Monday, 17 June 2024

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LOWER LAKE, Calif. – An exceptional Lower Lake High School student has received a scholarship to help her pursue her goal of working in the culinary arts field.

At the Konocti Unified School District Board of Trustee meeting on Wednesday, Destiny Purdum received a $1,000 check from the Caldwell Flores Winters Foundation.

The CFW Foundation Scholarship Program, now in its fifth year, focuses on students who have overcome challenges, do well in school and want to continue their education and training once high school is complete.

The district reported that Purdum has overcome considerable adversity in the pursuit of her career goals while maintaining a standard of academic excellence.

She is a leader in the high school’s culinary arts program, works a part-time job, plays in the jazz band and maintains a 3.67 grade point average while also pursuing many extracurricular activities.

Purdum is one of more than 120 students who have been selected for the award over the past five years.

Many of the scholarship recipients have gone on to success in universities, colleges or in vocational/technical programs.

Purdum plans to continue her studies of culinary arts, opening her own restaurant in the future.

When asked what her favorite menu item would be, she smiled and responded, "Cheesecake!"

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A cardinal rule of trust administration is that the intentions of the settlor(s) – the person(s) who created the trust – are to be given effect. A second cardinal rule is that a trust must be strictly administered according to its stated terms.

What happens, then, when the stated terms of an executed trust no longer give the same effect as a settlor’s intention at the time of signing the trust instrument? All is not necessarily lost.

Let us examine some possible scenarios and how the situation may be salvaged.

In the easiest situation, when the settlor is still alive and competent, the settlor can always amend his/her revocable trust to correct any inadequacy or drafting error.

What, however, if the settlor is not competent, or, if the trust is an irrevocable trust (e.g., a special needs trust) or it became irrevocable upon the settlor’s own death?

If the settlor is incapacitated – as that term is defined in the trust instrument or as adjudicated by a court – then we must see whether the trust grants someone else power to amend the trust that are sufficient to correct the error.

Perhaps the trust allows the incapacitated person’s agent acting under a durable power of attorney, or a trust protector, the authority to amend the trust.

If so, we must further examine whether the powers of amendment granted are sufficient to fix the problem.

For example, an agent who can amend the trust to change who becomes successor trustee might not also be authorized to amend the distribution of trust assets, and if the latter is the problem the agent cannot correct it.

In that case, another solution would be to amend the incapacitated settlor’s revocable trust by means of a court order using a petition for substituted judgment. Such a petition can only be brought by the conservator of the settlor’s estate. A temporary conservatorship could suffice and be terminated after the court order is obtained.

A substituted judgment proceeding, amongst other things, allows the conservator to petition the court to exercise the incapacitated settlor’s own reserved authority to amend the trust.

The conservator must first convince the court that what is proposed is justified under the circumstances and the law. Moreover, substituted judgment petitions can be contested and result in trials.

If the settlor is deceased and their living trust is now irrevocable, or if the trust was irrevocable at the outset, then a court proceeding either to reform or to modify the trust or for instructions to the trustee are all options.

Reformation and modification of a trust are completely different approaches.

In a reformation action, an aggrieved party petitions the court to rewrite the terms of a trust to correct an inaccuracy due to a mistake or fraud. Evidence outside of the trust may be allowed to show its inaccuracy. Once reformed, it is as if the trust were written as reformed from the start.

In a modification action, on the other hand, a beneficiary, trustee or settlor petitions the court to modify the trust on a go forward basis in order to address a problem involving an ambiguity or changed circumstances, i.e., circumstances that did not exist at the time the trust was established.

When the settlor is deceased and an ambiguity is involved, all beneficiaries must consent to the modification.

Lastly, instructions to the trustee may solve problems where interpretation of existing language is at issue.

It is very important to a successful outcome that the correct approach be taken. It is also important to consider the implications of any no contest clause before proceeding with any action.

Obviously, court proceedings should be undertaken with the assistance of a qualified attorney.

Dennis A. Fordham, attorney (LL.M. tax studies), is a State Bar Certified Specialist in Estate Planning, Probate and Trust Law. His office is at 55 First St., Lakeport, California. Dennis can be reached by e-mail at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or by phone at 707-263-3235. Visit his Web site at www.dennisfordhamlaw.com.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congressman Mike Thompson (CA-1) on Thursday led a bipartisan group of representatives in calling on President Obama to protect local clean energy royalties from harmful budget cuts.

The letter urges the president to not repeal the sharing of geothermal royalty payments with counties.

Because of the high burdens that geothermal production places on the counties where it is developed, counties currently share in the revenue of the federal receipts. Revenue sharing has been a target of cuts in the past.

“The geothermal energy produced in California’s counties is good for our environment, reduces our dependence on foreign oil and helps our economy by spurring green job creation,” said Thompson. “Repealing geothermal royalty payments to counties is a short sighted plan that will do nothing to reduce our deficit. Also, it is not fiscally responsible. It will kill jobs, cripple future green job growth and slow our economic recovery – all of which will only make our deficit larger. If a community invests in developing geothermal energy they deserve to get their fair share in returns.”

Last year, Lake County received $800,000 a year in geothermal royalties. The county has received among the highest reimbursement amounts nationwide thanks to The Geysers geothermal steamfield.

Revenue sharing was first started through the bipartisan Energy Policy Act of 2005. Geothermal revenue sharing accounts for less than one half of one percent of the total federal deficit. Ending this sharing would negatively impact counties.

Currently, counties use geothermal revenues to pay for governmental services, such as road maintenance, public safety and law enforcement, and conservation easements.

Many of the counties receiving revenue from geothermal receipts are small, rural counties like Lake, facing uncertain budget situations.

The loss of such revenue for these counties could result in the elimination or reduction of essential services.

"Geothermal energy brings jobs and growth to Nevada with 20 plants in operation providing clean, reliable electrical capacity to the grid and significant additional capacity under development," said Congressman Amodei. "Given the important role of the counties in the development of this domestic energy source, it's only proper that they should share in the revenue of the federal receipts."

“By generating geothermal energy, my home county of Sonoma is making an important contribution to an environmentally sustainable future,” said Congresswoman Woolsey (CA-6). “The royalties Sonoma earns from that production pay for the services our people expect and deserve from their local government, at a time when our county is facing a fiscal crunch. This very modest federal investment yields a significant return – these royalties must not be eliminated in the President’s budget.”

“In his State of the Union address, President Obama called on America to double down on our clean energy investments. I agree, and that’s why I support preserving incentives for geothermal development, which help us produce affordable American-made renewable energy and strengthen our energy independence,” Congressman Garamendi (CA-10) said. “This revenue is essential to many rural communities, especially in Northern California. Cutting geothermal royalties would be shortsighted, devastating vital public services while doing virtually nothing to address the deficit. I urge the President to maintain his commitment to clean energy by preserving geothermal royalties for local communities.”

“Geothermal development comes at a cost,” Thompson continued. “Our counties spend money on public safety, road maintenance and law enforcement in and around areas where geothermal is produced.”

The full text of the letter is below.


February 1, 2012

President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave
Washington, DC 20500

Dear President Obama,

As you draft your Fiscal Year 2013 Budget proposal, we urge you not to include a repeal of the sharing of geothermal royalty payments to counties. We understand the need to propose a fiscally prudent budget, but repealing geothermal royalty payments to counties is a short sighted method that does nearly nothing to solve our fiscal problems.

In the bipartisan Energy Policy Act of 2005, Congress decided that because of the high burdens geothermal production places on the counties where geothermal development is located, these counties should share in the revenue of the federal receipts. In turn, counties have used these revenues to pay for critical governmental services, such as road maintenance, public safety and law enforcement, and conservation easements. This revenue sharing has also made counties vested partners, and ultimately champions, in the continued development of geothermal energy — a clean, renewable, and domestic energy source that provides jobs in rural areas.

Ending the geothermal revenue sharing plan would have a significant negative impact on our districts, while the overall effect on our nation’s fiscal well-being would be miniscule — less than $7 million a year. Many of the counties that receive revenue from geothermal receipts are small, rural counties facing precarious budget situations. The loss of such revenue for these counties could result in the elimination or reduction of essential services. As such, we urge you not to include the repeal of geothermal revenue sharing with counties in your Fiscal Year 2013 Budget proposal.

We appreciate your attention to this issue and look forward to working with you as you prepare your budget.

Congressman represents California’s First Congressional District, which includes the Counties of Del Norte, Humboldt, Lake, Mendocino, Sonoma, Napa and Yolo.

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CLEARLAKE, Calif. – Due to energy upgrades completed at two city buildings and the retrofit of street and parking lights, the city of Clearlake will begin to see cost savings in its energy usage.

The city also is expected to score big energy efficiency-wise and contribute to the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions.

Using a $86,138 federal block grant from the U.S. Department of Energy under the American Recovery Assistance Act (ARRA) – and administered by the California Energy Commission – the city installed cool-roofing at its facility housing both Clearlake City Hall and the Clearlake Police Department.

Because of the energy upgrade, most of which was completed late last year, Clearlake expects to save 130,600 kilowatt hours or $16,730 in energy costs, and reduce greenhouse emissions by almost 40 tons every year.

White roofs clad in solar-reflective thermal plastic are an inexpensive way to prevent buildings from absorbing heat on hot days, and keep them cooler when the temperature rises.

About 1,000 lighting fixtures at these buildings and the Highlands Senior Center were retrofitted with bulbs that use less energy, but glow brighter.

More than 25 occupancy sensors also were installed to turn lights off when offices are not in use.

The city’s energy makeover likewise targeted the replacement of 56 traffic signal lights on Old Highway 53 and Lakeshore Drive with energy-saving and longer-lasting light emitting diodes (LEDs).

To cap the upgrade, 27 high-sodium vapor street lights at various locations were replaced with LEDs.

Federal stimulus funds to small cities and counties awarded under the ARRA's Energy Efficiency Conservation Block Grants and administered by the Energy Commission are providing more than $33 million to 201 to eligible localities throughout California.

Large cities and counties are receiving funding directly from the U.S. Department of Energy.

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LOWER LAKE, Calif. – Needing to cut millions of dollars in order to have a balanced 2012-13 fiscal year budget, the Konocti Unified School District Board on Wednesday night took up a new approach to budgeting.

District Superintendent Dr. Bill MacDougall took to the board a proposed zero based budget model, accompanied by an updated list of proposals for basic services and losses that he and district management staff compiled.

The zero based process, according to MacDougall, will allow the district to begin with the vision of services it wants for its students.

From there, he said they must determine what the minimal program requirements and positions are to achieve that vision, noting they’re planning for continued success.

He suggested that the mantra needed to be how to do business differently in the face of the deep cuts Gov. Jerry Brown is projecting.

Board members went into the Wednesday night meeting knowing that they would have to begin the process of some serious considerations for the district's future, with $2.8 million – more than 10 percent of the district's budget – needing to be cut back.

“It's a tough night for all of us, whether you're sitting out there or sitting up here,” said Board Chair Anita Gordon.

The board plans an all-day budgeting workshop on Saturday, Feb. 11, but Wednesday was a chance for the management team to present its proposals to the trustees and get their initial input.

MacDougall said the document is still a draft.

He noted that in the first three years of his four-year tenure as superintendent, the district sustained $3.6 million in budget cuts. Now, in addition, it's looking at another $2.8 million.

“We want your input. It's crucial. As a community we can make this work,” he told the board and staff.

Later in the evening, as the zero based model came up for discussion, MacDougall compared the district's budget to the board game “Jenga,” in which building blocks are pulled out one at a time until the structure finally collapses.

“We have been pulling blocks out of the foundation of the Konocti Unified School District for over four years,” he said.

With $2.8 million needing to be pulled out of the district budget, “at that point the district crumbles,” he said, noting that the district is the largest organization of its kind in the county and must be fiscally responsible.

Rather than taking the approach of cutting, MacDougall proposed starting with zero and building upward. “We rebuild from a base, and that base is the bare, bare, bare minimum of operations.”

In the past four years the district has made many wise moves, including preparing for midyear cuts when other districts didn't, MacDougall said.

While the governor is proposing to put on the ballot later this year a bill to give funds to education and other state agencies, MacDougall warned it won’t be a panacea.

He said the district has to be prepared, otherwise it will be devastated. To help staff prepare, MacDougall said he will visit the district’s schools in the days ahead to discuss the budget with staff.

Understanding the new model

Among the recommended actions, the district will go from 181 days down to 177, two above the state minimum. MacDougall said it will have staff development days, which will allow them to pay staff. He said staff has made many sacrifices, and called the plan “a win-win.”

Board member Mary Silva was trying to keep track of how the various proposals would save the district money, but MacDougall said he didn't want to talk about what they were cutting, but what they were keeping.

“I have to see where it all comes from,” said Silva.

MacDougall said he wanted to discuss how to build up from zero.

Gordon said the zero based process has been described to her using a pizza comparison: the district is starting out with a thin crust pizza with sauce and cheese, and it has to decide later on the toppings.

Staff went through the proposals with the board, going over everything from federal mandates for special education services in transportation to needs for appropriate numbers of licensed vocational nurses, food services and the importance of keeping the technology director position, which helps guide the district's technology policies.

As the night wore on, MacDougall said the board was doing well with the new budget concept, noting it was a little uncomfortable at first.

“It's just a new concept,” said Silva, adding that in the 14 years she's been on the board she's never budgeted that way.

MacDougall said the board needs to be really comfortable with the method by the time the Feb. 11 budget workshop arrives.

If there was a bright spot it was that the revised document presented Wednesday was not as dire as originally proposed.

“I really had to gulp over the original one and I think this is a really good compromise,” said Gordon.

At one point, while discussing the bare minimums in food service, Board member Hank Montgomery said they needed to focus on what was needed to keep the doors open, pointing out that what they were doing had nothing to do with peoples' worth, otherwise they would have had a very different discussion.

The Wednesday evening discussion had focused mostly on the management team's proposals to the board. The next steps will be for the discussion to be opened up to everyone, MacDougall said.

“We're preparing for the worst. We will hope for the best,” he said.

Montgomery thanked the management team for its efforts.

“I think you've provided us with a thoughtful approach to a horrible situation,” he said.

He added that “it's always been kids first,” and the proposals reflected that, showing what the district values in the face of what he called “a tragic situation.”

Gordon added that the hardest thing for the board members is knowing that they didn't cause the problem.

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





020112 KUSD Zero Based Model - Staff Recommendations

UPPER LAKE, Calif. – A two-vehicle crash resulted in minor injuries and caused a minor blockage on Highway 20 Thursday evening.

The collision, involving a sedan and a pickup, occurred shortly before 6:30 p.m. on West Highway 20 near Old Highway 20 not far from the Lake and Mendocino County line, according to the California Highway Patrol.

Reports from the scene said the pickup was on its side following the crash.

Cal Fire and CHP units from Mendocino County and Northshore Fire from Lake County responded to the crash, where both eastbound lanes of Highway 20 were reported to be blocked.

Firefighters called for extrication tools due to one person being trapped in a vehicle.

Radio reports indicated there were two patients, both with minor injuries. One later was transported to Sutter Lakeside Hospital in Lakeport.

The CHP reported that advance warning was needed to warn drivers approaching the scene. Flares were reportedly placed at the scene.

Fire Chief Jay Beristianos terminated the incident at 7:46 p.m., according to scanner traffic.

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Europe’s Rosetta spacecraft is en route to intercept a comet – and to make history.

In 2014, Rosetta will enter orbit around comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and land a probe on it, two firsts.

Rosetta’s goal is to learn the primordial story a comet tells as it gloriously falls to pieces.

Comets are primitive leftovers from our solar system's 'construction' about 4.5 billion years ago.

Because they spend much of their time in the deep freeze of the outer solar system, comets are well preserved – a gold mine for astronomers who want to know what conditions were like back “in the beginning.”

As their elongated orbits swing them closer to the sun, comets transform into the most breathtaking bodies in the night sky.

A European Space Agency mission launched in 2004 with U.S. instruments on board, Rosetta will have a front-row seat for the metamorphosis.

What we know of comets so far comes from a handful of flyby missions.

"In some ways, a flyby is just a tantalizing glimpse of a comet at one stage in its evolution," said Claudia Alexander, project scientist for the U.S. Rosetta Project at JPL. "Rosetta is different. It will orbit 67P for 17 months. We'll see this comet evolve right before our eyes as we accompany it toward the sun and back out again."

Fierce solar heat will have a profound effect on Rosetta’s target. "We'll watch the comet start as just a little nugget in space and then become something poetic and beautiful, trailing a vast tail."

At the moment, Rosetta is "resting up" for the challenges ahead. It's hibernating, engaged in its high-speed chase while fast asleep.

Reveille is on or around New Year's Day 2014, when the spacecraft begins a months-long program of self-checkups.

If all goes well, in August of the same year, Rosetta will enter orbit around 67P's nucleus and begin scanning its surface for a landing site.

Once a site is chosen, the spacecraft will descend as low as 1 kilometer to deploy the lander.

The lander’s name is “Philae” after an island in the Nile, the site of an obelisk that helped decipher – you guessed it – the Rosetta Stone.

Touchdown is scheduled for November 2014, when Philae will make the first ever controlled landing on a comet's nucleus.

"When we land, the comet could already be active!" said Alexander.

Because a comet has little gravity, the lander will anchor itself with harpoons. “The feet may drill into something crunchy like permafrost, or maybe into something rock solid,” she speculated.

Once it is fastened, the lander will commence an unprecedented first-hand study of a comet’s nucleus.

Among other things, it will gather samples for examination by automatic onboard microscopes and take panoramic images of the comet’s terrain from ground level.

Meanwhile, orbiting overhead, the Rosetta spacecraft will be busy, too.

Onboard sensors will map the comet’s surface and magnetic field, monitor the comet’s erupting jets and geysers, measure outflow rates, and much more.

Together, the orbiter and lander will build up the first 3D picture of the layers and pockets under the surface of a comet.

The results should tell quite a story indeed.

Dauna Coulter works for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

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Ten recruits will graduate from the Lakeport Fire District Joint Volunteer Firefighter Academy on Friday, February 3, 2012. Photo courtesy of Andrew Bergem and Becky Hirscher.

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lakeport Fire District Joint Volunteer Firefighter Academy will honor 10 graduates at a Friday graduation ceremony.

The 10 recruits – five from Lakeport Fire, four from Northshore Fire and one from Kelseyville – completed their academy training last Sunday, according to Andrew Bergem, the academy’s coordinator and a firefighter/EMT for the Lakeport Fire Protection District.

“We made the academy very difficult and demanding of recruits,” said Bergem. “We wanted them to understand and be able to apply everything we expected.”

Graduating volunteers are Josh Armstrong, Kelseyville Fire; Beau Bastian, Lakeport Fire; Tom Beall, Lakeport Fire; Nick Elam, Northshore Fire; Gregory Fricker, Lakeport Fire; Shavona Graham, Northshore Fire; Robert Hopkins, Northshore Fire; Jordan Mills, Lakeport Fire; Miles Monte, Northshore Fire; Sean Thomas, Lakeport Fire.

At the Friday ceremony they will receive certificates of completion. Additional awards for top performance also will be given.

Bergem said the academy was designed to train new volunteer candidates to the firefighter level so they could respond and operate with a basic knowledge and safety on emergency response calls.

He said the academy physically challenged the recruits, requiring them to participate in morning physical fitness exercises that pushed them further mentally and physically than many had ever experienced before – much as they would be challenged on a fire scene.

Recruits had 10 hour days of physically and mentally intense training on the drill ground where they learned everything from building construction to how to throw ladders and apply streams to compartmentalized fires, Bergem said.

The recruits also learned how to operate on a company level, meaning on a fire engine or truck, and a a team member, working together to accomplish an objective, he said.

In addition, the academy included station cleaning duties, academic requirements, hands-on drill ground exercises and core values and their importance in the fire service.

Bergem said he is very proud of all of the recruits.

“We held them to a high standard and each one stepped it up to impress me each and every day,” he said.

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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Lake County Gang Task Force made seven arrests during a countywide gang sweep conducted late last month.

The Lake County Gang Task Force operation took place on Monday, Jan. 23, according to Sgt. Steve Brooks of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.

Brooks said the purpose of the sweep was to conduct parole and probation searches.

Arrested were Justin Thomas Cordero, 27, of Clearlake, probation violation; Aaron Lee Pifer, 22, of Nice, probation violation; Brandy Nichole Lopez, 22, of Lucerne, under the influence of a controlled substance; Shawn Patrick Stallings, 38, of Lakeport, parole violation; Curtis Frank Anderson III, 39, of Lucerne, probation violation; Rickey Lee Floyd Jr., 27, of Clearlake, under the influence of a controlled substance; and 25-year0old Nicholas Stephen Jarvis of Kelseyville, who had a misdemeanor arrest warrant.

The task force is comprised of personnel from the Lake County Sheriff’s Office, Lakeport Police Department, Clearlake Police Department, California Highway Patrol and the Lake County Probation Department, Brooks said.

During the Jan. 23 sweep, the task force was divided into two teams. Brooks said one team worked in the city of Clearlake and the other team worked in the North end of the county.

He said they conducted 25 probation and parole searches and five warrant services, and noted the task force considered the operation to have been very successful.

Brooks said the task force’s continuing proactive enforcement efforts are designed to send a clear message to criminals, gang members and drug dealers that Lake County will not tolerate their illicit endeavors.

Anyone with information that can assist the Lake County Sheriff’s Gang Task Force or Narcotics Task Force with this effort is encouraged to call the anonymous tip line at 707-263-3663.

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MENDOCINO COUNTY, Calif. – The Department of Fish and Game (DFG) will begin planting rainbow trout in Lake Mendocino for the first time this February.

Approximately 15,000 pounds of trout will be put into the lake throughout the winter and early spring, giving anglers an opportunity to enjoy one of the state’s most popular activities.

“There are very few trout fishing opportunities in Mendocino County,” said DFG Environmental Scientist Scott Harris. “We are pleased that we can add Lake Mendocino to the annual allotment list as a winter trout fishery.”

This is the first time that Lake Mendocino has been stocked by DFG. Historically, only the Mill Creek ponds east of Talmage have been stocked during winter and early winter months in Mendocino County.

The triploids will be put in the lake several times during the winter and early spring, the agency said.

To ensure there is a constant supply of fish in the upper East Branch Russian River area, fish will be planted in the East Branch Russian River in Potter Valley from late April to October.

The planted fish are between a half and three-quarter pounds each and are raised at the Darrah Springs Hatchery in Paynes Creek.

Other popular fish species inhabiting the lake include large and smallmouth bass, striped bass, channel catfish and black crappie.

DFG sells approximately 1 million fishing licenses a year. Anyone over the age of 16 must have a valid fishing license in their possession while fishing.

To buy a California fishing license, visit www.dfg.ca.gov/licensing/ols/.

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CLEARLAKE, Calif. – A Thursday night fire in Clearlake burned a trailer and nearby vegetation.

The fire was reported just after 11:30 p.m. on Third Avenue near Wilkinson Avenue, according to radio reports.

A caller from Third Avenue had reported seeing flames and a lot of smoke near two structures.

A short time later, a second caller told dispatchers that abandoned trailers and brush were on fire.

Lake County Fire Protection District firefighters initially had difficulty accessing the scene, but when they arrived they reported finding a single structure that already was well involved, as well as a small amount of wildland with a slow rate of spread, radio reports indicated.

The fire was reported contained just before midnight.

A battalion chief on scene reported that the damaged structure was an abandoned singlewide mobile home.

Also on Thursday evening, a brush fire near a residence was reported on Highway 29 near Twin Pine Casino in Middletown just before 5 p.m. No further details were immediately available.

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The Legislature has passed a bill to restore school transportation funding, and the North Coast’s legislators are urging Gov. Jerry Brown to sign it.

On Thursday morning SB 81 passed the Assembly, moving on to be heard and passed in both the Senate Budget and Fiscal Review Committee before the full Senate passed it 26-8.

SB 81 seeks to undo the trigger cut made by Gov. Jerry Brown which eliminates funding for the Home-to-School Transportation Program.

The bill would replace the $248 million cut to the transportation program, which disproportionately impacts rural and low income students, with a much smaller, more equitable reduction which impacts all school districts in California.

The midyear cuts amounted to a loss of $875,000 in transportation funding for Lake County schools, according to the Lake County Office of Education.

Both Sen. Noreen Evans and Assemblyman Wes Chesbro, Lake County’s state legislators, are urging the governor to sign the bill.

Following the vote on the bill, Chesbro requested that the bill be fast-tracked in order for it to get to the governor as soon as possible.

“I am grateful that many of my colleagues joined me in getting SB 81 passed so swiftly,” Chesbro said. “Quick passage of this bill is especially important because of the impacts on children and their educational opportunities. Many school districts in my area are considering laying off personnel and some have already sent out pink slips.”

“Children can’t learn if they can’t get to school,” said Evans. “SB 81 was the result of both houses and both sides of the aisle coming together to find a solution that will get kids to school.”

“Today, thousands of parents and students are relieved to hear our leaders agree we must keep our school buses rolling,” said Allan Clark, president of the California School Employees Association. “School buses are by far the safest way to get kids to school, so we hope the governor will quickly sign this bill.”

SB 81 was introduced by the Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, of which Evans is a member.

Home to School Transportation is particularly important to rural schools on the North Coast. Cuts in transportation funding can cause a double hit on school districts’ budgets. Without SB 81, school districts would lose large chunks of transportation funding and then lose out on ADA funding due to students inability to get to school.

“This is the survival of my community," Chesbro added. “The future of these communities depends on educating children and getting them to school.”

SB 81 is headed to the governor for his consideration and will go into effect immediately if it is signed. Brown has reportedly indicated his support for the legislation.

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