CLEARLAKE, Calif. — Clearlake Animal Control has several more dogs that have joined its large selection of adoptable canines.
The newest dogs are at the top.
‘Blue Eyed Jack’
“Blue Eyed Jack” is a male German shepherd mix.
He is dog No. 5046.
‘Dash’
“Dash” is a male Chihuahua mix with a short tan coat.
He is dog No. 5040.
‘Petey’
“Petey” is a male American Staffordshire terrier mix with a black and white coat.
He is dog No. 4963.
‘Sissy’
“Sissy” is a female American Staffordshire terrier mix with a black coat.
She is dog No. 4964.
‘Bear’
“Bear” is a male American Staffordshire terrier mix with a short brown coat.
He has been neutered.
He is dog No. 3476.
‘Cleo’
“Cleo” is a female Doberman pinscher mix with a short gray coat who is new to the shelter.
She has been spayed.
She is dog No. 4865.
‘Dusty’
“Dusty” is a male American Pit Bull Terrier with a tan and white coat.
He is dog No. 4750.
‘Girly’
“Girly” is a senior female Chihuahua mix.
She has a short tan coat.
Girly is house-trained.
She is dog No. 4940.
‘Gizmo’
“Gizmo” is a senior male Chihuahua mix with a short tan and white coat.
He is dog No. 4902.
‘Ike’
“Ike” is a senior male Chihuahua.
He has a short tan coat.
He is dog No. 4942.
‘Jake’
“Jake” is a senior male Chihuahua mix.
He has a short tan and white coat.
He is dog No. 4941.
‘Lucky’
“Lucky” is a male Labrador retriever mix with a short yellow coat.
He is dog No. 4908.
‘Mara’
“Mara” is a female Rottweiler mix.
She has a short black and tan coat.
He is house-trained.
She is dog No. 4628.
‘Mary J’
“Mary J” is a female pit bull terrier mix.
She has a white and tan coat.
She is house-trained.
She is dog No. 4927.
‘Mitzy’
“Mitzy” is a female shepherd mix with a medium-length black and white coat.
She is dog No. 4648.
‘Mojo’
“Mojo” is a male Chihuahua mix with a short black and tan coat.
He has been neutered.
He is dog No. 4881.
‘Oakley’
“Oakley” is a male pit bull terrier mix.
He has a short red and white coat.
He is dog No. 4934.
‘Patches’
“Patches” is a male Chihuahua mix with a short tricolor coat.
He is dog No. 4903.
‘Sassy’
“Sassy” is a female American bully mix with a short black coat.
She has been spayed.
She is dog No. 4602.
‘Tanisha’
“Tanisha” is a female shepherd mix with a short orange and white coat.
She is dog No. 4647.
‘Terry’
“Terry” is a male Dutch shepherd mix with a smooth brindle coat.
He is dog No. 4880.
‘Tinsel’
“Tinsel” is a female American pit bull terrier mix with a short brindle and brown coat.
She is dog No. 4433.
‘Yule’
“Yule” is a male husky with a medium-length black and white coat.
He is dog No. 4432.
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. — This week, Congressman John Garamendi (D-CA 3rd District) released discussion draft legislation to add the Lake County portion of Walker Ridge to the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument, a move conservation groups said will preserve and protect biodiversity and recreational opportunities.
The Walker Ridge tract, nearly 4,000 acres, was within the original Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument boundary, but was excluded before President Obama signed the Presidential Proclamation on July 10, 2015.
Also included in the draft legislation is the requirement to complete a Monument Management Plan within a year.
Located north of San Francisco and Sacramento, Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument is a rugged and diverse landscape.
The region is culturally significant to numerous Native American tribes and is also notable for its variety of habitats including grasslands, old growth conifer forests, and woodlands.
It hosts imperiled wildlife such as northern spotted owls, Northern California steelhead, martens and fishers.
Walker Ridge, approximately 10 miles east of Clearlake, is considered a jewel of biodiversity.
The area hosts ancient blue oak woodlands, rugged rock outcrops, precious meadows, rolling hills of chaparral and extensive stands of McNab cypress. It is home to more than 30 species of rare plants.
“We have long fought for the appreciation and protection of this irreplaceable region, which is a mecca of botanical richness within the biodiversity hotspot that is California,” said Nick Jensen, conservation program director for the California Native Plant Society. “We are overjoyed that Congressman Garamendi has introduced draft legislation to expand Berryessa Snow National Monument to include the Lake County portion of Walker Ridge.”
“Permanent protection of this extraordinary place has been a personal priority since before the Berryessa Snow Mountain campaign began,” emphasized Lake County resident and Tuleyome board member, Victoria Brandon. “I’m thrilled that my own Congressman John Garamendi has stepped up to save it for posterity by adding it to the monument.”
Walker Ridge notably provides easy access to a variety of recreational users including mountain bikers, hikers, OHV riders and equestrians.
Don Amador, a long-time trail recreation and resource management professional, noted that, “As one of the OHV recreation partners that helped in the creation of the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument, I want to commend Congressman Garamendi for his proposal to adjust the Monument boundary to include Walker Ridge and the many trails that exist in that area. The boundary adjustment also makes a lot of sense given the BLM has started its travel planning effort within the monument and this plan will make it easier for the agency to designate routes that provide connectivity to increase public access and enhance recreation opportunities for all user groups.”
By completing a management plan, all user groups will be able to enjoy the many wonders of this remarkable region, supporters said.
"The Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument Expansion Act will safeguard Walker Ridge's natural beauty, wildlife, rare plants, and indigenous treasures,” said Tuleyome Executive Director Sandra Schubert. “It will also secure continued recreation opportunities in the area while providing a boost for the economy and local communities that have long called for permanent protection of the area. We support this legislation and commend Congressman Garamendi for protecting Walker Ridge and all of the Monument’s treasures.”
“Conservation Lands Foundation celebrates and supports Congressman Garamendi’s goal to expand the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument and ensure this special landscape has a robust management plan,” said Elyane Stefanick, California program director for the Conservation Lands Foundation. “The addition of Walker Ridge will help protect the area’s rich biodiversity and is a step toward helping the State of California and the Biden Administration meet the important goal of protecting 30% of U.S. lands and waters by the year 2030.”
“We're very grateful that Congressman Garamendi introduced this critically important bill,” stated Ryan Henson, senior policy director for the California Wilderness Coalition. “Walker Ridge is a natural extension of Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument with its critical habitat, rare species and thousands of years of history in its lands. Walker Ridge belongs in the monument.”
Individuals are encouraged to submit feedback on the discussion draft legislation by contacting Legislative Assistant Tigran Agdaian, at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
LAKEPORT, Calif. — The Lakeport Police Department said it has entered a partnership with strategic community stakeholders to provide services to individuals formerly incarcerated and in need of rehabilitation services.
Siyan Clinical Research of Santa Rosa was recently awarded a Lake County Mental Health Services grant through the California Community Reinvestment grants program, or CalCRG, in response to a health needs assessment provided by Hope Rising Lake County.
This assessment identified the county’s significant health needs, including mental health, alcoholism, poverty, drug use, unemployment and housing stability.
The CalCRG program was included in the Adult Use of Marijuana Act (Proposition 64), approved by California voters in 2016, and funded by the cannabis excise and cultivation taxes.
Siyan Clinical Research is the largest psychiatric research facility in Northwestern California.
The facility will be designing and implementing services in cooperation with Hope Rising Lake County, Lake County Family Resource Center, Lake County Behavioral Health, Lake County Probation, Lake County Public Health, Lakeport Police Department, California Human Development and the Mendocino Private Industry Council Inc.
“At Siyan Clinical Research we provide our patients with the highest quality psychiatric care in an atmosphere of respect, compassion, and a belief in the innate value of every individual, regardless of his or her accomplishments or failures,” said Dr. Anish Shah, president and CEO of Siyan Clinical Research. “Our mission is to improve care for people with mental disorders and their families through tailored treatment, professional education, and standard-setting clinical care.”
Siyan Clinical Research is the largest private behavioral health practice in Northern California, with a 4,000-patient database serving six counties. Find more information about Siyan Clinical Research at www.siyanresearch.org.
More information about the Lakeport Police Department’s participation in this program is available from Chief Brad Rasmussen at 707-263-5491.
Peter Chin-Hong, University of California, San Francisco
The Conversation asked Peter Chin-Hong, a physician who specializes in infectious diseases at the University of California, San Francisco, to help put into context the science behind the changing messages.
Some conditions make a breakthrough infection more likely in a vaccinated person: more virus circulating in the community, lower vaccination rates and more highly transmissible variants.
If vaccinated people can get infected with the coronavirus, they can also spread it. Hence the CDC recommendation that vaccinated people remain masked in indoor public spaces to help stop viral transmission.
Using these criteria, the CDC guidance applied to 63% of U.S. counties on the day it was announced.
Who’s actually protected by masking recommendations?
The recommendation that fully vaccinated people continue wearing masks is primarily intended to protect the unvaccinated – which includes kids under age 12 who are not yet eligible for vaccines in the U.S. The CDC further recommends masking in public for vaccinated people with unvaccinated household members, regardless of local community transmission rates.
Unvaccinated people are at a substantially higher risk of getting infected with and transmitting SARS-CoV-2, and of developing complications from COVID-19.
How do new variants like delta change things?
Preliminary data suggests that the rise of variants like delta may increase the chance of breakthrough infections in people who received only their first vaccine dose. For instance, one study found that a single dose of the Pfizer vaccine had an effectiveness of just 34% against the delta variant, compared with 51% against the older alpha variant in terms of warding off symptomatic disease.
Other recent preliminary reports from highly vaccinated countries like Israel and Singapore are sobering, however. Before the delta variant became widespread, from January to April 2021, Israel reported that the Pfizer vaccine was 97% effective in preventing symptomatic disease. Since June 20, 2021, with the delta variant circulating more widely, the Pfizer vaccine has been only 41% effective in preventing symptomatic disease, according to preliminary data reported by Israel’s Ministry of Health in late July. An analysis using government data from Singapore demonstrated that 75% of recent COVID-19 infections were in people who were at least partially vaccinated – though most of them were not severely ill.
In all reports and studies, however, vaccines remain very good at preventing hospitalizations and severe disease due to the delta variant – arguably the outcomes we most care about.
All of this emerging data supports the WHO’s global recommendation that even fully vaccinated individuals continue to wear masks. Most of the world still has low vaccination rates and uses a range of vaccines with variable efficacies, and countries have different burdens of circulating SARS-CoV-2 virus.
With U.S. case counts and breakthrough infection numbers headed in what public health officials consider the wrong direction, it makes sense that the CDC would modify its masking recommendations to be more conservative.
What conditions in the US warrant masking up (again)?
It makes sense that the CDC didn’t immediately change its recommendations to fall in line with the WHO’s June guidelines. With an overall high countrywide vaccination rate and a low overall COVID-19 hospitalization and death burden, the U.S. has a COVID-19 landscape very different from that in most of the world.
Additionally, some experts worried that an official message that the vaccinated should don masks might dissuade unvaccinated individuals from seeking vaccines.
The shifting recommendations don’t mean that the old ones were wrong, necessarily, only that conditions have changed. The bottom line? Masks do help cut down on coronavirus transmission, but it’s still vaccines that offer the best protection.
Congress appears close to a trillion-dollar infrastructure deal that recognizes the risks of climate change and the need to make America’s coasts more resilient.
On July 28, 2021, a bipartisan group of senators who have been working on the package for weeks announced an agreement on “major issues” of the plan. The Senate later voted 67 to 32 to move it forward in a procedural vote; it still faces major hurdles.
While many of the details have yet to be disclosed – or finalized – a few have emerged. The deal provides US$550 billion in new spending on roads, transit, electricity and other physical infrastructure, including about $47 billion for flooding and coastal resiliency and funds to help adapt ports and waterways to a changing climate.
These three articles from our archive describe some innovations in resilient infrastructure.
1. Adaptive design lessons from the Dutch
The Dutch have been dealing with flood risks for generations in the Netherlands, where a large part of the country is below sea level. They’ve learned that one key to living with rising water levels is adaptive design – building infrastructure that can be expanded in the future.
In the U.S., adaptive design might mean building levees wider than usual so they can be easily raised in 20 years. Or it could mean leaving room for future water pumps in areas that will become more flood-prone, or installing floodgates that can be raised or lowered as needed.
“By starting with an adaptive design, the U.S. can save billions of dollars compared with having to build new systems decades down the road,” writes Jeremy Bricker, a hydraulic and coastal engineer at the University of Michigan.
He points to the cost of renovating California’s Folsom Dam, built in 1955. Adding a new spillway now to improve water control is costing about $900 million, close to the price of the original dam with inflation.
In several coastal cities, the Army Corps of Engineers is developing plans for giant flood walls to provide protection against storm surges. The instinct is to build big now to handle the worst-case scenario in the future.
But in Miami, that plan reveals two problems: While a large wall might lessen the damage of a hurricane storm surge, it would block the downtown area’s million-dollar water views. And a 6-mile wall would only protect the downtown Miami area, and only from the surge. Water would still come in, and everyone outside the wall would be vulnerable.
There are other ways to protect the coastline that are less obtrusive and draw on natural coastal storm control, write University of Miami engineer Landolf Rhode-Barbarigos and ocean scientist Brian Haus.
Rhode-Barbarigos and Haus have been involved in developing “green-gray” infrastructure that pairs the strength of specially designed concrete structures with the natural protection of corals and mangroves for effective, more natural-looking hybrid coastal protection.
“Living with water today doesn’t look the same as it did 50 years ago, or even 20 years ago,” they write. “Parts of Miami now regularly see ‘sunny day’ flooding during high tides. Salt water infiltrates basements and high-rise parking garages, and tidal flooding is forecast to occur more frequently as sea level rises. When storms come through, the storm surge adds to that already high water.”
They add: “We don’t want to see Miami become Venice or a city walled off from the water. We think Miami can thrive by making use of the local ecosystem with novel green engineering solutions and an architecture that adapts.”
Cement, which binds concrete, is responsible for about 7% of global carbon dioxide emissions – greenhouse gases that are warming the environment and causing the oceans to rise. Some 26 billion tons are produced nationwide each year, and production is growing.
“Given the scale of the industry and its greenhouse gas emissions, technologies that can reinvent concrete could have profound impacts on climate change,” write University of Michigan engineers Lucca Henrion, Duo Zhang, Victor Li and Volker Sick.
Scientists are developing new types of concrete that reduce the amount of greenhouse gases released, including infusing it with carbon dioxide so future bridges and buildings lock away greenhouse gases that might otherwise be released into the atmosphere. The Michigan team has developed carbon dioxide-infused concrete that requires less steel, is stronger and more durable – and it’s bendable.
Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday signed the higher education budget trailer bill implementing significant California Comeback Plan investments in college affordability and access — including expanded student financial aid, education and training grants for workers displaced by the pandemic, transfer pathways for community college students and college savings accounts for low-income and underrepresented public school students.
The Governor’s California Comeback Plan provides an unprecedented level of investment in the state’s world-class public higher education system, with $47.1 billion total for the University of California, California State University and California Community Colleges, or CCC, and student financial aid.
“The California Comeback Plan doubles down on our commitment to making college more affordable and accessible than ever before, boosting the state’s nation-leading recovery from the pandemic and driving our long-term economic prosperity,” said Gov. Newsom. “With massive increases in funding for our world-class colleges and universities, expanded college savings accounts, increased student financial aid and opportunities to gain work experience while learning, we are helping students reach their full potential and driving upward mobility across California.”
Making college more affordable, AB 132 implements the California Comeback Plan’s expansion of the Cal Grant program for community college students by eliminating age and time-out-of-high-school requirements, with awards that follow students to the UC and CSU upon transfer.
Starting in 2022-23, the bill also revises the Middle Class Scholarship program to provide scholarships intended to cover up to the difference between a student’s total cost of attendance and other sources of aid, including student and family contributions, depending upon available resources each year.
It also makes summer financial aid investments for UC and CSU students permanent and includes $115 million for Zero-Textbook-Cost Degree grant programs and open educational resources at CCCs, helping address the rising costs of textbooks.
Working to create more equitable and streamlined pathways from school to career, the budget trailer bill establishes a Learning-Aligned Employment program at the UC, CSU and CCC to help underrepresented students with financial need gain relevant work experience, promoting long-term employment opportunities.
It also establishes the Golden State Education and Training Grant Program to provide grants for education or high-quality training for workers displaced by the pandemic.
Improving access, AB 132 establishes a dual admissions program that provides eligible first-time freshman applicants the opportunity for guaranteed admission to the UC or CSU campus of their choice following completion of an associate degree for transfer or another transfer pathway at a CCC.
It also requires school districts and other educational agencies to confirm that high school seniors who have not opted out complete FAFSA or California Dream Act applications for financial aid.
In addition, the legislation expands the California Kids Investment and Development Savings Program to provide $500 base deposits to seed college savings accounts for public school students from low-income families, English learners and foster youth, with supplemental deposits for foster youth and homeless students.
AB 132 also establishes the governance and operational structure for the state’s Cradle to Career data system, which will connect education, workforce and social services data to better inform parents, educators and policymakers.
The California Comeback Plan will create more slots for in-state students who wish to attend a CSU or UC school; sets aside $2 billion to address housing and space needs at the UC, CSU and CCCs, contingent upon future legislation, which will help drive down the cost of student housing; provides $50 million for Guided Pathways programs to help community college students graduate on time; and includes investments to support equity-focused programs at community colleges and Student Academic Preparation and Educational Partnerships programs at UC campuses, helping to bridge equity gaps.
For full text of the bill signed today, visit: http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Saying that they had heard the Lake County Planning Commission’s requests for increased guidance on proposed projects and water supply, the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approved an urgency ordinance requiring enhanced analysis during the drought emergency.
Board Chair Bruno Sabatier presented the urgency ordinance to the board.
It will require land use applicants — no matter what type of project — to provide hydrology reports.
Over the past month, the Lake County Planning Commission’s members — in particular, District 1 Commissioner John Hess — have stated at their meetings that they wanted more guidance from the Board of Supervisors about how to assess projects and water usage, especially as the drought situation has worsened.
Many of the projects they’ve been considering recently, the majority of them cannabis projects, use millions of gallons of water.
The commission and county staff raised issues about the need for more thorough water reporting, and earlier this month had put off a decision for two weeks on a proposed project at High Valley Ranch in Clearlake Oaks in order to seek more information from the applicant.
Sabatier and other board members noted during their discussion that they had heard the commission’s comments in recent months and wanted to respond to them, with a view to introducing long-term rules to analyze water usage.
In his written report on the item, Sabatier said the commission’s requests for guidance and direction came “during these hard and difficult times where economic development and the urgent need to conserve water seem to be clashing.”
During the discussion, explaining the importance of taking up the matter, board members referred to a report earlier in the meeting from the county’s Drought Task Force in which it was reported that the county expects to receive a total of 200 permit applications for new wells by year’s end. That’s compared to 148 last year, the highest number of permits applied for since 2015.
Sabatier said that one of the projects the commission had approved over the last two months and which was appealed to the board — an apparent reference to the WeGrow LLC project near Hidden Valley Lake — had estimated numbers for water usage but no accompanying report.
Similarly, commission agenda packets often don’t have water reports included in them, as Lake County News has reported.
Sabatier’s proposed urgency ordinance adds the requirement for a full hydrology report, explaining he’d like that to eventually be added as a permanent standard. Applicants also would be required to draft a drought management plan on how to conserve water.
Supervisor Jessica Pyska said the board had an opportunity to be proactive. “If we don’t have water, we don’t have anything,” she said, adding it was “eye-opening” to find out how many new wells are going in.
Pyska said it’s important to step back and make sure they are in a place where they can sustain this type of development.
Supervisor Tina Scott agreed with moving forward, saying she also wanted to see such hydrology reporting made permanent.
Supervisor Moke Simon — who appointed Hess as planning commissioner — said more conversations need to be had on a permanent solution.
“Fears are running rampant right now with what we’re doing with water use,” he said.
During public comment, several suggestions were made to fine-tune the document.
Consultant Richard Knoll said the ordinance seemed well-intended but wasn’t comprehensive enough. He said it needed to define who is to prepare the reports, suggesting a qualified hydrologist or engineer.
He said the reports also needed to account for other sources of water, beyond wells, including surface water, rainwater and catchment, and not look just at recharge of on-site wells but also the aquifer itself.
Knoll suggested the county should consult with a qualified hydrologist to develop the scope of work of what they’re looking for in the reports.
“We really need to do this as soon as possible,” said Peggie King, who recommended a state licensed hydrologist be required to conduct the reports.
King said there are cumulative impacts important to review so everyone has their fair share of the water in the basin. If the county starts to overdraft or impact low impact basins, that’s going to trigger state groundwater management rules, she said.
Fine-tuning language
After hearing the comments, Pyska said she was concerned that the ordinance required more work to be as strong and effective as needed. She wanted to take another week.
County Counsel Anita Grant agreed that it was important to add language requiring the reports be done by licensed hydrologists and said it could take longer than a week to find a hydrologist just to consult the county.
Simon also supported the hydrologist language and wanted to move forward with accepting the document on Tuesday in order to put one more tool in the hands of the Planning Commission.
Sabatier said that, currently, 95% of the time, the projects before the commission are for cannabis, with the typical water source being a well. When the commission asks for a hydrology report, it delays things further and people already have been waiting to get their projects through the process.
“The wait is exacerbated when it goes in front of the Planning Commission and the Planning Commission requests something else,” he said.
He agreed to add the language requiring a hydrologist and then asked Grant if adding language about a project’s type of water sources was too substantial of a change to do that same day.
“This is an urgency ordinance. There’s no such thing as too substantial of a change that you could make on the face of the document today,” said Grant.
The source of water included in the document may be a little vague but Grant said it’s better than limiting it to wells.
Grant also told the board during the discussion, “Application will give you a better understanding of the approach and the definitions for this urgency ordinance. And it’s not a one and done. You are fully capable of being able to come back and flesh it out.”
She said that if the board wants a permanent ordinance, the supervisors may want to have a hydrology expert consult with them on how best to craft that permanent ordinance. “You’re not without options.”
Water Resources and Public Works Director Scott De Leon suggested to the board that they add licensed civil engineers to the list of professionals who can do the hydrology reports.
Other commenters agreed with De Leon, noting the difficulty of finding qualified and available hydrologists.
Their suggestions would result in the board updating the urgency ordinance language to allow the hydrology reports to be prepared by civil engineers, hydrologists, hydrogeologists or geologists with experience in water resources.
At Grant’s suggestion, Sabatier also fine-tuned the ordinance language to require the approximate amount of water available for the project’s water identified source, the approximate recharge rate for that source and the cumulative impact of the project’s water use on surrounding areas.
“I’m not going to hold this up today, but I think this process is sloppy,” said Pyska.
She said she wants the county counsel to be involved in drafting urgency ordinances with adequate time to review them. “I think we can do better.”
Sabatier passed the gavel to Supervisor EJ Crandell so that he could offer the ordinance with the amendments.
The board passed ordinance 5-0; it needed at least a four-fifths vote.
The ordinance went into effect immediately upon the board’s approval.
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 week after the Board of Supervisors unanimously passed a resolution urging all community members to wear masks in indoor public settings, Lake County’s COVID-19 case rate has doubled and shows no sign of slowing.
“I know we would all like to believe that we’re through the COVID-19 pandemic and that it’s all behind us. But unfortunately it isn’t,” acting Public Health Officer Dr. Charlie Evans, an emergency room physician of 37 years from Sonoma County, told the Board of Supervisors during its Tuesday meeting.
Last week, Supervisor Jessica Pyska presented the indoor masking resolution to the board, prompted by a growing caseload of 17 per 100,000 over a seven-day average.
On Tuesday, the California Department of Public Health dashboard showed that the same metric had jumped to 35 per 100,000 over a seven-day average, remaining the highest such rate in the state.
Epidemiologist Sarah Marikos told the board Tuesday that the county’s caseload is even higher — 50 per 100,000 — when taking out the seven-day average.
Marikos also reported that Lake County’s testing positivity rate, which had fallen to a low of about 1% in June, has now risen to 17.4%, the highest the county has had during the pandemic so far. At the same time, the overall state testing positivity rate has grown from 1% to 6%.
Lake County also had its 65th COVID-19 death within the past week, Marikos said.
Marikos presented an epicurve graph showing that Lake County’s current case numbers now have surpassed December’s numbers and are approaching those recorded in January, when the surge hit its peak.
During the past week, there were 250 confirmed cases, the third-highest week for cases in Lake County since the pandemic began and nearly twice the cases reported the previous week. Marikos said she wouldn’t be surprised if by next week she’s reporting nearly 300 cases for the week.
The 20 to 44 age group continues to have the highest percentage of cases — 51%, Marikos said.
Of the Lake County residents who have been fully vaccinated — 28,548 — Marikos said 68, or 0.238%, have tested positive for COVID-19.
People who are unvaccinated are about seven times more likely to be infected, she said.
Marikos said the Delta variant is spreading and is present in every region of the state. In June, the Delta variant accounted for about 50% of sequenced specimens, while now it’s closer to 80%.
Statewide, in mid-June, Marikos said there were 150 hospitalizations a day in the state; that’s now climbed to 500.
She said recent studies in the United Kingdom, Canada, Scotland and the United States have looked at second dose vaccine effectiveness versus the Delta variant.
“This is really, really great news,” said Marikos, explaining that the vaccines are 96% effective in preventing hospitalization and 87 to 88% effective in preventing symptomatic disease.
Marikos said 51.7% of Lake County residents are fully vaccinated, compared to 63% of Californians. About 58% of people ages 18 to 49 are not vaccinated.
Lake County’s overall vaccination rate is only improving by about 1% a week, Marikos noted.
She said vaccinating will be critical in preventing new infections in late summer and early fall.
‘A house on fire’
Pointing to the information Marikos presented, Evans, making his first appearance at a board meeting, told the supervisors, “We really have a house on fire and it’s time that we all huddled together and put that fire out. Unlike a year ago, we now have the tools to do that.”
Evans said the United States has an abundance of vaccine and personal protective equipment, in contrast to Kenya, where only 2% of the population are vaccinated. He founded a clinic in Kenya 30 years ago and he’s going there next week to do some work.
As for why Lake County is leading the state in infection rates, Evans said he believes there are many factors. The surge started in the middle of June as the masking mandate was released for vaccinated individuals. Those who are not vaccinated are still requested to mask while indoors but he said that hasn’t been taking place, and Evans emphasized the value of masking.
Lake County’s vaccination rate also is impacting the case rate. Evans said the 18 to 49 age group is only 35% vaccinated, and those individuals are out and active in the community and getting infected.
He said they don’t know for sure how many infections are the Delta variant. “With time we will.”
Speaking about variants, Evans said the alpha variant from England, also known as B.1.1.7, which had caused havoc for parts of Europe as well as big infection rates in Michigan and Minnesota, didn’t impact the rest of the United States as severely as expected.
The alpha variant was 40 to 65% more aggressive than the mother virus. The Delta variant, Evans added, has 1,000 times the viral load of the mother virus.
As long as there are unvaccinated people, Evans said there will be variants.
“I know we’re all fed up with masking and children at home and isolating but in Lake County we’re facing one of the biggest surges we’ve yet seen. If we do nothing the situation will devolve and we will see additional unnecessary death,” Evans said.
To illustrate that point, he said last weekend both of Lake County’s hospitals were at capacity, including for ICU and med surg beds. “We’re already at that point of critical overload.”
He suggested businesses keep protective shields in place, continue to offer hand sanitizer and social distancing signage. Patrons should continue to mask until infection rates drop significantly.
“There is a clear path out of this pandemic and we all know what the answer is: It’s vaccination,” he said.
He addressed myths about vaccination as described in a statement this week from the Rural Association of Northern California Health Officers, and explained that the COVID-19 vaccine is more effective than that created for polio.
“COVID-19 is looking for hosts who are not yet vaccinated. And I'm sure if you’re not yet vaccinated, it will find you,” he said.
Pyska asked Evans about guidance on how to carry out large events that are planned in the coming months. Evans said he strongly discourages any large indoor functions, and said outdoor conditions are safer.
During public comment, Randall Cole, who acknowledged he was unvaccinated, recounted getting COVID-19 from an ill friend at the start of July. He ended up spending two weeks in the ICU.
“People have free will. They can choose whether they want to be vaccinated or not,” Cole said, adding masking should be required, whether people are vaccinated or not.
Leonardo Rodriguez, the student trustee on the Mendocino College board, said COVID-19 has completely thrown off so many students. In a county that’s only half vaccinated and with the surge, he suggested that maybe schools should not be reopened yet.
Rodriguez asked those who won’t get vaccinated to think of the community and others.
Evans also responded to statements from several community members questioning vaccines and testing, in particular, PCR tests.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said last week that, after Dec. 31, it will withdraw the request to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for emergency use of its own CDC 2019-Novel CoronavirusReal-Time RT-PCR Diagnostic Panel, first introduced in February 2020.
The CDC is encouraging labs to consider adopting methods that can test for both influenza and COVID-19 to save both time and money as the nation heads into flu season.
Evans said PCR tests are used in many different modalities. “It’s an extremely sensitive test. It tests the DNA of the virus. The only time it falters is when the test is not administered correctly.”
He said it’s been a lifesaving test that has allowed them to detect COVID-19 in numerous individuals.
As for one speaker’s assertion that officials were urging people to rush into being vaccinated, Evans said it’s more than a year into the pandemic, with vaccines available for nine months.
He said he had a patient last week with respiratory failure due to COVID-19. As he prepared her for the ICU, she asked if she could be vaccinated. Evans said he told her it was too late.
“We’re not rushing into anything here with the vaccines,” he said, noting he’s lost a family member to the illness.
He urged people to be vaccinated, wear masks and wash their hands.
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. — Authorities have arrested a Clearlake man who they say was responsible for setting a wildland fire last week.
Charles William Cartwright, 54, was taken into custody on Monday, Cal Fire reported.
Cal Fire said the fire Cartwright is believed to have set occurred on Friday.
Resources were dispatched to the area of Ogulin Canyon Road in Clearlake for smoke seen on the hillside at approximately 7:20 p.m. Friday, Cal Fire said.
When they arrived in the area, firefighters confirmed there was a fire and began searching for access to it, Cal Fire said.
Cal Fire said its aerial resources were the first to arrive at the fire and were successful in holding it in check until the first ground resources found access to it at approximately 8:10 p.m.
The fire burned approximately one-third of an acre, Cal Fire said.
Cal Fire law enforcement officers arrived at the fire shortly after the ground resources and began investigating its origin and cause, the agency reported.
During the course of the investigation, Cal Fire said a suspect was identified and an arrest warrant was issued for the suspect.
On Monday, authorities located Cartwright and took him into custody without incident, Cal Fire said.
Cartwright was booked into the Lake County Jail on a felony charge of recklessly setting a fire on forest land and a misdemeanor arson charge.
His bail was set at $50,000 and he remained in custody on Tuesday.
Cartwright, whose occupation is listed as lawn care, is scheduled for a court appearance on Aug. 16, according to his booking sheet.
Cal Fire said it was assisted by the Clearlake Police Department, Lake County Sheriff's Office, Lake County District Attorney’s Office, Lake County Fire Protection District and North Shore Fire Protection District.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — With COVID-19 cases rising across California, state health officials have issued new guidelines for masking.
On Wednesday, State Public Health Officer Tomás Aragón, MD, DrPH, and the California Department of Public Health, or CDPH, updated statewide face covering guidance.
“The Delta variant has caused a sharp increase in hospitalizations and case rates across the state. We are recommending masking in indoor public places to slow the spread while we continue efforts to get more Californians vaccinated,” said Aragón.
This update came in light of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Tuesday changes to its “Guidance for Fully Vaccinated People,” made in light of new evidence regarding the Delta Variant (B.1.617.2).
The CDC is now recommending all individuals in areas of “substantial or high transmission” wear a face covering in “public indoor settings.”
Under the CDC’s new guidance, more than 90% of California’s population is currently in areas designated as substantial or high transmission, CDPH reported.
Lake County, with the highest case rate in the state of California, is clearly in the “high transmission” category, confirmed by this CDC tracking tool.
CDPH has extended the recommendation to mask indoors to all Californians, regardless of vaccination status, “To achieve universal masking in indoor public settings.”
According to the CDC, getting vaccinated helps protect from the virus and the circulating variants, including the Delta variant that is now seen in the majority of California’s new cases.
California continues to work to increase vaccination rates across the state. This week, California took the nation-leading step of requiring state and health care employees to provide proof of vaccination or submit to regular testing.
California had also led with its K-12 school guidance, requiring universal masking and other prevention measures as schools fully open for the upcoming school year.
CDPH is continuing to motivate businesses and local communities to encourage vaccination to prevent new outbreaks in areas of substantial and high transmission.
The CDC, CDPH and Lake County Board of Supervisors all stopped short of mandating masking for vaccinated individuals, except in limited circumstances — e.g.: public transit; indoor K-12 schools and other child care settings; emergency shelters and formal cooling centers; all health care settings; correctional, detention and other congregate settings.
However, Lake County’s case rate continues to trend upward. On Wednesday, it was 52 cases per 100,000 (when removing the seven-day delay employed by state reporting).
The Delta variant is known to be present in Lake County, and reportedly carries 1,000 times the viral load of the “mother virus,” and has been described by CDC Director Rochelle Walensky as “hyper-transmissible,” and “one of the most infectious respiratory viruses we know of and that I have seen in my 20-year career.”
Hospitalizations and case rates are increasing across the state. Lake County has been more affected than most localities.
Community members are urged to do their part to protect immunocompromised individuals, for example, who “might be at increased risk for severe COVID,” even if they are vaccinated.
Health officials said Increasing the vaccination percentage is Lake County’s best known defense against COVID, and the proliferation of variants that pose threats previously unseen for generations. Some new options for vaccination are described here.
The county of Lake is asking residents to wear masks, wash their hands and maintain physical distancing.
“Do these things not merely out of obligation, but because we are a close-knit County that cares about helping each other out,” county health officials said in a Wednesday statement. “Your personally choosing to tolerate minor inconveniences now may make all the difference for someone you know and love.”
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — On Tuesday, Congressman John Garamendi (D-CA03), a former deputy secretary of the Interior during the Clinton Administration, released a discussion draft of the “Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument Expansion Act” for public review and comment.
This draft legislation would expand the National Monument to include a federally owned land parcel known as the “Walker Ridge” tract.
This ridgeline in Lake County has cultural significance to Native Americans and is home to bald eagles and rare wildflowers.
The proposed National Monument expansion is supported by the Lake County Board of Supervisors, California Wilderness Coalition, California Native Plant Society, and the Woodland-based Tuleyome nonprofit.
In 2014, Congressman Garamendi championed bicameral legislation (H.R.761) to establish the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument, with then-Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) and Congressman Mike Thompson (D-CA05).
This legislation would have included the Walker Ridge tract in Lake and Colusa Counties administered by the federal Bureau of Land Management within the National Monument’s boundary.
Congressmen Garamendi and Thompson hosted a visit by then-Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell in 2014 at Lake Berryessa Monument so she could view the landscape in person and hear from local community and tribal leaders about the need for a national monument designation.
Said Secretary Jewell at the time, “This is a beautiful area with cultural history and great opportunities for outdoor recreation and wildlife viewing, so it’s no surprise that the community wants to make sure that it is protected and passed on to the next generation.”
In July 2015, President Obama declared the federal land surrounding Lake Berryessa as a National Monument — Presidential Proclamation 9298 — at the Congressmen’s urging.
Congressman Garamendi’s new draft legislation would expand the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument to include Walker Ridge, an extinct volcanic mountain range with an unusual “serpentine” soil composition that has made it a trove of rare and beautiful plant species, including the adobe lily (Fritillaria pluriflora) found only in Northern California.
Other rare and protected animal species that make their home in this area include the bald eagle, golden eagle and tule elk.
The inclusion of Walker Ridge as a part of the Berryessa National Monument would not affect pre-existing water rights or impose new regulations on hunting, fishing, or motorized recreation that are important to the local economy.
A study by the Winters Chamber of Commerce indicated that outdoor recreation supports a $6 billion industry and 700,000 jobs in California alone.
“Conserving California’s special places has been a lifelong passion throughout my tenure in the state legislature, as Deputy Secretary of the Interior to President Clinton, and now as a member of Congress representing Lake County. Walker Ridge is one of those special places, and I welcome the public’s comments as we work to conserve this unique landscape for future generations of Californians to enjoy,” said Congressman Garamendi.
The “Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument Expansion Act” would not impact privately owned, state, tribal, or non-federal land in any way. The proposed federal land parcel proposed for including the National Monument does not include acreage of the BLM’s Walker Ridge tract in Colusa County.
The draft legislation would also direct the federal Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service to finally complete the management plan for the National Monument, which has remained unfinished since 2015.
Interested members of the public may submit their feedback on the discussion draft legislation to Congressman Garamendi’s office at: Tigran Agdaian, Legislative Assistant, Congressman John Garamendi (CA-03), 2368 Rayburn House Office Building, telephone 202-225-1880, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — A Lucerne man was seriously injured in a Friday motorcycle crash on Highway 20.
Joseph Ambrose, 31, was the motorcyclist injured in the wreck, the California Highway Patrol’s Clear Lake Area office reported Monday.
The CHP said the crash occurred at about 3:15 p.m. Friday on Highway 20 at Crump Avenue in Nice.
Ambrose was riding a black and red 2004 Yamaha VXS1100 motorcycle westbound on Highway 20 as Paul McGrorey, 60, also of Lucerne, was driving a silver 2005 Dodge Ram 1500 pickup eastbound, the CHP said.
McGrorey stopped in the double-left turn lane at the intersection with Crump Avenue, according to the report.
For reasons the CHP said are still under investigation, Ambrose laid down the Yamaha motorcycle.
The CHP said Ambrose was ejected from the motorcycle and collided with the Dodge pickup.
Ambrose sustained major injuries as a result of the collision and was life-flighted to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital, the CHP said.
The investigating CHP officer determined Ambrose was wearing a helmet at the time of the collision. McGrorey, who was wearing his seat belt, was uninjured.
Neither alcohol nor drug usage is suspected, the CHP said.
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.