Saturday, 21 September 2024

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WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson’s (CA-5) bipartisan legislation, the Small Business Healthcare Relief Act, was signed into law on Tuesday by President Barack Obama after passing the Senate last week.

The bill was included as a provision of the 21st Century Cures Act, a health care package that also included funding to fight opioid addiction and support for cutting edge medical research, among other things.

Thompson’s legislation allows small employers to continue offering Health Reimbursement Arrangements, or HRAs, to help workers offset the cost of health insurance.

Employees can use HRA accounts to pay insurance premiums, or to pay for qualified health expenses. By offering HRA’s, small businesses who are not obligated to provide health insurance can help their workers purchase quality insurance plans that fit their individual budgetary and healthcare needs.

The legislation comes in response to a 2013 Treasury Department ruling that disqualified HRAs as a tax-free method of reimbursing employees.

“I am proud to see my Small Business Healthcare Relief Act become law,” said Thompson. “This bipartisan legislation will help small employers in our district and around our country continue to do right by their employees, ensuring that workers have access to the quality and affordable care they need.”

Thompson’s HRA legislation is budget-neutral, meaning it won’t add a single dollar to our deficit.

The bill is supported by the United States Chamber of Commerce, the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), the Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA), the National Association of Homebuilders (NAHB), the National Association for the Self-Employed, and the Coalition for Affordable Healthcare (CAHC). The bill originally passed the House of Representatives in June as H.R. 5477.

In addition to funding efforts to combat opioid addiction, the 21st Century Cures legislation also provides more than $4 billion in funding for the National Institutes of Health, to support Vice-President Joe Biden’s Cancer Moonshot initiative, and for improvements to our mental health system.

“I am similarly pleased at the signing of the larger 21st Century Cures Act,” Thompson said. “This important legislation provides funding for many health initiatives I support – including Vice-President Biden’s Cancer Moonshot, increased Alzheimer’s research, and improvements in our mental health system. It’s critical that our country promote innovative health policies and research, and I look forward to supporting similar efforts in the future.”

Congressman Mike Thompson represents California’s Fifth Congressional District, which includes all or part of Contra Costa, Lake, Napa, Solano and Sonoma counties.

2016sparklingwinesUPPER LAKE, Calif. – Lake County Wine Studio is hosting a sparkling wine tasting event from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 18, to provide an opportunity for adults to sample the sparkling wines of Lake County in advance of New Year's Eve celebrations.

The $15/per person ($12 for Wine Studio Club Members) wine sampler and appetizers will feature the new Fults Family Blanc de Blanc, Bodkin Sparkling Sauvignon Blanc, Lady of the Lake Sparkling Pear, Thorn Hill Cuvée de Prestige, Olof Cellars Fira Nebbiolo, Dusinberré Cellars Cuvée Rouge and Steele Wines Black Bubbles.

Appetizers will include a variety of seafood spreads: smoked oyster, hot smoked salmon, crab, marscapone and Dijon spread, bacon surprise, chips, nuts and fruits.

Art on display is by Jackie Farley, who is donating her proceeds of sales to the Lake County Rising Fire Relief Fund. 

Weather permitting, McCarty’s Live Oak Belgians will be conducting Jingle Bell carriage and wagon rides in Upper Lake on the weekends during December. Staging for the rides is in front of the wine studio. 

Lake County Wine Studio is located at 9505 Main St. in Upper Lake. It is open Monday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday from 1 to 7 p.m., and Friday from 1 to 8 p.m.

The Farley show will be on display through Jan. 31. 

Holiday hours are 1 to 5 p.m. Dec. 24, and closed Dec. 25, with normal hours Dec. 26 to 30, 1 to 5 p.m. Dec. 31 and closed Jan. 1 to 14.

For more information call Lake County Wine Studio at 707-275-8030 or 707-293-8752.

OFFICE CHRISTMAS PARTY (Rated R)

Once upon a time, Christmas movies would serve up traditional holiday fare such as “It’s a Wonderful Life,” which continues to thrive on cable, and the Irving Berlin musical “Holiday Inn,” among others.

So far, during this holiday season we have had Billy Bob Thornton as a loutish Santa in “Bad Santa 2” and now the extreme version of a corporate holiday celebration in “Office Christmas Party.” Neither film is suitable for family viewing.

To its credit, “Office Christmas Party” has a great cast of comic characters, starting with Jennifer Aniston as the corporate boss-from-hell, T.J. Miller as the slacker boss of the Chicago branch office and Jason Bateman as the borderline nerdy tech executive.

Miller’s Clay Vanstone runs the Chicago branch of the family-owned tech firm Zenotek, but his older sister Carol (Aniston) does not share Clay’s fun-loving spirit of having a corporate culture that values its employees.

With Christmas approaching, Clay wants to have a fun office party, though Mary (Kate McKinnon), head of Human Resources wearing a non-denominational holiday sweater, is a killjoy who frets about the right cheese platter.

Getting wind of these plans, Carol cancels the Christmas festivities and threatens to close down the Chicago office, firing all of the employees and leaving her brother to live off his trust fund.

Assisted by Bateman’s tech executive Josh Parker and Olivia Munn’s tech savvy engineer Tracey, Clay and his crew go behind her back to set up a raucous party to attract a big account from potential client Walter Davis (Courtney B. Vance) who could save the branch office from closure.

The solution to keeping the Chicago office functioning beyond the holidays is the kind of stupid, futile gesture that originated with frat parties in “Animal House.” Throw the most debauched party one could imagine because it’s all going to hell anyway.

Starting off as a dance party with live reindeer, an imitation Jesus and Clay in a Santa suit, the evening gets gradually rowdier and out-of-control because it’s always a bad idea when employees get drunk with their co-workers.

A snow machine is inadvertently loaded with a bag of cocaine that loosens the inhibitions of Walter Davis. The party eventually turns into the semblance of the decaying Roman Empire’s drunken and depraved sex orgies.

Bad behavior becomes the norm for “Office Christmas Party,” but the fast pace of sight gags, one-liners and crude yet often hilarious scenes turns this holiday comedy into an amusing diversion, if you are willing to let go of any reservations about the absence of a sensible plot.

TV Corner: 'Star' on FOX Network

Banking on the success of the TV series “Empire,” the FOX Network turns to the same creator and executive producer, Lee Daniels, to pull back the curtain on music’s gritty and dark reality in the new series “Star.”

“Empire” has a strong pull for many watching this music industry soap opera of power plays and betrayals, but I’ve not been a follower of its melodramatic machinations, even though Taraji P. Henson’s Cookie is a powerful force of nature well worth watching.

From a personal point of view, I am even less likely to get past the first episode of “Star,” in which the main characters are a trio of young girls running from their pasts in order to chart a path to stardom in the treacherous music business.

“Star” is not just the name of the show. It happens that the most talented singer in the aspiring girl group is named Star (Jude Demorest), a tough-as-nails beauty who looks like she could just as easily twirl on a pole at a low-rent strip club.

Star is a young woman of unbridled ambition who escapes from a hellish foster family in Pittsburgh and heads off to rescue her younger sister Simone (Brittany O’Grady) from a similar terrible fate.

Together, the long-separated siblings head to Atlanta to team up with spoiled rich girl Alexandra (Ryan Destiny), who for reasons that don’t seem readily apparent or even logical leaves her upper-crust lifestyle in Manhattan for a dubious trek into the underbelly of the capital of Georgia.

The only connection the girls have to this Southern metropolis is beauty shop owner Carlotta Brown (Queen Latifah), the godmother to Star and Simone who takes them in but soon finds the girls are a handful.

The role of Carlotta, who sings beautifully in the church choir, allows Queen Latifah to shine with her natural talents, but given that she spends too much time coping with bickering employees, that’s about as far as it goes.

The character that might be the most believable is down-on-his-luck Jahil Rivera (Benjamin Bratt), a seedy-looking type who hangs out in dive bars and strip clubs, but still has a knack for spotting musical talent.

Having once managed singers, Jahil sees the girls as a ticket back to the industry. The ambitious manager might be interesting to watch, but there is much about “Star” that seems too contrived, and even unsettling, to stick with for the long haul.

Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake county News.

121016soroptimistsgroup

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Every year in December members of Soroptimist International of Clear Lake gather at the home of Kathy Freeborn to celebrate Human Rights Day on Dec. 10.

Each member brings an unwrapped gift for a silent auction and all proceeds go to fund the international
president's chosen project. 

This term 2015-2017 International President Yvonne Simpson chose “Educate to Lead: Nepal.”

She chose Nepal because of the need woman and girls have as they work to rebuild their lives following devastating earthquakes that hit the country.

Nepal is a small landlocked country lying between India and Tibet. In the hills and valleys of Nepal, in small isolated villages, live 30 million of the poorest people in the world.

Educational and medical facilities are limited, many children are undernourished and half the population is under 23 years of age.

Women are frequently second-class citizens, both legally and socially. Young girls are a financial
liability, putting them at risk of being trafficked. Women and girls are deprived of basic rights. If a family can afford to send a child to school, it will be their sons who are sent first.

On April 25, 2015, a devastating earthquake followed by aftershocks displaced millions of
people. Despite the huge amount of funds raised, little aid has or will reach the rural areas. These people have no political power and are a low priority for support.

Soroptimists know that in a disaster women and girls suffer disproportionately. The organization also knows that education for women and girls is the key to economic empowerment.

By uniting the four Soroptimist federations in support of the only project they do together, the group can impact the lives of more than 1,000 women and girls in Nepal.

In her announcement of the Nepal Educate to Lead project, President Simpson wrote to the more than 80,000 Soroptimists worldwide: “Women can be change agents too – and it is imperative to have women in leadership positions so they can empower their communities. Education is the key. Education empowers women with new skills and new hope for economic independence. It provides the confidence and ability to stand strong and be partners with men to lead the future. The situation needs our long term commitment to make this difference.”

She said that the project “will educate, empower and enable women and girls to overcome their adversity, stay safe and develop leadership skills that will in turn benefit their communities.”

I’m sure you know the old adage: “In the land of the blind the one-eyed man is king.”

Recently I have come to fully appreciate that saying, because I have lost sight in my right eye. I had a rare stroke in that eye. There was no pain, no paralysis, no slurring of speech. At chorus practice I reached for the next piece of music and a “shade” came down over my right eye.

A trip to the ER followed, but they could offer no help. The one ophthalmologist on the coast, Kevin Miller, couldn’t see me until the morning. By then the damage had been done.

My friends, my priest, and the pastor and the church where I sing prayed for me. I prayed to St. Lucy, the patron of eye disorders. She was martyred by having her eyes gouged out. At least I have one good eye left.

Now came the challenge, to give up, or to search for a new way to lead my life. I had to figure out how to safely drive my car. I had to learn to not always trust what I saw. That came home to me in spades when I went to pour a bottle of beer into my glass and wound up pouring it on the table instead. Folks with the three-dimensional sight of two eyes would never have made that mistake.

Unfortunately, my defunct eye is still sending signals to my brain, and they affect the vision of my good eye. My brain has to learn to disregard all “images” coming from the “dead” eye, but that could take up to a year.

So, not being cut out to advertise Hathaway shirts I opted not to wear an eye patch, although I did buy one as part of my Halloween costume. I use an eye cover at times, but it begs the question “what happened to you,” forcing me to explain it all over again. I have been fitted for an opaque contact, so if you see me with on brown eye and one black eye you’ll know that I have it in place.

Most importantly, in my quest for a “normal” life I have discovered that help is there for us “low vision” folks. My Kaiser ophthalmologist referred me to the Earle Baum Vision Center in Santa Rosa, where they have a wide choice of classes and sponsor groups in Sonoma, Lake and Mendocino counties.

The nearest group meets at the Walnut Village retirement community in Ukiah on the first Tuesday of each month.

I went to Ukiah on Nov. 1 and found it to be a very informative session with people who had a wide range of vision problems. They aren’t meeting in December, but in case anyone from on the Mendocino Coast would like to go in January, I can give you a ride. Send me an E-mail me at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

Meanwhile, if you, or a loved one has suffered vision loss please go online to www.earlebaum.org and take a look at the many programs the Baum Center offers.

One event held recently was “Tech Day,” when reps from companies that make vision-support equipment demonstrated them at the lovely farm that Earle Baum, who was totally blind, operated with his totally blind sister. They did so by having ropes strung to the barns etc. so they could tend the animals. An amazing feat!

Earle left the farm to the sight impaired community and it has flourished as a center for the vision-impaired. The spirit of Earle and his sister lives on in this special place.

Jim Culp lives in Little River, Calif.

Upcoming Calendar

21Sep
09.21.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
21Sep
09.21.2024 4:00 pm - 10:00 pm
Passion Play fundraiser
21Sep
09.21.2024 4:30 pm - 10:00 pm
Lake County Wine Auction
23Sep
09.23.2024 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Lakeport City Council candidates' forum
24Sep
09.24.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at Library Park
28Sep
09.28.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
5Oct
10.05.2024 7:00 am - 11:00 am
Sponsoring Survivorship
5Oct
10.05.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
12Oct
10.12.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
14Oct
10.14.2024
Columbus Day

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