CLEARLAKE, Calif. – Clearlake Animal Control is hosting many dogs for Christmas this year, canines it hopes to send home with new families.
The following dogs are ready for adoption or foster.
‘Bella’
“Bella” is a female Siberian Husky mix.
She has a long red and white coat.
She is dog No. 4428.
‘Ben’
“Ben” is a male American Pit Bull terrier mix.
He has a short brindle coat.
He is dog No. 4454.
‘Brownie’
“Brownie” is a male Chihuahua with a short black and tan coat.
He is dog No. 4431.
‘Bruce’
“Bruce” is a male American Staffordshire Terrier mix puppy.
He has a short smooth yellow coat.
He is dog No. 4383.
‘Bumble’
“Bumble” is a male Siberian Husky with a gray and black coat.
He is dog No. 4452.
‘Cindy Lou’
“Cindy Lou” is a female German Shepherd mix.
She has a medium-length tan and black coat.
She is dog No. 4448.
‘Jack’
“Jack” is a male Labrador Retriever mix with a short yellow coat.
He is dog No. 4155.
‘Jerry’
“Jerry” is a male American Pit Bull terrier with a short brindle coat.
He is dog No. 4455.
‘Rudolph’
“Rudolph” is a male shepherd mix.
He has a short tan and black coat.
He is dog No. 4436.
‘Sadie’
“Sadie” is a female American Pit Bull terrier mix with a short black and white coat.
She is dog No. 4460.
‘Sugarplum’
‘Sugarplum’ is a female German Shepherd mix.
She has a medium-length black coat.
She is dog No. 4447.
‘Tinsle’
“Tinsle” is a female American Pit Bull Terrier mix puppy.
She has a short brindle and brown coat.
She is dog No. 4433.
‘Toby’
“Toby” is a male boxer mix.
He has a short tan and white coat.
He is dog No. 4389.
‘Yule’
“Yule” is a husky of undetermined gender with a black and white coat.
Yule is dog No. 4432.
Call the Clearlake Animal Control shelter at 707-273-9440, or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. to inquire about adoptions and schedule a visit to the shelter.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – As Californians prepare for the Christmas holiday during the COVID-19 pandemic, the California Highway Patrol reminds everyone the rules of safe driving are just as critical as ever.
Although traffic may be lighter this holiday season, it is not an invitation to speed.
The rules of the road still apply, and motorists should avoid driving tired, impaired or distracted.
California has instituted a regional stay at home order throughout most of the state and is advising residents to stay close to home as much as possible and not travel significant distances.
If you must travel, the CHP wants to remind you of some important traffic safety tips to help you arrive safely: Drive sober, avoid distractions, always buckle up, and leave plenty of time to get to your destination.
“The CHP wants to ensure your safety throughout this unprecedented year,” said CHP Commissioner Amanda Ray. “We are hopeful that the public will do their part and remember to make safety a priority.”
Safeguarding California’s roadways through the upcoming Christmas holiday, the CHP will implement a maximum enforcement period, which begins at 6:01 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 24, and concludes at 11:59 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 27.
During that time, all available officers will be on the road for enhanced enforcement and to assist any drivers in need of help.
The mission of the CHP is to provide the highest level of safety, service and security.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Lake County Superior Court reported that a second employee has tested positive for COVID-19.
Court Executive Officer Krista LeVier said Tuesday that the employee in question has not been in the office since Dec. 10.
“This individual did not have close contact with any attorney, law enforcement or members of the public. We continue to follow all guidance provided by Lake County Public Health,” LeVier said.
A week and a half ago, the court reported that its first employee had tested positive for the virus.
That employee was asymptomatic while at work at both the Clearlake and Lakeport courthouses, but didn’t work in a courtroom or have close contacts with the public, attorneys or law enforcement, LeVier said.
That announcement regarding the first case came days after Superior Court Presiding Judge Michael Lunas and LeVier announced that most of the court’s proceedings were being moved back online and that trials were canceled until Dec. 30.
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.
Thousands of sparkling young stars are nestled within the giant nebula NGC 3603, one of the most massive young star clusters in the Milky Way Galaxy.
NGC 3603, a prominent star-forming region in the Carina spiral arm of the Milky Way about 20,000 light-years away, reveals stages in the life cycle of stars.
Powerful ultraviolet radiation and fast winds from the bluest and hottest stars have blown a big bubble around the cluster.
Moving into the surrounding nebula, this torrent of radiation sculpted the tall, dark stalks of dense gas, which are embedded in the walls of the nebula.
These gaseous monoliths are a few light-years tall and point to the central cluster. The stalks may be incubators for new stars.
On a smaller scale, a cluster of dark clouds called "Bok" globules resides at the top, right corner. These clouds are composed of dense dust and gas and are about 10 to 50 times more massive than the sun.
Resembling an insect's cocoon, a Bok globule may be undergoing a gravitational collapse on its way to forming new stars.
The nebula was first discovered by Sir John Herschel in 1834.
NORTH COAST, Calif. – COVID-19 testing is underway at the Mendocino County Jail where several staffers and inmates have tested positive for the virus.
Lt. John Bednar of the Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office said a corrections deputy at the Mendocino County Jail had been off work with an illness and, per policy, received testing for COVID-19.
On Saturday, the corrections deputy reported to jail administration that he had taken a COVID-19 test and received a positive result, Bednar said.
Working with Mendocino County Human Resources, contact tracing was immediately done. Bednar said two employees were identified as being potentially exposed and were subsequently tested.
On Monday, one of those employees received a positive test. Bednar said an additional employee reported feeling ill and submitted to COVID-19 testing, and was also found to be positive that same date.
Because of the positive results, Bednar said jail administration reached out to Mendocino County Public Health, which arranged for testing kits for all staff members. Testing began for all staff members on Tuesday.
The Mendocino County Public Health Department also worked to secure test kits so that all of the inmate population and corrections staff can be tested. Bednar said testing has begun and will continue until all inmates and staff have been tested.
On Tuesday evening, three male inmates reported feeling ill with flu-like symptoms. On-site jail medical staff from Naphcare responded immediately and began testing the three inmates. Bednar said the three inmates all tested positive for COVID-19.
Based on those results, Bednar said the housing unit in which they were assigned was quarantined, following the jail’s COVID-19 policy, to avoid any potential spread of the virus.
On Wednesday morning, a fourth male inmate from a different housing unit, complaining of flu-like symptoms, was tested and found to be positive, Bednar said. Again, following the jail’s COVID-19 policy, the housing unit in which the inmate was housed was placed on quarantine.
In addition to the normal cleaning of the jail, a deep cleaning of the jail was performed by staff following the positive findings, Bednar said.
The Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office thanked Bekke Emery and her staff for their quick response in assisting it and providing the necessary testing supplies so that testing can be completed for the safety of inmates and staff.
“Working with our partners at the Public Health Department, we will continue working to keep the staff and residents within the Mendocino County Jail safe,” Bednar said.
Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday announced the selection of California Secretary of State Alex Padilla to be California’s next United States senator, filling the term being vacated by Vice President-elect Kamala Harris.
The governor also said Tuesday that he will submit to the State Legislature the nomination of San Diego Assemblymember and Chair of the California Legislative Black Caucus Dr. Shirley N. Weber as the next California secretary of state once Padilla assumes office in the United States Senate.
The selections serve as two firsts: Padilla will be the first Latino to represent California in the United States Senate and the first Southern Californian in nearly three decades, while Weber will be the first-ever African American to serve as secretary of state in California.
“The son of Mexican immigrants — a cook and house cleaner — Alex Padilla worked his way from humble beginnings to the halls of MIT, the Los Angeles City Council and the State Senate, and has become a national defender of voting rights as California’s Secretary of State. Now, he will serve in the halls of our nation’s Capitol as California’s next United States Senator, the first Latino to hold this office,” said Gov. Newsom. “Through his tenacity, integrity, smarts and grit, California is gaining a tested fighter in their corner who will be a fierce ally in D.C., lifting up our state’s values and making sure we secure the critical resources to emerge stronger from this pandemic. He will be a senator for all Californians.”
Secretary of State Padilla was sworn in as California’s first Latino Secretary of State on Jan. 5, 2015, and pledged to bring more Californians into the democratic process as the state’s top elections official.
He was re-elected in 2018 and received the most votes of any Latino elected official in the United States.
“I am honored and humbled by the trust placed in me by Gov. Newsom, and I intend to work each and every day to honor that trust and deliver for all Californians,” said Padilla. “From those struggling to make ends meet to the small businesses fighting to keep their doors open to the health care workers looking for relief, please know that I am going to the Senate to fight for you. We will get through this pandemic together and rebuild our economy in a way that doesn’t leave working families behind.”
Since taking office, Secretary of State Padilla has worked to make California’s elections more accessible and inclusive, while fighting to protect the integrity of our voting systems.
Under Padilla’s leadership, voter registration is at an all-time high – more than 22 million Californians are registered to vote (an increase of more than four million from the day he took office) and the highest rate in nearly seven decades.
He also implemented innovations like same-day registration, online pre-registration for 16- and 17-year olds and automatic voter registration, also known as “California Motor Voter,” and oversaw the upgrades and replacement of voting systems in all 58 counties in the state to systems that meet California’s newer, higher security standards.
Padilla also served as Chairman of the California Complete Count Committee, where he led efforts to reach hard to count communities and worked with community based organizations to secure a safe and fair Census count.
Growing up, Padilla’s mom and dad relentlessly emphasized hard work and a good education as key to a better future. With just an elementary school education, Santos worked as a short order cook for forty years before retirement. He liked to boast that his kitchen “never failed an inspection.” For the same forty years, Lupe worked tirelessly as a housekeeper for a group of families in the affluent communities of Studio City and Sherman Oaks.
Santos and Lupe raised their three children, Julie, Alex and Ackley, in a modest home in Pacoima. In the 1980s, the neighborhood became one of the more violent areas of Los Angeles and gang activity, prostitution and open-air drug dealing were rampant. Going to sleep to the sound of police helicopters was not uncommon.
Padilla attended local public schools, keeping his focus on books and baseball. He worked his way into the starting rotation at San Fernando High as a senior. The same year, his countless hours of study paid off and he won admission to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering. He worked his way through college doing a variety of janitorial and administrative jobs while mentoring younger students back home to follow the same path.
It was the conditions in his neighborhood growing up and the feeling that the Northeast San Fernando Valley wasn’t adequately served by government that awakened his interest in political activism. As a teenager, Padilla’s family helped organize neighbors to take back the streets from crime. He and his mother would periodically join community leaders to protest environmental injustice and demand the closure of the Lopez Canyon Landfill.
In 1994, after California voters passed Proposition 187, the sweeping anti-immigrant measure, his parents finally applied for citizenship and Padilla, now a recent MIT graduate, resolved to put an engineering career aside and dedicate his life to public service.
Demanding a fair share of opportunity and resources for the people of the Northeast San Fernando Valley, Padilla was elected to the Los Angeles City Council as a political outsider at the age of 26. As a member of the City Council, he worked to expand after-school programs to serve 16 schools in his district, worked to reduce class sizes and built state-of-the-art libraries and a children’s museum.
He worked to retain and create more local job opportunities through industrial, commercial and residential development and community reinvestment. And he championed citywide measures to improve air and water quality while directing the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power to dramatically increase procurement of renewable energy sources.
In 2001, Padilla’s colleagues elected him the youngest Council President in Los Angeles history. As president, he provided citywide leadership at critical times. He was Acting Mayor during the tragedy of September 11, 2001. He assisted in the interview and selection of William Bratton as chief of the Los Angeles Police Department and helped negotiate the approval of LA Live and the modernization of Los Angeles International Airport. In 2005, his colleagues throughout the state elected him President of the California League of Cities.
In 2006, Padilla was elected to the State Senate to represent the more than one million people in the San Fernando Valley. As a state senator, he would go on to author more than 70 bills signed into law by both Republican and Democratic governors, with his major legislative efforts fighting climate change, expanding educational opportunities, fostering healthier communities and harnessing innovation.
Padilla lives with his wife Angela, a mental health advocate, and their three sons in the San Fernando Valley.
Governor to submit Weber nomination for secretary of state to state Legislature
In selecting Dr. Weber as Padilla’s successor as secretary of state, the governor said she has been a champion for civil rights and police reform, authoring a landmark law setting new, higher standards on the use of deadly force by police.
Dr. Weber has been fighting for civil rights her entire life – and she knows that ensuring every Californian has the right to vote is the fundamental building block for progress, the governor’s office said.
An Assemblymember since 2012, former president of the San Diego Board of Education and a retired Africana Studies Department professor for 40 years at San Diego State University, Dr. Weber will become the first-ever African American to serve as secretary of state in California.
The governor said she has been a voice of moral clarity in the Legislature, one who her colleagues have looked to for leadership on issues of social justice, including authoring the California Act to Save Lives, landmark legislation passed and signed by Gov. Newsom in 2019 setting new, higher standards on the use of deadly force by police.
Her nomination is subject to confirmation by the California State Assembly and Senate within 90 days.
“Dr. Weber is a tireless advocate and change agent with unimpeachable integrity,” said Governor Newsom. “The daughter of sharecroppers from Arkansas, Dr. Weber’s father didn’t get to vote until his 30s and her grandfather never got to vote because he died before the Voting Rights Act passed in 1965. When her family moved to South Central Los Angeles, she saw as a child her parents rearrange furniture in their living room to serve as a local polling site for multiple elections. Now, she’ll be at the helm of California’s elections as the next secretary of state – defending and expanding the right to vote and serving as the first African American to be California’s chief elections officer.”
“I am excited to be nominated for this historic appointment as the secretary of state of California. I thank Gov. Newsom for the confidence he’s placed in me and his belief that I will stand strong for California. Being the first African American woman in this position will be a monumental responsibility, but I know that I am up for the challenge. Expanding voting rights has been one of the causes of my career and will continue to motivate me as I assume my new constitutional duties,” said Dr. Weber.
Dr. Weber was born on a 100-acre farm in rural Hope, Arkansas where her father, David, was a sharecropper. Though he had a sixth-grade education and, according to Weber, could barely read, he instilled in Weber and her siblings a belief in the power of education. The family fled the farm and moved across the country when Weber was just three because her father refused to back down in a dispute with a white farmer, and a lynch mob threatened his life.
Soon after the family moved to the Pueblo Del Rio housing projects in South Los Angeles in 1951, Weber began school. She is a proud product of California public schools – district schools in Los Angeles through high school, and later at UCLA, where she earned three degrees, including her Ph.D., at only 26 years old.
As one of the few Black women in Southern California navigating academia in the late 1960s and early 1970s, Dr. Weber ascended to become one of the youngest-ever professors at San Diego State University, where she helped found the Africana Studies Department.
Prior to being elected to the Assembly, Dr. Weber served as the mayor's appointee and Chair on the Citizens Equal Opportunity Commission. She has also served on the Board of the NAACP, YWCA, YMCA Scholarship Committee, Battered Women Services, United Way, San Diego Consortium and Private Industry Council and others. She served as a member of the San Diego Board of Education from 1988 to 1996, including a stint as president.
Her commitment to advancing civil rights and equality also compelled her to serve in public office – first on the San Diego Unified School Board, and, since 2012, representing District 79 of the California State Assembly.
Dr. Weber has translated her lifelong commitment to service into an ambitious legislative agenda, including bills on education, civil rights, public safety, food insecurity, protections for persons with disabilities and voting rights.
Dr. Weber has served as chair (and currently as a member) of the Elections and Redistricting Committee, where she has helped to oversee California’s elections and campaign finance law for the last several election cycles. She authored AB 2466 extending voting rights to people on parole – more than 50,000 Californians – and has sponsored legislation to ensure that those on probation and parole are aware of their voting rights and able to cast their ballots.
She was the author of, and chief advocate for, the California Act to Save Lives, landmark legislation passed and signed by Governor Newsom in 2019 setting new, higher standards on the use of deadly force by police. She also passed first-in-the-nation legislation to provide transparency and accountability around the harmful and unjust practice of racial and identity profiling, while improving public safety and police-community relations.
A national and state leader on criminal justice issues, Dr. Weber has passed several pieces of progressive reform legislation, including AB 2590 which made California’s sentencing framework more flexible and effective by giving judges discretion to apply restorative justice principles in certain cases.
In 2015, Dr. Weber became the first African American to chair the Assembly State Budget Committee in California, the 5th largest economy in the world. In her current leadership role, she chairs the Assembly Budget Subcommittee on Public Safety.
Peter C. Mancall, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
When winter cold settles in across the U.S., the alleged “War on Christmas” heats up.
In recent years, department store greeters and Starbucks cups have sparked furor by wishing customers “happy holidays.” This year, with state officials warning of holiday gatherings becoming superspreader events in the midst of a pandemic, opponents of some public health measures to limit the spread of the pandemic are already casting them as attacks on the Christian holiday.
But debates about celebrating Christmas go back to the 17th century. The Puritans, it turns out, were not too keen on the holiday. They first discouraged Yuletide festivities and later outright banned them.
At first glance, banning Christmas celebrations might seem like a natural extension of a stereotype of the Puritans as joyless and humorless that persists to this day.
But as a scholar who has written about the Puritans, I see their hostility toward holiday gaiety as less about their alleged asceticism and more about their desire to impose their will on the people of New England – Natives and immigrants alike.
An aversion to Christmas chaos
The earliest documentary evidence for their aversion to celebrating Christmas dates back to 1621, when Gov. William Bradford of Plymouth Colony castigated some of the newcomers who chose to take the day off rather than work.
But why?
As a devout Protestant, Bradford did not dispute the divinity of Jesus Christ. Indeed, Puritans spent a great deal of time investigating their own and others’ souls because they were so committed to creating a godly community.
Bradford’s comments reflected Puritans’ lingering anxiety about the ways that Christmas had been celebrated in England. For generations, the holiday had been an occasion for riotous, sometimes violent behavior. The moralist pamphleteer Phillip Stubbes believed that Christmastime celebrations gave celebrants license “to do what they lust, and to folow what vanitie they will.” He complained about rampant “fooleries” like playing dice and cards and wearing masks.
Civil authorities had mostly accepted the practices because they understood that allowing some of the disenfranchised to blow off steam on a few days of the year tended to preserve an unequal social order. Let the poor think they are in control for a day or two, the logic went, and the rest of the year they will tend to their work without causing trouble.
English Puritans objected to accepting such practices because they feared any sign of disorder. They believed in predestination, which led them to search their own and others’ behavior for signs of saving grace. They could not tolerate public scandal, especially when attached to a religious moment.
Puritan efforts to crack down on Christmas revelries in England before 1620 had little impact. But once in North America, these seekers of religious freedom had control over the governments of New Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay and Connecticut.
The Puritans in Plymouth and Massachusetts used their authority to punish or banish those who did not share their views. For example, they exiled an Anglican lawyer named Thomas Morton who rejected Puritan theology, befriended local Indigenous people, danced around a maypole and sold guns to the Natives. He was, Bradford wrote, “the Lord of Misrule” – the archetype of a dangerous type who Puritans believed create mayhem, including at Christmas.
In the years that followed, the Puritans exiled others who disagreed with their religious views, including Anne Hutchinson and Roger Williams who espoused beliefs deemed unacceptable by local church leaders. In 1659, they banished three Quakers who had arrived in 1656. When two of them, William Robinson and Marmaduke Stephenson, refused to leave, Massachusetts authorities executed them in Boston.
This was the context for which Massachusetts authorities outlawed Christmas celebrations in 1659. Even after the statute left the law books in 1681 during a reorganization of the colony, prominent theologians still despised holiday festivities.
In 1687, the minister Increase Mather, who believed that Christmas celebrations derived from the bacchanalian excesses of the Roman holiday Saturnalia, decried those consumed “in Revellings, in excess of wine, in mad mirth.”
The hostility of Puritan clerics to celebrations of Christmas should not be seen as evidence that they always hoped to stop joyous behavior. In 1673, Mather had called alcohol “a good creature of God” and had no objection to moderate drinking. Nor did Puritans have a negative view of sex.
By comparison to their treatment of Natives and fellow colonists who rebuffed their unbending vision, the Puritan campaign against Christmas seems tame. But it is a reminder of what can happen when the self-righteous control the levers of power in a society and seek to mold a world in their image.
In the midst of the raging coronavirus pandemic, we’re faced with agonizing decisions about whether to forgo treasured holiday rituals.
Many people have defied health officials, putting themselves at risk of contracting COVID-19 or spreading the disease in order to uphold their family traditions in person.
A new paper by two researchers at UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business sheds light on the psychology of rituals – and why health officials may have to do more than just tell people not to gather in order to be effective.
That's because coming together to exchange gifts on Christmas isn’t just about getting presents; it’s a symbol of love. Eating turkey on Thanksgiving isn’t just a shared meal; it’s an expression of gratitude.
“We view rituals as more important than regular types of group activities because they reflect the values of the group,” said Dan Stein, a Berkeley Haas doctoral student and lead author on the paper.
“When people alter activities that are more ritualistic, it elicits stronger moral outrage,” said Juliana Schroeder, an assistant professor in the Haas Management of Organizations Group and the paper’s co-author. Pitting pandemic social distancing against the values of love and togetherness represented by the holidays creates moral conflict for many people. “If messages from officials to social distance are going to be successful, they must come up with a response to these strong group values.”
The paper, forthcoming in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, examines the psychology of rituals through seven experimental studies that drive home just how strongly people feel about traditions. It was co-written by Harvard Business School professors Francesca Gino and Michael Norton along with Nicholas Hobson, founder of The Behaviorist consulting firm.
"From Catholics performing the sign of the cross since the fourth century to Americans reciting the Pledge of Allegiance since the 1890s, group rituals have strikingly consistent features over time," the researchers wrote. "Because group rituals symbolize sacred group values, even minor alterations to them provoke moral outrage and punishment."
In one experiment, the researchers asked Berkeley undergraduate students to rate 15 holidays according to how ritualistic they were. They then asked them to rate on a scale of 1 to 7 how angry and frustrated they would feel if the U.S. government “moved celebrations for the holiday one week forward,” and also how immoral and inappropriate it would be to change the date. The more ritualistic the holiday, the higher it scored on both scales, signifying stronger “moral outrage” about altering it. Christmas and New Year’s scored above 5 on both scales, while Columbus Day scored as a 2 on both.
Change for the sake of good
In other experiments, they found that altering a ritual elicits moral outrage even if a person has a good reason for doing so.
When they asked participants – all U.S. citizens – how they would feel if they saw another citizen remaining seated rather than standing for the Pledge of Allegiance, participants reported outrage even when they were told the person was sitting to show solidarity with Americans with disabilities.
Participants expressed even more outrage, however, when told that the person was sitting to protest U.S. values – indicating that the reason for the change was important – and they were also upset if told that the person had forgotten to stand. Their irritation only subsided when they were told the person was injured and physically unable to stand.
Even changes that might make a ritual safer elicit moral outrage, they found.
In another experiment, the researchers asked Jewish participants how they would feel if a circumcision ceremony – a highly ritualized event occurring the same way for thousands of years – was done in a hospital rather than at a temple. Over 80 percent of respondents agreed that a hospital ceremony would be safer, and yet they also reported more anger about the suggestion of moving the circumcision ceremony to a hospital rather than keeping it the same, even if it was riskier.
“People don’t want to have to pit one sacred value against another,” Stein said. “While medical safety represents the sacred value of life in Judaism, circumcision stands for a literal blood covenant with God. That creates an uncomfortable conflict in people’s minds.”
Commitment to group values
In fact, the researchers found that the study participants who were most committed to U.S. values expressed the most outrage about changing holiday traditions.
“We theorize that moral outrage is functional in the long-run because it can help a group protect its sacred rituals,” Stein said. “We need those people who are committed for the group to survive, but our research suggests that trying to tell people, ‘By not practicing your ritual, you’ll save lives,’ might not be effective for everyone.”
The challenge for families trying to stay safe during the pandemic is how to alter rituals in ways that keep their values intact, even if getting together physically isn’t possible. “This research suggests that to reduce outrage when altering rituals, you should try to change them in ways that still allow people to celebrate group values,” said Schroeder. “That’s what people are getting upset about when the ritual is altered – and that’s the thing that needs to be maintained.”
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The latest forecast from the National Weather Service calls for a rainy Christmas day and the potential for rain through the weekend.
Forecasters said parts of Lake County could see patchy frost on Wednesday morning, with sunny conditions throughout most of the day. Northeast winds of up to 15 miles per hour, with gusts into the 20s, are possible.
Thursday, Christmas Eve, will be partly sunny.
Temperatures on both days are anticipated to be in the 50s during the day and into the low 30s at night.
On Friday, Christmas Day, the forecast said rain is likely between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., with showers after 4 p.m. and light winds of up to 9 miles per hour in the morning.
Rainfall totals on Christmas are estimated to be between half an inch and an inch, total, for the precipitation during the day and at night.
Temperatures on Christmas are expected to be in the high 40s during the daytime and in the high 30s at night.
The National Weather Service forecast calls for chances of showers to continue from Saturday through Monday, and temperatures ranging from the low 30s at night to the high 49s during the day.
Conditions are expected to clear on Tuesday, when the forecast calls for mostly sunny conditions but cold daytime temperatures in the 40s.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County will see expanded COVID-19 testing hours and new weekly schedules beginning in January.
Public Health Officer Dr. Gary Pace said this week that Verily, a South San Francisco-based company that has been conducting testing for the virus in the county since the spring, will be replaced by OptumServe.
Pace said drive-thru testing will no longer be offered. Instead, testing will take place indoors at sites in Lakeport and Lower Lake.
Beginning on Jan. 4, OptumServe will offer testing at the Silveira Community Center, 500 N. Main St. in Lakeport from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Mondays, Fridays and Saturdays.
Testing will be offered from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays at the Lower Lake Town Hall, 16195 Main St.
Pace said walk-ins are welcome and no appointments are necessary. He said the new testing services should be much more accessible.
He said Rite Aid also is offering COVID-19 testing. Appointments can be made at the Rite Aid website, which shows that the service is available at the company’s Clearlake store and is being conducted by Verily.
Public Health officials have continued to urge people to be tested for the coronavirus as a way of identifying those who need care quickly and in an effort to prevent people who are infected from spreading it to others.
As of Wednesday, Lake County Public Health said approximately 21,804 COVID-19 tests have been conducted in Lake County, which has a population of just over 64,000.
Of those tests, 1,524, or 7 percent, have been positive, and 20,280, or 93 percent, have been negative, Lake County Public Health reported.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – While the COVID-19 vaccine rollout continues, Lake County’s Public Health officer said Tuesday that the case rate is climbing and he urged residents to stay home for the holidays.
“We are in a situation where the number of cases is increasing dramatically,” Dr. Gary Pace said in a video posted on Facebook.
Separately, he told Lake County News that the “big rise” in local cases is likely due to Thanksgiving, which he said is “very concerning.”
As of Tuesday, Lake County had 1,583 confirmed cases and 22 deaths, Public Health reported.
There are 13 people hospitalized, one of the highest hospitalization rates reported so far locally during the pandemic.
Pace said more than 230 cases are active, by far the highest number of active cases the county has had.
Across the state, more than 1.96 million cases and nearly 23,300 deaths were reported Tuesday by Public Health departments in California’s 58 counties.
Pace said California’s positivity rate was 12.2 percent, while in Lake County it’s ranged between 8 and 11 percent in recent days.
He attributed the local and statewide case increase to the Thanksgiving holiday. “The cases go up and then a couple of weeks later, the hospital rates go up.”
The death rate curve also is moving upward, following case and hospitalization rates, he said.
Neither the case nor the hospitalization rate curves are showing any signs of flattening, with 1,399 intensive care unit beds available statewide and concerns that those remaining beds could be used up in coming weeks, Pace said.
“We’re anticipating that the number of people needing hospital beds is going to continue to increase,” while the number of beds available doesn’t change much, he said.
Lake County has had more than 200 new cases in the last week alone, with a case rate of 31.5 per 100,000 people. Pace said a case rate of 10 per 100,000 is what qualifies for the purple tier, the most restrictive on the state’s Blueprint for a Safer Economy, which Lake County moved into late in November.
State officials have broken down California into five regions for the purposes of case measurement.
Lake County is in the Northern California region, the only one so far that hasn’t been placed in a regionwide stay-at-home order because of the availability of ICU beds falling below 15 percent.
Pace said the Northern California region’s ICU bed capacity has been staying stable at about 28 percent.
However, in Lake County, the pressure on ICU beds is growing. Pace said that on Monday seven of the county’s eight ICU beds were in use.
With the county still able to transport some patients to other regional hospitals, “We’re not in a crisis situation now,” Pace said.
Pace said the state has plans to set up 20 extra beds each in Chico, Marysville and Redding to address the growing bed shortage.
Virus level in community reported to be high
The virus is now popping up all over Lake County, Pace said.
“The virus is spreading throughout the whole community,” said Pace, with the amount of virus in the community very high. He said 75 percent of the county’s total cases tracked to the most populated areas – Lakeport, Kelseyville and Clearlake.
There is an outbreak of more than 100 cases in the tribal community that he said now appears to be slowing.
Pace said one of the skilled nursing facilities, which he did not name, has a significant cluster of cases but the others are OK.
The state’s skilled nursing facility dashboard showed that Rocky Point Care Center in Lakeport has had 50 positive cases among residents and 17 among health care workers, with none of those cases now active.
Lakeport Post Acute has had 41 cases among residents, none of which currently are active, with 23 of its health care workers infected. Less than 11 of those cases with staff remain active.
For Meadowood Nursing Center in Clearlake, there are 12 cases amongst residents, with less than 11 active. It also has less than 11 active cases amongst health care workers.
Less than 11 deaths at each of the facilities were reported for residents, with no reported deaths among health care workers, the state reported.
Pace said Public Health’s efforts are now turning increasingly to communications and public education, and preparing for a change in testing companies that goes into effect in January.
Vaccine being distributed to health care workers
Lake County received the first shipment of 975 doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine on Thursday, and Pace said the focus is on getting them to the staff at the acute care hospitals.
“I’m very, very concerned about what’s going to be happening to our medical infrastructure for the next eight weeks or so, Pace said.
In the coming days, a vaccine clinic will be set up for EMS and first responders, with the next tier of vaccines to cover nursing homes. Pace said pharmacies are helping distribute the vaccine to skilled nursing facilities, with shipments for those populations expected next week.
The goal is to cover these initial tiers before moving on to other medical settings like outpatient clinics, he said.
The state of California expects to have 1.7 million vaccine doses by the end of the month, and by that point Pace estimated Lake County would have received between 1,100 and 1,500 doses.
He said he’s heard concerns about the vaccine and while there have been reports of some people in other parts of the country and the world having allergic reactions, on the local level, “At this point, we’re seeing really good things,” with reactions limited to soreness at the injection point, muscle aches and fever, none of which last long.
Pace said the risk of the disease is much greater than the risk of the vaccine based on what’s known at this time.
“It’s a very, very difficult time right now,” said Pace, noting that the community is now entering the phase he’s been concerned about all along.
“Where this ends up, it looks pretty concerning to me right now,” he said, urging people to stay home for the holidays and protect their families.
Those heightened precautions shouldn’t last long and in a few months we should be on the way out of the situation, Pace said, adding the vaccine is the light at the end of the tunnel.
“I want to really encourage people to be as safe as possible and just take extra precaution this year so we can all be around next year to enjoy each other’s company and have a more normal time together,” Pace said.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – While the COVID-19 pandemic continues to impact jobs nationwide, on the local and state levels, November job statistics show the lowest jobless rates since March.
The California Employment Development Department’s newest report on unemployment puts Lake County’s November jobless rate at 7.3 percent – the same as it was in March, just before local and statewide lockdowns went into effect.
That’s down from 7.4 percent in October but up markedly from the 4.8 percent reported in November 2019, according to EDD data.
On the statewide level, California’s unemployment rate dropped 0.8 percent to 8.2 percent in November as the state’s employers added 57,100 jobs.
The California unemployment rate in November was down from 9 percent in October 2020 but up from 3.9 percent from November of last year, the EDD said.
The state’s November unemployment rate also was the lowest since the 5.5 percent reported in March.
On the nationwide level, employment numbers also are recovering. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the national jobless rate was 6.7 percent in November, down from 6.9 percent in October but up from the 3.5 percent reported the previous November.
Like the local and state situations, November was the best month nationwide for employment since March, when a 4.4 percent jobless rate was reported.
Lake County’s civilian labor force numbered 26,620 individuals in November, with 2,080 individuals unemployed, compared to a civilian labor force of 27,400 in October, when 2,200 people were reported to be without jobs.
State data showed that industry sectors that showed job growth in Lake County in November included leisure and hospitality, 12.9 percent; trade, transportation and utilities, 8.2 percent; professional and business services, 1.6 percent; government, 0.7 percent; and service providing, 0.3 percent.
Total farm jobs were down by 35.1 percent in November, but up by 26 percent in a year-over comparison, the state said. Other local industries showing year-over growth included professional and business services, 8.5 percent; federal government, 6.3 percent; and trade, transportation and utilities, 0.3 percent.
In November, Lake County ranked No. 35 out of the state’s 58 counties for its jobless rate.
Lake’s neighboring counties’ jobless rates and ranks in the latest report are Colusa, 10.8 percent, No. 57; Glenn and Napa tied at No. 16 with 6 percent; Sonoma, 5.5 percent, No. 8; and Yolo, 5.8 percent, No. 12.
Over the course of several months, some of the state’s rural counties had the lowest unemployment in California. Lassen, for example, held the No. 1 spot for the lowest jobless rate from May through October.
However, in November, Lassen was pushed out of the top spot by Marin County, which historically has among the lowest unemployment rates statewide but which saw its rate climb due to the business impacts of COVID-19.
Marin’s November rate was 4.7 percent, with Sierra County ranking No. 2 with 5 percent, Santa Clara and San Mateo counties tying for No. 3 with 5.1 percent, and Placer ranking No. 5 with 5.2 percent. Lassen fell to No. 6, with 5.3 percent.
The highest unemployment was reported in Imperial County, which reported 16.4 percent and ranked No. 58. The rest of the five counties with the highest jobless rates included Colusa, No. 57, 10.8 percent; Los Angeles, No. 56, 10.6 percent; Tulare, No. 55, 9.8 percent; and Kern, No. 54, 9.4 percent.
The statewide employment situation
The EDD reported that California has now regained approximately 46 percent of the 2,615,800 nonfarm jobs that were lost due to the COVID-19 pandemic in March and April. November marks the sixth straight month the unemployment rate fell below the all-time unemployment rate high of 16.4 percent set in April and May of this year.
California payroll jobs totaled 16,191,400 in November 2020, up 57,100 from October 2020 but down 1,336,700 from November of last year, the EDD said.
The state said the number of Californians with jobs in October was 17,347,000, a decrease of 141,500 jobs from October’s total of 17,488,500, and down 1,386,900 from the employment total in November of last year.
The number of unemployed Californians was 1,542,100 in November, a decrease of 186,000 over the month, and up by 788,400 in comparison to November of last year, the EDD reported.
The EDD’s newest report said that nine of California’s 11 industry sectors gained jobs in November: Leisure and hospitality, up 27,800; trade, transportation and utilities, 19,700; professional and business services, 12,900; education and health services, 8,500; financial activities, 2,300; information, 900; manufacturing, 600; other services, 300; and mining and logging, 100.
Two sectors reported job losses: construction, which lost 5,800 jobs, and government, which for the third straight month posted the largest industry job decline, losing 10,200 jobs in November.
The EDD also reported that there were 1,278,200 people certifying for Unemployment Insurance benefits during the November 2020 sample week. That compares to 1,650,946 people in October 2020 and 293,595 people in November 2019.
Concurrently, the state said 168,998 initial claims were processed in the November 2020 sample week, which was a month-over increase of 16,347 claims from October 2020, and a year-over increase of 119,552 claims from November 2019.
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.