Stolen property from several residential burglaries was found in a car driven by Tabytha Jarvis, 27, of Lake County, Calif., on Friday, December 14, 2018. Photo courtesy of the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office. NORTH COAST, Calif. – Sonoma County Sheriff’s deputies arrested two Lake County residents on Friday for a string of residential burglaries.
Arrested in the case were Ryan Messing, 33, and 27-year-old Tabytha Jarvis, according to a report from Sgt. Spencer Crum.
At about 4:15 p.m. Friday Sonoma County Sheriff’s deputies responded to a call from a woman who just arrived home in the 2900 block of River Road in Forestville to find her home in the process of being burglarized, Crum said.
He said the woman told the deputies when she arrived home a woman was parked in her driveway in a newer light-colored, small SUV. The woman was able to drive away after asking the homeowner if “Gina” lived there.
The homeowner then noticed a window broken to her front door and then heard someone rummaging through her garage. Crum said the homeowner ran back to her car and called the sheriff’s office from her cell phone. at which point she saw Messing, a parolee from Clearlake, run from the north side of her home and into a nearby vineyard.
Deputies, with the help of the sheriff’s helicopter unit, spotted Messing in the vineyard fleeing away from the scene. After a foot pursuit and struggle, Messing was taken into custody and arrested for residential burglary and resisting arrest, Crum said.
Sheriff’s property crimes detectives were called to the scene to assist. Crum said detectives were able to identify Messing’s girlfriend as Jarvis, who they confirmed was the woman driving the SUV at the victim’s home in Forestville after showing the victim a series of photographs.
Through investigative means, detectives tracked Jarvis to a residence in the 1500 block of North Street in Santa Rosa. In the driveway at that address was a silver, newer Nissan Rogue that was reported stolen out of Arbuckle and had been taken during another residential burglary, Crum said.
Crum said detectives contacted and arrested Jarvis at the home. Detectives searched the stolen car, the home and a storage shed at the home and found a trove of stolen property from at least three residential burglaries in Sonoma County, including eight stolen firearms, tools, jewelry and miscellaneous items.
Detectives also are attempting to solve at least two other burglaries that were committed in Lake County, Crum said.
Crum said both Messing and Jarvis were booked and are currently housed in the Sonoma County Jail charged with burglary, possession of stolen property, theft of firearms, possession of a stolen vehicle and conspiracy.
Messing is being held without bail due to a post release community supervision hold out of Lake County. Jarvis is being held on $500,000 bail after a judge increased the standard bail of $50,000, Crum said.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lake County Sheriff’s Office’s challenges with keeping positions filled will be a main item of discussion at this week’s Board of Supervisors meeting.
The board will meet beginning at 9 a.m. Tuesday, Dec. 18, in the board chambers on the first floor of the Lake County Courthouse, 255 N. Forbes St., Lakeport.
The meeting can be watched live on Channel 8 and online at https://countyoflake.legistar.com/Calendar.aspx. Accompanying board documents, the agenda and archived board meeting videos also are available at that link.
At 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, the board will hold the discussion on staffing and vacancies within the sheriff’s office.
Sheriff Brian Martin requested the item be placed on the agenda on behalf of the Lake County Deputy Sheriff’s Association.
Martin said the association asked for the timed item, not to exceed 25 minutes.
“This time would allow for a presentation of concerns as well as potential solutions. Statements from staff leaving the department may be presented,” he said in his memo to the board.
In an October letter to the editor, Lake County Deputy Sheriff’s Association President Sgt. John Drewrey said it is up to the county of Lake to make staffing the sheriff’s office a priority.
In other business, on the agenda is an informational workshop on how the county should establish policy dealing with short-term or vacation rental services for temporary lodging – such as through Airbnb and VRBO.
Specifically, the untimed item will discuss with staff what actions should be taken to regulate that industry, which is estimated to include more than 300 local residences in the unincorporated portion of the county.
The supervisors also will consider adopting a resolution of intention to develop and Implement an Ordinance adding Article VIII to Chapter 13 of the Lake County Code regarding hazardous vegetation abatement on unimproved parcels in the unincorporated areas of the county of Lake. That item also isn’t timed.
The board held a lengthy discussion on the proposed ordinance last week but it was decided that more work was needed. In the meantime County Counsel Anita Grant suggested the supervisors consider adopting the proposed resolution in order to be eligible for potential grant funding for a joint powers agreement meant to address fire risk in the county.
In another untimed item, the board will consider an agreement with the Romero Institute-New Paradigm College for the sale of the Lucerne Hotel.
The full agenda follows.
CONTRACT CHANGE ORDERS
5.1: Consideration of Contract Change Order #8 for the Clearlake Oaks Intertie Control Valve Project, SD17-03 to confirm the revised contract price, and authorize the chair to sign.
CONSENT AGENDA
6.1: Approve letter of support for the Middletown Art Center's 2019 Artists in Schools “Being Leonardo” grant application and authorize the chair to sign.
6.2: Adopt proclamation commending Diane Fridley for her years of service to the county of Lake.
6.3: Approve leave of absence request for Melinda Daunis from Oct. 21, 2018, through Jan. 31, 2019, and authorize the chair to sign.
6.4: Adopt resolution to support participation in the 2020 Census and consideration of direction to staff to complete the processes necessary to apply for state funding available to Lake County to support Census 2020 outreach efforts.
6.5: (a) Approve in concept revisions of Personnel Rule 1604.6, Salary Plan Administration, pending meet and confer; (b) rescind county policy restricting purchase of bottled water for county offices; (c) approve revisions of County Employee Appreciation and Team Building Policy (E.A.T.S).
6.6: Approve letter to CalPERS appealing decision disallowing LCDSA employees a special enrollment period based on increase in employer contribution for health care from $800 to $1,000 per employee per month, to be signed by all five board members.
6.7: (a) Waive the formal bidding process, pursuant to Lake County Code Section 38.2 as it is not in the public interest due to the unique nature of goods or services; and (b) approve the agreement between the county of Lake and Lake Family Resource Center for the provision of the FEMA-based immediate services program known as Cal Hope for Fiscal Year 2018-19, for an amount not to exceed $225,000; and authorize the chair to sign.
6.8: (a) Waive the formal bidding process, pursuant to Lake County Code Section 38.2, as it is not in the public interest due to the unique nature of goods or services; and (b) approve the agreement between the county of Lake and Redwood Community Services Inc. for substance use disorder perinatal intensive outpatient and perinatal outpatient drug free services provided at H.O.M.E. for Fiscal Year 2018-19, for an amount not to exceed $30,000; and authorize the chair to sign.
6.9: (a) Waive the formal bidding process, pursuant to Lake County Code Section 38.2, as it is not in the public interest due to the unique nature of goods or services; and (b) approve the agreement between the county of Lake and Redwood Community Services Inc. Tule House for substance use disorder perinatal residential services for fiscal year 2018-19, for an amount not to exceed $62,000; and authorize the chair to sign.
6.10: Adopt resolution accepting official canvass of the statewide general election held on Nov. 6, 2018; and, declaring the results of county measure under the board's jurisdiction.
6.11: Adopt resolution approving county of Lake Health Services to apply for the Farm to School Grant receiving one time funding in the amount of $75,000 through the Department of Agriculture Food and Nutrition Services for the Fiscal Years 2019-2021 and authorizing the director of Health Services to sign application, and necessary amendments, certifications, clauses, contracts, and payment requests to said grant agreement on behalf of the county of Lake.
6.12: Approve advanced step hire for Dana Sturzbecher, occupational therapist to the county of Lake Public Health Division.
6.13: Adopt resolution appointing representatives to the CSAC-EIA Insurance Authority Board of Directors.
6.14: Approve budget transfer and new capital asset in the amount of $6,033.00 to purchase a parks maintenance landscaping trailer and authorize the chair to sign.
6.15: Approve amendment one to the laboratory services agreement between the county of Lake and BC Laboratories Inc. for water sampling, monitoring, and testing at the Eastlake Landfill for an annual amount not to exceed $50,000.00; and authorize the chair to sign.
6.16: Approve the agreement between the county of Lake and SCS Engineers for California Environmental Quality Act environmental review and regulatory agency permitting services for the Eastlake Landfill expansion, and authorize the chair to sign.
6.17: Adopt resolution approving final parcel map – Smith & Smythe PM 15-03 and Authorizing the chair to sign.
6.18: Approve the plans and specifications for the Cycle 7 and Cycle 8 HSIP Signs and Striping Project; Bid no. 18-22, Federal Aid project no. HSIPL-5914 (104) & HSIPL-5914 (113).
6.19: (a) Waive the normal sealed bid process under Ordinance No. 2406, Section 38.2, for the purchase of four Central Garage pool vehicles and four ISF vehicles; and (b) authorize the Public Works director/assistant purchasing agent to issue a purchase order through the statewide bid contract in the amount of $104,266.94 and a purchase order to Matt Mazzei in the amount of $123,727.78.
6.20: Authorize the destruction of records under Government Code sections 26202 and 26205 for the sheriff's office.
6.21: (a) Adopt resolution to amend the adopted budget for FY 2018-19 by cancelling obligated fund balance to make available for appropriation in Budget Unit 8482; and (b) approve payment of outstanding general fund loan balance in full.
6.22: Adopt resolution accepting the Clearlake Oaks Intertie Control Valve Project, SD17-03, as complete and authorize the Special Districts administrator to sign the notice of completion.
6.23: Authorize the purchase of two sedans and two AWD's From Redwood Ford for $86,420.46 and authorize the Social Services director to sign the purchase order and all other accompanying documents for this transaction.
6.24: Approve first amendment between the county of Lake and JUMP Technology Services in the Amount of $10,560 from July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2019 and authorize the chair sign.
6.25: Approve the addendum to lease agreement between Mobil Modular for public restrooms at our Lower Lake main office, extending the term through April 14, 2022, for an annual lease rate of $6,192 and authorize the chair to sign.
TIMED ITEMS
7.2, 9:10 a.m.: Presentation of proclamation commending Diane Fridley for her years of service to the county of Lake.
7.3, 9:12 a.m.: (a) Consideration of continuing a proclamation of a local health emergency by the Lake County health officer due to the Mendocino Complex fire.
7.4, 9:15 a.m.: Consideration of acceptance of $11,100 donation from the Lake County Literacy Coalition.
7.5, 9:20 a.m.: Discussion and consideration of a first amendment to the joint powers agreement creating the Lake County Community Risk Reduction Authority in order to include the Kelseyville Fire Protection District as a member.
7.6, 9:30 a.m.: Public hearing, consideration of appeal (AB 18-02) of the planning commission's decision to approve use permit (UP 17-04) and variance (VR 18-03) for an unmanned 70-foot tall Broad Leaf Mono-tree Wireless telecommunication tower and variance to allow 15-foot wide access easement; project location 25 and 55 Worley Drive, Lakeport (APNs 029-141-31 and 029-141-33); applicant: Verizon Wireless (c/o Epic Wireless); appellant: Linda Shields.
7.7, 10 a.m.: Public hearing, consideration of appeal (AB 18-03) of planning commission's denial of variance (VR 18-05) to allow applicant to apply for a use permit to operate a Type 1c indoor cannabis cultivation license within 1,000 feet of a drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility; project location 14725 Catholic Church Road, Clearlake Oaks (APN 010-046-06); applicant, Liyu Shen.
7.8, 10:30 a.m.: Discussion and consideration of staffing and vacancies within the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.
UNTIMED ITEMS
8.2: Consideration of letter of support for a grant request to Cal Fire's California Climate Investments Fire Prevention Grant Program.
8.3: Reconsideration of (a) board appointment of delegate and alternate to the Rural County Representatives Board of Directors for 2019; (b) board appointment of delegate and alternate to Golden State Finance Authority Board of Directors for 2019; and (c) board appointment of delegate and alternate to the Rural Counties Representatives of California Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority Board of Directors for 2019.
8.4: Consideration of (a) late travel claim for District 3 Supervisor Jim Steele in the amount of $523.02; and (b) late mileage claim for District 3 Supervisor Jim Steele in the amount of $149.84.
8.5: Consideration of Intent to Award Bid No. 18-13 for propane fueling services.
8.6: Consideration of a memorandum of understanding (mou) between the county of Lake and the Lake County Sheriff Management Association for the period from Jan. 1, 2019, through Dec. 31, 2019.
8.7: Consideration of agreement regarding the sale of property located at 3700 Country Club Drive, Lucerne, California, between the county of Lake and the Romero Institute – New Paradigm College.
8.8: Second reading, consideration of an ordinance amending Article X of Chapter Two, of the Lake County Code to revise the local procurement standards to state and federal standards for public projects.
8.9: Informational Workshop to discuss impacts and potential policy options regarding short-term rental services for temporary lodging.
8.10: Consideration of a resolution of intention to develop and implement an ordinance adding Article VIII to Chapter 13 of the Lake County Code regarding hazardous vegetation abatement on unimproved parcels in the unincorporated areas of the county of Lake.
8.11: Discussion and consideration of temporary courthouse elevator modifications for inmate transport during repair of the court holdings elevator.
CLOSED SESSION
9.1: Conference with legal counsel: Existing Litigation pursuant to Gov. Code sec. 54956.9(d)(1): Tabba aka Ward v. Wright, et al.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
UPPER LAKE, Calif. – A student seriously injured in a car wreck earlier this year had the chance to return to his school for a visit earlier this month.
Kellen Smith has been fighting for months to recover from his injuries, which include severe brain trauma.
On that journey, he’s had the love and support of his family – parents Mike and Shannon Smith, and sister Annalise – and friends across the county and beyond.
So it was a big, heartwarming surprise when he returned to visit his friends at Upper Lake High School on Friday, Dec. 7, for the first time after three and a half months.
“It’s been a rough go,” but the love, support and positive messages have made a huge difference, Mike Smith told the students that day.
His mother said his prognosis for a full recovery is good, and the work is continuing.
In the video above, Kellen and his family speak about his road to recovery and he visits with his school friends.
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.
One of California’s elk. Photo by Dale Cotton/courtesy of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife has released a Statewide Elk Conservation and Management Plan.
The plan has undergone extensive public review and will help guide state wildlife managers’ efforts to maintain healthy elk herds.
The plan builds on the success of efforts to reestablish elk in suitable historic ranges, and management practices that have resulted in robust elk populations throughout the state.
It includes objectives for providing public educational and recreational opportunities, habitat enhancement and restoration, and minimization of conflicts on private property.
“This plan demonstrates CDFW’s commitment to build upon its strong foundation for the continued conservation of this iconic species for future management of California’s elk populations,” said CDFW Wildlife Branch Chief Kari Lewis.
There are three subspecies of elk in California: Roosevelt (Cervus canadensis roosevelti), Rocky Mountain (Cervus canadensis nelsoni) and Tule (Cervus canadensis nannodes). California’s 22 Elk Management Units, or EMUs, collectively comprise the distribution of all three species within their respective ranges in the state.
Management activities on those lands include controlling invasive weeds, installing water sources, conducting research and planting food plots.
Lake County is home to tule elk. The Lake Pillsbury Tule Elk Management Unit in Lake County includes land 300,000 acres near Lake Pillsbury within the historical tule elk range.
The plans said the department directly manages only a small fraction of land within current elk range.
The department owns six properties where elk land management activities occur: Grizzly Island Wildlife Area in Solano County, San Antonio Valley Ecological Reserve in Santa Clara County, Cache Creek Wildlife Area in Lake County, North Coast Wildlife Area Complex in Del Norte and Humboldt counties, and Carrizo Plains Ecological Reserve in San Luis Obispo County, and undesignated mitigation land (the future North Carrizo Ecological Reserve) in San Luis Obispo County.
The plan addresses historical and current geographic range, habitat conditions and trends, and major factors affecting all three species statewide, also in addition to individually addressing each EMU.
The EMU plans include herd characteristics, harvest data, management goals, and management actions to conserve and enhance habitat conditions on public and private lands.
More information about California’s Elk Management Program can be found on CDFW’s Web site.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – In its final regular meeting of the year, the Lakeport City Council’s two reelected members will take their oaths of office, the council will consider appointments to various committees and meet new city employees.
The council will meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 18, in the chambers at Lakeport City Hall, 225 Park St.
Mayor Mireya Turner and Council member Stacey Mattina will take their oaths of office at Tuesday’s meeting.
Turner and Mattina were not opposed in their reelection bids and so in August the council voted to appoint them to new four-year terms rather than go through the expense of an election.
This will be the start of Turner’s second term and Mattina’s third.
Once the two women take their oaths, the council will nominate and elect its mayor and mayor pro tem for the coming year.
Under council business, the council will consider four appointments to the Lakeport Economic Development Advisory Committee, two appointments to the Measure Z Advisory Committee, three Lakeport Planning Commission appointments, three appointments to the Traffic Safety Advisory Committee and two appointments to Parks and Recreation Commission.
Also on Tuesday, there will be presentation of awards to the winners of the annual Holiday Decorating Contest sponsored by the Lakeport Main Street Association, and introductions of Lakeport Police Department Sgt. Michael Davis and new Public Works employees Hector Heredia and Codie Lairson.
On the consent agenda – items considered noncontroversial and usually accepted as a slate on one vote – are ordinances; minutes of the joint council meeting on Dec. 3 and the regular meeting on Dec. 7; the Dec. 7 warrant register; confirmation of the continuing existence of a local emergency in the city of Lakeport; direction to the city clerk to prepare the 2019 Maddy Act appointments list and post at City Hall and the Lakeport Public Library; authorization of the cancellation of the regular meeting of Jan. 1, 2019; adoption of the resolution accepting construction of the Lakeshore Boulevard Roadway Repair Project by Granite Construction Co. and authorization of the filing of the notice of completion; and authorization of the city of Lakeport to contract with the county of Lake for dispatch services.
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 group of more than 70 volunteers came together on Monday, November 26, 2018, as part of the Totes for Teens effort. Courtesy photo. LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Totes4Teens delivered holiday Totes for Lake County teens to various agencies and high schools on Nov. 27.
The deliveries made 146 teens very happy for this holiday season. As a recipient student from a Totes4Teens local continuation high school said, “No one has ever done such a nice thing for me in my life.”
Totes4Teens is an all-volunteer organization that serves more than 130 teens each year with holiday gifts sent in a duffel bag or suitcase and Santa bag.
The group works with Lake County’s Child Protective Services director and local continuation high school principals to identify teens with the greatest needs.
The totes are actually a large duffel bag (or suitcase) and Santa utility bag filled with essential items for teens in need throughout Lake County.
The essential items consist of warm clothing like a coat or jacket, scarves and hats, socks, T-shirts and pajamas.
Totes4Teens volunteers personally make most of the hats and scarves. The duffel bag is filled to capacity with school supplies, toiletries in a zippered bag, soap wrapped in a hand knit wash cloth, filled Christmas stocking, a gift each for an adult female and an adult male, large insulated lunch box and hot and cold tumblers, pre-stamped cards for conventional mailing and more.
The Santa bag includes a size-appropriate sleeping bag, fleece blanket (made by Soroptimists of Clearlake), pillow with unique custom-made pillowcases, sports balls and bath towel.
Although 146 teens received these Totes, many more are left out due to lack of funds and capacity.
Totes4Teens raises funds strictly within Lake County from individuals and businesses. Volunteers shop for bargains throughout the year, but the best deals can usually be found right after Christmas, so funds are needed in December to support purchasing activity for the next year.
The goal is to buy new and best quality available within the budget. Volunteers from AmeriCorps this year said they were impressed with the quality of all the items accumulated.
Since 2005, Totes4Teens has donated to 1,949 teens. The community’s support is most appreciated, not only by members of the team but by the many teens who are so thankful to know their community cares about them.
Kelsey Wiley, educational counselor at Konocti Education Center, standing next to the totes delivered for some KEC students on Tuesday, November 27, 2018. Courtesy photo.
NORTH COAST, Calif. – The remains of a man reported missing last month in Mendocino County have been identified, with authorities reporting that his death no longer appears to have been a case of homicide.
The body of Frank Edward Pinckney, 58, of Eureka was identified by a forensic odontologist, according to Lt. Shannon Barney of the Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office.
Pinckney has been reported missing late last month, as Lake County News has reported.
The Mendocino County Sheriff's Office had begun to investigate Pinckney’s disappearance as a possible homicide after a burned Ford van later confirmed as his was found near Leggett, Barney said.
On the afternoon of Nov. 24 a citizen reported a vehicle fire just south of Leggett and stated that they saw an adult male wearing a white jumpsuit and heavy logging style boots fleeing the scene, with a leg on fire.
Authorities responded to the scene, Barney said, finding a deceased male inside the van. They found what appeared to be numerous bullet holes in the side of the van and a gun was located on the ground nearby.
They also searched the area for signs of the male subject the witness had seen near the van, but couldn’t locate anyone, Barney said.
On Nov. 28, a forensic odontologist was able to make a positive identification on the body found inside the van, identifying it as that of Pinckney, according to Barney.
Barney said Pinckney’s family members related that he had been exhibiting what was described as signs of mental health problems in the last few weeks of his life.
Mendocino County Sheriff's detectives re-interviewed an original witness, Barney said. It was previously thought that a subject was "seen fleeing from the scene" onto a private logging road.
However, Barney said the detectives since clarified with the witness that no one was seen running down a logging road and the man, whose leg was on fire, was last seen behind the van where the witness lost sight of him.
Barney said investigators now believe this man was actually Pinckney and that he reentered the van prior to his death.
Pinckney’s cause of death is still under investigation as there are forensics tests being completed, the results of which are not yet known, Barney said. However, investigators now believe homicide is no longer a likely scenario in this case.
Investigators do not believe the witness misled investigators and has been cooperating fully in this investigation, Barney said.
The Mendocino County Sheriff's Office is asking for the public's assistance.
Anyone with information related to the suspect or anyone who might have seen Pinckney or his vehicle in the past several days is asked to contact the Sheriff's Office Communications Center at 707-463-4086 or the Sheriff's Tip Line at 707-234-2100.
Clearlake Police Chief Andrew White, foregrounds, administers the oath to Lt. Tim Hobbs, Officer Robert west, Code Enforcement Officer Garrett Copas, police dispatcher Sabrinna LaCoy and kennel technician Charmaine Weldon on Thursday, December 13, 2018. Photo courtesy of Greg Folsom. CLEARLAKE, Calif. – At the Clearlake City Council meeting on Thursday, Dec. 13, in front of a large crowd, Police Chief Andrew White swore in four new employees and one newly promoted employee.
For many years the Clearlake Police Department has operated with just one lieutenant.
Chief White is beginning to reorganize the police department with one of the first steps being the promotion of Sgt. Tim Hobbs to lieutenant.
Among his new duties, Lt. Hobbs will be responsible for support services, including Code Enforcement and Animal Control.
In addition to swearing in Lieutenant Hobbs, Robert West was sworn in as a police officer, Garrett Copas was sworn in as a Code Enforcement officer, Sabrinna LaCoy was sworn in as a police dispatcher and Charmaine Weldon was sworn in as a kennel technician.
“This is a very important day for the Clearlake Police Department as we are adding officers and employees at all levels within the police department,” said Chief White.
On Friday White also administered the oath to Steven Diaz, a new police officer, at his police academy graduation.
With the addition of Diaz, “We will be up to fully budgeted staffing in all areas of the police department for the first time in quite a while,” White said.
“This is a very exciting way to finish out the calendar year for the city of Clearlake. Congratulations to Lt. Hobbs for promoting into this important command staff position,” said City Manager Greg Folsom.
“We continue to add quality personnel throughout our police department and we are pleased to have Officer West, Dispatcher LaCoy, Code Enforcement Officer Copas and Kennel Technician Weldon join our Clearlake team. With the addition of these new staff members we will be working hard in 2019 to make Clearlake a cleaner, safer city,” Folsom said.
James Naismith, the inventor of basketball. Public domain image, via Wikimedia Commons.
The only ones who hate rainy, cold weather more than children who have to stay indoors, cooped up, are their parents who have to endure that caged energy.
It’s even worse for teachers, who don’t even have the benefit of parental love and affection to mitigate their frustration at the frenzied little monsters, who unaccountably possess their classrooms on dark winter days.
Adversity, they say, is the mother of invention.
That certainly was the case during a cold December in 1891 Massachusetts, when James Naismith, a physical educator at the YMCA’s School for Christian Workers in Springfield, faced down a room of energetic youth.
It was snowing outside – hard. There was no way he was going to able to get his students to release their energy in the usual manner – you know, running long distances and other devices of torture that remain the object of pain in P.E. classes to this day.
The director of the physical education department tasked Naismith with the job of coming up with a game that the young boys could play indoors. Something that included plenty of running, of course, and good competition. Naismith had two weeks before presenting a polished final product.
Naismith himself had come from McGill University only recently, having left the Canadian college as the athletics director. The YMCA offered him a wider reach, since the youth organization had a national and, increasingly, international, reach. Hoping to impress his new employer, Naismith went right to work on his new task.
He tinkered with a few different ideas for several days before he remembered a game from his childhood. “Duck on a Rock,” was a game that included one of the most cherished activities of any young boy: throwing rocks.
In this game, the object was to knock a large rock from off the other team’s boulder before they did the same to yours. With a stone in hand, the boys would run around, passing the rock from one teammate to the other, before getting close enough to the opponents’ side to throw it and – ping! – knock off the opponents’ big rock. Simple, destructive and competitive – perfect.
Of course, Naismith couldn’t have his boys throwing rocks around inside the gymnasium, so he made some adjustments.
Naismith had the school custodian nail two peach baskets to the railing of a 10-foot-high balcony that ran around the school gymnasium. Since his class had 18 students, he divided them up into two teams of nine and explained to the players that they would score points by throwing the soccer ball into the opposing team’s basket.
“The first words were not very encouraging,” remembered Naismith years later, “when one of the class made the remark, ‘Humph, a new game.’ I asked the boys to tri it once as a favor to me. They started, and after the ball was first thrown up there was no need for further coaxing.”
The game was an instant favorite. Now it needed a name. One of the students suggested “Naismithball” as an option but, thankfully, that was voted down in favor of “basketball.”
Over the next decade or so, some things were refined in the new sport. For instance, in the first edition, the baskets didn’t have holes in them, so each time a team scored a point, they’d have to climb up and retrieve their ball.
Naismith wrote a rulebook on his new sport and the YMCA began marketing the game across the country to all of its branch locations. Shortly thereafter, they presented the game internationally in 1904 when they presented the game as a demonstration sport during the Summer Olympics in St. Louis.
By then James Naismith had moved on from the YMCA. More interested in physical education, Naismith went back to school and in 1898 earned a medical degree.
He wasn’t just going to let his invention go at that, however. After school, he went to the University of Kansas where he founded a basketball program. Over the next four decades, Naismith would initiate a long line of prestigious basketball coaches and players, including Phog Allen, who would eventually famously coach rock star players-turned coaches Dean Smith, Adolph Rupp and Ralph Miller.
Naismith would live long enough to see his sport officially join the Olympics and to see the birth of the NCAA tournament in 1939.
He died that year, at the age of 78, having forever made his mark in the field of sports and – more importantly – giving parents and teachers everywhere an outlet for their caged-in kids on stormy winter days.
Antone Pierucci is curator of history at the Riverside County Park and Open Space District and a freelance writer whose work has been featured in such magazines as Archaeology and Wild West as well as regional California newspapers.
SACRAMENTO – Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. on Monday announced the appointment of six California Superior Court judges.
The appointments include one in Alameda County, one in Napa County, one in Orange County, one in Sonoma County and and two in Yolo County.
The compensation for each of these positions is $207,424.
Alameda County Superior Court
Colin T. Bowen. Courtesy photo. Colin T. Bowen
Colin T. Bowen, 55, of Oakland, has been appointed to a judgeship in the Alameda County Superior Court.
Bowen has served as supervising deputy city attorney at the Oakland City Attorney’s Office since 2015. He was interim board counsel at the Oakland Citizens Police Review Board from 2014 to 2015 and a sole practitioner from 2013 to 2015.
Bowen was a partner at Clay and Bowen LLP from 2007 to 2013 and a deputy public defender at the Alameda County Public Defender’s Office from 1994 to 2007.
He was an associate at McKenna and Cuneo from 1992 to 1994 and at Miller, Starr and Regalia from 1990 to 1992.
Bowen earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of California, Berkeley School of Law and a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of California, Los Angeles.
He fills the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge Roy Hashimoto.
Bowen is a Democrat.
Napa County Superior Court
Scott R. L. Young. Courtesy photo. Scott R. L. Young
Scott R. L. Young, 39, of Napa, has been appointed to a judgeship in the Napa County Superior Court.
Young has served as a commissioner at the Napa County Superior Court since 2018. He served as a deputy district attorney at the Napa County District Attorney’s Office from 2017 to 2018 and from 2007 to 2014.
Young served as a deputy district attorney at the Orange County District Attorney’s Office from 2014 to 2017 and was a sole practitioner from 2005 to 2007.
He earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law and a Bachelor of Science degree from Southern Oregon University.
He fills the vacancy created by the conversion of a court commissioner position on Dec. 13.
Young is a Democrat.
Orange County Superior Court
Sandy N. Leal. Courtesy photo. Sandy N. Leal
Sandy N. Leal, 46, of Irvine, has been appointed to a judgeship in the Orange County Superior Court.
Leal has served as a deputy chief at the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Central District of California since 2015, where she has been an Assistant U.S. Attorney since 2004.
She served as an assistant district counsel at the U.S. Department of Justice, Immigration and Naturalization Service from 1999 to 2004.
Leal earned a Juris Doctor degree from Boston College Law School and a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Washington.
She fills the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge Timothy J. Stafford.
Leal is registered without party preference.
Sonoma County Superior Court
Mark A. Urioste. Courtesy photo. Mark A. Urioste
Mark A. Urioste, 44, of Santa Rosa, has been appointed to a judgeship in the Sonoma County Superior Court.
Urioste has served as a commissioner at the Sonoma County Superior Court since 2018. He served as a deputy district attorney at the Sonoma County District Attorney’s Office from 2006 to 2018 and was an associate at Babin and Seeger in 2006.
Urioste served as a research attorney and judicial assistant to the Honorable Julie Spector at the King County Superior Court from 2003 to 2005.
He earned a Juris Doctor degree from the Lewis and Clark College School of Law and a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Connecticut.
Effective Dec. 31, he will fill the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge Rene A. Chouteau.
Urioste is registered without party preference.
Yolo County Superior Court
Tom M. Dyer. Courtesy photo. Tom M. Dyer
Tom M. Dyer, 44, of Sacramento, has been appointed to a judgeship in the Yolo County Superior Court.
Dyer has served as chief deputy legislative affairs secretary in the Office of Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. since 2015. He served as legislative director at the California Department of Finance from 2012 to 2015 and at the California Department of Personnel Administration from 2010 to 2012.
Dyer served as staff counsel at the California Department of Social Services in 2009, labor relations counsel at the California Department of Personnel Administration from 2006 to 2008 and enforcement counsel at the California Fair Political Practices Commission in 2006. He served as a deputy district attorney at the Sutter County District Attorney's Office from 2003 to 2005.
Dyer earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of California, Davis School of Law and a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of California, Davis.
He fills the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge Kathleen M. White. Dyer plans to continue serving in his current position in the Governor’s Office until the end of the Administration.
Dyer is a Democrat.
Peter M. Williams. Courtesy photo. Peter M. Williams
Peter M. Williams, 50, of Sacramento, has been appointed to a judgeship in the Yolo County Superior Court.
Williams has served as deputy secretary, general counsel at the California Business, Consumer Services and Housing Agency since 2016.
Prior to that, he served in several positions at the California Department of Justice, Office of the Attorney General from 2001 to 2015, where he was supervisor of the Fraud and Special Prosecutions Unit and was a cross-designated special federal prosecutor with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in both the Eastern and Central Districts of California.
He was an associate at Boutin Jones Inc. from 2000 to 2001, at Carle, Mackie, Power and Ross from 1998 to 2000 and at Bolling, Walter and Gawthrop from 1996 to 1998.
Williams earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of San Diego School of Law and a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of California, Santa Barbara.
He fills the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge Steven M. Basha.
The “Country Air” quilt block in Lakeport, Calif. Photo courtesy of the Lake County Quilt Trail. LAKEPORT, Calif. – The new “Country Air” quilt block has been added to the Lake County Quilt Trail.
It was installed on the Country Air Properties office building at 460 S. Main St. in Lakeport.
Country Air Properties was founded in 1980 and has been serving Lake County's real estate needs ever since. Phil Smoley is owner/broker of Country Air Properties. To learn more about Country Air Properties go to www.countryair.com.
The Lake County Quilt Trail is an agricultural and tourism project designed to promote community pride.
The 4-foot by 4-foot quilt block was drawn and painted by the Lake County Quilt Trail team, a group of dedicated volunteer quilters, graphic artists, painters, writers and carpenters.
For more information about the Lake County Quilt Trail visit its Web site or Facebook page.
Lisa Bitel, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
Santa Claus will soon be coming to town, bringing gifts to children.
Santa has several aliases, depending on the part of the world you live in. The English call him Father Christmas, the French know him as Père Noël, and Kris Kringle seems be a version of the Christkind, or Christ Child, who leaves treats for good German Lutherans.
In the Netherlands, he arrives in town on a steamboat or horse from Spain. On the night of Dec. 5, Dutch children put their shoes on the hearth – these days near the central heating duct – hoping that he will fill them with sweet rewards rather than a reprimand for poor behavior. The Dutch call him Sinterklaas – which has come into American English as ‘Santa Claus’ – short for Sint Nicolaas or St. Nicholas.
St. Nicholas and Santa Claus are historically the same man. But unlike the jolly figure who purportedly flies on a sleigh from the North Pole, the saint came originally from the balmy Mediterranean coast.
Who was St. Nicholas really?
As a historian of religions who has written books about ancient saints, I caution against reading accounts of saints’ lives as factual history. However, the earliest stories of St. Nicholas seem to correlate with histories and church documents of the period.
According to these early medieval texts, Nicholas was born around 260 A.D. into a Christian family. His birthplace was near the town of Myra, now called Demre, on the southwest coast of modern Turkey. At the time, Christianity was illegal under the Roman empire.
He studied to be a priest and spent time in prison for his beliefs. However, after Emperor Constantine legalized Christianity, Nicholas was elected Bishop of Myra.
During his lifetime, he became famous for defending his people against imperial taxes and other forms of oppression. According to the earliest document about Nicholas, from the fifth century, he prevented three loyal generals from unjust execution for treason.
A ninth-century Greek legend claims he revived three scholars who had been murdered and stashed in a pickling tub. He also saved three girls whose poverty-stricken father wanted to sell them into prostitution.
After his death, people believed that Nicholas continued to work miracles. His burial place, below the floor of his church, became a popular destination for pilgrims who begged Nicholas to relay their petitions to God.
Proof that Nicholas was listening, they believed, was in the “manna” – holy oil or water – that dripped from the tomb. Pilgrims took this manna home in little bottles or used rags to sop up the moisture that dripped from the saint’s tomb in its subterranean crypt. This was a common pilgrimage practice at Christian shrines.
Visitors to the coastal town of Myra spread Nicholas’ fame along sea routes across the Mediterranean. From there, word passed to the Latin West, and upriver to Russia. Soon, pilgrims from all over Christendom were journeying to Myra to seek the gifts of protection and healing from the saint, who was said to be especially attentive to children.
Italians steal the body
This pilgrimage was disrupted in the 11th century when Seljuk Turks invaded Anatolia. Christians feared that the Muslims who now governed Demre would disregard the saint’s tomb. So, one crew of pious Italian Christians decided to take action.
In 1087, three ships laden with grain set out from Bari, on Italy’s southeast coast, bound for Antioch. However, according to a monk named Nicephorus who wrote immediately after the event, their real mission was to steal St. Nicholas’ body.
In Antioch they heard a rumor that the Venetians too were planning a similar heist. The Barian sailors hastily sold off their grain and headed for Myra in search of St. Nicholas’ church. Priestly custodians there became suspicious when the sailors asked to see the saint’s body.
The Barians claimed that the pope had a vision directing him to fetch Nicholas to Italy. When the priests refused, they offered gold for the relics, but the offer “was tossed aside like dung.” Done with arguing, the Barians caught and bound the priests. Suddenly, a phial of manna fell to the pavement and broke. It seemed that St. Nicholas spoke to them: “It is my will that I leave here with you.”
So, the Barians broke through marble floor with picks and hammers. A delicious aroma filled the church as they opened the tomb. They found the bones swimming in a small sea of manna. They carefully wrapped the relics in a silk case brought for the purpose.
Nicephorus describes how they fled to their ship, pursued by outraged priests and a howling crowd of citizens demanding that they “give back the father who has by his protection kept us safe from visible foes.”
Yet the crew made it back to the harbor at Bari, where the townsfolk and clergy processed, singing joyous hymns, to greet the saint.
St. Nicholas gets a reputation
A new church was built for Nicholas in the court of the governor of Bari. A few years later, Pope Urban II — the one who would preach the First Crusade – formally enshrined the relics of the saint.
A view of the interior of the church of St. Nicholas, built in the 11th century, at Bari.AP Photo
The Barians believed that manna continued to ooze from Nicholas’ coffin. And going by the claim on the basilica’s website, the belief persists to this day.
Within a decade of the saint’s arrival in 1087, the Basilica di San Nicola was one of Europe’s most popular pilgrimage destinations. May 9 is still celebrated as the day that Nicholas moved shrines or was “translated.”
For at least five centuries, the region, which includes Bari and its saint, was caught in constant wars for possession of southern Italy. In 1500, Bari fell into the hands of King Ferdinand of Aragon, whose marriage to Queen Isabella of Spain created a global naval power.
Because Nicholas was a patron saint of sailors, Spanish sailors and explorers carried stories of the saint wherever they went: Mexico, the Caribbean, Florida and other ports around the world.
St. Nicholas around the world: Russian Orthodox believers line up to kiss the relics of St. Nicholas that were brought from an Italian church where they have lain for 930 years.AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko
Even the Dutch, who rebelled against Catholic Spain and formed a Calvinist republic in 1581, somehow maintained their devotion to Sinterklass. In other parts of Europe, St. Nicholas lost his feast day but his concern for children helped link him to the gift-giving tradition of another December feast day: Christmas.
How true is this story?
In the 1950s, Italian scientists examined the bones enshrined in the Basilica di San Nicola, seeking evidence of authenticity.
They found the skull and incomplete skeleton of a man, dating to around the fourth century. More recent technology has allowed experts to use the bones to reconstruct Nicholas’ face – he looks like an old Greek man with a broad, worn face. He lacks the rosy cheeks and Anglo-Germanic features of modern Christmas decorations, but like the Santa Claus of greeting cards, he was probably bald.
Turkish archaeologists now claim that the Italians stole the wrong body and that Nicholas’ remains never left Demre. They have discovered another sarcophagus dating to the fourth century in the same church, which they claim contains the saint.
Meanwhile, historians have suggested that the story of Nicholas’ translation is a fiction purposely created to advertise a new pilgrimage center in the 11th century. Although relic theft was common in the Middle Ages, grave-robbers often made mistakes or lied about the authenticity and source of their bones. Nothing in the shrine at Bari proves that the bones inside belong to the fourth-century Bishop Nicholas.
Still, this holiday season, when you tell your children about Santa Claus, why not include the tale of Santa’s well-traveled bones? And don’t forget the manna, which is believed to still flow in Bari.