- Elizabeth Larson
- Posted On
Drought update, additional water reporting on projects and temporary early activation moratorium before supervisors this week
The board will meet beginning at 9 a.m. Tuesday, July 27, in the board chambers on the first floor of the Lake County Courthouse, 255 N. Forbes St., Lakeport.
The meeting can be watched live on Channel 8, online at https://countyoflake.legistar.com/Calendar.aspx and on the county’s Facebook page. Accompanying board documents, the agenda and archived board meeting videos also are available at that link.
To participate in real-time, join the Zoom meeting by clicking this link.
The meeting ID is 930 3219 4127, pass code 555254. The meeting also can be accessed via one tap mobile at +16699006833,,93032194127#,,,,*555254#.
All interested members of the public that do not have internet access or a Mediacom cable subscription are encouraged to call 669-900-6833, and enter the Zoom meeting ID and pass code information above.
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At 10:30 a.m., representatives from the Lake County Water Resources Department, Office of Emergency Services, Environmental Health and the Lake County Drought Task Force, a workgroup organized by the California Department of Water Resources, will provide an update on the 2021 declared drought and its relationship with Clear Lake and its watershed.
On May 11, the board passed a resolution declaring a drought emergency that directed reports be made to the board so it can determine whether emergency conditions continue to exist.
That will be followed by a discussion timed for 11 a.m. in which the board will consider an urgency ordinance requiring land use applicants to provide enhanced water analysis during a declared drought emergency.
The Lake County Planning Commission has asked the board for additional guidance on projects with regard to water, as Lake County News has reported.
“The Planning Commission is given a difficult task to deal with many applications that have been working their way through a rigorous process to be considered eventually in their meetings,” said Board Chair Bruno Sabatier in his memo on the item. “During these meetings, water has become, rightfully so, a more sensitive subject matter due to our drought conditions. The Planning Commission has requested the board's assistance verbally multiple times on direction and guidance during these hard and difficult times where economic development and the urgent need to conserve water seem to be clashing.”
Sabatier notes that in the many Planning Commission meetings that he’s observed, including the appeals that the Board of Supervisors has heard, “often times only well reports are provided. Well reports do not provide any scientific review on the impacts that the project may have and offer little to no information to allow our staff to analyze the cumulative impact these projects may have on the surrounding area.”
He’s offering an urgency ordinance that provides guidance to Community Development staff that a hydrology report is required for all projects during the duration of our drought emergency declaration “and that the applicants draft a drought management plan on how to take part in our community in conserving water in comparison to pursue the full potential of their projects. This would impact all projects as water is part of all projects currently being reviewed.”
At 11:30 a.m., the board will consider a proposal from Supervisor Jessica Pyska and Supervisor Moke Simon for an interim urgency ordinance imposing a temporary prohibition — or moratorium — on the issuance of early activation permits for land use projects within the county’s unincorporated area.
Pyska and Simon’s memo to the board explains that the Community Development Department Ad-Hoc Committee has determined that the temporary moratorium is necessary in order to address a significant backlog of applications for early activation permits “and to ensure that such permits are not issued without a thorough consideration of the narrowly-prescribed circumstances pursuant to which such permits may be issued.”
The interim urgency ordinance also is needed to allow Community Development “sufficient time to study and assess various approaches to the land use permitting process to ensure that zoning regulations are developed whereby permittees are not delayed by an early activation process when a streamlined use permit process is more advantageous to effective land use planning, offers certainty to permittees, and fosters critical environmental review and public comment,” the memo explains.
If passed by a four-fifths vote, the urgency ordinance would be in effect for 45 days, Pyska and Simon’s memo said.
They said all early activation applications submitted before the effective date of the urgency ordinance and deemed acceptable by the Community Development Department will be allowed to proceed in the review process.
In other drought-related matters, in an untimed item Sabatier and Supervisor EJ Crandell will ask their colleagues to consider code enforcement priorities during the drought emergency as well as the creation of a code enforcement ad hoc committee.
During the drought emergency, Crandell and Sabatier suggest that code enforcement activities should align with drought-related priorities including illegal cannabis grows, illegal water trucks and hazardous vegetation.
“We feel that with the administrative penalties, an urgency water truck ordinance, and an action plan for attacking these new priorities that a Code Enforcement Ad Hoc Committee should be created to work efficiently and collaboratively to move these action items along,” Crandell and Sabatier wrote in their memo.
They suggest that the ad hoc committee should include themselves along with the interim Community Development director, county counsel, code enforcement manager, sheriff, water district director or their designees.
Also on Tuesday, the board is scheduled to get an update on COVID-19 at 9:06 a.m., present a proclamation recognizing Lake County AmeriCorps CivicSpark Fellows at 9:30 a.m. and hear a CivicSpark presentation on fire mapping at 9:35 a.m.
At noon, the board is set to get a presentation from the Lake Area Planning Council on the regional transportation plan and active transportation plan.
The full agenda follows.
CONSENT AGENDA
5.1: Allocation of cannabis taxes to the Middle Creek Restoration Project design cost.
5.2: Adopt Proclamation Recognizing Lake County AmeriCorps CivicSpark Fellows.
5.3: Approve addition of a special meeting date to the board’s annual meeting calendar for 2021.
5.4: Approve leave of absence request for Social Services employee Bonnie Ceja from Dec. 16, 2021, through June 1, 2022, and authorize the chair to sign.
5.5: Approve revision to the applicant interview travel expense reimbursement policy.
5.6: Approve minutes of the Board of Supervisors Meetings June 8, 2021, June 15, 2021, and June 22, 2021.
5.7: Approve second reading of an ordinance amending Section 21-3.7 of Chapter 21 of the Ordinance Code of the County of Lake by Adopting a Sectional District Zoning Map No. 3.7(b) 1.403.
5.8: Approve second reading of an ordinance amending Section 21-3.7 of Chapter 21 of the Ordinance Code of the County of Lake by Adopting a Sectional District Zoning Map No. 3.7(b) 1.404.
5.9: Adopt resolution to continue participation in the Abandoned Vehicle Abatement Service Authority and extend the vehicle registration fee/service fee for the Abandoned Vehicle Abatement Program and authorize the chair to sign.
5.10: Approve the creation of an extra help museum assistant and extra help museum technician.
5.11: Approve a purchase order for the purchase of a John Deere excavator for county road maintenance, and authorize the Public Works director/assistant purchasing agent to sign the purchase order.
5.12: Approve contract between county of Lake and The Regents of the University of California for training services in the amount of $225,292.50, from July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022, and authorize the chair to sign.
TIMED ITEMS
6.2, 9:06 a.m.: Consideration of update on COVID-19.
6.3, 9:30 a.m.: Presentation of proclamation recognizing Lake County AmeriCorps CivicSpark Fellows.
6.4, 9:35 a.m.: CivicSpark presentation on fire mapping.
6.5, 10:30 a.m.: Presentation of 2021 drought, Clear Lake.
6.6, 11 a.m.: Consideration of an urgency ordinance requiring land use applicants to provide enhanced water analysis during a declared drought emergency.
6.7, 11:30 a.m.: Consideration of an interim urgency ordinance imposing a temporary prohibition (moratorium) on the issuance of early activation permits for land use projects within the unincorporated area of the county of Lake.
6.8, 12 p.m.: Consideration of presentation by the Lake Area Planning Council on the regional transportation plan and active transportation plan.
UNTIMED ITEMS
7.2: a) Discussion and consideration of code enforcement priorities during the drought emergency; and b) consideration of a code enforcement ad hoc committee.
7.3: CivicSpark Fellow presentation: Amendments to Chapter 23 — Clear Lake Shoreline Ordinance for the Lake County Water Resources Department.
7.4: (a) Consideration to waive the formal bidding process, pursuant to Lake County Code Section 38.2, as it is not in the public interest due to the unique nature of goods or services; and (b) consideration of tenth amendment to the agreement between the county of Lake and Cerner Corp. for Anasazi Software and Support Services for fiscal years 2020-21 and 2021-22 for a sum of $95,000.00 and authorize the board chair to sign the amendment.
CLOSED SESSION
8.1: Conference with legal counsel: Significant exposure to litigation pursuant to Government Code section 54956.9 (d)2)(e)1) — one potential case.
8.2: Sitting as the board of directors of the Lake County IHSS Public Authority: Conference with (a) Chief Negotiator M. Long and County Negotiator C. Markytan; and (b) Employee Organization: California United Homecare Workers Union Local 4034.
8.3: Conference with legal counsel: Existing litigation pursuant to Gov. Code section 54956.9(d)(1): Settling States v. McKesson, Cardinal Health and AmerisourceBergen (“Distributors”), and manufacturer Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Johnson & Johnson, et al.
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.