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Board of Supervisors to consider legislative updates, proposed election office investment

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Board of Supervisors this week will consider updates on federal and state legislation, along with a proposal to invest in staffing and infrastructure for the Registrar of Voters Office following delays in ballot processing during the November election.

The‌ ‌board will meet beginning ‌at‌ ‌9‌ ‌a.m. Tuesday, May 13, 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, ‌online‌ ‌at‌ ‌https://countyoflake.legistar.com/Calendar.aspx and‌ ‌on‌ ‌the‌ ‌county’s‌ ‌Facebook‌ ‌page. ‌Accompanying‌ ‌board‌ ‌documents, ‌the‌ ‌agenda‌ ‌and‌ ‌archived‌ ‌board‌ ‌meeting‌ ‌videos‌ ‌also‌ ‌are‌ ‌available‌ ‌at‌ ‌that‌ ‌link. ‌ ‌

To‌ ‌participate‌ ‌in‌ ‌real-time, ‌join‌ ‌the‌ ‌Zoom‌ ‌meeting‌ ‌by‌ ‌clicking‌ ‌this‌ ‌link‌. ‌ ‌

The‌ ‌meeting‌ ‌ID‌ ‌is‌ 865 3354 4962, ‌pass code 726865.‌ ‌The meeting also can be accessed via one tap mobile at +16694449171,,86533544962#,,,,*726865#. The meeting can also be accessed via phone at 669 900 6833.

At 9:30 a.m., the board will consider a federal legislative update regarding staffing and budget cuts to Health and Human Services and safety net programs, presented by Rachel Mackey of Paragon Government Relations, the county’s federal advocacy firm.

The presentation will include the federal budget reconciliation process, President Trump’s initial discretionary spending proposal, funding freezes and the reorganization at the Health and Human Services department.

At 10 a.m., the board will consider state legislative updates by Geoff Neill of the county’s state advocacy firm Nielsen Merksamer Parrinello Gross & Leoni.

The updates will include state legislation of interest to the county and expectations before Gov. Newsom releases his May revision budget proposals.

At 10:30 a.m., a public hearing will be held on amendments of the master fee schedule for departmental services rendered by the county. The new fees will take effect July 1.

At 1 p.m., the board will consider a proposed investment in staffing, infrastructure and technology for the Registrar of Voters Office.

The staff report referred to the slow pace in processing ballots for the 2024 general election. On election night, nearly 29% percent of the 27,127 total votes cast were processed, according to Registrar of Voters Maria Valadez in the staff memo. During the following week, the office processed just 681 ballots despite the team operating at full capacity.

“This reduced pace is not due to a lack of commitment or effort; rather, it reflects the structural limitations of an office that has outgrown its current resources,” Valadez said in the memo.

The proposed solutions include four priorities from expanding staffing, improving staffing structure, upgrading infrastructure to facilitate faster and more accurate ballot processing, to adding a department-owned elections van and long-term planning.

In the untimed items, the board will consider an agreement between the county’s Behavioral health Services and Adventist health Clearlake Hospital in the amount of $127,665.52, effective from December 1, 2024 to June 30, 2027.

“This agreement supports the Hope Center's efforts to provide Rapid Rehousing and support services tailored to unaccompanied Transitional Age Youth (TAY) experiencing homelessness in Lake County,” Behavioral Health Services Director Elise Jones said in the staff memo.

In closed session, the Board will conduct interviews and appoint a director for Animal Control.

The full agenda follows.

CONSENT AGENDA

5.1: Adopt proclamation designating the month of May 2025 as Military Appreciation Month in Lake County.

5.2: Approve reissuance of property tax refund checks from FY 20/21 in the amounts of $949.71 and $771.64 to Angie Brossard.

5.3: a) Rescind Resolutions No. 2025-35 and 2024-34, resolutions approving an application for funding and the execution of a grant agreement and any amendments thereto from the 2023-2024 funding year of the State CDBG Mitigation Resilience Infrastructure (MIT-RIP) Program; and b) Adopt corrected resolution approving an application for funding and the execution of a grant agreement and any amendments thereto from the 2023-2024 funding year of the State CDBG Mitigation Resilience Infrastructure (MIT-RIP) Program.

5.4: Approve the agreement between County of Lake and Star View Behavioral Health, Inc., for community treatment services and specialty mental health services for fiscal year 2025-2026 in the amount of $150,000 and authorize the Board Chair to sign.

5.5: Adopt proclamation designating May 2025 as Maternal Mental Health Awareness Month in Lake County.

5.6: Approve Amendment Two of the agreement between County of Lake and PlaceWorks for planning services; an increase of $50,000; total compensation not to exceed $2,124,954 for the contract term; and authorize the Chair to sign.

5.7: Adopt resolution authorizing the 2024-2025 grant project, Lake County Victim-Witness Assistance Program and authorize the District Attorney to affirm that the County of Lake will comply with all applicable assurances.

5.8: (Sitting as the Lake County Air Quality Management District Board of Directors) Consideration of re-appointment for Robert Bridges to the Lake County Air Quality Management District Hearing Board pursuant to Health and Safety Code.

5.9: Approve request to close the Probation Department on Friday, May 30, 2025, from 12:00 p.m. - 5 p.m. for all-staff training.

5.10: Adopt resolution approving agreement with the State of California for Help America Vote Act (HAVA) federal funds, SFDA Number 90.404, administered by the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC) for activities to improve the administration of elections for federal office, including to enhance election technology and make election security improvements and authorizing the Registrar of Voters to execute the agreement with the State.

5.11: Adopt resolution approving Amendment 4 to Agreement No. 18G30117 between the Secretary of State and the County of Lake for voting system replacement funds.

5.12: a) Adopt resolution amending Resolution No. 2024-99 to amend the adopted budget for FY 2024-25 by adjusting revenues and appropriations in Budget Unit 2301 – Sheriff/Jail Facilities, and authorize the Chair to sign b) approve Change Order No. 1 to the agreement with Humboldt Fence for the Hill Road Correctional Facility Exterior Fencing Project, Bid No. 250855, for an increase of $45,434.00 and a revised contract amount of $271,384.00, and authorize the Public Services Director to sign.

5.13: Adopt resolution to allocate funding from grant, 2024-3105 County of Lake-Sheriff’s Office-Search and Rescue from Direct Relief.

5.14: Adopt proclamation designating May 15, 2025 as California Peace Officers’ Memorial Day and May 11-17, 2025, as National Police Week in Lake County.

TIMED ITEMS

6.1, 9:02 a.m.: Public input.

6.2, 9:03 a.m.: Pet of the Week.

6.3, 9:06 a.m.: Presentation of proclamation designating the month of May 2025 as Military Appreciation Month in Lake County.

6.4, 9:08 a.m.: Presentation of proclamation designating May 2025 as Maternal Mental Health Awareness Month in Lake County.

6.5, 9:10 a.m.: Presentation of proclamation designating May 15, 2025 as California Peace Officers’ Memorial Day and May 11-17, 2025, as National Police Week in Lake County.

6.6, 9:30 a.m.: Consideration of a Health and Human Services-focused federal legislative update.

6.7, 10 a.m.: Consideration of state legislative update.

6.8, 10:30 a.m.: Public hearing - Consideration of a resolution amending the master fee schedule for departmental services rendered by the County.

6.9, 11 a.m.: Consideration of presentation from Northern Rural Energy Efficiency Network.

6.10, 11:30 a.m.: Consideration of presentation from Lake County Chamber of Commerce.

6.11, 1 p.m.: Consideration of proposal - Investing in staffing, infrastructure, and technology.

NONTIMED ITEMS

7.1: Supervisors’ weekly calendar, travel and reports.

7.2: Consideration of update to the 2025 Board of Supervisors Committee Assignment list.

7.3: Consideration of the agreement between County of Lake Continuum of Care and Adventist Health Clear Lake Hospital Inc. to provide services under the Homeless Housing Assistance and Prevention (HHAP) Youth Set-Aside Initiative in the amount of $127,665.52 for the period of December 1, 2024 to June 30, 2027.

7.4: a) Consideration of changes to the County of Lake Hiring Incentives Policy; and b) Discussion about the existing list of qualifying positions and using the "hard to fill" criteria to determine eligibility.

7.5: Consideration of Transient Occupancy Tax - Relief of Penalty and Interest.

CLOSED SESSION

8.1: Public employee appointment pursuant to Gov. Code Section 54957(b)(1): Interviews for Animal Control Director; Appointment of Animal Control Director.

8.2: Public employee evaluation: Title: Social Services Director.

8.3: Conference with labor negotiator: a) Chief Negotiator: C. Torrez; County Negotiators: S. Parker, S. Carter, C. Moreno, P. Samac and D. Rico; and b) Employee organizations: LCDDAA, LCDSA, LCCOA, LCEA, LCSEA and LCSMA.

8.4: Conference with real property negotiators pursuant to Government Code Section 54956.8 Property: APN 028-251-090; 371 Crystal Lake Way, Lakeport. Negotiating parties: a) County Negotiators R. Borre, Susan Parker, Stephen Carter and b) Lake County Treasurer-Tax Collector Patrick Sullivan Under negotiation: Price and terms of payment.

8.5: Conference with legal counsel: Significant exposure to litigation pursuant to Gov. Code section 54956.9(d)(2), (e)(1) – One potential case.

Email staff reporters Lingzi Chen at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. 
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Written by: LINGZI CHEN
Published: 12 May 2025

Lakeport Planning Commission to meet May 14

LAKEPORT, Calif. — The Lakeport Planning Commission will discuss the city’s general plan when it meets this week.

The commission will meet at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 14, in the council chambers at Lakeport City Hall, 225 Park St.

The agenda is available here.

To speak on an agenda item, access the meeting remotely here; the meeting ID is 814 1135 4347, pass code is 847985.

To join by phone, dial 1-669-444-9171; for one tap mobile, +16694449171,,81411354347#,,,,*847985#.

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 before 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday, May 14.

The commission’s main agenda item is a progress report review and discussion of the annual progress report on the Lakeport General Plan.

Associate Planner Victor Fernandez explained in his report to the commission that the intention of the general plan annual progress report, or APR, “is to provide a transparent, consistent mechanism for local jurisdictions to report on their progress in implementing the goals, policies, and programs of the General Plan. It is also a tool for ensuring local consistency with statewide planning priorities, such as infill development, climate resilience, housing supply, and infrastructure coordination. The APR enables state agencies to monitor trends, identify regional challenges, and inform future policy development at the state level.”

The commission will next meet on June 11.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, and on Bluesky, @erlarson.bsky.social. Find Lake County News on the following platforms: Facebook, @LakeCoNews; X, @LakeCoNews; Threads, @lakeconews, and on Bluesky, @lakeconews.bsky.social.
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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 12 May 2025

CHP targets ‘video game-styled’ driving with new low-profile enforcement vehicles

In the real world, aggressive lane weaving, triple-digit speeds and road rage aren’t part of a high-score strategy — they’re deadly.

The California Highway Patrol is deploying a new generation of low-profile, specially marked patrol vehicles to crack down on what can only be described as “video game-styled” driving on the state’s highways.

“The new vehicles give our officers an important advantage,” said CHP Commissioner Sean Duryee. “They will allow us to identify and stop drivers who are putting others at risk, while still showing a professional and visible presence once enforcement action is needed.”

These 100 Dodge Durangos — paired with our existing high-performance fleet, which includes Dodge Chargers and Ford Explorers — blend into traffic just enough to observe the most reckless and dangerous behaviors without immediate detection.

Once enforcement begins, their markings serve as a clear reminder that safety is the CHP’s top priority.

With over 390,000 crashes annually in California and nearly 1,000 daily reports of reckless driving, these new tools will help our officers hold the most egregious violators accountable.

Last year, CHP officers issued almost 18,000 citations to drivers speeding over 100 miles per hour.

Speed is a factor in approximately 30% of all crashes and a major contributor to traffic fatalities and injuries.

It is particularly dangerous because it decreases reaction time, extends stopping distance, and intensifies the severity of crashes.

“Our goal remains the same: reduce injuries, prevent fatalities, and restore a sense of safety on California’s roadways,” the CHP said in a written statement. “We urge all drivers to obey speed limits, avoid aggressive behavior, and share the road responsibly.”

The CHP is positioning the first 25 specially marked patrol vehicles in various regions across California.

All 100 high-performance patrol units will be strategically placed along California’s busiest, high-risk roadways by June.

“Speed isn’t a thrill— it’s a threat. And the CHP is responding,” the CHP said.
Details
Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 12 May 2025

Science requires ethical oversight – without federal dollars, society’s health and safety are at risk

 

Brain organoids, pictured here, raise both many medical possibilities and ethical questions. NIAID/Flickr, CC BY-SA


The National Institutes of Health has been the world’s largest public funder of biomedical research. Its support helps translate basic science into biomedical therapies and technologies, providing funding for nearly all treatments approved by the Food and Drug Administration from 2010 to 2019. This enables the U.S. to lead global research while maintaining transparency and preventing research misconduct.

While the legality of directives to shrink the NIH is unclear, the Trump administration’s actions have already led to suspended clinical trials, institutional hiring freezes and layoffs, rescinded graduate student admissions, and canceled federal grant review meetings. Researchers at affected universities say that funding will delay or possibly eliminate ongoing studies on critical conditions like cancer and Alzheimer’s.

The Trump administration has deeply culled U.S. science across agencies and institutions.

It is clear to us, as legal and bioethics scholars whose research often focuses on the ethical, legal and social implications of emerging biotechnologies, that these directives will have profoundly negative consequences for medical research and human health, with ripple effects that will last decades. Our scholarship demonstrates that in order to contribute to knowledge and, ultimately, to biomedical treatments, medical research at every stage depends on significant infrastructure support and ethical oversight.

Our recent focus on brain organoid research – 3D lab models grown from human stem cells that simulate brain structure and function – shows how federal support for research is key to not only promote innovation, but to protect participants and future patients.

History of NIH and research ethics

The National Institutes of Health began as a one-room laboratory within the Marine Hospital Service in 1887. After World War I, chemists involved in the war effort sought to apply their knowledge to medicine. They partnered with Louisiana Sen. Joseph E. Ransdell who, motivated by the devastation of malaria, yellow fever and the 1928 influenza pandemic, introduced federal legislation to support basic research and fund fellowships focusing on solving medical problems.

By World War II, biomedical advances like surgical techniques and antibiotics had proved vital on the battlefield. Survival rates increased from 4% during World War I to 50% in World War II. Congress passed the 1944 Public Health Services Act to expand NIH’s authority to fund biomedical research at public and private institutions. President Franklin D. Roosevelt called it “as sound an investment as any Government can make; the dividends are payable in human life and health.”

As science advanced, so did the need for guardrails. After World War II, among the top Nazi leaders prosecuted for war crimes were physicians who conducted experiments on people without consent, such as exposure to hypothermia and infectious disease. The verdicts of these Doctors’ Trials included 10 points about ethical human research that became the Nuremberg Code, emphasizing voluntary consent to participation, societal benefit as the goal of human research, and significant limitations on permissible risks of harm. The World Medical Association established complementary international guidelines for physician-researchers in the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki.

White researcher injecting a Black participant in the Tuskegee Study with a syringe
At least 100 participants died in the Tuskegee Untreated Syphilis Study. National Archives

In the 1970s, information about the Tuskegee study – a deceptive and unethical 40-year study of untreated syphilis in Black men – came to light. The researchers told study participants they would be given treatment but did not give them medication. They also prevented participants from accessing a cure when it became available in order to study the disease as it progressed. The men enrolled in the study experienced significant health problems, including blindness, mental impairment and death.

The public outrage that followed starkly demonstrated that the U.S. couldn’t simply rely on international guidelines but needed federal standards on research ethics. As a result, the National Research Act of 1974 led to the Belmont Report, which identified ethical principles essential to human research: respect for persons, beneficence and justice.

Federal regulations reinforced these principles by requiring all federally funded research to comply with rigorous ethical standards for human research. By prohibiting financial conflicts of interest and by implementing an independent ethics review process, new policies helped ensure that federally supported research has scientific and social value, is scientifically valid, fairly selects and adequately protects participants.

These standards and recommendations guide both federally and nonfederally funded research today. The breadth of NIH’s mandate and budget has provided not only the essential structure for research oversight, but also key resources for ethics consultation and advice.

Brain organoids and the need for ethical inquiry

Biomedical research on cell and animal models requires extensive ethics oversight systems that complement those for human research. Our research on the ethical and policy issues of human brain organoid research provides a good example of the complexities of biomedical research and the infrastructure and oversight mechanisms necessary to support it.

Organoid research is increasing in importance, as the FDA wants to expand its use as an alternative to using animals to test new drugs before administering them to humans. Because these models can simulate brain structure and function, brain organoid research is integral to developing and testing potential treatments for brain diseases and conditions like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and cancer. Brain organoids are also useful for personalized and regenerative medicine, artificial intelligence, brain-computer interfaces and other biotechnologies.

Brain organoids are built on knowledge about the fundamentals of biology that was developed primarily in universities receiving federal funding. Organoid technology began in 1907 with research on sponge cells, and continued in the 1980s with advances in stem cell research. Since researchers generated the first human organoid in 2009, the field has rapidly expanded.

Fluorescent dots forming the outline of a sphere
Brain organoids have come a long way since their beginnings over a century ago. Madeline Andrews, Arnold Kriegstein's lab, UCSF, CC BY-ND

These advances were only possible through federally supported research infrastructure, which helps ensure the quality of all biomedical research. Indirect costs cover operational expenses necessary to maintain research safety and ethics, including utilities, administrative support, biohazard handling and regulatory compliance. In these ways, federally supported research infrastructure protects and promotes the scientific and ethical value of biotechnologies like brain organoids.

Brain organoid research requires significant scientific and ethical inquiry to safely reach its future potential. It raises potential moral and legal questions about donor consent, the extent to which organoids should be grown and how they should be disposed, and consciousness and personhood. As science progresses, infrastructure for oversight can help ensure these ethical and societal issues are addressed.

New frontiers in scientific research

Since World War II, there has been bipartisan support for scientific innovation, in part because it is an economic and national security imperative. As Harvard University President Alan Garber recently wrote, “[n]ew frontiers beckon us with the prospect of life-changing advances. … For the government to retreat from these partnerships now risks not only the health and well-being of millions of individuals but also the economic security and vitality of our nation.”

Cuts to research overhead may seem like easy savings, but it fails to account for the infrastructure that provides essential support for scientific innovation. The investment the NIH has put into academic research is significantly paid forward, adding nearly US$95 billion to local economies in fiscal year 2024, or $2.46 for every $1 of grant funding. NIH funding had also supported over 407,700 jobs that year.

President Donald Trump pledged to “unleash the power of American innovation” to battle brain-based diseases when he accepted his second Republican nomination for president. Around 6.7 million Americans live with Alzheimer’s, and over a million more suffer from Parkinson’s. Hundreds of thousands of Americans are diagnosed with aggressive brain cancers each year, and 20% of the population experiences varying forms of mental illness at any one time. These numbers are expected to grow considerably, possibly doubling by 2050.

Organoid research is just one of the essential components in the process of learning about the brain and using that knowledge to find better treatment for diseases affecting the brain.

Science benefits society only if it is rigorous, ethically conducted and fairly funded. Current NIH policy directives and steep cuts to the agency’s size and budget, along with attacks on universities, undermine globally shared goals of increasing understanding and improving human health.

The federal system of overseeing and funding biomedical science may need a scalpel, but to defund efforts based on “efficiency” is to wield a chainsaw.The Conversation

Christine Coughlin, Professor of Law, Wake Forest University and Nancy M. P. King, Emeritus Professor of Social Sciences and Health Policy, Wake Forest University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

As the Trump administration continues to make significant cuts to NIH budgets and personnel and to freeze billions of dollars of funding to major research universities – citing ideological concerns – there’s more being threatened than just progress in science and medicine. Something valuable but often overlooked is also being hit hard: preventing research abuse.
Details
Written by: Christine Coughlin, Wake Forest University and Nancy M. P. King, Wake Forest University
Published: 12 May 2025
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Public Safety

  • Lakeport Police Department celebrates long-awaited new headquarters

  • Lakeport Police Department investigates flag vandalism cases

  • Lakeport Police Department thanks Kathy Fowler Chevrolet for donation

Community

  • Hidden Valley Lake Garden Club installs new officers

  • 'America's Top Teens' searching for talent

  • 'The Goodness of Sea Vegetables' featured topic of March 5 co-op talk

Community & Business

  • Annual 'Adelante Jovenes' event introduces students, parents to college opportunities

  • Gas prices are dropping just in time for the holiday travel season

  • Lake County Association of Realtors installs new board and presents awards

  • Local businesses support travel show

  • Preschool families harvest pumpkins

  • Preschool students earn their wings

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