Wednesday, 18 September 2024

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eunicenortonobit

LAKEPORT, Calif. – Eunice Audrey (Booth) Norton passed away on Friday, April 8, 2016, at the age of 94 in Lakeport.

She was born Nov. 23, 1921, in Mill Valley, Calif., to Chester and Marguerite (Bornson) Booth.

She was predeceased by her husband, Howard Denio Norton, who she married in 1938. They shared 69 years of marriage, making their home on Third Street in Kelseyville where they raised their family.

Eunice enjoyed a long and full life. She loved her family, friends and community where she was active in many activities including the PTA, The Woman’s Club, Girl Scouts, Upper Lake TOPS and KOPS, a painting group and an organ group.

A very talented woman she could sing, play melody after melody by ear on her Clavinova, paint, knit, garden, and even decorate wedding cakes! She was Mom … she could do everything.

Many may remember her as an Avon Lady, or in her career as a clerk at the Kelseyville Post Office.

She is survived by her children, Lynn Elder of Nyack, New York, Lois Jordan (Michael) of Kelseyville, and Terry Norton of Lakeport.

Also surviving are grandchildren, Julie Havrilla (Gary), David Jordan (Lynn), Bonnie Yassky (Steven) and Taryn Dingwall (Courtney). She was blessed with eight great-grandchildren and five great-great-grandchildren. She also leaves a brother, Chet Booth (Donna), a brother-in-law, Russell Norton (Jan) and many nieces and nephews.

A memorial service will be held at a later date with inurnment at Kelseyville District Cemetery in  Kelseyville.

oct2015elymarket

KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – The May 1 Fiddlers’ Jam at the Ely Stage Stop & Country Museum welcomes the return of the Ely Stage Stop Marketplace.

This free, family friendly, fun-packed day can be enjoyed by all, young and old alike.

The marketplace, just outside the Ely barn, will feature local handcrafted goods and will run from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. As usual, musicians will jam from noon to 2 p.m. inside the barn.

Enjoy music, refreshments, and the opportunity to browse and purchase the wares of local craftsmen and artists. Food will be available for purchase on site from the Cactus Grill in Clearlake.

Items available at the marketplace will include jewelry, butcher blocks, pencil art, and bath and beauty products. There will be fantasy art, yard art, organic veggies, and honey and bee products. The Lake County Rockhounds will offer gold panning for children.

Beverages and tasty treats will be provided by the docents in the barn. Take a ride up to the house on the hay wagon where you can enjoy the newest displays and learn about antique cookware.

Donations made during the fiddling benefit both the Ely Stage Stop, helping to fund the blacksmith shop, and the Old Time Fiddlers Association, District 10, who uses it to partially fund their scholarship programs.

On Saturday, May 21, the Ely Stage Stop & Country Museum will be hosting Lake County Fire Recovery Blues Benefit No. 2 for Hope Crisis Response Network to rebuild homes lost in the Valley Fire.  Gates open at 2 pm, with blues music from local and Bay Area bands from 3 to 7 pm.

For more information visit Lake County Fire Recovery Blues Benefits on Facebook or call Spotlight On Productions at 707-278-7126.

Lake County Historical Society’s Ely Stage Stop & Country Museum is located at 9921 State Highway 281 (Soda Bay Road) in Kelseyville, near Clear Lake Riviera, just north of Hwy 29-Kit's Corner.

Current hours of operation are 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. each Saturday and Sunday. Fiddlers’ Jams occur the first Sunday of every month from noon until 2 p.m. Living History events are held on the fourth Saturday of each month, again, from noon until 2 p.m.

Come join the Lake County Historical Society and become a volunteer at Ely or its sister museum, the Gibson Museum & Cultural Center in Middletown. Applications will be available during the day. Join the fun!

Visit www.elystagestop.org or www.lakecountyhistory.org , check out the stage stop on Facebook at www.facebook.com/elystagestop or call the museum at 707-533-9990.

SACRAMENTO – California has finalized the purchase of $200 million worth of green bonds issued by the World Bank, state Treasurer John Chiang announced Thursday.

Proceeds from the sale will help the bank finance projects that meet specific criteria for low-carbon and climate-resilient growth; mitigate climate change or help people adapt to global warming.

“This is a win-win for Californians who are not only interested in safe, solid-performing investments, but want to move the needle on combating climate change,” said Chiang.

These World Bank green bonds mature on Oct. 1, 2018, and have fixed coupons that pay just over 1 percent interest. In contrast, benchmark U.S. Treasury notes with similar maturities are currently earning only 0.82 percent.

The green bonds bought by California’s Pooled Money Investment Account enjoy the highest possible AAA credit rankings from rating agencies Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s.

Concurrently, the bonds also have the highest certification for “greenness” from the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research.

The investment is part of Chiang’s commitment to leveraging the state’s financial resources to both buy and sell environmentally friendly securities, when such investments meet all other requirements of state policy and law.

“My office is excited about participating in the burgeoning green bond market, but we want to do it right,” said Chiang. “We want to raise money to combat climate change and at the same time get the best possible deal for our taxpayers.”

The treasurer recently concluded a national “listening tour” to find new ways to harness the potential of green bonds to pay for critically needed, clean-energy infrastructure in California.

Chiang’s staff also is drafting a report to identify the legal, economic, attitudinal and other barriers that have prevented the U.S. green bond market from developing as fast as those in Europe, Latin America and Asia.

The report’s findings and related issues are expected to be the focus of a conference Chiang plans to hold early next year that will bring together investors, environmentalists and other thought leaders.

The California’s Pooled Money Investment Account has purchased $1.3 billion in World Bank Group green bonds since 2009.

SACRAMENTO – State Sen. Mike McGuire has been appointed by Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León to the influential and powerful Senate Appropriations Committee.

“I was honored to be chosen by Pro Tem de León to serve on the Senate Appropriations Committee,” Senator McGuire (D-Healdsburg) said. “I look forward to the new challenges and opportunities this assignment will bring and I’ll always work hard to ensure the North Coast is at the top of the priority list.”

The seven-member Appropriations Committee decides the fate of hundreds of bills prior to making it to the Senate floor.

The committee is chaired by Senator Ricardo Lara.

Sen. McGuire also serves as chairman of the Senate Human Services Committee and the Joint Committee on Fisheries and Aquaculture.

He is a member of the Senate Transportation and Housing Committee, the Senate Energy, Utilities & Communications Committee and the Governmental Organization Committee.

COLUSA, Calif. – California State Park and Recreation Commission (Commission) will be holding a public meeting to discuss the future of Colusa-Sacramento River State Recreation Area.

The public is invited to participate and give their input at this meeting, which will be held next Friday, April 29, starting at 9 a.m. at Granzella’s Banquet Hall, 457 Seventh St. in Williams.

A tour will be provided to the commissioners on Thursday, April 28, beginning at 1 p.m. The public is also invited to participate.

The tour will begin in the group picnic area of the park. Transportation will not be provided. Participants must provide their own high-clearance vehicle transportation.

Tour participants may encounter mud, insects, heat or cold, snakes and other wildland challenges, so they should come prepared. So that everyone will be able to hear public testimony, official comments will be deferred until the April 29 meeting.

Improvements to the park will be presented to the commission through a general plan/final environmental impact report (EIR).

This plan will set the stage for investments that will bring recreational boaters and anglers back to Colusa, draw more visitors and improve the area’s economic vitality.

Providing additional recreational facilities will also give Colusa residents more options for engaging in healthy outdoor recreation. The plan also includes goals and guidelines to improve management of the park’s abundant natural resources.

“Colusa-Sacramento River State Recreation Area offers a big park experience in a small park setting,” said California State Parks’ Northern Buttes District Superintendent Eddie Guaracha. “It is a gateway to outdoor adventure all along the middle reach of the Sacramento River.”

The EIR recommends, among other things, opportunities for the following recreation and interpretive activities be expanded:

– Motorized and human-powered boating;
– Wildlife watching and nature observation;
– Trail activities such as bicycling, hiking, running and orienteering;
– Safe public access to the river, including for persons with mobility challenges;
– RV and tent camping for groups and individuals, as well as overnight lodging;
– Large and small outdoor social, interpretive and cultural events for groups and families;
– Information and facilities serving regional recreation opportunities.

The EIR is currently available for review online at www.parks.ca.gov/ColusaGP .

The general plan process revealed the public’s desire for multiple activities to be accommodated in the more developed southeast area of the park.

Additional facilities proposed in the southeast area include a new boat launching facility in partnership with the city of Colusa, and outdoor event center with interpretive/educational features.

A new RV campground is proposed outside the Sacramento River floodway. Public access to the 243-acre northern area, which was acquired in 2007, is proposed to be expanded, with dispersed parking, multiple bicycle and walking trails, a canoe/kayak launch, more fishing access points, and primitive campgrounds.

The general plan process involved the public, scientists, technical experts and land managers in documenting and understanding the park’s important natural, cultural and recreational resources, existing uses and visitor needs.

Several plan alternatives were prepared and discussed at a public workshop. Then, goals and guidelines were developed for the preferred alternative that include resource preservation and land use strategies that will best serve the public in the long term.

An analysis of the potential environmental impacts of plan implementation was conducted as required by the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), and public comment was received.

Finally, the EIR, which includes responses to comments, will be presented to the California Park and Recreation Commission for review and adoption at the April 29 meeting.

U.S. Reps. Mike Thompson (CA-5), chair of the House Gun Violence Prevention Task Force, Elizabeth Esty (D-CT), vice-chair of the Task Force, and Peter King (R-NY) on Thursday led more than 110 of their bipartisan colleagues in calling on Speaker Paul Ryan and House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi to reject legislative language – or “riders” – that would block efforts to reduce and prevent gun violence in Fiscal Year (FY) 2017 appropriations bills.

“These riders are nothing more than legislative tactics designed to circumvent an open debate on gun violence prevention in the House and sneak provisions into must-pass spending bills that undermine efforts to help keep guns out of dangerous hands,” said Thompson and Esty. “There is no justification for preventing scientific research into the causes of gun violence, or for restricting our ability to track and combat the spread of illegal guns. We ask our colleagues to bring forward clean, responsible spending bills, free from dangerous riders that handcuff law enforcement’s ability to reduce gun violence.”

In previous appropriations bills, gun-related riders have been added without open debate and have acted as roadblocks to reducing and preventing gun violence.

These riders have prevented law enforcement from requiring federally licensed firearm dealers to keep an inventory of their firearms, prevented law enforcement and academic institutions from using gun trace data to better understand the pattern of criminal gun transfers, and stifled scientific research into the causes of gun violence.

Thompson’s task force recommended that Congress should act to repeal these riders and restore funding for public safety and law enforcement initiatives aimed at reducing gun violence.

The task force urged Congress to fund law enforcement’s efforts to reduce gun violence, while supporting federal research into the causes of gun violence.

The full text of the letter is below:

Dear Speaker Ryan and Leader Pelosi:

As the House Committee on Appropriations develops each of the twelve Fiscal Year 2017 appropriations bills, we urge that you ensure the Committee’s legislation not include harmful legislative language, or “riders,” that impact the enforcement of gun laws, the operations of Federal Firearms Licensees (FFL), or research into the causes of gun violence and how to prevent it. Gun violence reduction and prevention is an important and sensitive issue. Given the renewed national focus on gun violence prevention, now is not the time to include controversial appropriations riders that negatively impact gun laws.

Instead, such changes to gun policy must be seriously and properly considered by Congress through the regular order. This must be done in an open and transparent process where a full range of options can be frankly discussed and debated by the proper committees of authorizing jurisdiction and the entire House of the Representatives. Over the past several years, various appropriations riders related to gun policy have had unintended consequences that could have been prevented had these issues been properly and more thoroughly debated in Congress.

For example, the Tiahrt and Rehberg amendments, among others, have prevented law enforcement from requiring FFLs to keep an inventory of their firearms, prevented law enforcement and academic institutions from using gun trace data to better understand the pattern of crime gun transfers, and chilled unbiased scientific research into the causes of gun violence and the means of preventing it.

As the Fiscal Year 2017 appropriations process begins through the respective subcommittees, we urge you to support the development of legislation that is free of harmful gun-related riders. Thank you for your consideration of this matter.

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – Adventist Health has entered into an agreement with Colusa Regional Medical Center in Colusa to acquire three rural health clinics.

This agreement would ensure that medical care is available to the local communities after the medical center’s imminent closure. Previously, CRMC announced it would close on April 22 due to financial struggles.

“As we work through this difficult situation in our community, we’re pleased to announce that Adventist Health will assume responsibility for our community care clinics in Arbuckle, Colusa and Williams,” said Wayne Allen, chief restructuring officer and interim chief executive officer for CRMC. “The health system will provide stability and access to health services in our region’s rural communities.”

Adventist Health operates the largest rural health network in California, with more than 15 percent of the rural health clinics in the state.

“As a faith-based organization, we are eager to share our mission of inspiring health, wholeness and hope,” said Jeff Eller, president and chief executive officer of Adventist Health’s Northern California Region.

“We have identified a sustainable solution to provide quality care to community members,” said Bob Beehler, Adventist Health’s vice president for Market Development/Mergers and Acquisitions.

Upcoming Calendar

19Sep
09.19.2024 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Clearlake City Council
19Sep
09.19.2024 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Redbud Audubon Society
21Sep
09.21.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
21Sep
09.21.2024 4:00 pm - 10:00 pm
Passion Play fundraiser
21Sep
09.21.2024 4:30 pm - 10:00 pm
Lake County Wine Auction
24Sep
09.24.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at Library Park
28Sep
09.28.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
5Oct
10.05.2024 7:00 am - 11:00 am
Sponsoring Survivorship
5Oct
10.05.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
12Oct
10.12.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile

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