CLEARLAKE, Calif. – A Clearlake man died Sunday after he was hit by a vehicle while walking in the road.
Jeremiah Fields, 35, died in the crash, which occurred on Sunday night, according to Sgt. Tim Hobbs of the Clearlake Police Department.
At 9 p.m. Sunday 26-year-old Clearlake resident James Adkins was driving west on Arrowhead Road near Ciwa Street in a 2005 Toyota Camry, while Fields was walking west on Arrowhead Road in the westbound lane near Ciwa Street, Hobbs said.
Hobbs’ report explained that Adkins did not see Fields, who was walking on the wrong side of the road, until he was too close to avoid a collision.
Adkins swerved to avoid striking Fields but was unable to do so and almost collided head-on with a vehicle that was traveling east on Arrowhead Road, Hobbs said.
The cause of the fatal collision is still under investigation, however, Hobbs said neither alcohol nor drugs appear to be a contributing factor in the collision.
As a reminder, Hobbs said it is safest for pedestrians to walk nearest to his or her lefthand edge of the roadway. Additionally this is required by law when walking on a roadway outside of a residential or business district.
“I was born of the struggle and the torment and the pain. A child of the wheel, a brat of the cogs, a woman of the dust … When a laborer sweats his sweat of blood and weeps his tears of blood a remedy is thrust upon the world. I am that remedy.”
Thus Mother Jones, the “most dangerous woman in America” according to those in power, described her life of suffering.
And really, those few words are a good summation of the first 60 years of her life. Hers was a life lived largely on the margins of the world, far distant from the tectonic movements of her day.
We know this at least: Mary Harris was born in Ireland in 1837 (although she later claimed a birthdate of 1830 to add to the grey-haired persona of a grandmotherly figure). She immigrated to Canada with her parents, graduated from school and worked for a time as a school teacher in Michigan.
She married a man named George Jones in Memphis in 1861 and had several children. Her first major encounter with tragedy saw her entire family, husband and children, die of yellow fever in 1867.
She travelled to Chicago and opened a seamstress shop just in time for the great 1871 Chicago fire. She had become the female counterpart to the protagonist in the old folk song “A Man of Constant Sorrow.”
Up until then, Mary Jones had lived a life of obscurity, leaving no trace of her daily struggle on the historical record beyond census records and what she later recalled to journalists. Her story is a warning to those who would oppress and a comfort for those who suffer still, that even the most obscure of us can blaze a trail across society, whose passing forever alters the status quo.
Her husband had been a member of a union in Tennessee. Perhaps that’s what spurred her to action after her life burned to ashes in 1871. Or maybe she was just plain pissed off and tired of the drudgery she had wallowed in her whole life.
Whatever the reason, beginning in the 1870s, Mary Jones sought community in the Knights of Labor, a national labor union that sought fair wages and working conditions for the country’s laborers. Having lost her family and her business, Mary Jones threw herself into her new role, and found in the struggle a new family. She was rechristened Mother Jones.
Following the philosophy of “wherever there’s a fight,” Mother Jones travelled the nation to support strikes by laborers in the railroad, steel, copper, brewing and textile industries. In the 1890s, she found her a home as an organizer for the United Mine Workers of West Virginia.
In a style that today would seem rambling and bombastic, Mother Jones’ public speeches were widely hailed at the time for their fervor and intensity. Upton Sinclair, author and exposer of the unhealthy meat packing industry in his book The Jungle, was a huge fan of Mother Jones. He described her fiery perambulations in these terms:
“All over the country she had roamed, and wherever she went, the flame of protest had leaped up in the hearts of men; her story was a veritable Odyssey of revolt.”
Her most powerful tool was her ability to weave stories into her speeches. In 1912, she gave her famous speech at a miner’s meeting in West Virginia – famous in part because it was faithfully recorded by a stenographer and remains the most complete example of her speaking style.
In that speech alone, she weaves together stories of the doomed miners and their meager lunch boxes, the clueless U.S. Sen. Dick and the mine owner’s wife and her pampered dog.
She exhorts the crowd, calling them her “boys” and passes around a hat to collect beer money for “the miners who came up here broke.” Is it any wonder she was labelled “the most dangerous woman in America” by a West Virginia attorney?
She was a self-proclaimed “hell-raiser” and when she spoke, the powerful groaned.
She focused so much on the economic and social evils of her day that she ended up on the wrong side of a few social justice causes.
For instance, she was opposed to woman suffrage. She believed that to advocate for the vote would serve as a distraction from the underlying economic issues facing working women. She saw the whole movement – in retrospect not entirely incorrectly – as a rich woman’s battle.
On the topic, she said publicly “the plutocrats have organized their women. They keep them busy with suffrage and prohibition and charity.”
As for her people, the workers, they had more pressing concerns. When the Colorado militia killed 20 women and children at a miner’s tent colony in Ludlow in 1914, Mother Jones raised enough hell for a Congressional hearing to finally be called. Oh sure, Mother Jones lost as many fights as she won. But in a career that spanned decades, that was still a lot of wins.
As the years went on, the gray-haired agitator continued her fight for the oppressed. She travelled to Mexico in 1921 for the Pan American Federation of Labor.
She lived her final years with friends and on her self-proclaimed 100th birthday, May 1, 1930, she gave her final public speech.
Although a short one, her final message to her “boys” the world over, was recorded on a moving picture camera, giving future generations a tantalizing peek at the woman who led a movement.
Antone Pierucci is curator of history at the Riverside County Park and Open Space District and a freelance writer whose work has been featured in such magazines as Archaeology and Wild West as well as regional California newspapers.
Why was an earthquake in Virginia felt at more than twice the distance than a similar-sized earthquake in California?
The answer is one that many people may not realize. Earthquakes east of the Rocky Mountains can cause noticeable ground shaking at much farther distances than comparably-sized earthquakes in the West.
A magnitude 5.8 earthquake in 2011 in Mineral, Virginia, was felt up to 600 miles from the epicenter. Tens of millions of people in the eastern United States and southeastern Canada felt this earthquake.
For comparison, a magnitude 6.0 earthquake in 2014 in Napa, California, was felt only as far as 250 miles from the epicenter.
Despite the Napa earthquake releasing about twice as much energy as the Virginia earthquake and causing much more damage near the epicenter, it wasn’t felt nearly as far away.
As another example, the magnitude 4.1 earthquake that occurred in December 2017 near Dover, Delaware, was felt approximately 200 miles from the epicenter.
The region that felt this earthquake is about the same size as that of the much larger California event, which released about 700 times more energy.
Scientists are researching a variety of factors that influence regional differences in the intensity and effects of earthquakes.
Some of the factors have to do with the nature of the underlying tectonic plates and their geologic history. Others are connected to the size and age of buildings.
Seismic waves can travel farther in the east
Eastern North America has older rocks, some of which formed hundreds of millions of years before those in the West. These older formations have been exposed to extreme pressures and temperatures, making them harder and often denser. Faults in these older rocks have also had more time to heal, which allows seismic waves to cross them more effectively when an earthquake occurs.
In contrast, rocks in the West are younger and broken up by faults that are often younger and have had less time to heal.
So when an earthquake occurs, more of the seismic wave energy is absorbed by the faults and the energy doesn’t spread as efficiently.
More vulnerable infrastructure in the east
Many of the older structures in the East, such as buildings and bridges built before the 1970s, were not designed to endure earthquakes and therefore may not fare well.
The recent earthquakes that struck near Christchurch, New Zealand showed the damage that infrequent earthquakes can do to a region with older structures.
With that said, modern buildings are being constructed to newer design standards, and there has been progress in retrofitting many older buildings in the East. In the West, older structures are often retrofitted, and new structures are designed to withstand strong shaking.
Furthermore, smaller structures such as houses could experience stronger and more damaging shaking in the East. Earthquakes in the East tend to cause higher-frequency shaking – faster back and forth motion – compared to similar events in the West.
Shorter structures are more susceptible to damage during fast shaking, whereas taller structures are more susceptible during slow shaking.
Surprising level of shaking in Washington, DC
An example of the earthquake hazard in the eastern U.S. is provided by the surprising level of high-intensity ground shaking that occurred in Washington, DC, during the 2011 Virginia earthquake.
This shaking caused well-publicized damage to some historic buildings, even though the earthquake was moderate in size and its epicenter was 80 miles from the city.
To learn more, USGS scientists deployed 27 temporary seismometers throughout DC to study variations in the strength of earthquake ground shaking. The instruments recorded ground motions from 30 earthquakes around the world during the 10 months they were in place.
Scientists confirmed that shaking is amplified in the parts of DC underlain by a thin layer of sediments compared to areas built on more solid, harder bedrock. This is because the energy in the seismic waves can move the lighter, weaker sediments more easily than the harder bedrock, and that energy gets “trapped” and echoes multiple times within the sediments.
While this amplification effect has been well documented in some western cities, including Seattle, Los Angeles and San Francisco, this is the first study that directly measures the effect in the nation’s capital. It was previously suspected to occur in Washington, DC, and had been found in other cities such as Boston.
Other major cities in the central and eastern United States with similar geology that could lead to amplified ground shaking include Trenton, New Jersey; Wilmington, Delaware; Baltimore, Maryland; Richmond, Virginia; and Columbia, South Carolina. Similar deposits also underlie cities in the Mississippi Valley and Gulf Coast, notably Memphis, Tennessee, near the New Madrid Seismic Zone.
The new results about amplification and the more efficient energy transmission in the East are part of an increased understanding and awareness of earthquake hazards in central and eastern U.S. cities. This information is especially useful to engineers and architects when designing buildings and retrofitting existing structures.
Challenges of Assessing earthquake hazards in the east
The geology of the eastern United States and the relatively sparse history of earthquakes to study make it difficult for scientists to assess how frequently earthquakes will occur and how large they can be.
Eastern earthquakes are more of a mystery because they do not take place at a plate boundary where most other earthquakes originate. Scientists do not fully understand the state of stress within tectonic plates, and they are studying how stresses accumulate and evolve and how earthquakes are triggered.
Scientists also do not know precisely where most active faults are located in the East. Most faults have not had major earthquakes or movement in the past few million years, and the faults that are active may only have earthquakes every few thousand or tens of thousands of years. Furthermore, any evidence of past earthquakes on the land’s surface in the eastern U.S. is often obscured by vegetation or is more subdued because of erosion.
Conversely, the West has more active faults and many areas with sparse vegetation, meaning earthquakes can leave clear markings that inform research on earthquake history, size and effects.
Ongoing research
The National Science Foundation and the USGS recently added new seismic stations in the central and eastern United States, creating a more robust network that augments the monitoring by university partners. USGS scientists also are working with university collaborators on several research projects.
For example, they are searching parts of Virginia and the Carolinas for evidence of strong earthquake shaking in the past, monitoring earthquakes and studying faults near the 2011 earthquake in Virginia and the 1886 earthquake in Charleston, South Carolina, and conducting detailed studies of the seismically active central Virginia region.
Scientists can’t predict earthquakes
As far as predicting earthquakes, no reliable short-term earthquake prediction method has ever been developed. Nor do scientists expect to develop a method in the foreseeable future.
However, using scientific data – such as fault locations and patterns of earthquakes over many years – probabilities can be calculated for future earthquakes, and that information is used in development of building codes.
Furthermore, the USGS and its partners are working to develop a prototype Earthquake Early Warning System for the West Coast of the U.S. called ShakeAlert. The system does not predict earthquakes, but once an earthquake happens, it could provide a few seconds to tens of seconds of warning before seismic waves arrive and cause strong shaking.
More earthquakes in the West
The western United States lies along the boundaries of major tectonic plates that make up the Earth’s crust – the North American Plate and the ocean plates to the west.
These plates are moving against each other, breaking up the crust along many faults like the San Andreas Fault. Faults in the East are less active and lie entirely within the North American Plate.
One of the most important takeaway messages is that everyone should know how to protect themselves during an earthquake. Check out FEMA’s Ready campaign for tips on earthquake preparedness.
The USGS is the federal agency with primary responsibility for recording and reporting earthquake activity nationwide and assessing seismic hazards to reduce risks to life and property. The USGS has created and provides tools to support earthquake loss reduction, including hazard assessments, earthquake scenarios, comprehensive real-time earthquake monitoring and public preparedness handbooks. Learn more about USGS earthquake science.
NICE, Calif. – Authorities arrested a Northshore man last week after finding a butane hash oil lab, drugs and weapons at a home in Nice.
On Thursday, Lake County Sheriff’s Office Narcotics Unit detectives served a search warrant at a residence located in the 3400 block of Clyde Street in Nice, according to Lt. Corey Paulich.
The residence was determined to be connected to Jose Gustavo Mena III, who was arrested on April 25 in possession of a loaded firearm and lock pick set, as Lake County News has reported.
Detectives contacted Jose Mena’s brother, Ryan Anthony Mena, 33, and Christina Elizabeth Muis, 26, both of Nice, at the residence, Paulich said.
Upon entering the residence, detectives located a butane concentrated cannabis extraction lab, commonly known as butane hash oil lab. Paulich said they also located approximately 15 pounds of marijuana, 1 gram of methamphetamine, glass pipes, 61 rounds of 9 millimeter ammunition, an extended 9 millimeter magazine, hypodermic needles and more than $11,000 in cash.
He said detectives also located a binder that was hidden in the house that contained dozens of completed shipping labels along with a log showing various amounts of money.
Detectives were able to confirm that Ryan Mena was on probation out of the state of Louisiana and had left the state without permission. Paulich said they also confirmed that Mena had previously been convicted of a felony.
Paulich said Mena was arrested and booked at the Lake County Jail for violations of California Health and Safety Code including chemical extraction of a controlled substance, possession of marijuana for sale, possession of controlled substance paraphernalia, possession of a controlled substance and a prohibited person in possession of ammunition.
Mena’s bail was set at $100,000. Jail records showed that he posted the required percentage of bail and later was released.
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – Dozens of volunteers joined in the effort to spruce up Clearlake this weekend.
On Saturday, the city of Clearlake – in coordination with the Clear Lake Chamber of Commerce, Clearlake Waste Solutions and Citizens Caring 4 Clearlake – sponsored the annual Clearlake Clean-up Day event.
Volunteers, including elected officials, service clubs, citizens, and city staff, spent the morning picking up trash and cleaning various areas in Clearlake.
“We estimate we collected over 120 tons of debris, 50 tires and five tons of scrap metal during today’s cleanup,” said Bruce McCracken of Clearlake Waste Solutions.
Doug Herren, Public Works director for the city of Clearlake, added, ”We had a great turnout this year with over 86 volunteers and were able to remove a lot of trash from the roadsides and the lake. This community is terrific the way they come together for a common cause.”
“Once again it was my privilege to participate in such a great showing of community spirit,” said City Manager Greg Folsom. “It’s amazing to see the impact that such a group of dedicated citizens can make in cleaning up parts of our city. Thank you to all the staff and volunteers that came out on a Saturday morning to show their Clearlake pride.”
LAKEPORT, Calif. – This year’s Lake County Symphony Mother’s Day Concert will go beyond Bach and Beethoven.
The concert will take place beginning at 2 p.m. Sunday, May 13, at the Soper Reese Theater, 275 S. Main St.
This year’s concert will feature Jenna Mammina, a skilled vocal stylist, songwriter and educator-whose unique blend of musical styles will keep the energy level high and display the versatility of the talented musicians in the Lake County Symphony.
John Parkinson, music director and symphony conductor, said he decided to change the program’s usual format because he was so impressed with Mammina’s unique talents, and also because, along with his love of classical music, he is also a major jazz fan.
Described as one of the leading women of jazz/pop crossover for three years in a row by Jazziz Magazine, Mammina has shared the honor of both the magazine cover and a featured original song, (“A love that Lasts”) with Diana Krall and Norah Jones.
Other notable accolades include SF Weekly’s Jazz Performer of the Year, a nomination for Best Jazz Album for her CD (“Meant To Be”) from the California Music Awards, and the Goldy Award for her continuing work with children through her nationally acclaimed music education program, Scat for Cats.
Her first album (“Under the Influence”) was one of the most widely praised debuts in recent years, earning a four-star review in Japan’s most prestigious jazz magazine, Swing Journal.
This first effort from Mammina was also lauded by Derk Robertson, writing for the SF Chronicle, which he chose as number nine in his top albums of 1999.
Her second album, “Meant to Be,” was nominated for a California Music Award in the Outstanding Jazz Album category.
Mammina says she found music early in life in St. Joseph, Michigan, singing in church at the age of 5 and performing in school musicals. In her teens, she learned guitar and piano and performed with local bands.
After attending Michigan State University and Laney College in Oakland, Mammina settled in San Francisco, going on to record five albums, all released on her own label, Mamma Grace. An accomplished performer who puts on as many as 250 shows per year and has played with musicians like Bobby McFerrin, Bobby Watson, Nancy King, Andy Narell and Steve Coleman, reviewers say Mammina combines folk music, pop and jazz, to create her own unique style. She often includes songs from such performers as Abbey Lincoln (her idol), Elvis Costello, U2 and Tom Waits, as well as her own original compositions.
“I don’t want to categorize my music,” said Mammina. “It’s not that I don’t know who I am. I don’t sing classical, and I’m not a soul singer or an R&B singer, but I have been influenced by that stuff too. I can sing a Patsy Cline tune, a James Taylor or Led Zeppelin tune, but I do it with my own flair.”
Her voice has been described as “sweet and flexible” and “whisper-like” with “airbrushed phrasings and silky nuance.” Grapevine Culture critic Kimberlye Gold writes, “Jenna could sing a page from the phone book and make it sound like her own private piece of the sky.”
When she is not performing, Mammina enjoys teaching song and movement (she is a longtime yoga teacher) to kids of all ages through her trademark workshops “Scat for Cats,” “Art of the Duo,” and the latest, “So You Want to be a Rock and Roll Star,” at schools and universities throughout the country.
Songs for the upcoming Mother’s Day Concert at the Soper-Reese come from such notables as Roy Orbison (Blue Bayou) Bonnie Hayes (Have a Heart), Joni Mitchell (Help Me), Dolly Parton (Here You Come Again) Abbey Lincoln (Throw it Away) Jules Styne & Sammy Cahn (Time After Time), G. Anthony Bertig (Moonlight Duet ), Tony Bertig (Where Life Will Take You), Rolf Sturm (Begin to Dance-arranged by Sturm) as well as her own songs, Inner Smile, Contradictions and Upside Down World. Most were arranged for orchestra by Isaac Narell.
The Mother’s Day concert opens with the LCSA Youth Orchestra, conducted by Sue Condit. “Hunting the Wild Beast” will lead the audience into a world of castles, knights and dragons.
The driving rhythms in this piece tell a story of hunters pursuing the dragon, but leaving the outcome to the imagination of the listener.
The final piece is “The Magical World of Pixar,” a medley of the Big Race, Nemo Egg (Main Title), The Spirit of Adventure, The Glory Days, Ratatouille Main Theme and You’ve Got a Friend in Me.
This high-spirited medley will be familiar to those who enjoy Pixar Studio movies.
The 11 a.m. full dress rehearsal,is free to those 18 and younger and costs just $5 for the older crowd.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – The statewide network of county First 5 commissions will honor Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry, D-Winters, with a Champion for Children Award on May 2 as part of First 5’s 20th Anniversary celebration on May 2nd at the capitol steps.
Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Lakewood) will deliver the keynote for the award ceremony.
Champion for Children Awards are given to legislators who have demonstrated their commitment to young kids in California by consistently supporting policies that improve the lives of families and children ages 0 to 5.
Assemblymember Aguiar-Curry is sponsoring a bill this legislative session to increase pay and recruitment of child care providers (AB 2292).
Only 14 percent of eligible infant-toddlers in California have access to subsidized care, in part due to a workforce shortage that ensued after more than $1 billion was cut from child care spending during the Great Recession.
Aguiar-Curry’s bill would create start-up grants to rebuild child care capacity and increase the reimbursement adjustment factor for infant-toddler care.
“The current reimbursement rate for infant-toddler care providers does not cover the cost of providing care, which has caused many providers to shut down or stop offering care for subsidized families,” said Camille Maben, executive director of First 5 California. “Assemblymember Aguiar-Curry’s bill will help reverse this trend and put our young children on track for kindergarten and beyond.”
Assemblymembers Joaquin Arambula (D-Fresno) and Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) will also receive Champion for Children awards on May 2.
First 5’s 20th Anniversary event will celebrate the local partners and state legislators who support its mission of ensuring California’s kids thrive. Kids’ games, a visit from Sesame Street’s Walkaround Rosita, and appearances by visits by state legislators will mark the event.
“Our kids are our collective future. These legislators’ commitment to the wellbeing of California’s youngest children is a step in the right direction,” said Moira Kenney, executive director of First 5 Association, which represents First 5s in the state’s 58 counties. “Families are struggling across our state – with poverty, quality child care, and access to early intervention services. By supporting kids in the early years, we can shape the course of their lives—and our society.”
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lakeport City Council this week will hear from the city’s police chief about the ongoing effort to increase traffic safety on 20th Street, consider a request from the organizers of a sprint boat race and get a presentation from the head of Sutter Lakeside Hospital.
The council will meet in closed session at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 1, to discuss a case of anticipated litigation before the public portion of the meeting begins at 6 p.m. in the council chambers at Lakeport City Hall, 225 Park St.
Under council business, Lakeport Police Chief Brad Rasmussen will give the council an update on traffic issues on 20th Street, where the city is working on speed surveys and traffic control measures in order to reduce speeding between Alden Avenue and Hartley Street.
Rasmussen also will present to the council the request for the use of city streets, property and city resources and personnel to staff and accommodate Clearlake Motor Sport Enterprises LLC for the second annual Lakeport Sprint Boat Grand Prix event set for June 1 through 3.
In other business, Utilities Superintendent Paul Harris will ask the council to sign a memorandum of understanding with the Lakeport Unified School District as well as a budget adjustment not to exceed $60,000 to fund a sewer main project.
Dan Peterson of Sutter Lakeside Hospital also will give a presentation during the meeting.
On the consent agenda – items considered noncontroversial and usually accepted as a slate on one vote – are ordinances; minutes of the council’s regular meeting on April 17; the April 20 warrant register; approval of Application WP-2018-001, with staff recommendations, for the 2018 Grillin’ on the Green event, to be held August 4; approval of Application 2018-017, with staff recommendations, for the 2018 Cardboard and Duct Tape Regatta, to be held July 4; approval of Application 2018-018, with staff recommendations, for the 2018 Fun Walk and 5K run event, to be held May 27; approval of the memorandum of understanding between the Lakeport Unified School District and the city of Lakeport Police Department for the services of a school resource officer for fiscal years 2018/2019 and 2019/2020 and direct the city manager to sign; and receipt and filing of the draft minutes of the April 18 MZAC meeting.
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.
AccuWeather reports it's common advice to stay away from plumbing or metal objects during a thunderstorm, but what could happen if you don't?
Lightning can strike and electricity can travel through pipes and water, shocking you, according to John Jensenius, lightning safety specialist for the National Weather Service, or NWS.
During a thunderstorm, simple daily tasks such as doing the dishes or taking a shower can increase your risk of getting struck by lightning.
"You just want to stay away from things that conduct electricity within the home," Jensenius said. "That would include both the wires and the plumbing, so in that particular case certainly showers would be dangerous, it would be dangerous to be washing your hands or washing dishes. Just avoid those any time you can hear thunder."
"If you're at all connected to ... anything that plugs into the wall, which could be, for example, a dishwasher or a washing machine that's plugged into the wall or also has connections to plumbing, that becomes dangerous," Jensenius said.
He said that lightning can strike up to about 10 miles away from a thunderstorm. With that in mind, if you can hear thunder, you're within striking distance of a storm and you'll want to get to a safe place.
According to the NWS, a safe place is indoors, away from metal, plumbing, anything plugged in, concrete, windows and doors. Picnic shelters, dugouts and dog houses are not safe. A vehicle with a metal roof is safe if the windows are up.
Jensenius said some people think if they have plastic pipes, they're able to shower during a storm without risk.
"That's not true. Water can conduct electricity as well. We see that on the outside where lightning strikes something and if there are puddles around, it can easily electrocute somebody nearby the puddle."
AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Dan Kottlowski noted it can also depend on how your house is grounded.
"When a house is built, it should be built so that when your electricity comes in, it's grounded to your house. If your house is grounded to separate rods that are basically stuck down into the ground, then that's a bit safer because nothing is attached to the plumbing," Kottlowski said.
Kottlowski said some homes, years ago, had electrical systems that were grounded to the plumbing system.
He said one way to change where your electrical system is grounded to is to have an electrical contractor come in and put steel rods in the ground, a few feet away from the house, and attach the electrical system to those rods.
In order to determine if your electrical system is grounded to your plumbing, it's best to contact an electrician, Kottlowski said.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County’s annual burn ban – which addresses concerns over both fire hazard and air quality – starts on Tuesday, May 1.
All burn permits expire on April 30.
The burn restriction applies to all areas in Lake County. It includes all open waste burning, though exemptions are possible for agricultural operations, essential control burns for fire hazard reduction projects, public safety burns and others.
The annual burn ban was first implemented in 1986 in response to weather conditions that often create extreme fire danger and poor air quality.
A managed approach incorporating fire and air agency concerns has been implemented and improved upon for many years.
The ban allows a quick fire agency response to all fires observed from May 1 on, as they are all assumed to be uncontrolled fires unless specifically authorized by an exemption permit. This successful program is one of the primary reasons Lake County has superior and healthful air quality.
To obtain an exemption permit to burn after May 1, first contact Lake County Air Quality at 707- 263-7000 to determine need, then contact your local fire agency so that your burn site can be inspected for fire safety. After the fire agency notifies the air district that the proposed burn site is fire safe then an exemption permit may be obtained.
Anyone responsible for open burning during the ban without an exemption permit may be subject to citation, fines and fire agency response costs to extinguish the fire. Burn restrictions will remain in effect until Cal Fire declares an end to fire season.
Officials ask that community members help to reduce the danger and losses caused by uncontrolled fires, and protect Lake County’s clean air.
“Public cooperation is greatly appreciated and results in a safer and more healthful environment for us all,” Lake County Air Quality Management said in a statement on the ban’s implementation.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Board of Supervisors this week will once again consider appointments to a committee that will study the health of Clear Lake and discuss a resolution related to cannabis cultivation.
The board will meet beginning at 9 a.m. Tuesday, May 1, in the board chambers on the first floor of the Lake County Courthouse, 255 N. Forbes St., Lakeport.
The meeting can be watched live on Channel 8 and online at https://countyoflake.legistar.com/Calendar.aspx . Accompanying board documents, the agenda and archived board meeting videos also are available at that link.
In an untimed item continued from last week, the board will consider the appointment of members to the Blue Ribbon Committee for the Rehabilitation of Clear Lake for the purposes of discussion, reviewing research, planning and providing oversight regarding the health of Clear Lake.
The board also will consider an untimed resolution expressing its intent to prohibit a cannabis cultivation site within 1,000 feet of a water sphere of influence as described in Lake County Ordinance No. 3073.
The full agenda follows.
CONSENT AGENDA
7.1: Adopt proclamation designating the first week of May 2018 as Wildfire Awareness Week in Lake County.
7.2: Adopt proclamation designating the month of May 2018 as Cal Fresh Awareness Month in Lake County.
7.3: Approve minutes of the Board of Supervisors meetings held Jan. 23 and Feb. 13.
7.4: Approve retention schedule and destruction of documents.
7.5: Adopt the resolution approving the standard agreement for the No Place Like Home Technical Assistance Grant Award Multi-Year Agreement between the county of Lake and the Department of Housing and Community Development for Fiscal Year 2017-18 through Fiscal Year 2022-23 and authorize the Behavioral Health administrator to sign the standard agreement. not available.
7.6: Adopt resolution to make applicable to the Upper Lake Unified School District provisions of the education code permitting the formation of school facilities improvement districts.
7.7: Adopt resolution authorizing the director of the Public Works Department to sign a notice of completion for work performed under agreement dated July 11, 2017, for the Harbin Springs Road at Harbin Creek Bridge Replacement Project. Bid No. 17-04.
7.8: Approve purchase of three M7 In-Vehicle Computer Systems, at a cost of $20,280.50 from Data911, an approved vendor under the state CMAS contract.
7.9: Approve purchase of one M7 In-Vehicle computer system, at a cost of $6,554.61 from Data911, an approved vendor under the state CMAS contract.
7.10: (a) Waive the formal bidding process, per Ordinance #2406, Purchasing Code 38.2, as it is not in the public interest due to the unique nature of goods or services; and (b) approve agreement between the county of Lake and PJ Helicopters for Calendar Year 2018 in the amount of $60,000 and authorize the chair to sign.
7.11: Approve three year Lease between Schall Investment Corp. and county of Lake for the annual amount of $31,200 with Consumer Price Index (CPI) adjustment increases each subsequent year during the term of the lease terminating on June 30, 2021, and authorize the chair to sign.
TIMED ITEMS
8.2, 9:10 a.m.: Presentation of proclamation designating the first week of May 2018 as Wildfire Awareness Week in Lake County; and presentation of proclamation designating the month of May 2018 as Cal Fresh Awareness Month in Lake County.
8.3, 9;30 a.m.: Consideration of proposals for design services for South Lakeport Water Project; and authorize board chair to award contract to NEXGEN Utility Management Inc. of Sacramento in the amount of $49,200.
UNTIMED ITEMS
9.2: Continued from April 24, consideration of appointment of Blue Ribbon Committee members for the Rehabilitation of Clear Lake for the purposes of discussion, reviewing research, planning and providing oversight regarding the health of Clear Lake.
9.3: Approve Agreement between Lake County Behavioral Health and Lakeport Police Department for crisis responding services and authorize the Behavioral Health Administrator to sign.
9.4: Consideration of a resolution expressing the intent of the Board of Supervisors in prohibiting a cannabis cultivation site within 1,000 feet of a water sphere of influence as described in Lake County Ordinance No. 3073.
CLOSED SESSION
10.1: Public employee evaluations title: County Administrative Officer Carol Huchingson.
10.2: Employee grievance complaint pursuant to Gov. Code sec. 54957.
10.3: Conference with legal counsel: Decision whether to Initiate Litigation Pursuant to Gov. Code sec. 54956.9(d)(4): PG&E.
10.4: Conference with legal counsel: Decision whether to Initiate Litigation Pursuant to Gov. Code sec. 54956.9(d)(4): One potential case.
10.5: Conference with legal counsel: Significant exposure to litigation pursuant to Gov. Code sec. 54956.9 (d)(2), (e)(3): Claim of PG&E.
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The ALMA and APEX telescopes have peered deep into space – back to the time when the Universe was one tenth of its current age – and witnessed the beginnings of gargantuan cosmic pileups: the impending collisions of young, starburst galaxies.
Astronomers thought that these events occurred around three billion years after the Big Bang, so they were surprised when the new observations revealed them happening when the Universe was only half that age! These ancient systems of galaxies are thought to be building the most massive structures in the known Universe: galaxy clusters.
Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX), two international teams of scientists led by Tim Miller from Dalhousie University in Canada and Yale University in the US and Iván Oteo from the University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom, have uncovered startlingly dense concentrations of galaxies that are poised to merge, forming the cores of what will eventually become colossal galaxy clusters.
Peering 90 percent of the way across the observable Universe, the Miller team observed a galaxy protocluster named SPT2349-56. The light from this object began travelling to us when the Universe was about a tenth of its current age.
The individual galaxies in this dense cosmic pileup are starburst galaxies and the concentration of vigorous star formation in such a compact region makes this by far the most active region ever observed in the young Universe. Thousands of stars are born there every year, compared to just one in our own Milky Way.
The Oteo team discovered a similar megamerger formed by ten dusty star-forming galaxies, nicknamed a “dusty red core” because of its very red colour, by combining observations from ALMA and the APEX.
Iván Oteo explains why these objects are unexpected: “The lifetime of dusty starbursts is thought to be relatively short, because they consume their gas at an extraordinary rate. At any time, in any corner of the Universe, these galaxies are usually in the minority. So, finding numerous dusty starbursts shining at the same time like this is very puzzling, and something that we still need to understand.”
These forming galaxy clusters were first spotted as faint smudges of light, using the South Pole Telescope and the Herschel Space Observatory. Subsequent ALMA and APEX observations showed that they had unusual structure and confirmed that their light originated much earlier than expected — only 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang.
The new high-resolution ALMA observations finally revealed that the two faint glows are not single objects, but are actually composed of fourteen and ten individual massive galaxies respectively, each within a radius comparable to the distance between the Milky Way and the neighbouring Magellanic Clouds.
"These discoveries by ALMA are only the tip of the iceberg. Additional observations with the APEX telescope show that the real number of star-forming galaxies is likely even three times higher. Ongoing observations with the MUSE instrument on ESO’s VLT are also identifying additional galaxies,” comments Carlos De Breuck, ESO astronomer.
Current theoretical and computer models suggest that protoclusters as massive as these should have taken much longer to evolve. By using data from ALMA, with its superior resolution and sensitivity, as input to sophisticated computer simulations, the researchers are able to study cluster formation less than 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang.
"How this assembly of galaxies got so big so fast is a mystery. It wasn’t built up gradually over billions of years, as astronomers might expect. This discovery provides a great opportunity to study how massive galaxies came together to build enormous galaxy clusters," says Tim Miller, a PhD candidate at Yale University and lead author of one of the papers.