Saturday, 04 May 2024

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Jim Robbins is retiring after spending 39 years as a fire chief. He first served as head of the fire department for Lucerne, Calif., and later as chief of Northshore Fire Protection District, which he was appointed to lead in 2006 after Lucerne, Nice, Upper Lake and Clearlake Oaks all consolidated into one district. Courtesy photo.


 

 




LUCERNE, Calif. – After 39 years as a fire chief, Jim Robbins is preparing for his retirement.


Robbins, 59, is marking his last official day on the job as Northshore Fire chief on Thursday, but he said this week that, with the final selection of his successor still a few weeks out, he'll remain on the job long enough to help get the new chief settled.


“It's not that I really want to walk away from it, it's just that I feel that it's time,” Robbins said Wednesday of his plans to retire.


He's been on the job a long time.


At the age of 20, Robbins became the chief of the Lucerne Fire Department. In 2003, he became chief of the Northshore Fire Joint Powers Agreement, and was appointed chief of the newly formed Northshore Fire Protection District in November 2006.


He oversees a department with a $2.8 million annual budget, drawing its revenues from property tax, a fire fee and money generated from ambulance services.


The district has 17 paid employees and 58 volunteers covering seven stations, three of which – Lucerne, Clearlake Oaks and Nice – are manned around the clock, seven days a week, in order to serve one of the state's largest fire districts, covering more than 350 square miles.


“I've surrounded myself with good administrative staff, so it works out real well,” he said.


No matter the size of a department, Robbins said there are always challenges. “The people that we've hired are up for the challenge and want to help people, and I'm very proud of that part of it.”


Robbins has spent most of his life in Lake County, moving here with his family when he was about 12 years old.


He credits his mother with spurring his interest in firefighting.


While they still lived in San Francisco's Sunset District, he remembered that when fire engines would go down the street, his mother would chase them to see where they were going. “So that's kinda how I got my start.”


He would find himself actively getting involved in firefighting just a few years later.


When he was 15 and living in Lucerne, he and a friend watched local firefighters prepare for a Thursday night fire drill at a local wrecking yard.


He remembered the firefighters setting up an old car that would be set on fire, and putting a dummy in the front seat that firefighters were supposed to remove after they had extinguished the fire.


After the fire chief set up the car and left, “Being kids, we decided we were going to help them out a little bit,” said Robbins, explaining that he and his friend then wired the dummy into the car.

 

 

 

 

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Jim Robbins worked his way up through the ranks, joining the fire department in Lucerne, Calif., while still a teenager. He and appointed as the agency's chief when he was 20 years old. Lucerne was merged along with several other districts into the Northshore Fire Protection District, a process that was completed in 2006, at which time he was appointed the new district's chief. Courtesy photo.
 

 

 

 


Later, they watched firefighters arrive and try to get the dummy out of the car after putting out the fire. He said the chief looked at them and, said, “So you boys want to be firemen, don't you?”


The young Robbins and his friend were invited to help roll up hose, and after being told they did a good job, they were invited to the station for the next meeting, at which time the chief said they needed to start a junior fire department.


That was in 1967, and during the next several years Robbins would work his way up through the ranks – from engineer to captain and deputy chief before receiving the chief's job at age 20.


In the years since then, he's watched the community grow, seen needs increase and the witnessed requirements for firefighters change significantly.


Today, volunteers must complete 240 hours of training annually, as much as paid personnel, as well as completing continuing education, he explained.


“The demand on them any more is really tough,” he said.


One of the most memorable incidents of his tenure was the August 1996 Fork Fire in the Mendocino National Forest.


At nearly 83,000 acres, the fire is still ranked among the largest in United States history. Robbins, who has traveled with strike teams to battle blazes around California, said he believes it was the largest fire he'd ever fought.


The cause of the fire was attributed to an unattended campfire in White Buck Canyon, at the base of Elk Mountain. Robbins said four homes and numerous outbuildings were destroyed by the fire, which he personally was on for 13 days.


Robbins said the fire was “crazy,” and recounted how it created its own wind as it raced through the wildland.


“It almost sounds like a freight train coming down a track toward you. It just rumbles as it gets closer,” he said, adding, “I didn't think I was ever gonna see my kids again after that one.”


Firefighters came from around California to help fight the Fork Fire, which Robbins remembered at one point jumped over firefighters in a “flashover.” Good safety plans, he added, helped firefighters survive it.


Robbins said the firefighters had been proud of their ability to save numerous older buildings that had been part of the Bartlett Springs Resort from the Fork Fire.


He said one of his biggest disappointments was seeing many of those same buildings destroyed by an arsonist in 2007. But Northshore Fire's efforts helped lead to the arrest and prosecution of Norman Henderson, who later was sentenced to 24 years in state prison for the serial arsons.


Time for transition


Since Robbins announced his retirement earlier this year, the Northshore Fire Protection District Board of Directors has been working to find the district's new chief.


“I think it's time for someone younger to come in and build a future for themselves and be progressive,” he said.


Robbins said he has not been involved in the hiring process, choosing to step back and allow the district to make its choice. “They've basically handled it to this point.”


He said three top candidates have been chosen and are now going through background checks. A final selection is expected within a few weeks.


Although June 30 was his planned retirement date, “I've agreed to stay on just a little longer,” said Robbins, adding that he will help with the new chief's transition in order to make it a smooth one.


Once that's completed, Robbins will start his next chapter.


“I have a lot of things that I'd like to see and do,” he said.


A retirement party is being held for Robbins on July 23 at the Clearlake Oaks Moose Lodge, located at the intersection of Highways 20 and 53. Hospitality will start at 3 p.m. with dinner at 5:30 p.m., and presentations and desserts at 6:30 p.m.


Tickets are $20 each and can be purchased from any member of Northshore Fire's personnel.


Robbins said he plans to stay in Lucerne in retirement.


His wife, Leah, is a captain/paramedic with Northshore Fire, and his mother lives on a ranch above town where he plans to help do some farming.


In addition, there are plans for fishing and, he added, “My wife's got a list of things for me to do.”


Looking back on his work with the fire department, Robbins said, “I just hope that I left it better than I found it.”


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 Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – With the July 4 holiday upon us, the California Highway Patrol (CHP) wants the three-day weekend to be a safe one for all motorists on the road.


“Celebrating our great country’s birthday with friends and family is a holiday tradition for many people,” said CHP Commissioner Joe Farrow.


“Many Californians will be taking to the roadway and we encourage motorists to celebrate safely; designate a non-drinking driver, buckle up, minimize distractions and allow yourself plenty of time to get to your destination so that you don’t feel the need for speed on the highway,” Farrow said.


The CHP will join travelers on the roadway this coming weekend. The Independence Day weekend is a Maximum Enforcement Period (MEP) for the CHP.


Officers will be on duty during the MEP, which begins at 6 p.m. Friday, July 1. and continues through 11:59 p.m. Monday, July 4.


“With many people taking to roadway this holiday weekend, motorists can rest assured our officers will be on the lookout for those in need of assistance,” said Farrow.


In addition to providing service to motorists, throughout the Independence Day MEP, CHP officers also will focus on removing impaired drivers from the roadway, discouraging speeders from exceeding the posted speed limit and encouraging all motorists to buckle up; those are three primary causes of death on the roadway.


During last year’s Independence Day MEP, 23 people were killed statewide; among the 11 vehicle occupants killed in CHP jurisdiction, three were not wearing a seat belt.


In addition, CHP officers made 1,438 arrests for driving under the influence.


“We want you to travel safely through this great state and enjoy your weekend with friends and family,” added Commissioner Farrow.


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LAKEPORT, Calif. – As the Fourth of July weekend approaches, the Lakeport Police Department is providing citizens with important information for those who wish to attend the event.


Annually, the July 4 event draws a large crowd of people to the parklands thus causing safety

concerns.


Lakeport Police Chief Brad Rasmussen said the city is expecting heavy vehicle and pedestrian traffic in on July 4, with peak flows being just before and after the fireworks show. Citizens are asked to drive with caution.


Park Street between First and Third streets and Second Street between Park and N. Main Street will be closed to vehicle traffic on July 4.


The Lakeport Police Department has set up a public information cellular telephone text alert function through Nixle to provide public safety alerts, other important information, such as lost children, safety concerns, street closures or location information for the safe and sane discharge area to members of the public who are attending the activities during the event.


In order to receive these important public information text messages, members of the public can opt-in by texting the word fireworks to 888777.


As in previous years, the city of Lakeport is allowing the sale and use of Safe and Sane fireworks within the incorporated area of Lakeport.


Any person who wishes to purchase and use Safe and Sane Fireworks shall adhere to the following dates, times and locations for discharging the fireworks.


Dates and hours of discharge


  • Friday, July 1: 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.

  • Saturday, July 2: 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.

  • Sunday, July 3: 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.

  • Monday, July 4: 9 a.m. to 11 p.m.


Designated places for discharge


All Safe and Safe fireworks are permitted on any street within the incorporated area of Lakeport from July 1t through July 4, which does not violate section 5.30.180B, which states: “It is unlawful for any person to ignite, discharge, project or otherwise fire or use any safe and sane firework, or permit the ignition, discharge or projection upon or over or onto another’s property without his/her permission or within 10 feet of any residence, dwelling or other structure used as a place of habitation by human beings.”


Discharge of Safe and Sane fireworks will be permitted in a new location north of Library Park during the July 4 event. The location will be cordoned off by barrier tape and will be in the 50 block of Fourth Street.


Discharging Safe and Sane fireworks in any other location in or near Library Park is prohibited.


Alcohol use


Alcohol will be permitted by persons in the parklands during the July 4 event. The event has been issued a “special permit” for alcohol consumption with certain restrictions which are listed below.


These restrictions are in place as a precautionary measure to protect public safety, damage to city property or private property and to protect any and all persons in attendance.


Failure to abide by these conditions may result criminal actions, the immediate suspension of the alcohol permit for the responsible person as well as seizure of their alcoholic beverages and the possible forfeiture of future alcohol permits for the responsible person at special events in the city of Lakeport.


Alcohol restrictions


The following alcohol use restrictions will be in place:


  • No kegs or other large alcohol storage/dispensing containers.

  • No glass containers.

  • No sales of alcohol will be allowed.

  • Public intoxication is prohibited.

  • Authorized hours for consumption/possession: 12 p.m. to fireworks display.


Noise restrictions


  • No amplified music outside of facility or event location.


Park rules


  • Park lands will be closed between midnight and 6 a.m.

  • Obey all posted rules and regulations.


The Lakeport Police Department will also have a command post set up at City Hall Chambers, 225 Park St., during the event for those who wish to stop by or have questions.


For more information call the Lakeport Police Department, 707-263-5491.


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MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – A project to increase safety at a south county intersection that has been the site of fatal crashes in recent years has begun.


Caltrans said Wednesday that the project will include the installation of flashing beacons at the intersection of Highway 29 and Hartmann Road near Hidden Valley Lake.


The flashing beacons are intended to warn motorists traveling along Highway 29 when vehicles are on Hartmann Road waiting to enter the highway, and when vehicles on southbound Highway 29 are waiting to turn left onto Hartmann Road, Caltrans reported.


The intersection was the site last week of a collision that killed a Clearlake woman, and a Rodeo woman died as the result of injuries she suffered in a crash there over the 2010 Memorial Day weekend, as Lake County News has reported.


Both of the women who died were in vehicles attempting to turn onto Highway 29 from Hartmann Road, based on California Highway Patrol reports.


Caltrans said traffic actuated flashing beacons have been installed at other locations in the agency's District 1 – which covers the North Coast – and have proven to be effective.


Work on this approximately $290,000 project will be performed in two stages with a brief break in between, Caltran said.


Stage one, which will take about two weeks, will consist of repairing metal beam guardrail, installing

electrical conduit, and installing the traffic sensor loops. When this stage is complete Caltrans said Pacific Gas & Electric will be notified to connect power.


After PG&E connects power, stage two will begin, Caltrans said. Stage two, which will take about two weeks, will install the actual flashing beacon system.


The agency said the project should be completed by the end of August.


Current work will be performed under a shoulder closure, and Caltrans advised motorists to drive with caution through the area and may experience minor traffic slowdowns.


Future work will require one-way traffic control, and Caltrans said motorists should anticipate 10-minute delays.


The contractor is GBA Engineering of Fullerton, Caltrans said.


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CLEARLAKE, Calif. – One of the three suspects in a shooting that killed a little boy and injured five others made his second court appearance on Tuesday, pleading not guilty to more than a dozen counts against him.


Paul William Braden, 21, of Clearlake Oaks appeared with his defense attorney, Jacob Zamora, before Judge Stephen Hedstrom in Lake County Superior Court's Clearlake division Tuesday afternoon, according to District Attorney Don Anderson.


Anderson said Braden pleaded not guilty to all of the counts against him, as well as a number of special allegations.


Braden is one of three men accused of opening fire on a family and their friends at a residence on Lakeshore Drive in Clearlake late on the night of Saturday, June 18.


He was charged last week with one count of murder for the death of 4-year-old Skyler Rapp; and five counts of attempted murder for shooting Desiree Kirby, 22, Skyler Rapp's mother, along with her 25-year-old boyfriend, Ross Sparks and his brother, Andrew Sparks, 23, as well as Ian Griffith, 19, and Joey Armijo, 15.


Braden also faces six counts of assault with a deadly weapon, two counts of mayhem and special allegations including personally using and discharging a firearm causing great bodily injury, the District Attorney's Office previously reported.


Each attempted murder charge carries a potential life sentence, and the special allegations also could carry 25-years-to-life prison terms, Chief Deputy District Attorney Richard Hinchcliff said last week.


Hinchcliff said the prosecution will not be a death penalty case because the evidence doesn't support any of the 22 required conditions for capital prosecution.


State law sets out standards that require prosecutors prove conditions that include lying in wait; gang affiliation; torture; killing of a law enforcement officer, political leader, judge or witness; and drive-by shootings, among numerous other scenarios.


Charged last week along with Braden was Kevin Ray Stone, 29, of Clearlake, who is still at large.


Acting Clearlake Police Chief Craig Clausen indicated Tuesday afternoon that he had no updates yet on the efforts to locate and arrest Stone.


Braden's arraignment came several hours after a third suspect in the case, 23-year-old Orlando Joseph Lopez, was rearrested, as Lake County News has reported.


Lopez and Braden both had been arrested on June 20, with Lopez released from the Lake County Jail late last week as investigators continued to work to build a case against him.


On Tuesday morning, Clearlake Police Det. Tom Clements picked Lopez up after he was able to assemble the needed evidence to charge him, according to Hinchcliff.


Lopez is being held in the Lake County Jail with bail set at $1,510,000. His booking records indicate he is to appear in court for arraignment on Thursday, June 30.

 

Braden's preliminary hearing has been set for Aug. 1, Anderson said.


Anderson – who indicated he will be handling the prosecution of Braden, Lopez and Stone – said it's too early to tell if all of the men will be tried together.


“We just don't know yet,” he said.


The Clearlake Police Department also is continuing it extensive work on the case, he said.


The victims who survived the shooting are continuing their own work along the road to recovery.


On Tuesday, UC Davis Medical Center spokesman Charles Casey said Kirby, the most seriously injured of the survivors, was listed in fair condition.


Ian Griffith and Andrew Sparks were discharged late last week, according to Casey.


Ross Sparks had been discharged a few days after the shooting and Armijo had been treated and released at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital, as Lake County News has reported.


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 Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

CLEARLAKE, Calif. – A man who had been arrested in connection with a fatal June 18 shooting that killed a young child but was subsequently released due to lack of evidence is back in custody again.


Orlando Joseph Lopez, 23, of Clearlake Oaks was arrested Tuesday morning, according to Chief Deputy District Attorney Richard Hinchcliff.


Hinchcliff said Clearlake Police Det. Tom Clements developed the evidence necessary to charge Lopez and at about 9 a.m. Tuesday made the arrest.


The evidence Clements put together ties Lopez to the shooting that killed 4-year-old Skyler Rapp and left five other people – including the boy's mother and her boyfriend – wounded, Hinchcliff said.


Lopez and Paul William Braden, 21, of Clearlake Oaks had both been arrested on June 20 on allegations that they had participated in the shooting, as Lake County News has reported.


Police are still seeking a third suspect, 29-year-old Kevin Ray Stone of Clearlake in the case.


Hinchcliff formally charged both Stone and Braden on June 22 with murder, attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon and numerous special allegations for shooting the little boy, his mother, Desiree Kirby, 22; her boyfriend, Ross Sparks, 25, and his brother, Andrew, 23; Ian Griffith, 19; and Joey Armijo, 15.


Lopez had been released from the Lake County Jail late last week after Hinchcliff said they didn't have the evidence to charge him.


However, Hinchcliff had said at the time that the investigation was continuing, and Tuesday's arrest was the result of those continued efforts.


Hinchcliff said he will charge Lopez with the same counts as Stone and Braden. If convicted on all of the counts, the men would spend the rest of their lives in state prison.


In the wake of the shooting, which police have confirmed claimed the largest number of victims of any shooting in the city's history, many community members discussing the case on Facebook and in article comments sections have clamored for the District Attorney's Office to seek the death penalty.


Hinchcliff said the District Attorney's Office isn't seeking the death penalty because it can't under the law.


He pointed out that death penalty cases must meet one of 22 special circumstances under Penal Code Section 190.2.


Among the special circumstances included in Penal Code Section 190.2 that allow the death penalty are if the murder was motivated by financial gain; if the suspect previously had a first- or second-degree murder conviction; conviction of multiple murders in one case; use of a bomb or other explosive device that either was hidden or mailed; the victim was a peace officer, federal law enforcement officer, firefighter, current or former prosecutor, a judge, elected official or a juror; the victim was a witness to a crime who was intentionally killed to prevent their testimony; the murder was especially heinous and cruel, or involved torture; the defendant killed the victim by means of lying in wait; the victim was killed due to race, color, religion, nationality or country of origin; the murder was committed during the commission of a number of felonies, from robbery and kidnapping to arson and sex crimes; the murder was perpetrated by discharging a firearm from a motor vehicle; and the defendant was an active participant in a street gang.


At the time of the shooting there had been speculation by community members that the suspects involved were gang members, but police and Hinchcliff have said they have not found evidence of gang involvement.


Hinchcliff said there is no firm court date for Lopez yet, although he could be in court on Wednesday for arraignment.


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 Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

ANDERSON SPRINGS, Calif. – A 3.4-magnitude earthquake was reported early Wednesday morning near Anderson Springs.


The quake occurred at 4:13 a.m., according to the US Geological Survey.


Survey records showed that the quake was centered two miles south southwest of Anderson Springs, five miles west of Middletown and six miles west of Cobb, at a depth of 1.2 miles.


The US Geological Survey received 13 shake reports from six zip codes – Hidden Valley Lake, Middletown, Healdsburg, Elk, Santa Rosa and San Francisco.


A 3.0-magnitude quake occurred three miles southwest of Anderson Springs on June 24, according to US Geological Survey records. That quake received 11 shake reports from around the North Coast and the Bay Area, but not from within Lake County.


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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County has received $6.1 million in the latest round of state transportation funding for area highway improvements.


On June 23 the California Transportation Commission (CTC) allocated $825 million in new funding to 92 highway, transit, and rail projects that will strengthen California’s economy and upgrade the state’s vast transportation system.


The allocations included nearly $9 million from Proposition 1B, a 2006 voter-approved transportation bond. To date, the state has allocated nearly $8 billion in Proposition 1B funds.


“From one end of the state to the other, transportation projects are providing jobs and improving mobility for people and businesses in California,” said Caltrans Acting Director Malcolm Dougherty.


Lake County will receive $6.15 million for a project to repave about three miles of Highways 29 and 53 in Lower Lake, Caltrans reported.


Caltrans spokesman Phil Frisbie said the project will repave Highway 53 from the junction of Highway 29 and 53 to 40th Avenue. There also will be repaving done on Highway 29 on either side of the intersection of Highways 29 and 53.


There also will be some guardrail repairs, Frisbie added.


The goal is to improve ride quality, prevent further deterioration of the road's surface, extend the roadway life and minimize costly repairs, according to the project list.


Frisbie said the paving project will extend to the south end of another, separate project to rehabilitate Highway 53 and install a traffic signal at the Olympic Drive intersection.


The list of projects also included $236,000 for a pedestrian and bicycle safety outreach program – with emphasis on areas where the state highway is the main street – in Lake, Humboldt, Mendocino and Del Norte counties.


In March Lake County received $13.3 million to repave sections of Highways 29 and 175, as Lake County News has reported.


Other notable projects around the North Coast include several in Mendocino County, including $9 million for a project that will replace the Greenwood Creek Bridge on Highway 1 near Elk with a wider bridge that will include a protected pedestrian walkway; $9.9 million to repave about 20 miles of Highway 128 from near Boonville to the Sonoma County line; $300,000 for road improvements to reduce collisions near Willits; and $3 million to remove a bypassed northern portion of Highway 101 as part of minimizing the manmade features along the south fork of the Eel River, which has received “wild and scenic” designation.


Among the largest dollar value projects approved statewide include two notable design-build projects in Los Angeles County that received $526 million in allocations: the Gerald Desmond Bridge ($470 million) and the Interstate 10/Interstate 605 Direct Connector ($56 million).


Design-build streamlines a project by overlapping design and construction to speed up construction and potentially reduce costs, Caltrans said. Design-build is currently being used in 32 other states.


Caltrans obtained design-build authority in February 2009 with the passage of Senate Bill 4 (second extraordinary session).


The legislation established a demonstration program, which allows 10 design-build projects for Caltrans and five for local transportation agencies, subject to authorization by the CTC.


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062311 California Transportation Commission Allocations

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A fire broke out behind a group of homes on Robinson Rancheria near Nice, Calif., on Monday, June 27, 2011. Photo courtesy of Northshore Fire Protection District.




NICE, Calif. – A fire that burned on Robinson Rancheria Monday afternoon threatened several homes before firefighters contained it.


The fire, on Manzanita Circle across from Acorn Drive, was reported at about 4 p.m. Monday, according to radio reports.


Reports from the scene indicated the fire was going the hill behind the group of residences just east of Robinson Rancheria's casino.


Northshore Fire Deputy Chief Pat Brown said the fire ultimately burned about seven acres and threatened four or five nearby homes, burning some fences and weeds near the residences.


Brown said Northshore Fire sent four engines, a water tender and two chiefs – including himself and Chief Jim Robbins – and Lakeport Fire responded with a unit under mutual aid.


He said Cal Fire took over the wildland portion of the fire, providing three engines, two hand crews, a helicopter and one chief.


Reports from the scene indicated that the fire was close enough to being controlled just after 4:30 p.m. that fixed wing aircraft and additional dozers from Cal Fire were canceled.


Brown said the cause of the fire is under investigation, although they have an idea what may have ignited it.


Also late Monday afternoon, the California Highway Patrol reported a fire along Highway 29 near Lower Lake. Radio reports indicated the fire was contained shortly before 5 p.m. by community members.


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 Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

 

 

 

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The fire burned a total of about seven acres on Robinson Rancheria near Nice, Calif., on Monday, June 27, 2011. Photo by Elizabeth Larson.
 

The military’s top medical officers are divided over a House-passed mandate to reorganize the health care system under a unified medical command.


The plan, in effect, would merge commands that the Army, Navy and Air Force have run with separate staffs and resources for decades.


Two of three surgeons general, for Air Force and Navy, oppose the move and hope senators will reject it when preparing their own version of the fiscal 2012 defense authorization bill, and then again when House-Senate conferees meet to negotiate away any differences between the two bills.


The plan to restructure military medicine, which the Army and Navy had embraced five years ago, assumes cost savings of $460 million a year by ending duplication of effort and staff redundancies across the services.


But Lt. Gen. Charles B. Green, Air Force surgeon general, said his service continues to oppose a unified command, in part because it disagrees the restructuring will save money.


“We believe a more effective and efficient joint medical solution can be attained without the expense of establishing a unified medical command,” Green said. “Changes to doctrine can be made within current authorities and do not require a new unified medical command.”


The Navy no longer supports medical command consolidation, at least not now. Vice Adm. Adam M. Robinson, Jr., Navy surgeon general, warned “there is currently no joint construct or doctrine to permit the seamless and safe care for our service members and their families” under a unified command.


But Lt. Gen. Eric Schoomaker, Army surgeon general and commanding general of Army Medical Command, finds “merit in considering the most effective and efficient command structures to support the strategic goals of the military health system, the services and the combatant commanders.”


Under the House bill, the unified medical command would be a major combatant command similar to U.S. Special Operations Forces Command (SOCOM), and reporting directly to the secretary of defense.


The four-star officer selected to run it would be given unprecedented authority over medical staffing, training, purchasing, operations and readiness, just as SOCOM is responsible for all aspects of combined special forces.


Medical personnel still would be trained for service-unique missions in the culture of parent services. But overall medical training, assignments, procurement and operational support would be centrally controlled.


The unified command would oversee three subordinate commands led by three-star officers. One would be responsible for all fixed military treatment facilities. A second would run all medical training and education plus research and development.


The plan is silent on functions such as logistics and information technology, allowing the department to organize those as it deems fit.


A third subordinate command, called the Defense Health Agency, would assume all functions now performed by the TRICARE Management Activity including the multibillion dollar TRICARE support contracts that support vast networks of civilian health care providers to deliver a triple health care option to family members and retirees.


The House directs the secretary of defense to present details for implementing these changes to defense committees by July 1, 2012.


In 2006, while Donald Rumsfeld was defense secretary, the department came near to recommending a similar restructuring plan to Congress. But it was vigorously opposed by the Air Force.


Military Update asked each current surgeon general his views on the unified command plan the House passed in HR 1540 (Section 711).


Green said the Air Force recognizes that service and joint medical doctrine “must be improved to assure service capabilities are fully interoperable and interdependent to bolster unity of effort. The services should continue integrating common medical platforms to reduce redundancy and lower costs.”


But a unified medical command might “not achieve the intended synergy or unity of effort,” Green said. No unified command model so far has included funds or oversight of “medical forces intrinsic to service line units.”


Because “line-funded” medical personnel represent 48 percent of Army medics, 25 percent of Navy medics but only 5 percent of Air Force medics, Green worries Air Force’s “ability to meet operational medical requirements would be disproportionately compromised” under a unified command.


Also, Greed said, a unified command “will require new systems and structure to oversee component headquarters and assigned forces. This will drive even higher costs. If a unified medical command follows the example of the current JTF CAPMED (Joint Task Force, National Capitol Region Medical), it is highly unlikely there will be cost savings.”


A unified command, he suggested, would create a “fourth” military medical service “without the discipline and historical rule sets that govern existing services” and that too will “likely drive costs much higher. Even more critical, a unified medical command may not be as responsive to the needs of service war fighters as is the current oversight by the services.”


Robinson argued the medical community “is already highly integrated” with Army, Navy and Air Force working “seamlessly to care for patients from battlefield to bedside. If we were to create a new unified command, it would require extensive study on how it would be best implemented so that we don't jeopardize our current capability or add excessive cost to the system.”


But Schoomaker, for Army, noted that “numerous” past studies have endorsed a unified medical command to improve the health of the force and to reduce redundancies. “Like all major organizational transformation efforts, however, the devil resides in the details,” he said.


“Army Medicine recognizes the merit inherent in these efforts, providing that the continuum of care remains fully integrated,” he said.


To comment, e-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., write to Military Update, P.O. Box 231111, Centreville, VA, 20120-1111 or visit: www.militaryupdate.com.


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THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN UPDATED; ROBINSON'S FIREWORKS DISPLAY HAS BEEN CANCELED, CLEARLAKE OAKS' DISPLAY WON'T BE AT WIDGEON BAY.

 

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County is home to numerous fireworks shows during the July 4 holiday, many of which dazzle the skies over Clear Lake, illuminating the water’s surface.


The following is a sampling of fireworks shows and festivals.


Saturday, July 2


City of Clearlake Independence Day festivities, Clearlake


A lively parade from Redbud Park to Austin Park, street fair, musicians, a car show, arts and crafts, food, a worm race competition (following the parade) and children’s activities complement the evening fireworks show over Clear Lake at dusk at Austin Park. Admission is free. Information: 707-994-3600 or 707-994-3070.


Sunday, July 3


Hidden Valley Lake Independence Weekend Celebration


Hidden Valley Lake community members will gather at the Big Beach, 18600 Lakeridge Circle, beginning at 10 a.m. for a sand castle building contest and casting contest. A poker run for all paddle boats, rowers and canoers at the Little Beach will be held at 11 a.m.; at 1 p.m. a boat parade for best decorated powerboat and paddle-power boat will take place. There will be a pre-fireworks celebration from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the Big Beach with a water slide, face painting, jumpy house, crafts for kids and volleyball competition. From 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. there will be live music from the California Cowboys plus Tony Neves' Steamroller Music. Other events: 5 p.m., water balloon tossing contest; 6 p.m., three-legged race; 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., barbecue; with fireworks (conditions permitting) beginning at dusk. Information: Hidden Valley Lake Association, 707-987-3138, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


Maxine Sherman Memorial fireworks show, Clearlake Oaks


For a spectacular show, the best viewing area for the Maxine Sherman Memorial Fireworks display is on the water, anchored east of Rattlesnake Island, where the fireworks twinkle overhead and reflect off the waters of Clear Lake. From the shore, Clearlake Oaks Beach on Island Drive is a great spot. Show begins at dusk. Admission is free. Information: 707-998-9563, www.clearlakeoaks.org.


Lakeport Speedway Deake Lyndall Memorial and fireworks, Lakeport


The 2011 Deake Lyndall Memorial will be held at the Lakeport Speedway, located at the Lake County Fairgrounds, 401 Martin St., Lakeport. Following a night of racing, the Lakeport Speedway will have fireworks from the infield, put on by the speedway and Robinson Rancheria Resort and Casino. Information: http://lakeportspeedway.com/.


Monday, July 4


Lakeport Independence Day festivities, Lakeport


An all-day street fair with music, arts and crafts, food, and beverages. The day features a cardboard/duct tape boat race at Library Park. The event ends with fireworks over Clear Lake at Library Park at dusk. Sponsored by the Lakeport Main Street Association and the Lake County Chamber of Commerce. Library Park, between First and Third streets. Festivities begin at 8 a.m. Admission is free. 866-525-3767, 707-263-5092, www.lakeportmainstreet.com, www.lakeportchamber.com.


For more information, call the Lake County Visitor Information Center at 800-525-3743.


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CLEARLAKE OAKS, Calif. – The Lake County Sheriff's Office is reportedly working with the Northshore Fire Protection District to investigate a fire that destroyed a mobile home at the Elem Indian Colony early last Saturday morning.


The sheriff's office called the fire “an apparent arson.”


Capt. James Bauman said that at 4:20 a.m. Saturday, June 25, Northshore Fire Protection firefighters and several sheriff's deputies were dispatched to the Elem Indian Colony on Sulphur Bank Road on a report that a mobile home was on fire and that at least one occupant was still inside.


The mobile home at 22 Pomo Drive was reportedly “fully involved” when emergency personnel arrived, Bauman said.


Upon arrival, firefighters began battling the blaze, Bauman said, while sheriff’s deputies quickly learned that all occupants had made it out of the mobile home unharmed.


Within less than 15 minutes of their arrival, firefighters had the blaze under control. However, the home was later determined to be a total loss as a result of the fire, Bauman said.


He said sheriff’s deputies at the scene learned from witnesses that several men had been seen running away from the fire as it broke out. It also was reported that the owners had been threatened the previous day that the home would be burned down.


Nathan Mark Brown, 60, had just taken delivery of the new mobile home the previous day from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Bauman said detectives with the Sheriff’s Major Crimes Unit were called out to assist with the investigation.


Bauman said that the investigation has so far revealed that Nathan Brown and his son, 40-year-old Robert Anthony Brown, were both in the mobile home when the fire started. Robert Brown told deputies he had stayed awake all night due to the threats made the previous day.


Nathan Brown told deputies that he was in one bedroom of the home when he heard a “crackling” sound outside, according to Bauman's report. When Nathan Brown went outside, he saw that one end of the mobile home was on fire so he quickly went back in and woke up his father.


The father and son ran out of the trailer and considered trying to fight the fire with an extinguisher but it was already out of control, Bauman said.


Bauman said sheriff’s detectives are currently trying to positively identify the male subjects who witnesses reported seeing running away from the fire in order to determine their involvement in what appears to be an arson.


The criminal investigation, as well as the exact cause and origin of the fire, are pending further investigation, Bauman said.

 

Northshore Fire Deputy Chief Pat Brown, who had released a report to Lake County News on the fire over the weekend, said the district had asked for the assistance of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in investigating the incident.


Brown said Northshore Fire is very concerned about increasing problems at the colony.


He told Lake County News on Monday that he's spoken with BIA officials and is awaiting an answer about his request from BIA on Tuesday.


For Northshore Fire's part, “The fire is still under investigation,” he said.


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