Friday, 29 March 2024

News

LAKEPORT, Calif. – On Monday the Lake County District Attorney's Office dropped murder charges against a Clearlake man in connection with a fatal September 2009 shooting.


Michael Gil Truscott, 31, was arrested in October 2009 for the shooting death of 30-year-old Anthony Cruz on Sept. 4, 2009, as Lake County News has reported.


But on Monday the case was dismissed, according to Stephen Carter, Truscott's defense attorney from the Carter & Carter Law Offices in Lower Lake.


“That means that the District Attorney's Office has realized that they cannot prove their case based on the witnesses and investigation they have to date,” Carter said.


Carter added, “Without going into detail, it is safe to say the prosecution had some huge witness credibility issues to overcome.”


Chief Deputy District Attorney Richard Hinchcliff said that the case is not going to be closed, and that the investigation is continuing.


“Since charges were originally filed, we conducted an extensive amount of investigation that has resulted in other information that we were previously unaware of,” he said.


Because of that information, Hinchcliff said the District Attorney's Office didn't believe it could convince 12 jurors beyond a reasonable doubt that Truscott committed the charged offenses.


“We've come to the point where if we take this to trial now, we believe there's a strong likelihood that we're going to lose this case,” he said.


If that were to happen, jeopardy attaches, and Truscott couldn't be recharged in the future, Hinchcliff said.


Hinchcliff said that, because of the ongoing nature of the investigation, he couldn't discuss other possible suspects.


Cruz was at the window of his Spruce Avenue home in Clearlake when he was killed by a single gunshot wound to the chest, according to police reports.


Clearlake Police Department investigators alleged that Cruz was confronting someone in his yard who was allegedly stealing marijuana from him when he was fatally shot.


Carter said marijuana trimmings were recovered at the scene, but a firearm was never located.


Truscott was arrested and charged based in part on a confrontation he allegedly had with Cruz in public several weeks before the shooting, Carter said. It was alleged that Cruz beat Truscott severely during that fight.


When Truscott was located and arrested a month and a half after the shooting he was in a state prison in Tracy on a parole violation.


Truscott was placed on a parole hold as a result of prior convictions against him and booked into the Lake County Jail on Nov. 23, 2009, where he has remained since on $1 million bail.


Carmen Walsh, a 40-year-old Clearlake resident, was arrested as an accessory after the fact in the homicide. Deputy District Attorney John DeChaine said the case against Walsh was dismissed on Nov. 6, 2009, due to lack of evidence.


DeChaine also wouldn't comment further on the case, noting, “The investigation had not stopped since the night Mr. Cruz was killed.”


The dismissal came about a month before the case's jury trial – which had been expected to last eight weeks – was set to begin, Carter said.


Carter said he was pleased with the result. “My view has always been that the state of the evidence was such that this case was going to end in either a dismissal or an acquittal at jury trial,” and it was a good decision to save potential jurors the time and expense of a lengthy trial.


On Monday morning Truscott remained in custody at the Hill Road Correctional Facility in Lakeport. A remaining violation of probation charge also was handled Monday and Truscott was released from custody by day's end.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews , on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

EUREKA, Calif. – As news came out this week that a state legislator is suing the state over a pay cut, the North Coast's representative in the state Assembly said that pay cuts for legislators were the right step to take last year


Assemblymember Wesley Chesbro (D-North Coast) said he accepted the 18 percent legislator pay cut in 2009 because it was the right thing – for him – to do and criticized an attempt by Assemblymember Gil Cedillo to undo it.


“My goal is to restore paychecks for my district, not for myself,” Chesbro said. “I accepted that pay cut in 2009. I accept it now. We should be leading by example. And that example should not include complaining about lost pay when so many of the people we represent are dealing with hard times.”


The California Citizens Compensation Commission sets the salaries of state legislators.


In December 2009 the Commission voted to cut legislators’ pay and benefits by 18 percent.


Cedillo, a Democrat from Los Angeles, represents the 45th District in the state Assembly.


He has filed a claim with the California Victim Compensation and Government Claims Board alleging the cuts are illegal.


Cedillo wants the Claims Board to restore the 18 percent, retroactively, for all 120 legislators.


“We go into the new year with a new governor and the hope and commitment to finally resolve the budget mess,” said Chesbro. “We need to get off on the right foot. And thinking about our own paychecks is not the right way to do that.”


Cedillo is being roundly criticized statewide for taking the action, which critics point out is being taken at a time when the state is struggling financially.


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From left, Candy May Henderson and Theresa Anne Blakesley were arrested on Sunday, December 12, 2010, after the women fought with Lake County Sheriff's deputies who responded to a noise disturbance in Glenhaven, Calif. Lake County Jail photos.



 


GLENHAVEN, Calif. – A report of a disturbance early Sunday morning at the Glenhaven Beach Resort resulted in the arrest of two Glenhaven women.


Candy May Henderson, 45, and 25-year-old Theresa Anne Blakesley were taken into custody after they both fought with deputies, according to Capt. James Bauman of the Lake County Sheriff's Office.


Bauman said deputies responded to the trailer park at about 6:20 a.m. Dec. 12 when the park manager reported multiple complaints from other tenants of yelling and banging coming from Henderson's home.


On the deputies' arrival, one deputy was confronted by Henderson in the doorway of her trailer. Bauman said Henderson was highly agitated, reportedly yelling and cussing at the deputy with her hands clenched into fists, and pointing a large hunting knife at the deputy.


The deputy backed away from the woman and, at gunpoint, ordered her several times to drop the knife, Bauman said.


Henderson eventually dropped the knife but as the deputy started ordering her to her knees to be handcuffed, she suddenly stood up and charged the deputy, Bauman reported.


Bauman said Henderson was pushed to the ground and as another deputy arrived to help control her, she fought with both deputies, punching and kicking them until one deployed his Taser and she was taken into custody.


As Henderson was being taken to a patrol car, the other deputy checked the trailer for other occupants and found Blakesley pacing around inside, Bauman said.


Blakesley initially refused to exit the trailer and kept reaching into her purse for some reason. Bauman said she eventually was talked out of the trailer but then began fighting violently with the deputy as he tried to detain her.


Bauman said both deputies struggled with Blakesley as she fought to escape but after another Taser deployment, she too was taken into custody.


Both women were booked at the Lake County Jail, Bauman said.


Henderson was charged with felony brandishing of a weapon and misdemeanor charges of battery on a peace officer and resisting arrest, Bauman reported, while Blakesley was charged with misdemeanor resisting arrest.


Neither the suspects or the deputies involved in the incident were injured and there was no apparent explanation for the initial disturbance or the behavior of the two women when they were contacted by deputies, Bauman said.


Both women remained in custody Monday night, according to Lake County Jail records.


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A Geminid fireball explodes over the Mojave Desert in 2009. Credit: Wally Pacholka / AstroPics.com / TWAN.
 

 

 



The Geminid meteor shower, which peaks this year on Dec. 13 and 14, is the most intense meteor shower of the year. It lasts for days, is rich in fireballs, and can be seen from almost any point on Earth.


It's also NASA astronomer Bill Cooke's favorite meteor shower—but not for any of the reasons listed above.


“The Geminids are my favorite,” he explains, “because they defy explanation.”


Most meteor showers come from comets, which spew ample meteoroids for a night of “shooting stars.” The Geminids are different. The parent is not a comet but a weird rocky object named 3200 Phaethon that sheds very little dusty debris – not nearly enough to explain the Geminids.


“Of all the debris streams Earth passes through every year, the Geminids' is by far the most massive,” says Cooke. “When we add up the amount of dust in the Geminid stream, it outweighs other streams by factors of 5 to 500.”


This makes the Geminids the 900-lb gorilla of meteor showers. Yet 3200 Phaethon is more of a 98-lb weakling.


In 1983, 3200 Phaethon was discovered by NASA's IRAS satellite and promptly classified as an asteroid.


What else could it be? It did not have a tail; its orbit intersected the main asteroid belt; and its colors strongly resembled that of other asteroids. Indeed, 3200 Phaethon resembles main belt asteroid Pallas so much, it might be a 5-kilometer chip off that 544 km block.


“If 3200 Phaethon broke apart from asteroid Pallas, as some researchers believe, then Geminid meteoroids might be debris from the breakup,” speculated Cooke. “But that doesn't agree with other things we know.”


Researchers have looked carefully at the orbits of Geminid meteoroids and concluded that they were ejected from 3200 Phaethon when Phaethon was close to the sun – not when it was out in the asteroid belt breaking up with Pallas.


The eccentric orbit of 3200 Phaethon brings it well inside the orbit of Mercury every 1.4 years. The rocky body thus receives a regular blast of solar heating that might boil jets of dust into the Geminid stream.


Could this be the answer?


To test the hypothesis, researchers turned to NASA's twin STEREO spacecraft, which are designed to study solar activity.

 

 

 

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An artist's concept of an impact event on Pallas. Credit: B. E. Schmidt and S. C. Radcliffe of UCLA.

 

 


Coronagraphs onboard STEREO can detect sungrazing asteroids and comets, and in June 2009 they detected 3200 Phaethon only 15 solar diameters from the sun's surface.


What happened next surprised UCLA planetary scientists David Jewitt and Jing Li, who analyzed the data. “3200 Phaethon unexpectedly brightened by a factor of two,” they wrote. “The most likely explanation is that Phaethon ejected dust, perhaps in response to a break-down of surface rocks (through thermal fracture and decomposition cracking of hydrated minerals) in the intense heat of the Sun.”


Jewett and Li's “rock comet” hypothesis is compelling, but they point out a problem: The amount of dust 3200 Phaethon ejected during its 2009 sun-encounter added a mere 0.01 percent to the mass of the Geminid debris stream – not nearly enough to keep the stream replenished over time. Perhaps the rock comet was more active in the past …?


“We just don't know,” said Cooke. “Every new thing we learn about the Geminids seems to deepen the mystery.”


This month Earth will pass through the Geminid debris stream, producing as many as 120 meteors per hour over dark-sky sites. The best time to look is probably between local midnight and sunrise on Tuesday, Dec. 14, when the Moon is low and the constellation Gemini is high overhead, spitting bright Geminids across a sparkling starry sky.


Bundle up, go outside, and savor the mystery.


Dr. Tony Phillips works for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.


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The path of 3200 Phaethon through STEREO's HI-1A coronagraph camera. False-color green and blue streamers come from the sun. Courtesy of NASA.
 

Gifts by dependent adults to unrelated care custodians – caregivers who provide health and social services – have been presumed to be the product of fraud, duress, menace or undue influence, and so presumed to be invalid under section 21350 of the California Probate Law.


Overcoming the presumption has required either a certificate of independent review or clear and convincing evidence that shows the gift was not the product of duress, menace, fraud, or undue influence.


The presumption of invalidity is meant to protect vulnerable (and usually lonely) dependent adults from predatory persons going after the dependent person’s estate.


Such predation often takes the form of substantial gifts at death in the dependent person’s will or trust. Presently, gifts exceeding $3,000 are considered substantial and so subject to the statute.


The presumption has often raised major concern with respect to even legitimate gifts made to genuine friends (who stepped in when their dependent friend needed help) due to uncertainty over the definition of “care custodian.”


This issue was recognized in 2006 by Chief Justice Ronald George and he invited the Legislature to amend the law to, “protect society as a whole.”


As a result, the California Law Revision Committee recommended that friends who became volunteer caregivers be excluded from the definition of “care custodian.”


Effective Jan. 1, 2011, section 21350 is amended in significant ways intended to protect gifts made to genuine friends who presently might be treated as care custodians.


Let’s examine the major law changes.


Most importantly, “care custodians” will exclude those who provide services without pay provided the care giver has a personal relationship with the dependent adult that began at least 90 days prior to when the volunteer services were provided and at least six months prior to the dependent adult’s death.


In addition, if the dependent adult is admitted to hospice care, such personal relationship must also begin prior to hospice care. Any gift instrument executed during the 90-day time period would make the gift presumptively invalid.


Furthermore, the definition of “dependent adult” is amended. With respect to persons over 65, a dependent adult means someone with “difficulty managing his or her own financial resources or resisting undue influence.”


Persons under 65, however, are only dependent adults if they have “substantial difficulty” in such areas.

 

Moreover, come 2011 the attorney drafting the gift instrument in question may now issue the certificate of independent review if he or she is truly independent; that is, not conflicted by an interest in the beneficiary of the gift (i.e., disinterested).


These law changes apply to gifts made in legal instruments that become irrevocable on or after Jan. 1, 2011.


Thus, instruments drafted prior to 2011 which become irrevocable after 2010 will be covered by the new 2011 law. Otherwise, the existing 2010 law still applies to gifts made before 2011.


Lastly, section 21350 supplements but does not replace the common law. Common law protections on undue influence still apply. Thus, predators who insinuate themselves into the lives of the vulnerable and use undue influence to coerce a dependent adult into making a gift should still beware.


Dennis A. Fordham, attorney (LL.M. tax studies), is a State Bar Certified Specialist in Estate Planning, Probate and Trust Law. His office is at 55 First St., Lakeport, California. Dennis can be reached by e-mail at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or by phone at 707-263-3235.


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The long-awaited study on gays in the military serving openly not only takes the pulse of the force on the issue – concluding change can occur with little risk to readiness – but also details how it will work in practice.


The report came out earlier this month, just ahead of the Senate vote that determined “Don't Ask, Don't Tell” will remain in place, at least for the time being.


Will service members with same-sex partners qualify for the higher “with dependents” housing allowance rate? No.


Will same-sex partners qualify for military health coverage? No.


What if a gay couple is legally married in a state allowing such unions?


Still no, because the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act defines marriage, for federal program purposes, as “a legal union between one man and one woman as husband and wife” and defines “spouse” to mean “a person of the opposite sex who is a husband or a wife.”


Because this law bars the federal government from recognizing same-sex marriages, it also that blocks spousal benefits for gay partners across hundreds of federal programs including many military benefits. There are, however, active court challenges.


Will service members with same-sex partners be eligible for on-base family housing? Legally, that could be allowed. It is already is for gay civilian employees working for some federal agencies. But the study advises against opening military base housing to such arrangements.


Will gay members be able to designate partners as beneficiaries of Servicemembers’ Group Life Insurance and federal Thrift Savings Plans? Yes.


Will same-sex partners be eligible for base shopping, family support programs, legal assistance, space-available travel and relocation assistance when members move to new assignments?


Some of these benefits could be allowed. It will depend on how the Department of Defense and the services define “dependent” and “family member” for benefit eligibility. For now, if gays are allowed to serve openly, the report recommends that regulations not be revised to benefit same-sex partners, at least “for the time being.”


“Other federal agencies are managing this by establishing a domestic partner status for same-sex partners, through an affidavit or other evidence of the relationship,” the report says. “Within the military community, where benefits are much more prominent and visible…administering such a system distracts from the military’s core mission and runs counter to the Secretary of Defense’s basic direction that implementation of a repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell be done in a way that minimizes disruption to the force.”


Will members who identify themselves as gay have to use separate bathroom and shower facilities? Absolutely not, though the report acknowledges privacy concerns will become a bigger leadership challenge.

 

Gen. Carter Ham, commander of U.S. Army Europe, and DoD General Counsel Jeh Johnson, led the nine-month examination of the impact of repealing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” the law that for 17 years has barred homosexuals from serving openly in U.S. armed forces.


In their 350-page, two-part report, Ham and Johnson conclude it can be repealed without endangering readiness, but it will require strong leadership and careful preparation.


Ham, Johnson and a 66-person team reviewed all regulations and policies likely to need revision including those on fraternization and misconduct discharges. They held 95 face-to-face forums at 51 bases. They conducted a survey to which 115,000 members and 44,000 spouses responded on how they, their units and families would react to this change.


Marines and Army soldiers – the ground forces doing most of the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan – reacted most negatively, with 48 percent of ground combat Marines expecting unit performance to be harmed.


But the overall response from the military community was more positive. Seventy percent of members predicted that allowing gays to serve openly would have a positive, mixed or no effect on units.


The House passed its version of the 2011 defense authorization bill with language to repeal Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. The Senate’s defense bill had similar language but Republicans opposed repeal in the lame duck session and will gain seats for the new Congress in January.


Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs, testified for repeal in February saying gay Americans shouldn’t have to lie to serve their country.


That “personal opinion” then, Mullen said in an interview earlier this month, “is now my professional view – that this is a policy change that we can make. And we can do it in a relatively low-risk fashion, given the time and given the ability to mitigate whatever risk is out there through strong leadership.”


TFL TARGETED: Military retirees age 65 and older who rely on TRICARE for Life (TFL) as a golden insurance supplement to Medicare would face higher out-of-pocket costs, along with other older Americans, if Congress adopts the final plan of National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform. The plan was released Dec. 1.


Gone are some controversial provisions, such as a three-year pay freeze on the military, that had been part of a draft plan released in early November by commission co-chairmen Alan Simpson and Erskine Bowles.


But to encourage the elderly to use health care more efficiently, TFL and other Medigap plans would be barred from covering the first $500 of costs not paid by Medicare, and would cover only half of the next $5000. Thus elderly could pay up to $3000 more ($500 + $2500) annually to save $4 billion for Medicare and TRICARE through 2015.


Not found in this report are specific calls to raise TRICARE fees for working age military retirees or specific “reforms” to military retirement. But the panel wants a task force created to “re-evaluate” federal retirement plans which now are “out of line” with private sector pensions. The goal is $70 billion in federal retirement savings over 10 years.


A separate “process” should be set up to control federal health care spending including by TRICARE beneficiaries, the commission says.


To comment, send e-mail to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or write to Military Update, P.O. Box 231111, Centreville, VA, 20120-1111.


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Despite improvements over the past 10 years that have lifted more than 350 million rural people out of extreme poverty, global poverty remains a massive and predominantly rural phenomenon – with 70 percent of the developing world’s 1.4 billion extremely poor people living in rural areas – according to a report released by the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD).


IFAD’s Rural Poverty Report 2011 says that, during the past decade, the overall rate of extreme poverty in rural areas of developing countries – people living on less than US$1.25 a day – has dropped from 48 per cent to 34 per cent. Dramatic gains in East Asia, particularly China, account for much of the decline.


The report points to an alarming increase in the numbers of extremely poor people in rural areas of Sub-Saharan Africa, although the percentage living on less than the equivalent of US$1.25 a day – at 62 per cent – has actually dropped slightly since IFAD last issued a Rural Poverty Report in 2001.


It also notes the persistence of rural poverty on the South Asian subcontinent, which is home to half of the world’s 1 billion extremely poor rural people.


Increasingly volatile food prices, the uncertainties and effects of climate change, and a range of natural resource constraints will complicate further efforts to reduce rural poverty, the report says.


But the report also emphasizes that profound changes in agricultural markets are giving rise to new and promising opportunities for the developing world’s smallholder farmers to significantly boost their productivity, which will be necessary to ensure enough food for an increasingly urbanized global population estimated to reach at least 9 billion by 2050.


Accordingly, “there remains an urgent need … to invest more and better in agriculture and rural areas” based on “a new approach to smallholder agriculture that is both market-oriented and sustainable,” the report says.


“The report makes clear that it is time to look at poor smallholder farmers and rural entrepreneurs in a completely new way – not as charity cases but as people whose innovation, dynamism and hard work will bring prosperity to their communities and greater food security to the world in the decades ahead,” said Kanayo F. Nwanze, IFAD’s President.


“We need to focus on creating an enabling environment for rural women and men to overcome the risks and challenges they face as they work to make their farms and other businesses successful,” he said.


Significant gains in many areas


In addition to the overall decline of extreme poverty in rural areas of developing countries, the Rural Poverty Report 2011 points to other significant gains, most notably:


  • A drop in the overall poverty rate of US$2 a day in rural areas, from 79 per cent to 61 per cent over the past decade.

  • Remarkable progress in rural areas of East Asia – primarily China – where the number of extreme poor fell by about two-thirds over the past decade, from 365 million to 117 million, as did the rate of extreme poverty, which fell from 44 to 15 percent.

  • Improvements in other regions, with the extreme rural poverty rate falling by more than half in Latin America and by nearly half in the Middle East and North Africa. in both regions, the percentage of rural people who live in extreme poverty dropped significantly, as well.


Notwithstanding these gains, the report makes clear that rural poverty continues to be a massive phenomenon throughout much of the developing world, and that it is particularly acute in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia:


  • Sub-Saharan Africa is home to nearly a third of the world’s extremely poor rural people, whose numbers swelled from 268 million to 306 million over the past decade. While Sub-Saharan Africa’s rate of extreme poverty in rural areas declined from 65 to 62 per cent, it remains by far the highest of any region.

  • Rural poverty rates have dropped only slightly in the last decade in South Asia, which now has the largest number of poor rural people – about 500 million – of any region or sub-region. Four-fifths of all extremely poor people in South Asia live in rural areas.


The report cites the consequences of climate change – which will make agricultural production more difficult in many places – as complicating the challenges of addressing rural poverty in these regions and globally.


It also points to the key role of women farmers, who produce most of the food that is consumed locally in rural areas, and the need to address their inadequate access to land tenure, credit, equipment and market opportunities.


In addition, the report says “low levels of investment in agriculture, weak rural infrastructure, inadequate production and financial services, and a deteriorating natural resource base” – particularly land and water and growing competition for their use – are creating an environment which makes it too risky and unprofitable for most of the developing world’s smallholder farmers to participate in agricultural markets.


Opportunities for accelerating progress


Yet the report also indicates that momentous ongoing changes in agricultural markets, as well as emerging opportunities in the rural non-farm economy, offer new hope that major progress can be made in combating rural poverty. These include the rapid growth of urban centres and the accompanying rise in demand for higher value food, as well as the fact that agricultural markets are growing and becoming better organized in order to meet that demand.


“The world that rural people live in is changing very fast, and that is bringing a range of new opportunities,” said IFAD’s Ed Heinemann, who led the team that wrote the report. “In order to enable them to address the problems they face and make the most of the opportunities, governments and the donors who work with them have got to do much more to support rural areas, to invest in rural areas, to improve their infrastructure and governance, and to make rural areas better places to live and to do business.”


Essential to any rural poverty reduction strategy, said Heinemann, is understanding how to help poor rural people avoid and manage the risks they face – from longstanding risks related to ill-health and natural disasters to new and emerging challenges related to natural resource degradation, the effects of climate change, growing insecurity of access to land, and greater volatility of food prices.


“The food price shocks a few years ago were a wake up call that, with global population growth and the movement of more people into cities, higher and more uncertain food prices could become a fact of life,” said Nwanze. “But this also means that smallholder agriculture – if it is productive, commercially oriented and well linked to modern markets – can offer the developing world’s rural people a route out of poverty as they become part of the solution to global food security challenges.”


The Rural Poverty Report 2011 was made possible with funding from the Governments of Italy, the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland, and the Arab Center for the Studies of Arid Zones and Dry Lands.


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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – With the holiday season well underway, giving and receiving the latest gadgets is a part of this gift-giving time of year, and the Lake County Public Services Department wants to remind residents to properly dispose of their old electronics, which cannot be placed in

curbside trash carts.


Some electronics waste, or “e-waste” contain hazardous and toxic materials including lead, cadmium, beryllium, mercury, and brominated flame retardants – all of which cannot be put in the landfill or curbside carts and must be disposed of as hazardous materials. An older computer monitor can contain up to 5 pounds of lead alone.


Today, very few electronics products can be recycled or repaired and many become obsolete within a few years, making proper disposal of every item extremely important to protect the Lake County environment.


Lake County residents can easily dispose of their e-waste properly – at no cost – by taking it to Lake County Waste Solutions, South Lake Refuse and Recycling or the monthly e-waste event sponsored by Goodwill.


E-waste includes electronics that are replaced frequently such as cell phones and chargers, PDAs, computer systems and peripherals including accessories (printer, mouse, monitors, speakers, scanner, keyboard, cables, modems, etc.), as well as stereo equipment, radios, tape players, CD players, headphones VCR/VHS, DVD players, camcorders, fax machines, scanners, copiers, telephones, answering machines, microwave ovens, televisions, hair dryers, irons and blenders.


However, not all electronics are considered e-waste. Regular ovens, vacuum cleaners, coffee pots, toasters, batteries, stoves, refrigerators, and small engines are not e-waste, but can be taken to Lake County Waste Solutions or South Lake Refuse and Recycling to dispose of for a small fee.


Residents with curbside service in the unincorporated areas and in the city of Lakeport can contact their hauler to schedule a bulky item pickup for large appliances, televisions, air conditioners, etc. Fees for this service range from no-cost up to $20, depending on location and what needs to be picked up.


If the older electronic equipment is still in good working order, Goodwill will accept the items at the monthly e-waste drive as a donation for resale in one of their stores. Local thrift stores also will accept donations of items in good working order.


For more information on reducing, reusing, and recycling, please visit the Lake County Recycling Website at www.recycling.co.lake.ca.com, or call the Recycling Hotline at 707-263-1980.


No Charge E-Waste Drop-Off Locations:


Lake County Waste Solutions

230 Soda Bay Road, Lakeport

707-234-6400 or 1-888-718-4888

Open Monday to Saturday, 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.


South Lake Refuse & Recycling

16015 Davis St., Clearlake

707-994-8614

Open daily, 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.


Goodwill Industries

Bruno’s Shop Smart

355 Lakeport Blvd., Lakeport

First Saturday of each month, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.


Thrift Stores That Accept Donations of Working Electronics:

Hospice Services

14290 Lakeshore Dr., Clearlake


Hospice Services

1701 S. Main St., Lakeport


People Services

395 N. Main St., Lakeport


St. Vincent DePaul

16125 Orchard, Lower Lake


Methodist Church

21216 Washington St., Middletown


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LUCERNE, Calif. – A vehicle collision knocked down a power pole in Lucerne Saturday night, resulting in a closed highway.


The California Highway Patrol reported that the vehicle hit the power pole at 14th Avenue and Highway 20 just before 9 p.m.


The CHP assisted Caltrans in closing Highway 20 at 13th and 15th avenues in order to keep motorists far from the downed lines. They routed vehicles around the area.


Fire line tape also was put up across the sidewalks to keep people from getting too close.


The downed pole was lying partially in the yard of a nearby residence.


Shortly before 11:30 p.m. a crew began working on the pole. The roadway remained closed into early Sunday morning.


A radio report indicated that Lake County Environmental Health was to be called to the scene.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews , on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

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Soil work takes place at Westside Community Park in Lakeport, Calif. Courtesy photo.


 




LAKEPORT, Calif. – Construction and other activities were highlights of the past year at Westside Community Park.


Receipt of a major grant, the inaugural Grillin’ on the Green, and completion of earthmoving and stockpiling donated grindings from the Highway 29 repaving project were among the major accomplishments.


The Westside Community Park Committee is the recipient of a grant from the Pacific Forest & Watershed Lands Stewardship Council.


This infrastructure grant for $200,000 over two years is funding the final grading, installation of an irrigation system, provision of electricity, planting of grass and construction of two sets of backstops and dugouts.


When completed this five-acre portion of the park will contain a baseball field, a Little League field and three soccer fields.


As a donation to the park, Ruzicka Associates of Lakeport developed a grading plan and then surveyed and staked the site for the final earthwork. Funded by grant money, the final grade was completed.

 

 

 

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Grading work was completed on a portion of the park in 2010. Courtesy photo.
 

 

 


Following a soils analysis, amendments were purchased and added to enrich the soil. Longtime park supporter RB Peters of Lakeport donated time and equipment and, utilizing additional equipment donated by the Wooldridge Ranch, worked the amendments into the soil and landplaned the field to its final form.


Wyatt Irrigation in Ukiah created an irrigation plan and the committee purchased the needed materials to install that system. The company donated the sprinkler heads for the system.


The rains began before installation could occur. The materials are being stored and installation will be the first activity to take place in the spring.


The last activity to occur on site this season was the placing of erosion control measures for the winter.


Under California law, these measures must be in place by Oct. 15 and remain until at least April 15.


In August the committee held its first onsite fundraising event. Grillin’ on the Green was a barbecue cookoff featuring service clubs and individuals. The People’s Choice Competition was won by the Irwin family from Kelseyville.


The goal of the Committee in hosting an event at the park was to get people out there for a fun day.


Many in attendance said it was their first visit. Music by the LC Diamonds and activities for children added to the fun.


With the assistance of many sponsors, especially the Keeling-Barnes Family Foundation and the Priest Family Trust, the event cleared more than $16,000.


The committee plans to make this an annual event. The second Grillin’ on the Green is scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 6, 2011.


Granite Construction Company agreed to donate more than 20,000 tons of asphalt grindings generated from the repaving of Highway 29. These grindings are being stored on site and will be processed and used as road base under roads, driveways, parking lots and trails.


Others in the community came forward to assist with moving the grindings on site. RB Peters offered the use of a dozer. Larry Wise of Scotts Valley volunteered as the equipment operator of this seven-day project. Westgate Petroleum of Lakeport donated 450 gallons of diesel fuel.


The value of this donated material is $350,000. This was accomplished at no cost to the committee as a result of those making donations.


Planning for the 2011 construction season is currently under way. The committee’s goal for next year is to have five acres of athletic fields planted and a baseball field and a Little League field completed.


Rollins recently announced that interested individuals will soon be able to track progress and obtain information about the park online.


A Web site is under development by Bit Sculptors of Lakeport. Owner Eric Schlange has offered to create the site as a donation to the park. The address will be westsidecommunitypark.org.


The Westside Community Park is located at 1401 Westside Community Park Road, Lakeport. Westside Community Park Road is accessed from Parallel Drive between the Kathy Fowler Auto Dealerships and Mendocino College.


Dennis Rollins is chair of the Westside Community Park Committee.

 

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An inmate crew from the Lake County Jail works at Westside Community Park in Lakeport. Courtesy photo.
 

 

 

 

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Irrigation materials are offloaded at the park. Courtesy photo.
 

LAKEPORT, Calif. – At the end of a two-hour meeting that saw both supporters and opponents weighing in, the Lakeport Planning Commission voted 4-0 to suspend the Full Throttle Tavern's permit allowing live entertainment.


More than 60 people crowded into the council chambers at Lakeport City Hall, where the commission considered concerns about noise, and a high number of calls and incidents at the tavern, located at 650 S. Main St.


At the start of the meeting, Commissioner Ross Kauper recused himself because he owns property within 500 feet of the tavern. That left fellow commissioners Marc Spillman, Harold Taylor, Suzette Russell and Chair Tom Gayner to sort through the 2-inch-thick staff report and the myriad public comments.


City Planning Manager Andrew Britton said the proposal to revoke the tavern's planning permit was based on noncompliance with permit requirements and the level of calls to the Lakeport Police Department.


He cited 34 noise complains from April 1 through Nov. 12 and the generation of 80 percent more service calls than come from any of the other bars in Lakeport. Britton said the police department's work with with the tavern management was unsuccessful in resolving the issues, thus the request for revocation.


Acting Lakeport Police Chief Brad Rasmussen told the commission that from the police department's standpoint, the primary issue is the affect on the neighbors “due to the loud and unreasonable noise we'd encountered on the premises.”


Rasmussen said they believe that the live entertainment activities were the primary contributor and the cause for the calls.


Sean Lyon, the bar's manager as well as the president and chief executive officer of the limited liability company that owns the business, pointed out that a bar has been located in the building for more than 50 years.


He said he's done soundproofing work, is planning to install a new door and has implemented police suggestions, including floodlights in the front of the building.


Lyon said he also had asked Building Official Tom Carlton about enclosing a back patio for a smoker's area. He said it took two months to get Carlton to tell him how he should approach the project, with Carlton telling him about the middle of November to get an engineer or architect to draw up plans. A day later, Lyon got the city's letter about the permit revocation hearing.


He told the commission that one of the business' neighbors, Joey Brodnick, has made harassing calls to the bar and made repeated unfounded complaints about the business itself. Although Lyon said he had tried to work it out, “I don't know what I can do.”


Lyon said he had tried to work with neighbors to address their issues. “I feel it's unjustified to take our music permit away.”


He said there are not a lot of live entertainment options for people in Lakeport. “There's not much for people to do.”


Lyon also suggested that his bar was being singled out by the Lakeport Police Department. “We just want to be able to operate on an even playing field, that's all we're asking.”


Since the bar opened under new ownership earlier this year, there has only been one fight incident in the bar, Lyon said. As for complaints about sex in public, Lyon said, “That's off my premises, that's something that should not be held against my bar.”


Taylor said he had done some investigation of his own, parking down on Lily Cove, where he said, “You can hear your music clearly.”


Taylor said he'd visited the bar on Halloween when he said it was packed with about 80 people, more than the 49-person occupancy. “I think you've got a little work to do.”


Russell questioned how many security staffers were on scene. She said she felt just one wasn't enough. Lyon said there were sometimes two plus himself.


Gayner referenced the permit requirement that calls for limiting the sounds to the premises, and asked what is the guarantee that the bar will begin to adhere to that.


“That condition, I'll be honest with you, is very tough,” said Lyon, noting that it's an old building. However, he guaranteed that after renovations are complete, it will be as soundproof as possible.


Community Development and Redevelopment Director Richard Knoll told the commission that the focus of the discussion was specific.


“Our zoning permit is fairly narrow in terms of what we're addressing here tonight,” he said. “It is the live entertainment aspect of this operation, not other aspects of the operation,” although he said there may be relationships between the issues.


Commissioners hear complaints, support


Over the next hour, approximately 22 people spoke to the commission. Of those, 17 were employees, customers, fellow business owners or neighbors showing their support. The remainder were people with concerns about noise and other problems.


Supporters said they felt the bar had worked hard to deal with neighbors' concerns. One of the neighbors, Thomas Rendel of Oak Knoll, said he had complaints when the bar first opened, but he called Lyon and Lyon took care of them.


Another neighbor, Carrie White, had another experience. She said her two children – one of them, a young son, was with her at the meeting – had been awakened numerous times this year due to the noise. There had been incidents involving people have sex outside her children's bedroom windows.


She found her son in the living room with a baseball bat one night, because he thought someone was going to come into their home.


She said she'd spoke to Lyon, and told the commission that she didn't want to see Lyon lose his business. But she added, “We can't live like this.”


White said she had noticed improvements in recent weeks, noting that from May until about a month ago, she couldn't sleep in her own bedroom due to the noise.


Jay Holden, a psychologist and a musician, said he spoke with Lyon about the situation after reading about it. He said some noise is to be expected from bars, and he was concerned about the “slippery slope” of letting the complaints override decibel requirements that might exist in ordinances.


Holden, who lives near the Elks club, questioned if he should be able to have that group shut down because of noise generated at events.

 

“I believe this business deserves our support, not our punishment,” said Holden, asking them to give Lyon a chance to complete his planned mitigations.


Brodnick also spoke to the commission, admitting that he gets upset about the noise. But he said it wasn't just the noise – it's also the crowd. Early in the morning “they come outside and they go nuts,” he said, describing screaming people, revving Harley Davidsons and taking part in fights.


“This establishment is what's drawing the crowd to start the fights,” he said.


Racheal Ferguson, one of the bar's owners, told the commission that she feels like she and Lyon were wasting their time, as they've already done a lot to solve the issues.


Pointing to the thick commission packet, she said a number of issues cited in it had nothing to do with the bar, there were duplicate reports and numerous complaints from a single person – a reference to Brodnick.


“We are on top of this,” she said, noting the work they're doing and continuing to do.


Another neighbor, Pat Skoog, also complained about the noise, but said she wanted to see Lyon and Ferguson succeed, as they are young, innovative and really trying. “I hope they can work it out.”


Charlene Calvillo of Kelseyville said the tavern is a venue for local talent, and it also gives local people a place to enjoy themselves without going out of town.


Assessing reasons for pulling the permit


Britton, referencing city ordinances, explained that one of the required findings in the municipal code for granting zoning permits is that the proposed use be in the right district, be consistent with the general public and zoned commercially, and not create a detrimental impact.


As to that detrimental impact issue, “That's what we're talking about tonight,” he said, explaining that the evidence from the police department and the neighbors led to a finding that the bar was having that kind of affect on the community.


In response to some of the input from bar supporters, Spillman said that while residents around the establishment should acknowledge that a bar has been in the area for some time, he said the venue has also changed over the last year, and that residents there have noticed it.


“I think it's important to note that,” he said.


Taylor asked about the delay in the correspondence between Lyon and Carlton. Britton said a building permit application was not submitted, and Carlton was giving a courtesy-type inspection.


Knoll said the building official is not a consultant, and that it's the right of the property owner to prepare and submit plans. Lyon would later clarify that Carlton had told him to take no action until he heard from him.


Regarding Lyon's plans to enclose a smoking area, Knoll said state law prohibits that. “It just isn't going to work.”

While a lot of fingers were being pointed at one person making complaints, when a complaint is registered – whether it's one person or 10 – “the city has an obligation to respond to that complaint,” Knoll said.


A decibel level is not applied in this instance, Knoll said, but instead it depends on the criteria to which Lyon agreed, including keep the sound to the premises, a condition that “was very explicit.”


“That was agreed to by the business owner. That condition has not been complied with,” he said.


Lyon wanted to respond and Gayner told him the hearing had closed. Some of the audience members became angry – with someone yelling about railroading – before about a dozen people walked out.


Knoll said the city is concerned about small business and business in general. As part of his job, he spends a lot of time trying to encourage business activities, and is a small business owner himself.


“We're very concerned about it,” he said. “Our intention is to support small business, not to close small business.”


However, the city has an obligation to investigate complaints. Knoll said the commission had two options – revoking the permit or suspending it, which would give the city the option to work out a solution with the bar.


Britton said the suspension could be lifted after the city and police department work out additional conditions for operation.


Spillman moved to suspend the permit, which Taylor seconded and the commission approved 4-0.


After the crowd filled out, Lyon and Ferguson continued talking with city staff, voicing their frustration over the situation.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews , on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

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