LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County Animal Care and Control has five kittens ready to be adopted into new homes this week.
The following cats at the shelter have been cleared for adoption.
Call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278 or visit the shelter online at http://www.co.lake.ca.us/Government/Directory/Animal_Care_And_Control.htm for information on visiting or adopting.
Male orange tabby kitten
This male orange tabby kitten has a short coat and gold eyes.
He is in cat room kennel No. 1b, ID No. 14159.
Male brown tabby kitten
This male brown tabby kitten has a short coat and gold eyes.
He is in cat room kennel No. 1c, ID No. 14160.
Female domestic short hair
This female domestic short hair kitten has a black coat and gold eyes.
She is in cat room kennel No. 1f, ID No. 14163.
Male domestic short hair kitten
This male domestic short hair kitten has a gray and white coat and green eyes.
He is in cat room kennel No. 108, ID No. 14169.
‘Coconut’
“Coconut” is a male domestic medium hair kitten with a black coat.
He is in cat room kennel No. 120, ID No. 14175.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County Animal Care and Control has a bunch of big dogs waiting for their new homes.
Dogs available for adoption this week include mixes of husky, Labrador Retriever, pit bull, heeler and Shar Pei.
Dogs that are adopted from Lake County Animal Care and Control are either neutered or spayed, microchipped and, if old enough, given a rabies shot and county license before being released to their new owner. License fees do not apply to residents of the cities of Lakeport or Clearlake.
The following dogs at the Lake County Animal Care and Control shelter have been cleared for adoption (additional dogs on the animal control Web site not listed are still “on hold”).
This male husky has a medium-length black and white coat and blue eyes.
He’s in kennel No. 22, ID No. 14194.
Female pit bull terrier
This young female pit bull terrier has a short brown coat.
She is in kennel No. 25, ID No. 14181.
Male pit bull terrier
This male pit bull terrier has a short gray and brindle coat.
He is in kennel No. 26, ID No. 14138.
Male pit bull terrier
This young male pit bull terrier has a short blue and white coat.
He is in kennel No. 28, ID No. 14198.
Male heeler-Labrador Retriever
This male heeler-Labrador Retriever mix has a short black and white coat.
He is in kennel No. 29, ID No. 14178.
Male pit bull-Shar Pei
This male pit bull-Shar Pei has a short brown coat.
He is in kennel No. 30, ID No. 14177.
‘Hugo’
“Hugo” is a male pit bull terrier with a medium-length black and white coat.
He has been neutered.
He’s in kennel No. 34, ID No. 14174.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
Human-produced noise and light pollution are troublesome to our avian neighbors, according to new research from a team at California Polytechnic State University, published Nov. 11 in Nature.
Using NASA satellite data, the researchers got a bird’s-eye view of how noise and light negatively affected bird reproduction in North America. The team also discovered that these factors might interact with or even mask birds’ responses to the effects of climate change.
Bird populations have declined by about 30 percent in the last few decades. Scientists and land managers seeking to understand what caused the decline and reverse the trend had largely overlooked the effects of noise and light pollution, until recent studies suggested that these stressors could harm certain types of birds.
Prior to the launch of the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) instrument aboard the joint NASA-National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership satellite in 2011, high-resolution light pollution data didn’t exist on such a large scale. This new study has produced a continent-wide picture utilizing VIIRS data.
“Our study provides comprehensive evidence that noise and light can profoundly alter reproduction of birds, even when accounting for other aspects of human activities,” said Clint Francis, a biologist at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, California, one of the lead authors on the study.
The research team looked at a vast collection of data sets – including those collected by citizen scientists through the NestWatch Program – to assess how light and noise affected the reproductive success of 58,506 nests from 142 bird species across North America.
They considered several factors for each nest, including the time of year when breeding occurred and whether at least one chick fledged – or flew – from the nest.
Birds’ reproduction coincides with peak food availability to feed their young, as daylight cues signal to breed around the same time each year.
The researchers found that light pollution causes birds to begin nesting as much as a month earlier than normal in open environments, such as grasslands or wetlands, and 18 days earlier in forested environments.
The consequence could be a mismatch in timing – for example, hungry chicks may hatch before their food is readily available. If that happens, these early season nests may be less successful at fledging at least one chick, but the situation is complicated by climate change.
As the planet warms, birds’ food is available earlier due to warmer weather. Birds that maintain their historical breeding times because their internal clocks are set to changes in daylength may have fewer chicks survive because the food source they rely on already came and went.
“We discovered that the birds that advanced the timing of their reproduction in response to increased light pollution actually have better reproductive success,” Francis said. “A likely interpretation of this response is that light pollution actually allows these birds to ‘catch up’ to the shift towards earlier availability of food due to climate change.”
These findings suggest two conclusions about birds’ responses to climate change. First, at least temporarily, birds in lit conditions may be tracking climate change better than those in dark areas.
Second, when scientists thought birds were adjusting their reproductive timing to climate change, birds may have actually been instead responding to light cues since many studies were done in areas exposed to some light pollution.
When considering noise pollution, results showed that birds that live in forested environments tend to be more sensitive to noise than birds in open environments.
Researchers delved into greater detail in 27 different bird species, looking for physical traits that could explain the variations in species’ responses to light and noise. A bird’s ability to see in low light and the pitch of its call were related to species’ responses to light and noise pollution.
The more light a bird’s eye is capable of taking in, the more that species moved its breeding time earlier in the year in response to light pollution, and the more that species benefited from light pollution with improved nest success.
Noise pollution delayed nesting for birds’ whose songs are at a lower frequency and thus more difficult to hear through low-frequency human noise. Mating decisions are made based on the male’s song, and in some cases, females need to hear the male’s song to become physically ready to breed.
These trait and environment-specific results have strong implications for managing wild lands. Developers and land managers could use this study to understand how their plans are likely to affect birds. For example, Francis says, “Is it a forest bird? If so, it is likely that it is more sensitive to light and noise.”
The study is the first step toward a larger goal of developing a sensitivity index for all North American birds. The index would allow managers and conservationists to cross-reference multiple physical traits for one species to assess how factors such as light and noise pollution would affect each species.
The biopharmaceutical company AstraZeneca has released data on what is now the third promising vaccine candidate against COVID-19 – and it has several advantages over those of its competitors, Pfizer and Moderna.
Last Monday, AstraZeneca released interim analysis of its phase 3 trial data of 23,000 volunteers from the U.K. and Brazil. These results show that the test vaccine is between 70% and 90% effective in stopping COVID-19, depending on the vaccine doses administered. Although less effective than the reported results from the Pfizer or Moderna COVID-19 vaccine candidates, this vaccine is still more effective than annual influenza vaccines that reduce the risk of flu by between 40% and 60%. Notably none of the vaccinated participants needed hospitalizations or reported severe disease.
Like most vaccine experts, I am intrigued by large differences in effectiveness between two tested dosages of AstraZeneca’s vaccine. Until March, I was developing vaccine candidates against Zika and dengue. Now I am coordinating a large crowd-sourced international effort to better understand the scope and severity of COVID-19 in cancer patients. The COVID-19 vaccine trials generally exclude most people with a history of cancer, so I am eagerly awaiting vaccine efficacy data for this risk group when these vaccines become widely available.
Intriguing dose response
AstraZeneca’s vaccine was originally planned to be given in two full doses, four weeks apart, as injections in the upper arm. A third of the volunteers were injected with a dummy saline placebo.
One of the few details that AstraZeneca released is that of 131 cases of COVID-19, only 30 cases were detected among 11,636 who were given the vaccine; 101 cases occurred among the volunteers who got the placebo. That suggests that the vaccine is 70% effective overall.
However, an error in the early stages of the trial meant that some participants received only a half-dose in the first round. In the group of 2,741 volunteers who received a lower dose of the vaccine candidate followed a month later by a full booster dose, the efficacy was 90%, according to AstraZeneca. The efficacy was only 62% among the 8,895 volunteers who received both full doses.
It is not clear why the half-dose plus the full dose sequence of the vaccine performs better than two full doses. One explanation could be that since the vaccine is based on a common, although nonhuman, cold virus, the immune system probably attacks and destroys it when the first dose is too large.
It is also possible that progressively increasing the dose more closely mimics a natural coronavirus infection. Beginning with a lower first dose might be a better way of kicking the immune system into action; then a stronger, more effective immune response occurs after the second full booster dose. Despite enormous progress in human immunology, scientists still don’t understand the best strategies for inducing protective immunity.
These results are based on the evaluation of about one-third of volunteers who are expected to participate in this trial, which is ongoing in other parts of the world and will enroll up to 60,000 people.
AstraZeneca will now seek approval from the FDA to also evaluate the half-dose protocol in the ongoing U.S. trial. The current trial involves 30,000 participants and is evaluating only the two full-dose regimen. AstraZeneca’s trials in the U.S. were halted temporarily in early September after a study participant in the U.K. fell ill, but resumed in the U.K., Brazil, South Africa and Japan.
A modified chimpanzee cold virus
The Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine is another example of a new strategy being used to rapidly develop vaccines against the coronavirus that has already infected over 58 million people worldwide.
A vaccine works as a primer to train the immune system against a pathogen.
Conventional vaccines are made by weakened viruses or by purifying their disease-causing protein, such as the spike protein, which decorates the surface of a coronavirus. But these methods can take decades to develop new vaccines. Coinvented by the University of Oxford and its spinout company, Vaccitech, this vaccine uses different molecular tools to provide a preview of the SARS-CoV-2 virus to the human body.
The original adenovirus causes common cold in chimpanzees and it rarely, if ever, infects humans. The virus is further modified to ensure that this chimp virus cannot grow in people. The AstraZeneca vaccine uses the modified virus as a vehicle to deliver the COVID-19-causing spike or S-protein of the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
Under the agreement with the University of Oxford, AstraZeneca is responsible for development, worldwide manufacturing and distribution of the vaccine.
This isn’t the first time that University of Oxford scientists have tried a vaccine using this harmless virus. Previously, it testedthe concept against a closely related coronavirus that causes Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) in animal studies. So this time, soon after the sequence of the novel SARS-CoV-2 became available, the Oxford scientists retooled the chimp virus for a vaccine that induced robust immune response against SARS-CoV-2 in mice and rhesus macaques.
Not-so-frigid storage requirement
Despite a somewhat later arrival, with less than the effectiveness claimed by its competitors, AstraZeneca’s vaccine might be favored because it can be stored, transported and handled at standard refrigerated conditions of between 36 and 46 degrees Fahrenheit for at least six months.
Another important advantage of the AstraZeneca vaccine, which is being tested in collaboration with a larger number of global sites, is that it should cost less because of AstraZeneca’s commitment to COVAX, a global initiative that aims to distribute low-cost vaccines to low- and middle-income countries. Pfizer and Moderna have not joined the COVAX initiative, but AstraZeneca has agreed to make the vaccine on a not-for-profit basis for the duration of the pandemic.
Wait and watch
However, like all other candidate vaccines for COVID-19, AstraZeneca’s vaccine is also lacking in key details such as the breakdown in infections, the durability, or the efficacy in the different age groups of trial participants.
For all the vaccine candidates, we have only preliminary data from a small number of infections, and none of the groups developing the COVID-19 vaccine candidates has so far published complete data. So it is difficult to fully assess the differences between them.
We will have to wait for more follow-up and longer-term data to evaluate the effectiveness of all the COVID-19 vaccines in finally getting the COVID-19 pandemic under control.
The hungriest of black holes are thought to gobble up so much surrounding material they put an end to the life of their host galaxy.
This feasting process is so intense that it creates a highly energetic object called a quasar – one of the brightest objects in the universe – as the spinning matter is sucked into the black hole’s belly.
Now, researchers have found a galaxy that is surviving the black hole’s ravenous forces by continuing to birth new stars – about 100 Sun-sized stars a year.
The discovery from NASA’s telescope on an airplane, the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy, can help explain how massive galaxies came to be, even though the universe today is dominated by galaxies that no longer form stars. The results are published in the Astrophysical Journal.
“This shows us that the growth of active black holes doesn’t stop star birth instantaneously, which goes against all the current scientific predictions,” said Allison Kirkpatrick, assistant professor at the University of Kansas in Lawrence Kansas and co-author on the study. “It’s causing us to re-think our theories on how galaxies evolve.”
SOFIA, a joint project of NASA and the German Aerospace Center, DLR, studied an extremely distant galaxy, located more than 5.25 billion light years away called CQ4479. At its core is a special type of quasar that was recently discovered by Kirkpatrick called a “cold quasar.”
In this kind of quasar, the active black hole is still feasting on material from its host galaxy, but the quasar’s intense energy has not ravaged all of the cold gas, so stars can keep forming and the galaxy lives on.
This is the first time researchers have a detailed look at a cold quasar, directly measuring the black hole’s growth, star birth rate, and how much cold gas remains to fuel the galaxy.
“We were surprised to see another oddball galaxy that defies current theories,” said Kevin Cooke, postdoctoral researcher at the University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas, and lead author of this study. “If this tandem growth continues both the black hole and the stars surrounding it would triple in mass before the galaxy reaches the end of its life.”
As one of the brightest and most distant objects in the universe, quasars, or “quasi-stellar radio sources,” are notoriously difficult to observe because they often outshine everything around them. They form when an especially active black hole consumes huge amounts of material from its surrounding galaxy, creating strong gravitational forces.
As more and more material spins faster and faster toward the center of the black hole, the material heats up and glows brightly. A quasar produces so much energy that it often outshines everything around it, blinding attempts to observe its host galaxy.
Current theories predict that this energy heats up or expels the cold gas needed to create stars, stopping star birth and driving a lethal blow to a galaxy’s growth. But SOFIA reveals there is a relatively short period when the galaxy’s star birth can continue while the black hole’s feast goes on powering the quasar’s powerful forces.
Rather than directly observing the newborn stars, SOFIA used its 9-foot telescope to detect the infrared light radiating from the dust heated by the process of star formation.
Using data collected by SOFIA's High-resolution Airborne Wideband Camera-Plus, or HAWC+ instrument, scientists were able to estimate the amount of star formation over the past 100 million years.
“SOFIA lets us see into this brief window of time where the two processes can co-exist,” said Cooke. “It’s the only telescope capable of studying star birth in this galaxy without being overwhelmed by the intensely luminous quasar.”
The short window of joint black hole and star growth represents an early phase in the death of a galaxy, wherein the galaxy has not yet succumbed to the devastating effects of the quasar.
Continued research with SOFIA is needed to learn if many other galaxies go through a similar stage with joint black hole and star growth before ultimately reaching the end of life.
Future observations with the James Webb Space Telescope, which is scheduled to launch in 2021, could uncover how quasars affect the overall shape of their host galaxies.
SOFIA is a joint project of NASA and the German Aerospace Center. NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley manages the SOFIA program, science, and mission operations in cooperation with the Universities Space Research Association, headquartered in Columbia, Maryland, and the German SOFIA Institute at the University of Stuttgart.
The aircraft is maintained and operated by NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center Building 703, in Palmdale, California. The HAWC+ instrument was developed and delivered to NASA by a multi-institution team led by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Peter C. Mancall, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
The 400th anniversary of the Pilgrims’ voyage to Plymouth will be celebrated on both sides of the Atlantic with a “remembrance ceremony” with state and local officials and a museum exhibit in Plymouth, England. An autonomous marine research ship named “The Mayflower” has been equipped with an AI navigating system that will allow the ship to trace the course of the original journey without any humans on board.
Native Americans had met Europeans in scores of places before 1620, so yet another encounter was hardly unique. Relative to other settlements, the colony attracted few migrants. And it lasted only 70 years.
So why does it have such a prominent place in the story of America? And why, until recently, did the more troubling aspects to Plymouth and its founding document, the Mayflower Compact, go ignored?
Prophets and profits
The establishment of Plymouth did not occur in a vacuum.
The Pilgrims’ decision to go to North America – and their deep attachment to their faith – was an outcome of the intense religious conflict roiling Europe after the Protestant Reformation. Shortly before the travelers’ arrival, the Wampanoag residents of Patuxet – the area in and around modern day Plymouth – had suffered a devastating, three-year epidemic, possibly caused by leptospirosis, a bacterial disease that can lead to meningitis, respiratory distress and liver failure. It was during these two crises that the histories of western Europe and Indigenous North America collided on the shores of Massachusetts Bay.
Despite a number of advantages, including less competition for local resources because of the epidemic, Plymouth attracted far fewer English migrants than Virginia, which was settled in 1607, and Massachusetts, which was established in 1630.
The Pilgrims, as they told their story traveled so they could practice their religion free from persecution. But other English joined them, including some migrants seeking profits instead of heeding prophets. Unfortunately for those hoping to earn a quick buck, the colony never became an economic dynamo.
A shaky compact
Plymouth nonetheless went on to attain a prominent place in the history of America, primarily due to two phenomena: It was the alleged site of the first Thanksgiving, and its founders drafted the Mayflower Compact, a 200-word document written and signed by 41 men on the ship.
Generations of American students have learned that the Compact was a stepping stone towards self-government, the defining feature of American constitutional democracy.
But did Plymouth really inspire democracy? After all, self-governing communities existed across Indigenous New England long before European migrants arrived. And a year earlier, in 1619, English colonists in Virginia had created the House of Burgesses to advance self-rule in North America for subjects of King James I.
So American self-government, however one defines it, was not born in Plymouth.
The Mayflower Compact nonetheless contained lofty ideals. The plan signed by many of the Mayflower’s male passengers demanded that colonists “Covenant & Combine ourselves into a Civil body politic, for our better ordering, & preservation.” They promised to work together to write “laws, ordinances, Acts, constitutions.” The signers pledged to work for the “advancement of the Christian faith.”
Yet as the years after 1620 bore out, the migrants did not adhere to such principles when dealing with their Wampanoag and other Algonquian-speaking neighbors. Gov. William Bradford, who began writing his history of Plymouth in 1630, wrote about the Pilgrims arriving in “a hideous and desolate wilderness, full of wild beasts and wild men” even though Patuxet looked more like a settled European farmland. The Pilgrims exiled an English lawyer named Thomas Morton, in part because he believed that Indigenous and colonists could peacefully coexist. And in 1637, Plymouth’s authorities joined a bloody campaign against the Pequots, which led to the massacre of Indigenous people on the banks of the Mystic River, followed by the sale of prisoners into slavery.
The Compact was even used by loyalists to the British crown to argue against independence. Thomas Hutchinson, the last royal governor of Massachusetts, pointed to the Pilgrims as proof that colonists should not rebel, highlighting the passage that defined the signers as “loyal subjects” of the English king.
History told by the victors
After the American Revolution, politicians and historians, especially those descended from Pilgrims and Puritans, were keen to trace the origins of the United States back to Plymouth.
In the process, they glossed over the Pilgrims’ complicated legacy.
In 1802, the future President John Quincy Adams spoke at Plymouth about the unique genius of the colony’s founders and their governing contract. He announced that the Pilgrims would arrive at the biblical day of judgment “in the whiteness of innocence” for having shown “kindness and equity toward the savages.”
In the mid-19th century, the historian George Bancroft claimed that it was in “the cabin of the Mayflower” where “humanity recovered its rights, and instituted government on the basis of ‘equal laws’ for ‘the general good.’”
Nineteenth-century anniversary celebrations focused on the colonists, their written Compact, and their contribution to what became the United States. In 1870, on the 250th anniversary, celebrants struck a commemorative coin: one side featured an open Bible, the other a group of Pilgrims praying on the shoreline.
Missing, not surprisingly, were the Wampanoags.
A more nuanced view of the past
By 1970, the cultural tide had turned. Representatives of the Wampanoag nation walked out of Plymouth’s public celebration of Thanksgiving that year to announce that the fourth Thursday in November should instead be known as the National Day of Mourning. To these protesters, 1620 represented violent conquest and dispossession, the twinned legacies of exclusion.
The organizers of an international group called “Plymouth 400” have stressed that they want to tell a “historically accurate and culturally inclusive history.” They’ve promoted both the General Society of Mayflower Descendants and an exhibit featuring 400 years of Wampanoag History. Unlike earlier generations of celebrants, the organizers have acknowledged the continued presence of Native residents.
Prior celebrations of Plymouth’s founding focused on the Pilgrims’ role in the creation of the United States. By doing so, these commemorations sustained an exclusionary narrative for over two centuries.
Perhaps this year a different story will take hold, replacing ancestor worship with a more clear-eyed view of the past.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – On Saturday, state health officials moved Lake County into the most restrictive COVID-19 tier in response to a sharp increase in cases that includes a doubling in hospitalizations, while the county’s sheriff said he will not enforce the heightened restrictions.
Public Health Officer Dr. Gary Pace said Lake County is now in the purple tier of the state’s Blueprint for a Safer Economy after weeks of being in the red, or second most restrictive, tier.
Lake is now among 51 of 58 counties in the purple tier, representing 39.7 million people or 99.1 percent of California's population.
Pace did not give an update on the total number of cases in Lake County. The last time Public Health updated the numbers on its website was Wednesday, and on Saturday those numbers remained unchanged, with 886 cases and 19 deaths reported.
Across California, the caseload continues to climb. The Public Health departments of the state’s 58 counties reported a total of approximately 1,195,649 cases and 19,122 deaths as of Saturday night.
Impacting Lake County’s caseload is an outbreak that is continuing in the Lake County Jail, Pace said.
In addition, Pace said a large case cluster has emerged in the Native American community, “a variety of businesses are experiencing new cases, and we see continued spread in households and social settings. Many people had smaller gatherings in observance of Thanksgiving, and we expect a significant post-holiday elevation in numbers.”
Over the course of the week, Lake County’s hospitalizations have nearly doubled. Pace said 11 people were hospitalized due to COVID-19-related issues on Friday, which is about twice the number of hospitalizations the county has had in the last month.
Pace said eight of those patients have since been transferred to other counties.
“Our hospitals are maintaining now, and plans are in place if there are significant surges,” he said.
Epidemiologist Sarah Marikos is tracking COVID-19 case trends in Lake County, and has found that the positivity rate has tripled over the last three weeks, from 1.9 percent to 6.3 percent, Pace said. During the same period, the county’s daily case rate increased about 2.5 times, from 5 to 13 per 100,000.
In addition, since mid-October, there has been a steady increase in the weekly number of cases, from a low of 21 per week to 57 in mid-November. For the week of Nov. 22 to 28, there already are 39 known cases, Pace reported.
Regarding how people are becoming infected, Pace said Marikos has found that from Nov. 1 to 20, nearly 2 in 5 cases – or 39 percent – are believed to have resulted from community contact, and about 1 in 3 via household contact.
“Limiting community transmission is key to decreasing the overall number of cases, and it will reduce the number of people who become infected through household contact,” said Pace.
Marikos’ research has found that in November, about 80 percent of the known cases lived in the following places: Kelseyville (26 percent of cases), Clearlake (21 percent), Lakeport (20 percent), Clearlake Oaks (8 percent) and Hidden Valley Lake (5 percent).
Cases in November have increased among white, non-Hispanic individuals and Native Americans, and there has been a decrease in Latino cases, Pace reported.
Lake County now under increased restrictions; sheriff won’t enforce orders
Along with being moved into the most restrictive COVID-19 tier comes enhanced restrictions on businesses and social movement in Lake County that Pace said will go into effect on Sunday in an effort to slow the spread of this virus.
Among the restrictions, schools that were already open can remain open, while schools that have not yet opened need to remain closed until the county returns to the red tier. Pace said elementary schools can apply for a waiver that may allow reopening.
As for businesses, Pace said hair salons, personal care services and barbershops can remain open with modifications, and retail establishments can open indoors with modifications and a maximum capacity of 25 percent.
Restaurants cannot have indoor dining and must go to outdoor-only with modifications. Also required to move to outdoors-only activities are museums, places of worship, and gyms and fitness centers, Pace said.
Only outdoor private gatherings are permitted, with modifications, with a maximum of three households for a two-hour duration.
Pace said Lake County also will now be under the limited stay at home order issued by the state Public Health officer on Nov. 19.
That order requires that all gatherings with members of other households and all activities conducted outside the residence, lodging or temporary accommodation with members of other households cease between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. “except for those activities associated with the operation, maintenance, or usage of critical infrastructure or required by law.” It doesn’t apply to the homeless.
In response to the state’s action on Saturday, Sheriff Brian Martin – whose department for weeks has been working to control the jail outbreak – issued a statement on his Facebook page in which he said that Government Code Section 8627 authorizes the governor, during a state of emergency, to “promulgate, issue, and enforce such orders and regulations as are deemed necessary.”
Government Code Section 8567 states such orders “shall have the force and effect of law” and Section 8665 makes violation of such an order a misdemeanor, Martin said.
“However, section 26602 gives the sheriff the authority, but not the obligation to enforce such orders,” Martin noted.
“In accordance with the authority granted under section 26602, the Lake County Sheriff’s Office will not be determining compliance with, or enforcing compliance of any health or emergency orders related to curfews, staying at home, or other social gathering inside or outside the home, maximum occupancy, or mask mandates,” Martin said.
“Further, we will not dispatch deputies for these purposes; callers will be transferred or advised to contact the County Public Health Department, in accordance with Health and Safety Code section 101030. Of course, if there is potential criminal behavior or the potential for impacts to public or personal safety, we will continue to respond appropriately,” he said.
Martin concluded, “Please understand this applies only to the Lake County Sheriff’s Office. Other State, County, and City agencies may be actively enforcing these orders.”
Meanwhile, Pace is asking the community to take the coronavirus seriously. “It is spreading freely throughout the community now,” he said.
Pace added, “Stay home, wear masks, and be super careful. The next few months will be tough, but we will make it through this period a lot better off if we consider each other’s needs and vulnerabilities when we are thinking about going out and doing things with other people.”
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – COVID-19 may be disrupting our lives and forcing us to socially distance but it won’t dim our holiday spirit.
Hospice Services of Lake County has transformed the original “Festival of Trees” gala event into a public display of spectacularly designed Christmas trees and a virtual auction.
The fundraising event supporting the Wings of Hope Bereavement program for children and special needs of Hospice patients runs through Dec. 1.
Community members are invited to view the 27 beautifully designed trees at local businesses and visit the virtual auction site to bid on the uniquely designed trees and other auction items available.
“Photos of trees taken by local professionals are located on the bid site with a description of each tree and some include wonderful heartfelt stories of loved ones,” said event organizer and staff community relations manager, Beth Havrilla. “However an ‘in-person’ viewing of trees really captures the amazing detail that each designer has put into the decorations.”
Havrilla said business owners are adhering to COVID-19 precautions where trees are located for your safety.
All trees were donated and designed by local Lake County individuals and businesses.
“My family is dedicated to participating in this meaningful event each year,” said Hospice Services Board member Patty Brunetti. “I personally experienced the compassionate services Hospice of Lake County provides when the team cared for my mother at the end of her life. This is my way of supporting Hospice so they can continue providing the same wonderful care to other community members.”
Brunetti’s donated tree is on display at Red’s at The Skyroom in Lakeport.
On Saturday, Nov. 28, community members are encouraged to attend an “open air” open house in downtown Kelseyville highlighting the Festival of Trees from 3 to 6 p.m.
Many trees can be viewed with the full effects of holiday lighting throughout the downtown community.
During the event, meet new Hospice Executive Director Cindy Sobel at A+H General Store from 4 to 6 p.m.
There are 20 festive tabletop centerpieces available to purchase made by Hospice Services volunteers Peggy Landini and Nikka Deacon. Proceeds will support the “Joy in a Vase” project that distributes floral arrangements to Hospice patients and families. The auction site also includes an opportunity to donate directly to the Wings of Hope program.
Hospice Services a nonprofit health care organization is celebrating its 41st anniversary, providing compassionate comfort care for patients and families experiencing life-threatening conditions.
The Wings of Hope Bereavement camp and school-based counseling program is an opportunity for children in the community to receive professional support when someone special in their life has died. These services are available due to the generous support from community members and fundraising.
For more information about the Festival of Trees contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or call 707-263-6222.
Janine Smith Citron is director of development for Hospice Services of Lake County.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – This November, Lake County Behavioral Health Services has been celebrating National Native American Heritage Month.
“Our vision here at the Circle of Native Minds is to help support members of our Tribal Nations in finding paths to wellness that value and embrace cultural considerations,” said Thomas Brown, cultural specialist, Circle of Native Minds, part of the Peer Support Center of Lake County Behavioral Health Services.
Presently, there are seven tribes in Lake County that celebrate their cultural ways with dancing, songs, ceremonies and prayers.
They are federally recognized tribes under the United States government and maintain their own governments as sovereign nations.
Lake County’s tribal nations are Elem Indian Colony, near Clearlake Oaks; Habematolel Pomo of Upper Lake; Big Valley Band of Pomo Indians, near Lakeport; Scotts Valley Band of Pomo Indians, near Lakeport; Robinson Rancheria, near Nice; Koi Nation of Northern California; and Middletown Rancheria of Pomo Indians of California, near Middletown.
Lake County Behavioral Health Services’ Circle of Native Minds serves Lake County’s Native American population in need of mental health, housing, and/or substance use disorder services, although its doors are open to all.
For more information on services available in Lake County, please contact the Circle of Native Minds at 707-263-4880, or stop by, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., 845 Bevins St., Lakeport.
To learn about National Native American Heritage Month, and view the most recent Presidential Proclamation, visit the following links:
The gap in life expectancy between disadvantaged and privileged Americans has widened over the past half-decade, but so has the gap between the most affluent Americans and their peers in other prosperous nations, according to a new study from the University of California, Berkeley.
Even average residents of wealthy countries belonging to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, or OECD, such as Japan, were on par with or outliving affluent Americans in 2018, said UC Berkeley demographer Magali Barbieri, associate director of the Human Mortality Database and author of the report funded by the Society of Actuaries and published Nov. 17.
“Life expectancy for the most affluent American men was one year less than for the average Japanese man,” Barbieri said. “Meanwhile, the gap between average Japanese women and the most affluent American women reached nearly 3.5 years.”
Using U.S. Census and other national vital statistics data, Barbieri tracked mortality rates for residents in dozens of U.S. counties based on education, income, employment, occupation, housing costs and quality, and other socioeconomic characteristics. She calculated the average lifespans of men and women, separately, in all these counties for every year from 1999 to 2018.
Notably, Barbieri discovered that, in 2018, men in the most affluent U.S. category could expect to live at least seven years longer than those in the most disadvantaged U.S. group (80.5 vs. 73.2 years). For women, that gap was six years (84.9 vs. 79.9 years). The socioeconomic gap was particularly high for children and for adults between the ages of 40 and 60.
By comparison, the socioeconomic gap in life expectancy in 1999 amounted to 5.5 years for men and 3.4 years for women.
Although she did not factor in data for 2019 and 2020, which is still being collected, mortality rates in the U.S. and worldwide are projected to rise sharply due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Over the last century, life expectancy in the United States and other OECD nations has risen at a rate of three to four months per year.
But Barbieri found that, after 2010, life expectancy in the U.S. leveled off and then decreased from 2014 to 2017, going up slightly in 2018. The higher death toll, she said, is partly due to the opioid epidemic and unsuccessful efforts to control cardiovascular disease, the leading cause of death in the U.S.
While the most disadvantaged U.S. counties saw a rise in mortality between 2010 and 2014, the life expectancy of affluent Americans increased only slightly over that same period.
As for how the lifespan of Americans compares to that of other industrialized countries, Barbieri finds the U.S. is losing ground.
“Overall, Americans are lagging further and further behind in life expectancy, compared to similarly wealthy democratic countries where mortality has continued to decline at a relatively fast pace over the first two decades of the 21st century,” Barbieri said.
“Only the 10 percent of Americans in the most affluent U.S. counties can now expect to live as long as their peers in similarly wealthy nations,” she added. “And, when compared with Japan where the length of life is particularly long, and where progress has continued unabated, all socioeconomic categories of Americans are falling further and further behind.”
Yasmin Anwar writes for the UC Berkeley News Center.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The holiday season is here again, which brings a mix of joy and stress to most people.
The anticipation of and preparation for holiday events, as well as the change in weather, is something with which we are all familiar.
This year, the holiday season is a bit different, as the coronavirus pandemic and related economic downturn continue to weigh heavily on communities across the country, state and Lake County.
“Here at Behavioral Health Services, we support the message of Public Health with regard to stopping the spread of the virus: stay at home and stay safe. We also recognize being isolated from friends and family during this time may be especially difficult,” said Lake County Behavioral Health Services Director Todd Metcalf.
Moreover, for individuals with disabilities, the elderly, and people with mental health issues, this time of year may feel even more challenging, Metcalf said.
Regardless of your situation, Metcalf said there are some helpful ways you can manage stress more effectively and feel better during this season and the entire year:
· Call or use technology to connect with friends and family while sheltering in place.
· If you don’t have anyone to reach out to, try giving the CalHOPE Warm Line a call when you’re feeling isolated: (833) 317-HOPE (4673).
· Treat your body kindly. Eat healthy foods, avoid excessive alcohol, and exercise or get some fresh air as you are able.
· Try a mindfulness exercise. If you’re feeling overwhelmed, take a moment to focus on your breath, without trying to control it. Just notice your breath going in and out.
If you find yourself feeling significantly overwhelmed or distressed in a way that interferes with your ability to get through day-to-day life, Metcalf said it may be appropriate to seek help.
You can schedule an appointment with your primary care provider to talk about what’s going on. You can also contact Lake County Behavioral Health Services for information on services and support at 707-274-9101 or 707-994-7090.
Lake County Behavioral Health Services provides recovery-oriented mental health and substance use disorder services to those in need.
If you are experiencing a mental health crisis, which can include thoughts or plans to hurt yourself or others, Metcalf urges you to contact his agency’s crisis line at 800-900-2075 or the North Bay Suicide Prevention Hotline of Lake County at 855-587-6373.
“Remember, you and your life are important. You matter a great deal to all of those connected with you, and all of us at Lake County Behavioral Health Services,” Metcalf said.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – With the holidays arriving, the Lakeport Police Department is asking community members to use caution and to beware in order to not be the victims of crime.
“‘Tis the Season to be Jolly. ‘Tis also the season of opportunity for the criminally minded. It is an unfortunate truth that during these holidays, there is an increase in the number of thefts and burglaries,” the department said its holiday safety reminder.
Police said “porch piracy,” vehicle and residential burglaries, and telephone/Internet scams increase at this time of year, and they’re asking city residents to themselves and police by following a few helpful tips.
Package delivery: Have your packages delivered to an address that is regularly attended such as work, a good neighbor, friends or family. If you are the address that is regularly attended, offer to be that delivery point for friends’ and families’ packages.
Preventing vehicle theft and burglaries: Lock your vehicles, try to park in well-lit areas or close to an occupied residence, and don’t leave expensive items in your vehicle or anything in plain view.
Preventing residential burglaries: Lock your residence, whether home or away. If you are going to be away from your home for an extended number of days, take advantage of the Lakeport Police Department’s online vacation check request. It is accessed through the “Community Portal” banner on the department’s web page located at www.cityoflakeport.com/police and let a good neighbor know. If you are home and see unusual or suspicious activities around your neighbors’ house, call the department’s friendly and responsive patrol staff at 707-263-5491, option 1, and report it.
Telephone/Internet scams: Be wary of telephone calls or internet messages soliciting donations and payments. Any request that involves “getting a gift card,” especially as payment, is likely a scam and should be looked into further.
Impaired drivers: During the holidays, there may also be an uptick in impaired drivers. Drive with caution and defensively. Don’t react to what a driver should do, but rather react to what they are actually doing and report anyone whom you feel is impaired. If it is you that are enjoying the season with alcoholic beverages, have a sober driver, wait until you are definitely sober enough to drive, or take advantage of the independent driving services available in this area.
The Lakeport Police Department said it wishes the community a happy and safe holiday season.