Friday, 11 October 2024

News

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Clayton Duncan with a picture showing his great-grandmother, Lucy Moore. Photo by Raphael Montoliu.

 


LAKE COUNTY "At 6 years old, she weighed not much more than one of the cannon balls that tore through the people like a boulder though willows. Crouching beneath the water beside the bank she sipped air through a reed to maintain her life. Above her, an old world was ending, washed in blood.”


Those are the words Clayton Duncan uses to tell the story of his grand-grandmother, Lucy Moore, and her survival of the events of Bloody Island.


The year was 1850. Lucy hid in the bloodied water behind the tules with her mother at Badonnapati, Old Island – called Bloody Island after dragoons and a militia under the command of Captain Nathaniel Lyon massacred between 150 and 200 Pomo men, women, elders and children, bayoneting women and babies, stepping on and crushing infants, "braining" (a 19th century term) children by smashing their heads against tree trunks.


Given some limited public outcry, they were charged for these crimes but not convicted, and Lyon later was promoted.


The members of the militia, some of them prominent members of society, subsequently took ownership of the best Pomo lands around the lake and all over Lake County, said Duncan, for the unofficial design of this particular expedition was to "clear" the land of its indigenous inhabitants, as the official policy of California, supported by the federal government, was to exterminate all of the Indian population.


A few Pomo people survived Bloody Island. It took five days to gather the bodies for cremation, Duncan said. Orphaned children had to be hidden from settlers gathering slaves for the market in central California.


Despite this and many more hardships unleashed on native people by the US, Duncan said Lucy Moore became a mother, a grandmother and great-grandmother, lived to be 110 years old, and in her old age prayed every day to forgive America.


It is in her memory and to honor her, her prayer and all who died at Bloody Island that Duncan created the Lucy Moore Foundation in 2000, having for many years approached the tribal leadership to address some of the following issues, without success.


The foundation organizes the yearly May 15 Sunrise Ceremony at Bloody Island, to honor and remember the people who died there during the massacre.


The Lucy Moore Foundation's vision is to educate the public about the massacre, one of many in California, according to Duncan. The group also is working to locate, preserve and memorialize the site of the mass grave – where the victims of the massacre, whose only fault was to live on their own land and stand in the way of America's expansion – were thrown into a hole and cremated.


The foundation's mission is to pronounce Bloody Island and the surrounding 500 acre of marshlands an area of archaeological sensitivity, as a variety of significant prehistoric and historic periods archaeological sites exist within the borders of the 500 acres Bloody Island project boundaries.


As part of that mission, the foundation wants to buy Bloody Island and preserve the rich archaeological and anthropological resources known to exist in great abundance on and around the Island, its wetlands and its bay.


On the island will be created a Lucy Moore Foundation Museum and Cultural Center in the traditional shape of a round house, Duncan said.


In accordance with the prophetic dream of Sage Runningbear and the traditional use of the four directions, the foundation also is planning to build and develop:


  • To the east a research center/laboratory, focusing on nutrition, natural medicine and the environment;

  • To the north a counseling center for abused, neglected children of all races;

  • To the west a healing center offering Native and non-Native spiritual and healing practices and therapies such as the sweat lodge, round house and Native American church, herbal medicine, yoga, massage, meditation, acupuncture and other healing methods;

  • To the south an amphitheater and spaces for concerts, celebrations, pow wows and other events.


"If we can do this together, to know and learn from each other, to accept the truths of the old world and the new, perhaps our children will not see the colors of skin, the manners of our worship, our cultural heritages as characteristics that divide us,” said Duncan. “Perhaps they will see them as the attributes that unite us so we can all work together to fix, mend and heal the Earth, our mother.


“Doing this, we know in our hearts and from the wishes of our ancestors that it will bring back the balance, using Lucy Moore prayer of forgiveness,” Duncan said.


Anyone seeking more information about the Foundation, including foundation meeting dates, should contact Clayton Duncan, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or 707-274-6788.


E-mail Raphael Montoliu at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


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MENDOCINO COUNTY – A local man is in Mendocino County custody after reportedly holding a relative at gunpoint and then confronting deputies with the gun.


A report from the Mendocino County Sheriff's Sgt. Derek Scott Thursday reported that deputies had arrested Jeremy R. Jeffers, 19, of Lakeport, in Ukiah on Monday night.


At 8:30 p.m. Monday, Scott reported that deputies were dispatched to Jeffers Pool and Spa at 123 Lake Mendocino Drive for a welfare check on Jeffers, who was reported to possibly be in possession of a firearm.


Deputy Andrew Whiteaker arrived at the scene, where he observed Jeffers' right arm inside the bed of a truck and an unidentified male relative standing to the rear of the truck, Scott reported. When Whiteaker asked about the firearm the relative told him that Jeffers had it in his hand.


Scott's report said Whiteaker then pulled out his firearm and immediately ordered Jeffers to put the gun down. Jeffers reportedly told Whiteaker to shoot him as he was going to jail.


Whiteaker then took out a Taser and used it to try to subdue Jeffers, but failed, Scott's eport stated.


Shortly afterward Sgt. Scott arrived at the scene and helped take Jeffers to the ground, where he was arrested.


Once Jeffers was subdued, his relative told Whiteaker that Jeffers had held him at gunpoint for about an hour prior to the authorities arriving, according to Scott's report.


While Jeffers had allegedly held the other man at gunpoint, he allegedly made criminal threats to the relative, causing him to believe that he would be killed if he tried to leave the scene.


Authorities transported Jeffers to the Mendocino County Jail on charges of robbery, terrorist threats, false imprisonment, resisting an officer and carrying a loaded firearm in a public place.


Lt. Rusty Noe of the Mendocino County Sheriff's Office told Lake County News that Jeffers was in possession of an unspecified type of handgun. Noe had no information about previous contacts between Jeffers and law enforcement.


A Mendocino County Jail official confirmed that Jeffers remains in jail on $125,000 bail.


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


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Pultizer-Prize winning author Alice Walker, who lives in Anderson Valley in Mendocino County, takes questions from the audience. Photo by Terre Logsdon.

 


HOPLAND – At an event that could only happen in Northern California – but should happen everywhere – farmers, hippies, city dwellers and country folk alike all got their groove on to learn about sustainable ways of living and doing business this past weekend.


The event in question was Hopland's 12th annual SolfFest.


After morning yoga on Sunday, the Alternative Fuels Smackdown took center stage with advocates for ethanol, biodiesel and electric defending and explaining the benefits and differences between these alternative fuels.


After all was said and done – it was declared a tie.


David Blume, author of “Alcohol Can Be A Gas,” engaged the audience many times as he explained how alcohol could be made from almost any crop – including cattails and kelp grown on nets in the ocean – and wouldn’t take away from crops for human or animal consumption.


Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alice Walker, who penned “The Color Purple,” inspired the audience on Sunday, reassuring everyone that we have the faithfulness of sun rising everyday – and that events like SolFest keep people informed and energized.


“The goal of life is not to stuff a trunk full of money,” Walker told the audience, but to be happy whenever we can.


“It is our birthright to be joyful,” Walker told a cheering audience.


Reading from her newest book for children, “Why war is never a good idea,” Walker explained that during this time of war, everyone should have a spiritual practice.


“This is a time that you really have to have a practice,” Walker said. “A practice that can sustain you through this time.”


On a more technological footing, Ernesto Montenero of Sustainable Technologies from Alameda spoke about converting methane gas from manure to usable energy.


According to Montenero, there are 110 methane “digesters” in California that utilize cow manure to produce methane gas which is then used to generate electricity – or is used to fuel cooking stoves on a smaller scale – and the United States Department of Agriculture has applications for 85 more.


But methane digesters, alternative fuels and solar energy are just a few topics that SolFest, which is hosted at the Solar Living Institute in Hopland, just over the hill from us in Lake County, have available every day.


If you didn’t make it to SolFest this year, don’t worry – just stop by the Solar Living Institute and the Real Goods store the next time you’re passing through Hopland. You will probably learn a thing or two which will inspire you.

 

E-mail Terre Logsdon at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


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Ernesto Montenero of Sustainable Technologies shows workshop participants how a methane digester works. Photo by Terre Logsdon.
 

 

  

See the Solar Carousel:

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LAKE COUNTY – Sonoma County Sheriff's Office investigators issued a report on Saturday night regarding a missing woman who was believed to be heading for the Kelseyville area.


According to a statement issued at 7 p.m., Sonoma County Sheriff's officials said they had taken a missing persons report on Lauren Rutz, 22.


A Sonoma State University student who occasionally resides in the Sebastopol area as well as Kelseyville, the sheriff's report stated that Rutz was traveling alone from San Francisco to the Kelseyville area when she disappeared.


She was last heard from Saturday at 2:45 a.m., the report noted, when she spoke to her mother via cell phone.


At the time of the call, cell phone records indicate Rutz may have been in the Windsor area, the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office reported.


Rutz is a white female, 5' 4" tall and 140 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes, authorities reported. She was driving a silver 1997 Toyota RAV4, California License Plate No. 4XXF221.


Law enforcement agencies continue to search Rutz's possible routes of travel from the air and on the ground, in and around Sonoma County, according to the Sonoma County Sheriff's report. No foul play is suspected at this time.


Anyone with information is asked to call Sonoma County Sheriff's Department at (707) 565-2650.


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


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LAKE COUNTY – All the hats are now officially in the ring for November's local elections.


Candidates have filed to run for seats on nearly two dozen boards and districts throughout Lake County.


The November ballot will feature only those districts where candidates outnumber vacancies, according to Registrar of Voters Diane Fridley's office.


Below is a list of candidates for the various education boards and special districts.


EDUCATION


Kelseyville Unified School District Board (three vacancies):


– Don Boyd, appointed incumbent, educator.


– John R. DeChaine, criminal prosecutor for the Lake County District Attorney's Office, parent.


– Andy Dobusch, incumbent.

 

– Chris Irwin, sales manager.


– Philip Murphy pear and walnut grower.


– Gary Olson, real estate broker.


– Valerie A. Ramirez, incumbent.


– Mireya Gehring Turner, county supervisors' assistant.


Lakeport Unified School District Board (three vacancies):


– Craig Kinser, incumbent.


– Philip T. Kirby, school administrator.


– Robyn K. Stevenson, incumbent.


– Patricia Jonas Voulgaris, retail business owner.


– Bob Weiss, incumbent.


Lucerne Elementary School District Board (one vacancy):


– Kay Hancock, retired teacher.


– Bruce Higgins, incumbent.


Upper Lake Union Elementary School District (two vacancies):


– Walt Christensen, incumbent.


– Valerie Petz, appointed incumbent.


Upper Lake Union High School District Board (two vacancies):


– Colleen Alexander, incumbent, Nice.


– Annie Barnes, administrator, grant writer, Upper Lake.


– Dawn R. Binns, business owner, Upper Lake.


– Howard Chavez, deputy director of education, Lucerne.


– Gary L. Lewis, sales/marketing director, Upper Lake.


Lake County Board of Education, Trustee Area 1 (one vacancy):


– George H. Rider, incumbent, Lower Lake.


Lake County Board of Education, Trustee Area 2 (one vacancy):


– Mark A. Cooper, incumbent, Clearlake.


Lake County Board of Education, Trustee Area 4 (one vacancy):


– David Browning, appointed incumbent, Lakeport.


– Larry A. Juchert, retired business owner, Lakeport.


Mendocino-Lake Community College District, Trustee Area 1 (one vacancy):


– Paul B. Ubelhart, incumbent, Willits.


Mendocino-Lake Community College District, Trustee Area 3 (one vacancy):


– Joan M. Eriksen, incumbent, Ukiah.


– Larry MacLeitch, retired professor and trustee, Ukiah.


Mendocino-Lake Community College District, Trustee Area 4 (one vacancy):


– Wade Koeninger, incumbent, Hopland.


Mendocino-Lake Community College District, Trustee Area 7 (one vacancy):


– Jerry DeChaine, professor of chemistry, Kelseyville.


– Gary Taylor, incumbent, Kelseyville.


SPECIAL DISTRICTS


Anderson Springs Community Services District (two vacancies):


– Penelope D. Falduto, appointed incumbent.


– Beatrice A. Moulton, retired law professor.


– Daniel L. Wood, custodian.


Anderson Springs Community Services District (one vacancy for an unexpired term):


– John Engels, appointed incumbent.


Butler-Keys Community Services District (three vacancies):


– James Evans, incumbent.


– Frank Gillespie, incumbent.


– Jeanne Renli Schiele, incumbent.


Hidden Valley Lake Community Services District (three vacancies):


– Robert W. Barton, incumbent.


– Frances Bunce, appointed incumbent.


– Lyle W. LaFaver, incumbent.


Kelseyville Fire Protection District (two vacancies):


– Donald R. Carter, incumbent.


– William H. H. Wolfe, appointed incumbent.


Lake County Fire Protection District (three vacancies):


– William W. Llewellyn, incumbent, Lower Lake.


– Rozie Cheek, incumbent, Clearlake Park.


– Thomas W. Walker, incumbent, Clearlake.


South Lake County Fire Protection District (three vacancies):


– Rob Bostock, appointed incumbent, Cobb.


– Madelyn Martinelli, incumbent, Middletown.


– Danny L. McCabe, incumbent, Cobb.


Adams Springs Water District (two vacancies):


– Kathy DeMartini, appointed incumbent.


– Evan Robert Willig, incumbent.


Adams Springs Water District (one vacancy for an unexpired term):


– Gloria Poulsen, appointed incumbent.


Buckingham Park Water District (two vacancies):


– George Hawley, incumbent.


– James Horne, appointed incumbent.


– Michael B. Meese, appointed incumbent.


Callayomi County Water District (two vacancies):


– Linda Olhiser, retired controller.


Clearlake Oaks County Water District (three vacancies):


– Mike Anisman, retired law enforcement.


– June A. Greene, incumbent.


– Helen G. Locke, retired telecom manager.


– Glenn R. Rowe, incumbent.


– Frank Toney, highway maintenance worker.


– Bob White, incumbent.


Cobb Area County Water District (two vacancies):


– Renada Breeden, incumbent.


– Kees Winkelman, appointed incumbent.


Cobb Area County Water District (one vacancy for an unexpired term):


– Robert Paul Trautwein, appointed incumbent.


Konocti County Water District (two vacancies):


– Donnie Bachman, appointed incumbent.


– Darin M. McCosker, incumbent.


Scotts Valley Water Conservation District, Division 1 (one vacancy):


No candidates filed.


Scotts Valley Water Conservation District, Division 2 (one vacancy):


No candidates filed.


Upper Lake County Water District (three vacancies):


– Wilda C. Beavers, incumbent.


– Henry Ward Beecher, incumbent.


– Allen E. Merriman, incumbent.


Villa Blue Estates Water District (two vacancies):


– Mark Fetzer, satellite technician.


– Dennis John Knudsen, incumbent.


– Clara Summerfield, incumbent.


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


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LAKEPORT – A fight that was reported Saturday afternoon eventually led to the arrests of two people on weapons charges.


As Lake County News reported over the weekend, Lakeport Police and the Lake County Sheriff's Office were involved in making the arrests, which took place along Ackley Road in Lakeport.


A report from Lake County Sheriff's Lt. Cecil Brown Monday explained that at 3:41 p.m. Saturday Lake County Sheriff’s deputies responded to a reported fight in front of a residence in Kelseyville. Personnel from the Kelseyville Fire Protection District also responded.


The deputies found several excited people in front of the home, according to Brown, who told the deputies that “Jose” started a fight, and then left in a gray Isuzu utility vehicle. Witnesses told fire department personnel that a woman in the Isuzu had a small handgun concealed in her brazier.


As deputies searched for the Isuzu, Lakeport Police Officer Jason Ferguson located the vehicle on Ackley Road near Lakeport, according to Brown's report.


Lt. Brad Rasmussen of Lakeport Police told Lake County News Monday that Ferguson spotted the vehicle on Highway 29 and followed it to Ackley Road, where he initiated a felony stop and waited for sheriff's deputies.


Brown said Deputy Gavin Wells, Deputy Darren Daskam, Sgt. Jim Beland and Sgt. Brian Martin responded to the Ackley Road location. There they detained Jose Luis Valadez, 29, of Lakeport; Teresa Yepez Garcia, 48, of Lakeport; and another woman and removed them from the vehicle.


A search of the vehicle yielded a .380 caliber handgun, according to Brown's report.


Interviews were conducted at the residence in Kelseyville, at the location of the high-risk stop and at Sutter Lakeside Hospital, Brown reported. Witnesses confirmed that an altercation had occurred at the residence.


However, Brown reported that none of the involved parties wished to cooperate in the prosecution of any other party.


The interviews also revealed that Valadez and Yepez Garcia had both been in possession of the .380 caliber handgun.


Both were arrested for carrying a concealable firearm in a vehicle (12025(a)(1)PC) and carrying a loaded firearm in a vehicle (12031(a)(1)PC), and booked into the Lake County Jail.


Since Saturday, Yepez Garcia and Valadez have both posted, in the amount of $20,000 each, and been released from jail, according to jail records.


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


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LAKE COUNTY If you lived 1,000 years or so ago, the morning of Aug. 28 would terrify you.


You would see the full moon being slowly eaten by some hideous, unseen creature a very bad omen indeed! Will the earth be next? What will happen to us?


Our scientific knowledge back then, or lack thereof, gave rise to many frightening explanations for what will be seen.


Today, we have a better understanding of what causes the celestial event that will occur on Tuesday morning. It's an eclipse of the moon, and in Lake County we'll have a marvelous view of it – providing you're able to stay up late, or get up early, depending on your schedule.


The eclipse will begin around 1:20 a.m. It will be at maximum at 3:30 a.m., and will end around 6 a.m.


A lunar eclipse happens when the earth is between the sun and the moon, and the Earth's shadow is cast on the moon.


The diagram below shows how this happens.

 

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A diagram provided by www.mreclipse.com.

 


Lunar eclipses occur several times a year. They can only be seen from specific parts of the Earth – this month's eclipse won't be visible from Europe, for example.


The next eclipse we'll be able to see will happen on Feb. 21, 2008. After that one, we'll have to wait until December 2010.


So, this month's eclipse may not happen at a convenient time, but it's an event well worth setting your alarm for or staying up to watch.

 

John Zimmerman has been an amateur astronomer for 50 years. He is a member of the Taylor Observatory staff, where, among his many duties, he helps create planetarium shows.


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An example of a lunar eclipse from earlier this year.

LAKE COUNTY – The State Senate on Tuesday ended a 52-day budget stalemate when it approved California's budget for fiscal year 2007-08.


The Senate voted 27-12 Tuesday afternoon to accept the $145 billion budget, which includes $103 billion in general fund spending, according to David Miller, spokesman for North Coast Sen. Patricia Wiggins.


In a statement after the vote, Wiggins noted that the Senate's version of the budget was very similar to that passed July 20 by the Assembly and to a budget the Senate almost approved three weeks ago. Wiggins said the Senate should have arrived at a final budget “much, much earlier.”


“But I am glad that we are putting this impasse behind us, because it will allow us to resume payments to child care facilities, to nursing homes, to health clinics and other providers who receive reimbursements through Medi-Cal, to those who offer care and services to the developmentally disabled, and to anyone else who has been negatively affected by the delay,” said Wiggins.


This budget fully funds education and law enforcement, allows the state to pay off $2.5 billion of its overall bind debt earlier than scheduled and keeps a record $3.4 billion in reserve – all without raising taxes, Wiggins reported.


“It is my hope that we can move quickly now on other major outstanding issues, especially health care reform, and that we can reach early agreement on the next round of budget talks in 2008,” said Wiggins.


There was one part of the budget package Wiggins didn't agree with, according to her office. Senate Republicans demanded the elimination of an existing requirement that all state-owned buildings be “green,” which Senate Democrats agreed to honor. Wiggins, however, voted against the change.


Assemblywoman Patty Berg's office offered no comment on the budget's passing. However, in July, when the Assembly passed a $103 billion budget version, Berg said it would protect children, the elderly and the poor.


As chair of the Assembly's Budget Subcommittee on Health and Human Services, she worked to add $12 million to the state’s Adult Protective Services program in order to give every county in the state at least one watchdog to protect seniors from elder abuse.


The Assembly budget also preserved the Williamson Act, increased funding for the California Methamphetamine Initiative, prevented a wage freeze for In-Home Supportive Services workers, maintained Rural law enforcement grant program, kept intact the homeless program for mentally ill, fully funded K-12 education and created a $3.4 billion reserve.


However, just how close the two budgets are in their specifics wasn't clear Tuesday evening, although it's reported that they are very similar.


Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger issued a statement Tuesday afternoon that lauded the Senate's responsible budget,” which he said protects the state's priorities and keeps its economy strong.


“It was a challenging process but in the end our legislative leaders came together to deliver a spending plan that does not raise taxes, creates the largest reserve in history, and reduces our operating deficit after the spending vetoes that I have promised,” Schwarzenegger said in the statement.

 

Schwarzenegger said the budget also limits spending growth to less than one percent, pays down $2.5 billion in debt, fully funds education and public safety, and allows the state to move forward with the infrastructure bond measures that voters approved last year.


“We now will move forward together on the issues we've been elected to address such as health care, a comprehensive water plan, and redistricting reform,” Schwarzenegger said.


The budget comes none too soon.


Late last month, State Controller John Chiang reported that the budget impasse forced him to withhold $1.1 billion in state payments to hospitals, nursing homes, child care centers, community colleges and other programs. Chiang estimated at that time that he would not be able to pay another $2.1 billion in state payments in August.


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


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UPPER LAKE – Officials still haven't settled on the cause of a fire that broke out near Highways 20 and 29 Saturday morning.


The fire, which was reported at about 10 a.m., was located in farmland in a flat area near the junction of the two highways, according to Battalion Chief Ken Petz of Northshore Fire Protection District's Upper Lake station.


Upper Lake's station sent two attack units and one engine responded from Lakeport, along with responders from the US Forest Services and Cal Fire, said Petz.


Cal Fire Battalion Chief Redhawk Palleson said Cal Fire sent five engines, a helicopter, an air attack, a dozer and two air tankers to the scene, Pallesen said.


Firefighters contained the fire between 1 and 2 p.m., Petz said.


One home was threatened, he said, but firefighters were able to protect it and avert damage.


Petz said there were no injuries.


The fire's cause still has not been determined, said Petz.


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


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Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger put his signature on the state's budget on Friday, lauding the document which state lawmakers passed on Tuesday.


The governor also announced about $700 million in cuts to the budget, which he said was necessary to keep the budget balanced and build a “prudent reserve.”


North Coast Sen. Patricia Wiggins (D-Santa Rosa) said the budget was fiscally responsible; includes no new taxes, fees or special programs; has a $3.4 billion reserve; pays debt early and lowers the operating deficit.


“This budget, while not a great one, is a decent one, and it was the best one we could accomplish in 2007,” she said.


Wiggins said the budget maintains a cost of living increase for Supplementary Security Income and State Supplementary Payment recipients.

 

The state budget shows that expenditures for the Supplemental Security Income/State Supplementary Payment Program are $3.7 billion for 2007-08, up $118.7 million from the revised 2006 budget. That's due in part to an estimated increase in the average monthly caseload by 1.3 million recipients, a 1.8-percent increase over the 2006-07 projected level.

 

Schwarzenegger's 42 pages of revisions and budget cuts will affect many programs. One of the hardest hit state departments is Health and Human Services, which will suffer hundreds of millions in fiscal decreases.


Among the reductions are $34.6 million for the county grants portion of the Children's Outreach initiative in Medi-Cal and the Healthy Families Program, and $54.9 million for the Integrated Services for Homeless Adults with Serious Mental Illness Program.


Regarding the program for homeless, mentally ill adults, Schwarzenegger suggests that the program “can be restructured to meet the needs of each county’s homeless population using other county funding sources,” including federal funds.


Said Wiggins, “It is unfortunate that the governor chose to veto funding for things like funding for Medi-Cal and housing for mentally ill homeless people, from a budget which includes a $45 million tax break for people who own yachts.”


One item preserved in the budget was the Williamson Act, which gives farmers and ranchers a tax break for keeping farmland in production, and reimburses counties for lost tax revenue.


Schwarzenegger's May budget revision had targeted the $39 million planned for supporting the program this year, but the California Farm Bureau and other agriculturalists around the state kept up the pressure. Assemblyman Mike Villines (R-Fresno), the Republican Assembly leader, helped hammer out an agreement with Schwarzenegger to leave the Williamson Act funding in tax.


The new budget also includes $1.6 billion for In-Home Supportive Services, an amount that is up $97.1 million from last year. The budget summary explains that the average monthly caseload in this program is estimated to increase to 389,100 recipients, a 5.1-percent increase over the 2006-07 projected level.


The documents also state that, effective July 1, state participation in IHSS provider wages and health benefits increased from $11.10 per hour to $12.10 per hour, based on the projected growth of General Fund revenues.


The state's Military Department will receive $1.8 million and 22 positions to meet the increased demand for military funeral honors ceremonies around the state.


The increased funds will provide an additional 300 funeral honors per month which would include California National Guard members folding the United States flag and presenting it to the next of kin during the funeral ceremony. The California National Guard is required by federal law to serve as the primary provider of those services to veterans and their families who request funeral services with military honors, according to the budget summary.


The newly signed budget also includes $11.4 million General Fund and 26.4 positions to assist in implementing a statewide Veterans Home Information System, according to the budget report. That system will be based on the federal veterans health care information, and will be used to improve health care tracking and the care provided to veterans.


Wiggins said she is looking forward to getting started on next year's budget as soon as possible. She said she supports Senate Leader Don Perata’s call for a bipartisan budget revision panel to develop a multiyear plan in order to get budgets back on time.


“I agree with Sen. Perata that the state’s budget is ‘fatally broken’ because it is controlled by conflicting ballot-box mandates, dedicated funding streams and other constraints that limit what lawmakers can do,” Wiggins said.


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


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LAKE COUNTY – Authorities are reporting that a month-long investigation has led to the arrest of a local man for failing to register as a sex offender.


Det. Mike Curran of the Lake County Sheriff's Office reported on the investigation Tuesday, which resulted in the arrest of Albert Wilbur Charboneau, 63, a former Clearlake resident, on sex registration violations.


Curran also is an agent of the Sexual Assault Felony Enforcement (SAFE) Task Force, a multi-county effort that is focused on reducing the number of sex offenders who fail to comply with legal registration requirements.


SAFE's investigation began July 23 during a south county operation that included the city of Clearlake, Curran reported.


Charboneau, who reportedly worked as a carpenter, was found to have moved several months ago from the address listed on registration documents. Curran then began a search investigation to determine Charboneau's whereabouts.


Curran gathered information that indicated that Charboneau had possibly relocated to an unknown location in Lucerne, according to Curran's report.


During a subsequent interview with Curran, Charboneau took responsibility for his failure to notify law enforcement of his relocation and then to re-register.


"He knows he made a mistake and that there are potential consequences as a result,” Curran said.


Charboneau was arrested and booked into the Hill Road Correctional Facility on Aug. 16 after his arrest on active traffic warrants and alleged sex registrant violations, Curran reported. Charboneau had gone to the Hill Road Correctional Facility to register, knowing that he could be arrested.


Jail records indicate that Charboneau remains in custody with bail set at $38,500.


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


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BARTLETT SPRINGS – A collision involving a motorcycle and a pickup truck on the way to Bartlett Springs sent a Clearlake teen to the hospital Sunday night with major injuries.


The California Highway Patrol incident logs reported that the crash occurred six to seven miles up Bartlett Springs Road at 6:20 p.m.


Battalion Chief Ken Petz of Northshore Fire Protection District's Upper Lake station reported Sunday that Northshore firefighters were the first on the scene at the crash.


The CHP logs reported that the motorcyclist was a 15-year-old male from Clearlake.


Petz said the teen suffered a compound fracture and was transported by REACH helicopter to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital for treatment.


No information was available on the pickup driver.


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


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Upcoming Calendar

12Oct
10.12.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
14Oct
10.14.2024
Columbus Day
14Oct
16Oct
10.16.2024 5:00 pm - 6:00 pm
John T. Klaus Park Zoom meeting
16Oct
10.16.2024 5:30 pm - 7:00 pm
Free veterans dinner
19Oct
10.19.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
26Oct
10.26.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Pet wellness clinic
26Oct
10.26.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
31Oct
10.31.2024
Halloween

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