LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lake County Library’s summer reading program has finished, the pages read have been tallied, points are totaled, and the prizes awarded.
Approximately 271 people of all ages finished the summer reading program this year.
Parents and children alike appreciate the summer reading program. At this year’s children’s awards party at Library Park, several people expressed their appreciation for this perennial program.
Cristen Baker said that her family has loved everything about the Reading Program. “All three of my kids love getting new books and start reading as soon as we get in the car. We appreciate all the energy and time all who are involved put in.”
Victoria Newman calls the program “super fun and really thoughtful.”
Juliana Bisaccio’s family enjoyed learning about the different things the library has to offer, picking out books and participating in LEGO Club. Her daughter Annabelle “liked that you got to read a lot and got to see science books with projects.”
The library’s storytime reader, Barbara Green, drew special praise from Maria Maravilla who said, “I enjoyed the books and how Mrs. Barbara interacts with the children. My daughter Karla always looks forward for reading at the park with Mrs. Barbara. Thank you for making this possible for all kids.”
Prizes were awarded to the children included book bags, coupons for hamburgers, ice cream, doughnuts and more.
Bookplates in new library books commemorate the readers who finished the program.
Prize winners in Lakeport Library’s teen group were Joseph Marsh, Natasha Karp, Hunter Perrine, and Angelina Diaz. Viridiana Torres won the teen prize at Middletown Library. Rebecca Weller won the teen prize at Redbud Library.
Adult prize winners are Gregg Lindsley, Cindy Wilson, Jennifer Royal, Alisa Barnes at Lakeport, and Kathie Toibin at Upper Lake. Caitlin Meisle was the adult winner at Middletown Library. At Redbud Library Sharon Leonardo won the adult prize.
Unclaimed prizes will be held at library branches through August.
The Lake County Library Summer Reading Program is supported in part by the Friends of the Lake County Library and Friends of Middletown Library.
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – Thanks to the quick action of firefighters with the assistance of animal control and police officers, more than two dozen pets were saved from an early Friday morning fire in Clearlake.
The fire occurred in a mobile home and a kennel in the 2100 block of Ogulin Canyon Road. The initial dispatch took place just after 2:45 a.m. Friday, with firefighting resources coming from Lake County Fire, Cal Fire and Northshore Fire, as Lake County News has reported.
Lake County Fire Chief Willie Sapeta said a total of seven engines, two water tenders – due to lack of water supply – along with two medic units and three company officers responded.
“It went real well,” he said.
Initial reports from the scene said the fire was burning a mobile home and had started into the wildland. Firefighters arriving on the scene started rescuing the animals.
Sapeta said the people in the mobile home had evacuated by the time firefighters arrived.
He said the kennel had an office building at the front that was gutted, while the kennel area itself was not enclosed. Sapeta said the animals were able to move away from the fire, and not being in a building prevented them from suffering from the smoke or heat.
Reports from the scene indicated the mobile home burned down. Sapeta said they were able to save a majority of the kennel structure.
Sapeta said some power lines fell into trees and Pacific Gas and Electric responded to deenergize them.
He said there were no injuries to personnel or animals, and investigators are continuing to try to determine cause and origin.
The Clearlake Police Department, Clearlake Animal Control, Lake County Animal Care and Control and its Lake Evacuation and Animal Protection team responded, and were instrumental in helping evacuate the dogs, cats, pigs and goats from the scene, Sapeta said.
Lake County Animal Care and Control Director Jonathan Armas told Lake County News that his team responded and arrived close to 4 a.m.
He said Animal Care and Control and LEAP had four people on scene during the event, and the regularly scheduled shelter staff assisted during intake and care.
“All animals have been brought to our shelter in Lakeport. Some animals have already been picked up by their owners and others we have been in contact to get them home,” Armas said Friday afternoon.
He confirmed there were no animals killed or burned during the fire. Only one dog suffered injuries requiring veterinarian medical attention, and that was due to two other dogs attacking it. Armas said Dr. Debi Sally examined the injured dog at the scene and then it was transferred to Wasson Memorial.
“He is back at our shelter now where he should make a full recovery. All the other animals are doing great and a few had some little cuts but nothing substantial,” Armas said.
Armas said the final animal count was 19 dogs, two cats, four kittens, two pigs and three goats.
He thanked all of the agencies involved, as well as Dr. Sally and Wasson Memorial Veterinary Clinic. “We also want to thank the rescues Coppers Dream and Bones for their help in getting our animals to create room for the displaced animals from the fire. We also saw a higher number of public looking at our animals for adoption and want to thank the community for coming to help as well.”
This was the second animal rescue for local officials in Clearlake in two days.
Early Thursday, a black bear was found in a tree in the area of Hill and West 40th. The effort to relocate the bear involved the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, Clearlake Police Department, Lake County Fire, the US Department of Fish and Wildlife and K&R Tree Service.
“It went off very, very well,” said Sapeta, noting that it was cool how all of the resources pulled together.
Sapeta said firefighters were ready to do a roof rescue rigging system to safely get the bear out of the tree, but after being hit with a tranquilizer dart it fell out of the tree, hitting an embankment on the way down, which helped break its fall.
He said wildlife biologists treated the bear and then relocated it. The bear later was reported to be fine.
“We were joking around, 'who’s going to start the IV,'” Sapeta said.
Regarding the bear, Sapeta added, “That’s a first in my career,” noting that he has dealt with bobcats and mountain lions, and years ago was involved in a rigging system for a horse rescue.
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.
This artist's illustration depicts the exoplanet LHS 3844b, which is 1.3 times the mass of Earth and orbits an M dwarf star. The planet's surface may be covered mostly in dark lava rock, with no apparent atmosphere, according to observations by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (IPAC). A new study using data from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope provides a rare glimpse of conditions on the surface of a rocky planet orbiting a star beyond the sun.
The study, published this month in the journal Nature, shows that the planet's surface may resemble those of Earth's Moon or Mercury: The planet likely has little to no atmosphere and could be covered in the same cooled volcanic material found in the dark areas of the Moon's surface, called mare.
Discovered in 2018 by NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Satellite Survey, or TESS, mission, planet LHS 3844b is located 48.6 light-years from Earth and has a radius 1.3 times that of Earth. It orbits a small, cool type of star called an M dwarf – especially noteworthy because, as the most common and long-lived type of star in the Milky Way galaxy, M dwarfs may host a high percentage of the total number of planets in the galaxy.
TESS found the planet via the transit method, which involves detecting when the observed light of a parent star dims because of a planet orbiting between the star and Earth. Detecting light coming directly from a planet's surface – another method – is difficult because the star is so much brighter and drowns out the planet's light.
But during follow-up observations, Spitzer was able to detect light from the surface of LHS 3844b. The planet makes one full revolution around its parent star in just 11 hours. With such a tight orbit, LHS 3844b is most likely "tidally locked," which is when one side of a planet permanently faces the star.
The star-facing side, or dayside, is about 1,410 degrees Fahrenheit (770 degrees Celsius). Being extremely hot, the planet radiates a lot of infrared light, and Spitzer is an infrared telescope. The planet's parent star is relatively cool (though still much hotter than the planet), making direct observation of LHS 3844b's dayside possible.
This observation marks the first time Spitzer data have been able to provide information about the atmosphere of a terrestrial world around an M dwarf.
The search for life
By measuring the temperature difference between the planet's hot and cold sides, the team found that there is a negligible amount of heat being transferred between the two. If an atmosphere were present, hot air on the dayside would naturally expand, generating winds that would transfer heat around the planet. On a rocky world with little to no atmosphere, like the Moon, there is no air present to transfer heat.
"The temperature contrast on this planet is about as big as it can possibly be," said Laura Kreidberg, a researcher at the Harvard and Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and lead author of the new study. "That matches beautifully with our model of a bare rock with no atmosphere."
Understanding the factors that could preserve or destroy planetary atmospheres is part of how scientists plan to search for habitable environments beyond our solar system. Earth's atmosphere is the reason liquid water can exist on the surface, enabling life to thrive. On the other hand, the atmospheric pressure of Mars is now less than 1% of Earth's, and the oceans and rivers that once dotted the Red Planet's surface have disappeared.
"We've got lots of theories about how planetary atmospheres fare around M dwarfs, but we haven't been able to study them empirically," Kreidberg said. "Now, with LHS 3844b, we have a terrestrial planet outside our solar system where for the first time we can determine observationally that an atmosphere is not present."
Compared to Sun-like stars, M dwarfs emit high levels of ultraviolet light (though less light overall), which is harmful to life and can erode a planet's atmosphere. They're particularly violent in their youth, belching up a large number of flares, or bursts of radiation and particles that could strip away budding planetary atmospheres.
The Spitzer observations rule out an atmosphere with more than 10 times the pressure of Earth's. (Measured in units called bars, Earth's atmospheric pressure at sea level is about 1 bar.)
An atmosphere between 1 and 10 bars on LHS 3844b has been almost entirely ruled out as well, although the authors note there's a slim chance it could exist if the stellar and planetary properties were to meet some very specific and unlikely criteria.
They also argue that with the planet so close to a star, a thin atmosphere would be stripped away by the star's intense radiation and outflow of material (often called stellar winds).
"I'm still hopeful that other planets around M dwarfs could keep their atmospheres," Kreidberg said. "The terrestrial planets in our solar system are enormously diverse, and I expect the same will be true for exoplanet systems."
A bare rock
Spitzer and NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have previously gathered information about the atmospheres of multiple gas planets, but LHS 3844b appears to be the smallest planet for which scientists have used the light coming from its surface to learn about its atmosphere (or lack thereof).
Spitzer previously used the transit method to study the seven rocky worlds around the TRAPPIST-1 star (also an M dwarf) and learn about their possible overall composition; for instance, some of them likely contain water ice.
The authors of the new study went one step further, using LHS 3844b's surface albedo (or its reflectiveness) to try to infer its composition.
The Nature study shows that LHS 3844b is "quite dark," according to co-author Renyu Hu, an exoplanet scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, which manages the Spitzer Space Telescope. He and his co-authors believe the planet is covered with basalt, a kind of volcanic rock. "We know that the mare of the Moon are formed by ancient volcanism," Hu said, "and we postulate that this might be what has happened on this planet."
JPL manages the Spitzer Space Telescope mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. Science operations are conducted at the Spitzer Science Center at Caltech in Pasadena. Space operations are based at Lockheed Martin Space in Littleton, Colorado. Data are archived at the Infrared Science Archive housed at IPAC at Caltech. Caltech manages JPL for NASA.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County Animal Care and Control has a wide variety of dogs needing homes this week.
Dogs available for adoption this week include mixes of border collie, Cane Corso mastiff, Catahoula Leopard Dog, Chihuahua, Labrador Retriever, mastiff, pit bull, shepherd, Shiba Inu, Shih Tzu and wirehaired terrier.
Dogs that are adopted from Lake County Animal Care and Control are either neutered or spayed, microchipped and, if old enough, given a rabies shot and county license before being released to their new owner. License fees do not apply to residents of the cities of Lakeport or Clearlake.
If you're looking for a new companion, visit the shelter. There are many great pets hoping you'll choose them.
The following dogs at the Lake County Animal Care and Control shelter have been cleared for adoption (additional dogs on the animal control Web site not listed are still “on hold”).
“Nova” is a female Cane Corso mastiff in kennel No. 17, ID No. 6579. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Nova’
“Nova” is a female Cane Corso mastiff with a short black coat.
She is in kennel No. 17, ID No. 6579.
“Koda” is a male pit bull terrier in kennel No. 18, ID No. 12609. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Koda’
“Koda” is a male pit bull terrier with a short red coat.
He already has been neutered.
He’s in kennel No. 18, ID No. 12609.
This male pit bull terrier is in kennel No. 20, ID No. 12744. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. Male pit bull terrier
This male pit bull terrier has a short gray and white coat.
He is in kennel No. 20, ID No. 12744.
This female terrier is in kennel No. 21, ID No. 12723. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. Female terrier
This female terrier has a medium-length tricolor coat.
She is in kennel No. 21, ID No. 12723.
This female Labrador Retriever is in kennel No. 23, ID No. 12697. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. Female Labrador Retriever
This female Labrador Retriever has a short black.
She is in kennel No. 23, ID No. 12697.
“Beau” is a male Catahoula Leopard Dog in kennel No. 24, ID No. 12677. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Beau’
“Beau” is a male Catahoula Leopard Dog with a blue merle coat.
He’s in kennel No. 24, ID No. 12677.
“Pengen” is a female Shiba Inu in kennel No. 25, ID No. 12776. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Pengen’
“Pengen” is a female Shiba Inu with a medium-length red coat.
She already has been spayed.
She’s in kennel No. 25, ID No. 12776.
“Pete” is a male Shih Tzu in kennel No. 26, ID No. 12738. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Pete’
“Pete” is a male Shih Tzu with a shaved tan and white coat.
He has been neutered.
Pete is in kennel No. 26, ID No. 12738.
“Cash” is a male pit bull terrier mix in kennel No. 27, ID No. 12413. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Cash’
“Cash” is a male pit bull terrier mix with a short black and white coat.
He has been marked as urgent because he has been at the shelter since June.
Shelter staff said Cash does well with others, loves people and walks well on a leash.
He has been neutered.
He’s in kennel No. 27, ID No. 12413.
“Rico” is a senior male Chihuahua in kennel No. 28, ID No. 12583. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Rico’
“Rico” is a senior male Chihuahua with a short tan coat.
He is in kennel No. 28, ID No. 12583.
This female Chihuahua is in kennel No. 29, ID No. 12786. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. Female Chihuahua
This female Chihuahua has a short brown and white coat.
She is in kennel No. 29, ID No. 12786.
“Boots” is a male border collie and Labrador Retriever mix in kennel No. 30, ID No. 12739. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Boots’
“Boots” is a male border collie and Labrador Retriever mix with a short white and brindle coat.
He is in kennel No. 30, ID No. 12739.
This female wirehaired terrier is in kennel No. 31, ID No. 12771. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. Female wirehaired terrier
This female wirehaired terrier has a coarse brown and black coat.
She is in kennel No. 31, ID No. 12771.
Lake County Animal Care and Control is located at 4949 Helbush in Lakeport, next to the Hill Road Correctional Facility.
Office hours are Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday. The shelter is open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday and on Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
For more information call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – Local and state firefighters stopped a structure fire on Friday evening that had started to burn in the wildland.
The fire at 6101 Old Highway 53 in Clearlake was reported shortly after 7 p.m.
Lake County Fire and Cal Fire responded, finding the structure had caught nearby wildland on fire when they had arrived.
Within about 15 minutes, the wildland fire was reported to have been stopped, but radio reports indicated there were still concerns about the potential for spotting from the structure fire.
By 7:20 p.m., the structure fire was reported to have been contained, with firefighters following up with a few hours of overhaul.
The Clearlake Police Department closed Old Highway 53 from Crawford Avenue to the Galaxy Resort while the firefighting effort took place.
Just after 12:20 a.m. Saturday, a fire was once again reported at the address, according to radio reports.
Firefighters found a small rekindle of the fire in the roof area of the structure and quickly extinguished it, based on reports from the scene.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – Firefighters spent several hours early Friday battling a fire that burned structures and wildland at a Clearlake kennel facility.
The fire was first dispatched just after 2:45 a.m. Friday in the 2100 block of Ogulin Canyon Road.
Based on radio traffic, the first units at the scene found a mobile home fully involved, with the fire spreading to nearby wildland and into the nearby kennel building, where animals were trapped.
Lake County Fire Chief Willie Sapeta asked for animal control resources from the city of Clearlake or the county of Lake to respond, and also requested Pacific Gas and Electric due to fallen power lines.
Resources from Lake County Fire, Cal Fire and Northshore Fire responded, sending engines as well as water tenders due to a water supply issue, according to radio reports.
Firefighters were reported to be in the process of rescuing animals from the burning kennels. Sapeta asked for more engines, water tenders and help with animal evacuations.
Just after 3:50 a.m., Sapeta reported over the radio that they had shaky containment on the structure fires and that forward progress was stopped on the wildland.
Animal control personnel were reported to be on scene shortly after 4:20 a.m., with the safety hazards related to the downed power lines abated about 10 minutes later.
By 5 a.m., overhaul at the scene was under way and expected to last at least two hours, according to radio reports.
More information will be reported as it becomes available.
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.
That means running vehicles and trains on electricity, heating buildings with electric heat pumps, electrifying industrial applications such as steel production and using renewable electricity to make hydrogen (similar to natural gas) for other requirements. So the focus is on powering the electric grid with renewable sources.
There is debate, though, about whether fully renewable electricity systems are feasible and how quickly the transition can be made. Here I argue that feasibility is clear, so only the transition question is relevant.
Known technologies
A wind farm in Texas, which got about 15% of its electricity from wind in 2017.Draxis/flickr, CC BY-ND
My research focuses on the economics of renewable energy. To demonstrate feasibility and estimate cost of renewable electricity systems, researchers use computer models that calculate potential production from different technologies at each point in time, based on changing weather conditions. A model reveals which combination of electricity sources and energy storage systems has the lowest cost while always meeting demand.
Many studies demonstrate that fully renewable electric grids are feasible in the United States, Europe, Australia and elsewhere. My colleagues and I recently completed a small-scale study on the island-nation of Mauritius. Islands are attractive places for initial renewable transitions because of their small scale, relative simplicity and dependence on imported fuels.
There are a number of ways to make renewable electricity: hydro, wind, solar photovoltaics, geothermal and burning various forms of biomass (plant matter), besides improving efficiency to use less energy. These are mature technologies with known costs.
Other possibilities include wave, tidal and concentrating solar power, where reflectors focus solar rays to produce power. While these may be used in the future, the need to address climate change is urgent, and in my estimation, the mature technologies suffice.
Opinions on nuclear energy run strong, which is another conversation. But models show that the United States does not need nuclear energy to retire fossil fuels.
The grid of the future
Renewable energy systems are location-specific: The best system depends on a location’s resources (is it windy?), its temporal pattern (how often is it not windy?) and availability of complementary sources (is there hydropower for backup?). Despite this location sensitivity, studies in disparate places are finding similar results.
Having a diversity of renewable sources can reduce costs. In particular, solar and wind are complementary if the sunny season is not the windy season; models find that a combination of both is typically less expensive than either alone.
For most technologies, larger scale reduces cost. For example, in the United States, large-scale solar farms can be more than 1,000 times larger than residential rooftop systems and about half the cost. To minimize cost, we build large systems.
Building large-scale renewable energy projects, such as this 550-megawatt solar plant in the Mojave Desert in California, leads to lower costs for energy produced.U.S. Department of Interior, CC BY-SA
Because solar and wind conditions vary across the landscape, system costs fall as a production area grows, so there needs to be a robust electric grid to move electricity from places where there is supply to places of demand. We also need more electricity for applications like transportation that currently use fossil fuels. This means the grid must grow.
Studies show that running an electric grid with variable renewable energy will include not using, or dumping, some energy at times, a strategy that reduces cost compared to always storing surplus energy.
Still, some form of electricity storage is needed. Batteries work well for smoothing short-term fluctuations, but for storing energy for many hours or days, pumped hydroelectric storage is less expensive. Pumped hydro uses any extra energy in the grid to pump water uphill, and when energy is needed, the water runs back down to generate power in a turbine. The United States has some existing examples and many feasible locations. With grid expansion, storage may be located at a distance from users.
Hydroelectricity and biomass power are available on demand, so having these in a renewable electric grid shrinks the energy storage need and reduces cost. Both have environmental effects that must be managed.
Hydropower can alter local ecosystems. Burning biomass emits carbon dioxide, but a study I worked on shows that biomass emissions are reversible and are clearly carbon-preferable to fossil-fuel emissions. Sustainability also depends critically on management of biomass fields and forests; the human track record on this has not been stellar.
Renewable energy systems require land. A U.S. study shows that supplying all electricity from wind, water and solar would need 0.42% of land area, plus 1.6% of land area for space between wind turbines. Biomass energy requires much more land than wind or solar, so biomass must be a small part of the renewable energy solution.
Real barriers are political and cultural
A future renewable electricity grid with associated electrification may or may not reduce energy costs. But avoiding the worst effects of climate change means quitting fossil fuels, whether or not this saves money. Still, the renewable transition will be faster and politically easier if it is less expensive.
In Mauritius, our study finds renewable electricity costs to be similar to present costs there, based on current capital costs for renewable energy. Some studies also find costs for future renewable electricity to be lower than present fossil-fuel costs, in the likely event that costs fall as we build more renewable energy systems and get better at doing it.
And that’s it, from a technical perspective. A combination of renewable sources and energy storage – the specific combination depending on local conditions and preferences – can supply all the electricity needed at an affordable price, and will reduce air pollution to boot.
But government policies are needed to make a transition to renewable energy. Climate change is an external cost – borne by society rather than by energy producers – so market forces alone will not make the transition. Besides putting a price on carbon (perhaps with dividends returned to the public), government could make it easier to build the needed infrastructure. And public support is needed: For example, public acceptance of transmission lines to move electricity from the windy Great Plains to city centers is another challenge for an all-renewable grid.
A project on the scale of transforming the energy system will create jobs – many jobs – which is perhaps the economic measure of most importance to the citizenry.
Research from me and others shows that fully renewable electric grids are feasible with current technology at current prices; barriers to using renewable electricity are more political and cultural than technological or economic.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – Firefighters are making progress on a wildland fire that began burning near Redding on Thursday morning.
Cal Fire said the Mountain fire is being held at 600 acres, with 50-percent containment.
The fire is burning in Shasta County on Bear Mountain Road and Dry Creek Road, north of Bella Vista. The cause remains under investigation, Cal Fire said.
The Shasta College Campus is closed and some evacuations remain in place, according to Cal Fire.
Cal Fire said 14 structures – seven homes and seven other types – have been destroyed, and four homes and two other structures have been damaged. Damage assessment is ongoing.
There have been two injuries, both minor in nature, with the individuals treated and released, Cal Fire said.
Resources assigned include 903 firefighters and 72 overhead personnel, 79 engine companies, 31 fire crews, 12 water tenders, 12 bulldozers and two helicopters, according to Cal Fire’s report.
Cal Fire said firefighters will continue to extinguish interior hotspots and secure the containment lines.
In other state fire news, Cal Fire said the Yucca fire in Riverside County, which also began on Thursday, has burned 34 acres and is 65 percent contained.
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.
A motorhome towed during an enforcement and outreach operation on Thursday, August 22, 2019, in Clearlake, Calif. Photo courtesy of the Clearlake Police Department. CLEARLAKE, Calif. – The Clearlake Police Department on Thursday conducted an enforcement and outreach operation focused on illegal encampments in the city and issuing dozens of citations.
The department said police officers from its patrol division as well as Code Enforcement officers partnered with representatives from Lake County Child Welfare Services, Adult Services, Social Services, Employment Services and Mental Health.
Last week, police gave advance notice to encampment occupants, the department said.
During the Thursday operation, the officers and service representatives contacted the occupants who had remained, police said.
Police said the individuals who were contacted on Thursday were counseled regarding resources.
The operation also focused on upholding local laws, with officers issuing 34 citations for various violations, with the primary violation being illegal camping, police said.
As part of the operation, the police department said a dumped motorhome was removed from the field behind Tractor Supply and the Cache Creek Apartments.
“We appreciate the support of the county agencies that participated in this operation. We are hopeful to see their continued presence in the city to help address the impacts of homelessness. We will continue to partner with them and uphold the law,” the police department said in its statement on the operation.
One of the illegal encampments targeted in an enforcement and outreach operation on Thursday, August 22, 2019, in Clearlake, Calif. Photo courtesy of the Clearlake Police Department.
This picture of Neptune was taken by Voyager 2 less than five days before the probe's closest approach of the planet on Aug. 25, 1989. The picture shows the "Great Dark Spot" – a storm in Neptune's atmosphere – and the bright, light-blue smudge of clouds that accompanies the storm. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech.
Thirty years ago, on Aug. 25, 1989, NASA's Voyager 2 spacecraft made a close flyby of Neptune, giving humanity its first close-up of our solar system's eighth planet.
Marking the end of the Voyager mission's Grand Tour of the solar system's four giant planets – Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune – that first was also a last: No other spacecraft has visited Neptune since.
"The Voyager planetary program really was an opportunity to show the public what science is all about," said Ed Stone, a professor of physics at Caltech and Voyager's project scientist since 1975. "Every day we learned something new."
Wrapped in teal- and cobalt-colored bands of clouds, the planet that Voyager 2 revealed looked like a blue-hued sibling to Jupiter and Saturn, the blue indicating the presence of methane. A massive, slate-colored storm was dubbed the "Great Dark Spot," similar to Jupiter's Great Red Spot. Six new moons and four rings were discovered.
During the encounter, the engineering team carefully changed the probe's direction and speed so that it could do a close flyby of the planet's largest moon, Triton.
The flyby showed evidence of geologically young surfaces and active geysers spewing material skyward. This indicated that Triton was not simply a solid ball of ice, even though it had the lowest surface temperature of any natural body observed by Voyager: minus 391 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 235 degrees Celsius).
The conclusion of the Neptune flyby marked the beginning of the Voyager Interstellar Mission, which continues today, 42 years after launch. Voyager 2 and its twin, Voyager 1 (which had also flown by Jupiter and Saturn), continue to send back dispatches from the outer reaches of our solar system. At the time of the Neptune encounter, Voyager 2 was about 2.9 billion miles (4.7 billion kilometers) from Earth; today it is 11 billion miles (18 billion kilometers) from us. The faster-moving Voyager 1 is 13 billion miles (21 billion kilometers) from Earth.
This global color mosaic shows Neptune's largest moon, Triton. Pink-hued methane ice may compose a massive polar cap on the moon's surface, while dark streaks overlaying this ice is thought to be dust deposited from huge geyser-like plumes that erupt from Triton's surface. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech. Getting there
By the time Voyager 2 reached Neptune, the Voyager mission team had completed five planetary encounters. But the big blue planet still posed unique challenges.
About 30 times farther from the Sun than Earth is, the icy giant receives only about 0.001 times the amount of sunlight that Earth does. In such low light, Voyager 2's camera required longer exposures to get quality images. But because the spacecraft would reach a maximum speed of about 60,000 mph (90,000 kph) relative to Earth, a long exposure time would make the image blurry. (Imagine trying to take a picture of a roadside sign from the window of a speeding car.)
So the team programmed Voyager 2's thrusters to fire gently during the close approach, rotating the spacecraft to keep the camera focused on its target without interrupting the spacecraft's overall speed and direction.
The probe's great distance also meant that by the time radio signals from Voyager 2 reached Earth, they were weaker than those of other flybys. But the spacecraft had the advantage of time: The Voyagers communicate with Earth via the Deep Space Network, or DSN, which utilizes radio antennas at sites in Madrid, Spain; Canberra, Australia; and Goldstone, California.
During Voyager 2's Uranus encounter in 1986, the three largest DSN antennas were 64-meters (210 feet) wide.
To assist with the Neptune encounter, the DSN expanded the dishes to 70 meters (230 feet). They also included nearby non-DSN antennas to collect data, including another 64-meter (210 feet) dish in Parkes, Australia, and multiple 25-meter (82 feet) antennas at the Very Large Array in New Mexico.
The effort ensured that engineers could hear Voyager loud and clear. It also increased how much data could be sent back to Earth in a given period, enabling the spacecraft to send back more pictures from the flyby.
Voyager 2 took these two images of the rings of Neptune on Aug. 26, 1989, just after the probe's closest approach to the planet. Neptune's two main rings are clearly visible; two fainter rings are visible with the help of long exposure times and backlighting from the Sun. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech. Being there
In the week leading up to that August 1989 close encounter, the atmosphere was electric at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, which manages the Voyager mission. As images taken by Voyager 2 during its Neptune approach made the four-hour journey to Earth, Voyager team members would crowd around computer monitors around the Lab to see.
"One of the things that made the Voyager planetary encounters different from missions today is that there was no internet that would have allowed the whole team and the whole world to see the pictures at the same time," Stone said. "The images were available in real time at a limited number of locations."
But the team was committed to giving the public updates as quickly as possible, so from Aug. 21 to Aug. 29, they would share their discoveries with the world during daily press conferences. On Aug. 24, a program called "Voyager All Night" broadcast regular updates from the probe's closest encounter with the planet, which took place at 4 a.m. GMT (9 p.m. in California on Aug. 24).
The next morning, Vice President Dan Quayle visited the Lab to commend the Voyager team. That night, Chuck Berry, whose song "Johnny B. Goode" was included on the Golden Record that flew with both Voyagers, played at JPL's celebration of the feat.
Of course, the Voyagers' achievements extend far beyond that historic week three decades ago. Both probes have now entered interstellar space after exiting the heliosphere — the protective bubble around the planets created by a high-speed flow of particles and magnetic fields spewed outward by our Sun.
They are reporting back to Earth on the "weather" and conditions from this region filled with the debris from stars that exploded elsewhere in our galaxy. They have taken humanity's first tenuous step into the cosmic ocean where no other operating probes have flown.
Voyager data also complement other missions, including NASA's Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX), which is remotely sensing that boundary where particles from our Sun collide with material from the rest of the galaxy. And NASA is preparing the Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP), due to launch in 2024, to capitalize on Voyager observations.
The Voyagers send their findings back to DSN antennas with 13-watt transmitters — about enough power to run a refrigerator light bulb.
"Every day they travel somewhere that human probes have never been before," said Stone. "Forty-two years after launch, and they're still exploring."
From left, Chuck Berry and Carl Sagan at a Voyager 2 Neptune flyby celebration at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in August 1989. Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" is the only rock-and-roll song on the Golden Records currently traveling in interstellar space aboard Voyagers 1 and 2. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech.
Dennis Fordham. Courtesy photo. Death benefits payable from a life insurance policy on the death of the insured can be considerable.
Such benefits can either be paid directly to one or more individual beneficiaries or be paid to a trust administered for their benefit.
A trust can own and/or be the death beneficiary on a life insurance policy. Unlike retirement plans, there is no income tax disadvantage to naming a trust as the death beneficiary of a life insurance policy.
Moreover, for very high net worth persons, having an irrevocable life insurance trust purchase and own the life insurance policy is a way to keep a considerable asset outside of their estate and so minimize federal estate taxes.
Nowadays, however, with the estate tax threshold at around 11.2 million dollars far fewer persons are concerned with estate tax minimization.
Nonetheless, naming a trust, including a revocable living trust, as a death beneficiary on a life insurance policy offers other advantages: It allows for more contingency planning in the event that the primary death beneficiary does not survive to inherit; it allows for cash to fund a trust that may otherwise be short on cash; it allows for the death benefits to be held in further trust in order to protect such benefits and/or the beneficiary; and it allows for the management of the death benefits by a trustee.
Naming alternative death beneficiaries, and changing one’s death beneficiaries, through the life insurance company’s own change of death beneficiary forms does not compare favorably to naming a trust as the death beneficiary.
The change of death beneficiary form provides very limited choices when it comes to naming secondary alternative death beneficiaries. That is, what happens when a first tier alternative death beneficiary does not survive the insured.
With a trust, however, a tailored plan of distribution to secondary alternative beneficiaries is possible. The trustee receives the death benefit proceeds and follows the instructions in the trust as to how such proceeds are to be administered in any eventuality.
Life insurance policies are also a good way to ensure that the trust has adequate funds to pay for debts, administration expenses and to fund shares. This will allow other non-cash assets not to be sold at unfavorable prices and to equalize inheritances when some beneficiaries receive cash and other beneficiaries receive non cash assets (like real property and stocks).
Trusts also can be drafted and administered to protect the beneficiaries, who would otherwise inherit directly from the life insurance policy, from claims by judgment creditors.
When beneficiaries receive insurance proceeds outright such money becomes subject to collections by their own judgment creditor. Inside a trust the money remains safe from the beneficiaries’ creditors.
The trustee (someone other than the beneficiary) can be authorized to make distributions to or for the benefit of the beneficiary.
In addition, the trustee can administer the death benefits according to the settlor’s instructions. Otherwise, with an outright distribution, the money may be used in ways that the settlor does not approve. Such concern is relevant when the beneficiary does not manage their own money well, makes poor choices, or is subject to control by other persons.
Lastly, naming a trust as the owner of a life insurance policy can be accomplished by declaring the transfer of the life insurance policy within the trust itself.
In Dudek v. Dudek (2019) 34 CA5th 154, California’s Fourth District Court of Appeal, addressed whether the failure of the life insurance owner to properly execute the life insurance company’s own legal forms resulted in a failed attempt to transfer the ownership in the life insurance policy.
The Dudek appellate court ruled that language of conveyance included in a deceased insured’s trust was sufficient in itself to convey ownership of a life insurance policy.
In sum, naming a trust as death beneficiary may be appropriate for a variety of non-tax reasons such as who inherits if an alternative beneficiary fails to survive, equalizing out inheritances, and protecting beneficiaries’ inheritances.
Dennis A. Fordham, attorney, is a State Bar-Certified Specialist in estate planning, probate and trust law. His office is at 870 S. Main St., Lakeport, Calif. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and 707-263-3235.
A newly installed recreation sign on the Grindstone Ranger District in the Mendocino National Forest. Courtesy photo. MENDOCINO NATIONAL FOREST, Calif. – A group of volunteers signed on to some tough, dirty work last week to help clean and restore the Stonyford off-highway vehicle area and campgrounds on the Grindstone Ranger District that burned in the 2018 Ranch fire.
During the week-long project, 32 volunteers cleared 40 miles of trail, installed 26 barriers in Mill Valley Campground, removed over 80 yards of burned barriers and rebar and installed 30 signs and trail markers. The volunteers contributed a total of 196 hours
“It’s hard work but very satisfying to know that we are making a difference for future generations to enjoy this area,” Grindstone OHV Program Manager Sarah Ridenour-Chamberlin said.
Burned barriers removed on the Grindstone Ranger District in the Mendocino National Forest. Courtesy photo. Grindstone District Ranger Christine Hill added, “The volunteers did an outstanding job and we are very appreciative of their hard work. Thank you all so much.”
The Ranch fire is the largest wildland fire in California history at 410,203 acres; around 288,000 acres are on the Mendocino National Forest.
The fire burned through the southern portion of the forest, damaging the entire off-highway vehicle trail system, destroying or compromising culverts and bridges and impacting campgrounds, day use areas, trailheads and signage.
An off highway vehicle trail marker installed on the Grindstone Ranger District in the Mendocino National Forest. Courtesy photo.