Friday, 10 May 2024

News

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The decadent and delicious annual Wine & Chocolate Festival will be held at Mt. Konocti Growers on Saturday, Feb. 19, from noon to 4 p.m.

 

An extensive offering of ultra-premium Lake County wines – everything from pear champagne to award-winning Syrah and Port – will be masterfully paired with luscious chocolates and other tasty food bites by Sommelier Stephanie Green, owner of Focused on Wine in Kelseyville.

 

Green will lead workshops on wine sensory and pairing food with wines and a variety of other classes and demonstrations will be held, such as olive oil sensory, chocolate demonstrations, and biodynamic vineyards.

 

This year’s event also will feature a silent auction with wine, dining, travel and art packages, as wells as an array of olive oils and appetizers to stimulate the palate.

 

Event-goers will stroll through the venue tasting wines from more than 30 area wineries, nibble on delicious chocolates, and can purchase a “wine country” lunch.

 

Wines from the event also will be available for sale. Auto enthusiasts and admirers will have an opportunity to see vintage cars and trucks up close throughout the event, weather permitting.

 

Proceeds from the Wine & Chocolate Festival benefit the programs and services of the Lake Family Resource Center.

 

Mt. Konocti Growers, 2550 Big Valley Road, Lakeport. Admission is $35 per person in advance; $40 at the door. Noon to 4 p.m. For information, call 707-279-0563.

 

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A fire on Friday, January 28, 2011, destroyed a home near Lakeport, Calif. Photo by Tera DeVroede.
 

 

 


 

LAKEPORT, Calif. – A Friday afternoon fire destroyed a Lakeport home.

 

The fire, reported just after 3 p.m., occurred at 1100 Park Way at Hill Road East.

 

Lakeport Fire Chief Ken Wells said the fire in the doublewide mobile home began in rear of the structure and went through it.

 

“It was a total loss,” he said.

 

No humans were injured but a family dog perished in the blaze, Wells said.

 

Two engines and a ladder truck from Lakeport and an engine from Kelseyville responded, along with about 18 firefighters, according to Wells.

 

He said it took about 30 to 45 minutes to contain the fire, but mop up was still going on well after 7 p.m.

 

The cause of the fire is not known, Wells said.

 

On the Northshore, there was a happier ending for a man whose cabover camper caught fire later in the day.

 

At around 4:30 p.m. a fire was reported in the camper in space No. 14 at Len-Lee Trailer Resort, located at 3427 East Highway 20 in Nice.

 

Northshore Fire Battalion Chief Steve Hart said a small propane explosion ignited the fire.

 

The owner, who is deaf and cannot speak, got distracted and walked outside, and when he returned the fire ignited and burned a small 1-foot by 1-foot area of insulation behind the stove, Hart said.

 

Firefighters didn't have to use any water but were able to pull out the burned material by hand, which Hart said pleased the owner, who was afraid of losing all of his possessions in case a fire hose was brought in.

 

Hart estimated total damage to be between $100 to $150.

 

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 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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A plume of smoke rises from a home on Park Way near Lakeport, Calif., that was destroyed by fire on Friday, January 28, 2011. Photo by Tera DeVroede.
 

 

 

 

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Lakeport Fire Protection District Chief Ken Wells said the home was destroyed by the fire. Photo by Terre Logsdon.
 

Just days after President Barack Obama gave his State of the Union speech, on Thursday the president of the National Congress of American Indians gave the “State of Indian Nations” address, calling for additional investment and opportunity in Indian County as a way to help the United States as a whole.

 

Jefferson Keel, president of the National Congress of American Indians and lieutenant governor of the Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma, gave the 20-minute address Thursday morning at the Newseum in Washington, DC.

 

It was broadcast online and can be found in its entirety at www.ncai.org/ .

 

Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) delivered a congressional response after Keel's speech.

 

Keel said that the state of Indian nations “is strong and driven by new momentum.”

 

He said previous eras were defined by what the federal government chose to do – from Indian removals to reservations, to reorganization and termination, to allotment, to the more recent “self-determination” era.

 

“This new era is defined by what we, as Indian nations, choose to do for ourselves,” he said, noting that Indian nations are poised to be full partners in the American economy.

 

Keel defined the new era ahead as one of recognition and responsibilities met or promises kept.

 

But no matter what it's called, Keel said it brings the nation closer to what the US Constitution called “a more perfect union.”

 

He issued an invitation to tribal leaders, Indian people, members of Congress and the Obama administration, and people across the country to join in building a new era.

 

“We've worked hard to reach this point,” but Keel said that alone isn't enough to reach the promise, as he said Indian people around the nation still face barriers to economic success.

 

He said the state of the U.S. economy “has played a significant role” in opening up the new opportunities.

 

“These difficult times have made self-reliance into a necessity,” said Keel.

 

He said Indian nations offer a great untapped source of economic opportunity for all Americans. “This is a moment when doing the right thing is also the smart thing to do.”

 

Keel said America's founders recognized tribes' inherent sovereignty – the same as foreign nations – a concept included in the US Constitution.

 

Among the successes for Indian peoples in 2010, Keel recounted federal legislation such as the Tribal Law and Order Act – which gives tribes additional resources to fight crime – and the Indian Health Care Improvement Act, which reauthorized permanently the legal authority for providing American Indians and Alaska Natives with health care. Keel called both bills “monumental.”

 

Other 2010 legislative milestones cited by Keel included the Cobell case, involving a $3.4 billion settlement for mismanagement of Indian lands, and the Keepseagle lawsuit, which alleged discrimination against the US Department of Agriculture. The case was settled for $680 million.

 

Keel said native peoples also welcomed the United Nations' Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which fundamentally affirms their human rights.

 

He said the resilience of spirit of native peoples have carried them to today. “Our cultures are resolute and diverse, we see every challenge as an opportunity.”

 

Citing the higher-than-average unemployment native peoples have faced for decades – sometimes as high as four to five times the national average – Keel emphasized economic opportunities such as energy development as an important goal. He said only a handful of tribes have been able to successfully utilize their resources.

 

Keel welcomed Energy Secretary Steven Chu's announcement earlier this month of $10 million for energy efficiency and renewables projects in Indian Country.

 

That's a positive step, but Keel said Indian Country is still impeded by barriers to economic development – including bureaucracy and lack of financing.

 

A goal for the future is to improve electronic communication for tribal communities. Keel said that while 60 percent of most communities across the nation have broadband access, that's true of only 10 percent of tribal communities.

 

He highlighted the efforts of the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation in Central Oregon, which is connecting communities, schools and government through a multimillion dollar broadband infrastructure expansion project.

 

Keel said there has never been sufficient private or government financing available for projects in Indian Country, which is seeking investment in after school and job training programs.

 

As well, he said many Indian schools lack the curriculum and proper tools to help them compete for scholarships. “Our children have been waiting for generations and today is always a good day to start.”

 

Keel criticized a web of “stifling” Bureau of Indian Affairs policies, such as current trust policy, which he said is neither effective or appropriate. He thanked Interior Secretary Ken Salazar for his efforts to make changes to trust policies, but added, “the work is not done.”

 

During his talk, Keel noted that native peoples are proudly serving in the US Armed Forces. A veteran himself, Keel acknowledged the 24,000 American Indians and Alaskan natives serving in the military today, and remembered the 77 natives who have died since 2001 in Iraq and Afghanistan, with another 400 wounded.

 

He said the bond between American and Indian nations “is not in doubt.”

 

The decisions before the country's leadership today, Keel said, will be felt in tribal life for seven generations and beyond.

 

He called on federal partners to clear the way for entrepreneurship, which would allow Indian Country to contribute more to the economy and assist with recovery, while developing energy and infrastructure, and building up native communities.

 

“The state of Indian nations is strong,” Keel said.

 

He then introduced Murkowski, an important friend and ally who Keel said played a key role in many important pieces of legislation.

 

Murkowski, who has served on the US Senate Committee on Indian Affairs throughout her eight years in the US Senate, said many of the legislative victories Keel spoke of were many years in the making.

 

Even in Washington's partisan atmosphere, “I think it is fair to characterize the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs as one of the most productive committees in the Senate,” said Murkowski.

 

The secret is, “we work together,” said Murkowski. “We work across those party lines all of the time to benefit native people.”

 

Murkowski said there is still much to do.

 

Deaths among American Indians from diabetes and vehicle crashes are much higher than the national average. In addition, a native person is twice as likely as any other American to be the victim of aggravated assault, Murkowski said.

 

Native peoples also lag behind the rest of the nation in employment and income. She said 15 percent of natives live in homes without electricity, with 12 percent lacking plumbing and one-third without any telephone service.

 

“We have so much work to do and we'll work hard to get it done,” she said.

 

At the same time, she acknowledged, “We will be undertaking this work in a period of great financial stress for our nation.”

 

She said Indian programs remain among the most underfunded, and competition for the government's shrinking funding will be fierce.

 

Murkowski urged American Indian leaders to remind legislators of the “uniquely federal responsibility” that the U.S. Government has for tribes. She cited the US Constitution's Indian commerce, treaty and property clauses as evidence.

 

Her priorities for the 112th Congress include addressing the high rate of suicide amongst natives – particularly youth – and development of energy resources.

 

Murkowski called the National Congress of American Indians “a powerful voice on Capitol Hill.”

 

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 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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Airmen check clearances as they load missiles while Global Strike Challenge inspectors observe during Air Force Global Strike Command's first load competition. The competition consisted of a uniform inspection, general knowledge test, tool inspection, munitions build, weapons load and B-1 Bomber pre-flight inspection. Photo by Air Force Airman 1st Class Chelsea Browning.
 

 

 

 

 

BARKSDALE AIR FORCE BASE, Louisiana – The son of a Lakeport man is helping rewrite military history books as a competitor in a competition within the Air Force's newest command shouldered with the responsibility for nuclear missiles and bombers throughout the nation.

 

Air Force Staff Sgt. Matt M. Gerrits, son of Thomas Gerrits, is an aircraft armaments technician who converged on this traditional B-52 bomber base in northern Louisiana to compete in Global Strike Challenge 2010.

 

It is the new Global Strike Command's competition to determine the best missile, bomber and security forces teams within the command.

 

It began back in April with a bomb loading competition at a bomber base in North Dakota and ended with the security forces competition at Barksdale.

 

“The competition was a lot of hard work,” said Gerrits, a 2003 graduate of Kendrick High School, Columbus, Ga. “We worked really hard to show the world that we're the best.”

 

 

 

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Air Force Air Force Staff Sgt. Matt M. Gerrits is an aircraft armaments technician for the 2nd Aircraft Maintenance Squadron, Barksdale Air Force Base, La., who participated in the bomb competition portion of Global Strike Challenge 2010. Photo by Air Force Tech. Sgt. Sean Worrell.
 

 

 

All of the nearly 400 competitors, including Gerrits and his teammates, were highly trained in their specialties and tested extensively in their knowledge and abilities in their field.

 

In addition to active duty airmen, members of all of the Air Force's National Guard and Reserve elements also participated in the competition.

 

“We didn't actually do any special training for the competition,” said Gerrits, who is assigned to the 2nd Aircraft Maintenance Squadron, Barksdale Air Force Base, La. “We train on what the competition covered monthly. We were ready for it.”

 

This year's competition is a combination of two older competitions, a bomb competition and a missile competition, that date back to the 1940s.

 

From 1948 to 1992 Strategic Air Command (SAC) held a bombing and navigation competition to test its best crews.

 

 

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Members of a Global Strike Challenge team practice possible competition scenarios in the missile procedures trainer. This year's competition is a combination of two older competitions, a bomb competition and a missile competition, that date back to the 1940s. Photo by Beau Wade.
 

 

 

 

In 1966 SAC held their first missile combat competition. Today, Global Strike Challenge combines both of these storied contests into a single highly competitive whole.

 

Air Force Global Strike Command, activated in April 2009, puts the command and control of the Air Force's nuclear assets under the control of a single organization.

 

Its creation began in 2008 when Air Force leaders took a critical look at its nuclear mission after discovering shortcomings in its procedures. They decided the service needed a single command focused on nuclear operations.

 

“This competition allows all of the participating units to increase their readiness and capabilities,” said Gerrits, who has been in the Air Force for seven years. “But it's also important to the competitors because it lets us exercise our competitive sides and try to take home as many awards as we can.”

 

Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews , 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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Weapons load crew members direct a trainer cruise missile into place for load on a B-52H Stratofortress during the weapons load portion of the Global Strike Challenge. Nearly 400 airmen were able to compete in this year's challenge. Photo by Air Force Senior Airman Amber Ashcraft.

 

 

 

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Security forces team members race for the finish line after a grueling series of obstacles during the mental and physical challenge portion of the security forces competition during Global Strike Challenge 2010. The security forces competition included firing several different weapons including pistols, rifles, machine guns and grenade launchers, as well as tests of their mental and physical endurance. Photo by Air Force Tech. Sgt. Sean Worrell.

 

 

 

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Members of a security forces team react to a threat during a scenario designed to test their ability to gauge and react to various threats during the security forces portion of Global Strike Challenge 2010. Photo by Air Force Tech. Sgt. Sean Worrell.

 

 

 

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Two security forces members work together to accurately fire an M240 machine gun during the security forces portion of Global Strike Challenge 2010. This portion of the challenge included firing several different weapons including pistols, rifles, machine guns and grenade launchers, as well as tests of their mental and physical endurance. Photo by Air Force Tech. Sgt. Sean Worrell.
 

 

 

 

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A security forces team low crawls under wires, trying to touch none of them, as part of a series of obstacles during the mental and physical challenge portion of the security forces competition during Global Strike Challenge 2010. Photo by Air Force Tech. Sgt. Sean Worrell.
 

THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS SOME GRAPHIC DESCRIPTIONS THAT WOULD BE INAPPROPRIATE FOR YOUNG READERS.

 

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The District Attorney's Office has reached a plea agreement with an actor and model who allegedly exposed himself in public during Lakeport's annual July 4 celebration in 2006 and later was arrested again after not appearing for trial.

 

District Attorney Don Anderson and defense attorney Paul Swanson appeared before Judge Richard Martin on Friday morning to discuss the agreement on behalf of 44-year-old New York resident Justin Force Lazard, who was not in court for the matter.

 

Lazard was arrested on July 4, 2006, after several Lakeport Police officers witnessed him exposing his genitals and masturbating near the children's playground in Library Park, as Lake County News has reported.

 

Later that month he was charged with three misdemeanor counts – indecent exposure, annoying or molesting a child under age 18, and engaging in lewd conduct in public.

 

Acting Lakeport Police Chief Brad Rasmussen, the arresting officer in the case, said he and fellow officers witnessed Lazard's alleged activities, which were done in view of several witnesses, including a juvenile.

 

In the process of taking Lazard into custody, Lakeport Police used a Taser on him because he was resisting arrest, Rasmussen said.

 

Rasmussen said the District Attorney's Office did a followup investigation in the case, which resulted in the addition of the charge of annoying or molesting a child under age 18.

 

Lazard – who, in an unusual development, made a gift of playground equipment to Library Park in 2008 – was scheduled to appear for trial in May 2009, but didn't show up, resulting in a bench warrant being issued for his arrest.

 

Last March, Lazard was arrested by US Customs officials as he was entering the country after a trip to the Caribbean, as Lake County News has reported.

 

Anderson told Judge Martin Friday that Lazard would be pleading guilty to lewd or dissolute conduct in public, which does not automatically require registration as a sex offender, although the judge can use his discretion to impose it.

 

Based on a review of the penal code, if Lazard had been convicted of the indecent exposure charge, he would be required to register as a sex offender. The deal will dismiss that charge, along with the allegation of annoying or molesting a child.

 

Lazard is on the court's calendar for trial on Monday, Jan. 31. Martin wanted to leave that date on for the formal entry of the plea. Swanson asked for a week's delay, but Martin didn't want to put it off.

 

“I'll tell you what my concerns are,” said Martin, who pointed out that the case goes back to 2006 and that he believed the nature of the conduct required it should have been dealt with much earlier.

 

Martin also said there have been numerous scheduled court appearances where Lazard didn't show up. “I want to assure he's going to come.”

 

Swanson said he was willing to personally go back to Miami and accompany Lazard back to Lake County but wanted the extra week.

 

“What's going on in Miami that he can't be here?” asked Martin.

 

Swanson said that Lazard's young daughter is undergoing medical treatment there for a congenital heart defect.

 

Said Anderson, “We don't mind putting it off for a short time but we actually would like to have Mr. Lazard here because there are some issues with mental health.”

 

Martin told Swanson that Lazard needed to appear. “The concern I had was the child,” said Swanson.

 

Anderson told the court that as part of the agreement for Lazard's plea to engaging in lewd conduct in public, Lazard would receive three years' probation, 30 days in county jail with 30 days credit for time served, 100 hours community service which may be performed in New York where he lives, and psychiatric counseling for the length of the three-year probation period, during which regular updates on Lazard's progress are to be submitted.

 

Anderson said Lazard also has agreed to give $7,500 to the Lake Family Resource Center for the benefit of women and children.

 

Martin said one reason why he was weighing sex offender registration for Lazard was because the alleged offenses occurred in front of the Library Park playground area.

 

“This plea bargain does not include that,” said Swanson, who noted he wouldn't agree to that requirement.

 

“Well, we can confirm the trial if you wish,” said Martin.

 

Anderson told the court, “I don't think this amounts to a registrable sex offense,” arguing that Lazard had a mental breakdown, which Anderson said was the root cause of the issue.

 

He said Lazard was masturbating in public when three police officers surrounded him. Anderson said the District Attorney's Office has received letters from psychologists saying it was an unusual situation, and Lazard now seems to be performing well.

 

Martin asked if Lazard had prior violations. Anderson said there was a prior arrest in Monterey County about three weeks before the Lakeport arrest.

 

“He was not aware of what he was doing at that time,” said Anderson, noting that as far as his office knew Lazard had not reoffended, and that he was now married and had a 2-year-old daughter.

 

Swanson said Lazard's psychologist does not believe the issues will reoccur, and said Lazard has no proclivities for inappropriate behavior towards children.

 

Martin agreed not to impose a sex offender registration requirement due to Lazard's psychological breakdown. Having been the judge during Lazard's initial court appearances, Martin said Lazard's alleged actions near the playground was a particular concern for him.

 

Swanson said he had discussed the deal in its entirety with Lazard, and he was agreeable to the terms.

 

Lazard was ordered to be present for the Jan. 31 entry of plea.

 

DA explains reason not to take case to trial

 

Court documents show that Lazard was arrested in Wickenburg, Ariz., in March 2006 for first degree criminal trespass after being told to leave The Meadows treatment center, which the Wickenburg Police Department confirmed to Lake County News.

 

The previous arrest Anderson referred to in court occurred in Soledad, Calif., on June 15, 2006, according to Lt. Jaime Fernandez of the Soledad Police Department.

 

Fernandez said police received a report of a shirtless male subject standing in the drive-through of a store at a shopping center, exposing himself.

 

When officers arrived they found Lazard exposing his genitals. The officers told Lazard to stop and he replied that God wanted him to do it, Fernandez said.

 

Lazard was arrested for indecent exposure, according to Fernandez, who said Lazard later received three years of supervised probation, one year of therapy, an order not to be around children under age 18 and a $1,000 fine. That disposition also included a reduction from indecent exposure – which requires sex offender registration under Penal Code section 290 – to lewd conduct in public.

 

Anderson said later Friday that there had been offers back and forth between the District Attorney's Office and Swanson previously to settle the case. “The only issue was whether or not he would be a registered sex offender,” he said of Lazard.

 

He said he reviewed the case and during a district attorney's training this week in Costa Mesa he went over the case with some other district attorneys. “They came to the same conclusion that I did, that this should not be a registered sex offense,” Anderson said, adding the alleged offense did not include touching a child.

 

Anderson said Lazard has serious psychological problems that appear to be under control thanks to medication and counseling, both of which must continue, with his psychiatrist required to submit reports every three months.

 

“I just came to the opinion that based on all these circumstances that he didn't deserve to have to register for the rest of his life,” Anderson said.

 

The case previously was handled by Deputy District Attorney Ed Borg, who handles sex offense-based prosecutions and was in court looking on during the Friday morning proceedings.

 

While Borg could have continued on the case, “Because of the deal I preferred to do it myself,” Anderson said.

 

Anderson's appearance in the misdemeanor case had raised some questions about the potential for an ethical conflict and his reasons for getting involved in settling the case following discussions with Swanson, who was his second largest campaign contributor in last year's election, according to finance reports submitted through October.

 

Swanson donated $1,375 of the more than $23,000 Anderson raised, which Anderson said “was no small amount but it wasn't a large amount either.”

 

He said he has a lot of respect for Swanson but not because of the campaign.

 

Lazard is due to return to court on Monday morning. If he decides, as he's done in some past instances, not to appear, Anderson said a bench warrant will be issued for him.

 

Asked if he will retract the plea agreement if Lazard doesn't appear, Anderson said, “That I don't know,” noting he will wait to see what happens.

 

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 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. – There is still time to nominate a favorite person, group or organization for recognition in the Stars of Lake County Awards program.

 

Nominations close at 5 p.m. Friday, Jan. 28.

 

For those nominations that are mailed, they must be postmarked by Jan. 28.

 

Lake County Chamber Chief Executive Officer Melissa Fulton said that, as happens every years, when the list of Stars nominees appear in the media it reminds people to enter their nominations.

 

“Since last week’s publication of names, there has been a daily flow of nominations received,” said Fulton.

 

She said the program offers the chance to honor those who make Lake County a great place to live, work and play.

 

For more information about the program, call the Lake County Chamber, 707-263-5092.

 

The most recent list of this year's nominees follows.

 

Marla Ruzicka Humanitarian of the Year

1. Carolyn Wing Greenlee, Kelseyville

2. Ben Finneston, Clearlake

 

Senior of the Year

1. Edward McDonald, Lakeport

2. Ginger Frank, Clearlake Oaks

3. J.J. Jackson, Lakeport

 

Volunteer of the Year

1. Gerald Morehouse, Lucerne

2. Bill Knoll, Lakeport

3. Dawn Smith, Lakeport

4. Lorrie Gray, Kelseyville

5. Gregory Scott, Lakeport

6. Bill Stone, Clearlake

 

Student of the Year-Female

1. Veronica Wilder, Lower Lake

2. Alexis Marie Valdovinos, Middletown

 

Student of the Year-Male

1. John-Wesley Davis, Middletown

2. Tiancheng “Harry” Zhang, Lower Lake

 

Youth Advocate of the Year-Volunteer

1. Donna Nelson, Kelseyville

2. Daniel “Boone” Bridges, Kelseyville

3. Marie Henry, Upper Lake

4. Dennis & Ruth Darling, Lakeport

 

Youth Advocate of the Year-Professional

1. Michelle Meese, Kelseyville

2. Connor Snyder, Kelseyville

 

Agriculture Award

1. Scully Packing Company, Finley

2. CA Women for Ag-Lake County Chapter AgVenture Program, Lake County

 

Organization of the Year-Nonprofit (nonprofit has paid staff)

1. Lakeport Speedway, Lakeport

2. AmeriCorps of Lake County, Lakeport

3. Rock of Faith Cogic Community, Kelseyville

 

Organization of the Year-Volunteer (all volunteer staff)

1. Delta Iota Tau, Lakeport

2. Clearlake Oaks/Glenhaven Business Association, Clearlake Oaks/Glenhaven

3. Kelseyville Lions Club, Kelseyville

 

Environmental Award

1. Terry Knight, Lakeport

2. Tom Smythe, Kelseyville

 

New Business of the Year

1. Riviera Fitness, Kelseyville

2. Color Splash Photos, Lakeport

3. Common Grounds Coffee House, Kelseyville

 

Small Business of the Year

1. Lannette R. Huffman, DDS, Lakeport

2. Lake County Jazzercise, Middletown

3. Airport Auto Brokers, Lakeport

4. Lucerne Pharmacy & Alpine Café, Lucerne

5. Redwood Regional Medical Oncology, Lakeport

 

Large Business of the Year

No nominations submitted.

 

Best Idea of the Year

1. Lake County Quilt Trail, All Around Lake County

2. AgVenture, All Around Lake County

 

Local Hero of the Year

1. Aaron Wright & Rich Swaney, Cal-Trans Workers, Clearlake Oaks

 

The Arts Award of the Year-Amateur

1. Cobb Mountain Artists, Cobb

 

The Arts Award of the Year-Professional

1. Susan & Kevin Byrnes, Lower Lake

2. George Waterstraat, Kelseyville

3. Pat Skoog, Lakeport

 

Woman of the Year

1. Julie Kelley, Lakeport

2. Paula Bryant, Hidden Valley Lake

 

Man of the Year

1. Brian Grey, DDS, MDS, Lakeport

2. Mark Turrill, MD, Lakeport

3. Phil Smoley, Lakeport

4. Ron Quick, Kelseyville

 

Lifetime Achievement

1. Allen Gott, Clearlake

 

Stars of Lake County Sponsors to date are St. Helena Hospital Clearlake, Jim Jonas Inc, North Lake Medical Pharmacy, Shannon Ridge Winery, Cliff and Nancy Ruzicka, Westamerica Bank, Strong Financial Network, Congressman Mike Thompson, John Tomkins, Lake County Record-Bee, Lake County Land Trust and Bruno’s Shop Smart.

 

 

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I’ve spent the last week immersed in the rustic cuisine of root vegetables. Turnips and rutabagas have been on my menu, not to mention a parsnip or two.

 

It all started innocently enough, with a dare from an old college friend. He expects to be pulling a large number of turnips from the ground over the next couple of months, and he challenged me to share five recipes using this rustic root. Loving a rousing bit of food research, I was happy to comply.

 

Shortly afterward, I received a plea from a high school friend who’s got rutabagas spilling forth from her coastal garden.

 

“What can I do with them?” she wondered.

 

I decided it was only right to add rutabagas to my recipe odyssey.

 

You would be surprised how many cookbooks ignore these humble roots, but I did manage to find a few that gave them mention. At times turnips were honored while rutabagas were not; other cookbooks had both included.

 

While thumbing through Julia Child’s classic, “Mastering the Art of French Cooking,” in search of rooty inspiration, my husband joked (while imitating her fluty voice) that surely she would recommend smothering them in butter and animal fat.

 

When I opened the page with general information on turnips, I found this: “The turnip is a wonderful vegetable when given the treatment required to bring out its delicious qualities. It wants and needs to absorb butter or meat fats …”

 

Uncanny, isn’t it?

 

She goes on to say this is why they’re particularly succulent when finished off in a stew or braised dish, or in the juices of roasting meat.

 

She also mentions that in France rutabagas are practically unheard of as food for humans (my mother, once a French chef, says they use them as animal fodder), but they may be used interchangeably with turnips.

 

Substituting rutabagas and turnips for one another in recipes was a theme I found in my research. This makes sense, as they have quite a bit in common.

 

Both are in the brassica family, along with cabbage, kohlrabi, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, mustard and cauliflower. It’s believed that rutabagas originated in the wild as a cross between turnips and wild cabbage. They’re sometimes referred to as the yellow turnip.

 

While turnips have broad appeal worldwide (they’re pickled in Japan, used to flavor a Turkish juice made from carrots, boiled in Iran as a remedy for fever, used in a variety of dishes in India, and were well established in ancient Rome), the geographical popularity of rutabagas doesn’t seem to extend too far beyond northern Europe. Maybe that’s because its history as a vegetable is not as long.

 

While they’ve been cultivated in the U.S. for nearly 200 years, they’re rarely found on our tables, though my mother maintains that it’s impossible to make a proper pot roast without them.

 

Rutabagas are so closely associated with Scandinavia that in many parts of the English speaking world they’re referred to as Swedes. In the U.S. and Canada, the term rutabaga is employed, which derives from the Swedish word “rotabagge.”

 

The rutabaga, with yellowy flesh and a bit of purple on its shoulders, is full of beta carotene in the form of vitamin A. As well, it contains vitamin C and good stores of minerals like calcium, magnesium and iron.

 

Its stepfather, the turnip, with its white flesh (also accented with purple) is high in vitamin C, but doesn’t share the other nutritious reserves of the rutabaga.

 

The greens of both vegetables are extremely nutritious, however, more so than the roots. Young tender leaves are preferred, as they don’t have the bitterness that can develop as leaves mature and age. If the greens you have are older, you may remove bitterness by boiling them first, discarding the water and then using them as you would normally.

 

So what can you do with these rustic and nutritious roots?

 

In addition to using them in a stew or braising with meat, Julia Child has a few other recommendations for turnips (or, alternatively, for rutabagas), such as blanching them and tossing them with butter, lemon juice, and parsley; mashing them with potatoes; glazing them with butter and sugar; and, finally, making a turnip casserole with bacon and onions, flavored with sage.

 

The Finns use rutabagas in any recipe that calls for root vegetables. There they’re the major ingredient in a traditional Christmas casserole; they flavor soups with them; and they thinly julienne raw rutabagas as a side dish or salad.

 

Like Julia Child, the Swedes and Norwegians mash rutabagas with potatoes, but they add carrots for color. This puree – with the occasional addition of onion – is a popular accompaniment to many regional dishes.

 

In Scotland, rutabagas are endearingly referred to as “neeps.” The Scots mash them and potatoes separately for a dish they call “neeps and tatties” (with tatties being their word for potato).

 

Bubble and squeak, another cutely-named dish from the British Isles, is a pancake of sorts made with mashed winter vegetables. It was developed to use the veggies left over from the roast served for Sunday dinner.

 

To get the consistency right, it’s recommended that potatoes make up about 60 percent of the mixture. The rest can be any winter vegetables, including turnips, rutabagas, leeks, onions, carrots, Brussels sprouts or cabbage. Simply mash up soft veggies, form into a patty and cook in a hot pan with olive oil or butter.

 

And what of my own research? I used them in stews and soups, mashed them in varying quantities with potatoes and other vegetables, and found some subtle differences between the two.

 

I recommend using small to medium roots, though extra large specimens, especially of rutabagas, are sometimes stocked in the produce aisle.

 

Rutabagas are a bit denser and more fibrous than turnips. I enjoyed eating turnips raw, but not so much rutabagas.

 

The raw crunch of turnips, with their rather mild flavor and subtle peppery note, appealed to me.

 

Rutabagas, in my opinion, hold up a bit better when cooked and add more substance than turnips to mashed potatoes.

 

If you have an extra large rutabaga, you might be interested to know that the Scots and Irish carved faces into them and used them as candle lanterns in their inaugural Halloween festivals.

 

I’ll leave you with a recipe I developed for a root vegetable pot pie. As with bubble and squeak, any combination of root vegetables may be used. (I just wish I could think of a name for it that’s as clever!) The leftovers are nice warmed up the next day as a stew or thick soup. Enjoy!

 

Root vegetable pot pie

 

2 or more tablespoons olive oil1 large yellow onion, sliced

½ pound of mixed mushrooms (e.g., white button, crimini, Portabellas), sliced or roughly chopped

4 garlic cloves, minced

4 cups vegetable or chicken stock, homemade or otherwise

2 parsnips, peeled and diced

2 medium turnips, peeled and diced

2 medium rutabagas, peeled and diced

2 medium carrots, peeled and diced

2 ribs celery with leaves, sliced

¾ cup dry sherry

1 cup frozen green peas, thawed

2/3 cup all purpose flour

1 ½ cups milk of your choice

¼ cup chopped fresh parsley

2 tablespoon chopped fresh thyme

1 ½ teaspoon salt (more to taste, if needed)

Freshly ground black pepper

Cooking spray

1 sheet frozen puff pastry dough, thawed

 

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.

 

Bring broth to boil in pot and add parsnips, turnips, rutabagas, carrots, and celery; cover, reduce heat and simmer about five minutes.

 

Meanwhile, sauté onion and mushrooms in very large skillet or soup pot until just tender.

 

Add garlic and sauté a minute or so longer; add sherry and sauté another minute or so.

 

Add broth and vegetables to mushroom mixture.

 

Mix milk and flour; add to mushroom mixture. Stir to blend and cook for about five minutes or until thickened.

 

Stir in parsley, thyme, salt, pepper and peas, if using. Taste and adjust seasonings.

 

Spray individual ramekins with cooking spray and spoon mixture into them.

 

Place puff pastry dough on floured surface and cut rounds that will fit over ramekins.

 

Place dough over each ramekin and cut slits in dough to allow steam to escape. Coat dough lightly with cooking spray.

 

Place ramekins on baking sheet and bake for 16 minutes or until pastry is browned and filling is bubbly. Allow to rest for a few minutes before serving.

 

Note: In lieu of ramekins, this may be made in an 8-inch by 13-inch oblong pan. Roll out the puff pastry to fit and lay it over the top of the vegetable mixture, making slits in the dough for steam to escape.

 

Recipe 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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NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – Despite a dry January, the state's second snow survey of the 2010-11 season shows a snowpack with above-average water content, based on manual and electronic readings.

 

The California Department of Water Resources said Friday that, statewide, real-time sensors show that snowpack water content is 78 percent of the April 1 seasonal average, compared to an average reading of 55 percent for Friday's date.

 

The agency said the above-average readings are due to heavy storms in October, November and December. January so far has recorded only about 13 percent of average precipitation for the month.

 

“We are still optimistic for a good water supply, but realize that we can come up short any given year,” said DWR Director Mark Cowin. “Our unpredictable weather and delivery restrictions make it clear that conservation must always be one of our top priorities.”

 

DWR estimates it will be able to deliver 60 percent of requested State Water Project (SWP) water this year. The estimate will be adjusted as hydrologic and regulatory conditions continue to develop.

 

In 2010, the SWP delivered 50 percent of a requested 4,172,126 acre-feet, up from a record-low initial projection of 5 percent due to lingering effects of the 2007-2009 drought. Deliveries were 60 percent of requests in 2007, 35 percent in 2008, and 40 percent in 2009.

 

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

 

The SWP delivers water to more than 25 million Californians and nearly a million acres of irrigated farmland.

 

The mountain snowpack provides approximately one-third of the water for California’s households, industry and farms as it slowly melts into streams and reservoirs.

 

Manual surveys are conducted up and down the state’s mountain ranges on or about the first of January, February, March, April and May.

 

The manual surveys supplement and provide accuracy checks to real-time electronic readings as the snowpack builds, then melts in early spring and summer.

 

April 1 is when snowpack water content normally is at its peak before the spring runoff.

 

Electronic readings indicate that water content in the northern mountains is 108 percent of normal for the date and 65 percent of the April 1seasonal average.

 

Readings for the central Sierra are 126 percent of normal for the date 75 percent of the April 1 average. The numbers for the southern Sierra are176 and 97.

 

On Dec. 28, the date of this winter’s first manual survey, percentages of the snowpack’s normal April 1 water content were 57 percent for the northern Sierra, 61 percent for the central Sierra, and 78 percent in the south.

 

On this date last year, snowpack water content readings were 80 percent of the April 1 average in the north, 60 percent in the central ranges, 67 percent in the south and 68 percent statewide.

 

California’s reservoirs are fed both by rain and snowpack runoff.

 

Most of the state’s major reservoirs are above normal storage levels for the date.

 

Lake Oroville in Butte County, the State Water Project’s principal reservoir, is 102 percent of average for the date, at 68 percent of capacity. Remaining winter weather will determine whether it fills to its 3.5 million acre-foot capacity.

 

Lake Shasta north of Redding, the federal Central Valley Project’s largest reservoir with a capacity of 4.5 million acre-feet, is at 112 percent of average, or 76 percent of capacity.

 

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

 

Historic readings from snowpack sensors are posted at http://cdec.water.ca.gov/cgi-progs/rpts1/DLYSWEQElectronic and reservoir level readings may be found at

http://cdec.water.ca.gov/cdecapp/resapp/getResGraphsMain.action .

 

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MENDOCINO COUNTY, Calif. – Caltrans said Thursday that site preparation will begin this week for the roundabout which is scheduled to be built this summer at the intersection of Route 1 and Simpson Lane in Mendocino County.

 

Last week, Caltrans received final project funding from the California Transportation Commission.

 

The project is funded by Caltrans and Mendocino County, and is expected to go out to bid in February.

 

However, to eliminate potential nesting sites, trees must be removed by Caltrans maintenance crews before mid-February to comply with the Migratory Bird Treaty Act.

 

When completed, the roundabout will relieve current and future projected congestion at this intersection more efficiently than traffic signals.

 

It will also use less energy than traffic signals, it will require less ongoing maintenance, and it will reduce vehicle emissions by reducing idle times.

 

To learn more, visit the project Web site at www.dot.ca.gov/dist1/d1projects/simpson_lane/.

 

For questions about the project, please contact Project Manager Steve Blair at 707-441-5899.

 

To learn more about roundabouts and how to navigate them, see www.dot.ca.gov/dist1/d1projects/roundabout.htm.

 

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Image
A Cassini image of vaporous, icy jets emerging from fissures on Enceladus, taken on November 24, 2009. Courtesy of NASA.

 

 

 

 

For years researchers have been debating whether Enceladus, a tiny moon floating just outside Saturn's rings, is home to a vast underground ocean. Is it wet – or not?

 

Now, new evidence is tipping the scales.

 

Not only does Enceladus likely have an ocean, that ocean is probably fizzy like a soft drink and could be friendly to microbial life.

 

The story begins in 2005 when NASA's Cassini probe flew past Enceladus for a close encounter.

 

“Geophysicists expected this little world to be a lump of ice, cold, dead, and uninteresting,” said Dennis Matson of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “Boy, were we surprised!”

 

Cassini found the little moon busily puffing plumes of water vapor, icy particles and organic compounds out through fissures (now known as “tiger stripes”) in its frozen carapace.

 

Mimas, a nearby moon about the same size, was as dead as researchers expected, but Enceladus was precociously active.

 

Many researchers viewed the icy jets as proof of a large subterranean body of water. Near-surface pockets of liquid water with temperatures near 32o F could explain the watery plumes. But there were problems with this theory. For one thing, where was the salt?

 

In initial flybys, Cassini's instruments detected carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and various hydrocarbons in the plume gasses. But there were none of the elements of salt that ocean water should contain.

 

In 2009 Cassini's cosmic dust analyzer located the missing salt – in a surprising place.

 

 

 

Image

SACRAMENTO – In another move to attack the state's budget shortfalls, California's governor on Friday announced cutbacks to the state vehicle fleet.

 

Gov. Jerry Brown, in an effort to cut the state’s passenger vehicle fleet in half, directed all state agencies and departments to immediately halt new car purchases and turn in taxpayer-funded cars that are not essential to state business.

 

“There is a lot of wasteful spending on cars that aren’t even driven,” Brown said. “And we can’t afford to spend taxpayer money on new cars while California faces such a massive deficit.”

 

Brown said his goal is to halve the number of the state’s passenger cars, trucks and home storage permits – which allow state employees to use passenger cars for their daily commute.

 

“Fifty percent is a starting point. If we find more waste, we’ll make more cuts,” Brown added.

 

A potential savings amount wasn't indicated Friday.

 

Brown will also move underutilized vehicles to new locations, so that the fleet is more efficient overall. Cars that are not needed will be sold.

 

The Department of General Services estimates that there are approximately 11,000 passenger cars and trucks in the state fleet, and approximately 4,500 home storage permits, that don’t serve a health or public safety function. Brown’s goal is to cut these totals in half.

 

Brown’s order directs every agency secretary and department director to immediately review their organization’s home storage permits and withdraw those that are not essential or cost-effective.

 

He explained that some employees may need a car around-the-clock because their jobs are public health and safety focused, or it is more cost-effective for the state for certain employees to have a car than not. The review will take this into account.

 

Brown’s order instructs agencies and departments to analyze the purpose, necessity and cost-effectiveness of every fleet vehicle, and submit a plan for cutting unneeded vehicles. Non-essential vehicles must be sold or transferred within 120 days of the plan’s approval.

 

The order additionally prohibits agencies and departments from buying new vehicles for non-emergency use.

 

Earlier this month, Brown issued an executive order directing state agency and department heads to collect and turn in 48,000 government-paid cell phones.

 

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Image
An early afternoon crash outside of Lakeport, Calif., on Wednesday, January 26, 2011, blocked a part of Highway 29, with some of those who were involved in the crash sustaining minor injuries. Photo courtesy of Sharon Thornton.
 

 

 


 

LAKEPORT, Calif. – A crash the blocked Highway 29 in Lakeport early Wednesday afternoon resulted in minor injuries for some of those involved.

 

The California Highway Patrol reported that the crash occurred just before 1 p.m. at the intersection of Highway 29 and Highway 175 at the Hopland Grade.

 

The roadway was blocked for just over a half hour as the CHP and firefighters worked at the scene.

 

The CHP said minor injuries resulted, but more specific information was not immediately available.

 

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