LOWER LAKE, Calif. – An early morning vehicle wreck in Lower Lake damaged a power pole and resulted in power outages that closed area schools, with repairs continuing Thursday afternoon.
The crash occurred shortly before 3 a.m. on Lake Street at Bryant Road, as Lake County News first reported on Thursday morning.
California Highway Patrol Officer Kory Reynolds said 29-year-old Matthew Brew of Los Angeles was driving a 2002 Land Rover southbound on Lake Street at an unknown speed when he allowed his vehicle to exit the east roadway edge and struck a utility pole.
Initially reported as a hit and run, Reynolds said Brew was contacted at the scene and arrested for driving under the influence.
There were no passengers in the vehicle, and Reynolds said Brew sustained minor injuries to his head, chest and hands.
The crash sheared off the power pole. Reynolds said power outages in the area resulted, forcing the closure of local schools.
Parts of Lake Street also were closed due to the downed lines and pole, with Reynolds stating that it was not known when the road would reopen.
Officer Erica Coddington is investigating the crash, Reynolds said.
Because of the power outage, the Konocti Unified School District reported that several schools had been closed for the day, including the Lewis School for independent study students, Lower Lake Elementary, Lower Lake High School and Carlé Continuation High School.
The repairs to the pole were continuing Thursday morning afternoon, with barricades up near the work area on Lake Street.
Pacific Gas & Electric spokesperson Brittany McKannay said efforts were under way to make repairs as quickly and safely as possible.
“We have a crew out there right now trying to finalize those repairs,” she said.
Originally, about 2,100 customers had been affected. McKannay said they were located in Lower Lake, Clearlake, Middletown and even one in Lakeport. “It just depends on how they’re fed through the system.
She said the crew, working on Lake Street, had been able to restore power to most of the customers.
By noon, McKannay said 130 customers in Lower Lake remained without power. She said those customers won’t have power until all of the repairs are finished later Thursday.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .
COBB, Calif. – A community group that has advocated for the preservation of the Cobb area has reorganized.
Hamilton Hess, chairman of the Friends of Cobb Mountain, said the group has reincorporated under a tax-exempt nonprofit status.
Hess said the environmental organization, incorporated with the state in 1975, previously had as its actual membership only its board of directors. When the group met, only the directors and invited consultants could attend.
Friends of Cobb Mountain recently applied for – and received – tax-free status for financial donations, Hess said.
However, to complete the process, Hess said the group was required to disincorporate from its earlier status and then reincorporate under the conditions of AB 501.c.3.
The new status is now in effect. The California Attorney General’s charities registry showed that Friends of Cobb Mountain was granted its charitable registration on Sept. 7.
Hess said the Friends of Cobb Mountain’s goal is the preservation and enhancement of the natural environment of the Cobb region, focusing mainly on the control of negative impacts on water quality, air quality, noise, and visual effects from the activities of the geothermal and logging industries.
“Ideally this is accomplished with the cooperation of county state and federal agencies together with that of the industries themselves,” he said.
In June, the group settled a lawsuit with the county of Lake over the certification of the environmental impact report for the Bottle Rock Steam Power Project, which it alleged that the county approved in violation of state law. Details of the settlement agreement can be found at http://bit.ly/K4t8ej .
The objective of reducing the frequency and magnitude of the earthquakes caused by geothermal production and water injection is always on the agenda, Hess said, and again with the cooperation of earthquake scientists and the geothermal industry, “but the matter is complicated and progress toward reduction is slow.”
NORTH COAST, Calif. – A 4.5-magnitude earthquake shook the Mendocino and Lake County areas on Tuesday morning.
The quake occurred at 8:15 a.m. two miles north of Talmage, three miles east northeast of Ukiah and 14 miles west of Upper Lake, according to the US Geological Survey. It was recorded at a depth of 6.2 miles.
The US Geological Survey had received 285 shake reports from 26 zip codes by 9:30 a.m.
Reports came from up and down the coast, as well as Kelseyville, Lakeport, Nice, Upper Lake and Witter Springs.
The Mendocino County Sheriff's Office said Tuesday morning that no reports of damage had yet been made.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – One of Clear Lake’s native species is the focus of new state and federal Endangered Species Act applications submitted on Tuesday.
Estimating that the Clear Lake hitch’s numbers have plummeted from millions to, more recently, a few thousand, the Center for Biological Diversity on Tuesday petitioned to protect the hitch – a large minnow found only in Clear Lake and its tributaries – under both the federal Endangered Species Act and the state’s Endangered Species Act.
The fish, once a staple food for the region’s Pomo tribes, has been tracked closely in recent years by local tribes and the Chi Council for the Clear Lake Hitch. As the fish’s habitat has dramatically changed their numbers have seen a precipitous decline.
The Clear Lake hitch has long been an important part of the lake’s natural and cultural heritage of Clear Lake but, if it’s to survive for future generations, Jeff Miller of the Center for Biological Diversity said the fish needs to be put on the pathway to recovery, which means it needs to be protected and have its habitat restored.
Miller said the center has been looking at the hitch for about five years.
There is precedent for the disappearance of a local fish species – Miller pointed out that the Clear Lake hitch’s closest relative, the Clear Lake splittail, became extinct in the 1970s through habitat alterations that dried out spawning streams and barriers that prevented fish migration.
“Fisheries and biologists have been warning about the Clear Lake hitch going the same way,” he said. The fish also has been on a California Department of Fish and Game watch list for decades.
Over the last couple of years, with the continuing decline in spawning runs and the dropping number of fish, Miller said the group decided to act and give the fish “a fighting chance.”
The Center for Biological Diversity’s petition proposes recovery measures for hitch, such as removing or retrofitting barriers to fish migration, improving instream water flows, restoring fish to former spawning streams and reducing predation by invasive fish near the mouths of spawning streams.
The center also is proposing that the hitch be reintroduced into Blue Lakes after it’s determined what caused the fish population there to die. He said so far he’s not aware of studies being done on the previous Blue Lakes hitch population.
“I think it’s necessary,” said Paula Britton, environmental director of the Habematolel Pomo of Upper Lake, of the proposed Endangered Species listing.
Britton’s work for the tribe includes study of the hitch. One of their projects includes tagging the fish, – she said they’re still tabulating results from last year’s tagging work – and they hope to initiate habitat surveys.
At Big Valley Rancheria, Environmental Director Sarah Ryan said the tribe has given input on the application, and has provided Miller and the Center for Biological Diversity information over the past few years, as has the Chi Council.
“I think it’s probably a positive step because the hitch are declining pretty badly at this point,” she said.
Peter Windrem, president of the Chi Council, said the group was unaware that the Center for Biological Diversity was planning to file the petitions for protection.
He said the group was meeting Wednesday afternoon, and he deferred further comment until he had a chance to discuss the matter with the rest of the council.
Tom Smythe, an engineer with Lake County Water Resources who also sits on the Chi Council, said the petitions weren’t a complete surprise. “There’s been discussion of this for a couple of years.”
He said there are pluses and minuses to a potential Endangered Species listing for the Clear Lake hitch.
On the plus side, it could provide funding for habitat restoration for the hitch, which isn’t a game fish and so doesn’t have much of that funding available. Miller also believes projects like the Middle Creek restoration would likely gain funding as a result of the listing.
Among the minuses, said Smythe, is the potential for the permitting process to become much worse, “even if you’re trying to help the habitat.”
Theoretically, the listing shouldn’t add complications to the Middle Creek restoration project, although there is the possibility, Smythe said, adding that a listing would potentially affect any project that impacts local streams.
Miller said that any projects under way currently, whether beneficial or harmful, would likely be unaffected due to the time it will take for a listing decision to be made.
He said restoration projects, scientific monitoring and tribal harvests of fish “are usually permitted within the framework of listings” as long as there is a conservation component to them.
Changes in habitat threaten fish
“The Clear Lake basin and its tributaries have been dramatically altered by urban development and agriculture,” the Center for Biological Diversity states in its petitions. “Much of the former stream and wetlands habitat suitable for hitch has been destroyed or degraded, and barriers that impede hitch migration have been built in many streams which formerly had spawning.”
The petitions continue, “Hitch can no longer reach the majority of former spawning areas, and are forced to spawn opportunistically in ditches and wet meadows during high flows. In recent years, hitch have been able to spawn in significant numbers in only two streams, Kelsey Creek and Adobe Creek, both located in the Big Valley drainage.”
The hitch spawn has become “sensitive to very localized events,” and, as such, “a toxic spill or water use issues of limited size could results in spawn failure for the entire population,” according to the petitions.
The petitions found no local ordinances or regulations to protect the fish.
While the 2008 Lake County General Plan’s goals and policies seek to ensure the protection of sensitive species, limit encroachment into sensitive habitats and protect riparian corridors, the petitions suggested it didn’t go far enough.
The center said the general plan “only superficially mentions the Clear Lake hitch as a state species of concern. The plan contain goals and policies aimed at protecting water quality and biological resources, but some of the policies are couched in qualifiers such as ‘should’ or ‘shall consider’ and ‘whenever possible.’”
Historically, the hitch spawned in all of Clear Lake’s tributaries. Now, however, due to a variety of impacts – changes in creek habitat, migration barriers, water pumping, in-channel mining, pollution and predation by non-native fish – they’re found spawning only in Kelsey and Adobe creeks.
The Endangered Species Act petitions also raise another future concern. “Increased drought and rapid climate change due to global warming will likely accelerate this trend, causing further spawning failures.”
In the last spring hitch run, Ryan said they found that while the hitch were spawning, there was not enough water in the creeks, such as Adobe Creek, for them to make it back to Clear Lake.
Ryan said that an Endangered Species listing could lead to changed water usage in the creeks, making sure that the fish have the water they need.
“The intent is not to stop projects and not to stop progress and things that are already being planned,” said Ryan, pointing to the Endangered Species Act’s goal of preserving heritage species populations.
If there are actions or activities that are affecting hitch being able to survive and thrive, Ryan said they will have to be modified in conjunction with the act.
Smythe said he’s noted a decline in hitch populations over the past 25 years.
During the spring spawn in 2011, which was a wet year, Smythe said the hitch were seen in streams where their presence hadn’t been noted in years.
However, this year, with late rain – and less rain overall – the hitch were harder to find, he said.
“We don’t really have good data this year because it’s hard to see them in a muddy stream,” Smythe said, adding that, overall, the hitch spawn “looked pretty poor.”
The Endangered Species listing process “takes a lot longer than it should,” said Miller.
There will be a 90 day finding, but Miller said that step rarely is as quick as three months. After that, there is a yearlong status review that’s similar in both the state and federal process.
During the status review, Miller said the government will collect information from stakeholders, hold public hearings and take public comment, followed by a Federal Register notice if the listing is granted.
“Optimistically, you’re looking at a couple of years,” Miller said.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Unemployment numbers reported for August showed slight improvements in Lake County, and across California and the nation.
The California Employment Development Department’s latest report put Lake County’s unemployment rate at 14 percent in August, down from 14.7 percent in July and 15.6 percent in August 2011.
The statewide unemployment rate for August was 10.6 percent, down just slightly from the 10.7 percent rate reported in July and the 11.9 percent rate for August 2011, the agency reported.
Nationwide, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that unemployment in August was 8.1 percent, down from 8.3 percent in July and 9.1 percent in August 2011.
Dennis Mullins of the Employment Development Department’s North Coast Region Labor Market Information Division said Lake County’s wage and salary employment increased 430 jobs between July and August. Farm jobs accounted for the bulk of the increase, thanks to the summer harvest of important local products like pears.
For the year over, Lake is down 220 jobs with government accounting for over three-fourths of the cutbacks. Six industry sectors gained or were unchanged over the year and five declined, Mullins said.
He said year-over job growth occurred in trade, transportation and utilities, +10; and private educational & health services, +20.
Industry sectors with no change over the year were farm, manufacturing, information and financial activities, Mullins said.
Industry sectors with decline over the year included mining, logging and construction, -30; professional and business services, -10; leisure and hospitality, -10; other services, -10 ; and government, -170, according to Mullins.
Lake County was ranked No. 45 among California’s 58 counties for its August unemployment rate. Neighboring counties showed the following rates: Colusa County, No. 54, 15.2 percent; Glenn, No. 51, 14.6 percent; Mendocino, No. 16, 9.3 percent; Napa, No. 4, 7.5 percent; Sonoma, No. 8. 8.3 percent; and Yolo, No. 22. 9.7 percent.
Details about California’s job picture
In August California’s nonfarm payroll jobs increased by 12,000 to 14,346,300, for a year-over-year change of 298,700 jobs and a total gain of 504,000 jobs since the recovery began in February 2010, according to data the Employment Development Department derived from two separate state and federal surveys.
The federal survey of households the agency uses, done with a smaller sample than the state survey of employers, showed a decrease in the number of employed people, estimating the number of Californians holding jobs in August was 16,404,000, a decrease of 38,000 from July, but up 203,000 from the employment total in August of last year.
The number of people unemployed in California was 1,935,000 – down by 27,000 over the month, and down by 243,000 compared with August of last year, the report showed.
EDD’s report on payroll employment (wage and salary jobs) in the nonfarm industries of California totaled 14,346,300 in August, a net gain of 12,000 jobs since the July survey. This followed a gain of 17,900 jobs, as revised, in July.
Six categories – construction; manufacturing; information; financial activities; educational and health services; and leisure and hospitality – added jobs over the month, gaining 23,300 jobs, according to the report. Educational and health services posted the largest increase over the month, adding 8,900 jobs.
Five categories – mining and logging; trade, transportation and utilities; professional and business services; other services; and government – reported job declines over the month, down 11,300 jobs. The report showed that government posted the largest decrease over the month, down 7,400 jobs.
The Employment Development Department said nine categories – mining and logging; construction; trade, transportation and utilities; information; financial activities; professional and business services; educational and health services; leisure and hospitality; and other services – posted job gains over the year, adding 329,100 jobs.
Of those categories, professional and business services posted the largest gains on a numerical basis, adding 103,200 jobs, up 4.8 percent. Construction posted the largest gains on a percentage basis, up 6.0 percent, adding 33,000 jobs, according to the jobs report.
Two categories, manufacturing and government, posted job declines over the year, down 30,400 jobs, the Employment Development Department report said. Government posted the largest decline on both a numerical and percentage basis, down by 23,400 jobs, a 1-percent decrease.
The Employment Development Department said there were 501,158 people receiving regular unemployment insurance benefits during the August survey week, compared with 518,605 in July and 543,089 in August of last year.
The agency said new claims for unemployment insurance were 51,467 in August, compared with 52,336 in July and 54,463 in August 2011.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .
LAKEPORT, Calif. – A fundraiser this weekend aims to help a Lakeport family whose youngest child is recovery from surgery to address diseases of the brain.
On Sunday, Sept. 30, a fundraiser for the Aponte family will take place from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Smoley Oaks, 999 Whalen Way, Lakeport.
Gabriel and Angelene Aponte’s youngest son, Isaiah, has been diagnosed with Acute Disseminated Encephalomyelitis and Chairi Malformation Type One.
Gabe Aponte thought he had seen it all and was prepared for anything life could throw at him.
As a Marine serving in Iraq, Sgt. Aponte was involved in some of the most ferocious fighting of the war, with many men in his unit being casualties.
Aponte returned to Lakeport safely and is now serving as an officer with the Ukiah Police Department, but even now, years later, sometimes when he gets a whiff of burned diesel, it reminds him of battle.
But none of these experiences prepared him for what he was faced with earlier this year.
His wife told him she found 7-month-old Isaiah, the youngest of their four children, paralyzed. They rushed him to the hospital, where it was determined Isaiah suffered from Acute Disseminated Encephalomyelitis, an immune mediated disease of the brain.
While treating this condition, and after many tests and trips to specialists, doctors discovered another, more serious condition: Isaiah was diagnosed with Chairi Malformation Type One, a rare condition where the brain grows into the protective sac protecting the brain stem, putting pressure on its connection to the spinal chord. The results are loss of motor skills, paralysis and, in some cases, death.
The doctors could do only so much, but they were able to help Isaiah regain some movement ability to his limbs, but it was limited. Only a life-threatening surgery could offer any hope of recovery and a normal life. The Apontes were facing the worst crisis of their lives.
“When I was fighting in Iraq, I had come to terms with the fact that I might be hurt or even killed,” Aponte recalled. “We all did. We were Marines. We had the skill and confidence to accomplish anything we set out to do. But none of that prepared me for this. I never felt so powerless, so helpless.”
The Apontes agreed that surgery was the best option. The operation would entail opening the back of the skull and working around the brain stem and the brain in an attempt to permanently relieve the pressure off the brain stem in a quest to give Isaiah a full and normal life.
The risks were enormous. The slightest twitch of a hand, a slight bump, a mild hiccup could cause permanent paralysis or worse. But the Apontes had some of the best doctors on the case and they proceeded.
On August 28, several pre-operation trips to the doctors in the Bay Area later, it was time for the operation.
“The worst feeling I ever had was handing him over to the nurse to take him in to get prepared for surgery,” Aponte recalled. “We both put our best faces on to make Isaiah feel all would be ok, but as he disappeared into the surgery wing, we both went to pieces. We are both Christians, but we never prayed like we prayed that day.”
After several hours of anxious waiting, the doctors came to tell the Aponte’ that the surgery was as successful as they could hope for, and barring any post-op complications, Isaiah would be OK. Several weeks later, he is well on his way to what should be a full recovery.
Being employed by the Ukiah Police Department, Aponte had good insurance coverage that took care of most costs related to the surgery. But with multiple trips to doctors and hospitals over many months, the accumulated costs of travel, overnight stays and time off work began to add up, putting a major strain on the household budget.
But family, friends, and church began to mobilize to help out. “We were blessed not only to have Isaiah come through this well, but to be part of such a loving and generous community,” Aponte said. “The outpourings of support and assistance has been overwhelming. We feel like we are the most loved and blessed people on earth.”
A group of friends will be hosting the Sunday benefit which, in addition to the barbecue, will offer swimming, bacci, horseshoes and a variety of other activities.
The suggested donation is $20 for adults, $10 for ages 12-18, and kids under 12, free.
All proceeds will go to the Aponte family.
For more information or to make a donation, contact Phil Smoley at 707-264-4905 or at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .
California Attorney General Kamala Harris on Tuesday announced that claim forms will be sent to approximately 432,584 California borrowers who lost their homes to foreclosure between Jan. 1, 2008, and Dec. 31, 2011, and may be eligible for a settlement payment under the $25 billion national mortgage foreclosure settlement.
Borrowers receiving the claim forms had mortgages serviced by Ally/GMAC, Bank of America, Citi, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo, the servicers that agreed to the settlement with the federal government and attorneys general of 49 states and the District of Columbia.
The settlement, which was signed by the Court in April 2012, earmarked approximately $1.5 billion in payments for 2 million borrowers nationwide. The actual payment amount will depend upon the total number of borrowers who decide to participate. Payment checks are expected to be mailed in mid-2013.
Last week, the national settlement administrator mailed notification postcards to eligible borrowers across the nation.
In California, packets containing a letter from the California Department of Justice, a claim form and answers to frequently asked questions are being mailed to eligible borrowers starting this week and continuing through October 12.
Eligible California borrowers should complete the claim form and return it as soon as possible in the envelope provided, or file the claim form online at www.nationalmortgagesettlement.com . The deadline for all claims is Jan. 18, 2013.
The one-page claim forms are simple to complete. Borrowers who have questions or need help filing a claim should contact the settlement administrator, toll-free, at 866-430-8358, or send questions by email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . The information line is staffed Monday through Friday from 5 a.m. to 5 p.m. PST.
Eligible borrowers do not need to prove financial harm to receive a payment, nor do they give up their rights to pursue a lawsuit against their mortgage servicer or to participate in the Independent Foreclosure Review Process being conducted by federal bank regulators. More information about that program is available at www.independentforeclosurereview.com .
Eligible borrowers may receive payment from this settlement even if they participate in another foreclosure claims process. However, any payment received may reduce payments that a borrower may be eligible to receive in any other foreclosure claim process or legal proceeding.
Borrowers who believe they may qualify for a payment, but did not receive a notice because they have moved, should contact the settlement administrator, toll-free, at 866-430-8358, or send an updated address by email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . The line is staffed Monday through Friday from 5 a.m. to 5 p.m. PST.
Attorney General Harris also is warning all homeowners to be aware of settlement-related scams. Do not provide personal information or pay money to anyone who calls or emails and claims to provide settlement-related assistance. The official claim form does not ask for personal financial information. If you believe someone is conducting a settlement-related scam, please file an online complaint with the Attorney General’s Public Inquiry Unit at http://oag.ca.gov/consumers/general .
The national settlement followed state and federal investigations, which alleged that the five mortgage servicers routinely signed foreclosure-related documents outside the presence of a notary public and without personal knowledge that the facts contained in the documents were correct.
This civil law enforcement action also alleged that the servicers committed widespread errors and abuses in their foreclosure processes.
The settlement resulted in broad reform of the mortgage servicing process, as well as financial relief for borrowers who are still in their homes via direct loan modification relief, including principal reduction.
Gov. Jerry Brown on Monday signed a bill that makes it easier for Californians to vote by allowing same-day voter registration.
Assembly Bill 1436, authored by Assemblyman Mike Feuer (D-Los Angeles), allows same-day voter registration, giving Californians the right to vote with a provisional ballot if the conditional voter registration is deemed effective.
“Voting – the sacred right of every citizen – should be simple and convenient,” said Gov. Brown. “While other states try to restrict voters with new laws that burden the process, California allows voters to register online – and even on Election Day.”
A statement from Feuer’s office said AB 1436 is meant to increase voter turnout by allowing potential voters to register in the days preceding an upcoming election, including Election Day.
“This new law will help assure that all eligible Californians will have the chance to determine who speaks for them in Washington, Sacramento and their home towns,” said Feuer. “By recognizing the importance of increasing voter turnout in our state, we are improving the democratic process in California.”
Currently in California, voter affidavits must be hand-delivered or postmarked to a county elections office at least 15 days before the election. Exceptions are made for people who become U.S. citizens 7-14 days before Election Day. These individuals are allowed to register and vote up to seven days prior to the election.
Currently, 10 states allow some form of Election Day registration, including Connecticut, Idaho, Minnesota and Wisconsin.
The provisions of AB 1436 will go into statute on Jan. 1, 2014, and the law will take effect when Vote Cal, the state’s federally mandated statewide voter database, is fully implemented by the Secretary of State’s office.
Last year, Gov. Brown signed Senate Bill 397 (Yee) allowing Californians to register to vote online.
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – A stoplight being installed on Highway 53 and Olympic Drive is on track to be ready for activation next spring.
Due to a high collision rate at the intersection, one of the entry points into the city of Clearlake, in early 2010 Caltrans announced its plans to install a stoplight there.
The new traffic signal is part of a larger rehabilitation project along Highway 53 that resumed early in August after being on hold for eight months due to the original contractor defaulting, as Lake County News has reported.
Caltrans said the project was awarded to a new contractor, Teichert Construction of Davis, before work resumed last month. The total project is set to be completed next fall.
Caltrans spokesman Phil Frisbie told Lake County News that Caltrans had intended to ask the new contractor to begin with a focus on completing the widening near Olympic Drive so the new traffic signal could be activated. However, he said the new contract with Teichert took longer to approve than anticipated.
“With the late start of work this summer, we realized we must let the contractor focus on earthwork before we are shut down for the winter,” he told Lake County News in an email. “Before we committed to this decision we checked with our Traffic Safety Office to confirm that the current all-way stop at Olympic Drive is working with very few incidents.”
Frisbie said that Caltrans plans to direct Teichert to begin paving near Olympic Drive next spring so that the traffic signal can be activated in May.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Although there were no new wildland fires in Lake County on Tuesday, concerned residents reported seeing smoke and haze in the air basin.
Their senses weren’t deceiving them: a new intrusion of wildland fire smoke – this time from several states away – was coming into the area.
Lake County Pollution Control Officer Doug Gearhart said the source of the smoke is a major wildland fire in northern Idaho and parts of western Montana.
A NASA/MODIS satellite image posted above shows the smoke making its way down from Idaho, through Washington, Oregon and into Northern California.
The image shows that the smoke appears to be originating from the area of Idaho’s biggest wildland fire, the lightning-caused Mustang Complex in the Salmon-Challis National Forest, burning just over the Montana sate line.
On Tuesday the fire was at 336,744 acres, with 25 percent containment, according to the US Forest Service.
Gearhart the smoke from Idaho has been passing into the air basin for several days.
“It actually affected our air quality on Friday,” he said, noting that while it didn’t cause state health standards to be exceeded, particulate level was raised.
Lakeport Fire Chief Ken Wells, who confirmed to Lake County News that there were no reports of new fires in the county on Tuesday, also cited a pressure system moving over Northern California as a contributing factor to moving the smoke to the county.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .
California Attorney General Kamala Harris announced Monday that two bills that will make it more difficult for human traffickers to hide their assets have been signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown.
Assembly Bill 2466, by Bob Blumenfield (D-San Fernando Valley), ensures that criminal defendants involved in human trafficking will not dispose of assets that would otherwise be provided as restitution to victims.
Senate Bill 1133, by Mark Leno (D-San Francisco), expands the list of assets that a human trafficker must forfeit and provides a formula for using those resources to help victims of human trafficking. Both laws will take effect on January 1, 2013.
“With these new laws, California prosecutors and law enforcement officials will be able to seize assets of human traffickers, cripple their operations and aid victims,” said Harris. “Human trafficking is big business in California. It is a high profit criminal industry that is expanding rapidly across the globe, including here in California.”
Assembly Bill 2466 (Preservation of Assets for Victims of Human Trafficking), will help to ensure that more victims of human trafficking receive restitution.
Under California law, victims are entitled to mandatory restitution; however there are no laws to help prevent human trafficking defendants from liquidating and hiding their assets before conviction.
Assembly Bill 2466 will allow a court to order the preservation of the assets and property by persons charged with human trafficking.
“We need all hands on deck to confront trafficking,” Blumenfield said. “Trafficking is slavery. Now, the perpetrators of this despicable crime cannot game the system and keep their money when caught and convicted. Justice will come for victims.”
Senate Bill 1133 ensures that those convicted of human trafficking crimes involving minors will not be able to keep the financial benefits reaped from their unlawful activity.
The law expands the scope of property subject to forfeiture and provides a formula to redirect those resources to community groups that aid victims of human trafficking.
“Today we are one step closer to dismantling the economic infrastructure that convicted child sex traffickers rely on to continue to lure young people into the sex trade,” said Sen. Leno. “In addition to taking away the lucrative profits from these horrendous crimes, we are providing much-needed financial support for increased investigations and victim services.”
Attorney General Harris is committed to the fight against this fast-growing crime that deprives persons of basic human rights.
Harris cosponsored the California Human Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2005, which made human trafficking a felony in California. She also has served on the California Alliance to Combat Trafficking and Slavery Task Force.
Last Friday, Attorney General Harris and Mexico Attorney General Marisela Morales Ibáñez signed an accord to expand prosecutions and secure convictions of criminals who engage in the trafficking of human beings.
The accord will increase coordination of law enforcement resources targeting transnational gangs that engage in the sale and trafficking of human beings across the California-Mexico border.
It also calls for closer integration on human trafficking investigations between the two offices and the sharing of best practices for law enforcement to recognize instances of human trafficking and provide support and services to victims.
Human trafficking is estimated to be a $32 billion industry, the world’s third most profitable criminal enterprise behind drugs and arms trafficking.
Human trafficking involves the recruitment, smuggling, transporting, harboring, buying, or selling of a person for purposes of exploitation, prostitution, domestic servitude, sweatshop labor, migrant work, agricultural labor, peonage, bondage, or involuntary servitude.
While human trafficking often involves the smuggling of human beings across international borders, numerous Americans are trafficked around the United States ever year. Human trafficking strips people, especially women and children, of their freedom and violates our nation’s promise that every person in the United States is guaranteed basic human rights.