NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – The public is invited to submit comments on the proposed Plaskett-Keller August Complex Phase 1 project on the Mendocino National Forest.
This proposed project covers approximately 4,500 acres in the middle of the Forest about 15 miles from Covelo and 36 miles from Willows.
The proposed Plaskett-Keller project crosses multiple jurisdictional lines – ranger districts, counties and land ownership – and is an excellent area for partnerships and collaboration on land management. It also contains several campgrounds and major roads used frequently by the public and Forest Service employees.
The proposal includes post-fire recovery activities to remove fire-killed and fire-injured trees in order to improve employee and public safety, capture remaining economic value of dead trees, and reduce post-fire fuels to prevent the excessive accumulation of fuels.
The August Complex burned a total of 1,032,648 acres, including 612,634 acres on the Mendocino National Forest.
For post-fire recovery, forest resource specialists considered the rapid assessment conducted by the Mendocino, Shasta-Trinity and Six Rivers national forests as a foundation to develop a three-phase approach for restoration.
Phase 1 will address time-sensitive safety concerns along roadways and campgrounds as well as economic recovery.
Phase 2 involves restoration activities such as reforestation, additional fuels reduction work, habitat enhancement, recreation site improvements, and more.
Phase 3 will focus on long-term recovery across the landscape using the Watershed Condition Framework approach.
The participation of interested persons, organizations, state and local governments, and tribes is encouraged throughout the process of developing this project.
Forest officials said their desire is to receive comments on the merits of the proposed action, as well as comments that address concerns.
Public questions and comments regarding this proposal are an integral part of the environmental analysis process. Comments will be used to identify issues and develop alternatives to the proposed action. To best assist the Forest Service in developing this project, comments should be as specific as possible.
Comments would be the most useful if they are received by Wednesday, March 17.
All comments, including source information, will become part of the public record, and therefore will be subject to release upon request.
How to comment: Comments may be submitted via email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. (include “Plaskett-Keller” in the subject line); via mail to Mendocino National Forest: Attn: Plaskett-Keller. 825 N Humboldt Ave., Willows, CA 95988; or via facsimile to 530-934-7384.
About 8 percent of American adults reported they had received a COVID-19 vaccination and around half of adults who haven’t (51%) indicated they would definitely get a vaccine, while an additional 26 percent said they probably would, according to new U.S. Census Bureau data.
The latest revision to Phase 3 of the Household Pulse Survey was implemented on Jan. 6 and included a new series of questions about COVID-19 vaccinations and attitudes toward the vaccines.
This article is based on analysis of Phase 3 data collected Jan. 6 through Jan. 18, a time period in which the Census Bureau sent invitations to 1,037,972 households and received a total of 68,348 responses.
This content was added in partnership with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC. Based on survey self-reports, these data may differ from other administrative information, particularly those collected during different time periods.
The new vaccination series asks respondents if they had received a COVID-19 vaccination. Those who had are then asked if they plan to receive all required doses.
Adults who have not been vaccinated are asked if they plan to get a vaccine once available. Respondents who express uncertainty are asked the reason(s) for their reluctance.
These data show:
– About 95 percent of the estimated 19 million who reported receiving a COVID-19 vaccination said they had received or plan to receive all required doses. – Around half (51%) of the approximately 226 million adults yet to receive a vaccination said they “definitely” plan to receive it when available (Figure 1). – An additional 26 percent of adults yet to be vaccinated reported they would “probably” get a vaccine once available, compared to approximately 14 percent who said they would “probably not,” and 10 percent who said they would “definitely not” get vaccinated. Overall, these results indicate that around a quarter of all unvaccinated adults will probably not, or will definitely not, receive a COVID-19 vaccine once one is available to them.
Age factors
During this initial collection period, the reported likelihood of eventually receiving a COVID-19 vaccination once available varied by age and older adults appear to be more certain they want to get vaccinated.
While about 71 percent of adults ages 65 and over reported they would “definitely” get a vaccine once available, around half (51%) of those ages 45 to 64 said the same (Figure 2).
Meanwhile, among those ages 30-44 and 18-29, only 41 percent indicated they would “definitely” get a vaccine once available (The percentages for these two youngest age groups were not statistically different.)
Racial differences
The reported likelihood of receiving a COVID-19 vaccination once available also varied by Hispanic origin and race (Figure 3).
About two-thirds of unvaccinated non-Hispanic Asian adults indicated they would “definitely” get a vaccine once available, compared to around 56 percent of non-Hispanic Whites.
In contrast, only about 47 percent of Hispanics, 37 percent of non-Hispanics of other races or two or more races, and 30 percent of non-Hispanic Blacks said they would “definitely” get a vaccine once available.
Health insurance coverage
Attitudes about receiving a COVID-19 vaccine also varied according to health insurance status. Those without insurance were less likely to say they would get vaccinated (Figure 4).
Among the unvaccinated, over half (56%) of insured adults and 34 percent of uninsured adults said they would “definitely” get a vaccine when available.
Respondents who indicated uncertainty about receiving a vaccination (49%) were also asked the reason(s) for their reluctance.
The most frequently selected answers included:
– Concern about possible side effects (51%) and plans to wait to see if the vaccines are safe (50%). The percentages for these two reasons were not statistically different. – Feeling that other people might need the vaccine more right now (28%).
It should be noted that respondents could provide more than one response to this question.
All respondents were also asked whether they had received a positive COVID-19 diagnosis from a medical professional; around 14 percent indicated they had. As more Americans are vaccinated, Household Pulse Survey data will allow for meaningful analysis of demographic differences in vaccination rates and positive COVID-19 diagnoses. Additional information about the number of COVID-19 vaccines administered is available from the CDC.
The estimates in this analysis are based on survey self-reports from a specific time period and may not align with published counts generated from other sources.
Thom File is a sociologist in the Census Bureau’s Social, Economic and Housing Statistics Division. Abinash Mohanty is a statistician in the Census Bureau’s Social, Economic and Housing Statistics Division.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Lakeport City Council this week will honor a former planning commissioner and consider extending the contract with a company hired to recruit retailers to the city.
The council will meet in closed session at 5:30 p.m. to discuss labor negotiations before the public portions of the meeting begins at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 16.
The meeting will be by teleconference only. The city council chambers will not be open to the public.
To speak on an agenda item, access the meeting remotely here or join by phone by calling toll-free 669-900-9128 or 346-248-7799. The webinar ID is 973 6820 1787, access code is 477973; the audio pin will be shown after joining the webinar. Those phoning in without using the web link will be in “listen mode” only and will not be able to participate or comment.
Comments can be submitted by email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. To give the City Clerk adequate time to print out comments for consideration at the meeting, please submit written comments prior to 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 16.
Indicate in the email subject line "for public comment" and list the item number of the agenda item that is the topic of the comment. Comments that read to the council will be subject to the three minute time limitation (approximately 350 words). Written comments that are only to be provided to the council and not read at the meeting will be distributed to the council prior to the meeting.
The council on Tuesday will present a proclamation honoring Ken Wicks Jr. for his years of service to the city of Lakeport, including nearly a decade spent on the planning commission. His term ended in December, and last week he was commended by the commission for his work.
Under council business, City Manager Kevin Ingram will seek authorization to execute the first extension in the form of an amendment to the professional services agreement with The Retail Coach for retail strategies.
Ingram’s report to the council explained that the city hired the company in July 2019 to conduct an assessment of the Lakeport area “and provide targeted data sets and education opportunities focused on sustaining and enhancing existing businesses as well as recruiting new ones.”
He said the company’s proposal contained eight phases: Analyzing the market, determining retail opportunities, identifying development and redevelopment opportunities, identifying retailers and developers for recruitment, marketing and branding, recruiting retailers and developers, downtown revitalization and retail recruitment coaching.
The majority of the items in the first five phases were completed but the COVID-19 pandemic “severely limited The Retail Coach’s ability to begin recruitment, revitalization efforts and education opportunities,” Ingram wrote.
Ingram said the company agreed to “pause” the contract.
“As businesses seek to return to a degree of normalcy, City staff has begun conversations with The Retail Coach to work towards completion of the original proposal,” Ingram wrote in his report.
He said The Retail Coach has agreed to extend the contract at a reduced rate of $25,000 rather than $30,000.
The council also will hold the traffic safety biannual review in which it will discuss observed trends in received traffic safety-related complaints to the city.
Police Chief Brad Rasmussen also will give a police statistics and training summary report for 2020.
In other business, Community Development Director Jenni Byers will ask for approval for staff to initiate a text amendment to the zoning ordinance to address microenterprise home kitchen operations and work with county staff so that the text amendment would be in effect if the county proposes to continue with a permanent program after July 1.
On the consent agenda – items considered noncontroversial and usually accepted as a slate on one vote – are ordinances and minutes of the regular council meeting on Feb. 2.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Anderson Marsh Interpretive Association is among 15 state parks and park partners receiving grants to help restore fragile habitats, rebuild parks and create a climate-resilient state park system.
The California State Parks Foundation is awarding $135,000 in grants from its new Wildfire Resiliency and Prevention Fund to help 15 parks – 10 of which are in the Northern California region – recover from devastating wildfires.
The Anderson Marsh Interpretive Association, or AMIA, will receive $9,026, with the grant term running for a year, beginning March 1, the foundation reported.
The grant will allow AMIA to partner with the Department of Parks and Recreation in restoring and rehabilitating the three-acre entrance meadow that first greets visitors to Anderson Marsh State Historic Park, which burned in the 2016 Clayton fire, the association reported.
“AMIA is grateful for the financial support of CSPF that will allow this project to help protect the park’s historic ranch house and barn complex, as well as creating an opportunity to educate the public about the benefits of native plants in reducing the risk of wildfire,” said AMIA President Roberta Lyons.
The nonprofit California State Parks Foundation, which advocates for and supports California state parks, created the Wildfire Resiliency and Prevention Fund in 2020, a record-setting year for wildfires in California.
“The 2020 California wildfires were horrifically destructive, and our beloved state parks have undergone devastating damage. There is a real need to restore fragile habitats and rebuild parks, while building climate resiliency to mitigate the impact of climate change,” said Rachel Norton, executive director of California State Parks Foundation.
The Wildfire Resiliency and Prevention Grant opportunity includes $135,917 in grant funding that supports activities resulting in outcomes including assessment, restoration, preparedness and education.
AMIA, a nonprofit association cooperating with State Parks to support and promote educational and interpretive activities at Anderson Marsh State Historic Park, said its project will begin with a prescribed burn at the park.
The project focuses on making the park more resilient to the ever-increasing wildfires that are being caused by climate change, as well as educating the public about what can be done to reduce the risk from wildfire, including the planting of native plants.
“The project will help create a defensible space around the park's historic ranch house and barns through the clearing of non-native species and overgrowth and the replanting of native grasses, shrubs, and trees,” said AMIA Grant Director Henry Bornstein. “At the end of the project, the entrance meadow will be restored to a more natural state and a native plant demonstration area will be created where visitors can compare the treated native entrance meadow to the adjacent untreated areas, and learn about the advantages of native plants in the control of wildfires.”
“State Parks and AMIA have continued to work together on projects which further enhance visitor experiences at Anderson Marsh State Historic Park,” said State Parks Northern Butte District Superintendent Matt Teague. “This project will provide an excellent opportunity to educate users of the park on the benefits of native habitat as it relates to wildfire intensity and management.”
In addition to Anderson Marsh, other grant winners are the California Native Plant Society for the Big Basin Redwoods State Park and Henry W. Coe State Park; California State Parks for Mount Diablo State Park; California State Parks, Bay Area District Natural Resource Management Program for Trione-Annadel State Park and Sugarloaf Ridge State Park; California State Parks, Sierra District for Ed Z'Berg Sugar Pine Point State Park; Gold Country Avian Studies for Big Basin Redwoods State Park; Sonoma Ecology Center for Sugarloaf Ridge State Park; South Yuba River Citizens League for South Yuba River State Park; Stewards of the Coast and Redwoods for Armstrong Redwoods State Natural Reserve and Austin Creek State Recreation Area; Anahuak Youth Sports Association for Rio de Los Angeles State Park and Los Angeles State Historic Park, Bowtie Parcel; California State Parks/Poppy Reserve Mojave Desert Interpretive Association for Arthur B. Ripley Desert Woodland State Park; California State Parks in partnership with Chino Hills State Park Interpretive Association and Hills For Everyone for Chino Hills State Park; and Los Angeles Audubon Society for Baldwin Hills Scenic Overlook State Park and Kenneth Hahn State Recreation Area.
AMIA has received previous grants for projects from the California State Parks Foundation, including $5,000 in 2020 to repair the wooden boardwalk on Cache Creek Nature Trail; $3,000 in 2015 for purchasing interpretive equipment for nature walks, school field trips and senior tours; and $6,000 in 2014 for general operations.
For information about Anderson Marsh State Historic Park or AMIA, visit www.andersonmarsh.org or contact AMIA at either This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or 707-995-2658.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Lake County Sheriff’s Office said Monday afternoon that a missing south county boy has been found safe.
Austin Maloney, 12, was located nearly 24 hours after he had gone missing on Sunday afternoon.
He had last been seen in the area of Jerusalem Grade Road near Hidden Valley Lake, as Lake County News has reported.
Lt. Corey Paulich of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office said the boy had left his house on Sunday after a disagreement with his family.
The Lake County Sheriff’s Office was notified of his disappearance on Sunday evening and activated its Search and Rescue team, which searched for the child overnight.
Other agencies, including the California Highway Patrol, also were reported to have assisted with the search, as had volunteers from the community.
Paulich said Austin was found safe in the Jerusalem Valley area and returned to his family.
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.
We inaugurated our 46th president, Joseph Biden, on Jan. 20, but there are no places in the United States named Biden — at least not yet.
With Presidents' Day arriving on Feb. 15, just weeks after a presidential inauguration, we look at where our presidents were born and how many places in the United States carry their names. Places include counties, cities, towns and minor civil divisions.
George Washington, who took the oath on April 30, 1789, tops the list of presidential namesakes with at least 94 places that share his name.
Every other president, except for Dwight Eisenhower and our most recent – Biden, Donald Trump and Barack Obama — have places that share their names, too. (A ghost town named Trump in Colorado disappeared in the 1930s.)
Second on the list of places with presidential monikers is Abraham Lincoln (72), followed by Andrew Jackson (67) and Thomas Jefferson (62).
Five names show up twice because we had different presidents with the same last name: John Adams and John Quincy Adams; William Henry Harrison and Benjamin Harrison; Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin Roosevelt; Andrew Johnson and Lyndon Johnson; George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush.
Adams, Roosevelt and Bush were related but there is one more name that appears twice but belongs to one man: Cleveland, as in Grover Cleveland, who was our 22nd and 24th president.
So, while Biden is the 46th president, he is the 45th person to be president.
Fun facts
Of the 45 men who have been or are president of the United States, a third (15) came from just two states: eight from Virginia and seven from Ohio.
Many presidents (29) were born in states that were colonies or former colonies. While there were 13 colonies, 15 states were former colonies because Maine was then part of Massachusetts and Vermont was part of New York.
The top five presidents with matching county names are: Washington (31), Jefferson (26), Jackson (24), Lincoln (24) and Madison (20). Of the 3,143 counties in the United States, 298 match presidential names.
Only eight presidents were born west of the Mississippi.
The president born farthest west? Barack Obama in Hawaii.
Even though we may think of Ronald Reagan as a Californian because he served as governor of that state, he was born in Illinois.
Richard Nixon, however, was born in California and is the only president from the West Coast.
Derick Moore is a senior communications specialist at the Census Bureau.
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – The Clearlake City Council this week will hold its midyear budget review, discuss a proposal for a memorial for COVID-19 victims, conduct a public hearing for grant funding, consider declaring some city-owned properties surplus and discuss committee appointments.
The council will meet for a budget workshop at 5 p.m. and the regular meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 18.
Because of the county’s shelter in place order, Clearlake City Hall remains closed to the public, however, the virtual meeting will be broadcast live on the city's YouTube channel or the Lake County PEGTV YouTube Channel. Community members also can participate via Zoom.
Comments and questions can be submitted in writing for City Council consideration by sending them to Administrative Services Director/City Clerk Melissa Swanson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. You can also visit the city’s town hall site and submit written comments at https://www.opentownhall.com/portals/327/forum_home. Identify the subject you wish to comment on in your email’s subject line or in your town hall submission.
To give the council adequate time to review your questions and comments, please submit your written comments prior to 4 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 18.
Each public comment emailed to the city clerk will be read aloud by the mayor or a member of staff for up to three minutes or will be displayed on a screen. Public comment emails and town hall public comment submissions that are received after the beginning of the meeting will not be included in the record.
During its workshop, the council will hold a midyear budget review for the time period through Dec. 31.
Andrew White, the city’s police chief and its interim finance director, said in his report to the council that, overall, “revenues are exceeding projections and we are cautiously optimistic that the trend will continue. The trend is primarily being driven by higher than expected sales tax revenue, fees and permits and fines related to code enforcement violations. There was also a significant one-time revenue from the settlement of litigation related to the Sulphur Fire.”
White added, “The higher-than-expected sales tax revenue is also benefitting the Measure V and Measure P special revenue funds. However, based on economic uncertainties, staff is only recommending conservative increases to revenues to cover additional expenses.”
White said it’s also important to remember that this year’s budget relied on fund balance and coming into the year, Measure P had a negative fund balance.
“Overall, expenses are on track with budgetary projections. There was a significant increase in health insurance costs resulting in an over $50,000 increase to the employer share of said costs, though based on projected salary savings, a budget increase is not being proposed,” White wrote.
During the regular portion of the meeting, the council will consider a request from Councilwoman Joyce Overton to establish a memorial to COVID-19 victims in Austin Park.
Overton’s report to the council said that she is proposing a small cross with the name of each individual who died from the coronavirus to be placed within the fenced rose garden in Austin Park. The garden is maintained and used to honor local Soroptimists.
She said the memorial is currently proposed to be temporary, and would be funded by private donations.
The council also will meet one of February’s adoptable dogs before holding a public hearing to consider projects and authorize the application for funding through the Community Development Block Grant Mitigation Program.
In other business, the council will consider declaring various small city-owned properties as surplus in order to offer them to the state Housing and Community Development Department for use in affordable housing in accordance with AB 1486.
Also on Thursday, the council will consider appointing a person to succeed Councilmember David Claffey on the Clearlake Marketing Committee. The two applicants are Susan Bloomquist and Kristina Nelson.
On the meeting's consent agenda – items that are not considered controversial and are usually adopted on a single vote – are warrants; authorization for the city manager to execute a license agreement with Mudslingers Coffee for a drive-thru coffee Facility at 14760 Olympic Drive; the Lake County Vector Control District Board minutes for Dec. 9; minutes of the January meetings; consideration of a resolution rescinding Resolution No. 2009-51, establishing purchasing procedures; and rejection of all bids for the Austin Park Bus Stop and Promenade Project.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Lake County Sheriff’s Office is continuing its efforts to locate a boy whose family reported him missing on Sunday.
The sheriff’s office said 12-year-old Austin Maloney was last seen leaving a residence off of Jerusalem Grade at 3:30 p.m. Sunday.
Social media posts indicated he was last known to be in the area of Burnt Oak Road, Coons Flat and Jerusalem Grade Road northeast of Hidden Valley Lake.
At the time he was last seen, Austin was wearing a black sweatshirt, blue jeans, an orange beanie hat and sketchers shoes, officials said.
Austin is described as 5 feet 1 inch tall and 77 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes.
Sgt. Aaron Clark told Lake County News on Sunday night that it’s believed Austin ran away.
The sheriff’s office and Lake County Search and Rescue received the report of the missing boy at 7:30 p.m. Sunday and quickly mobilized, as Lake County News has reported.
Radio traffic indicated the search continued through the night.
The Lake County Sheriff’s Office is asking community members with information about Austin’s whereabouts to contact Central Dispatch at 707-263-2690.
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.
Elizabeth Leyva, Texas A&M-San Antonio; David J. Purpura, Purdue University, and Emily Solari, University of Virginia
Math and reading scores for 12th graders in the U.S. were at a historic low even before the COVID-19 pandemic forced a massive shift to remote learning, according to results of the 2019 National Assessment of Educational Progress released in late 2020. We asked three scholars to explain why so many high school seniors aren’t proficient in these critical subjects.
Elizabeth Leyva, director of entry-level mathematics, Texas A&M University-San Antonio
One might expect the jump from high school to college mathematics to be a natural progression, or a small step up in difficulty or expectations. But over time it has actually become a chasm, and that chasm continues to grow.
More students are taking advanced coursework – algebra II or higher – in high school. But studying the material doesn’t mean that a student has truly learned it. As a result, a student can pass a course which should be a college preparatory course, such as algebra II, yet fail a standardized placement exam, or not score high enough on SAT/ACT tests to be deemed “college ready.”
Most high school teachers hold their students to a different set of expectations than college faculty do. In many cases, the policies are set by the school district, so high school teachers are simply upholding rules that the community and parents have pushed for. This can include allowing students to submit late work, retest on assessments they performed poorly on and use a calculator for most assignments.
The rationale is well intentioned; high school students are young learners, and may need multiple opportunities to master a concept.
Multiple opportunities to pass means more students pass. But this generous assessment strategy has unintended consequences on student motivation and accountability. The effect is that students can earn a passing grade but not retain or master the material in a meaningful way. This is how a student can receive a B in algebra II, for example, but land in a developmental class when they enter college.
David Purpura, associate professor of human development and family studies, co-director of the Center for Early Learning, Purdue University
When looking at the striking data for 12th graders from the national report card, policymakers, researchers, parents and teachers often ask: What’s going on with high school math? Should we change math instruction at this age?
Math is often taught with few explicit connections across individual classes. Sometimes these classes follow a certain order: for example, algebra I and algebra II. But the content in and across the classes isn’t being thoroughly connected. For example, in the early elementary years, we talk about addition and subtraction, then multiplication and division. We move on to fractions, and then algebra. Yet this still treats these concepts as separable rather than integrated.
But math is an interrelated web of knowledge with new information building on previously learned information. And, this acquisition of knowledge begins early. There are significant individual differences in children’s math performance even prior to kindergarten.
I believe children aren’t receiving a strong enough foundation for basic math skills in the earliest years. Preschool teachers spend less than five minutes per day on numbers. Nearly a third of classrooms provide no number instruction at all.
In kindergarten, the level of math instruction is typically well below what children already know and can do. The misalignment could be attributable to the low expectations set forth in the Common Core Standards – the academic standards shared across the majority of states. Over 85% of children are able to meet certain end-of-kindergarten expectations before they even enter kindergarten. These disparities continue through elementary school.
So, the question in my mind isn’t: Why are so many high school seniors not proficient in math? The question is: How can teachers better link math concepts across all grade levels and improve learning?
Emily Solari, professor of reading education, University of Virginia
How kids learn to read is a well-researched aspect of human learning. Scientists have identified what happens in the brain when children learn to read and why some children have difficulty mastering this skill. Despite this wealth of evidence about how reading develops, only 37% of 12th gradersread at a proficient or advanced level, according to the national assessment.
While standardized tests are not the perfect measure of reading ability, they do provide a pulse of reading attainment across the country. Importantly, the scores show significant differences in reading performance between particular groups of students. Profound gaps exist between white and Black students and white and Hispanic students.
The education system is fraught with inequities that have a greater negative impact on historically marginalized students – particularly those who are Black, Hispanic, poorer or have a disability. Recent data suggests the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated these gaps. Improving the system, and how students are taught reading, is a matter of equity.
Why, if there is solid evidence on how children learn to read, has this not translated into classroom practice and better reading outcomes for students?
Studies show that children should be taught the alphabetic system – the relationship between the sounds of letters and their written form – in order to learn how to read words. The ability to read words combined with vocabulary and language development is essential to reading comprehension.
In addition to what is taught, how children are taught to read is also important. Reading instruction should have a clear scope and sequence, with skills building on each other over time.
However, a recent survey suggests that about 75% of teachers use curricula that teach early reading using a cueing approach. And, 65% of college professors teach this approach to new teachers. This method does not align with the scientific evidence of how children learn how to read.
Sometimes called “MSV” – shorthand for meaning, syntactical and visual – the cueing approach emphasizes reading whole words over learning the alphabetic code. This method of teaching reading can be especially problematic for children who are having difficulties learning how to read.
To improve students’ reading ability, I believe schools, districts and states must push multiple levers simultaneously. This includes making sure instruction, curriculum and testing all align with the science of reading, and that teachers and administrators are provided adequate professional development about reading instruction.
Further, teacher education programs must commit to preparing teachers who understand how reading develops in children’s brains and how to implement teaching practices that are based on current evidence.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Board of Supervisors is continuing, for the time being, policies of limiting the county government’s in-person delivery of services to the public and a closure of its chambers during meetings because of COVID-19.
At its meeting last week – the board did not meet this week because of the Presidents Day holiday – the supervisors agreed to keep in place the resolution authorizing temporary reduction of in-person delivery of county services while increasing alternative methods for service delivery.
The board passed the resolution during a special meeting in January following an increase in COVID-19 cases.
The resolution has to be reviewed every 30 days, which the board did at its Feb. 9 meeting. At that time, the board took no action to change it, so the monthly reviews will continue until the board decides it’s safe to reopen.
It was noted during the discussion by County Administrative Office Carol Huchingson that so far very few county employees have been vaccinated against the virus.
That discussion was followed by the weekly review of the board’s decision to keep its chambers closed for in-person meetings.
Board members supported the chambers remaining closed for the time being. While new case numbers are dropping, supervisors didn’t want to change that trend by reopening too soon.
Supervisor Jessica Pyska said that when they do reopen the chambers, they need to look at ways to protect the staff that work in the room during the meetings and enforcing the masking ordinance needs to be part of that discussion.
Board Chair Bruno Sabatier said that, rather than having the chambers situation reviewed weekly, they should have a trigger to bring it back, such as the county dropping out of the purple tier on the state’s Blueprint for a Safer Economy and into the red tier, or when the county reaches a certain number of cases.
Supervisor Tina Scott agreed with the trigger, but noted that the state is revamping its tier system so they need to determine what that trigger might be.
Pyska also agreed to a trigger and then asked how to enforce masking in the chambers.
Sabatier said the county offers alternative models to access the meeting virtually so if the board chose to take a hard line and require masking – which he said he personally didn’t support doing – he would be willing to draw that hard line.
He suggested dropping into the red tier as a trigger to allowing the public back into the chamber.
Supervisor Moke Simon said the board has done a great job with the hybrid meeting models, and when reopening for public participation, he suggested they could rotate and have some board members present for the meetings with others on Zoom.
Sabatier said he didn’t want to force board members to be in the environment, adding he wanted to to have a place for members of the public to go to express themselves.
The board ultimately reached consensus to bring the chambers reopening matter back for discussion next after Lake County has dropped into the red tier or the state comes up with other guidelines, with the mask requirement to be included.
The next board meeting takes place virtually on Feb. 23.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Lake County Sheriff’s Office and its Search and Rescue teams began a search late Sunday night near Hidden Valley Lake that continued early Monday for a missing boy who is believed to have run away from home.
On Sunday night, Middletown resident Bo Darnell posted on Facebook that her 12-year-old son Austin had been missing since the afternoon.
He was reportedly last seen in the area of Burnt Oak Road, Coons Flat and Jerusalem Grade Road northeast of Hidden Valley Lake, according to social media posts.
Sheriff’s Sgt. Aaron Clark confirmed to Lake County News late Sunday night that authorities were searching for the boy.
Clark said the boy ran away from home at about 3:30 p.m. Sunday.
The family called law enforcement at about 7:30 p.m., Clark said.
He said Search and Rescue personnel were able to quickly mobilize just before 8 p.m.
The search on Sunday night included a large group of more than 20 participants who were working in rough terrain, Clark said.
Searchers were reported to be continuing their efforts to locate the boy early Monday in the midst of cold, rainy conditions.
Just after 2:10 a.m., the Northshore Fire Protection District Support Team was toned out to respond to the search site, according to radio traffic.
Additional information will be posted 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.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – February is Black History Month, a celebration acknowledging the achievements of Black Americans and how they have uniquely shaped the nation’s history.
Celebrating the contributions to our nation made by people of African descent goes back to 1915, half a century after the Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery in the United States.
The effort began with the advocacy of Harvard-trained American historian Carter G. Woodson and the prominent minister Jesse E. Moorland., who sought to recognize the heritage and achievement of Black Americans.
The event was first celebrated during the second week of February 1926, selected because it coincides with the birthdays of both Abraham Lincoln (Feb. 12) and abolitionist/writer Frederick Douglass (Feb. 14). That 1926 event was sponsored by the Association for the Study of African American Life and History.
That first celebration inspired schools and communities nationwide to organize local celebrations, establish history clubs and host performances and lectures.
In 1975, President Gerald Ford issued a message on the observance of Black History Week urging all Americans to "recognize the important contribution made to our nation's life and culture by black citizens."
Since 1976, February has been officially designated as Black History Month.
That week would continue to be set aside for the event until 1976 when, as part of the nation’s bicentennial, it was expanded to a month. Since then, U.S. presidents have proclaimed February as National African American History Month.
Earlier this month, the Board of Supervisors and the Clearlake City Council presented proclamations in honor of Black History Month.
The city of Clearlake’s proclamation notes that, “while the history of Black Americans is also the story of countless nameless heroes brought to our shores who endured lives of bondage and oppression, the deprivation of their civil rights, and ravages of bigotry and racism, it is a history for which most of the chapters have yet to be written as Black Americans contribute to the American promise.”
The proclamation also notes that, “for generations, African Americans have strengthened our Nation by urging reforms, overcoming obstacles, and breaking down barriers,” and cites the contributions of individuals including Martin Luther King Jr., Elijah Cummings, Harriet Tubman, Sojourner Truth, Rosa Parks, Cicely Tyson, Hank Aaron, Kamala Harris and Rev. Rafael Warnock.
Mendocino College also is celebrating Black History Month.
“As we continue to face a global pandemic, allow the celebration of Black History Month to serve as a reminder of the multiple contributions made by Black Americans and other ethnic communities,” says Mendocino College President Tim Karas. “We commemorate Black History Month by continuing the essential work of self-reflection and strengthening our resolve to stay engaged in equity work in our district and to work harder against racism (overt and structural) and toward social justice.”
On Feb. 24, a webinar titled “You Don’t Know Who We Be: A Conversation about the Pre-enslavement & Pre-Colonial History of Africans in America” will be hosted by BCC Speaker Series with Dr. Edward Bush, President of Cosumnes River College. Register for this webinar here.
The Mendocino College librarians have also put together a LibGuide for Black History Month and the Black Lives Matter movement specifically. View the page here.