facility which rapidly became overcrowded. Voters rejected expanding the jail on four occasions.[105] The sheriff solved the problem by the construction of a large but less expensive "hardened tent" to house non-violent offenders. Crowding reached its peak in 2007 at 1,988 inmates, 300 over capacity. The budget for the facility was $42 million in 2010. There were 1,585 residents. Costs for feeding and housing was $72 per inmate daily. There were 475 staff members.[106]
The county jail retains inmates awaiting trial or those who have been sentenced to a year or less. Longer sentences must be served in state prisons, such as the facility in Sharpes for young men.
A unit of the Coast Guard, homeported at Port Canaveral, plays a role in preventing illegal immigration and is an interdictor of drugs in the area.
Public safety for unincorporated areas of the county is the responsibility of the Brevard County Sheriff's Office. All but three of the 17 incorporated municipalities, Malabar, Cape Canaveral and Palm Shores, maintain their own law enforcement services. Those three contract that service to the Sheriff's Office.[107]

In 2009, there were 1,200 law enforcement officers working in the county, of which 361 are sheriff's deputies.[108] The number of Sheriff's deputies had risen to 843 in 2015.[109] Of all crime that came to the attention of the sheriff's office in 2007, 80% was drug-related.[110] From January to June 2009, the county reported a total of 10,037 crimes. Of these, a majority, 3,002, were under the jurisdiction of the sheriff's department.[111] In 2009, the crime rate was 3,471.3 property-related crimes per 100,000 residents, slightly above the national average.[89]
Public safety for Port Canaveral is under the direction of the Port Authority. Traditionally, emphasis was placed on monitoring the content of containerized cargo on incoming ships, as well as underwater inspection of arriving ships that could be carrying explosive devices. In 2008, the Canaveral Port Authority Board of Commissioners approved the creation of an independent police department.[112][113]
In 2017, the Florida Highway Patrol had about 32 troopers working different shifts on the I-95 interstate, and the unincorporated parts of the county. Normally there were five or six officers per shift.[114]
The county runs a fire-rescue service. In the year 2015–2016, they responded to 11,383 trauma calls.[115]
In 2017, the fatality rate for pedestrians was the second worst for metropolitan areas in the nation.[116] In 2017, the most dangerous road for bicycles and pedestrians was on State Road A1A from Cocoa Beach to Cape Canaveral.[117]
Utilities
[edit]Three cities provide potable water and sewage for their cities and surrounding areas: Cocoa, Melbourne, and Titusville. The majority of Melbourne water customers are supplied with treated surface water from Lake Washington.[118] Where available, residents were obligated to hook into the system. In 2012, there were 90,000 septic tanks.[119]
Storm and wastewater management fees vary. In 2014, the county charged $36 annually per household. Cities and towns charged from $36 to $77.52 per household annually.[120]
Public recreation
[edit]
There are more than 100 parks and three campgrounds in the county that are managed by local government agencies.[121] Many of these are managed by the Brevard County Parks and Recreation, an agency within the Brevard County Government. There are 25 public golf courses and three private ones. Due to dwindling numbers of golfers, five courses closed from 2004 to 2017. In 2017, three public courses were being considered for closure.[122]
In 11 sanctuaries that protect natural ecosystems, the county's Environmentally Endangered Lands (EEL) Program offers passive recreation opportunities such as hiking, wildlife viewing, biking and paddling. In 2013, there was a total of 24,000 acres (9,700 ha), with 62 miles (100 km) of trails and 120 miles (190 km) of fire lanes. The quantity of fire lanes was considered insufficient.[123]
The Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge[124] and the Canaveral National Seashore[125] are two national wildlife refuges in the county that offer recreational pursuits such as hiking, wildlife viewing, paddling, and environmental education.
Social services
[edit]Brevard County provides a number of services to help older people, juveniles, people with physical or mental disabilities, and minorities. The Brevard County Housing Authority acquires and leases housing projects, investigates housing conditions, determines where slums and unsafe housing exist and investigates conditions dangerous to the public. It is managed by a board appointed by the county commission.[126] Several organization provide social services for juveniles, such as the Children's Home Society, Children's Advocacy Center of Brevard, and The Child Care Association of Brevard County. ARC-Brevard, Inc. provides a spectrum of services for the lifespan of 1200 individuals (and their families) with developmental disabilities in nine locations throughout Brevard.[127]
The Brevard County Housing Authority acquires and leases housing projects; investigates housing conditions; determines where slums and unsafe housing exist and investigates conditions dangerous to the public. It is managed by a board appointed by the county commission.[128]
The Children's Home Society (CHS) provides Florida families with a unique spectrum of social services, including foster care, adoption, child abuse prevention, emergency shelters, group homes, case management, and treatment for developmentally disabled children.[129] It is a 501(c)(3) organization.
Among other local services, CHS also runs the Hacienda Girls Ranch which provides a safe haven for forty-five abused, neglected and/or abandoned girls from the ages of 10–18.[130]
Children's Advocacy Center of Brevard is a program of the Space Coast Health Foundation that serves abused and neglected children.[131] Professionals serve children with allegations of abuse, all sexual abuse and the most severe physical abuse and neglect, and their non-offending family members. Onsite crisis and short-term counseling is provided free of charge and without a waiting list. Onsite medical exams, forensic interviews and other assessment services provided by partner, the Child Protection Team.
The Child Care Association of Brevard County, is a private non-profit agency that coordinates child care, early childhood education and early intervention programs and services for families in Brevard County.[132] In April, the Association sponsors a Children's Festival.
The Women's Center provides counseling services, educational programs, criminal justice support/advocacy; crisis counseling; information and referral; personal advocacy; support groups; therapy; translation services; victims compensation claims.[133] There is a Junior League of South Brevard.[134] Serene Harbor provides a domestic violence hotline which is staffed 24/7 by trained advocates.[135] The Salvation Army provides a Domestic Violence Shelter to abused partners and their families.[136] The Brevard County Commission on the Status of Women advises the County Commission on issues affecting women. Its members are appointed by the County Commission.[137]
In June, the Juneteenth Festival is held, commemorating the freeing of the slaves at the end of the Civil War. This attracts about 500 attendees.[138]
The monthly Brevard Ebony News is a newspaper publishing articles of interest to the Afro-American community.[139] There are several local chapters of NAACP committed to improving the lot of minorities.[140] The Brevard Multi-Cultural Unity Council has annually sponsored a Race Unity Day celebrating diversity since 1989.[141] In 1995, the Harry T. and Harriette V. Moore Multi-Cultural Center was created to improve race relations and human relations in Brevard County and the state of Florida. The center sponsors public forums that focus on the value of racial and cultural diversity. Every February they also sponsor a Moore Heritage Festival of the Arts and Humanities. Their slogan is "Building Unity through Diversity."[142] Local centers for worship include the Islamic Society,[143] and B'ai Hai. In February the 300 member Indian Association of Brevard sponsors Indiafest, a festival featuring food, culture and dancing from India, as well as Basakhi, a harvest festival.[144] It attracts 6,500 people. They also sponsor an "India Day" around August 15, celebrating India's Independence. In 2006, 4000 people attended. Local Thai-Americans stage a Songkran Thai New Year Festival in April featuring food and culture of Thailand.[145] 2,000 individuals of American Indian extraction live in the area—including Cherokees, the original inhabitants of the area when the Europeans arrived . This number represents a slightly higher percentage than Florida as a whole. Each December, The Native Heritage Foundation sponsors a "Gathering and Pow-Wow" to publicize and preserve the Native American culture. This attracts upwards of 1,500 attendees.[146] In September, the Annual Family Salsa Festival draws about 1000 people where Puerto Rican heritage is celebrated.[147]
Elections
[edit]According to the Secretary of State's office, Republicans form a plurality of registered voters in Brevard County.
| Brevard County voter registration & party enrollment as of January 31, 2024[148] | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Political party | Total voters | Percentage | |||
| Republican | 189,821 | 44.85% | |||
| Democratic | 113,961 | 26.93% | |||
| Independent | 106,735 | 25.22% | |||
| Third Parties | 12,711 | 3.00% | |||
| Total | 423,228 | 100% | |||
The county has voted in favor of Republican candidates in all presidential elections since 1980.
| Year | Republican | Democratic | Third party(ies) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | % | No. | % | No. | % | |
| 1892 | 0 | 0.00% | 449 | 88.74% | 57 | 11.26% |
| 1896 | 337 | 37.36% | 505 | 55.99% | 60 | 6.65% |
| 1900 | 121 | 17.34% | 513 | 73.50% | 64 | 9.17% |
| 1904 | 125 | 17.58% | 553 | 77.78% | 33 | 4.64% |
| 1908 | 225 | 38.86% | 294 | 50.78% | 60 | 10.36% |
| 1912 | 61 | 10.34% | 357 | 60.51% | 172 | 29.15% |
| 1916 | 174 | 18.95% | 599 | 65.25% | 145 | 15.80% |
| 1920 | 659 | 39.30% | 894 | 53.31% | 124 | 7.39% |
| 1924 | 515 | 34.22% | 872 | 57.94% | 118 | 7.84% |
| 1928 | 1,830 | 62.12% | 1,063 | 36.08% | 53 | 1.80% |
| 1932 | 956 | 34.05% | 1,852 | 65.95% | 0 | 0.00% |
| 1936 | 1,147 | 33.28% | 2,300 | 66.72% | 0 | 0.00% |
| 1940 | 1,984 | 39.85% | 2,995 | 60.15% | 0 | 0.00% |
| 1944 | 1,769 | 40.02% | 2,651 | 59.98% | 0 | 0.00% |
| 1948 | 2,315 | 41.61% | 2,348 | 42.20% | 901 | 16.19% |
| 1952 | 6,756 | 61.91% | 4,157 | 38.09% | 0 | 0.00% |
| 1956 | 10,004 | 71.81% | 3,928 | 28.19% | 0 | 0.00% |
| 1960 | 17,585 | 61.37% | 11,069 | 38.63% | 0 | 0.00% |
| 1964 | 24,551 | 49.71% | 24,833 | 50.29% | 0 | 0.00% |
| 1968 | 37,124 | 48.02% | 18,281 | 23.65% | 21,909 | 28.34% |
| 1972 | 62,773 | 78.73% | 16,854 | 21.14% | 106 | 0.13% |
| 1976 | 44,470 | 48.15% | 46,421 | 50.26% | 1,473 | 1.59% |
| 1980 | 69,460 | 60.07% | 39,007 | 33.73% | 7,169 | 6.20% |
| 1984 | 102,477 | 73.45% | 36,985 | 26.51% | 49 | 0.04% |
| 1988 | 104,854 | 70.30% | 43,004 | 28.83% | 1,301 | 0.87% |
| 1992 | 84,585 | 43.19% | 61,091 | 31.19% | 50,184 | 25.62% |
| 1996 | 88,022 | 45.11% | 80,445 | 41.23% | 26,666 | 13.67% |
| 2000 | 115,253 | 52.75% | 97,341 | 44.55% | 5,894 | 2.70% |
| 2004 | 153,068 | 57.66% | 110,309 | 41.55% | 2,085 | 0.79% |
| 2008 | 157,589 | 54.54% | 127,620 | 44.17% | 3,718 | 1.29% |
| 2012 | 159,300 | 55.62% | 122,993 | 42.94% | 4,135 | 1.44% |
| 2016 | 181,848 | 57.16% | 119,679 | 37.62% | 16,614 | 5.22% |
| 2020 | 207,883 | 57.48% | 148,549 | 41.08% | 5,221 | 1.44% |
| 2024 | 216,533 | 59.65% | 141,233 | 38.91% | 5,249 | 1.45% |
Economy
[edit]This section needs to be updated. (March 2019) |
The county Domestic Product was $30.1 billion in 2022.[150] In 2010 and 2011, the Brookings Institution reported that Brevard ranked in the bottom fifth of the nation's top metro areas, based on unemployment, gross metropolitan product, housing prices and foreclosed properties.[151] Foreclosures reached a monthly high of 963 in March 2009.[152] The county reached an annual high foreclosure in 2009 of 9,772.[153] In December 2010, Forbes magazine rated the area the worst place in America to find a job.[154]
Government purchasing contributed 12–15% of the county's gross domestic product from 2000 to 2010.[155]
Though the area has a relatively small number of high technology companies, 736, a business journal ranked it eighth in the country as a high tech center in 2009. The area had 23,096 high-tech jobs with a ratio of 124 per 1,000 total jobs.[156]
In December 2010, Forbes magazine ranked the area as the worst in the country for finding a job, for the second time in 2010.[157]
During 2020, overlapping the COVID-19 pandemic, the metropolitan area was the second best-performing out of 200 in the country.[158]
Personal income
[edit]As of the census of 2000:
- Median income for a family – $47,571
- Median income for males – $36,542
- Median income for females – $24,632
- Per capita income – $21,484. The county has the 17th highest per capita income in the state (out of 67).
- Median income for a household – $40,099
- In 2005, the median income for a household had risen to $43,281[159]
The county ranked 17th for per capita income, out of Florida's 67 counties.
The following were below the poverty line in 2000:
- Families – 6.80%
- Total population – 9.50%
- Under age 18 – 13.00%
- Age 65 or older – 6.50%
In 2012, 79,621 people in the county were receiving food stamps.[160]
In 2010, there were 5,600 civilian government workers in the county. They earned an average of $74,000 each in 2009.[161]
In 2009, 84,401 households in the county (38%) received social security payments averaging $16,136 for a total of $1.7 billion annually. 53,717 (24%) received pension payments averaging $24,327 for a total of $1.3 billion annually.[162]
Housing
[edit]The taxable value of property went from $20 billion in 2002 to $40 billion in 2007. In 2009 the bubble burst and a rapid descent to $24 billion was experienced. in 2017, the value rose to $35 billion. The last figure includes new construction.[163]
In 2011, the county was rated 6th worst in the country for foreclosures. There were 1,039 for the third quarter of 2010. Nearly half the homes in the county were worth less than their mortgages. The average home had dropped 53.4% since the peak of the boom.[164] In 2012, the county was the highest in foreclosure rate in the nation. In 2013, the metro area was rated "best" in the country for buying, with a 34 months supply of houses, with a discount rate of 28%, according to RealtyTrac. It has since reduced its backlog.[165]
After various insurance companies pulled out of Florida after their losses from the 2004 hurricane season, property insurance became a major concern for many homeowners. As of 2011, 32,000 Brevard policyholders insure with the state-owned Citizens Property Insurance Corporation.[166]
In 2010 Kiplinger.com rated the county one of five "best" places in America to retire. Factors evaluated included cost of living, weather, the number of doctors, taxes, crime rates and recreational opportunities.[167]
The largest home in Brevard is a 50-room 19,000 square feet (1,800 m2) mansion in Suntree built in 1991 and once owned by Cecil Fielder.[168]
Development
[edit]The Viera Company, developing East and West Viera as they’re identified by the US Census Bureau, gained state permission and county acquiescence to create a self-governing board named the Viera Stewardship District that could raise taxes and sell bonds to pay for roads, water lines, pumping stations and other infrastructure needed to support the construction of 16,500 houses, apartments and condominiums.[citation needed]
Industry
[edit]The Brevard economy has been driven by Trade, Transportation and Utilities (18%), Professional and Business Services (17%), Total government (15%), Education and Health (14%), Manufacturing (12%), Leisure and hospitality (10%), Construction (6%), Financial (4%).
In 2012 local government employed 21,000 workers. Over the years the percentage has varied from 7.2% to 7.9% of the population.[169]
The number of people working in construction dropped from 2,630 in 2005 to 1,420 in 2010.[170]
Port Canaveral is one of the world's busiest cruise port. There are seven cruise lines, with six major cruise terminals. There is 750,000 square feet (70,000 m2) of covered freight storage capacity. It handled 4,000,000 short tons (3,600,000 t) of cargo in 2004. The port has contributed $500 million annually to the county's economy.
Two hospitals were among the top five private employers in the county, together employing 8,850 in 2009.[97]
In 2008, 14,865 workers were employed at the NASA/Kennedy Space Center. The Center directly spent $1.82 billion in the county.[97]
Annually, $78 million is spent at the Space Center Visitor's Complex, and $5.9 million from space business visitors.[171]
In 2014, there were 495 aerospace companies in the county. There were 36,223 workers. Sales and revenue from this industry were $3.4 billion.[172]
L3Harris Technologies, headquartered in the county, has the most employees in the private sector, 7,000 in 2019.[173]
There are 15 Community Redevelopment agencies in the county. They are funded from real estate taxes in the affected area. Cocoa has three, and Eau Gallie, one.[174]
Though the area has a relatively small number of high technology companies, 736, a business journal ranked it eighth in the country as a high tech center in 2009. The area had 23,096 high-tech jobs with a ratio of 124 per 1,000 total jobs.[175]
The county had 1,050 restaurants in 2007 and nearly that many (1,040) in 2010. There were 22,600 leisure and hospitality workers in the county in 2006. This figure includes hotel workers. That figure had dropped 8.5% to 20,700 in 2010.[176]
In the early 2010s, the Shiloh area was proposed by Space Florida as a potential location for the development of a commercial-only spaceport. Located immediately north of the U.S. Government's Kennedy Space Center, the open access to the flyover range on the open Atlantic Ocean to the east, and easy access to the tracking facilities of the Eastern Test Range make the location an attractive launch site. Among other potential users of the commercial spaceport facility, SpaceX was reported to be considering Shiloh as one of several potential locations for building a commercial launch facility.[177]
Space Coast Credit Union is the largest locally based financial institution in Brevard County and the third largest credit union in the state of Florida.[178][179]
Military
[edit]Military installations in Brevard County include Patrick Space Force Base, near Satellite Beach, Cape Canaveral Space Force Station (CCSFS), adjacent to the Kennedy Space Center, and the U.S. Air Force Malabar Test Facility on Minton Road in suburban Palm Bay. In 2009, they employed a total of 2,000 civilian federal workers.[161] In 2012 there were 2,900 military jobs in the county.[169]
The United States Coast Guard (USCG) Maintains one station in Port Canaveral, the station is located on the east bank of the West Turning Basin. The station is home to USCG cutter 617.[180]
The Navy maintains a Trident turning basin at Port Canaveral for ballistic missile submarines. The Naval Ordnance Test Unit (NOTU) tests weapons on these subs, which arrive at the rate of one a month. 160 ships visited their two piers in 2017.[181] The 2005 base closures included realigning NOTU out of state. The community was successful in having this decision revoked.[citation needed] The unit employs 100 military personnel and 900 civilian contractors.[182]
Cape Canaveral Space Force Station houses the Air Force Space & Missile Museum and Launch Complex 26, where many uncrewed rockets were launched early in the U.S. space program, including Explorer 1, the first US spacecraft placed in earth orbit.[183]
The USS Brevard (AK-164) was a World War II Alamosa-class naval cargo ship that was decommissioned shortly after the war.[184]
Agriculture
[edit]23% of Brevard County is agricultural-usable for citrus, raising cattle or horses. Cattle ranches include the Deseret, Duda Ranch, Kempfer, and two other major ranches.[185] Citrus growers include Victory Groves and Harvey's Indian River Groves. The county ranked 21 out of 24 Florida counties in the shipment of gift fruit. [citation needed]
In 2009, aquaculture was a $900,000 business in the county.[186] The county produces more than 25% of all blue crabs along Florida's East Coast.[187]
There are 40 4-H-related clubs in the county, including livestock- and pet-related and after-school clubs.[188] As in all Cooperative extension service, a land grant college, the University of Florida, conducted over 60 courses in 2010 in aid of 4-H programs and other agricultural pursuits.[189]
In February 2010, the USDA declared that Brevard, along with 59 other Florida counties, was a "primary natural disaster area".[186] This happened when the temperature falls below 28 °F (−2 °C) degrees for 4 hours, where crops are being grown.
Tourism
[edit]In 2016, tourism represents about 9% of the county's gross domestic product. The industry employs about 13% of the workforce.[190] The county raised its room tax to 5% in 2005. In 2012, this raised $8.4 million.[191]
In 2008, tourists spent $2.89 billion in the county. This is distributed in several categories: lodging $839 million, eating and drinking $509 million, Kennedy Space Center $597 million, retail sales $450 million, entertainment $120 million, and Port Canaveral $109 million.[192] Brevard tourists come mainly from ten states: Florida itself is first, followed by Ohio, Illinois, Michigan, New York, Virginia, Wisconsin, Georgia, Minnesota, and Pennsylvania. The five primary sources of foreign visitors are Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, China, and Italy.[193]
1.6 million people visited the Space Center Visitor Complex in 2008.[97] Tourism, measured by the tourist tax, reached a peak in March 2007.[194]
In 2009, there were 2.4 million overnight visitors in the county. There were 1.2 million day visitors.[195] In 2013, a city manager estimated that 20% of income from tourism comes during spring break.[196]
Brevard competes with other Florida areas for tourists. A number of organizations help promote the area. The Space Coast Office of Tourism consists of county staff and the Brevard County Tourist Development Council (TDC). They attempt to attract tourists. The TDC serves as an advisory council to the county on the expenditures of revenues received from a tourist tax. This revenue is spent on beach improvements, visitor information centers and website,[197] promotion and advertising, the Brevard Zoo, additional beach improvements and the Space Coast Stadium.
$97.7 million has been spent on beach replenishment in the county between 2000 and 2010. This was funded 58% by the federal government, 27% by the state and 15% by the county.[198]
In 2008 monthly tourist tax revenue slumped from a high of $1,174,742 in March to a seasonal low in September of $432,145.[199] In 2008, the county had 11,000 hotel rooms available. In July 2007, there was a 66.1% occupancy rate.[200] In 2008, the county had a nearly identical 81%+ occupancy rate in March and April. This fell to a seasonal low of 42.3% in September.[201] In January 2010, the average hotel room rate was $88.25.[202]
Cocoa Main Street, a member of the Florida and National Main Street Programs, works toward restoring business sites in the historic area known as "Cocoa Village". Cocoa Main Street has received six Florida Main Street Awards given by the Secretary of State. The restored area is a tourist attraction and an economic magnet.[203] Melbourne Main Street is another historic business area and tourist attraction restored through the Main Street Programs.[204]
Brevard has five judged art festivals annually attracting tens of thousands of people to art displays. Most festivals are held in the spring or fall when many tourists can attend. Many other annual festivals are held in parks and public sites throughout the year. The Brevard Cultural Alliance (BCA) maintains an event calendar[205] and a map of sites of historic, cultural, and ecological interest.[206]
The annual Florida Key Lime Pie Festival is held beach side every Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend. In 2018 The Florida Key Lime Pie Company successfully made the World's largest key lime pie.[207]
An annual February Greek Festival had over 8,000 visitors in 2011.[208]
The annual Grant Seafood Festival attracts as many as 50,000 people for the two-day February event. It is the Southeast's largest and longest running seafood festival.[209]
An ice skating rink in Rockledge serves the county's residents and visitors with hockey and figure skating events.[210]
In 2009, recreational boat owners generated almost $51 million annually towards the county economy, ranking the industry fifth in the state.[211]
Labor
[edit]There were 168,500 private sector jobs in the county in 2009. The Bureau of Labor Statistics counted the following workers in Brevard along with average annual pay ($):
- Retail 25,900 ($23,361)
- Manufacturing 21,700 ($65,521)
- Local government 20,100 ($42,517)
- Hospitality 19,600 ($15,857).
The largest local employer is Brevard Public Schools, with 9,500 employees, 5,000 of which are teachers.[212] Brevard County Teachers are represented by the Brevard Federation of Teachers (AFT).
The county had an unemployment rate of 12.7% in January 2010, a 20-year record high.[213] In March 2010, there were 33,500 people out of work.[214] The county experienced a record low unemployment in 2005 of 2.8%.[215] There were 32,608 people unemployed in the county in January 2011.[216]
In 2009, there were 6,400 federal workers, total, employed in the county. They earned an average of $74,600.[217]
In 2009, average annual salaries in the county for engineers was $90,563; registered nurses $53,315; education $49,441; police officers $43,035; cooks $21,569; and cashiers $19,489. The average annual pay for all workers was then $42,411.[218]
In 2011, there were more engineers (48) per thousand workers than any other region in the United States.[219]
Kennedy Space Center (KSC) is the largest employer in the county with 15,000 contractors and civil servants.[220] While there is concern about the new generation of space vehicles requiring 1/3 fewer workers, about that number were eligible for retirement by 2011. Unions represented at KSC include the American Federation of Government Employees, the International Association of Machinists and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers.
Healthcare
[edit]As of 2011, there were ten hospitals in the county, with 1,734 beds total.[221] Health First is the largest healthcare provider in the county, consisting of four not-for-profit hospitals—Cape Canaveral Hospital in Cocoa Beach, Holmes Regional Medical Center in Melbourne, Viera Hospital in Viera, Florida and Palm Bay Community Hospital in Palm Bay.
Besides hospitalization, services include outpatient centers; the county's only trauma center (at Holmes Regional Medical Center); home care; specialized programs for cancer, diabetes, heart, stroke, and rehabilitative services; central Brevard's largest medical group; and Medicare Advantage, commercial POS, and commercial HMO health plans. Parrish Medical Center, a 210-bed hospital, was named America's No. 1 Healing Hospital for the third straight year by the Baptist Healing Trust.[222]
Former place names
[edit]There are place names currently used, or used at one time by the USGS. Some are early developments, while others are former stations along the main line of the Florida East Coast Railway. Several of these disappeared when Kennedy Space Center took over their area.[12]
Education
[edit]Higher education is provided by Eastern Florida State College (EFSC) and Florida Institute of Technology. There are satellite campuses for the University of Central Florida, Barry University, Embry–Riddle Aeronautical University, Keiser University, and Webster University.
Elementary and secondary education is provided by the Brevard Public Schools and private schools.
In 2011, six public schools were ranked by the state in the top ten schools in the state, out of 2,800 There was one list each for primary and secondary schools.[223]
Libraries
[edit]The Brevard County Library System has 17 branches.[224] Although the Merritt Island Public Library is counted as part of the Brevard County Public Library System, it is part of a separate library district. In 2005, HB1079 was passed to codify all the special acts under which the Merritt Island Public Library District exists.[225]
Sports
[edit]- Minor league baseball
Brevard County was the home of the Brevard County Manatees, the Class-A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers until 2016.
In 2009, the Space Coast Surge, a member of the Florida Winter Baseball League, had the Cocoa Stadium as their home stadium.[226]
- Major league baseball
The Washington Nationals held their spring training at Space Coast Stadium in Viera until 2016. They play about 14 games against other professional teams locally in March as part of the "Grapefruit" League.[227]
- Minor league basketball
The Brevard Blue Ducks, members of the United States Basketball League (USBL), played at the Clemente Center at Florida Tech.[228]
- Minor league football
The Brevard Rams and Space Coast Predators were scheduled to play as members of the Florida Football Alliance in 2010.[229]
- Amateur sports
Aside from school-sponsored sports, there are youth leagues for basketball, football, soccer, lacrosse, gymnastics, baseball and swimming.
Infrastructure
[edit]Transportation
[edit]While Brevard County has transportation available in the usual modes for a coastal county—highways, shipping, and airlines—it has the addition of space transportation, making it unique in the world.[230]
Public transportation is provided by Space Coast Area Transit.[231]
The county contains about 300 gasoline retail outlets.[232]
Airports
[edit]- Arthur Dunn Airpark
- Melbourne Orlando International Airport
- Merritt Island Airport
- Space Coast Regional Airport
- Valkaria Airport
Power
[edit]Florida Power & Light (FPL) maintains an oil-fired generating plant at Sharpes; it generates 800 megawatts (1,100,000 hp), supplying most of the requirements for the county. In 2008 the company announced plans to replace the plant with a more efficient natural gas-powered plant in 2013 with a 1,250 megawatt capacity, which can supply 250,000 homes or businesses.[233] Near FPL's plant is the Indian River Power Plant; formerly owned by the Orlando Utilities Commission, it is now owned and operated by RRI Energy. In 2016, FPL had 304,400 customers in Brevard.[234]
Florida City Gas furnishes natural gas to various areas of the county.[235]
Communication
[edit]The area code for most of the county became "321" in 1999, as in the "3...2...1... lift-off!" countdown sequence. A small portion of the county along the southern border, including the communities of Micco and Barefoot Bay, share a 772 area code with Indian River County and St. Lucie County, Florida to the south.
Solid waste
[edit]The county government maintains various landfills for solid waste. Brevard County Central Disposal Facility is located in Cocoa, has a size 190-acre (77 ha) and receives annually around 275,000 tonnes of waste.[236] In 2013, the county planned a new $100 million landfill, north of U.S. Route 192, near the border with Osceola County, 8.5 miles (13.7 km) west of I-95. The county has awarded a $3.9 million contract for a wetlands mitigation for this new landfill.[237]
In 2013, the county, for the first time, let a seven-year contract out for bids for solid waste. The resulting contract is expected to cost $1 billion over the lifetime of the contract, the county's largest single contract. This was the first time in 20 years, a bid was requested. In the past, Waste Management, Inc has performed the work, not only for the county but for 9 of 16 Brevard municipalities. Waste Pro has five of the remaining municipal contracts. Rockledge and Titusville maintain their own trash service.[238] In 2013, the county directly contracts for solid waste pickup for 100,000 residences.[239]
Water
[edit]In 2013, the county consumed about 100,000,000 US gallons (380,000,000 L; 83,000,000 imp gal) daily. Landscape irrigation accounted for about half of this usage.[240]
In 2017, there were five municipal entities selling water (figures in parentheses are millions of gallons/day): Cocoa (22), Melbourne (19), Palm Bay (6), Titusville (2), and West Melbourne (1). The fifth, Brevard County (1), is low because county areas outside the preceding cities, purchase their water from those cities.[241]
Wastewater
[edit]The county controls six Wastewater Treatment Facilities: Mims (900,000 US gallons (3,400,000 L; 750,000 imp gal)/day), Port St. John (500,000 US gallons (1,900,000 L; 420,000 imp gal)/day), South Central (Viera) (12,000,000 US gallons (45,000,000 L; 10,000,000 imp gal)/day), South Beaches, and Barefoot Bay area.[242] Some cities have wastewater treatment plants, as well.[243]
Media
[edit]Brevard County is within the Orlando-Daytona Beach-Melbourne-Cocoa-Clermont television market. The county is within range of many television and radio stations located in Orlando.[244]
Newspapers
[edit]Florida Today is the major daily newspaper serving Melbourne, Brevard County and the Space Coast region of Florida. It is owned by the media conglomerate Gannett Company.[245] A monthly newspaper, El Playero, serves the Spanish-speaking population of the Space Coast.[246] The Brevard Business News, Hometown News, Space Coast Daily, Talk of Titusville, and Viera Voice also cover local news within Brevard County.[citation needed]
Radio
[edit]Television
[edit]Most of Brevard County receives cable television from Charter Spectrum. Comcast serves the Micco and Palm Bay areas in southern Brevard County.
Local stations licensed to or located in Brevard County include:
Films and television
[edit]The following films were filmed (in parts) in Brevard County:[247]
- Matinee (1993), filmed in Cocoa Village and Cocoa Playhouse
- Apollo 13 (1995), Contact (1997), Armageddon (1998) and Moonraker (1979) all utilized Cape Canaveral or Kennedy Space Center facilities.
- Marvin's Room (1996), filmed in Rockledge
- Nightmare (1981) horror film shot in Merritt Island, Cocoa, Cocoa Beach and Titusville
- A Night in Heaven (1983), filmed in Titusville
- Things Behind the Sun (2001), by independent filmmakers Allison Anders, raised in Cocoa Beach and Cape Canaveral, and Kurt Voss
- Space Cowboys (2000)
- Stowaway to the Moon (1975), filmed in Titusville and several Kennedy Space Center locations.
- Portions of Jaws 3-D (1983) were filmed on the Minutemen Causeway.
- The Number 23 (2007) shot scenes on the shore of Cocoa Beach.
- I'll Believe You (2007)
- The Manure Film Project: A Crappy Documentary with Absolutely No Budget (2018)[248]
- Transformers: Dark of the Moon, directed by Michael Bay. Filmed in 2010 at Kennedy Space Center's Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB), orbiter processing facilities, and launch pad among other areas
Television series included:
- The Cape, 13 episodes (1996 through 1997)
- From the Earth to the Moon, a miniseries (1998)
- I Dream of Jeannie, a 1960s comedy series, was set in Cocoa Beach and Cape Canaveral but filmed in California.
Arts and culture
[edit]The Maxwell C. King Center for the Performing Arts, seating 2000, features locally produced and former Broadway shows, ballet, and symphony. Several different performances are scheduled each week.
The Brevard Symphony Orchestra and the Space Coast Ballet offer shows performed by professionals. There is the professional Space Coast Symphony Orchestra.[249] Community orchestras and bands include, but are not limited to, the Melbourne Community Orchestra,[250] the Space Coast Pops and the Community Band of Brevard.[251] Choral groups include the Brevard Community Chorus,[252] the Brevard Chorale,[253] the Indialantic Chamber Singers,[254] and the Brevard Youth Chorus.[255]
The Brevard Zoo is a 75 acres (30 ha) facility[256] that contains more than 650 animals representing more than 165 species from Florida, South America, Africa, Asia and Australia. The Zoo offers animal experiences including giraffe and lorikeet feedings, African kayak tours, paddle boats in the wetlands and a train ride.[citation needed]
- Ballet
The Space Coast Ballet incorporates professional principal dancers and instructors together with many roles for local senior talent as well as roles for students. They annually stage The Nutcracker.
- Museums and attractions
The Space Coast has a number of museums from the rocket exhibitions at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex and the Air Force Space and Missile Museum, to local museums and others of unique character, such as the American Police Hall of Fame & Museum.[citation needed]
The Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex offers an educational look at the accomplishments of America's space program. The Observation Gantry near Launch Complex 39 offers a view of the Space Shuttle launch pads (first built for the Apollo missions), the Vehicle Assembly Building, and the crawlerway over which rockets are taken to the pad. The Apollo/Saturn V Center displays an example of the largest rocket ever launched.[257]
The US Space Walk of Fame in Titusville commemorates both the astronauts and the NASA and contractor personnel who made American crewed space exploration possible with museum and monuments.[258]
The Brevard Museum of History & Natural Science features the remains of the "Windover Man", the oldest human remains found on the North American continent, and a re-creation of the Windover Dig, a "wet" archaeological site. A visitor may see how Native Americans lived and Florida pioneers survived.[259]
Honor America runs the Liberty Bell Memorial Museum. This houses a replica of the Liberty Bell, historical documents, and patriotic memorabilia. Items are permanent reminders of our nation's history, as well as a memorial to military veterans.
The Harry T. and Harriette V. Moore Memorial Park and Cultural Center features a museum with artifacts and timeline of the civil rights movement and the story of Harry T. and Harriette V. Moore, civil rights leaders who were killed after their home was bombed on December 25, 1951.[260]
The Wizard of Oz Museum features a large collection of over 3,000 Wizard of Oz artifacts and memorabilia,[261] including the first known published copy of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, signed by L. Frank Baum, an early copy of the script for the 1939 MGM movie, and a fox-raccoon jacket owned by Judy Garland, monogrammed with her initials, "JG." The facility also includes a gift shop, and a large room with 31 projectors featuring both the Van Gogh Experience, and a Wizard of Oz immersive experience.
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
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Further reading
[edit]- Busick, Glenda Carlin (1992). Brevard good ole boys: A taxpayer searches for truth in the "good ole boy" network of county government. Tampa, Florida: Free Press Publishing. ASIN B0006OUK3C. A critic summarizes and comments on Brevard politics in the late 20th century.
- Eriksen, John (1994). Brevard County, Florida: A Short History to 1955. Melbourne, Florida: JohnEriksen.net/. ASIN B076H69FDW. This is a documented history of Brevard County, from prehistoric to the space age. Documented with 320 end notes drawn from 1000 sources.
- Middleton, Sallie. "Space Rush: Local Impact of Federal Aerospace Programs on Brevard and Surrounding Counties," Florida Historical Quarterly, Fall 2008, Vol. 87, Issue 2, pp. 258–289. JSTOR 20700217.
External links
[edit]
Geographic data related to Brevard County, Florida at OpenStreetMap
- Government links and constitutional offices
- Brevard County Government / Board of County Commissioners
- Brevard County Supervisor of Elections
- Brevard County Property Appraiser
- Brevard County Sheriff's Office; Archived August 17, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
- Brevard County Parks and Recreation
- South Central Regional Water Reclamation Facility; Archived October 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
- Special districts
- Judicial branch
- Brevard County Clerk of Courts
- Brevard County Public Defender; Archived December 11, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- Office of the State Attorney, 18th Judicial Circuit; Archived April 7, 2012, at the Wayback Machine serving Brevard and Seminole Counties
- Circuit and County Court for the 18th Judicial Circuit of Florida
- Local references
- Florida Today "Fact Book" on Brevard County; Archived November 14, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
- USF Maps of Historical Brevard County
- Old Florida Map Collection
- North Brevard – Titusville, Florida – Community Directory
- Searchable Database of Brevard County Property Records Archived October 1, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
- Space Coast Wiki – a community wiki for Brevard County
- General business statistics; Archived November 5, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- Brevard County Collection on the RICHES Mosaic Interface; Archived April 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
Brevard County, Florida
View on GrokipediaHistory
Indigenous Peoples and Early Settlement
The region encompassing present-day Brevard County was first inhabited by Paleo-Indians, semi-nomadic hunter-gatherers who arrived between 12,000 and 10,000 years ago during the late Pleistocene epoch, subsisting on megafauna such as mammoth and giant sloth before adapting to post-Ice Age ecosystems through foraging and small-game hunting.[7] By the late prehistoric period, more sedentary groups constructed shell middens along the Indian River Lagoon, indicating reliance on marine resources like oysters, fish, and turtles, with archaeological evidence of villages and burial practices dating to around 1000 CE.[8] The primary indigenous group at the time of European contact was the Ais (also spelled Ays or Ah-es), a distinct tribe whose territory extended from Cape Canaveral northward to the St. Lucie Inlet, including much of Brevard County's coastal and lagoon areas, where they maintained villages such as those near the "River of Ais" (now the Indian River).[9][10] The Ais were maritime-oriented, skilled in canoe navigation and known to Spanish explorers for salvaging goods from shipwrecks along the treacherous coast, often demanding tribute from survivors in exchange for aid, as documented in 16th- and 17th-century accounts of interactions involving wrecked vessels and trade in deerskins, fish, and shellfish.[11] They numbered perhaps 800-1,000 in the early 1600s but suffered rapid depopulation from European-introduced diseases, enslavement raids, and conflicts, with the tribe effectively extinct by the early 18th century as survivors dispersed or integrated into other groups like the Seminole.[12][13] Spanish explorers first charted the Brevard coastline in the 16th century, with Pedro Menéndez de Avilés establishing temporary outposts and naming Cape Canaveral (originally Cabo de Cañaveral) during expeditions in 1565-1570, though no permanent colonies were founded due to hostile terrain, disease, and native resistance.[11] British and later American interests followed, but substantive settlement awaited U.S. acquisition of Florida in 1821; the area initially fell under Mosquito County (organized 1824), a vast, sparsely populated jurisdiction plagued by Seminole Wars (1835-1842) that displaced remaining natives and deterred colonists.[14] Brevard County was formally established on December 29, 1844, carved from Mosquito County and named for Theodore Washington Brevard, a territorial judge and early settler; the first permanent non-indigenous settlement occurred in 1848 near Cape Canaveral, where families like those of pioneer Peter Wright established farms amid mangrove swamps and pine flatwoods, focusing on subsistence agriculture and fishing despite challenges from malaria and isolation.[15] By the early 1850s, additional pioneers such as Captain Miles O. Burnham and Balaam Allen founded outposts at Sand Point (later Titusville), clearing land for citrus groves and cattle, marking the shift to Anglo-American homesteading under the Armed Occupation Act of 1842, which incentivized frontier defense with land grants.[15][16] These early efforts laid sparse foundations, with population under 200 by 1850, constrained by poor drainage, wildlife, and distance from ports until steamboat navigation improved access post-1850s.[14]19th and Early 20th Century Growth
St. Lucie County, encompassing the area of present-day Brevard County, was established on March 14, 1844, from portions of Mosquito County following Florida's territorial organization and the resolution of Seminole conflicts.[17] The county was renamed Brevard County effective January 6, 1855, in honor of Theodore Washington Brevard, a Florida legislator and Confederate colonel, reflecting the post-statehood administrative adjustments after Florida's admission to the Union in 1845.[18] Early settlement remained limited due to the region's isolation, harsh environment, and lingering threats from Seminole remnants, with the first permanent European-American community forming near Cape Canaveral in 1848 around the construction of the Cape Canaveral Lighthouse.[7] Population growth was gradual, driven by small-scale farming and fishing ventures. The 1850 census recorded 139 residents, increasing to 246 by 1860 and surging to 1,216 after the Civil War amid freed labor shifts and northern migration.[19] By 1880, the count reached 1,478, supported by steamboat access along the Indian River starting in 1877 with vessels like the Pioneer, which facilitated trade in timber, fish, and early citrus crops.[11] Agricultural production centered on subsistence crops, cattle ranching—comprising over half of the 1860 farm output—and nascent citrus cultivation, including Indian River oranges pioneered by settler Douglas Dummett in the mid-19th century through grafting techniques suited to the lagoon's microclimate.[20] Towns such as Titusville (founded 1867 as a trading post) and Rockledge emerged as hubs for these activities, with county boundaries expanding southward to include areas now in Miami-Dade until later subdivisions.[11] The arrival of railroads catalyzed accelerated development in the late 19th century. The Jacksonville, Tampa and Key West Railroad extended to Titusville in 1886, followed by Henry Flagler's Florida East Coast Railway reaching Melbourne by 1894, reducing travel times from Jacksonville to days rather than weeks and enabling export of perishable goods like pineapples and seafood.[20] This infrastructure boom doubled the population to 3,401 by 1890 and peaked at 5,158 in 1900, attracting tourists to nascent resorts and boosting land values through speculation.[19] The county seat shifted to Titusville in 1892, formalizing its role as an administrative center amid disputes over earlier sites like Malabar.[11] Early 20th-century growth continued modestly, with the 1910 population at 4,717 despite boundary losses to Osceola (1887) and future St. Lucie (1905), sustained by fishing industries and citrus expansion, though a 1920s land bubble foreshadowed economic volatility.[17][19]Mid-20th Century: Citrus and Infrastructure
In the mid-20th century, citrus cultivation remained a cornerstone of Brevard County's agrarian economy, particularly within the Indian River Citrus District encompassing northern portions of the county along the lagoon. The region's groves, concentrated on Merritt Island and adjacent areas, produced premium oranges and grapefruit valued for their superior flavor, attributed to the sandy soils, subtropical climate, and brackish water influence from the Indian River Lagoon that enhanced fruit quality without excessive salinity.[21] Operations scaled industrially, exemplified by the Nevins Fruit Company Packing Plant in Titusville, the area's largest facility with expansive packing floors for sorting, grading, and shipping citrus to northern markets via rail and emerging truck routes.[22] Statewide, Florida's citrus output exceeded 100 million boxes annually by 1950, reflecting post-World War II recovery from freezes and wartime disruptions, with innovations like frozen concentrate juice (FCOJ) boosting demand for juicing varieties and stabilizing prices after oversupply issues in the 1930s.[23] [24] Brevard's contributions aligned with this peak, though specific county yields were modest compared to central Florida hubs, emphasizing quality over volume in the Indian River brand protected since the 1930s.[25] This era's citrus prosperity intertwined with infrastructure expansions that improved drainage, irrigation, and transport critical for grove viability and market access. Post-1940 freezes prompted investments in frost protection systems, such as smudge pots and wind machines, while county roads were upgraded to handle heavier loads from packing houses like the Marion S. Whaley facility, supporting shipments amid Florida's grapefruit production surge to over 14 million crates by 1940.[26] [27] Key federal initiatives included the 1940 activation of Banana River Naval Air Station (later Patrick Air Force Base), which introduced modern airfields, dredging, and utilities that indirectly benefited civilian agriculture by enhancing regional connectivity and workforce influx.[20] Bridge and causeway projects addressed the county's fragmented geography of rivers and lagoons, with 1950s constructions like the A. Max Brewer Causeway (completed 1955) replacing drawbridges to enable reliable vehicular flow for citrus haulers and reduce spoilage delays.[28] These high-level spans over the Indian River, built with steel girders to accommodate boating, presaged larger 1960s builds but primarily served mid-century needs for agricultural export and local commerce before space-related booms.[29] By facilitating automobile-dependent logistics—eclipsing earlier rail reliance—infrastructure upgrades sustained citrus until land pressures from population growth initiated conversions to residential use, marking the industry's gradual eclipse around the 1950s-1960s.[18]Space Race and Post-Apollo Era
The space race catalyzed unprecedented development in Brevard County, transforming it from a rural area into a hub of aerospace activity centered on Cape Canaveral. Following the establishment of NASA's Launch Operations Center on July 1, 1962—renamed the John F. Kennedy Space Center after President Kennedy's assassination in November 1963—the county became the primary site for preparing and launching the Apollo program's Saturn V rockets from Launch Complex 39.[30][31] The Apollo 11 mission launched on July 16, 1969, marking the first manned lunar landing, while subsequent missions through Apollo 17 in December 1972 solidified Brevard's role, with all crewed Apollo flights originating from the county's facilities.[32] This era drove explosive population growth, with Brevard County's residents more than doubling from approximately 82,000 in 1960 to over 230,000 by 1970, fueled by influxes of engineers, technicians, and support staff employed by NASA and contractors.[33] The economic surge extended beyond direct employment, spurring infrastructure expansions including roads, schools, and housing to accommodate the boom, while tourism emerged as visitors flocked to witness launches.[32] Aerospace activities accounted for a significant portion of labor force participation, with trends from 1960 to 1974 showing marked increases tied to space-related jobs.[34] However, the conclusion of the Apollo program in 1972 led to temporary workforce reductions and economic uncertainty, as federal funding shifted priorities away from lunar missions.[35] In the post-Apollo era, Brevard County adapted through transitional projects like Skylab in 1973 and the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project in 1975, both launched from the Kennedy Space Center, maintaining some momentum before the Space Shuttle program's development.[36] The shuttle era commenced with Columbia's first flight on April 12, 1981, from Launch Complex 39A, initiating 135 missions over three decades that processed orbiters, boosters, and external tanks at county facilities, reinvigorating the local economy with sustained high-tech employment and processing operations. By the 1980s, the space industry contributed substantially to Brevard's growth, with direct NASA spending and contractor activities supporting thousands of jobs and positioning the county as the "Space Coast."[34]Late 20th to Early 21st Century Expansion
The Space Shuttle program, initiated with the first orbital flight of STS-1 on April 12, 1981, sustained and expanded Brevard County's aerospace-driven economy following the Apollo era, employing thousands directly at Kennedy Space Center and through contractors while drawing tourists for launches. This stability contributed to robust population growth, with the county's residents increasing from 230,582 in the 1980 census to 420,706 by 1990, a 82.4% rise fueled by in-migration of skilled workers and support staff.[37] Concurrently, Port Canaveral underwent significant infrastructure upgrades, including berth expansions and terminal developments in the 1980s, enabling the rise of the cruise industry; Premier Cruise Lines, headquartered there, pioneered affordable multi-day Caribbean voyages starting in the mid-1980s, boosting tourism revenue and related jobs in hospitality and logistics.[38] Into the 1990s and 2000s, economic diversification accelerated with investments in high-technology corridors and planned developments, such as the Viera master-planned community initiated in 1989, which added thousands of residential units, commercial spaces, and recreational facilities by the early 2000s. Population growth moderated but persisted, reaching 476,320 in the 2000 census, supported by expansions in aviation, defense contracting, and retiree influxes attracted to the coastal lifestyle.[37] The county adopted a comprehensive growth management plan in 1988, emphasizing controlled development, environmental preservation, and infrastructure like roadway widenings along State Road A1A and U.S. Highway 1 to accommodate rising traffic from tourism and commuting.[39] The early 2000s saw a housing construction surge, with annual building permits for new private structures averaging over 5,000 units from 2000 to 2006, reflecting Florida's broader real estate boom driven by low interest rates, speculative investment, and demand from space and tourism sectors. This expansion peaked around 2005–2006 before the 2008 financial crisis led to foreclosures and stalled projects, yet it had irreversibly urbanized southern Brevard with subdivisions and retail centers, elevating the county's profile as a hub for aerospace tourism and waterfront commerce by 2010, when population hit 543,376.[37][40]Recent Developments (2010s–2025)
Brevard County's economy rebounded from the 2008 financial crisis and the 2011 Space Shuttle program retirement, which had driven unemployment to 11.8% in late 2010.[41] Commercial spaceflight expansion, led by companies such as SpaceX establishing operations at Cape Canaveral, spurred job creation; the local aerospace and technology workforce nearly doubled from 7,847 employees in 2017 to 14,828 in 2023.[42] This growth diversified beyond traditional NASA dependencies, with SpaceX alone supporting over 6,000 jobs by the mid-2020s through rocket launches and recovery operations.[43] Population expanded consistently, rising in each year from 2010 through 2022 per U.S. Census Bureau estimates, with a 2.1% annual increase between 2021 and 2022 marking the largest single-year gain in that period. From 610,723 residents in 2022, the county grew 1.61% to 620,533 in 2023, driven by in-migration tied to space-related opportunities and Florida's broader appeal for retirees and remote workers.[45] Projections estimated 670,402 residents by 2025, reflecting sustained 1.8% annual growth rates.[46] By 2025, Brevard ranked among the fastest-growing economies for U.S. midsized communities, propelled by science, technology, manufacturing, and commercial space sectors, with gross domestic product climbing to $39.6 billion in 2023 from $28.2 billion in 2020.[47] [48] The space boom intensified industrial real estate demand, attracting developers for aerospace infrastructure expansions.[49] Residential construction added nearly $2 billion in new taxable value to county rolls in 2025 alone, though real estate trends showed stabilizing inventory at under seven months' supply amid moderating sales.[50] [51] The county avoided direct major hurricane landfalls in this period—no Category 3 or higher since records began in 1850—despite brushes with systems like Tropical Storm Gordon in 1994 and preparations for active seasons such as 2020's record 30 named storms.[52] [53] Tourism, a key sector via Port Canaveral cruises and Kennedy Space Center visits, encountered headwinds from the 2025 federal government shutdown, reducing federal visitor bookings and straining hotel occupancy.[54] Politically, Brevard maintained a conservative orientation, electing Republican Mike Haridopolos to represent Florida's 8th Congressional District in January 2025.[55]Geography
Physical Geography and Topography
Brevard County encompasses approximately 1,016 square miles of land along Florida's central Atlantic coast, extending 72 miles from the Volusia County line in the north to the Indian River County line in the south, with its eastern boundary formed by the Atlantic Ocean and its western boundary by the St. Johns River watershed and inland flatwoods.[56] The county's topography is predominantly low-lying and flat, characteristic of the broader Atlantic Coastal Plain physiographic province, with elevations ranging from sea level along coastal and estuarine margins to a maximum of 83 feet near City Point in the Cocoa area.[57] [58] This gentle relief results from Pleistocene marine transgressions and regressions that deposited layers of sand, shell, and limestone, forming a landscape dominated by sandy ridges, dunes, and marshes rather than rugged highlands.[59] The eastern portion consists of a chain of barrier islands and peninsulas, including the prominent Merritt Island—the largest barrier island in Florida at over 20 miles long—and the Cape Canaveral peninsula, which projects eastward and shelters parts of the adjacent lagoons from oceanic swells.[60] These features, separated from the mainland by the Indian River Lagoon estuary, exhibit elongate sand dunes paralleling the shoreline, with heights typically reaching 10 feet or more in areas like the Cape Canaveral quadrangle, stabilizing coastal ecosystems against erosion and storm surges.[61] Inland from the lagoon, the mainland includes remnants of the Atlantic Coastal Ridge in northern Brevard, a series of relict beach ridges and highs exceeding 30 feet that mark former shorelines, interspersed with low-lying marshes and flat pine flatwoods.[59] Southern sections transition to broader coastal lowlands with minimal relief, underlain by unconsolidated sands and coquina shells that facilitate high permeability and groundwater influence on surface features.[62] Hydrologically, the county's topography integrates with extensive estuarine systems, notably the Indian River Lagoon, a 156-mile-long shallow waterway that traverses Brevard and constitutes about 40% of Florida's east coast lagoon habitat, with depths averaging 4 feet and fringed by mangroves and salt marshes.[63] The Banana River, a narrower lagoon parallel to the Indian River, lies between Merritt Island and Cape Canaveral, while the northern Haulover Canal connects to the St. Johns River, influencing tidal flows and creating a mosaic of brackish wetlands that occupy roughly 34.8% of the county's total 1,557 square miles.[56] These water bodies, combined with permeable substrates, result in a hydrology prone to tidal inundation and groundwater discharge, shaping flat, hydric soils and limiting pronounced topographic variation across the region.[64]Climate Patterns and Natural Hazards
Brevard County features a humid subtropical climate (Köppen classification Cfa), with hot, humid summers and mild, drier winters influenced by its coastal position along the Atlantic Ocean and proximity to the Gulf Stream. Annual average temperatures hover around 76.6°F, with representative stations like Melbourne recording mean highs of 82°F and lows of 65°F; summers often exceed 90°F with high humidity, while winters rarely drop below freezing, averaging lows in the mid-50s°F. Precipitation totals approximately 51–54 inches annually, concentrated in a wet season from May to October driven by convective thunderstorms and tropical moisture, peaking at 5.9 inches in August; the dry season from November to April sees reduced rainfall, averaging under 3 inches monthly, though occasional cold fronts can bring brief wintry mixes without significant snowfall (0 inches average).[65][66][67][68] The county's low-lying topography, barrier islands, and exposure to Atlantic tropical activity make it susceptible to natural hazards, primarily hurricanes and associated phenomena. Tropical cyclones have historically produced high winds, storm surges up to 10–15 feet in major events, inland flooding, and spawned tornadoes; Brevard's position often results in glancing blows rather than direct landfalls, mitigating some surge impacts compared to south Florida but still yielding widespread damage from wind and rain. Key historical events include Hurricane David (1979), which delivered sustained hurricane-force winds (up to 100 mph) and caused $10 million in damage; the intense 2004 season, with Hurricanes Charley (Category 4, minimal direct hit but peripheral winds), Frances (Category 2, 105 mph gusts leading to power outages for 90% of residents), and Jeanne (Category 3, similar wind damage and 6–10 inches of rain); and more recent brushes like Hurricane Irma (2017, Category 4 at peak, with 10–15 feet surges eroding beaches). Flooding risks are amplified by heavy rainfall (e.g., 12+ inches from single storms), storm surges breaching dunes, and urban development overwhelming drainage systems, affecting low-elevation areas like Merritt Island and coastal zones; the county has experienced inland flooding from at least 12 hurricane-strength systems since records began.[69][70][71] Tornadoes, frequently embedded in squall lines ahead of or during hurricanes, represent another recurrent threat, occurring at a rate 3.3 times the U.S. average and causing 12 fatalities and 638 injuries from 1950 to 2004 alone; these waterspouts or weak-to-EF2 twisters often strike coastal and inland communities, damaging homes and infrastructure as seen in events tied to Tropical Storm Barry (2024) and pre-Hurricane Milton activity (October 2024). Lightning and severe thunderstorms contribute to isolated hazards like fires and power disruptions year-round, while beach erosion from prolonged swells—such as those in early October 2025 following offshore hurricanes—has degraded dunes, with severe impacts in southern areas like Patrick Shores. Overall hazard vulnerability stems from causal factors including sea-level rise (accelerating surge risks) and development on floodplains, though natural buffers like the Indian River Lagoon provide partial mitigation against extreme surges.[72][73][74]Environmental Features and Conservation
Brevard County encompasses a diverse array of coastal ecosystems, including barrier islands, estuaries, wetlands, and upland scrub habitats, contributing to one of North America's most biologically rich regions due to the convergence of temperate and subtropical climates.[75] The Indian River Lagoon, which forms much of the county's western boundary, is recognized as the most diverse estuary in North America, supporting over 2,100 plant species, 2,200 animal species, 685 fish species, and 370 bird species within its brackish waters that serve as nurseries for marine life.[76] [77] The Banana River Aquatic Preserve, covering 300,000 acres adjacent to Merritt Island, includes mangroves, seagrasses, and salt marshes essential for habitat connectivity.[78] The Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge spans 140,000 acres across Brevard and Indian River counties, established in 1963 to protect migratory birds and encompassing coastal dunes, saltwater marshes, and impounded wetlands that host over 330 bird species and critical nesting grounds for sea turtles.[79] This refuge overlays the Kennedy Space Center and preserves habitats for endangered species such as the Florida scrub-jay and manatees, while facilitating controlled burns and hydrological restoration to maintain ecosystem health.[80] Upland areas feature Brevard Coastal Scrub, a rare ecosystem targeted for conservation due to its role in supporting endemic flora and fauna, including threatened scrub habitats fragmented by development.[81] Conservation initiatives in Brevard County emphasize land acquisition and restoration to counter habitat loss and pollution. The Environmentally Endangered Lands (EEL) Program, voter-approved in 1990 with ad valorem taxing authority up to $55 million, has protected over 28,000 acres of threatened habitats, focusing on passive recreation and biodiversity preservation through management of rare plants and animals.[82] [83] The Save Our Indian River Lagoon program addresses nutrient pollution from nitrogen and phosphorus via stormwater improvements, septic upgrades, and habitat restoration projects, including seagrass planting and muck removal to mitigate algal blooms that have caused widespread seagrass die-offs since the 2010s.[84] Ongoing efforts by the Brevard Soil and Water Conservation District and partners like the Brevard Indian River Lagoon Coalition prioritize science-based restoration of oyster beds, mangroves, and water quality to sustain the lagoon's ecological functions.Communities and Urban Structure
Brevard County encompasses 16 incorporated municipalities and extensive unincorporated territories that constitute the majority of its land area and house approximately 36% of the population. The municipalities range from small towns like Melbourne Village, with 684 residents, to larger cities such as Palm Bay, which has 140,199 inhabitants as of April 1, 2024. Other prominent municipalities include Melbourne (87,846 residents), Titusville (50,547), West Melbourne (30,443), and Rockledge (29,134).[85] Unincorporated areas, governed directly by the county, feature significant communities including Merritt Island, Viera, Suntree, and Port St. John, which support residential, commercial, and light industrial activities.[2] The county's urban structure is characterized by linear development patterns aligned with coastal barriers, the Indian River Lagoon, and inland corridors like Interstate 95 and U.S. Highway 1, fostering clustered urban centers separated by conservation lands and lower-density zones. Northern areas center around Titusville and Cocoa, central regions include Rockledge and Merritt Island with mixed residential-commercial uses, and southern clusters feature Palm Bay and Melbourne as high-growth hubs. Barrier island communities, such as Cocoa Beach and Cape Canaveral, emphasize tourism and waterfront commerce, while planned developments like Viera integrate mixed-use districts with up to 30 residential units per acre east of I-95, alongside office, retail, and conservation elements spanning 20,500 acres.[86] Growth management policies prioritize infill redevelopment, concurrency requirements for infrastructure capacity, and density bonuses—up to 50 units per acre in targeted areas—to curb sprawl and enhance efficiency, with Transfer of Development Rights programs preserving agricultural lands by shifting density to urban nodes. Commercial districts are limited in scale (e.g., neighborhood commercial up to 8 acres) and positioned at intersections to minimize strip development, while industrial uses concentrate near I-95 for logistics tied to aerospace and port activities at Port Canaveral. This framework supports a suburban-rural mosaic, with 75% of certain planned areas like Farmton designated for agriculture and conservation to balance expansion with environmental constraints.[86]Demographics
Population Dynamics and Trends
The population of Brevard County experienced modest growth prior to the mid-20th century but accelerated markedly during the Space Race era due to influxes tied to aerospace development at Cape Canaveral. Decennial census figures illustrate this trajectory: 23,653 in 1950, surging to 111,435 in 1960 (a 371% increase), 230,006 in 1970, 272,959 in 1980, 398,978 in 1990, 476,230 in 2000, 543,376 in 2010, and 606,612 in 2020.[19]| Census Year | Population | Percent Change from Prior Decade |
|---|---|---|
| 1950 | 23,653 | — |
| 1960 | 111,435 | 371.2% |
| 1970 | 230,006 | 106.3% |
| 1980 | 272,959 | 18.7% |
| 1990 | 398,978 | 46.1% |
| 2000 | 476,230 | 19.4% |
| 2010 | 543,376 | 14.1% |
| 2020 | 606,612 | 11.6% |
Racial, Ethnic, and Linguistic Composition
Brevard County's population is predominantly non-Hispanic White, reflecting historical settlement patterns in Florida's Space Coast region. According to the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey 2019–2023 5-year estimates, 72.6% of residents identify as White alone and not Hispanic or Latino. This group decreased from 77.7% in 2010 to 72.2% by 2022, indicating gradual diversification.[40] Hispanic or Latino residents of any race constitute 10.5% of the population, primarily of Mexican, Puerto Rican, and Cuban origin, though specific subgroup breakdowns at the county level show no single origin dominating beyond state trends. Black or African American residents alone account for 11.2%, Asians alone for 3.0%, and individuals identifying with two or more races for 2.9%. Smaller groups include American Indian and Alaska Native alone (0.5%) and Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone (0.1%).| Race | Percentage (2019–2023 ACS) |
|---|---|
| White alone | 82.2% |
| Black or African American alone | 11.2% https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/brevardcountyflorida/PST045223 |
| Asian alone | 3.0% https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/brevardcountyflorida/PST045223 |
| Two or More Races | 2.9% https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/brevardcountyflorida/PST045223 |
| American Indian and Alaska Native alone | 0.5% https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/brevardcountyflorida/PST045223 |
| Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone | 0.1% https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/brevardcountyflorida/PST045223 |
Socioeconomic Indicators
Brevard County's median household income stood at $75,817 in 2023, reflecting a growth from $71,308 the prior year and surpassing the Florida state median of $71,711.[45][5] This figure positions the county slightly above the state average but below the national median, influenced by its concentration in aerospace, defense, and tourism sectors that provide stable middle-class employment.[90] The poverty rate for all ages in Brevard County was 10.3% in 2023, lower than Florida's 12.4% and the U.S. rate of approximately 12.5%, with 65,640 individuals affected amid a population exceeding 600,000.[5][91] Child poverty under age 18 registered at 15.0%, highlighting vulnerabilities in family households despite overall economic expansion.[5] Unemployment averaged around 3.7% in early 2025, rising to 4.7% by August, consistent with seasonal fluctuations tied to tourism and space industry contracts.[92][93] Labor force participation benefits from proximity to Kennedy Space Center, though older demographics—median age 46.8—contribute to retiree-driven economic stability rather than high workforce growth.[94] Educational attainment among adults aged 25 and older shows 33.5% holding a bachelor's degree or higher, above Florida's average but trailing national tech hubs, with high school completion near 92.8%.[95][96] This aligns with vocational training in engineering and trades supporting local industries, though gaps persist in advanced degrees compared to urban centers. Homeownership reached 77.5% in 2023, exceeding state and national figures, bolstered by median property values of $304,400 and retiree influx, though rising insurance costs from hurricane risks strain affordability.[97][45] The county's cost-of-living index of 95.6 falls below the U.S. average of 100, driven by lower housing and grocery expenses relative to coastal peers, yet median home prices have climbed amid post-2020 migration.[98]| Indicator | Value (Latest Available) | Comparison to Florida |
|---|---|---|
| Median Household Income | $75,817 (2023) | Higher than state ($71,711)[5] |
| Poverty Rate (All Ages) | 10.3% (2023) | Lower than state (12.4%)[5] |
| Unemployment Rate | 4.7% (Aug 2025) | Comparable to state trends[93] |
| Bachelor's Degree or Higher (25+) | 33.5% | Above state average[95] |
| Homeownership Rate | 77.5% (2023) | Higher than state[97] |
Political and Voter Demographics
Brevard County maintains a Republican plurality in voter registration, indicative of its conservative political orientation. As of September 30, 2025, there were 199,884 registered Republicans, compared to 109,317 Democrats, 103,918 voters with no party affiliation, and 16,655 in minor parties, for a total of 429,774 active registered voters.[99] This distribution equates to Republicans at 46.5%, Democrats at 25.4%, no party affiliation at 24.2%, and minor parties at 3.9%, with Republicans outnumbering Democrats by over 90,000.[99] Election outcomes reinforce this alignment, with the county consistently favoring Republican candidates in federal, state, and local races. In the November 5, 2024, presidential general election, Donald Trump secured 216,533 votes (59.65%) in Brevard County, while Kamala Harris received 141,233 votes (38.91%), on a total of 363,015 votes cast from 443,257 registered voters, yielding an 82.43% turnout.[100] Republicans also achieved a complete sweep in that cycle, retaining all five county commission seats and the seven-member state legislative delegation from the county.[101] Voter demographics contribute to this pattern, with a higher proportion of white, older, and military-affiliated residents correlating with Republican support, though no party affiliation has grown amid broader Florida trends toward voter independence.[102] The county's political structure reflects sustained Republican dominance in governance, including a fully Republican county commission as of 2024.[101]Government and Politics
County Government Organization
Brevard County functions as a home rule charter county under Florida law, granting it broad powers of self-government as outlined in its charter adopted by voters.[103] The county's government combines legislative and executive functions primarily through the Board of County Commissioners (BCC), which serves as the central policy-making body.[104] This structure emphasizes district-based representation to align governance with local community needs, with the BCC responsible for enacting ordinances, approving budgets, overseeing land use planning, and managing county-wide services such as public works and emergency response.[105] The BCC comprises five commissioners, each elected from a single-member district to staggered four-year terms in nonpartisan elections, ensuring continuity and district-specific accountability.[104] The board appoints a county manager as the chief executive officer, who administers daily operations, implements BCC policies, and directs county departments excluding those led by independently elected officers.[106] The county manager reports directly to the BCC, attends its meetings, and coordinates executive functions across groups including public safety, community services, development, and support services.[105] Additionally, the BCC appoints a county attorney to provide legal counsel on county matters.[105] Independently elected constitutional officers, mandated by the Florida Constitution, handle specialized functions outside direct BCC control, including the sheriff (law enforcement), clerk of the circuit court (judicial records and county clerk duties), property appraiser (property valuations), supervisor of elections (election administration), and tax collector (revenue collection).[105] These officers maintain autonomy in their domains while coordinating with the BCC on shared fiscal and service delivery responsibilities, reflecting Florida's framework for checks and balances in county governance.[105] The charter further delineates executive responsibilities to the county manager for non-constitutional affairs, promoting efficient administration while preserving elected oversight.[107]Elected Officials and Administration
Brevard County operates under a charter government structure, with executive and legislative powers vested in a five-member Board of County Commissioners (BCC), each elected from a single-member district to staggered four-year terms. The BCC appoints a county manager to oversee administrative functions, including budget implementation and departmental operations. Commissioners earn an annual salary of $68,339 as of July 1, 2024.[108] As of October 2025, following the November 2024 general election, the BCC comprises solely Republican members: District 1 Commissioner Katie Delaney (elected 2024), District 2 Vice Chair Tom Goodson, District 3 Commissioner Kim Adkinson (reelected 2024), District 4 Commissioner Rob Feltner, and District 5 Commissioner Thad Altman (elected 2024). Delaney secured 64.1% of the vote in District 1 against Democratic challenger Bryan Bobbitt, while Adkinson and Altman similarly prevailed by margins exceeding 15%.[104][109][110]| Position | Incumbent | Party | Next Election |
|---|---|---|---|
| District 1 Commissioner | Katie Delaney | Republican | 2028 |
| District 2 Commissioner (Vice Chair) | Tom Goodson | Republican | 2026 |
| District 3 Commissioner | Kim Adkinson | Republican | 2028 |
| District 4 Commissioner | Rob Feltner | Republican | 2026 |
| District 5 Commissioner | Thad Altman | Republican | 2028 |
Political Alignment and Governance Style
Brevard County maintains a strong Republican political alignment, as evidenced by its voter registration and election results. As of September 30, 2025, Republicans constitute 199,884 registered voters (46.5% of the total electorate of 429,774), surpassing Democrats at 109,317 (25.4%), with No Party Affiliation voters numbering 103,918 (24.2%) and minor party affiliates at 16,655 (3.9%). In the November 5, 2024, general election, Republican Donald J. Trump received 59.65% of the presidential vote (216,533 ballots out of 363,057 counted), compared to 38.91% for Democrat Kamala D. Harris (141,233 ballots), reflecting a decisive conservative preference amid an 82.43% turnout from 443,257 registered voters.[100] The county's governance structure reinforces this alignment through an all-Republican Board of County Commissioners, a configuration sustained for the eighth consecutive year following the November 2024 elections, where three new commissioners secured victories by margins exceeding 15 percentage points.[117] Key constitutional officers, including Sheriff Wayne Ivey (Republican, elected countywide with salary of $256,853 as of July 1, 2024), further embody Republican dominance in executive roles.[108] Governance under this Republican-led commission prioritizes fiscal conservatism, economic policies supporting the aerospace and tourism sectors, and enhanced public safety, aligning with broader Florida Republican emphases on limited government intervention and infrastructure for growth. The board has advocated for state-level conservative priorities, including regulatory relief and tax restraint, while addressing local challenges like coastal development and emergency preparedness without expansive social programs.[118] This approach has contributed to sustained Republican sweeps in local races, including a complete hold on the county's legislative delegation.[101]Elections and Voter Behavior
Brevard County voters demonstrate a pronounced Republican lean, with partisan registration data underscoring this dominance. As of September 30, 2025, Republicans comprised 199,884 registered voters (46.5%), Democrats 109,317 (25.4%), minor party affiliates 16,655 (3.9%), and no party affiliation (NPA) 103,918 (24.2%), totaling 429,774 active voters.[99] This imbalance, where Republicans outnumber Democrats by over 90,000, has driven consistent electoral outcomes favoring conservative candidates, particularly in federal and state races.[99] In presidential elections, the county has reliably supported Republican nominees since 2016, with margins widening over time. The 2024 general election exemplified this, as Donald J. Trump captured 59.65% of the vote (216,533 ballots) against Kamala D. Harris's 38.91% (141,233 ballots), alongside minor candidates totaling under 2%.[100] Voter turnout reached 82.43%, with 365,375 ballots cast out of 443,257 registered voters, reflecting robust participation facilitated by early voting and mail-in options prevalent in Florida.[100] Local partisan contests mirrored this pattern, yielding a Republican sweep in sheriff, commission, and related races.[119] This Republican predominance stems from demographic factors including a large retiree base, aerospace and defense workforce conservatism, and military-affiliated residents, contributing to a rightward shift from more competitive mid-20th-century voting.[102] Non-presidential elections exhibit lower turnout, such as the 6.59% in the 2025 municipal and special district contest, highlighting engagement peaks during high-stakes national cycles.[120] NPA voters, often pivotal in close races elsewhere, have aligned with Republican outcomes in Brevard, reinforcing the county's status as a conservative bastion within Florida's Space Coast region.[99]| Party | Registered Voters (Sep. 30, 2025) | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Republican | 199,884 | 46.5% |
| Democrat | 109,317 | 25.4% |
| Minor Parties | 16,655 | 3.9% |
| No Party Affiliation | 103,918 | 24.2% |
| Total | 429,774 | 100% |
Law Enforcement and Public Safety
The Brevard County Sheriff's Office (BCSO) serves as the primary law enforcement agency for unincorporated areas and provides services such as patrol, investigations, jail operations, and animal control across the county.[121] Led by elected Sheriff Wayne Ivey, the BCSO maintains a policy of zero tolerance for crime, emphasizing community partnerships to reduce criminal activity.[121] The agency reports having achieved the lowest number of crime victims in the past 45 years, contributing to Brevard County's reputation as one of the safer regions in Florida.[121] Several municipalities operate independent police departments, including those in Cocoa, Cocoa Beach, Indialantic, Indian Harbour Beach, Melbourne, Palm Bay, and Titusville, which handle local policing, traffic enforcement, and community safety within city limits.[122] [123] These departments coordinate with the BCSO through the county's 9-1-1 system for mutual aid and joint operations.[124] Crime trends in Brevard County indicate a decline in violent incidents, with reported homicides decreasing slightly in 2024 compared to 2023 and further in the first half of 2025, recording only 10 cases versus 24 in the same period of prior years.[125] [126] The overall index crime rate stood at 2,134.6 per 100,000 population in 2020, closely aligning with the state average of 2,158.0.[5] Over the 2019-2024 period, the county documented approximately 23,350 violent crimes and 24,083 property crimes.[127] Public safety is augmented by Brevard County Fire Rescue, an all-hazards department responsible for fire suppression, emergency medical services (EMS), technical and marine rescues, hazardous materials response, and ocean lifeguarding.[128] Under Fire Chief Patrick Voltaire, the agency provides advanced life support transport and high-performance CPR protocols, staffing multiple stations to cover the county's 1,500 square miles.[128] EMS operations emphasize rapid response, with seasonal lifeguard deployments supporting beach safety amid high tourism volumes.[128]Economy
Overview of Economic Growth
Brevard County's economy has demonstrated robust growth in recent years, with gross domestic product rising from approximately $30.9 billion in 2022 to $32.8 billion in 2023, reflecting a year-over-year increase of about 6%.[5] This expansion aligns with broader population influxes, as the county's resident population grew by 1.61% from 610,723 in 2022 to 620,533 in 2023, fueled by migration to Florida's Space Coast region.[45] Median household income also advanced, reaching $75,817 in 2023, up from $71,308 the prior year, indicating rising prosperity amid diversification beyond traditional sectors.[45] Employment metrics underscore this momentum, with the county's labor force standing at around 318,451 and unemployment rates remaining low, averaging below 4% through much of 2024 before edging to 4.7% by mid-2025.[129][93] Total nonfarm employment in Brevard increased alongside Florida's statewide trends, supported by investments in high-tech industries and infrastructure.[130] Per capita GDP stood at roughly $61,479, positioning the county competitively among mid-sized U.S. economies.[131] The Space Coast's designation as a hub for aerospace and related activities has been a primary catalyst, with economic development efforts emphasizing industry diversification and attracting private space ventures.[3] County revenues expanded nearly 35% from 2012 to 2021, a trajectory sustained by spaceport operations and ancillary growth in logistics and manufacturing.[132] This pattern marks Brevard as one of the fastest-growing economies among comparable communities, though sustained expansion depends on managing workforce demands and infrastructure capacity.[133]Aerospace and Defense Industries
Brevard County, encompassing Florida's Space Coast, hosts critical infrastructure for aerospace and defense, including the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) and Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, which support NASA missions, Department of Defense operations, and commercial space activities. These facilities enable rocket launches, satellite deployments, and spacecraft assembly, with KSC serving as the primary launch site for NASA's Artemis program and crewed missions via partners like SpaceX.[134] The region's strategic coastal location provides equatorial launch advantages, reducing fuel needs for eastward trajectories over the Atlantic.[135] Major aerospace employers include Lockheed Martin, which develops the Orion spacecraft and supports missile systems at Cape Canaveral; Northrop Grumman, operating advanced surveillance prototyping in Melbourne; L3Harris Technologies, focused on avionics and communications; and Collins Aerospace, specializing in propulsion and interiors.[136][137][138] Defense contractors such as Boeing, Raytheon, and Leonardo DRS contribute through guided missile production, radar systems, and electro-optical infrared technologies, often integrated with space operations.[139][140] Commercial entities like SpaceX conduct frequent Falcon 9 and Starship tests from pads at Cape Canaveral, driving infrastructure upgrades and supply chain growth.[141] In fiscal year 2021, KSC activities generated over $5.2 billion in total economic impact, with $4.24 billion attributable to Brevard County through direct payroll, procurement, and induced spending.[134] KSC contractors alone produced $1.42 billion in local output that year, supporting high-skill jobs in engineering and manufacturing.[142] The sector's expansion, fueled by public-private partnerships, has outpaced national averages, with aerospace employment projected to grow faster than average through 2033 due to demand for engineers and technicians.[143] Defense-related activities, including Space Force operations, further bolster resilience against federal budget fluctuations, as evidenced by sustained DoD contracts amid NASA proposals.[144]Tourism, Real Estate, and Construction
Tourism in Brevard County is dominated by Port Canaveral, the world's second-busiest cruise port, which recorded 7.6 million passenger movements in fiscal year 2024, a 12% increase from 2023.[145] Projections for fiscal year 2025 anticipate 8.4 to 8.6 million passengers, reflecting sustained demand.[145] [146] The Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex draws visitors for space-related attractions, bolstered by over 80 rocket launches in 2024 and more than 100 expected in 2025.[147] Visitor spending reached $2.95 billion in 2023, generating a total economic impact of $4.6 billion for the county.[148] Tourist development tax collections hit $25.26 million in 2024, the second-highest on record, supporting beach projects and facilities.[149] Growth continued into 2025 with increased tax revenue and cruise activity, though federal shutdowns have caused cancellations in some periods.[150] [151] The real estate market has experienced cooling amid national trends, with median single-family home sales prices at $375,000 in September 2025, down 2.3% from $384,000 the prior year.[152] Average home values stood at $341,663, reflecting a 4.4% decline over the past year, while median listing prices were $375,000 in August 2025, down 2.6% year-over-year.[153] [154] Inventory has risen, contributing to fewer sales but stabilizing opportunities in a market influenced by tourism-driven migration.[155] Construction activity remains robust, with 4,603 new private housing units authorized by building permits in 2024.[156] In September 2025 alone, Brevard issued 284 residential permits valued at $116.4 million, part of a broader surge in residential, commercial, and educational projects expected to persist through 2025.[157] [158] This boom supports population influx from tourism and aerospace sectors, though permitting processes in unincorporated areas handle new builds and additions.[159]Other Sectors: Healthcare, Agriculture, and Manufacturing
Health First, the dominant healthcare provider in Brevard County, operates four hospitals including Holmes Regional Medical Center in Melbourne, which was ranked the 17th best hospital in Florida in 2024 by U.S. News & World Report, and Cape Canaveral Hospital in Cocoa Beach.[160] Parrish Medical Center in Titusville, a 210-bed facility established in 1928, delivers acute care services across north Brevard, while Orlando Health Melbourne Hospital, a 119-bed institution opened in 2021, focuses on surgical and emergency care for southern areas.[161][162] Countywide nursing home occupancy reached 88% in the fourth quarter of 2023, reflecting demand pressures amid Florida's aging population.[163] Agriculture contributes modestly to Brevard's economy, with 2022 USDA data reporting 153 farms covering 45,000 acres and generating $17.4 million in net cash income.[164] Crops comprise 78% of sales, led by nursery, greenhouse, and floriculture products valued at $1.571 million in 2017 data (latest detailed breakdown available), alongside minor vegetable and fruit outputs; livestock, including 4,200 cattle and 1,310 broilers, accounts for the remaining 22%.[165] Production expenses totaled $136 million in 2022, up 33% from prior years, driven by land and input costs in this urbanizing coastal region.[164] Manufacturing supports about 35,000 jobs in Brevard County as of recent estimates, representing roughly 11% of the workforce and boasting Florida's highest sector average wage of $102,772 in 2023.[131][166] Non-aerospace segments include electronics contract manufacturing, with firms like SMTC Corporation ($341 million revenue) and MC Assembly Holdings ($315 million revenue) specializing in circuit board assembly and testing for consumer and medical devices.[167] Advanced materials producers, such as Advanced Magnet Lab, fabricate high-performance magnets for industrial applications, contributing to over 500 total manufacturers countywide.[168]Labor Force and Competitiveness Metrics
As of July 2025, the unemployment rate in Brevard County stood at 4.3 percent, reflecting a 0.3 percentage point increase from July 2024, amid broader regional trends influenced by aerospace sector fluctuations and national economic softening.[169] The county's labor force participation rate aligns closely with Florida's statewide figure of approximately 59 percent as of August 2025, though specific county-level participation data indicate a workforce heavily oriented toward skilled trades and technical roles, with about 57 percent of those without a high school diploma still engaged in the labor market.[170][171] The workforce demonstrates above-average educational attainment, with 93.7 percent of residents aged 25 and older holding at least a high school diploma or equivalent, and 47 percent possessing an associate's degree or higher, supporting competitiveness in high-tech industries like aerospace.[172] Median household income reached $75,817 in 2023, up from $71,308 the prior year, while the Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville metropolitan statistical area reported a median hourly wage of $22.26 and average annual earnings of $61,860 as of May 2023, exceeding Florida's median but trailing national highs due to sector-specific wage compression in manufacturing and defense.[45][173] Brevard County's economic competitiveness is evidenced by its ranking among the fastest-growing midsized U.S. economies in 2025 analyses, driven by aerospace expansions and a pro-business environment that attracted $11.3 million in workforce training investments, yielding 2,685 job placements in 2022-2023.[47][174] The Space Coast region, encompassing Brevard, placed in the top 10 of the Milken Institute's Best-Performing Cities Index for job and wage growth, underscoring a skilled labor pool's role in sustaining GDP expansion outpacing state averages.[175] This positioning benefits from Florida's overall business-friendly policies, including no state income tax, though local challenges like housing costs temper net labor attraction compared to national benchmarks.[176]Economic Challenges and Policy Responses
Brevard County has encountered persistent fiscal pressures, with inflation-driven cost increases and salary demands outpacing revenue growth, as evidenced in the proposed $2.48 billion budget for fiscal year 2025-26.[177] [178] Housing affordability remains a significant issue, with 14.8% of residents facing severe housing problems in 2024 and median home prices projected to rise by at least 2% in 2025 amid ongoing demand from population influxes tied to economic expansion.[45] [179] The county's heavy reliance on the space and aerospace sectors exposes it to volatility, including potential disruptions from federal policy shifts or program cuts, compounded by the 2025 decision to eliminate the North Brevard Economic Development Zone, redirecting funds to the general budget and sparking concerns over diminished incentives for industry retention.[180] Tourism, a key economic pillar, has faced acute setbacks from external shocks, such as federal government shutdown threats in late 2025, which led to substantial hotel booking cancellations and strained local revenues in Port Canaveral and surrounding areas.[181] [151] Unemployment, while relatively low at 4.7% as of mid-2025, exceeds the state average in some metrics and reflects seasonal and sector-specific fluctuations, with a poverty rate of 9.9% underscoring vulnerabilities among lower-wage workers in tourism and construction.[182] [169] [183] Natural disasters, including hurricanes, periodically exacerbate these issues through infrastructure damage and business interruptions, as seen in recovery efforts following events like Hurricane Ian in 2022.[184] In response, county officials have prioritized fiscal restraint, incorporating state-level emphases on responsibility in the 2025-26 budget to address rising operational costs without broad tax hikes, though property tax adjustments have been debated amid space-related land use exemptions.[185] [186] To mitigate housing strains, Brevard has implemented provisions of Florida's Live Local Act, offering zoning flexibilities and tax incentives to encourage affordable multifamily developments and mixed-income projects.[187] Workforce development initiatives, guided by the four-year WIOA local plan through CareerSource Brevard, focus on upskilling for high-demand sectors like aerospace via targeted training and apprenticeships, alongside disaster recovery dislocated worker grants to facilitate rapid reemployment post-events.[188] [189] Economic diversification efforts include sustaining incentives for space industry growth, with over $500 million invested in infrastructure since 2012 yielding leveraged returns, while emergency management policies emphasize pre-positioning resources and federal ARPA fund allocation for resilient recovery, as outlined in the county's 2021 recovery plan.[190] [191] These measures aim to buffer against sector dependencies and external risks, though critics argue that reduced targeted funds could hinder long-term competitiveness in a rapidly evolving space economy.[180]Education
K-12 Public Education System
Brevard Public Schools (BPS) operates as the primary K-12 public education provider for Brevard County, encompassing 110 schools and serving approximately 73,824 students during the 2025-26 school year.[192] The district maintains a student-teacher ratio of 14:1, with 40% minority enrollment and 37.5% of students classified as economically disadvantaged.[193] Enrollment has faced declines, contributing to revenue pressures, with total district students including virtual options reaching about 81,576 in recent counts, though brick-and-mortar attendance stands at roughly 69,000.[194] The district earned an overall "A" rating from the Florida Department of Education for the 2024-25 school year, marking the second consecutive year at this level despite a stricter grading scale for secondary schools.[195] Approximately 67% of BPS schools received an A or B grade, with 10 schools improving their ratings and 25 designated as 2024-25 Schools of Excellence by state criteria.[195] [196] State assessment proficiency averages 57% for elementary reading and math, while the district-wide high school graduation rate reached 89.8% for the most recent cohort, exceeding the Florida state average of 88%.[193] [197] Several high schools rank highly within the state, with top performers achieving 97-99% graduation rates and elevated college readiness indices based on AP/IB participation and exam scores.[198] BPS operates on a $1.62 billion budget for fiscal year 2026, reflecting a $4.3 million decrease amid enrollment drops and expanded voucher programs diverting funds to non-public options.[194] Statewide policy shifts, including universal school choice expansions, have prompted concerns over potential school closures and teacher layoffs post-2025-26, as traditional public funding competes with scholarships serving over 72,000 students.[199] Federal grant freezes exceeding $6 billion nationally have further strained operations, though the district prioritizes core instructional funding.[200] Reforms emphasize student progression plans aligned with Florida statutes, focusing on data-driven interventions for low performers.[201]Higher Education Institutions
Brevard County is home to two primary higher education institutions: the private Florida Institute of Technology (FIT) in Melbourne and the public Eastern Florida State College (EFSC) with multiple campuses across the county.[202][203] These institutions emphasize programs aligned with the region's aerospace and technology sectors, reflecting the area's proximity to Kennedy Space Center. FIT, founded in 1958 as Brevard Engineering College by physicist Jerome P. Keuper to provide continuing education for space program professionals, evolved into a comprehensive university offering degrees in engineering, science, aeronautics, business, and related fields.[204] Its total enrollment stands at 5,371 students, including both undergraduate and graduate levels.[205] EFSC, established in 1960 as Brevard Junior College and renamed in 2013 to reflect its expanded bachelor's degree offerings, operates campuses in Cocoa, Melbourne, Palm Bay, and Titusville, serving more than 13,000 students annually through associate degrees, limited baccalaureate programs, and over 150 career certificates, many focused on aviation, healthcare, and technical trades.[206][207] Full-time enrollment is approximately 4,367, with part-time comprising the majority at 9,234, supporting workforce development along Florida's Space Coast.[207] Additional smaller institutions include the Melbourne campus of Keiser University, a private career-oriented school offering associate, bachelor's, and master's degrees in fields like nursing, information technology, and business, though it maintains a more limited regional footprint compared to FIT and EFSC.[208] These colleges contribute to Brevard's economy by training professionals for local industries, with FIT's research ties to NASA and EFSC's vocational emphasis addressing skill gaps in manufacturing and defense sectors.[209][203]Educational Controversies and Reforms
In 2021, Florida State Representative Randy Fine accused Brevard Public Schools of incorporating elements of critical race theory into its curriculum, prompting public outcry and demands for transparency from parents and lawmakers during a press conference.[210] Similar concerns over diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives have arisen periodically, though the district has aligned with state prohibitions on such teachings via laws like the 2021 Individual Freedom Act.[211] A major flashpoint has been the review and removal of library and classroom books containing explicit sexual content, often initiated by parental challenges under Florida's House Bill 1069, enacted in 2023 to expedite objections.[212] Brevard Public Schools removed over 100 titles in 2024 alone, including works with depictions of sexuality, contributing to the Florida Department of Education's statewide tally of more than 700 challenged books across districts.[213] In February 2024, approximately 100 students protested these actions at a school board meeting, arguing they restricted access to diverse literature, while proponents, including groups like Moms for Liberty, emphasized protection of minors from age-inappropriate material.[214] A federal appeals court in October 2024 partially reversed a lower ruling in Moms for Liberty v. Brevard Public Schools, finding the district's process for handling objections violated free speech rights by restricting parental input, leading to a settlement approved by the board on October 7, 2025, that reinforced parental notification and review timelines.[215][216] Policies on gender identity and sexuality education have also sparked debate. A 2022 district guideline required staff to use students' preferred pronouns and names in communication and permitted bathroom and locker room use aligned with gender identity, without mandatory parental notification, drawing criticism for undermining parental authority.[217] This clashed with state law HB 1557 (2022), which bars classroom instruction on sexual orientation or gender identity in grades K-3 or beyond developmental appropriateness, prompting the newly elected board in late 2022 to revise LGBTQ+ non-discrimination guidelines adopted in 2016.[218][219] In April 2025, a teacher's contract was not renewed after allegations of using a student's legal name over preferred pronouns, highlighting tensions between state compliance and local enforcement.[220] Reforms include a March 2024 overhaul of over 120 outdated policies to align with state standards, incorporating stricter instructional material reviews and abstinence-based human sexuality education where addressed.[221] In August 2025, the board approved amendments to a "bell-to-bell" cell phone ban, prohibiting student device use during instructional hours to reduce distractions, following months of public debate.[222][223] These changes reflect broader efforts to prioritize core academics amid declining national proficiency rates, with Brevard's implementation emphasizing empirical focus over contested social topics.[224]Infrastructure and Public Services
Transportation Networks
Interstate 95 serves as the dominant north-south highway through Brevard County, spanning roughly 72 miles from the Indian River County line in the south to the Volusia County line in the north, with multiple interchanges facilitating access to urban centers such as Palm Bay, Melbourne, Viera, Cocoa, and Titusville.[225] Ongoing widening projects, including expansions from south of Malabar Road (SR 514) to north of Fiske Boulevard (SR 519), aim to alleviate congestion on this corridor handling substantial daily vehicle volumes.[226] U.S. Highway 1 parallels I-95 inland, providing an alternative route through the county's eastern interior, while coastal access relies on state roads like SR A1A along the barrier islands and SR 520 connecting mainland areas to Port Canaveral and Cape Canaveral.[227] Public transportation is coordinated by Space Coast Area Transit (SCAT), the county's fixed-route bus and paratransit system, which operates multiple lines serving incorporated cities, unincorporated communities, and key destinations including shopping centers, medical facilities, and employment hubs throughout Brevard County.[228] Services include mobility device lifts, bike racks on buses, and fare-free options for certain routes funded by local grants, such as those in Melbourne, alongside app-based tracking for real-time updates.[228] Specialized paratransit accommodates residents unable to use standard routes, with emergency medical transport oversight integrated into county operations.[229] Aviation facilities anchor air travel, with Melbourne Orlando International Airport (MLB) in Melbourne functioning as the primary commercial hub, equipped with three runways—the longest at 10,181 feet by 150 feet—supporting scheduled passenger flights from airlines including Delta Air Lines.[230] Recent expansions added over 86,000 square feet of terminal space as part of a $72 million renovation, enhancing capacity for regional and national connections while serving as a gateway to the Space Coast.[231] General aviation is supplemented by Space Coast Regional Airport in Titusville, focusing on smaller aircraft and flight training proximate to Kennedy Space Center operations.[232] Port Canaveral, a deep-water seaport on the Atlantic seaboard adjacent to Cape Canaveral, drives maritime transport with dominant cruise operations and growing cargo throughput, achieving 7.6 million multiday passenger movements in fiscal 2024—a 12% rise from 2023—and forecasting 8.4 million for 2025 amid infrastructure upgrades to manage surging volumes.[145] Ranking as Florida's second-busiest cruise port behind Miami, it hosts over 500 annual vessel calls, including fuel bunkering as the state's largest terminal operator, though traffic congestion from passenger peaks has prompted planned roadway enhancements.[233] [234] Rail infrastructure supports freight movement via lines connecting to broader Florida networks, with intermodal strategies emphasizing integration of passenger rail hubs to link air, sea, and road modes for enhanced goods and personnel mobility.[235] Brevard's quintimodal system—encompassing roadways, transit, aviation, maritime, and rail—facilitates over 195,000 million annual vehicle miles on state highways and substantial freight tonnage, underscoring the county's logistical role in regional commerce.[236] [237]Utilities, Energy, and Waste Management
Electricity service in Brevard County is provided by Florida Power & Light Company (FPL), the largest electric utility in Florida, serving the entire county with reliable power distribution.[238] Natural gas is supplied by Florida City Gas Company to most areas, supporting residential and commercial needs.[239] Water and wastewater services are managed by the Brevard County Utility Services Department, which operates three drinking water plants and six wastewater treatment plants, primarily serving unincorporated areas such as Mims, Barefoot Bay, and San Sebastian.[240] Municipalities like the City of Melbourne and Palm Bay maintain their own water and sewer systems, with Brevard County handling sewer for some beach communities.[241] The department emphasizes water quality monitoring and has initiated projects like the south central reuse system upgrade in summer 2025 to enhance reclaimed water distribution.[242] Energy production in the county relies heavily on FPL's infrastructure, incorporating significant solar capacity amid Florida's push for renewables. The Ibis Solar Energy Center, a 74.5 MW facility on a 600-acre site in southern Brevard, features over 200,000 photovoltaic panels.[243] Additional solar installations, including the Palm Bay Solar Energy Center and Space Coast Next Generation Solar Energy Center (producing 8.6 GWh annually), contribute to FPL's near one million solar panels deployed county-wide.[244][245] Waste management is overseen by the Brevard County Solid Waste Management Department, operating two landfills—the Central Disposal Facility in Cocoa (2250 Adamson Road) and the Sarno Landfill in Melbourne—along with transfer stations in Sarno and Titusville.[246] Residential collection partners with Waste Management (WM) for trash and recycling pickup, emphasizing sustainable disposal practices.[247] Facilities like the Central Disposal Facility, spanning over 950 acres, handle solid waste disposal and accept household hazardous materials, with hours from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday.[248][249] Recycling drop-offs are available at sites including the Merritt Island Courthouse, supporting curbside programs to reduce landfill dependency.[250]Healthcare and Social Services
Brevard County is served by several major healthcare providers, including Health First, which operates Holmes Regional Medical Center in Melbourne with 550 beds, a Level II trauma center, pediatric emergency services, a heart center, and a Level II neonatal intensive care unit.[251] Health First also manages Cape Canaveral Hospital in Cocoa Beach and Viera Hospital. Parrish Medical Center in Titusville provides comprehensive services and was recognized as a high-performing hospital for maternity care in 2025 by U.S. News & World Report. Orlando Health Melbourne Hospital offers 119 beds for medical and surgical care. Primary and preventive care is available through Brevard Health Alliance, which includes family medicine, pediatrics, mental health, dental, and women's health services across multiple locations. The Florida Department of Health in Brevard County operates clinics providing immunizations, infectious disease services, clinical nutrition, environmental public health, and emergency preparedness.[252][253] Health outcomes in Brevard County compare favorably to state averages in several metrics. As of recent assessments, 14.0% of adults report poor or fair general health, lower than Florida's 17.7%; low birth weight among babies stands at 8.3%, slightly below the state's 8.4%; and life expectancy is 76.3 years, exceeding Florida's 75.8 years.[254] Most residents self-report their overall health as excellent, very good, or good. However, the county exhibits a higher smoking prevalence than the Florida average, contributing to elevated risks for related conditions.[255][256] Social services in Brevard County are coordinated through county government, state agencies, and nonprofits, focusing on emergency aid, self-sufficiency, and support for vulnerable groups. The Brevard County Housing and Human Services Department administers programs such as emergency financial assistance, Low Income Home Energy Assistance, cremation/burial aid, and a Community Action Agency offering child care, rent assistance, and education support to promote economic independence.[257][258] The Florida Department of Children and Families manages public assistance including Temporary Cash Assistance, Medicaid, food aid, child welfare, and Adult Protective Services for at-risk elderly or disabled adults via the Brevard County ACCESS center.[259][260] 211 Brevard serves as a 24/7 helpline connecting residents to crisis resources, homelessness prevention, veteran support, and family services. For seniors, Aging Matters in Brevard provides Meals on Wheels, homemaking, housing improvements, and independence support for those aged 60 and older.[261][262] Child and family services include Brevard Family Partnership programs for strengthening at-risk households through coordinated local providers.[263]Culture, Media, and Society
Arts, Culture, and Recreation
Brevard County's arts scene is coordinated primarily through the Brevard Cultural Alliance, the county's designated local arts agency, which fosters a dynamic sector contributing to quality of life via programs like Art in Public Places that curate rotating exhibits in public buildings and businesses.[264][265] The area's cultural offerings reflect its Space Coast identity, blending space exploration heritage with regional history and natural themes, as seen in institutions like the Brevard Museum of History and Natural Science in Cocoa, which displays artifacts from the Ice Age to NASA-era achievements and operates Thursday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.[266][267] Performing arts venues anchor live entertainment, with the Maxwell C. King Center for the Performing Arts in Melbourne—opened in 1988—hosting Broadway tours, concerts, ballets, operas, and community events in a 2,000-seat auditorium.[268][269] The Historic Cocoa Village Playhouse in Cocoa provides affordable community theater productions and educational programs in performing arts.[270] Visual arts thrive through groups like the Brevard Watercolor Society, which promotes education and hosts annual shows such as Splash! to advance watercolor techniques countywide.[271] Annual events like the Space Coast Art Festival in Viera showcase fine arts from over 200 artists alongside student works, drawing families for shopping and dining.[272][273] Recreation emphasizes outdoor pursuits amid 72 miles of Atlantic coastline and the Indian River Lagoon, with the county maintaining 117 parks offering ballfields, playgrounds, pools, trails, fishing piers, and beach access points.[274][275] Popular sites include Sebastian Inlet State Park, spanning three miles of beaches ideal for surfing, scuba diving, snorkeling, and saltwater fishing.[275] [Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge](/page/Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge) provides hiking, wildlife viewing, and boating in a 140,000-acre habitat, while Cocoa Beach supports swimming, beachcombing, and surfing year-round.[276] These facilities support activities like kayaking in the Banana River and golfing at public courses, with events such as the Space Coast Brew Fest enhancing community engagement through tastings and music.[277][278]Media Outlets and Coverage
Florida Today serves as the primary daily newspaper for Brevard County, providing coverage of local news, space industry developments, crime, sports, and government affairs across cities such as Melbourne, Palm Bay, Titusville, and Cocoa Beach.[279] Owned by Gannett, it emphasizes breaking news tied to the Space Coast region, including NASA and Kennedy Space Center activities, which reflect the county's economic reliance on aerospace.[280] Hometown News Brevard operates as a weekly publication distributed in Melbourne and surrounding areas, focusing on community events, police reports, obituaries, and local columns, with a circulation of approximately 10,315 as of recent records.[281] [282] Space Coast Daily functions as an online news outlet and print magazine, delivering daily updates on Brevard-specific topics like crime mugshots, health services, and sports involving institutions such as Eastern Florida State College and Florida Tech.[283] Television coverage primarily comes from Orlando-based affiliates extending into Brevard, including Spectrum News 13, which reports on weather, traffic, and events in Titusville, Port Canaveral, and Palm Bay.[284] FOX 35 Orlando provides breaking news on crime, traffic incidents, and weather alerts specific to Brevard municipalities like Melbourne and West Melbourne.[285] WFTV, an ABC affiliate, includes local Brevard stories within its Central Florida broadcasts, often highlighting community connections and uplifting news.[286] Radio options include WFIT, a public station operated by Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne, offering NPR-style news updates, local reporting in partnership with Florida Today, and cultural programming.[287] Commercial stations like Lite Rock 99.3 target Brevard listeners with music and occasional news segments.[288] Space Coast Government Television (SCGTV) broadcasts county commission meetings and public announcements, ensuring access to official proceedings without commercial influence.[289] Local media coverage characteristically prioritizes space-related events, hurricane preparedness, and coastal erosion risks, given Brevard's geography and vulnerabilities, as seen in reporting on storms off the coast prompting flood concerns in October 2025.[290] Outlets like Florida Today and Space Coast Daily maintain a focus on empirical local data, such as arrest reports and traffic disruptions, though broader Gannett-affiliated reporting has faced scrutiny for editorial choices aligning with national mainstream narratives rather than strictly localized, unbiased analysis.[280][283]Sports and Community Events
Brevard County hosts a variety of amateur and youth sports leagues, including soccer through Space Coast United Soccer for ages 3-19, flag football, basketball, wrestling, and cheerleading via FCA Brevard Sports, and baseball/softball little leagues such as Greater West Melbourne Little League.[291][292][293] Adult recreational options include co-ed leagues organized by the Space Coast Sports League, city-run programs in Palm Bay for soccer, basketball, pickleball, softball, and ultimate frisbee, and adult softball and kickball in Melbourne.[294][295][296] The county lacks a resident professional sports franchise following the relocation of the Brevard County Manatees minor league baseball team after the 2016 season.[297] Surfing competitions draw participants and spectators to the county's Atlantic beaches, with events like the annual NKF Rich Salick Pro/Am Surf Fest in Cocoa Beach featuring professional and amateur divisions alongside music and food vendors.[298] The Eastern Surfing Association's Southeast Regional Championships occur periodically, and novelty events such as Surfing Santas involve hundreds of participants in Santa suits riding waves during the holiday season.[299][300] Running races and golf tournaments also take place year-round, supported by the county's coastal and park facilities.[301] Community events emphasize family-oriented gatherings, including the Space Coast State Fair held annually in Viera from late October to mid-November, which attracts visitors with rides, livestock exhibits, and concerts as Brevard's largest such event.[302] The Palm Bay Fair runs in mid-October, featuring similar amusements and agricultural displays.[303] Other festivals include the weekly Cocoa Beach Friday Fest with live music and vendors, the Grant Seafood Festival highlighting local marine cuisine, and the Brevard Renaissance Fair from January to February, recreating historical European markets and performances.[304][305] These events foster local engagement amid the county's emphasis on outdoor recreation.[306]Health Statistics and Outcomes
Brevard County's age-adjusted mortality rates for major causes show variability relative to Florida averages. Coronary heart disease deaths stood at 73.1 per 100,000 population from 2019-2021, lower than the state rate of 89.0, while stroke deaths were comparable at 43.0 per 100,000 versus 43.2 statewide.[307] Lung cancer mortality was similar at 32.1 per 100,000 compared to 32.0 for Florida, but diabetes deaths were slightly higher at 23.7 versus 22.4. Breast cancer deaths among females exceeded the state average at 20.1 per 100,000 against 18.6. Infant mortality was notably elevated at 10.0 per 1,000 live births from 2019-2021, double the Florida rate of 5.9, reflecting challenges in perinatal outcomes.[307] Child mortality under age 18 reached 51.3 deaths per 100,000 in 2024.[45] Chronic disease prevalence contributes to health burdens, with 35.6% of adults obese in 2024, exceeding Florida's 30.1% but aligning closely with the national 36.0%.[255] Diagnosed diabetes affected 13.2% of adults, hypertension 48.2%, heart disease 11.7%, stroke 4.6%, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease 8.6%, and lifetime cancer diagnoses 15.0%, the latter higher than the U.S. 7.4%.[255] These rates, derived from local surveys, indicate elevated cardiovascular and respiratory risks, potentially linked to aging demographics and lifestyle factors, though lower heart disease mortality suggests effective interventions or underreporting in prevalence data. Behavioral risk factors include a 15.4% adult cigarette smoking rate in 2024, down from prior decades but above optimal levels, alongside 14.3% vaping prevalence showing an upward trend.[255] Excessive alcohol consumption affected 22.4% of adults, surpassing Florida's 16.1%, while past-month illicit drug use was 6.7%.[255] [254] Access barriers compound issues, with 13.7% of adults aged 18-64 uninsured in 2024, higher than the U.S. 8.1%, and 57.8% reporting care access difficulties.[255] Mental health outcomes reveal 30.4% of adults diagnosed with depressive disorders and 33.2% with anxiety, with 26.0% rating mental health as fair or poor.[255] These figures, from 2024 community surveys, exceed national benchmarks and correlate with rising trends since 2004, potentially exacerbated by socioeconomic disparities and limited service availability in rural areas of the county.[255]References
- https://usafacts.org/data/topics/people-society/population-and-demographics/our-changing-population/state/[florida](/page/Florida)/county/brevard-county/
