Friday, 20 September 2024

News

LAKEPORT, Calif. – On Wednesday, April 5, the Sons In Retirement group will start the golf season off with a scramble played at the Aetna Springs Golf Course.

Two weeks later on April 26, the group will play at the Hidden Valley Lake course. 

Jim Cary, the golf chairman for branch 133 and 168, has organized the schedule for the remainder of the year, including golf tournaments in Reno in June and in Monterey in September.

These events are in addition to the local tournaments that Cary has scheduled to take place about every two weeks from April through November.

Bob Specht, the travel chair, is working on plans for a trip to Sacramento on Thursday, May 25, to see the show “Phantom of the Opera.”

There are a few tickets left for this great musical. It's a matinée at the Sacramento Civic Theater. Bus transportation and lunch at the Spaghetti Factory are included.

The show costs $115 per person. Guests are invited. Call Bob at 707-279-0187 or Bill at 707-277-8846 for more information or reservations.

Sons In Retirement is a social organization for men of retirement age who are pursuing the goal of enjoying their later years.

It has 142 branches with 18,000 members throughout the state. Branch 168 holds a luncheon on the second Friday of each month at the TNT’s restaurant in Lakeport.

Anyone interested in learning more about Sons In Retirement is encouraged to contact Larry Powers, chair of the membership committee, at 707-263-3403 or to visit the state Web site at www.sirinc.org .  

LAKEPORT, Calif. – A down home blues benefit will be held to benefit the 2017 Clear Lake High School Grad Night on Friday, April 7.

The event will take place at the Soper Reese Theater at 275 S. Main St., Lakeport.

Doors open at 6:30 p.m., with showtime at 7 p.m.

Levi Lloyd will headline the event, with Kay Irvine and Jim Wilson – also known as Dee Wills – also set to perform.

The cost is $25 per table seat with wine and appetizers. Loge seats are $15 each.

There also will be Southern comfort food snacks and beverages available at the concession stand.

MENDOCINO NATIONAL FOREST, Calif. – The Pacific Southwest Region (Region 5) is inviting the public to help identify trails that will be part of a U.S. Forest Service effort with partners and volunteers to increase the pace of trail maintenance.

Nationwide, the Forest Service will select nine to 15 priority areas among its nine regions where a backlog in trail maintenance contributed to reduced access, potential harm to natural resources or trail users and/or has the potential for increased future deferred maintenance costs.

Region 5 manages more than 16,000 miles of trails enjoyed by 16,100,000 users each year.  In Region 5, volunteers and partner groups contributed more than 178,000 hours in maintenance and repair of nearly 2,984 miles of trails last year.

“We are counting on our fellow Californians to help us identify where maintenance is needed,” said Randy Moore, regional forester for the Pacific Southwest Region. “The forest visitors who enjoy these trails year-round are the best source of information for what’s needed on the ground, and we’re counting on their expertise and willingness to help.”

Region 5 has until April 15 to submit at least three regional proposals to National Headquarters. Those proposals will be weighed against proposal submitted by other Forest Service regions.

The trail maintenance effort is outlined in the National Forest System Trails Stewardship Act of 2016 and aims to increase trail maintenance by volunteers and partners by 100 percent by the end of 2021.

The selected sites will be part of the initial focus that will include a mosaic of areas with known trail maintenance needs that include areas near urban and remote areas, such as wilderness, are of varying sizes and trail lengths, are motorized and non-motorized, and those that incorporate a varied combination of partner and volunteer approaches and solutions.

The Forest Service manages more than 158,000 miles of trail – the largest trail system in the nation – providing motorized and non-motorized trail access across 154 national forests and grasslands.

These Forest Service trails are well-loved and highly used with more than 84 million trail visits annually, helping to support mostly rural economies.

The Forest Service receives widespread support from tens of thousands of volunteers and partners each year who, in 2015, contributed nearly 1.4 million hours – a value of about $31.6 million – in maintenance and repair of nearly 30,000 miles of trails.

However, limited funding compounded by the rising cost of wildfire operations, has resulted in less than 25 percent of Forest Service trails meeting all of the agency’s standards for safety, quality recreation and economic and environmental sustainability. The remaining trails meet standard to varying degrees.

To provide ideas and suggestions on potential priority areas and approaches for incorporating increased trail maintenance assistance from partners and volunteers, contact your local Forest Service office or Regional Trail Program Manager Garrett Villanueva at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. by April 7.

SACRAMENTO – In light of the new tobacco tax going into effect this week, the California Department of Public Health, or CDPH, reminds Californians that resources are available to help them kick the habit.

On April 1, the tax on a pack of cigarettes will increase $2, from $0.87 to $2.87. This increase is a result of Proposition 56, the California Healthcare, Research and Prevention Tobacco Tax Act, which was approved by voters last November.

Californians who want help to quit smoking can call the California Smokers’ Helpline at 1-800-NO BUTTS. The helpline provides smokers free telephone counseling and plans to help them quit.

The Helpline is staffed with trained counselors who are fluent in English, Spanish, Mandarin, Cantonese, Korean and Vietnamese. Additional resources and materials are available at www.nobutts.org .

“We know most smokers want to quit, and paying more for their habit could be the extra motivation they need to make an important life-saving step,” said CDPH Director and State Public Health Officer Dr. Karen Smith. “Quitting smoking helps protect your physical and financial health. A smoker who quits today could save nearly $1,500 in just one year.”

Smoking remains the number one cause of preventable death and disease in California. About 3.1 million, or one out of nine, California adults smoke, and an estimated 34,000 Californians die from smoking-related diseases each year.

The state’s new tax increase impacts tobacco products like electronic cigarettes and e-liquids, which are taxed based on their wholesale cost.

Proposition 56 funds tobacco-use prevention programs, the new state Oral Health Program and research on tobacco-related illnesses such as cancer and heart disease. It also strengthens the Medi-Cal health care system and provides additional resources for CDPH to enforce underage tobacco-sales laws.

The California Tobacco Control Program was established by the Tobacco Tax and Health Protection Act of 1988. California’s comprehensive approach has changed social norms around tobacco use and secondhand smoke. California’s tobacco control efforts have reduced both adult and youth smoking rates by 50 percent, saved more than one million lives and have resulted in $134 billion worth of savings in health care costs.

Learn more at www.TobaccoFreeCA.com .

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lake County Republican Party will meet on Tuesday, April 11.

The meeting will take place at Round Table Pizza, 821 11th St. in Lakeport.

Social time starts at 6 p.m. with no host food and beverages, followed by the business meeting at 6:30 p.m.

Group members will discuss President Trump's immigration policy and the proposal to make California a sanctuary state.

If you are interested in joining the Lake County Republican Committee, or if you are just interested in learning more about the group, please attend this meeting.

Follow the local Republican Party on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/Lake-County-CA-Republican-Party-401224996588222/?fref=ts or for more information contact Lake County Chair Dee Cuney at 707-235-2902.

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UPPER LAKE, Calif. – Lake County Wine Studio is hosting a wine release party and artist show reception with Olof Cellars and artists Jennifer and Anna Sabalone with their show "Perspectives," a mother and daughter's view of the world, on Friday, April 7, from 5 to 8 p.m. and Saturday, April 8, 4 to 7 p.m.
 
The $15 ($12.50/per person for studio club members) wine sampler featuring appetizers by Vintage Deli Station, will showcase Olof's white 2014 Nebbiolo paired with a Rachel Panini sandwich bite, 2011 Nebbiolo with a chicken, bacon and creamy brie wrap roll, 2013 Signature (red blend) with fresh mozzarella on focaccia with tomato and basil pesto, and the 2011 Barberic (Barbera) with a gluten free cherry chocolate bread pudding recipe from Cindi Olof.

The Olof's planted their first vines in the Lake County Appellation in 2000 and began making wines under their own Olof Cellars brand in 2009.

With a view looking out over the Big Valley AVA and Mt. Konocti to the East, their St. Olof Vineyard estate is sited on the bench of a coastal mountain foothill that hosts two types of soil, gravelly clay and clay loam, which well suit the Barbera, Nebbiolo, Malbec and Petit Verdot varietals grown there.

Three acres of the estate is also planted to the rare Lenoir varietal (red fleshed fruit), and is under contract to KAZ Wines.
 
Eric Olof is an adventuresome vintner and has dared to craft uncommon and unexpected wines such as their rosé of Barbera, a white Nebbiolo and a sparkling "method champenoise" Nebbiolo. They have two new blends, Marlbera (Malbec and Barbera), and Signature, a 50/50 blend of Nebbiolo and Barbera.
 
Artist Anna Sabalone returns to the Wine Studio alongside her mother Jennifer Sabalone, with a special display of works that explore the different creative perspective each artist has of the scene or subject they are viewing.

Jennifer Sabalone moved to Lake County from the Los Angeles area when she was 13. A graduate of Clear Lake High School, she received her BA in art and a secondary teaching credential from California State University, Fresno. She married shortly after college and moved back to Lake County where she and her husband raised their three children.
 
As a stay-at-home mom, there were always art materials available to her children. Sabalone became a 4-H leader and in that capacity encouraged the area youth to engage with the arts and enter their creations in the Lake County Fair.
 
In 1999 she accepted an art teaching position at Upper Lake Elementary School and taught there for 13 years. During that time she took watercolor and pastel classes at Mendocino Junior College from Lorraine Brady Arthur.

While teaching, Sabalone was fortunate to be able to show her students' work almost every year at the Main Street Gallery in Lakeport. Inspired by the majesty and beauty of nature, she finds that Lake County offers endless subjects for representation.
 
Anna Sabalone was born and raised in Lake County. She has been involved in the Lake County Arts Council since her teen years.

She attended the University of California, Santa Barbara and the University of Leeds, England for her undergraduate degree in English, history and anthropology. She earned her teaching credential and Masters of Education from UCSB and has been teaching art, English, history and Academic Decathlon at Upper Lake High School since 2008.

Lake County Wine Studio is a gallery for display of arts and a tasting room, wine bar and retail shop for the fine wines of Lake County. Artist's shows are held on a monthly basis with art and wine receptions held the first Friday and subsequent Saturday of each month.
 
The gallery is located at 9505 Main St. in Upper Lake. It is open Monday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday from 1 to 7 p.m., and Friday from 1 to 8 p.m.

The Sabalone duo art show will be on display for the full month of April.

For more information call Lake County Wine Studio at 707-275-8030 or 707-293-8752.

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CLEARLAKE, Calif. – St. Helena Hospital Clear Lake is one of 10 companies and organizations nationwide to receive gold-level recognition in 2017 for its commitment to worksite wellness.

The Wellness Council of America (WELCOA) uses a rigorous set of criteria when evaluating organizations that compete to be recognized as among America’s healthiest companies.

The Well Workplace Gold Award recognizes quality and excellence in worksite health at a level with a comprehensive program that produces results.

St. Helena Hospital Clear Lake is one of nine Adventist Health organizations to receive the gold-level recognition; two additional Adventist Health organizations received silver recognition.

In total, 11 of the 15 companies to receive a WELCOA award in 2017 were affiliated with Adventist Health.

St. Helena Hospital Clear Lake has a robust wellness program led by a wellness committee that involves human resources, community wellness, nutrition services and communications leaders who collaborate together to motivate employees through innovative wellness programs and activities.

The WELCOA Well Workplace application process was led by Sylvia Dupper, a community wellness project coordinator for the organization.

“We believe that great health for our community starts with our own team, and this national recognition is great evidence that we’re doing the right things,” said Audrey Barrall, administrative director of human resources. “Our employees are our greatest asset, and we do everything we can to help them flourish physically, mentally spiritually and socially.”

In 2015, an employee fitness center was opened on the hospital campus that provides a free gym and personal training services to employees.

Employee Personal Trainer Lara Keyser leads regular free exercise classes and organizes regular “Be Well Challenges” to motivate employees to engage in exercise, healthy eating and other positive behaviors.

Enterprise-wide, the LivingWell whole-person health and wellness program provides additional resources and incentives for healthy behaviors.

St. Helena Hospital Clear Lake is continuing to grow its health promotion programs in 2017 by hosting Weight Watchers classes on-site with 100-percent reimbursement for employees and starting a free Live Nicotine Free program to help employees stop smoking.

“As a health care organization, we are the first to acknowledge that employee wellness is a key pillar in our success,” said Shelly Mascari, director of community wellness. “Our local and Adventist Health executive teams have a bold goal to lower employee health risks, increase our energy to care for our patients and to help each employee enjoy doing what they love.”

Learn more about the WELCOA Well Workplace Award at www.welcoa.org .

Upcoming Calendar

21Sep
09.21.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
21Sep
09.21.2024 4:00 pm - 10:00 pm
Passion Play fundraiser
21Sep
09.21.2024 4:30 pm - 10:00 pm
Lake County Wine Auction
23Sep
09.23.2024 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Lakeport City Council candidates' forum
24Sep
09.24.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at Library Park
28Sep
09.28.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
5Oct
10.05.2024 7:00 am - 11:00 am
Sponsoring Survivorship
5Oct
10.05.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
12Oct
10.12.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
14Oct
10.14.2024
Columbus Day

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