Monday, 27 May 2024

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The Anderson Marsh Interpretive Association is looking at the possibility of a partnership with the state to keep Anderson Marsh State Historic Park open. Such an agreement is possible under the newly signed AB 42. Courtesy photo.
 

 

 

 

LOWER LAKE, Calif. – Thanks to a new law, state parks slated for closure – including Lake County's own Anderson Marsh – could be spared through cooperative agreements with nonprofits.


On Oct. 4, Gov. Jerry Brown signed AB 42 by Assemblyman Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael).


According to a report from Huffman's office, AB 42 authorizes the California Department of Parks and Recreation to enter into operating agreements with qualified nonprofit organizations to operate a state park unit if the agreement will enable the state to keep open a state park that would otherwise be closed.


In a statement, Huffman said his bill represents “a creative solution” to allow some parks to remain open despite the state's budget challenges.


“Particularly in these tough economic times, creative public/private partnerships are an essential tool in providing ongoing protection of, and continued access to, these treasured public assets,” said Huffman. “As we struggle to address California’s state budget deficit, I will continue to work to protect funding for state parks.”


The bill also has the support of the California State Parks Foundation, which said state parks are more at risk now than ever before.


“By signing AB 42, Gov. Brown has recognized that nonprofit organizations are essential partners to our state parks, particularly as 70 parks are set to close,” said Elizabeth Goldstein, president of the California State Parks Foundation.


In 2008, 2009 and again this year, Anderson Marsh State Historic Park was included on a list of parks proposed for closure due to budget cuts.


But with AB 42 now law, the Anderson Marsh Interpretive Association may be able to move forward with an agreement with the state to keep the park open.


The 1,000-acre park – which contains Pomo archaeological sites estimated to be at least 10,000 years old as well as a 19th century ranch house and barn complex – was acquired by the state in 1982. Two years later, AMIA formed to support it, according to a history of the group on its Web site, www.andersonmarsh.org/.


The group of volunteers organizes walks and outdoor education events at the park, puts on an annual Christmas event and for the last six years has hosted the Old Time Bluegrass Festival, with the park as its backdrop. AMIA's fundraisers also support conservation and facilities rehabilitation projects at the park.


Volunteers have continued to urge the state to keep the park open despite its appearance on the closure lists, and they're willing to step up and make a bigger commitment to keep it accessible to the public, said Henry Bornstein, AMIA treasurer and board member.


“We are definitely very interested in keeping the park open by funding some sort of agreement with the state,” said Bornstein. “We've been talking with the state and they are very interested in doing that also.”


The exploration of such an agreement already had begun before AB 42 became law, according to Bornstein, but they had to wait for the governor's signature to move forward.


Bornstein said there are two possible scenarios – a full or partial operating agreement between AMIA and the state, or a comanagement agreement in which the state and the group each would have certain responsibilities.


“They all amount to the same thing, which is that AMIA would go to the local community, which has been very supportive, to see if people want to get together with us and keep the park open,” he said.


AMIA is meeting this month with the sector and district park superintendents to begin formal negotiations, Bornstein said.


The park isn't huge, and it doesn't have big bills, said Bornstein.


He estimated that the park annually costs as much as $12,000 a year to operate. “Because of that we think this is really doable. It's within our range to do it.”


It's a realistic goal, especially considering that Bornstein said the bluegrass festival, AMIA's main fundraiser, raised $7,000 last year. “That's significant funding.”


Referring to a statement by State Parks Director Ruth Coleman, Bornstein said the new model for running parks involves thinking outside of the box.


Bornstein said AMIA is looking at partnering with local agencies, service groups and businesses to secure all the needed funding to keep the park operating at its current level.


“There's a lot of interest,” he said.


If AMIA reaches an agreement with the state, Bornstein said a public meeting would take place to kick off the group's effort to help operate the park.


Bornstein said Anderson Marsh went into a seasonal closure on Sept. 12, but AMIA plans to continue offering nature walks in October and November.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .




CLEARLAKE OAKS, Calif. – After four years of strife resulting from overturned or delayed elections and the disenrollments of dozens of tribal members, a majority of the members of the Robinson Rancheria Band of Pomo decided they had had enough.


Meeting on Sunday afternoon at Elem Colony in Clearlake Oaks, tribal members acted, in their words, to take back control of their tribe by kicking out the sitting council, installing a new one and voiding the tribal government structure.


“It just shows that we're all fed up,” said EJ Crandell, who by meeting's end would find himself among the newly elected council members.


According to the organizers of the Sunday meeting, based on Bureau of Indian Affairs guidelines and the tribe's own constitution, approximately 75 enrolled members – or 51 percent of the tribal roll – needed to take part in the voting to make it valid.


Of the close to 100 people present, it was determined that 79 enrolled members were present, clearing the way for them to move forward on a slate of 12 resolutions.


And move they did, swiftly voting unanimously to nullify a 31-year-old tribal constitution and removing from power the sitting tribal council, which includes Chair Tracey Avila and members Curtis Anderson Jr., Michelle Monlo, Kim Fernandez, Stoney Timmons and Nick Medina.


“It's a new world. It's a new path,” said Clayton Duncan, who was elected the interim tribal chair.


Along with Duncan, the new interim council will include Bruce White, Nathan Solario, Monty Orozco, Rosita Anderson and Crandell, a slate accepted as part of the agendized resolutions.


The new council will spend the next 90 days working to get the tribe's operations back up and running, appointing new committees and setting up an election for permanent officers.


“We're going to go in there and work,” said Duncan, who has experience as a former council member.


Part of the goal will be to investigate the tribe's finances.


Members of the new council alleged at the meeting that late last week Avila had $2.3 million removed from the vaults of the tribe's casino in Nice and put into the care of the tribe's attorney, Lester Marston of Ukiah.


Computers and other equipment also were reportedly taken from the tribal administrative offices late last week, and questions were raised about what had happened to nearly $200,000 in other tribal funds.


Last week, Marston and Avila also went on the offensive, sending a letter to the BIA claiming that the organization of the special meeting was due to the efforts of those disenrolled over the last three years.


Marston's Oct. 4 letter also claimed that some of those same people were living in tribal housing with delinquent rent, and that the tribe had not evicted them due to concerns over violence.


Tribal members received a packet that included, along with Marston's letter, a letter from the casino's human resources director reporting that the tribe's post office box had been closed.


Solario said that the US Postal Service had cut off the mail delivery and was conducting an investigation. That may be due to issues raised at the meeting which included concerns that mail was being taken from members' boxes.


Tribal members on Sunday claimed that Avila and her council have spent years trampling on their rights, refusing to hold elections, invalidating elections in which Avila was not reelected and using tribal resources for their own uses. Her tenure as tribal council chair was compared to a dictatorship.


The BIA in July sent Avila a letter urging her to hold tribal elections in accordance with the tribe's constitution and election ordinances, which as of the Sunday meeting still hadn't taken place.


Questions also arose Sunday about members' per capita payments – which they are paid every two months – that have been withheld from most of the tribe while family members of Avila and others on the ousted council had been paid.


Avila was arrested late last month on charges that she embezzled more than $60,000 from the Elem Colony while she was a bookkeeper there form 2006 to 2008, as Lake County News has reported.


Avila's arrest appeared to galvanize opponents, who passed out copies of her mugshot and articles written about her arrest at Sunday's meeting.


Other votes taken during the two and a half hour Sunday afternoon meeting included lowering the tribal council's weekly salaries from a reported $2,500 to $2,800 per week that Avila and the former council were drawing to $1,000 per week for new council members going forward.


They also voted to remove the gaming commission and replace it with three new members, setting their salaries at $1,000 per week; removed check signers on the bank's accounts and assign new ones; and removed all members of existing delegations, committees and commissions.


The one resolution that didn't move forward was the reinstating of those who were disenrolled from the tribe. After discussion, that matter was tabled, and the interim council pledged to make it a priority to reinstate those members wrongly removed from the tribal rolls.


The last of the resolutions to receive a vote was one to bar Avila and the former council and gaming commission from entering all tribal properties – from the casino and administration office to social services the tribe supports. That same resolution also suspended the membership rights of the former council pending the outcome of an investigation into alleged wrongdoing.


Some people called for Avila and her colleagues on the former council to be disenrolled themselves, but the interim council urged against that action.


The actions on Sunday suggested that the power had shifted.


“It's over for them. They don't have the checkbook any more,” Wanda Quitiquit, who along with her family was disenrolled from the tribe in 2009, said of the former council.


Her sister, Luwana, appealed to the interim council not just to investigate but to fire Marston, who she said has continued to take legal actions against her and many others in an attempt to evict them from their homes.


After the meeting, tribal members hugged and congratulated each other. Many agreed with Duncan that it was a new day, and that it was a time to hold their heads high.


Bernardine Tripp, one of the organizers of the action, thanked the many nontribal members who had offered support in the effort.


She told the group on Sunday that they had the support, prayers and good wishes of many people in the larger Lake County community.


Outside of the meeting two Lake County Sheriff's deputies were on the scene, organizers had asked the sheriff's office to ask for assistance in case a confrontation arose. But the meeting was peaceful and by the time it was over the deputies had left.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Weather forecasters are predicting large swings in weather patterns as winter approaches with near-term fall patterns looking much the same.


The first substantial rainfalls for the season occurred as October began, followed by several days of warm and sunny weather – before rains returned on Monday.


The winegrape harvest has stalled as growers wait on red varietals and the walnut harvest gets under way, but luckily forecasters are predicting skies to clear Tuesday afternoon with a warming trend and abundant sunshine to ramp up throughout the remainder of the week.


Forecasters state that Wednesday and Thursday will both top out in the 80s, with Thursday reaching into the mid- to upper-80s before temperatures dip slowly back to the 70s for at least the next 10 days.


Overnight temperatures are expected to remain in the mid-40s to 50s throughout this period.


Forecasters at AccuWeather.com report that apart from the Southwest United States, people across the western US, including Lake County, can expect large swings in weather conditions throughout the winter, according to their Long-Range Forecasting Team.


December is likely to feature above-normal warmth across much of the entire West, however from late December into January, the team expects a transition where cold fronts will drop farther south along the West Coast, reaching Northern and Central California and bringing temperatures back to near normal in Lake County.


The famed “Pineapple Express” – a phenomenon that occurs when a strong, persistent flow of tropical moisture sets up from the Hawaiian Islands to the West Coast of the U.S. – could develop for a time this winter according to Accuweather.com, which explains that this phenomenon often leads to excessive rain and incredible snow events.


“Last year, California was hit hard when the Pineapple Express set up from Dec. 17-22, producing massive flooding and 13 feet of snow in the Sierra,” senior meteorologist Paul Pastelok with AccuWeather explained.


During that time, Lake County received several inches of rain, as previously reported.


“The Pineapple Express could develop for a period this winter and take aim at northern and central California. That could lead to monster snowfall and heavy valley rain with the risk of flooding and mudslides,” according to Pastelok.


For up-to-the-minute weather information, please visit the Lake County News homepage.


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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The release of a draft environmental impact statement for the proposed Walker Ridge Wind Project in Lake and Colusa counties has been postponed until 2012.


The delay will allow the project proponent, AltaGas Renewable Energy Pacific Inc., time to complete a revised plan of development, according to a statement from the Bureau of Land Management.


Alta Gas applied for a right-of-way authorization on public lands for a 67-megawatt wind energy project with an interconnection to the Pacific Gas & Electric 115-kiloVolt distribution system.


The Bureau of Land Management’s Ukiah Field Office received a letter on Oct. 5 from AltaGas requesting a delay until 2012.


Although the draft environmental impact study release has been delayed, a notice from the Environmental Protection Agency announcing the document’s availability published in the Federal Register today because there was not enough time after BLM’s receipt of AltaGas’ letter to cancel the EPA’s notice.


A retraction of the EPA notice will be published in the Federal Register this week.


The proposed project would be built within a 7,882-acre right-of-way on federal land on Walker Ridge under the jurisdiction of the BLM Ukiah Field Office.


The draft environmental impact study alternatives include 29 or 42 wind turbine generators, an underground electrical collection system, a substation, a 115-kV overhead transmission line, an interconnect station, an operations and maintenance building, access roads, and a temporary lay down area.


The draft environmental impact study will analyze site-specific and cumulative impacts of the alternatives to the environment, the Bureau of Land Management reported.


The Ukiah Field Office Resource Management Plan identified the Indian Valley Management area, which includes Walker Ridge, as available for wind energy development.


The draft environmental impact study describes and analyzes the proposed action and alternatives, including measures to avoid, minimize or mitigate impacts on the environment.


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – Every year in California firefighters respond to residential structure fires that take lives and inflict millions of dollars in damage.


From Sunday, Oct. 9, through Saturday, Oct. 15, Cal Fire is teaming with the National Fire Prevention Association for Fire Prevention Week to educate Californians on the simple steps they can take to help protect their family from fires.


“Too many lives are lost in home fires in California,” said Cal Fire Director Chief Ken Pimlott. “Everyone should take steps to help prevent home fires and ensure their family is protected.”


On average, seven people die in residential structure fires every day nationwide, Cal Fire reported.


So far in 2011, Cal Fire and fire departments across the state have responded to over 3,500 residential structure fires, which have resulted in 191 injuries, 32 deaths and $184 million in property loss.


Cal Fire is taking this opportunity during Fire Prevention Week to remind all Californians of the importance of having working smoke alarms, the advantages of practicing family fire escape drills twice a year, and the benefits of installing home fire sprinklers.


Below are some important fire prevention tips:


SMOKE ALARMS:


  • Test smoke alarms once a month.

  • Replace batteries in all smoke alarms twice a year.

  • Replace smoke alarms every 10 years.


EXIT DRILLS:


  • Develop a fire escape plan.

  • Practice family fire drills at least twice a year.


HOME FIRE SPRINKLERS:


  • Provides your family extra time to safely escape.

  • Helps to contain a fire to the room it started in.

  • Will often extinguish the fire before the fire department arrives.


For more fire safety tips, visit the CAL FIRE website at www.fire.ca.gov.


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Adults drank too much and got behind the wheel about 112 million times in 2010 – that is almost 300,000 incidents of drinking and driving each day – according to a new CDC Vital Signs study released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


“The four million adults who drink and drive each year put everyone on the road at risk,” said CDC Director Thomas R. Frieden, M.D., M.P.H. “In fact, nearly 11,000 people are killed every year in crashes that involve an alcohol-impaired driver.”


For the study, CDC analyzed data from the 2010 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Survey.


The study also found that:


  • Men were responsible for 81 percent of drinking and driving in 2010.

  • Young men, ages 21-34, made up only 11 percent of the U.S. population in 2010, yet were responsible for 32 percent of all episodes of drinking and driving.

  • Eighty-five percent of drinking and driving episodes were reported by people who also reported binge drinking. Binge drinking means five or more drinks for men or four or more drinks for women during a short period of time.


“Drunk driving is a public health problem with far-reaching effects,” said Linda C. Degutis, Dr.P.H., M.S.N., director of CDC’s National Center for Injury Prevention and Control. “Drunk drivers, who have delayed reaction times and reflexes, put even the most responsible drivers and pedestrians in harm’s way. Public support to prevent drunk driving is strong. Thankfully, there are proven ways to protect everyone on the road.”


Proven, effective strategies to prevent alcohol-impaired driving include:


  • Sobriety checkpoints: At sobriety checkpoints drivers are stopped to assess their level of alcohol impairment. According to the Transportation Research Board, more widespread, frequent use of these checkpoints could save about 1,500 to 3,000 lives on the road each year.

  • Minimum legal drinking age laws: These laws prohibit selling alcohol to people under age 21 in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Keeping 21 as the minimum legal drinking age helps keep young, inexperienced drivers from drinking and driving.

  • Ignition interlocks: These devices prevent drivers who were convicted of alcohol-impaired driving from operating their vehicles if they have been drinking. Interlocks are effective in reducing re-arrest rates from drinking and driving by about two-thirds while the device is on the vehicle.


For more information about drinking and driving and overall motor vehicle safety, please visit www.cdc.gov/motorvehiclesafety and www.cdc.gov/injury. In addition, a policy issue brief, Policy Impact: Alcohol-Impaired Driving, features more information on state policies to prevent alcohol-impaired driving. For a copy of the data brief, visit www.cdc.gov/motorvehiclesafety/alcoholbrief.


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A view from the top of Mt. Konocti. Photo by Wayne Diggs.


 



KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – How many of us have sat and looked at the majestic Mt. Konocti and wondered just what the view would be like if you could only get to the top?


Well, until just a few months ago, this was most likely not going to happen. Now it can.


Mt. Konocti is a dormant volcano thought to have last erupted perhaps 10,000 years ago. There is archaeological evidence of the Pomo and Wappo Indian occupation of the Clear Lake area over 11,000 years ago. Although they never inhabited Mt. Konocti, they were – as we are – awed by its beauty.


The park was acquired in 2009 by the county of Lake. The county-owned portion of the park is more than 1,500 acres, with nearly 800 adjoining acres owned by the Bureau of Land Management.


So, let’s get started. Pick up the county brochure as there are some interesting facts here as well as a good map of the hike. These are available at the county parks office and sometimes at the gate. Information about the park also can be found here: http://www.konoctitrails.com/trails-information/mt-konocti-regional-park.


First off, at least initially, the county has placed several restrictions on the use of the park. Basically you can only bring your kids and your lunch. No dogs, motorized vehicles, bikes or horses.


Start out in downtown Kelseyville and take Konocti Road at the south end of town. You will drive up about four miles and come to the main gate, another mile or so to the main parking lot.


The road will be dusty or perhaps a bit muddy now that the rains have started, but it is a good solid surface gravel road, suitable for just about anything with four wheels.


Once you leave the parking lot, follow the road up to another gate and pedestrian turn-stile. This stretch is going to fool you though. It seems so easy at first. Let's not quibble about it, this isn’t an easy hike, but not really too difficult either. You will gain 1,650 feet in elevation, and it is truly a six mile round trip, to the top of Wright Peak and the fire tower.


Very quickly you start up hill. As you skirt off the fire road to avoid private property, it gets really steep for about one-quarter mile. This is the test, make this and you can do the rest.


I am going to describe this in terms of time, not miles as most of us have no idea of how long a mile is when you are walking it. I am well into my 60ss and not a professional hiker. It took me two hours and 15 minutes total, about one and three-quarters hours of actual hiking to reach the top.

 

 

 

 

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The Cal Fire tower on top of Mt. Konocti. Photo by Wayne Diggs.

 

 

 


So, the first hour is a mostly a steady uphill climb with glimpses of lake views towards the north and west; some very nice views of Lakeport and Kelseyville.


You will come to the first fork in the road; going left takes you to Buckingham Peak (elevation 3,952 feet) which is a five-mile round trip, better left for another day. Continue for another 15 minutes into a stand of towering canyon oaks, some believed to be more than 500 years old. You are now at 3,500 feet in elevation, well on your way to the top at 4,299 feet in elevation.


As you pass through the deep forest, just past the second walnut orchard you will come to a road off to your right. This is a lesser used road which will take you to Mary Downen’s cabin built in 1903. She lived here and tended her walnut orchard, by herself, signaling her daughter in Lakeport with a mirror every day at 2 p.m. that all was well.


I spent about 20 minutes looking at the cabin and surrounding area; it was a nice placed to take a break. I saw several deer and evidence of other wild life in the little orchard. From here it took me half an hour of steady hiking, up some 10 percent to 12 percent grades and I was at the top.


Continuing on back to the main road, you really start to gain elevation from here to the top. About 15 minutes from the top you will see a road off to the left which will take you to Howard Peak at 4,286 feet elevation, about a half-mile diversion. Again, I left this for another day.


Soon, you have arrived at the top and will be greeted by the fire tower, which in my case I had looked at through my telescope many times and wondered just what it would look like close up. It is a bit taller and larger than I expected, and kind of shaky looking. But, it was built 1964 and has withstood the test of time.


I was a bit disappointed that the county had not cleared the brush blocking your view toward the north. Unless you hit it on a day when the docent is on duty, you can not climb the tower for the best 360-degree unobstructed views. However, looking to the south I was able to clearly see the top of Mount St. Helena at 4,330 feet elevation, just a few feet higher than my location. Looking a bit east I could see the Sutter Buttes and to the west the Mayacamas and the steam from the Geysers.


It took me a total of two hours 15 minutes to reach the top of Wright Peak and the tower, which included a 20- to 30-minute break at Mary’s cabin. This is a 1,650 foot gain in elevation from the parking lot.


If you are younger or a more experienced hiker you could make it in less time, but I think that anyone in reasonable shape who does some hiking can do this trip. Back to the car took one hour and 30 minutes and it was all downhill. There are three porta-potties along the way, but no source for water.


This is a hike that is best done on a cool day, when the top of the mountain is clear of fog or mist. It is well worth the effort if only to be able to say, “I hiked to the top.”


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One of the oaks in the ancient oak grove that visitors will be able to visit while hiking through Mt. Konocti County Park. Photo by Elizabeth Larson.
 

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – A bill signed by Gov. Jerry Brown on Friday has been hailed by shark lovers as an important step in preserving the apex predators and the ocean ecosystems they inhabit.


Brown's office reported on Friday that he signed AB 376, by Assemblyman Paul Fong (D-Cupertino), which bans the possession and sale of shark fins in California, effective January 2012.


“The practice of cutting the fins off of living sharks and dumping them back in the ocean is not only cruel, but it harms the health of our oceans,” said Gov. Brown. “Researchers estimate that some shark populations have declined by more than 90 percent, portending grave threats to our environment and commercial fishing. In the interest of future generations, I have signed this bill.”


By banning the possession and sale of shark fins, California joins Hawaii, Washington, Oregon and Guam in an effort to reduce demand and protect shark populations.


Shark finning is illegal in the United States, but current federal laws banning the practice do not address the issue of the shark fin trade, so shark fins are imported to the U.S. from countries with few or even no shark protections in place, according to an Oceana report.


The practice of “finning” for culinary purposes has led to substantial declines in shark populations worldwide, according to groups like Defenders of Wildlife and Oceana.


Kim Delfino, Defenders of Wildlife's California Program Director, said in a Friday statement that 73 million sharks are killed annually just for their fins.


Oceana called shark finning a “cruel and wasteful practice” in which the shark's fins are sliced off while at sea and the remainder of the animal is thrown back into the water to die. Without fins, sharks bleed to death, drown or are eaten by other species, the group reported.


In recent decades some shark populations have declined by as much as 99 percent, according to Oceana. That, in turn, destabilizes the ocean's food web and results in other species' decline.


While many countries have already banned the practice, it continues unabated in unregulated international waters, the Governor's Office reported.


Defenders of Wildlife, one of the groups supporting the bill, said its members sent 47,000 messages in support of the shark fin ban to California's lawmakers.


Susan Murray, Oceana's senior Pacific director, called Friday “a landmark day for shark conservation around the globe.”


She said the actions taken by West Coast legislatures and governors “sends a strong message that the entire US West Coast will no longer play a role in the global practice of shark finning that is pushing many shark species to the brink of extinction.”


In addition to AB 376, Gov. Brown on Friday also signed a companion bill by Assemblyman Fong, AB 853, which allows existing stocks of on-hand shark fins to be sold until July 1, 2013.


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A new bill signed by Gov. Jerry Brown on Monday is meant to allow law enforcement officers to take more firearms out of the hands of those who are prohibited from owning them.


SB 819, by Senator Mark Leno (D-San Francisco), allows the use of existing regulatory fees collected by gun dealers to fund the Armed Prohibited Persons System (APPS), a program administered by the California Department of Justice.


California Attorney General Kamala Harris praised Brown for signing the bill.


“Department of Justice Special Agents are the secret weapon of California law enforcement,” said Harris. “I applaud Gov. Brown for signing this law that will authorize our special agents to utilize existing funds to seize firearms from felons, gang members, the mentally ill and others who cannot legally possess such weapons.”


Harris added, “Seizing guns from the most dangerous among us is the kind of smart law enforcement that makes a difference in the everyday lives of Californians.”


Leno said there is “a troubling blind spot” in the state's current enforcement of firearms laws.


“Thousands of gun owners who once obtained their weapons legally still possess firearms despite subsequent issues, including criminal activities, which disqualify them from owning weapons,” said Leno. “Innocent lives have been lost because we allow guns to be in the hands of known criminals and people who have serious mental illnesses. SB 819 helps remedy this troubling threat to public safety.”


The Bureau of Firearms has identified more than 18,000 Californians who illegally possess tens of thousands of firearms. Every day, 15 to 20 names are added to the list of prohibited persons who own firearms.


SB 819 allows the Department of Justice to use a surplus from the Dealer's Record of Sale account to enforce APPS.


The program, which began in 2007, cross-references five databases to find people who legally purchased firearms since 1996 with those who have since been prohibited from owning or possessing them.


Law enforcement officials in California have long struggled to disarm people who are prohibited from owning a firearm.


State and local officials lack the resources necessary to confiscate the enormous backlog of weapons, nor can they keep up with the daily influx of newly-prohibited persons. SB 819 helps to ensure that more persons on the APPS list are identified and their weapons confiscated.


In June, Harris announced the results of a statewide sweep in which 1,209 firearms were seized from individuals legally barred from possessing them.


The six-week sweep conducted by 99 agents from the Department of Justice also seized 155,731 rounds of ammunition and two grenades.


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This rustic roasted carrot soup is flavored with smoked paprika, which can be found in the spice aisle of most supermarkets. Photo by Esther Oertel.





The moment the summer heat subsides, my thoughts turn to soup. The big stockpot comes off the shelf and onto the stove at the first hint of cool weather. Fall’s shorter days and winter’s dampness lead me to seek such therapeutic liquid succor.


Soup transcends time, culture, and location, with nearly every civilization having a form of it. Evidence for the existence of soup extends as far back as 6000 B.C. The invention of early waterproof containers, most likely in the form of clay vessels or pouches made of animal skins, made it possible to heat water, spawning primitive soups.


A rich stock, made from simmering meat, bones, or vegetables in water, is the secret to a good soup. Fish stock should only be boiled 30 to 45 minutes, but most other stocks take much longer to make, from three to eight hours, depending on the base.


Mirepoix, a combination of onions, carrots, and celery, contributes flavor to stock, along with various herbs and other aromatics.


Fund blanc, or white stock, is made with raw bones, most commonly chicken, and fund brun, or brown stock, is made using bones that have been roasted to add flavor and color.


Vegetable stock may be made using all manner of vegetables. Cooking water from vegetables made throughout the week may be saved in the fridge and used as the stock base.


If you’re not interested in making your own stock, don’t despair, as quality premade stocks are available at most supermarkets.


Soups are traditionally divided into two categories, clear and thick. Clear soups include broth (known as bouillon in French) and consommé, a complex soup that has gone through a clarifying process. Consommé tends to gel somewhat when cool.


Thick soups are classified based on the thickener, such as starch, cream, eggs, grains or butter. Types of thick soups include purees, bisques, and cream soups.


It was the sale of soup for medicinal purposes by street vendors in Paris that led to today’s restaurant industry. A highly concentrated, warm liquid was sold as an antidote to physical exhaustion. A Parisian entrepreneur opened a shop in 1765 to sell the restorative liquid, which prompted the use of the word “restaurant,” meaning “something restoring,” to describe the business.


The weekend sun shines in fair skies at the moment, but it’s just a matter of time before consistent soup weather is here. In anticipation of the months of happy soup-making ahead of us, below are a few of my favorite soup recipes that have developed over the years.


A Spanish proverb says, “Of soup and love, the first is best.” While I disagree that food trumps love, a good bowl of soup can certainly inspire it.


Be warmed and comforted, sip with pleasure, and most of all, enjoy.



Smokey roasted carrot soup


2 pounds carrots (about 5-1/2 cups raw, which becomes 4 cups roasted)

2 large shallots

Tablespoon olive or grape seed oil

Teaspoon kosher or sea salt

Freshly ground black pepper to taste

1-1/2 teaspoons smoked paprika

1 quart vegetable or chicken stock

About ½ of a 15-ounce can of white beans


Preheat oven to 450 degrees F.


Peel and cut carrots into uniform pieces, about 1 inch in length.


Roughly chop the shallots


In a two-quart bowl, toss carrots in the oil until all are glossy.


Add salt, pepper, and smoked paprika, tossing to combine evenly.


Turn carrots onto a baking sheet and mix in shallots.


Roast mixture in oven until tender and somewhat browned, about 25 minutes or more. (Stir halfway through for even cooking.)


Heat stock on stove in a four-quart saucepan; add carrot mixture.


Simmer for 10 minutes or so, and then add beans.


Remove from heat and puree with an immersion blender (recommended), a food processor, or a blender.


If desired, add more beans until desired thickness is achieved.


Taste and adjust seasonings, if necessary.


Ladle into bowls and garnish as desired with fresh herbs such as parsley or dill.


Makes about 8 servings.



French onion soup


10 onions (any combination of types)

3 tablespoons olive oil

1 teaspoon salt

2 cups white wine

1 quart vegetable or beef stock

1 – ¼ cups apple cider

Bouquet garni (thyme sprigs, bay leaf, and parsley tied with kitchen string)

Kosher salt

Ground black pepper

Splash of Cognac or brandy (optional)

1 cup Fontina or Gruyere cheese, grated

Croutons (recipe follows)


Finely slice onions into half moon shapes.


Heat olive oil in a large wide-bottomed pot.


Add a layer of onions to pot and sprinkle with a little salt. Repeat until all onions and salt are in the pot.


Allow onions to sweat down for 15 to 20 minutes before stirring. After that, stir occasionally until onions are dark mahogany in color and reduced to approximately two cups. This will take about 45 minutes to an hour.


Add enough wine to cover the onions and turn heat to high, reducing the wine to a syrupy consistency.


Add broth, apple cider, bouquet garni, and brandy, if using. Reduce heat and simmer for 15 to 20 minutes.


Ladle soup into bowls. Top each with a crouton, and then top with grated cheese.


Place bowls on a baking sheet and broil in oven until cheese is golden and bubbly, about 1 to 2 minutes.


Makes six to eight servings.


Croutons


French bread baguette, thinly sliced

Olive oil

Garlic cloves, peeled, optional


Heat oven to 450 degrees F.


Brush bread slices with olive oil (or toss with oil in a bowl until pieces are coated) and toast in oven until golden brown.


If desired, rub with a garlic clove after toasting.



Cream of artichoke heart soup


2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil

2 leeks, white part only, washed well and chopped

1 clove garlic, minced

1 small potato, peeled and chopped

1 (8-ounce) package frozen artichoke hearts, thawed

2 cups chicken stock

½ teaspoon salt

¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

¼ - ½ cup heavy cream


Heat olive oil in a heavy, large pot over medium heat. Add the leeks and the potatoes and cook for 5 minutes, stirring often. Stir in the garlic and cook for another minute. Add the artichokes, stock, salt, and pepper and cook until the vegetables are tender, about 20 minutes.


Using a handhold immersion blender, or in a blender or food processor in batches, puree the soup. Add the cream to taste and blend again to combine. Taste and adjust the seasoning, if needed, and heat to serving temperature.


Makes about six servings.



Spicy Mexican bean soup with chili-garlic crostini


2 tablespoons olive oil

1 purple onion, diced

½ red pepper, diced *

½ green pepper, diced *

3 – 5 garlic cloves, finely chopped

1 quart vegetable stock (homemade or otherwise)

2 – 15 ounce cans black beans **

1 – 15 ounce can light kidney beans **

1 – 15 ounce can corn kernels

1 - 6 ounce can tomato paste

1 tablespoon red wine vinegar

2 teaspoons cumin

1 teaspoon dried red pepper flakes

½ cup roughly-chopped cilantro (plus more for garnish, if desired)

Salt to taste, if desired

Toasted pumpkin seeds or diced avocado for garnish, if desired


*Use any combination of colored bell peppers; the more colors, the merrier!


**Any combination of similar beans may be used, even 3 cans of one type. (If one type is used, black beans are recommended.)


Sauté onion and peppers in olive oil in large soup pot over medium-high heat until just tender.


Add garlic and sauté about a minute more.


Add vegetable broth, beans and corn. Once the broth comes to a boil, reduce heat to low to simmer.


Mix in tomato paste; add vinegar, cumin and pepper flakes.


Taste and adjust seasonings, if needed.


Allow to simmer for at least 10 and up to 30 minutes until flavors blend and soup has thickened.


Add cilantro and simmer a few minutes more.


Ladle into bowls and add desired garnishes.


Serve with chili-garlic crostini. (Recipe follows.)


 

Chili-garlic crostini


About 1 cup olive oil

3 cloves garlic

1 – 2 teaspoons dried chili flakes

1 French bread baguette, sliced


Preheat oven to 450 degrees F.


Press garlic cloves with flat of knife so they are crushed.


Warm olive oil on stove; add garlic and pepper flakes and cook a minute or so more (not long).


Remove oil from heat and allow it to rest for a bit. The longer it sits, the stronger the flavor.


Strain oil into a squeeze bottle or bowl and drizzle or brush oil on each baguette slice.


Arrange slices on a baking sheet and bake in oven until golden brown. Watch carefully; it takes only a few minutes.

 


Mushroom bisque with sherry


4 tablespoons unsalted butter

¼ cup all-purpose flour

¾ cup minced shallots or onions

2 cloves garlic, finely chopped

1 teaspoon finely chopped fresh thyme

¼ teaspoon freshly-grated nutmeg

1 – ½ pounds fresh mixed mushrooms, cleaned and sliced ¼ inch thick

6 cups chicken or vegetable stock (or 4 cups, plus 2 cups water)

2 – ¼ teaspoon kosher salt

¾ cup dry sherry (not “cooking sherry”)

1/3 cup cream


For garnish:


½ cup finely chopped toasted walnuts (procedure follows)


Melt butter in a large stock pot over medium-low heat. When melted, stir in flour and cook for a minute or so.


Add onions and sauté, stirring, for one or two minutes, then stir in garlic, thyme, and nutmeg and cook until fragrant, about one minute.


Add sliced mushrooms, stir to blend, and increase heat to medium. Add stock, sherry, and salt.


Cover and bring to a boil. Simmer, covered, until the mushrooms are tender, about 15 minutes.


When mushrooms are tender, puree soup using a hand-held immersion blender, a food processor, or a standing blender. (If using either of the latter two, puree the soup in batches. If using a standing blender, be sure to hold the lid tight with a towel to keep contents inside.)


If desired, soup may be strained through a medium-mesh strainer, using a ladle to help push it through. (This is an optional step.)


Once soup is pureed (and strained, if taking that step), add cream and stir to blend. If needed, gently heat soup to desired temperature.


Serve with a sprinkling of toasted walnuts.


Makes six generous or eight small servings


Note: When using a blender to puree hot soups, remove liquid from the heat and allow it to cool for at least 5 minutes. Transfer liquid to a blender and fill it no more than halfway. Release one corner of the lid, which prevents the vacuum effect that creates heat explosions. Place a towel over the top of the machine, pulse a few times then process on high speed until smooth.


Original recipes are by Esther Oertel.


Esther Oertel, the “Veggie Girl,” is a culinary coach and educator and is passionate about local produce. Oertel teaches culinary classes at Chic Le Chef in Hidden Valley Lake, Calif., and The Kitchen Gallery in Lakeport, Calif., and gives private cooking lessons. She welcomes your questions and comments; e-mail her at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


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Aron Fulwood III, 56, of Glenhaven, Calif., was arrested on Thursday, October 6, 2011, for possession of a controlled substance for sales and driving on a suspended license. Lake County Jail photo.






GLENHAVEN, Calif. – A probation search by the Sheriff’s Narcotics Task Force on a Glenhaven man has resulted in his arrest and the seizure of approximately one-quarter ounce of methamphetamine.


Aron Fulwood III, 56, was arrested for possession of a controlled substance for sales and driving on a suspended license, according to a Friday report from Capt. James Bauman of the Lake County Sheriff's Office.


At 5 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 6, narcotics detectives prepared to conduct a probation search at the home of Fulwood, who Bauman said was on formal felony probation for a prior narcotics conviction.


As detectives approached the home, Fulwood was seen driving away from the area in a white Toyota sedan, Bauman said.


He said detectives performed an enforcement stop on the vehicle and then directed Fulwood back to his home to complete the probation search.


During that search, detectives located approximately one-quarter ounce of methamphetamine concealed in Fulwood’s bed, Bauman said. Several “meth” pipes and a digital scale were also found concealed in the area of the same bed.


Bauman said Fulwood was arrested without incident and transported to the Lake County Hill Road Correctional Facility where he was booked.


Fulwood's bail was set at $10,000. Jail records indicated that he later posted bail and was released.


The Sheriff’s Narcotics Task Force can be contacted through its anonymous tip line at 707-263-3663.


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

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