Tuesday, 07 May 2024

News

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CLEARLAKE, Calif. – The 18th Annual Heron Festival, presented by the Redbud Audubon Society will be held at Redbud Park in Clearlake this Saturday, May 5, from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m.

The festival will feature nature booths, fascinating programs and children’s activities.

It is free and open to the public.

Pontoon boat rides will leave from Redbud Park to view the Great Blue Heron Rookery in Anderson Marsh; however tickets for the boat rides are now almost sold out although some may be available the day of the event.

The keynote speaker is internationally-honored nature photographer Philip L. Greene from Point Reyes.

Greene has studied and photographed herons and egrets for over two decades. His spectacular photos and delightful lecture focus on the nesting cycle of herons and egrets, with special emphasis on mating behaviors, nest building, and fledging.

Greene will present his program at 11 a.m. in the event tent at the park.

The very popular live owls and raptors show will be offered at 1 p.m. and repeated at 2 p.m. This special talk and demonstration by Native Bird Connections is one of the activities designed especially for families with children.

Dr. Harry Lyons again offers his “Myths and Music of Clear Lake,” combining an entertaining mix of music, science, and humor to tell the story of Clear Lake. Dr. Lyons will speak at 9 a.m.

Redbud Audubon will show a video and slide presentation on the amazing courtship “dancing” behaviors of the beloved grebes that frequent Clear Lake by the thousands every year during the breeding season.

Exhibit booths highlight educational displays and information from nature-related government agencies, local environmental nonprofit groups, and a wide range of nature-related artists and crafts vendors.

A wide range of fun educational activities for children will be presented, helping children to learn about nature. There is also a Children’s Heron Art Show where local school children’s creative gifts to the festival will be displayed in the Children’s Activities Area.

Food vendors will also be on hand, providing soft tacos, pulled-pork sandwiches, sodas, lemonade, cookies and desserts.

For photos and details on all festival events and to purchase tickets for the pontoon boat tours, please visit www.heronfestival.org or call 707-263-8030.

LAKEPORT, Calif. – Nurses at Sutter Lakeside Hospital are moving forward with a strike on Tuesday after they failed to come to an agreement on a new contract with hospital management last week.

The strike is set to take place from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday, with a rally planned at 3 p.m. Picketers will gather across the street from the hospital, located at 5176 Hill Road East.

California Nurses Association members at Sutter Lakeside and several other Bay Area hospitals are planning to take part in the one-day walkout to protest what they allege are unreasonable concessions being sought at Sutter-managed hospitals.

Benjamin Elliott, CNA’s labor representative for the registered nurses at Sutter Lakeside and the lead negotiator during the contract campaign, told Lake County News that the strike was moving forward after a final bargaining session was held last Thursday, April 26.

Sutter Lakeside Chief Administrative Officer Siri Nelson, also confirmed to Lake County News that the walkout was taking place.

“The community can rest assured that quality patient care will continue as we have contracted for temporary, qualified registered nurses to cover for nurses who choose to strike,” she said in a Monday email message.

Elliott said Sutter Lakeside refused to withdraw its concessions, and maintained its last, best and final offer at the bargaining session last week.

On March 27, Sutter Lakeside had made a final offer that included ratification bonuses, step increases, professional development awards, no-premium health benefit options for registered nurses and their families, employer contributions to a fully funded employee pension plan, between 19 minimum and 48 maximum paid days off and an increase in the retiree health care spending account to $30,000.

Elliott said the offer also included “strictly economic” concessions that Sutter Lakeside management was seeking, such as a 30-percent reduction in standby pay, elimination of afternoon shift differential and a major reduction in night shift differential, reductions in health care coverage, a change in protections regarding pensions and retiree health care, and reductions in protections for nurses receiving meals and rest periods.

“Management is asking for deep cuts in our current contract that are unprecedented,” he said.

Elliott said a vote was taken on the offer and 96 percent of those taking part in the vote rejected it.

He said the union delivered a verbal counter offer at the April 26 bargaining session.

Nelson didn’t interpret what took place as having included a counter offer.

“We met last Thursday under the guise they were willing to compromise and would be bringing proposals,” Nelson said. “But, they brought nothing. Instead, the union reiterated its stance that it would ‘begin’ to negotiate if the hospital dropped our current proposal. We have been negotiating for nearly a year. During this time the union never came to the table with a single written economic proposal.”

She continued, “Our final proposal reflects our commitment to continue providing competitive wages and benefits to our nurses while also providing some long-term economic stability for the hospital. As a reminder, the average full-time RN at Sutter Lakeside makes over $120,000 with a very generous benefit package. And for part-time RNs the average annual compensation is just over $90,000 a year with the same rich benefits.”

Nelson had told Lake County News last week that she believed the negotiations were at impasse. Elliott said Sutter Lakeside attempted to declare impasse, but the union thinks there is still “room to move.”

“The hospital is really campaigning with misinformation and intimidating nurses about the strike and a potential lockout,” he said.

No new bargaining sessions have been scheduled, and Elliott said the nurses are not willing to meet while any of them are locked out in favor of replacement nurses the hospital plans to bring in.

“As soon as all nurses return to work we’re determined to do whatever it takes to reach a settlement,” he said.

In the mean time, Nelson said striking won’t do anything to bring closure to the contract negotiations. “It will just divert already scarce resources.”

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Pacific Gas and Electric Co. reported Monday that it has paid franchise fees and property taxes of almost $286 million to the 49 counties and 243 cities in which it operates, with more than $1.1 million paid to Lake County's three local governments.

The 2011 franchise fee payments total more than $138 million – nearly $41 million for natural gas and more than $97 million for electric service. This sum is $582,308 more than last year’s payments.

Franchise fees are payments that PG&E makes to cities and counties for the right to use public streets for its gas and electric facilities.

PG&E’s property tax payments of $148 million cover the period from Jan. 1 to June 30, 2012. Total payments for the fiscal year 2011-2012 were $296 million.

The company’s property tax payments to counties for tax year 2011-12 increased by $14.6 million over the previous year’s payments as a result of an increase in assessments reflecting PG&E’s infrastructure investments and an overall increase in tax rates.

Property taxes paid to North Coast counties include Sonoma, $4,102,467.81; Humboldt, $1,830,956.53; Mendocino, $1,015,188.27; and Lake, $563,381.46, totaling $7,511,994.07.

Franchise fees paid for electric services to the county of Lake totaled $397,727.19, while the city of Lakeport received $32,570.41 and Clearlake received $123,153.09.

Payments to Lake County and the cities of Lakeport and Clearlake for franchise fees and property taxes totaled approximately $1,116,832.10.

The full list of PG&E franchise payments to all North Coast cities and counties follows.    
    
City/County     Electric     Gas     Grand Total
Arcata         $64,272.80     $46,791.37     $111,064.17
Blue Lake     $5,426.11     $5,024.05     $10,450.16
Clearlake     $123,153.09         -       $123,153.09
Cloverdale     $29,957.02     $17,837.45     $47,794.47
Cotati        $52,675.84     $16,065.60     $68,741.44
Eureka     $143,325.31     $92,195.37     $235,520.68
Ferndale     $6,208.93                -       $6,208.93
Fort Bragg     $37,792.80                  -       $37,792.80
Fortuna     $36,670.10     $28,569.88     $65,239.98
Healdsburg     $6,143.11     $35,550.17     $41,693.28
Lakeport     $32,570.41                   -       $32,570.41
Petaluma     $267,205.93     $162,460.01     $429,665.94
Point Arena     $5,354.98           -       $5,354.98
Rio Dell     $23,715.92     $6,530.82     $30,246.74
Rohnert Park     $285,386.31     $82,293.43     $367,679.74
Santa Rosa     $689,714.05     $401,323.93     $1,091,037.98
Sebastopol     $38,584.86     $23,561.88     $62,146.74
Sonoma     $53,389.11     $36,953.02     $90,342.13
Trinidad     $8,411.33                   -       $8,411.33
Ukiah         $2,705.89     $42,921.70     $45,627.59
Willits         $59,634.71     $16,036.30     $75,671.01
Windsor     $189,155.20     $56,068.70     $245,223.90
Humboldt Co. $493,775.59     $103,535.69     $597,311.28
Lake County     $397,727.19     -         $397,727.19
Mendocino Co. $493,258.14    $39,826.29     $533,094.33
Sonoma County     $1,056,644.71     $242,960.03     $1,299,604.74
Grand Total     $4,602,859.44     $1,456,515.69     $6,059,375.13

Manual and electronic readings taken on Tuesday as part of the year's final snow survey showed that California’s drier than usual mountain snowpack is steadily melting with warming spring weather.

Statewide, snowpack water content is only 40 percent of normal for the date, and was only 55 percent of normal the first of April, the time of year when it is historically at its peak.    

"The fact that we just had a dry winter right after an unusually wet season last year shows that we must be prepared for all types of weather,” said California Department of Water Resources Director Mark Cowin. “Reservoir storage will mitigate the impact of dry conditions on water supply this summer, but we have to plan for the possibility of a consecutive dry year in 2013, both by practicing conservation, continuing to develop alternative local water supplies, and working toward improved water storage and conveyance.”

The Department of Water Resources will analyze Tuesday's snow survey results to forecast runoff into the state’s streams and reservoirs as the snowpack continues to melt through spring and into summer.  The winter snowpack – often called California’s “frozen reservoir” – normally provides about a third of our water supply.

Snowpack runoff this year obviously will be less than normal, but above average reservoir storage due to wet conditions last winter will mitigate the impact on water supply.

With Lake Oroville in Butte County – the State Water Project’s principal storage reservoir 97 percent full (116 percent of average for the date), Department of Water Resources expects to be able to deliver 60 percent of the slightly more than 4 million acre-feet of State Water Project water requested this year.  

This is not an unusually low delivery projection, or allocation. Wet conditions last year allowed the Department of Water Resources to deliver 80 percent of amounts requested by the 29 public agencies that supply State Water Project water to more than 25 million Californians and nearly a million acres of irrigated agriculture.  

The final allocation was 50 percent in 2010, 40 percent in 2009, 35 percent in 2008, and 60 percent in 2007.  

The last 100 percent allocation – difficult to achieve even in wet years because of pumping restrictions to protect threatened and endangered fish – was in 2006.

Tuesday's manual snow survey was the fifth and last of the year. Surveyors from the Department of Water Resources and cooperating agencies trek into the mountains on or about the first of the month from January to May to take the vital water content measurements that signal how much runoff will be available for hydropower, homes, farms, industry and other uses.

Manual snow surveys complement and check the accuracy of real-time electronic sensors placed up and down the state’s mountain ranges.

These results, combined with readings from other locations, will produce the accuracy-checked water content readings as well as forecast spring and summer runoff.

Electronic readings indicate that water content in the northern mountains is 70 percent of normal for the date. Electronic readings for the central Sierra are 35 percent of normal. The number for the southern Sierra is 20 percent. The statewide number is 40 percent.

On May 1 last year, after an unusually wet winter, water content in the statewide snowpack was 190 percent of normal. It was 217 percent or normal in the north, 180 percent in the central Sierra, and 177 percent in the southern Sierra.

Electronic snowpack readings are available on the Internet at http://cdec.water.ca.gov/cgi-progs/snow/DLYSWEQ .

Electronic reservoir level readings may be found at http://cdec.water.ca.gov/cdecapp/resapp/getResGraphsMain.action .

See DWR’s Water Conditions page at http://www.water.ca.gov/waterconditions/ .

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The attorneys for two Clearlake Oaks men on trial for a June 2011 shooting that killed a child and wounded five others filed mistrial motions on Monday.

Doug Rhoades, representing 22-year-old Paul William Braden, and Stephen Carter, who is the attorney for 24-year-old Orlando Joseph Lopez, filed the motions by the deadline visiting Yolo County Judge Doris Shockley set for them last week.

Anderson's motion is response is expected to be filed on Tuesday in preparation for a hearing at 9 a.m. Wednesday.

Braden and Lopez are on trial for the shooting last June 18 that claimed the life of 4-year-old Skyler Rapp and left five of his family members and their friends wounded.

Testimony in the mens' trial – which began in late February – was called to a halt last Thursday after Rhoades raised objections to District Attorney Don Anderson's questioning of Sgt. Tim Celli of the Clearlake Police Department, as Lake County News has reported.

Anderson asked Celli about statements Lopez made to him during the investigation in which Lopez had allegedly incriminated Braden.

In response to a question about what Lopez said regarding his involvement, Celli said that Lopez told him he was a passenger in a vehicle driven by Kevin Stone – a previous codefendant who has since reached a plea agreement on lesser charges – with Braden seated behind him.

At that point Rhoades objected citing the 1965 court case People v. Aranda.

According to Rhoades' motion, such questioning in front of Braden's jury raises issues under case law established by People v. Aranda as well as another 1960s-era case, Bruton v. United States.

Rhoades’ motion explains, “Up to this point in the trial, not a single witness had placed Paul Braden at the scene or directly connected him with the shootings in any way.”

He said in subsequent discussions among counsel, “it was clear that the protections afforded by Aranda/Bruton had been violated.”

Aranda/Bruton establish that testimony of a defendant against his or her codefendant “produces a prejudice that cannot be cured with an admonition or instruction,” Rhoades wrote.

He said Celli's testimony was inadmissible under Aranda/Bruton, and further raises the issue of prosecutorial misconduct.

The complications from Aranda/Bruton were why two juries were impaneled, according to Rhoades, and agreements were reached between the prosecution and defense about the limits of evidence.

Rhoades' motion argues that Anderson, who took office as district attorney at the start of 2011, had not conducted a single prosecution in his career prior to the Braden and Lopez case, doing mostly family law, personal injury and some criminal defense.

“Yet for whatever reason, he decided to cut his prosecutorial teeth on a case involving two defendants charged with murder and multiple other counts, involving complex legal issues and not one, but two juries,” Rhoades explained.

According to Rhoades' take on the California Rules of Professional Conduct, Anderson is in violation of rules requiring “sufficient learning and skill” and suggests that such a violation “when observed by a judicial officer, must be reported to the State Bar.”

Rhoades said a curative instruction or admonition about the statement is futile. “Fourteen weeks of court proceedings, jurors’ lives, witness testimony and counsel time have been rendered useless by the carelessness of the prosecutor. Mistrial is the only available remedy as to defendant Paul Braden.”

In his motion, Carter also seeks a mistrial, with his arguments based on his client’s very different concerns, particularly, that joining the two mens’ trials was in error from the start and that it’s resulted in prejudice to both defendants.

“Two juries, and all the expense and time associated with two juries, have not solved the Aranda/Bruton problem,” he said.

Carter added, “A case with multiple defendants, numerous statements and defendants who are accusing each other of the crimes at issue is not an ideal joinder situation, not even when a county with limited departments and resources would like to combine the cases for cost-savings measures or other reasons relating to judicial economy.”

Further, Carter raised concerns about his client being forced to move forward as a single defendant in the middle of the trial. “There is a great ‘unknown’ as to what will be going through the minds of the people on the Lopez jury when Defendant Braden, his attorney and his jury are no longer in Court.”

A curative instruction to the jury won’t solve the problem, and he said it’s unknown what impact that a drastic change to the tactics and tone of the trial will have on his client’s jury.

Carter also takes aim at Anderson, suggesting the district attorney is guilty of misconduct for asking questions about statements that he knew “were not properly the subject of direct examination of this witness at this point in the jury trial and under no circumstances should such testimony have been elicited with both juries present in the courtroom.”

If Lopez’s case is to continue, Carter argued that the jury should be made aware that the prosecution erred and that Braden’s absence resulted from that error. As such, he’s seeking a finding of prosecutorial misconduct and a curative statement by the judge to the jury.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

hammersforhopegroup

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – For many people in need, minor home repairs can prove challenging, either physically, financially, or both. A new nonprofit corporation – Hammers for Hope – has formed to provide free and low-cost home repairs and upgrades to those in need in Lake and Sonoma counties.

The mission of Hammers for Hope is to assist seniors, low-income individuals and families, and people with disabilities in making minor home repairs to improve comfort and safety.

“Our hope is that we can make things a little easier for people,” said Mark Borghesani, Hammers for Hope’s chief financial officer and president and general manager for Kelseyville Lumber. “If we can help by installing a wheelchair ramp to make it easier for someone to get around their house or upgrading windows to make a drafty house warmer, that’s what we want to do.”

The primary focus of the program is to assist with short-term home repair projects under $5,000 in materials and labor.

Examples of repair projects include minor roof repairs, painting, weatherproofing and insulation, and minor carpentry, electrical, and plumbing repairs, as well as installation of wheelchair access ramps.

Hammers for Hope is a collaborative effort made possible by the work of local contractors and community volunteers with major funding provided by Calpine Corp. and assistance from Kelseyville Lumber.

hammersmarykeithly

Upon learning about the program, several local contractors have stepped forward to pledge their support, many lowering their costs and, in some cases, volunteering much of their time and talent to make a project happen.

“The goal is to make the funds go as far as possible, and we can do that with local volunteer help, in-kind support, and donations,” said Danielle Matthews Seperas, Hammers for Hope’s vice president and manager of government and community affairs for Calpine Corp. “We want to reach as many people in our community as we can.”

Project eligibility will be determined based on several factors, including the applicant’s need, the type and extent of repairs, the availability and ability of volunteers and/or contractor crews, and available funds. Proof of income and other documentation may be required.

“If it weren’t for the generosity and community commitment of Calpine, Kelseyville Lumber, and our local contractors, none of this would be possible,” said Rob Brown, Hammers for Hope’s president. “Each of these businesses understands the importance of giving back to those in need and has made the commitment to helping others right here in our own community.”  

For more information about Hammers for Hope or to apply for assistance, donate, or volunteer, call 707-349-2628.

The Center for Biological Diversity, Willits Environmental Center, Redwood Chapter of the Sierra Club and Environmental Protection Information Center (EPIC) filed a lawsuit in federal court Tuesday challenging the approvals and environmental review for the Willits Bypass, a proposed four-lane freeway around the community of Willits in Mendocino County.

The groups allege that the project would hurt wetlands, salmon-bearing streams and endangered plants.

“Bulldozing a freeway the size of Interstate 5 through precious wetlands would be wasteful and destructive – a four-lane road is just not needed for the traffic volumes through Willits on Highway 101,” said Jeff Miller with the Center for Biological Diversity.

“This is a wake-up call for Caltrans, which should be building efficient public transit and maintaining existing roads, rather than wasting our money and resources clinging to outdated visions of new freeways,” said Ellen Drell, board member of the Willits Environmental Center. “Global climate change, threatened ecosystems and the end of cheap oil are warning signs that we need to change course. The change needs to happen in every community, including here in Willits.”

For decades, Caltrans and the Federal Highway Administration have pursued a bypass on Highway 101 around Willits to ease traffic congestion.

The groups allege that the agencies are insisting on a four-lane freeway and refuse to consider or analyze equally effective two-lane alternatives or in-town solutions.

The current project is a six-mile, four-lane freeway bypass, including several bridges over creeks and local roads, a viaduct spanning the regulatory floodway and two interchanges.

The suit alleges that construction would damage wildlife habitat and biological resources in Little Lake Valley, including nearly 100 acres of wetlands, and would require the largest wetlands fill permit in Northern California in the past 50 years.

It's also alleged that the project would affect stream and riparian habitat for Chinook and coho salmon and steelhead trout in three streams converging into Outlet Creek, harm state-protected endangered plants – such as Baker’s meadowfoam – and destroy oak woodlands.

“In a time of devastating budget cuts to health, education, social services and the state park system, Caltrans proposes to spend nearly $200 million on an unnecessary project that will seriously degrade the headwaters of the Eel River,” said Gary Graham Hughes, executive director at EPIC. “This project is completely out of touch with the needs of the natural and human communities on the North Coast.”

“For three decades the Sierra Cub has promoted responsible transportation planning in Mendocino County, but requests to consider a two-lane alternative have been ignored by Caltrans,” said Mary Walsh with the Redwood Chapter of the Sierra Club. “We’re proud to challenge this wasteful and destructive highway project.”

The lawsuit is against Caltrans, the Federal Highway Administration and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for violations of the National Environmental Policy Act and Clean Water Act.

It seeks a court order requiring the agencies to prepare a supplemental “environmental impact statement” that considers two-lane alternatives and addresses substantial design changes and new information about traffic volumes and environmental impacts.

For more than half a century, Caltrans has promoted turning Highway 101 into a four-lane freeway from San Diego to the Oregon border, with a four-lane freeway bypass around Willits.

Caltrans first discussed potential bypass designs and routes through Willits in 1988, but by 1995 had unilaterally discarded all non-freeway or two-lane alternatives. An environmental review for a four-lane freeway was finalized in 2006.

The California Transportation Commission, the state funding authority, has repeatedly refused to fund a four-lane freeway, so Caltrans proposes to proceed in “phases,” grading for four lanes and constructing two lanes with available funds, then allegedly constructing two additional lanes when additional funding becomes available, a dubious prospect.

Caltrans and the Federal Highway Administration did not draft a supplemental “environmental impact statement” to look at impacts of this changed design or consider two-lane alternatives.

A 1998 Caltrans study found that 70 percent to 80 percent of traffic causing congestion in downtown Willits was local, and Caltrans internally conceded that the volume of traffic projected to use the bypass was not enough to warrant a four-lane freeway. Agency data showed the volume of traffic that would use the bypass did not increase from 1992 to 2005.

New information shows actual traffic volumes are below what the agencies projected when they determined only a four-lane freeway will provide the desired level of service, and that a two-lane bypass will provide a better level of service than projected.

Phase I of the project will discharge fill into more than 86 acres of wetlands and federal jurisdiction waters.

Caltrans purchased approximately 2,000 acres of ranchland in Little Lake Valley to “mitigate” for loss of wetlands, but the properties already had established existing wetlands, with no ability for Caltrans to “create” new wetlands.

To obtain the required wetlands fill permit under the Clean Water Act, the state and federal agencies submitted a significantly deficient “mitigation and monitoring plan” to the Army Corps to “enhance” wetlands.

This plan itself alters existing wetlands and causes significant new impacts to wetlands, endangered species and grazing lands, and makes design changes that were not analyzed or disclosed in the 2006 environmental review. The Corps improperly issued the permit in February 2012.

050112missionrancheriafire

LAKEPORT, Calif. – Firefighters responded to a trailer fire at Big Valley Rancheria early Tuesday morning.

The fire, reported at about 12:30 a.m., was located on Mission Rancheria Road across from Mission Way, according to radio reports.

Firefighters arriving on scene reported finding a fully involved singlewide travel trailer.

Lakeport Fire Chief Ken Wells said the travel trailer, located near the lake, was a 40-foot by 8-foot 1963 model, with stairs and a loft. He said three quarters of it was burned, with only the front quarter left standing.

“No one's been seen there for two weeks,” Wells said, adding that the trailer did have electricity.

Lakeport Fire sent one engine and seven personnel, and Kelseyville Fire sent one engine and three firefighters, he said.

Wells said the fire took about 30 minutes to extinguish.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Young cats and a kitten are at the county's animal shelter, waiting for homes.

The cats available this week range in age from 11 weeks to 2 years.

Cats that are adopted from Lake County Animal Care and Control are either neutered or spayed and microchipped before being released to their new owner. License fees do not apply to residents of the cities of Lakeport or Clearlake .

If you're looking for a new companion, visit the shelter. There are many great pets there, hoping you'll choose them.

The following cats at the Lake County Animal Care and Control shelter have been cleared for adoption (other cats pictured on the animal control Web site that are not listed here are still “on hold”).

yellowtabby1

Male orange tabby

This male orange tabby is 6 months old.

He has a short coat, gold eyes and has been neutered.

Find him in cat room kennel No. 1, ID No. 32499.

blackkitten52b

Black domestic short hair mix kitten

This female domestic short hair mix is 11 weeks old.

She weighs nearly 2 pounds and has been spayed.

She is in cat room kennel No. 52b, ID No. 32501.

tillycat

‘Tilly’

Tilly is a 10-month-old female domestic short hair mix.

She is a brown tabby, and has not yet been spayed.

She is in cat room kennel No. 126, ID No. 32385.

blackkitty13

Black female short hair

This black domestic short hair mix is 1 year old.

She weighs 8 pounds and has been spayed.

Find her in cat room kennel No. 13, ID No. 32378.

femaletabby16

Gray female tabby

This gray female tabby is 2 years old.

She has a short coat, weighs 7 pounds and has been spayed.

She is in cat room kennel No. 16, ID No. 32431.

Adoptable cats also can be seen at http://www.co.lake.ca.us/Government/Directory/Animal_Care_And_Control/Adopt/Cats_and_Kittens.htm or at www.petfinder.com .

Please note: Cats listed at the shelter's Web page that are said to be “on hold” are not yet cleared for adoption.

To fill out an adoption application online visit http://www.co.lake.ca.us/Government/Directory/Animal_Care_And_Control/Adopt/Dog___Cat_Adoption_Application.htm .

Lake County Animal Care and Control is located at 4949 Helbush in Lakeport, next to the Hill Road Correctional Facility.

Office hours are Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday. The shelter is open from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and on Saturday from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

Visit the shelter online at http://www.co.lake.ca.us/Government/Directory/Animal_Care_And_Control.htm .

For more information call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278.

LOCH LOMOND, Calif. – Early on Tuesday afternoon firefighters were continuing to work on cleaning up a small wildland fire that began early in the morning as the result of a downed tree and fallen power lines.

The Ridge Incident was first reported at 1:55 a.m. at 12200 Shen Road in Loch Lomond, according to a report from South Lake County Fire Protection District.

“A pine uprooted and took out the power lines out there and started a fire,” said South Lake County Fire Chief Scott Upton.

The fire burned approximately five acres. It was under control by 6:23 a.m., South Lake Fire reported.

The fire district said 36 firefighters, three engine companies, a water tender, two crews and a chief officer responded.

Pacific Gas & Electric reported that a small power outage remained in effect Tuesday afternoon as repairs were being made to the lines and pole.

Upton said area residents need to be aware of the increasing fire danger with this time of year.

“The season is upon us,” he said. “It's going to get nothing but drier.”

He urged community members to clear space around their homes in order to protect their property and to aid firefighters if they need to respond to an incident.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

043012boegasreport

A Monday report released by the state said gasoline and diesel prices surged in California in January 2012 while consumption dropped.

According to a report released today by the California State Board of Equalization (BOE), gasoline prices jumped 10.6 percent to an average of $3.75 a gallon, while consumption declined 3.2 percent compared to a year ago.

“Higher gasoline prices are challenging for every Californian and leading to tough choices about fuel consumption,” said BOE First District Member Betty T. Yee, whose constituency includes Lake County.

In California, diesel fuel prices were up 15.2 percent to $4.10 as consumption decreased 5.4 percent in January from a year earlier, the report showed.

Diesel consumption, used largely by commercial transportation, often reflects the pace of economic activity such as imports and exports through California ports, supply and demand conditions in residential and nonresidential construction, and agriculture, according to the report.

Nationally, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported that the average price of a gallon of gasoline was up 9.2 percent to $3.44 in January from a year ago. The EIA also reported that the national average price of a gallon of diesel was up 13.0 percent to $3.83 in January from a year earlier.

The high price of gasoline was a primary factor in the rise in consumer prices. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported in January 2012 that its consumer price index rose 2.9 percent in January 2012 from a year earlier.

Consistent with using less gasoline, the Federal Highway Administration data show a 1.2 percent decline in vehicle miles traveled by Californians in January 2012 from a year earlier.

California gasoline and diesel fuel figures are net consumption, including audit assessments, refunds, amended and late tax returns, and the State Controller’s Office refunds.

BOE, which is able to monitor gallons through tax receipts paid by fuel distributors in California, updates the fuel reports at the end of each month.

Fuel statistics and reports are available at www.boe.ca.gov/sptaxprog/spftrpts.htm .

043012boedieselreport

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Sonoma-Lake-Napa Unit of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection – or Cal Fire – has announced burn permits are required effective Tuesday, May 1.

Burn permits are required for any type of open burning in the State Responsibility Areas (SRA) of Sonoma, Lake, Napa, Solano, Yolo and Colusa counties.

State Responsibility Areas are generally the unincorporated, rural, grass, brush and timber covered lands of California.

Cal Fire burn permits requirements are in addition to any air quality control district and local fire agency permits.

It is the responsibility of anyone planning to have a control burn to ensure they meet all permit requirements.  

Lake County has a countywide ban on open burning beginning May 1.  Some open burning exemptions may be granted for agricultural burning.  Contact the Lake County Air Quality District at 707-263-7000 for burn ban information in Lake County.  

Anyone conducting open burning must adhere to all burning regulations on their permit.  Failure to maintain control of a fire may lead to the permit holder/ landowner being held responsible for fire suppression cost, fines and civil damages.    

Basic requirements include continual monitoring of the open fire by a responsible adult, at least 10 foot clearance to bare mineral soil around the burn pile and adequate control resources (tools, water, etc.).  Opening burning should not be conducted when winds exceed 10 miles per hour.

Sonoma-Lake-Napa Unit Chief Tim Streblow reminds local residents to be mindful regarding open burning.

“It will only take a few weeks of warm weather and spring winds to dry out the grasses and transition us into peak fire season,” Streblow said.

Streblow encourages property owners living in the SRA to maintain a defensible space around their homes and outbuildings.

Cal Fire's mandatory state law requires 100 feet of defensible space around all structures.

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