LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Lake County Museums and Lake County Parks and Recreation is inviting the community to meetings early in July to share ideas on possible improvements to the museum grounds.
The meetings will take place at the Lakeport Courthouse Museum, 255 N. Main St.
The first is scheduled for 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday, July 1.
The second meeting will take place from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, July 3.
A conceptual list of improvements and amenities for a competitive state grant funding opportunity will be available for review.
This is an opportunity for community members to tell the Parks and Recreation Department what they would like to see at the museum.
County staff also will be holding an online survey soon to offer more opportunities for community members to have their voices heard.
If you are unable to attend any of the meetings in person please visit any of the following locations in person or online for other ways to share your comments or ask questions:
Historic Courthouse Museum, 255 N. Main St., Lakeport; open Thursday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Historic Schoolhouse Museum, 16435 Main St., Lower Lake; open Thursday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Gibson Museum and Cultural Center at 21267 Calistoga Road, Middletown; open Thursday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
LAKEPORT, Calif. — The Lakeport Police Department is urging the community to be on the lookout for counterfeit bills that have been discovered circulating locally.
On Tuesday, the Lakeport Police Department said it received a report from two farmers' market vendors of receipt of counterfeit $100 bills.
The individuals who passed the bills were described as an adult male with a medium complexion in his 30s, wearing a gray tank top and gray sweatpants, with two lines tattooed under his right eye; and adult female with a light complexion, with one or more missing front teeth and an A-line hairstyle wearing a white and blue sundress.
The counterfeit bills collected were made to look like the new series $100 bills.
The community is asked to report any similar activity to the Lakeport Police Department or the nearest law enforcement jurisdiction.
Submit comments and questions in writing for commission consideration by sending them to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Identify the subject you wish to comment on in your email’s subject line.
On Tuesday, the commission will be asked to consider the appeal of Jamie Fielden, who is seeking an administrative use permit to exceed the total allowed square footage for an accessory structure on property located at 3006 Old Highway 53 and a finding that it’s exempt from environmental review.
Fielden is proposing to install a 3,000-square-foot prefabricated garage for personal storage purposes only.
The staff report explained that a public hearing was held on April 26 and, “based on significant concerns from neighboring property owners and lack of corresponding participation from the applicant – the application was denied.”
An appeal was filed on May 13, six days after the deadline for submission, staff reported.
In her appeal, Fielden said she did not receive the notice because it was sent to an incorrect address.
She said the garage will be used to store personal vehicles.
The commission’s members are Chair Kathryn Davis, Vice Chair Robert Coker and commissioners Lisa Wilson, Erin McCarrick and Fawn Williams.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
The last decade was free of recessions and from the opening bell in January 2010 to the closing bell in December 2019, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 soared 173.60% and 189.35%, respectively.
The Gross Domestic Product increased from $14.992 trillion to $21.433 trillion.
Yet, during that same period, the labor force participation rate actually declined.
So, how could it drop when the economy was booming and labor force participation rates among the working-age population grew in every age category?
The solution to this labor market puzzle: rise in the percentage of the population ages 65 and over.
The oldest baby boomers were 64 in 2010 and 73 in 2019. As they aged, a large segment of the population shifted into 65 and older age groups.
Because older Americans are less likely than younger ones to be in the labor force, this demographic shift reduced the overall labor force participation rate.
Labor force participation includes working-age adults who are either working or looking for work.
This article uses estimates from the 2010 and 2019 American Community Survey, or ACS, 1-year.
Labor force participation by age
The national labor force participation rate for the total population ages 16 and over decreased from 64.4% in 2010 to 63.6% in 2019.
Despite the overall dip, the labor force participation rate went up across all age groups from 2010 to 2019:
— Ages 16 to 19: 37.7% to 39.9%. — Ages 20 to 64: 77.5% to 78.3%. — Ages 65 to 74: 24.8% to 26.8%. — Ages 75 and older: 5.7% to 7.2%.
This apparent discrepancy in the rates can be explained by the sea change in the age distribution of the U.S. population.
Effect of aging on labor force
From 2010-2019, as the U.S. economy improved, the percentage of the population ages 65 and older grew nationally (from 13.1% to 16.5%) and in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
These increases affected both the national and state labor force characteristics.
The labor force participation rates of people ages 65 to 74 and 75 years and older were lower than for the population ages 16 to 19 and 20 to 64 in 2010 and in 2019.
Even so, older Americans were still more likely to be in the labor force in 2019 than in 2010.
Labor force trends in states
This seemingly contradictory pattern of an overall decline in labor force participation but increases in every age group was evident at the state level as well.
Only one state (Utah) and the District of Columbia experienced increases in their labor force participation rates for the total working-age population ages 16 and older while 38 states experienced decreases.
However, just as it played out nationally, labor force participation rates went up in most states in every age group from 2010 to 2019:
— Ages 16 to 19, up in 26 states and D.C., and down in four. — Ages 20 to 64, up in 26 states and D.C., and down in three. — Ages 65 to 74, up in 25 states and down in two. — Ages 75 and older, up in 36 states and down in none.
Aging and unemployment
People without jobs searching and available for work are considered unemployed.
Unemployment rates trended downward overall from 10.8% in 2010 to 4.5% in 2019. They also declined for each age cohort:
— Ages 16 to 19, from 29.7% to 14.9%. — Ages 20 to 64, 10.1% to 4.2%. — Ages 65 to 74, 7.9% to 3.0%. — Ages 75 and older, 6.9% to 3.0%.
The unemployment rates of the population ages 65 to 74 and 75 and older were lower than the unemployment rates of the population ages 16 to 19 and 20 to 64, in both 2010 and 2019.
As the nation and labor force aged, older Americans’ lower unemployment rates and continued presence in the labor force drove down the overall unemployment rate.
This effect was compounded by the improving labor market that reduced unemployment rates for all age groups between 2010 and 2019.
Aging out, not dropping out
These demographic subtleties matter because labor force participation and unemployment rates are key measures of economic health.
Conventional wisdom about falling labor force participation rates is that discouraged workers are dropping out of the labor force. But that conclusion can be misleading, especially when the country is experiencing significant demographic shifts, such as changes in the age distribution of the U.S. population in the last decade.
As a result, demographic changes rather than economic and labor market conditions may be the driving factor behind labor force participation and unemployment rates.
David Howard is a survey statistician in the Census Bureau’s Social, Economic and Housing Statistics Division.
The California Highway Patrol is partnering with 11 other highway patrols, state patrols, and state police agencies for the Western States Traffic Safety Coalition traffic safety campaign, giving motorists “a dozen reasons not to speed.”
Speeding violations will be the target of law enforcement in California, Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, Nevada, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington and Wyoming from Friday, June 25, through Sunday, June 27.
“Excessive speed and unsafe driving are a threat to everyone on the roadway,” said CHP Commissioner Amanda Ray. “The CHP and our allied state partners will be out in force this weekend with the common goal of saving lives through speed enforcement.”
The speed enforcement campaign follows a significant increase in speed-related incidents and traffic fatalities in 2020.
In California last year, more than 500 people were killed and more than 57,000 others were injured in crashes caused by unsafe speed.
Also last year, CHP officers issued more than 28,000 speeding citations to motorists driving in excess of 100 miles per hour — and 9,300 more during the first four months of 2021.
“Keep yourself and those on the road around you safe. Slow down and drive at a legal, safe speed,” added Commissioner Ray.
In addition to speed, officers will be looking for seat belt and child safety seat violations, evidence of distracted driving, and driving under the influence.
The CHP and the officers and troopers of its allied law enforcement agencies remind you to drive safely and report any emergencies or dangerous drivers by calling 911.
As two of the leadresearchers who produced this report, we observed that giving bucked historical trends in three ways. The total increased despite a recession; foundations’ giving surged; and gifts to a variety of nonprofits providing social services, supporting people in need and protecting civil rights grew the most.
Soon after the COVID-19 pandemic began, many foundations pledged to increase their grantmaking. Based on our findings, it looks like they kept their word: Foundation giving rose 15.6% to a record $88.55 billion in 2020, after adjusting for the effects of inflation.
Strong stocks also bolstered giving by foundations, which support a wide array of charitable activities by making grants. They are required by law to annually give away 5% of the average value of their assets, often held in endowments. As their stocks and other holdings grow, that 5% gets larger too.
Stock gains may have also boosted giving by American households, the source of about two-thirds of all charitable dollars, which grew 1% to set another inflation-adjusted record of $324 billion.
In particular, America’s billionaires became an estimated $1.2 trillion richer in 2020.
While giving by the wealthiest Americans – especially novelist and philanthropist MacKenzie Scott – often dominated the headlines, giving by individuals wasn’t limited to large-scale gifts. One report found that the total raised from gifts under $250 grew more than larger donations. Another study found that one-time online gifts to organizations that provided COVID-19 relief grew by 41%.
Food banks, homeless shelters, youth programs and other organizations that meet basic needs, collectively known as human services groups, received an outpouring of support in 2020. Those donations grew 8.4%, in inflation-adjusted dollars, to $65 billion. This additional giving responded to the COVID-19 pandemic and the economic troubles it brought about, as well as broad calls for racial justice.
Giving to public-society benefit organizations grew the most, a 14.3% increase to $48 billion. This broad category includes the United Way and its local branches, which pool donations raised in workplaces, from corporations and other sources. It also includes donor-advised funds, accounts through which donors can direct gifts to charities, and community development financial institutions, private-sector financial operations that boost local borrowers. Civil rights and voting rights groups also fall into this category.
However, organizations that rely on in-person events and services – such as operas and museums, as well as charity walks, runs and other peer-to-peer fundraising events that raise money to fight diseases – overall fared worse in 2020 compared to 2019. That could help explain the 8.6% decline in giving to the arts, culture and humanities sector as well as why giving to health-related organizations fell by 4.2% amid the pandemic.
In addition, some large gifts that funded COVID-19 research, such as the W.M. Keck Foundation’s $6 million in donations to the University of Southern California, count as giving to education, not giving to health.
What’s more, all nine categories that we track received gifts slated for COVID-19 relief and racial justice causes.
We also feel it’s important to observe that more than half of all Americans responded to the upheaval of 2020 with an outpouring of generosity, which they expressed in many ways besides donating money to charities.
When physical distancing became essential, Americans went out of their way to buy meals-to-go to support local restaurants, paid their hairdressers when their salons were closed and volunteered either formally or by simply helping their neighbors out. In addition, many Americans gave directly to others through crowdfunding platforms and other apps, which are particularly popular for younger people and people of color. While our research focuses on giving to charities, these new habits may indicate a broader move toward generosity on the horizon.
Together with our colleagues, we will continue to investigate whether these new patterns will continue in 2021 and beyond.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approved updates to the workplace regulations for county employees, changes made possible by state-level action last week.
On Thursday, the Cal/OSHA Board updated its regulations to come into line with guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the California Department of Public Health, as Lake County News has reported.
Following Thursday’s action, the county began finalizing the latest updates to county workplace rules and sent out notification about the changes to employees, County Administrative Officer Carol Huchingson told the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday.
Huchingson said Human Resources Director Pam Samac made sure employees were notified of the changes on Thursday night.
Samac told the board that county staff was excited to see Cal/OSHA update its rules to match the CDC’s guidance.
“We’ve got some very happy employees,” she said.
Among the changes to the protocol is a new addendum which is a certification of vaccination status for employees to fill out.
“Per Cal OSHA COVID-19 Prevention Emergency Temporary Standards we are required to collect information about your vaccination status,” the form says.
People can choose to disclose that they are full or partially vaccinated, not vaccinated, or they can decline to answer.
As of Tuesday morning, Samac said the county had received back 400 of those certifications.
Altogether, nine sections of the protocol have been updated, including the sections on facial coverings for vaccinated versus unvaccinated employees, she said.
Cal/OSHA’s “Emergency Temporary Standards” require employers “to provide unvaccinated employees with face coverings or N95 masks and ensure they are worn over the nose and mouth when indoors and when outdoors, and within 6 feet of another,” the county protocol explains.
Fully vaccinated employees are not required to wear face coverings indoors unless they are in certain situations, including being on public transit, in school and health care settings, correctional facilities and detention centers, homeless and emergency shelters, and cooling centers, the document said.
Samac said the county must provide facial coverings to staff who request them. The protocol said fully vaccinated employees can request, and must be provided, face coverings or N95 masks.
The protocol requires unvaccinated employees to wear face masks indoors unless they are alone in a room, using a respirator or respiratory protection, they cannot use a face covering due to a medical or mental condition, if they are hearing impaired or communicating with a hearing-impaired person, when specific work tasks cannot be performed with a face covering or when other measures to protect against COVID-19 infection must be implemented when face coverings cannot be used.
Samac said employees must still keep high touch areas clean and frequently wipe them down as necessary.
Regarding physical distance, there is no longer a need to have physical barriers and social distancing for employees, she said.
However, Samac said the county still needs to keep barriers in place in front-facing customer service areas to protect employees because they don't have 100-percent vaccination among employees at this point.
For vaccinated employees who come into close contact with a person with suspected or confirmed COVID-19, the protocol said they do not need to quarantine or be tested, but unvaccinated employees are to be instructed to quarantine for up to 10 days.
Samac said they also have eliminated an employee travel ban, and still need to offer remote telecommuting to high risk employees, where appropriate.
The board voted unanimously to approve the amended County of Lake COVID-19 Public Health Emergency Worksite Protocol and bring it back for future changes on an as-needed basis.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Clearlake City Council on Thursday approved the city’s new 2021-22 fiscal year budget, the largest budget Clearlake has had since it incorporated four decades ago.
“It is the largest budget in the city’s history, primarily due to a lot of investment in capital projects,” said City Manager Alan Flora during an hour and a half long budget workshop that took place before the regular Thursday evening meeting, during which the council and staff looked over the final budget numbers.
“This is an historic budget,” Mayor Dirk Slooten said during the council meeting that followed.
The 2021-22 fiscal year budget includes $57.4 million in expenditures, $53.6 million in revenue and a general fund of just under $8 million.
Much of that influx of revenue — nearly three times the $18 million the city had budgeted for 2020-21 — is the result of grants and settlements that are flowing into the city’s coffers, Flora said in his report.
One of the key areas of focus for spending in the coming fiscal year will be infrastructure — including 15 miles of road work — which Slooten said is badly needed.
The 2021-22 budget calls for capital projects totaling $36 million. The funds to cover that spending include $14 million in settlement proceeds from litigation and nearly $14 million in Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery money for two large road rehabilitation projects in and around the Sulphur Fire area.
During the budget workshop, staff noted highlights including more than $1 million going into the city’s general fund reserves, which will now total $1.625 million.
Flora said it’s a long way from five or six years ago, when the city’s reserves were zero. He said the Government Finance Officers Association recommends having reserves of 5% to 15%; Clearlake’s reserves are now just over 20% of general fund reserves.
Those reserves are an important piece of the city’s fiscal stability, Flora said.
Flora said a lot of the story about this budget is about infrastructure — which is something he acknowledged that the city hasn't done a good job of building over the years.
The coming year’s infrastructure improvements are going to have what Flora called “a dramatic impact” on the city’s ongoing discretionary revenue streams because of things like the commercial development set to take place at the city’s former Pearce Field airport site, where the infrastructure improvements are expected to break ground in the spring. Such developments bring in key revenue such as sales tax.
But preparing for those projects requires the city to be financially prepared, Flora explained
“We have to make sure that we're on a strong fiscal foundation and that reserve adjustment’s a big piece of that,” Flora said.
He also noted that he’s very optimistic about the city’s position with its developments, with retail consultants telling them the biggest problem is that the city needs more land to develop.
“Right now the retail interest is hot and we need to take advantage of it,” said Flora.
Capital project investments in the budget include more than $7 million for the airport project and $4.1 for Lakeshore Drive, Flora said.
Most of the city wasn’t developed properly in the beginning. “We’re trying to create a real city after the fact,” with amenities people expect, Flora said.
During the workshop, the council heard from Clearlake Police Chief Andrew White, who has been doing double duty as both chief and the city’s finance director, who said the police department’s greatest challenge remains recruitment and retention.
It’s not just an issue for officers; White said they are struggling to get applicants for dispatcher jobs.
They’ve also lost one of their two animal control officers and are about to lose the second, so they are considering contracting with an outside organization for services as they have no interim coverage lined up, White said.
Another challenge for the city this year is a growth in insurance premiums.
City Clerk/Administrative Services Director Melissa Swanson said the general liability market is having instability.
That’s resulted in increases across the board, with lowered coverage and increased deductibles across many insurance pools, Swanson said.
She said the city is seeing premiums increase for general liability at a rate they haven’t seen since the 1980s, and they’re expecting more such increases in the 2022-23 fiscal year.
After having the extensive discussion of the budget during the workshop, the council item to approve the budgeting during the meeting that followed was brief.
Councilman Russ Cremer moved to approve the budget, with Councilman David Claffey seconding and the council voting 4-0. Councilman Russ Perdock was absent.
Slooten offered his thanks to staff for their work on the new budget.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
This story is being updated as new information becomes available.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — A fast-moving vegetation fire in Clearlake is prompting evacuations as state and local firefighters attempt to stop it.
The fire in the area of Wilkinson and Dam Road was first reported shortly after 5 p.m. Monday.
Radio traffic indicated the fire began with a passenger car fire spreading into vegetation.
Dispatch reported receiving calls about multiple explosions in the area as well as downed power lines.
Initial reports from the scene put the fire’s size at about half an acre.
Incident command called for evacuations on Wilkinson from Dam Road to Eighth Avenue, with that area expanding as the incident has progressed.
The Clearlake Police Department reported that Dam Road at Lake Street has been closed because of the fire.
At 5:25 p.m., Cal Fire air attack reported the fire was two to three acres with a rapid rate of spread.
Other air resources, including tankers and a helicopter, are reported to be working at the scene.
Two nearby mobile home parks are being told to shelter in place.
Clearlake Police have requested an ambulance respond to Wilkinson and Dam Road to transport one patient.
Shortly before 6 p.m., incident command reported that the fire was seven to eight acres with a southwest wind on it, and is moving into the Avenues in the city with structures and vehicles actively threatened and the evacuation zone expanding.
There is short-range spotting and the high-tension power lines from the Kugelman to Highland substations are threatened, incident command said.
As of 6:03 p.m., power was reported to be out to 2,584 customers in an area stretching from Clearlake to Hidden Valley Lake. As of that time, Pacific Gas and Electric Co. had not confirmed that the outage was a direct result of the fire.
However, Sheriff Brian Martin later confirmed to Lake County News that PG&E had deenergized the lines due to the fire threat, with the fire just under the lines.
Just before 6:45 p.m., incident command reported the fire to be 15 acres, with multiple spot fires continuing.
At 7:16 p.m., the Lake County Sheriff’s Office sent out a Nixle alert reporting an evacuation advisory for the area north of 18th Avenue, east of Phillips Avenue, south of 32nd Avenue and west of the Clearlake city limits.
The sheriff’s office said an evacuation shelter has been set up at Kelseyville High School.
Incident command reported shortly after 8 p.m. that the fire was at 20 acres and 75-percent contained, with the spot fires mitigated and the winds reducing. Overall, incident command said things were going well and they were looking at beginning to release engines soon.
Sheriff Martin told Lake County News at 8:15 p.m. residents in the area were still evacuated and that his agency was working with the Clearlake Police Department on starting to get everyone home safely.
No one appeared to have been seriously injured during the incident, he said.
Martin said PG&E is anticipating getting power back on to all but about 20 customers by about 10 p.m.
About 15 minutes later, a Nixle alert was issued advising community members that the evacuation advisory for the following areas had been lifted as of 8:17 p.m.: north of 18th Avenue, east of Phillips Avenue, south of 32nd Avenue and west of the Clearlake city limits.
Radio traffic shortly after 10 p.m. indicated fire crews would remain on the scene through the night.
Additional information will be posted as it becomes available.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Congressman John Garamendi (D-CA) is encouraging hardworking families to be on the lookout for advance monthly payments of the Child Tax Credit of up to $300 per month per child beginning July 15 and continuing through December.
Garamendi’s office said 48,600 hardworking households, covering 86% of all children in California’s 3rd Congressional District, could get up to $300 per month per child July to December and even more after filing their taxes next year.
An estimated 11,000 children are expected to be lifted out of poverty in Garamendi’s district.
Nearly all families should get their monthly payments automatically beginning July 15 with no further action required.
Families who did not file a tax return for 2019 or 2020 and who did not use the IRS Non-filers tool last year to sign up for the Economic Impact Payments, should go online and use the IRS Child Tax Credit Non-filer Sign-up Tool to sign up today.
“Child Tax Credit Monthly Payments will help set America’s children up for success and put more money in the pockets of hardworking parents sooner, to pay for child care or put gas in the car so they can go to work and help fuel our economy while building better lives for their families,” said Garamendi.
Major tax relief for nearly all working families:
How much is the Child Tax Credit expansion from the American Rescue Plan?
The American Rescue Plan expanded the Child Tax Credit to up to $3,600 per child for children ages 0 to 5 and $3,000 per child for children ages 6 to 17.
The American Rescue Plan also authorized advance monthly payments of the Child Tax Credit through December 2021. Beginning in July and running through December, qualifying families can get up to:
— $300 a month per child for children ages 0 to 5. — $250 a month per child for children ages 6 to 17.
Families will get their remaining expanded Child Tax Credit when they file their 2021 tax return.
Who qualifies?
Families will qualify for a full credit if their income is below $75,000 for single filers, $112,000 for people filing as head of household, or $150,000 for people who are married and filing jointly.
How do I get my payment?
Nearly all families should get their monthly payments automatically beginning July 15 with no further action required. If you’ve filed tax returns for 2019 or 2020, or if you signed up to receive a stimulus check from the Internal Revenue Service, you will get this tax relief automatically. You do not need to sign up or take any action.
Families who did not file a tax return for 2019 or 2020 and who did not use the IRS Non-filers tool last year to sign up for the Economic Impact Payments, should go online and use the IRS Child Tax Credit Non-filer Sign-up Tool to sign up today.
Families who got their refunds from the IRS through direct deposit will get these payments in their bank account around the 15th of every month until the end of 2021. People who don’t use direct deposit will receive their payment by mail around the same time.
Families will be able to determine their eligibility, check the status of their payments, and more at IRS.gov/childtaxcredit2021 later this month.
Watch out for scams
According to IRS.gov: “The IRS urges everyone to be on the lookout for scams related to both Advance Child Tax Credit payments and Economic Impact Payments. The IRS emphasized that the only way to get either of these benefits is by either filing a tax return with the IRS or registering online through the Non-filer Sign-up tool, exclusively on IRS.gov. Any other option is a scam.
Watch out for scams using email, phone calls, or texts related to the payments. Be careful and cautious: The IRS never sends unsolicited electronic communications asking anyone to open attachments or visit a nongovernmental website.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — June 30 is the deadline to apply for cash awards including a first prize of $20,000 in the “Hands Up Lake County, 2021” small business competition.
A total of $50,000 in cash prizes will be awarded to five local small businesses that compete in this year’s competition with prizes ranging from $4,000 to $20,000. Startups and small businesses are encouraged to apply.
This is the second year the nonprofit, 1Team 1Dream, has featured the project to support local entrepreneurs and small business owners. The goal of the nonprofit is to improve the struggling Lake County economy, one small business at a time.
The idea for the competition is the brainchild of Maryann Schmid, a local business woman who knows what it is to work hard to achieve success. Peter and Maryann Schmid own and operate the now thriving “Lodge At Blue Lakes,” in Upper Lake.
“It wasn’t always this way and it didn’t happen overnight, the place was in a sad state of disrepair when we discovered it,” said Maryann Schmid. “We had a dream — a vision and a plan to get there. It took two years of very hard physical labor and sleepless nights filled with the next day's work list before we could open for business, but we never gave up. We worked our plan, made adjustments along the way and today, we are living the dream.”
That spirit, along with a commitment to a plan for success is, in large part, what the judges will be evaluating in the competition.
“We’re also looking for the business model that takes into account the ups and downs of a sometimes fragile and unpredictable market,” said Laurie Dohring, one of last year's judges. “It sounds complicated, but it really isn’t because the businesses selected to proceed will get help.”
Preparing for the competition begins with a one-day workshop. Selected applicants participate in this training and a “mini” competition from which the finalists are selected.
Finalists will receive personalized coaching and training to prepare their “pitch” to business leaders who will judge the competition and make the final decisions.
“It’s what sets this business competition apart from others — the investment in the applicants. Win or lose, the idea is to learn the basics of creating a strong, sustainable business model,” said Dohring.
This year’s business competition is possible through the support of several donors who see the value of investing in local small businesses.
“We are thankful to our major sponsors who will present the cash awards at the final competition and gala on Dec. 12, including the city of Clearlake, The Lodge At Blue Lakes, Foods, Etc., the city of Lakeport and Lake County Tribal Health,” said co-founder Olga Steele.
"Last year we distributed $28,250 to six small businesses with prizes ranging from $15,000 to $1,000. Despite the challenge of a pandemic, our first business competition was a smashing success,” said Steele.
This year the stakes are higher with prizes of $20,000, $12,000, $8,000, $6,000 and $4,000, Steele said.
Any local startup or small business is eligible to apply, including last year's applicants, except the 2020 winners.
The online application can be found at https://1team1dream.net/. Questions can be submitted via the contact section on the site or by calling Steele at 916-849-8170.
LAKEPORT, Calif. — The Westside Community Park Committee reported it’s making progress on its future horse park.
The committee recently completed the encroachment from State Highway 175 along with the entrance into the eight-acre site where the horse park will be located.
It is on the north side of the state highway just west of the intersection with Mathews Road outside of Lakeport.
Chair Dennis Rollins said this project was a collaborative effort.
Mike Lucchetti of Lucchetti Excavating approached the Westside Community Park Committee with an offer to provide labor and equipment for this project. Rollins said the committee eagerly accepted his very generous offer.
“This community has been supportive of our business and we would like to do this to help the community,” Lucchetti said.
The city of Lakeport Public Works Department under the leadership of Public Works Director Doug Grider and Foreman Jim Kennedy, provided additional labor and equipment when needed.
Bob Peters, owner of RB Peters in Lakeport, offered to haul asphalt to the site.
Granite Construction sold the asphalt at a significant discount to further assist with the completion of the horse park entrance.
Members of the Westside Community Park Committee volunteered to provide traffic control on the day of the paving.
“Even with the donations of labor and equipment as well as the discount on materials, this project still cost nearly $15,000,” said Rollins.
He added, “The committee raised these funds from its annual Grillin’ on the Green BBQ Cook Off and other donations from a generous community.”
Rollins said the Westside Community Park Committee is currently working on a grant application to fund the design and construction of the horse park.
Public support is always needed and appreciated. Donations can be mailed to Westside Community Park Committee, 1350 Berry St., Lakeport, CA 95453.