LUCERNE, Calif. – The Lake County Sheriff’s Office said a Lucerne man reported missing earlier this week has been located.
Lt. Corey Paulich said Timothy Michael Monte Jr., 32, was located on Friday and is safe.
His family had told Lake County News that Monte did not return home on Monday, Oct. 19, following a trip to the Clearlake Walmart.
Two days later, the gray Lexus that belongs to his girlfriend, which he had driven to Clearlake, was returned to the Lucerne home he shares with his girlfriend and grandmother.
Paulich said he was reported missing to the sheriff’s office this past Monday.
Monte’s family members were in Lake County on Friday to post fliers about his disappearance.
Paulich told Lake County News he did not have further details about how and where Monte was located, and as of Friday evening family members also didn’t have additional information.
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.
BERKELEY, Calif. – Since the discovery that people infected with COVID-19 often shed the virus in their feces, scientists around the world have scrambled to spot signs of the virus in the stuff that we flush.
However, detecting tiny virus particles amid the wastewater that flows through our sewage pipes — which includes not only toilet water, but sink water, shower water and everything else that goes down a drain — is no easy feat.
A team of scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, has spent months refining and optimizing a rapid and low-cost new technique to test wastewater for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.
This month, the team has launched a new high-throughput pop-up lab — a temporary 1200-square-foot lab, rapidly set up in an empty research space in Hildebrand Hall — that, in conjunction with UC Berkeley and wastewater utilities and public health agencies from throughout the Bay Area, will monitor the region’s wastewater for the virus.
“From the very beginning of the pandemic, it was clear that there were major limitations to the ability to test every individual in a population frequently enough to find out whether they were infected or not,” said Kara Nelson, professor of civil and environmental engineering at UC Berkeley, who leads the team. “Wastewater naturally pools the waste from hundreds to even millions of people in a single sample, so if you can collect a representative sample of wastewater and analyze it, you can gain a tremendous amount of information that you likely couldn’t gain through testing people individually.”
Monitoring wastewater from a city, neighborhood or building is an efficient way to keep track of whether COVID-19 is spreading there. It also has the potential to provide an early warning for a potential outbreak, as evidence suggests that the virus can start to shed in an infected individual’s feces even before the person starts to experience symptoms.
Working with municipalities around the Bay Area, the team has identified sewersheds to monitor, each an area of land where all the sewers flow to a single pipe or station where samples can be collected. The sewersheds they are currently monitoring represent the waste of a few thousand to several hundred thousand people, Nelson said.
Through its COVID wastewater epidemiology for the Bay Area, or COVID-WEB project, the lab can currently process approximately 30 samples a week for 11 agencies, and the team plans to scale up to as many as 200 samples a week by the end of the year to meet the growing demand from regional public health agencies.
“One of the huge bottlenecks in wastewater testing has just been testing capacity,” Nelson said. “This pop-up lab is the first high-throughput lab in the Bay Area that has the capacity to bring in a large number of samples and provide results quickly to public health officials.”
Like finding a virus in a haystack
In theory, the SARS-CoV-2 virus can be spotted in wastewater using the same types of PCR-based assays that doctors currently use to diagnose COVID-19 in humans.
These tests work by first transcribing viral RNA into DNA and then using the polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, technique to make billions of copies of the viral DNA so that they can be quantified using fluorescent molecular markers.
However, detecting the virus in wastewater samples is decidedly more troublesome than finding in it a nasal swab, Nelson points out.
For one, wastewater contains chemicals, such as bleach, that can break down the SARS-CoV-2 virus as it travels through the sewer system. Wastewater also contains a plethora of other viruses that each have their own RNA molecules, making it harder to isolate the SARS-CoV-2 RNA in a sample.
Finally, each individual infected person can excrete different amounts of SARS-CoV-2 virus particles in their feces, and the wastewater itself is also variable in composition.
Luckily, Nelson and her team have ample experience analyzing and understanding the contents of wastewater.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the team was primarily concerned with detecting and removing pathogens from water sources, including wastewater, in order to make it safe to drink.
Many of the techniques and processes that the group uses in that work also apply to COVID-19 wastewater testing.
“Nelson’s lab is the primary research group on campus that studies treatment processes for pathogens in wastewater and drinking water, and so we already had a lot of preexisting relationships with the wastewater utilities,” said Rose Kantor, a postdoctoral scholar in Nelson’s lab and a member of the COVID-WEB team. “So, when the pandemic hit, we were able to pretty quickly start getting samples from them and testing out different methods for detecting SARS-CoV-2.”
Most methods start by concentrating the particles of the virus, then extracting the RNA for detection.
Working with Oscar Whitney, a graduate student in Robert Tjian’s lab in UC Berkeley’s Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, the team created a new technique that takes the opposite approach: Their technique first uses table salt to lyse, or slice open, the outer envelope of the virus, causing it to spill all of its RNA into the sample. The salt stabilizes the RNA, which is then concentrated in the lab.
By taking this approach, the technique is also able to catch bits of RNA from virus particles that may have already partially disintegrated in the wastewater, making it more sensitive to detecting the original number of virus particles that entered the sewer system.
It also uses very simple materials, like table salt and ethanol, which helps keep the costs low and helps bypass the supply chain issues that plagued many labs during the first few months of the pandemic.
“Back in early May, when people were just starting to explore wastewater surveillance, some of the materials were hard to obtain,” said Adrian Hinkle, a graduate student in Nelson’s lab and a member of the COVID-WEB team. “So, we tried to develop a method that required as few materials as possible and was fast, because we wanted to get the results as fast as possible, to inform public health authorities.”
The technique has an exceptionally high sensitivity, compared to other techniques that have been developed. Hinkle estimates that it is sensitive enough to detect the virus from just a handful of infected individuals in wastewater produced by a few thousand people.
It is also fast. Hinkle says the whole testing technique now takes about eight hours to complete, and the pop-up lab turns around the results for any given sample to public health officials within three days or less. They have taken extra steps to further streamline the process, like including salt in the sampling kits that they send to utilities, so that the lysis step can start before a wastewater sample even reaches the lab.
“Our technique has a high sensitivity, I think, in part, because of the salt lysis early on and because of the simplicity of the process and how we have fine-tuned the filtration and rinsing steps to maximize the percent recovery [of the virus],” Hinkle said.
‘A bit of a crapshoot’
On a smoky morning in early October, Tim Pine and Al Sanchez haul a large, grey, cylindrical plastic barrel out of a sewer hole located in UC Berkeley’s University Village.
The cylinder, which the researchers call an autosampler, had been hanging in the sewer hole for the past 24 hours. Several times an hour, a hose attached to the sampler draws up a small sample of wastewater from the sewer pipe below, depositing it into a two-liter bucket tucked safely inside the barrel.
Pine and Sanchez unhook the lid of the sampler and remove it, revealing the storage bucket and its contents. The wastewater inside looks like slightly dirty water — not quite the sludge you might imagine when you think of the word sewage.
“Every time we do this, it's a little bit of a crapshoot, pun intended,” Pine says, pointing at a piece of toilet paper, stuck on a ladder rail in the drain — a common hazard that could easily have plugged the sampling hose and ruined that day’s collection. “Today, it looks kind of clean. We don't usually see it this clean.”
Pine, an environmental protection specialist, and Sanchez, a senior hazardous materials technician, both work in UC Berkeley’s Office of Environment, Health and Safety. Pine has been collecting weekly samples of wastewater from University Village since mid-July and also samples from sewers that drain from UC Berkeley’s undergraduate dormitories and surrounding neighborhoods.
While Sanchez loads the day’s sample into a truck for transport back to the pop-up lab on campus, Pine describes the autosampler in more detail. Before COVID-19, he says, these devices were often used for environmental regulation. For instance, an autosampler, like this one, could be used to sample the water downstream of a factory suspected of illegally dumping pollutants into the sewer system. But the COVID-19 pandemic has given autosamplers a new use.
The COVID-WEB team has partnered with a number of Bay Area utilities, including the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, or SFPUC, to form a regional working group that helps coordinate when, where and how to gather wastewater samples for COVID-19 testing.
“We have a great field monitoring team who usually sample wastewater to ensure permit compliance for industrial users, and they've pivoted quite deftly to using their equipment to pull composite samples from different locations in the city for COVID-19 surveillance,” said SFPUC General Manager Harlan L. Kelly Jr. “Depending on where they sample, they can get a comprehensive picture of the virus on a large scale, or we can use their skills to zoom in down to the building level.”
The regional working group also includes local public health agencies, which advise the team on how wastewater testing can best help the overall effort to slow the spread of COVID-19.
“One goal of this regional working group is to hear from public health officials how they think this wastewater data might help inform decision-making,” said Sasha Harris-Lovett, a postdoctoral fellow at the Berkeley Water Center and a member of the COVID-WEB team. “What are the gaps that this data could fill, and how could the data allow them to make more informed decisions?”
Harris-Lovett has learned that many in public health are interested in using wastewater testing to keep tabs on the SARS-CoV-2 virus in residential facilities and other dense living arrangements, where a few cases could quickly escalate to a major outbreak. This includes not just dorms and student apartments like University Village, but also places like nursing homes or prisons.
“Public health officials have also told us is that there are some neighborhoods that haven’t registered very many cases, not necessarily because people aren't sick, but because people aren't getting tested,” Harris-Lovett said. “So, there is an interest in using wastewater monitoring to keep track of trends in neighborhoods where perhaps people aren't able to access health care.”
Guy Nicolette, executive director and assistant vice chancellor of UC Berkeley’s University Health Services, said the wastewater testing being done near campus and at University Village will augment the school’s COVID-19 testing strategy.
“While we need to understand more, wastewater testing has great potential to be an early warning system, especially for sites where people aren't being tested frequently, for whatever the reason,” Nicolette said. “I can also imagine that when we see significantly reduced general transmission, (wastewater testing) could serve as large pooled testing for populations, so we can direct testing capacity to highest exposure risks and be even more adaptive and responsive, rather than try to directly test every single person.”
With COVID-19 case counts in California finally reaching a plateau, wastewater testing in the Bay Area could now play a role in helping public health officials keep an eye out for a possible resurgence of the virus, said Maya Petersen, chair of the Division of Biostatistics at UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health.
“I think there's really exciting potential for wastewater testing for the purpose of maintaining surveillance activity in a very efficient way that allows us to keep an eye on the bigger picture, and where an early surge might be happening, while at the same time really focusing our resources on persons and communities that are still bearing the brunt of the epidemic,” Petersen said.
A model for other wastewater surveillance projects
The potential of wastewater testing for COVID-19 goes beyond early detection and pooled surveillance of COVID-19. Working with Alexander Crits-Christoph, a graduate student in professor Jill Banfield’s lab in UC Berkeley’s Innovative Genomics Institute, the team has also developed a way to sequence the RNA of the individual strains of the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
Sequencing the RNA of SARS-CoV-2 helps scientists and epidemiologists monitor the virus as it changes over time and helps them track the different strains of the virus as they travel around the world. For example, by studying the genomes of SARS-CoV-2 virus samples collected on nasal swabs, epidemiologists have been able to deduce that the virus was brought to California via multiple introduction events.
“It’s harder to sequence viral genomes in wastewater because, with a nasal swab from a patient, you expect them to just have one strain of the virus. But in wastewater, a lot of different infected people are excreting virus into that single sample,” Kantor said. “To be able to look at the individual single nucleotide variants that are present in wastewater, you need to use more sophisticated bioinformatics tools that have been developed in Jill Banfield’s lab.”
In a preprint recently posted to MedRxiv, the team compares the strains of the virus found in the Bay Area’s wastewater with those found through nasal swabs of patients. In the wastewater, they found the same strains that had been identified through nasal testing, but also found additional strains that had not yet been observed in California.
Regularly sequencing the virus is also important, Kantor pointed out, because the virus is always mutating, but COVID-19 tests only work when they are programmed to detect the correct RNA sequences in the virus.
The researchers stressed that the rapid success of the new project has hinged on the close collaboration among the team members, both those from Berkeley and those who have joined the regional wastewater monitoring group. The team also shares information, via a massive Slack channel, with hundreds of researchers around the world who are also developing wastewater testing techniques, and such efficiency helps everyone progress faster.
Now that the high throughput pop-up lab is up and running, Nelson says that she and the team are eager to keep learning and sharing how to make this tool as useful as possible, by working collaboratively with their regional partners to put it into practice.
“One of our project goals is to help other regions replicate what we're doing,” Nelson said. “We want to share information as soon as we possibly can, so that we can speed up the process for other regions that are trying to create something similar.”
The COVID-WEB project is supported by UC Berkeley’s Innovative Genomics Institute, UC’s CITRIS and the Banatao Institute and a private foundation.
For most of the U.S., the clock goes back one hour on Sunday morning, Nov. 1, the “fall back” for daylight saving time. Many of us appreciate the extra hour of sleep.
But for millions, that gain won’t counter the inadequate sleep they get the rest of the year. About 40% of adults – 50 to 70 million Americans – get less than the recommended minimum seven hours per night.
Some researchers are concerned about how the twice-a-year switch impacts our body’s physiology. The American Academy of Sleep Medicine, the largest scientific organization that studies sleep, now wants to replace daylight saving time with a move to a year-round fixed time. That way, our internal circadian clocks would not be misaligned for half the year. And it would eliminate the safety risk from sleep loss when transitioning to daylight savings time.
I am a neurologist at the University of Florida. I’ve studied how a lack of sleep can impair the brain. In the 1940s, most American adults averaged 7.9 hours of sleep a night. Today, it’s only 6.9 hours. To put it another way: In 1942, 84% of us got the recommended seven to nine hours; in 2013, it was 59%. To break it down further, a January 2018 study from Fitbit reported that men got even less sleep per night than women, about 6.5 hours.
The case for sleep
Problems from sleep shortage go beyond simply being tired. Compared to those who got enough sleep, adults who are short sleepers – those getting less than seven hours per day – were more likely to report 10 chronic health conditions, including heart disease, diabetes, obesity, asthma and depression.
Children, who need more sleep than adults, face even more challenges. To promote optimal health, six- to 12-year-olds should sleep nine to 12 hours a day; teens from 13 to 18, eight to 10 hours. But a Sleep Foundation poll of parents says children are getting at least one hour less than that. And researchers have found that sleep deprivation of even a single hour can harm a child’s developing brain, affecting memory encoding and attentiveness in school.
Sleep impacts every one of our biological systems. Serious consequences can result with poor sleep quality. Here’s a short list: Blood pressure may increase. Risk of coronary heart disease could go up. Our endocrine system releases more cortisol, a stress hormone. We become more aroused by “fight or flight” syndrome. There’s a reduction of growth hormone and muscle maintenance. There’s a higher chance of increased appetite and weight gain. The body has less glucose tolerance and greater insulin resistance; in the long term, that means an increased risk for Type 2 diabetes.
Sleep deprivation is associated with increased inflammation and a decreased number of antibodies to fight infections. It may also cause a decrease in pain tolerance, reaction times and memory. Occupational studies show sleep loss can cause poor work performance, including more days missed and more car accidents.
Recent research suggests the body’s waste removal process relies on sleep to get rid of harmful proteins from the brain, particularly abnormal variants of amyloid. These are the same proteins that are elevated in Alzheimer’s patients. Studies show that older adults who sleep less have greater accumulation of these proteins in their brains.
On the other hand, getting enough sleep helps the body in many ways by protecting against some of these damaging effects and by boosting the immune system.
The problem with DST
Most of the risk associated with daylight saving time occurs in the spring, when we turn the clock forward and lose one hour of sleep. The idea of a national permanent year-round time has support, but disagreements exist on whether the fixed time should be standard time or daylight savings time.
States advocating for permanent daylight saving time are typically those that rely on tourism. Environmentalists, favoring less energy consumption from morning heating and evening air conditioning, often support permanent standard time. Religious groups, whose prayer times are linked to sundown and sunrise, also tend to prefer permanent standard time. So do many educators, opposed to transporting children to school during mornings when it’s still dark.
As you ponder what system is best for a national year-round standard, consider this: The American Academy of Sleep Medicine has recommended we go with permanent standard time – a better way to align with our natural circadian clock and minimize health and safety risks.
And just think: If we change to permanent standard time, then for the first time in decades, you won’t lose an hour of sleep every spring.
LUCERNE, Calif. – The Lake County Sheriff’s Office and the family of a missing Lucerne man are asking for the community’s help in locating him.
Timothy “Mike” Michael Monte Jr., 32, was last seen by family members at the Lucerne home he shared with his grandmother, girlfriend and children on Monday, Oct. 19.
His family said Monte, a local DJ, left Lucerne to travel to the Clearlake Walmart at around 8 p.m. that day. He did not return.
Monte was reported to be driving a gray Lexus that belongs to his girlfriend.
That vehicle showed up at his grandmother’s home two days after he was last seen – on Wednesday, Oct. 21. His family said the key was broken off in the ignition.
Lt. Corey Paulich of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office said Monte was reported missing to the agency this week, on Monday, a week after he was last seen.
Family members said they will be in Lake County on Friday to post fliers in an effort to locate him.
His family also is offering a $1,000 reward for information that leads to locating Monte.
Monte’s family described him as being Black and Mexican, 6 feet 2 inches tall and 210 pounds, with brown eyes and black hair.
He has several tattoos, including praying hands on his left shoulder, the name “Francis” on the left side of his chest and a grim reaper on his right shoulder. Family members said he also has a scar on his forehead hairline.
Anyone with information about Monte is asked to contact the Lake County Sheriff’s Office at 707-263-2690.
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. – A multi-vehicle wreck near Lower Lake on Thursday evening has resulted in one fatality and led to a temporary closure of Highway 29.
The crash occurred just before 5:30 p.m. Thursday on Highway 29 at C Street near Twin Lakes in the Lower Lake area, according to the California Highway Patrol.
Firefighters and law enforcement officers arriving at the scene reported finding four vehicles involved with the roadway completely blocked, according to radio reports.
A short time later, they confirmed over the radio that there was one fatality, along with four other individuals who had minor injuries and were able to get out of the vehicles on their own.
The CHP also separately confirmed that the crash had led to a fatality.
Caltrans was asked to respond to the scene and detour traffic around the crash site onto Spruce Grove Road North and Spruce Grove Road South as Highway 29 is expected to be closed for an extended period of time Thursday night.
Caltrans is reporting that the road is expected to open before 12 am. Friday.
Additional information will be published as it becomes available.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
Building on Gov. Gavin Newsom’s announcement last week establishing a Scientific Safety Review Workgroup to advise the state on COVID-19 vaccines, Dr. Erica Pan, acting state Public Health officer, has named a group of California immunization, geriatrics, ethics, epidemiology, health equity, and pharmacy practice experts to the state’s COVID-19 Drafting Guidelines Workgroup.
This Workgroup will develop California-specific guidance for the prioritization and allocation of a COVID-19 vaccine.
The guidance will be based on several national frameworks from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. COVID-19 vaccine supplies are expected to be limited initially.
The Drafting Guidelines Workgroup is part of the state’s initial COVID-19 vaccine distribution plan, which was submitted to the CDC on Oct. 16. Many vaccine candidates are in clinical trials currently, and California is putting a system in place for a safety review, prioritization, distribution and administration of vaccines as supply becomes available.
“Initial supplies of an approved vaccine will be limited and we know we will need to get them to our state’s front-line healthcare workers and others at highest risk, such as the most vulnerable living in nursing homes, first. The Drafting Guidelines Workgroup will help us make difficult decisions and guidelines about vaccine allocation and distribution both early on when the resources are scarce, and later as supplies increase. We want as much informed and broad input as possible to ensure allocation is done in a way that meets the needs of our state and that these choices are made with equity and with full transparency so everyone understands the allocation and distribution decisions,” said Dr. Pan.
California’s planning process for the eventual distribution and administration of COVID-19 vaccine is guided by the overarching principles of ensuring the COVID-19 vaccine meets safety requirements; ensuring that the vaccine is distributed and administered equitably, at first to those with the highest risk of becoming infected and spreading COVID-19; and transparency, by bringing in community stakeholders from the outset.
The members of the Drafting Guidelines Workgroup are:
· Co-Chairperson Oliver Brooks, MD, CMO, Watts Health Care Corp. and president, National Medical Association; · Co-Chairperson Robert Schechter, MD, MPH, Chief, Immunizations Branch, CDPH; · Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola, MD, PHD, professor of Clinical Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis and Founding Director of the Center for Reducing Health Disparities at UC Davis Health; · Louise Aronson, MD, MFA, director, Age Self Care Program, UCSF and Clinical Lead, Senior Hub, San Francisco Department of Public Health Covid-19 Response; · Randy Bergen, MD, Immunization Lead, Kaiser Permanente, Northern California; · Arleen Brown, MD, co-lead investigator, Covid-19 California Alliance of STOP COVID-19 CA; · Susan Ducore, RN, immunization lead, California Indian Health Service; · Katherine Flores, MD, UCSF Fresno Latino Center for Medical Education and Research; · Jeff Goad, PharmD., chair, Department of Pharmacy Practice, Chapman University; · Claire Jarashow, PhD, MPH, epidemic intelligence service officer, Centers for Disease Control and acting director, Vaccine Preventable Disease Control and chief, Epidemiology and Data, Acute Communicable Disease, Los Angeles County Department of Public Health; · Bernard Lo, MD, director, Program in Medical Ethics, UCSF, Emeritus and President, The Greenwall Foundation, New York; · Ngoc-Phuong Luu, MD, health officer, Yuba and Sutter counties; · Jeff Silvers, MD, immunization lead, Sutter Health; · Melissa Thun, RN, Public Health nurse manager, San Diego County; · Ann Walker, RN, PHN, Immunization program coordinator, Kern County Department of Health; and · Mike Witte, MD, CMO, California Primary Care Association.
A Community Advisory Vaccine Committee will also provide input and feedback to the planning efforts and solve barriers of equitable vaccine implementation and decision-making.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lake County Sheriff’s Office said that a dozen additional inmates at the Lake County Jail have tested positive for COVID-19.
Lt. Corey Paulich said a number of inmates at the Lake County Jail who are all housed in a single unit have been undergoing an isolation period after they were exposed to an inmate who tested positive for the COVID-19 virus on Oct. 12.
On Oct. 22, the sheriff’s office learned that a second inmate in that same housing unit also tested positive, Paulich said.
Then, on Thursday, Paulich said the sheriff’s office learned that 12 additional inmates from that same housing unit have tested positive for the coronavirus.
Including these 12 current cases, there have been 19 total cases of COVID-19 at the Lake County Jail, Paulich said.
Paulich said medical staff will be closely monitoring the isolated inmates and conducting the testing protocols recommended by Public Health. This includes the testing of staff and inmates as they work to contain the virus.
He said the sheriff's office continues to provide masks to inmates, employ comprehensive regular cleaning and to disinfect common areas in an effort to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in the jail.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – A community service organization this week got busy cleaning up one of the Lakeport area’s watersheds.
For their Kiwanis One Day project for 2020 on Saturday, members of the Kiwanis Club of Lakeport – assisted by personnel from the Lakeport Police Department and the city of Lakeport – recovered and properly disposed of four truckloads of trash from the Forbes Creek watershed.
Hundreds of pounds of garbage consisting of metal parts, tires, carpets, shopping carts, mattresses and blankets, food containers, tarpaulins, wood debris with nails and screws, chairs and other decaying materials were removed and transported.
This trash is harmful to wildlife, people, the environment and the water.
The cleanup operations ran the length of the watershed and surrounding land between Bevins Street and Martin Street, with the majority of the trash retrieved from city-owned property.
The Forbes Creek watershed drains to Clear Lake and includes property owned by the city of Lakeport, the fairgrounds, the fire department, Lake County Tribal Health and a private landowner.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – While it’s felt like 2020 has had more tricks than treats, and has been plenty scary on its own, Haunted Lake County is returning for another year, undaunted by the challenges of COVID-19 and with plans for a bigger drive-thru event.
Wayne Yahnke, cofounder and treasurer of Haunted Lake County, said they are excited to put on a COVID-safe Halloween this year at the Lake County Fairgrounds, located at 401 Martin St. in Lakeport.
He said the drive-thru approach to scaring local residents received approval from Lake County Public Health.
It had its first run this past weekend and is ramping up for the finale, on Friday, Oct. 30, and Saturday, Oct. 31, Halloween night.
The event will take place from 5 to 10 p.m. both nights. From 5 to 6 p.m. is a less-scary hour for children. Adults are encouraged to come back for the show for mature audiences from 6 to 10 p.m.
On Halloween night, Yahnke said the Kiwanis Club has approval to deliver candy safely through the windows of vehicles using a PVC pipe.
Yahnke said the show this year includes the entire fairgrounds, with visitors to take a quarter-mile drive through the grounds. They’ll enter the carnival area at gate four and then be directed through the event, ultimately leaving through the main gate.
Last year, the event was threatened by public safety power shutoffs. But Yahnke said community members helped by providing generators and the show went off without a hitch.
“The power went off and nobody knew it,” he said. “We pulled off a haunted house last year with no power.”
Yahnke said it takes weeks to prepare and involves the work of up to 30 volunteers, ranging in age from 12 to 60.
“We normally start construction the weekend after Labor Day,” he said, but this year the schedule was delayed by at least a week due to Public Health approvals and other issues.
As part of getting approval from Public Health, Yahnke said they had to write up a four-page COVID-19 plan.
Once the six weeks of construction was under way, it was crunch time. “We’ve really had to reach hard to make this happen,” Yahnke said.
He said they’ve never done an event this large, and had to be even more creative than normal. One of the questions for them was how to scare people in their cars.
“We’ve come up with some pretty good stuff,” Yahnke said.
This year’s theme revolves around the fairgrounds, from the carnival to boat races to livestock, Yahnke said.
They’ve gotten support from Hillside Honda, JKL Construction, Kelseyville Lumber, Dave Furia and Furia Motorsports in getting cars, and Forrest Kuecker who transported the cars.
“The list goes on and on,” Yahnke said of the people and businesses that have stepped up to help.
This year, he said Haunted Lake County is asking for a minimum donation of $20 per car.
Haunted Lake County raised $6,000 last year that was donated to Operation Tango Mike, he said.
Yahnke said their beneficiary this year is the Lake County Fair Foundation, the nonprofit organization that supports the fairgrounds.
He said they are excited to be able to put on Halloween in some form and give families a way to avoid going out trick or treating.
They’re trying to promote the holiday as much as possible while keeping elements of safety, Yahnke said.
For more information, visit Haunted Lake County’s website and Facebook page.
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.
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – Clearlake Animal Control has six dogs ready and waiting for adoption this week.
The following dogs are ready for adoption or foster.
‘Banjo’
“Banjo” is a male American Staffordshire Terrier mix with a short tan and white coat.
He is dog No. 4267.
‘Bella’
“Bella” is a female American Bully mix.
She has a short beige and tan coat.
She is dog No. 3537.
‘Charlie’
“Charlie” is a male adult Chihuahua with a short tan coat.
He has been neutered.
Charlie is recovering from surgery to fix a broken leg.
He is dog No. 4277.
‘Chuckie’
“Chuckie’ is a small male adult German Shepherd mix.
He has a short tan and black coat.
He is dog No. 4297.
‘Jack’
“Jack” is a male Labrador Retriever mix with a short yellow coat.
He is dog No. 4155.
‘Lady’
“Lady” is a female German Shepherd mix.
She has been spayed.
She is dog No. 3683.
The shelter is open by appointment only due to COVID-19.
Call the Clearlake Animal Control shelter at 707-273-9440, or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. to inquire about adoptions and schedule a visit to the shelter.
Visit Clearlake Animal Control on Facebook or on the city’s website.
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. – A number of local organizations have put together Halloween events for children and families that offer fun while following safety protocols to protect against COVID-19.
The following is a list of events planned around Lake County for Friday, Oct. 30, and Saturday, Oct. 31.
FRIDAY, OCT. 30
CLEARLAKE OAKS
Moose Lodge presents ‘Haunted Lodge’
The Clearlake Oaks Moose Lodge No. 2283 will present “Haunted Lodge” from 6:30 to 9 p.m.
They invite community members to come and be scared.
The cost is $3 at the door. Tickets will be sold at the door.
They will practice COVID-19 safety measures.
Food and beverages will be available for purchase.
The lodge is located at 15910 Moose Lodge Lane, Clearlake Oaks.
LAKEPORT
Haunted Lake County
Haunted Lake County will offer a COVID-19 safe and scary drive-thru Halloween experience from 5 to 10 p.m. at the Lake County Fairgrounds, 401 Martin St.
From 5 to 6 p.m. is a less-scary hour for children.
The show for mature audiences takes place from 6 to 10 p.m.
The requested donation is $20 per vehicle, with proceeds to benefit the Lake County Fair Foundation.
SATURDAY, OCT. 31
CLEARLAKE
Halloween Trunk or Treat at Austin Park
Enjoy some spooky fun at the annual Trunk or Treat event in Austin Park from 4 to 6 p.m.
Event parking will be available in Haverty Field near Austin Park, 14077 Lakeshore Drive.
There will be decorated trunks, music and candy.
Masks and social distancing will be required.
The event takes place rain or shine.
CLEARLAKE OAKS
Community Halloween Trunk or Treat
The Clearlake Oaks Moose Lodge No. 2284 will hold its third annual Community Halloween Trunk or Treat from 5 p.m. until the treats are gone.
The event will offer a safe place for community trick or treating. They will practice masking, hand sanitizing and social distancing for everyone’s safety.
There will be a best-decorated vehicle trunk contest.
Food and beverages will be available for purchase for to go or outside dining.
The lodge is located at 15910 Moose Lodge Lane, Clearlake Oaks.
Moose Lodge presents ‘Haunted Lodge’
The Clearlake Oaks Moose Lodge No. 2283 will present “Haunted Lodge” from 6:30 to 9 p.m.
They invite community members to come and be scared.
The cost is $3 at the door. Tickets will be sold at the door.
They will practice COVID-19 safety measures.
Food and beverages will be available for purchase.
The lodge is located at 15910 Moose Lodge Lane, Clearlake Oaks.
Haunted drive-thru
Marcel’s Drive-Thru will host a haunted drive-thru beginning at 7 p.m.
They will be handing out candy bags to every child. Hot cocoa and coffee also will be available for purchase.
People must stay in their vehicle at the event.
Marcel’s is located at 12609 E. Highway 20.
COBB
Halloween drive-thru at the Little Red Schoolhouse
The Mountain Lions Club of Cobb will host a drive-thru Halloween event at the Little Red Schoolhouse from 6 to 8 p.m.
Come in your costume and pick up treat bags and goodies. There will be special bags available for those with allergies.
The Little Red Schoolhouse is located at 15780 Bottle Rock Road.
KELSEYVILLE
Little Monsters Halloween Trunk or Treat
Richmond Park Bar and Grill will hold the Little Monsters Halloween Trunk or Treat from 2 to 5 p.m.
Costumes are admired but not mandatory.
COVID-19 restrictions and social distancing will apply.
Richmond Park is located at 9435 Konocti Bay Road.
Clear Lake Riviera Community Association and Ely Stage Stop Trunk or Treat
The Clear Lake Riviera Community Association along with the Ely Stage Stop will offer a trunk or treat event from 4 to 6 p.m.
The event will be held at the Ely Stage Stop and Country Museum, 9921 Soda Bay Road.
Kelseyville Drive-Thru Halloween
The Kelseyville Drive-Thru Halloween will take place from 4 to 7 p.m. at 5846 Live Oak Drive, and is hosted by West Coast Fire & Water.
Kids – put on your favorite costume, grab your favorite driver, and head on over for a fun, free Kelseyville Halloween.
Drive through the parking lot where businesses and organizations from the community will be handing out candy.
This is a COVID-safe environment: Candy is commercially packaged, vendors will be wearing masks and gloves, attendees will stay socially distanced by remaining in their cars.
For more information, contact West Coast Fire & Water at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or 707-972-7946.
LAKEPORT
Corn maze and pumpkin patch
The Wildhurst Vineyards corn maze and pumpkin patch will have its final day of the season on Halloween.
The maze, located at 4405 Thomas Drive in Lakeport, across from Rainbow Ag, will be open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The cost is $10 per person for adults, $5 for children. People are asked to purchase their tickets ahead of time here: https://thatcornmaze.square.site.
Due to COVID-19, masks will be required along with social distancing.
A portion of the funds will benefit the Kelseyville High School FFA.
Drive-thru trick or treating
LAKEPORT, Calif. – A drive-thru trick or treat event for children will be held on Saturday, Oct. 31, in downtown Lakeport.
The city of Lakeport, Lakeport Main Street Association and Kiwanis Club of Lakeport are hosting the event, which will take place from 4 to 7 p.m., or until treats run out.
Drive-thru trick or treating will take place on Park Street between First and Third streets.
Vehicles enter from First Street onto Park Street. Follow the signs.
Participants must stay in their vehicles to receive a treat.
Haunted Lake County
Haunted Lake County will offer a COVID-19 safe and scary drive-thru Halloween experience from 5 to 10 p.m. at the Lake County Fairgrounds, 401 Martin St.
From 5 to 6 p.m. is a less-scary hour for children.
The show for mature audiences takes place from 6 to 10 p.m.
The requested donation is $20 per vehicle, with proceeds to benefit the Lake County Fair Foundation.
‘Rocky Horror Picture Show’ screening
Lakeport Auto Movies will host a showing of the cult classic, “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” at 11 p.m. Gates open at 10:30 p.m.
Tickets are $20 per car when purchased online at www.lakeportautomovies.com. Snacks also can be ordered online.
Face masks are required at the box office and when visiting the snack bar or restrooms. Be sure to check out the drive-in’s COVID-19 rules on its website for a full list of social distancing rules and protocols.
MIDDLETOWN
Hometown Halloween
“Hometown Halloween” will be held at Middletown Central Park from noon to 3 p.m.
The afternoon of old-fashioned family fun will include corn dogs and other foods, games, music, raffles and a costume parade.
Masks and social distancing are strongly encouraged.
Middletown Central Park is located at 15229 Central Park Road.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Pacific Gas and Electric said late Tuesday night that it had restored power to 97 percent of the 345,000 customers in 34 counties – including Lake – whose power had been turned off over the weekend due to red flag warning conditions.
The company implemented the public safety power shutoff, or PSPS – which began on Sunday morning in some parts of the region and on Sunday afternoon in Lake County – across a large swath of PG&E’s service area.
An initial partial all-clear had been called for Lake County on Monday, with about 5 percent restored on Monday night. PG&E told Lake County News at that time that the rest of the county was set to be restored by Tuesday night.
Due to continuing high winds and dynamic weather conditions that lasted overnight Monday and into Tuesday, the weather “all clear” notification for the remaining impacted areas was issued at 1:45 p.m. Tuesday, PG&E said.
Following this all clear, PG&E crews began power restoration efforts in areas still out of power.
Ahead of restoring power, PG&E follows a protocol that involves patrolling lines and electrical equipment for damage.
PG&E said its crews have patrolled more than 17,000 miles of transmission and distribution lines using 1,800 ground patrol units, 65 helicopters and one airplane.
As of Tuesday night, PG&E said it had received 130 reports of damage or hazards to equipment – such as downed power lines or vegetation on lines – due to the high winds that moved across the region, which it said could have led to wildland fires had the PSPS not occurred.
By Tuesday night, PG&E said more than 335,000 of the approximately 345,000 customers impacted by the PSPS had power restored.
PG&E mapping indicated that by Tuesday night Lake County had power restored, with all of its community resource centers closed, according to the company’s PSPS website.
The approximately 10,000 customers still without power on Tuesday night throughout the outage area can expect to have their power restored by noon on Wednesday, PG&E officials said in a Tuesday night briefing.
Mark Quinlan, PG&E’s incident commander, said that the company doesn’t expect another PSPS for the coming week and a half.
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.