LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The quick work of Mt. Konocti’s fire lookout volunteers and a large number of fire resources – including a passing strike team on its way home from the August Complex – led to the quick containment of a fire along Highway 20 on Friday.
Cal Fire Battalion Chief Mike Wink said the fire was dispatched at 11:42 a.m., just east of New Long Valley Road, east of Clearlake Oaks.
Wink credited the sharp-eyed volunteers of the Mt. Konocti Lookout for spotting the fire early on.
While the volunteers are no longer in the lookout tower due to safety issues, they continue to have a presence on the mountaintop to look for fires, he said.
And on Friday, “Their determination and hard work paid off,” Wink said.
That early report was particularly important because the fire was located in an area without cell phone service, said Wink.
Another fortunate factor: “Just by random coincidence there was a strike team of engines that were passing through the area of Highway 20,” Wink said.
Following the fire’s dispatch, Wink said a strike team of five engines from Cal Fire’s Amador-El Dorado Unit happened to be traveling along Highway 20, on their way home from an assignment in Covelo, where they had been working on the north zone of the August Complex.
That group of firefighters, monitoring the radio traffic, stopped and joined the firefighting effort, which Wink said included a wildland dispatch of five Cal Fire engines and local fire agencies, as well as another five engines from Mendocino County fire districts that has been staged in the city of Clearlake due to the red flag conditions.
Wink said tankers and helicopters – including Copter 104 from Boggs Mountain, plus another copter that had been staged there due to the red flag warning – were part of the response.
All of them “pounced” on the fire, which Wink said burned in grass along the highway.
Although the fire had a northwest wind on it, “Luckily, it didn’t jump the highway,” Wink said.
The firefighters held the fire to three acres and contained it very quickly, he said.
Radio reports indicated Highway 20 was closed for a short time as firefighters were working in the area.
Wink said the fire started on private property.
“The property owner is cooperating with the investigation and it is not suspicious,” Wink said of the fire’s cause.
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. – The California Highway Patrol is asking for the community’s assistance in identifying the driver responsible for fatally injuring a pedestrian in a Thursday morning crash and then fleeing the scene.
The CHP’s Clear Lake Area office said Carl Curtis Knight, 59, of Clearlake died as a result of the crash.
Knight was crossing Highway 29, south of Orchard Street in Lower Lake, at 6:30 a.m. Thursday, when conditions were reported to be dark, the CHP said.
The CHP said Knight was walking from the west side of the roadway at the Power Mart towards the east side of the roadway when a vehicle hit him while he was in the No. 2 northbound lane of Highway 53.
The driver of the vehicle that hit Knight then fled the scene, according to the CHP’s Friday evening report.
Knight was transported to Adventist Health Clear Lake Hospital where he succumbed to injuries resulting from the collision, the CHP said.
If anyone has any information as to who the driver of the involved vehicle is or the location of the involved vehicle, please contact the Clear Lake CHP office at 707-279-0103.
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. – The Lake County Continuum of Care will hold a virtual town hall meeting next week to discuss its work to help the homeless and use of grant funds for COVID-19-related response.
The town hall will take place beginning at 6 p.m. Monday, Oct. 19, via Zoom. It also will be live-streamed on Facebook.
During the town hall, officials will introduce the Continuum of Care and receive public input on the usage of the Emergency Solutions Grant for COVID response, or ESG-CV, funds that the group has received.
The Lake County Continuum of Care Program is designed to promote communitywide commitment to the goal of ending homelessness; provide grant funding for efforts by nonprofit providers and local governments to quickly rehouse homeless individuals and families while minimizing the trauma and dislocation caused to homeless individuals, families, and communities by homelessness; and promote access to programs to optimize self-sufficiency among individuals and families experiencing homelessness.
As part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security, or CARES, Act, Public Law 116-136, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development created special Emergency Solution Grants to be used to prevent, prepare for, and respond to the coronavirus pandemic among individuals and families who are homeless or receiving homeless assistance.
The funds are also to support additional homeless assistance and homelessness prevention activities to mitigate the impacts of COVID-19.
The Lake County Continuum of Care will be receiving an allocation of ESG-CV funding to be used for these purposes.
The purpose of the Oct. 19 meeting is for the community and its citizens to learn about what the Continuum of Care does in the community, how it operates and how to participate in it.
The town hall also will provide an opportunity for the community to provide input on how the ESG-CV funds received by the Continuum of Care can be utilized in respect to the requirements of the grant.
Any member of the public may speak at the meeting and be heard on the items described in this notice or submit written comments to the Continuum of Care prior to the meeting by email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
To participate in the meeting, join from a PC, Mac, iPad, iPhone, or Android device by clicking here; the meeting ID is 281 490 2260.
Participate by audio only by using one tap mobile: +16699006833,,2814902260# US (San Jose) or by dialing in, +1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose); Meeting ID: 281 490 2260.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – In an effort to focus resources and respond to a challenge in recruitment, the Lakeport City Council has approved a plan for freezing two city committees and bringing forward new ad hoc committees to look at specific topics.
City Manager Kevin Ingram took the proposal to the council at its Oct. 6 meeting.
He said it’s the time of year to consider recruitment for the city’s committees and commissions. Over the past couple of years, the city has had trouble finding enough people to fill the seats and hasn’t had adequate agenda items for those who do serve.
As a result, Ingram was proposing a new option, which included freezing the Traffic Safety Advisory Committee and the Parks and Recreation Committee and instead forming ad hoc committees to deal with specific issues.
Ingram also suggested that at the beginning of the year the council would hold joint meetings with its committees to help members understand their roles and the council's direction.
“I think what’s important here is that the commissions and committees work in a manner that is beneficial for the council and for the city,” said City Attorney David Ruderman, who told the council that any resulting Brown Act concerns from creating the new committees would be handled by staff.
Council members offered their support for the plan, with Councilwoman Stacey Mattina noting that she liked the potential for having less staff time going into managing city committees that don’t meet regularly.
Ingram said the proposal was only dealing with the Traffic Safety and Advisory Committee and the Parks and Recreation Committee, as the Lakeport Planning Commission and Measure Z Advisory Committee have set roles, and the Lakeport Economic Development Advisory Committee has a strategic plan.
He said if it doesn’t work, in a year the city can return to its previous approach.
Councilman Kenny Parlet said that, ultimately, issues come back to the council anyway, and if there are problems community members usually call the council members directly.
Councilwoman Mireya Turner said everyone is strapped for time, so it made sense to focus resources where there’s the most energy and where they can get things done.
Turner moved to direct staff to review council goals, return with proposals for new ad hoc committees, and freeze the Traffic Safety and Advisory Committee and the Parks and Recreation Committee, which the council approved unanimously.
Ingram said he has talked to both the Traffic Safety and Advisory Committee and the Parks and Recreation Committee about the proposal and believed that the members are looking forward to participating in the new ad hoc committees.
In other council action on Oct. 6, the council presented a proclamation to Sheri Young of Lake Family Resource Center designating October as Domestic Violence Awareness Month, held a hearing and approved an ordinance to update the Lakeport Municipal Code’s emergency services chapter, made amendments to the fiscal year 2020-21 city budget and approved a resolution for approval that would authorize the city manager to submit an application for the Prop 68 Per Capita Program and execute any agreements necessary for the use of grant funds.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – During its Wednesday evening meeting, the Lakeport Planning Commission approved renaming a city street in honor of the man who was the prime mover behind the development of Westside Community Park.
The discussion about renaming Westside Park Road for Charlie Jolin was the main item on the agenda for the commission’s brief Wednesday night meeting.
In July, at the request of the Westside Community Park Committee, the Lakeport City Council approved beginning the process to rename the street in honor of Jolin, who died in June at age 96, as Lake County News has reported.
The process’ next stop was the planning commission, which first considered the proposal at its Sept. 8 meeting.
Originally, the proposal had been to name the road “Charlie’s Way.”
At the commission’s September meeting, City Manager Kevin Ingram pointed out that the city’s city’s street naming conventions discouraged the use of apostrophes.
Commissioner Mark Mitchell, later in the same meeting, suggested going with “Charlie Jolin Way,” as it would offer more information about the man behind the street name.
That option would come out as the top choice, but before making a decision the commission voted to hold off until this month’s meeting so they could hear directly from the Westside Community Park Committee, which had its own meeting at the same time and so didn’t have a representative on hand Sept. 8 to answer questions.
In his update to the commission on Wednesday, Ingram said the next step would be a public notice process that city staff would initiate immediately. While there are no residences on the road, he said it leads to homes in the Parkside Subdivision. It’s the city’s intention to give individual notifications to subdivision residents.
Because the city’s street naming rules don’t allow apostrophes, Ingram said staff recommended the new street name be “Charlie Jolin Way.”
Westside Community Park Committee Chair Dennis Rollins was on hand to answer questions from the commission.
He said the committee doesn’t believe there would be a Westside Park without Jolin.
Rollins explained that in the late 1990s, Jolin and then-Lakeport Community Development Director Richard Knoll got together and had a brainstorm about the park idea, and Jolin ran with it.
He said the first phase of the park involved help from the National Guard, which Jolin had arranged.
“He was the mover and the shaker,” Rollins said.
One of the park committee members had suggested the whole park be renamed for Jolin, but Rollins said Jolin didn’t want anything named after him. He was low-key about things unless it was about promoting the park.
Rollins said he thought renaming the road in Jolin’s memory is fitting.
Mitchell asked him his preference for the name.
Rollins said he liked “Charlie’s Way” because the committee had done everything Jolin’s way. However, he said he understood the punctuation issues with the city’s street naming rules. The committee has discussed it and is fine with the proposed name of “Charlie Jolin Way.”
“Ordinarily, this isn’t something I’d be in favor of,” said Commission Chair Michael Froio, who also had raised his concerns at the last meeting about renaming established streets.
However, Froio said Wednesday that in talking with people this week about the proposal, it seemed fitting and that his question had been answered when Mitchell questioned Rollins about his name preference.
Commissioner Ken Wicks moved to recommend the city council change Westside Park Road to “Charlie Jolin Way,” with the finding that the name change is in conformance with the general plan and existing street name network. Commissioner Jeff Warrenburg seconded and the commission approved the motion 4-0, with Commissioner Michael Green absent.
Ingram told Lake County News after the meeting that the Lakeport Municipal Code has a 10-day notice requirement for street renaming but it requires the notice to be placed in two public spaces.
He said he also intends to send a direct mailing to the Parkside Subdivision, as he had indicated during the meeting.
Ingram said the plan is to get sign notices by the end of the month, which would put the matter on track to go before the Lakeport City Council at its Nov. 17 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.
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – Clearlake Animal Control has several new dogs joining its pack of canines available for adoption.
The following dogs are ready for adoption or foster.
‘Bella’
“Bella” is a female American Bully mix.
She has a short beige and tan coat.
She is dog No. 3537.
‘Charlie’
“Charlie” is a male adult Chihuahua with a short tan coat.
He has been neutered.
Charlie is recovering from surgery to fix a broken leg.
He is dog No. 4277.
‘Chop’
“Chop” is a male Rottweiler mix with a black and tan coat.
He is dog No. 4267.
‘Chuckie’
“Chuckie’ is a small male adult German Shepherd mix.
He has a short tan and black coat.
He is dog No. 4297.
‘Ella’
“Ella” is a female Miniature Pinscher mix.
She has a short black and tan coat.
She is dog No. 4296.
‘Gozer’
“Gozer” is a female shepherd mix with a black and white coat.
She is dog No. 4288.
‘Isis’
“Isis” is a female American Staffordshire Terrier mix with a brindle and white coat.
She has been spayed.
She is dog No. 3732.
‘Jack’
“Jack” is a male Labrador Retriever mix with a short yellow coat.
He is dog No. 4155.
‘Lady’
“Lady” is a female German Shepherd mix.
She has been spayed.
She is dog No. 3683.
The shelter is open by appointment only due to COVID-19.
Call the Clearlake Animal Control shelter at 707-273-9440, or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. to inquire about adoptions and schedule a visit to the shelter.
Visit Clearlake Animal Control on Facebook or on the city’s website.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
After touching down on the Red Planet Feb. 18, 2021, NASA's Mars 2020 Perseverance rover will scour Jezero Crater to help us understand its geologic history and search for signs of past microbial life.
But the six-wheeled robot won't be looking just at the surface of Mars: The rover will peer deep below it with a ground-penetrating radar called RIMFAX.
Unlike similar instruments aboard Mars orbiters, which study the planet from space, RIMFAX will be the first ground-penetrating radar set on the surface of Mars. This will give scientists much higher-resolution data than space-borne radars can provide while focusing on the specific areas that Perseverance will explore.
Taking a more focused look at this terrain will help the rover's team understand how features in Jezero Crater formed over time.
Short for Radar Imager for Mars' Subsurface Experiment, RIMFAX can provide a highly detailed view of subsurface structures down to at least 30 feet underground. In doing so, the instrument will reveal hidden layers of geology and help find clues to past environments on Mars, especially those that may have provided the conditions necessary for supporting life.
"We take an image of the subsurface directly beneath the rover," said Svein-Erik Hamran, the instrument's principal investigator, with the University of Oslo in Norway. "We can do a 3D model of the subsurface – of the different layers – and determine the geological structures underneath."
While Mars is a frigid desert today, scientists suspect that microbes may have lived in Jezero during wetter times billions of years ago and that evidence of such ancient life may be preserved in sediments in the crater.
Information from RIMFAX will help pinpoint areas for deeper study by instruments on the rover that search for chemical, mineral, and textural clues found within rocks that may be signs of past microbial life.
Ultimately, the team will collect dozens of drill-core samples with Perseverance, seal them in tubes that will be deposited on the surface for return to Earth by future missions. That way, these first samples from another planet can be studied in laboratories with equipment too large to take to Mars.
Traveling back in time
Scientists believe the 28-mile-wide Jezero Crater formed when a large object collided with Mars, kicking up rocks from deep in the planet's crust. More than 3.5 billion years ago, river channels spilled into the crater, creating a lake that was home to a fan-shaped river delta.
Hamran hopes RIMFAX will shed light on how the delta formed. "This is not so easy, based on surface images only, because you have this dust covering everything, so you may not necessarily see all the changes in geology."
He and his science team will stack successive radar soundings to create a two-dimensional subsurface image of the crater floor. Eventually, data will be combined with images from a camera on the rover to create a 3D topographical image.
The instrument employs the same type of ground-penetrating radar used here on Earth to find buried utilities, underground caverns, and the like. In fact, Hamran uses it to study glaciers.
Tens of millions of miles away on Mars, however, he and his colleagues will be relying on Perseverance to do the work as it roams through Jezero Crater.
"We do some measurements while we are stationary," he said, "but most measurements will actually be gathered while the rover is driving."
More about the mission
A key objective for Perseverance's mission on Mars is astrobiology, including the search for signs of ancient microbial life.
The rover will characterize the planet's ancient climate and geology, pave the way for human exploration of the Red Planet, and be the first mission to collect and cache Martian rock and regolith (broken rock and dust).
Subsequent missions, currently under consideration by NASA in cooperation with ESA (the European Space Agency), would send spacecraft to Mars to collect these cached samples from the surface and return them to Earth for in-depth analysis.
The Mars 2020 mission is part of a larger program that includes missions to the Moon as a way to prepare for human exploration of the Red Planet. Charged with returning astronauts to the Moon by 2024, NASA will establish a sustained human presence on and around the Moon by 2028 through NASA's Artemis lunar exploration plans.
JPL, which is managed for NASA by Caltech in Pasadena, California, built and manages operations of the Perseverance and Curiosity rovers.
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – In an effort to save staff time and resources, the Clearlake City Council on Thursday approved an agreement with a company that will provide new agenda management services to the city.
The council unanimously approved the request for the new services from Administrative Services Director/City Clerk Melissa Swanson following a presentation by representatives of Municipal Code Corp., a company headquartered in Tallahassee, Florida, with a West Coast office in Portland, Oregon.
The discussion starts at the 35 minute mark in the meeting, shown in the video above.
Swanson told the council that it takes city staff about 35 hours per month – the equivalent of almost an entire work week – to review and produce agendas, with another four hours required to print out agendas for the two monthly council meetings.
The city currently relies on what Swanson’s written report called an “antiquated, time- and paper intensive process” that is estimated to cost $2,200 per month or $26,400 annually in staff time.
She said city council agenda packets use an average of more than 19,000 pieces of paper per year.
“To visualize this, 19,000 sheets of paper stack up to over 6 feet tall, and over my time as city clerk, that stack of papers would stretch as high as a 10-story building,” she said.
That doesn’t count the work necessary for the city’s planning commission, marketing committee or any ad hoc committees, Swanson said.
She said an agenda management system would streamline the agenda process for staff, the council, committees and the public.
While staff time and paper costs wouldn’t be completely eliminated, Swanson said they would be greatly reduced.
In July, the Administrative Services Department published a request for proposals for an agenda management system. Swanson said several proposals were submitted and staff selected three vendors for a final review by department heads and stakeholders including Mayor Russ Cremer.
She said they reviewed them on Sept. 14, using criteria including technology level, ease of use, user interface, pricing structure, functionality and integration with the city’s current technology infrastructure. After demos by the three finalists, Swanson said the committee’s decision was to recommend the council approve an agreement with Municipal Code Corp., or MuniCode.
Her written report said city staff contacted 14 other California jurisdictions that currently use MuniCode Meetings, with 10 responding to their request for information. All 10 said they would recommend MuniCode for ease of use, customer service and smooth implementation processes.
She said the cost would be $11,500, which includes the one-time cost of $1,500 for historical data importation. Implementation of the new program is included in her department’s budget.
MuniCode representative Leon Rogers, appearing via Zoom, showed the council the company’s meeting portal, a link for which would be put on the city’s website. It will have search functions for date ranges and by board and commission, with meeting information and agendas available for download.
Rogers said the software allows council members to vote through the system.
He also explained that they would train staff on how to use the program.
Following the presentation, the council unanimously approved the agreement with MuniCode.
Swanson told Lake County News that the module doesn’t come with a video portion like Granicus, the agenda management system used by the county of Lake for Board of Supervisors and Lake County Planning
She said the city will continue to use Zoom to record meetings and post them on the city’s YouTube page.
In other business, the council held a public hearing to consider updates to the city’s zoning code, design review procedures and design standards, and following extensive discussion decided to hold the matter over until its next meeting.
The council also denied appeals of abatement orders for 15615 34th Ave. and 16221 32nd Ave., which were cited for illegal outdoor marijuana cultivation.
At the request of the League of California Cities, the council approved a resolution in support of Proposition 20, the Reducing Crime and Keeping California Safe Act. The proposition, which is on the November ballot, would reclassify as “violent” some crimes currently categorized as “nonviolent” and create two additional categories of punishable crimes with increased penalties.
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. – More than 6.1 million Californians – including several thousand Lake County residents – will take part in earthquake-readiness drills and education on Thursday as part of the Great California ShakeOut.
Also known as International ShakeOut Day, the Great ShakeOut takes place each year on the third Thursday of October.
A statewide drill will take place at 10:15 a.m., but the event highlights the importance of ongoing preparedness.
Participants will practice "Drop, Cover, and Hold On," the protocol recommended by earthquake safety experts as essential for avoiding injury and even death.
Organizers said more than 27.7 million people across the United States and in more than 60 other countries will hold their own earthquake drills too in 2020 as part of the Great ShakeOut Earthquake Drills movement.
"Damaging earthquakes can strike at any time, and the Great California ShakeOut drill is an important reminder of what we need to do in order to survive and recover. Earthquakes are a reality, but they don't have to be devastating; strengthen your home now and get prepared," said Glenn Pomeroy, CEO of the California Earthquake Authority. "With our healthcare system already stressed by COVID-19, we all need to take steps to keep ourselves safe when the ground shakes."
Earthquake Warning California is coordinating a statewide test to coincide for the first time with ShakeOut on Thursday. People who have downloaded the MyShake app to their phone will receive a TEST warning around 10:15 a.m. with guidance to “drop, cover and hold on!”
ShakeOut participants in the Western United States are also encouraged to join a Facebook Live event from 8:45 to 10:20 a.m. known as "The Great Online ShakeOut." This online, live broadcast – available to anyone, even without a Facebook page – will feature a drill for everyone to participate in, presentations from earthquake experts representing government, emergency management, and science, key videos and other resources, and a Q&A.
In Lake County, approximately 8,418 participants are registered to take part in the ShakeOut, including 7,974 in school districts, 240 in health care, 108 in local government, 50 in nonprofit organizations and 40 in preparedness organizations.
Among the local participants is Adventist Health. Its Adventist Health Clear Lake Medical Center and Medical Offices will conduct Great ShakeOut drills Thursday morning.
“While damaging earthquakes here may be fewer in number when compared to other areas, they can occur at any time wherever we work, live, or travel within the region and beyond,” said Adventist Health Emergency Manager Kimberly Baldwin. “Everyone, everywhere should know how to protect themselves from an earthquake.”
Earthquakes are a common occurrence in parts of Lake County, especially the Cobb area, where quakes related to the Geysers Geothermal Steamfield are commonly felt. Those quakes often are in the 3- and sometimes 4-magnitude range.
On Aug. 9, 2016, a 5.1-magnitude earthquake with an epicenter 11 miles north of Upper Lake shook Lake County. Lake County News has been unable to find documentation of a larger quake recorded within Lake County’s boundaries in records going back to 1900.
In 1906, Lake County felt the impact of the 7.8-magnitude earthquake that devastated San Francisco. That quake led to the collapse of the Masonic Hall and damaged the Lakeview and Giselman hotels, damaged the original bell tower as well as the roof on the Lower Lake Schoolhouse, damaged residences around the county and shook walnut trees in Upper Lake, according to historical accounts.
When an earthquake occurs, the safe response is to:
– Drop where you are, onto your hands and knees. This position protects you from being knocked down and also allows you to stay low and crawl to shelter if nearby. – Cover your head and neck with one arm and hand. – If a sturdy table or desk is nearby, crawl underneath it for shelter. – If no shelter is nearby, crawl next to an interior wall (away from windows). – Stay on your knees; bend over to protect vital organs – Hold on until shaking stops. – Under shelter: Hold on to it with one hand; be ready to move with your shelter if it shifts. – No shelter: Hold on to your head and neck with both arms and hands.
ShakeOut organizers recommend people follow the Seven Steps to Earthquake Safety, a brochure for which can be downloaded at the California Earthquake Authority website.
Those steps notably begin with securing your space, as officials said most earthquake injuries are entirely preventable and are caused by the furniture and other objects that move or break when shaking occurs, resulting in trips, bruises, cuts, and more.
Officials urge California residents to be proactive and prepare now by moving heavy objects down to lower shelves, relocating tall furniture away from entrances and exits, and securing cabinets with latches.
"We have come a long way since ShakeOut began in 2008," said Mark Benthien, global ShakeOut coordinator and outreach director for the Southern California Earthquake Center at the University of Southern California. "More people have not only been practicing earthquake safety, but also securing furniture and objects around them, discussing safety plans, and even retrofitting their homes. For 2020, they are also adapting their drill plans because of COVID-19."
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. – Pacific Gas and Electric Co. said Friday night that it has restored power to nearly all of the customers impacted by a public safety power shutoff that was implemented over the past two days.
The shutoff, which began on Wednesday evening in response to red flag weather conditions, impacted 41,000 customers – about 12,000 customers less than originally forecast – in 24 counties: Alameda, Butte, Contra Costa, Humboldt, Lake, Monterey, Napa, Nevada, Plumas, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Shasta, Solano, Sonoma, Tehama, Trinity, Yolo and Yuba.
In Lake County, 82 Lake County customers, five of them in the medical baseline program, were impacted in the Cobb, Lower Lake and Middletown areas.
PG&E said the severe weather subsided enough during the day on Thursday in some locations for its meteorology team to issue a number of “weather all clears,” which allowed electric crews to begin patrols of power lines to look for damage as the first step toward restoration. As a result, 10,000 customers had their power restored on Thursday.
On Friday morning, PG&E issued the all clear for the remaining areas in the PSPS footprint, deploying 1,200 employees on the ground or in 47 helicopters inspecting about 3,200 miles of lines for damage or hazards.
The majority of the remaining 31,000 customers affected by this PSPS event were restored by early Friday evening, the company said.
PG&E said wind gusts of more than 50 miles per hour were recorded in multiple high fire danger areas including Napa, San Mateo and Yolo counties. Peak wind gusts were recorded in Contra Costa County, 61 miles per hour; Butte County, 64 miles per hour; and Sonoma County, 73 miles per hour.
Based on preliminary data from the company’s damage inspections, there were 30 instances of weather-related damage and hazards – such as downed power lines and vegetation on power lines – in the PSPS-affected areas. PG&E said that type of damage could have resulted in wildland fires had the lines not been deenergized.
PG&E said it will submit a report detailing damages from the severe weather conditions to the California Public Utilities Commission within 10 days of the completion of the PSPS.
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.
I’m a scholar of the presidency. And as many in this field know, early voting periods are not new to the 2020 election.
First presidential election took one month
There are many historical examples of an election period as opposed to an election day.
At the founding, there was no set national election day. The first presidential election started on Dec. 15, 1788, and ended almost a month later, on Jan. 10, 1789.
In 1792, Congress passed a law that permitted each state to choose presidential electors any time within a 34-day period before the first Wednesday in December. During this period, states determined what day to hold their presidential elections, resulting in a patchwork of election days. Most states had their election on a single day, but some had elections over the course of two days.
From 1789 to 1840, states gradually converged on early November as the time to hold their presidential elections, laying the groundwork for congressional adoption of a uniform presidential election day.
The 1840 presidential electoral season began on Friday, Oct. 30, in Ohio and Pennsylvania and ended on Thursday, Nov. 12, in North Carolina, except for South Carolina, whose state Legislature still chose its electors.
With the invention of the telegraph, the rise of two-party competition across most states and record-breaking voter turnout, both parties had an interest in regulating elections and establishing a national election day.
In addition, parties were becoming more concerned about election fraud, especially the “the importation of voters from one State to another.” Most of the discussion in Congress focused on which day election day should be, with the prevailing idea that it should be about 30 days before the meeting of the electors, and on a Tuesday, according to a story in The Boston Daily Globe in February of 1915.
The legislators chose Tuesday because most states already held their elections on Monday or Tuesday, and they thought it was generally a good idea to have one day between Sunday and election day, making Tuesday the preferred day over Monday.
But even during this period there remained elements of an election season. According to Scott James, the 1848 congressional elections spanned 15 months, from August 1848 to November 1849. Leading up to the Civil War, a clear split in scheduling congressional elections emerged.
Northern states tended to adopt the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, the same day as presidential elections, to hold congressional elections. Southern states, in contrast, scheduled congressional elections several months after presidential election day. It wasn’t until 1872 that Congress mandated that all states hold their congressional elections on the same day as the presidential election.
Moreover, a state’s early statewide electoral contests could act as a political laboratory for national elections. The saying “As Maine goes, so goes the nation” originated in the 19th century as Maine’s early statewide election returns, particularly in the governor’s race, often predicted the party of the presidential election winner. Political parties converged on Maine in September to rally their voters in hopes of influencing the November presidential election across the nation.
The establishment of an explicit early voting period rests on the precedent set during the Civil War. There were numerous ways soldiers on the battlefield could cast their vote: mailing proxy votes, ballots or voting in person at camps and hospitals close to the battlefield.
The proxy votes, ballots, and/or tally sheets from the voting sites were then mailed to the soldier’s or sailor’s home state for counting. In Ohio, the absentee military ballots that were considered qualified – from white men over 21 years old – accounted for 12% of Ohio’s votes in the 1864 presidential election.
Since then, multiple forms of early voting have been established. Early voting can happen in person or through voting by mail. In a 2001 federal appeals case challenging Oregon’s no-excuse absentee voting, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld early voting periods, ruling that the election must only be “consummated” on Election Day.
In other words, voters need to cast their ballots by Election Day, but the law does not prevent them from voting earlier.
In the 1980s, Texas offered its voters early voting in person. The number of states adopting early voting periods began to surge in the 1990s and included Florida, Nevada, Georgia, Tennessee and Iowa. After the 2000 presidential election and the controversy over “hanging chads,” many more states adopted early in-person voting periods to help with election administration.
The U.S. Election Assistance Commission reports that in 2016 more than 41% of all ballots nationwide were cast before Election Day – with in-person early voting making up 17%, and voting by mail 24%, of all turnout.
Does early voting increase voter turnout rates overall, or does it just split the voters who would normally vote on Election Day?
While some scholars contend that early in-person voting periods potentially can decrease voter turnout, studies that focus on vote-by-mail, a form of early voting, generally show an increase in voter turnout. New research presents evidence that the implementation of all-mail voting in Colorado increased voter turnout by 9.4 percent overall.
Early voting periods may have an effect on who turns out, as well – which may explain Attorney General Barr’s lack of enthusiasm for early voting periods. Although past studies have shown that early voting did not help one party over the other, the 2020 election may be different.
As of early October 2020, Democrats have cast 55.3% of the early ballots, whereas Republicans have cast only 24.2%. Independents have cast 19.8% and voters affiliated with a minor party less than 1%.
But there is still plenty of time for more people to vote early, either by mail or in person, before Election Day.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Congressman Mike Thompson (CA-05) has announced that the Federal Emergency Management Agency will cover 100 percent of the cost-share for debris removal and emergency protective measures for the LNU Lightning Complex fires.
This is an increase from the usual 75 percent of cost-share by the federal government for declared disasters, Thompson’s office reported.
Thompson had previously requested additional federal assistance for these fires, which started on Aug. 14 and burned 363,220 acres in Colusa, Lake, Napa, Solano, Sonoma and Yolo counties.
The LNU Lightning Complex killed three people in Napa County and two in Solano County, injured several civilians and firefighters, and destroyed nearly 1,500 structures – including nine in Lake County – and damaged more than 230 others.
“This fire season has caused an immense strain on us all, whether you were evacuated, lost your home, work in public safety, or are part of the local, state and federal team working to rebuild. That’s why I wrote to the FEMA asking the agency to lessen the financial burden on our state and local governments,” said Thompson.
In his Wednesday announcement, Thompson noted, “I am thrilled to see that FEMA will cover 100 percent of the cost of debris removal and emergency protective measures. This much-needed relief will help our communities already struggling due to the pandemic have the resources they need to recover and rebuild from the LNU Lightning Complex fires. Know that I will continue working to bring back every federal dollar and resource to help with our recovery process.”
Click here to read a copy of the notice from FEMA regarding approval for 100 percent cost share for Category A debris removal and Category B emergency protective measures.
Thompson represents California’s Fifth Congressional District, which includes all or part of Contra Costa, Lake, Napa, Solano and Sonoma counties.