
UPPER LAKE, Calif. – After nearly a decade of fundraising and planning, on Monday the booster club for Upper Lake High School, along with faculty, staff and students gathered to celebrate the beginning of construction on new lighting for the stadium in Cougar Country.
Led by the Upper Lake High School Booster Club, with support from the school district, the project to build lighting at the high school football stadium officially began on Monday following a brief ceremony.
Among those who came out for the rainy Monday morning groundbreaking were former board members Rich Swaney and John Tomkins, District 3 Supervisor Jim Steele, Upper Lake Unified Superintendent Patrick Iaccino, Upper Lake Unified School District Board President Keith Austin, Habematolel Pomo of Upper Lake Tribal Chair Sherry Treppa and members of her council, Upper Lake High School Principal Sandy Coatney, Upper Lake Middle School Principal Don Boyd and Upper Lake Elementary School Principal Stephanie Wayment, Athletic Director Mike Smith and a host of students, staff and faculty.
Also standing by at the ready with equipment to begin the work after the ceremony concluded were crew members from Modesto Executive Electric Inc., the project’s contractor.
Ron Raetz, a retired teacher and former district board member, has led the effort to bring lights to the stadium for the last nine and a half years along with his wife, Patty, also a retired Upper Lake High teacher.
He said the project started when, one October evening a decade ago, he and a group of parents were watching a soccer game at the stadium, with the children playing in the dark. Raetz said a woman watching the game said they needed lights, and that kicked off the effort.
Melanie Sneathen, president of the booster club, said they raised $165,000 but were still short of the total required to install the lights.

That’s when the Habematolel Pomo of Upper Lake, which owns Running Creek Casino, came forward, Sneathen said.
Sneathen said that, earlier this year, the tribe committed to a $130,000 donation for the lighting. The formal presentation of that final, critical piece of funding was part of the Monday celebration.
Treppa said when the tribe started the casino, it committed to helping with these kinds of community projects, especially those oriented toward youth.
“We’re very proud to be part of this,” said Treppa, who along with members of her tribal council presented Raetz and the boosters with a big check for $130,000.
Treppa also thanked community members for their support of the tribe.
Iaccino offered his thanks to the tribe, to Raetz and the community, and parent Sara Sanchez – who was herself a student at the high school, as was her father, both of them students of Patty Raetz – thanked the Raetzes for their tireless support of the project and the school.

“They have never, ever stopped helping our school,” Sanchez said.
She added of the project, “Upper Lake deserves it,” noting the improvements at the school over the last several years.
Raetz recalled the project’s beginnings and its inherent difficulties.
“You think there’s no way you’re going to raise that much money in this community,” he said.
The takeaway: “Don’t give up on your dreams,” he said, joking that, sooner or later, someone will bail you out.
“Now it’s time to start thinking about, what do we want to do next,” Raetz said.
Smith, as athletic director, committed to putting the best teams possible together to play on the field in the days ahead.
Iaccino told Lake County News that the project was carried out by the booster club, with the assistance of the school district and the requirement that, like all school projects, it ultimately must be approved by the Division of the State Architect.
Last year there had been concerns that there could be more costs incurred due to environmental requirements for the project. However, after state officials reviewed the project, that concern was allayed, and the work was cleared to begin, Iaccino said.

On Monday, the contractor was set to begin digging the footings for the four light standards, said Iaccino. There will be two standards on each side of the field, with the footings to be dug down 20 feet.
Iaccino said the light installation is expected to be completed by the time graduation arrives at the end of May.
This is expected to be the last major project Iaccino will see concluded during his tenure as superintendent. He will retire June 30 after more than 10 years in the district.
During that time, he has overseen major campus building and modernization projects, and was a prime mover behind the successful effort to unify the elementary and high school districts.
Beyond the lighting project, the stadium, which has been in use since 1976, also needs new seating, Iaccino said.
Currently, there are seats for about 500 spectators on one side of the field. Iaccino said they have begun getting bids to put in 1,000 new seats, with estimates ranging between $250,000 and $300,000 for that new stadium seating.
There are other big tasks ahead, including a high school weight room rebuild and millions of dollars of modernization required at the elementary school, with the latter expected to be part of a bond measure to be proposed to district voters in 2018, Iaccino 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.
