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Central Region Town Hall to meet April 14

LUCERNE, Calif. — The Central Region Town Hall will next meet on Monday, April 14.

The meeting will begin at 6 p.m. at the Lucerne Alpine Senior Center, 3985 Country Club Drive.

Virtual participation is available via Zoom at https://app.zoom.us/wc.

To join by phone dial 1 669 900 9128. The Zoom Webinar ID is 825 9780 9680; the passcode is 778050.

The full agenda can be seen here.

Agenda items include:

• Discussion and possible action including acceptance of an update from Public Services Director Lars Ewing and the Department of Water Resources regarding Alpine Park cleanup, swim area cleanup and tule/brush cleanup.

• A presentation from Senior Transportation Planner John Speka regarding the Lake Area Planning Council's update of the Regional Transportation Plan.

• A presentation from Public Works Director Glen March regarding transportation concerns and future projects.

• An update from Caltrans regarding potential projects.

• An update regarding a potential joint municipal advisory committee meeting.

• Flood control mitigation for Victoria Creek.

An update from Supervisor EJ Crandell.

The Central Region Town Hall Board includes Chair Becky Schwenger, Vice Chair Austin Pratt, Recorder Atlas Pearson, and members Jon Karlsson and Jacob Blue.
Details
Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 12 April 2025

Clearlake Animal Control: ‘Levi’ and the dogs

“Levi.” Photo courtesy of Clearlake Animal Control.

CLEARLAKE, Calif. — Clearlake Animal Control has many dogs waiting for a new start with adoptive families.

The shelter has 55 adoptable dogs listed on its website.

This week’s dogs include “Levi,” a 10-month-old male mixed breed dog with a brown brindle coat.

Shelter staff said Levi — who is still a puppy — would love another furry friend to play with in his new home. He’s energetic, loves walks and cuddling.

The shelter is located at 6820 Old Highway 53. It’s open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.

For more information, call the shelter at 707-762-6227, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., visit Clearlake Animal Control on Facebook or on the city’s website.

This week’s adoptable dogs are featured below.

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 April 2025

Estate Planning: Skilled nursing facility residents appointing health care decision makers

Dennis Fordham. Courtesy photo.
Residents at skilled nursing facilities are well advised to have an advanced health care directive, with an authorized agent (health care decisionmaker) in place to make decisions regarding medical treatment and placement.

However, a skilled nursing facility still cannot require the execution of an advanced health care directive as a condition to providing services (Probate Code Section 5677).

In California, “A patient is presumed to have the capacity to make a health care decision, to give or revoke an advance health care directive, and to designate or disqualify a surrogate (Probate Code Section 4657).”

An adult resident at a skilled nursing facility with capacity may appoint an agent, often a close family member or trusted friend, with representative authority, and express enforceable health care decisions using an advanced health care directive or a “power of attorney for health care.”

The representative authority to make health care decisions for the resident may either be immediate or delayed. A resident with capacity will usually make the advanced health care directive immediate, both in anticipation of an unforeseen health care crisis and so that the employees of the skilled nursing facility may discuss the resident’s health care with the agent.

The advanced health care directive will need to be supplemented by a Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA, release to allow disclosure of confidential medical information.

If a skilled nursing facility resident does not already have an advanced health care directive or power of attorney for health care, with which the resident agrees, then the resident will typically want to execute an advanced health care directive (present day approach).

California law requires that execution of an advanced health care directive by a skilled nursing facility resident involve the protective oversight of an ombudsman representative as a witness.

The ombudsman will need to meet with the skilled nursing facility resident, alone or with family if requested by the resident, to ensure that the resident has the capacity to sign the document.

That is, does the resident understand, at the time of signing, that the advanced health care directive is an important legal tool to express the resident’s preferences regarding health care and to appoint an agent as a health care decisionmaker.

Also, the ombudsman will want to ensure that the resident, at the time of signing, is acting voluntarily and not under duress, undue influence or menace.

If the ombudsman is still uncertain as to the resident’s capacity to understand the advanced health care directive, the ombudsman may look at the resident’s medical chart for further information before deciding.

Next, the signing of the prepared advanced health care directive involves either one of two approaches, that is, either the notary public and an ombudsman approach, or, second, an ombudsman and an additional witness approach. Typically the first approach is used.

The additional witness to the advanced health care directive (not the ombudsman) cannot be an employee of the skilled nursing facility or the agent nominated in the advanced health care directive.

Moreover, the additional witness (that is, other than the ombudsman), “… shall be an individual who is neither related to the patient by blood, marriage, or adoption, nor entitled to any portion of the patient’s estate upon the patient’s death under a will existing when the advance directive is executed or by operation of law then existing.”

That last restriction naturally favors hiring a travelling notary as most of the people who would be willing to come to the SNF and be a witness are disqualified persons.

As a temporary or emergency (“stop gap”) measure, a resident with capacity may choose to nominate a “surrogate” health care decisionmaker.

All this requires is that the resident personally inform the supervising health care provider or a designee of the skilled nursing facility (section 4711 Probate Code). The surrogate’s authority does not exceed 60 days but, while effective, the surrogate’s authority is the controlling authority, even over the authority of an agent under any existing advanced health care directive.

The foregoing is not legal advice. Consult a qualified estate planning attorney for guidance.

Dennis A. Fordham, attorney, is a State Bar-Certified Specialist in estate planning, probate and trust law. His office is at 870 S. Main St., Lakeport, Calif. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and 707-263-3235. 

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Written by: Dennis Fordham
Published: 12 April 2025

Space News: Jets from powerful black holes can point astronomers toward where − and where not − to look for life in the universe

 

Black holes, like the one in this illustration, can spray powerful jets. S. Dagnello (NRAO/AUI/NSF), CC BY-SA

One of the most powerful objects in the universe is a radio quasar – a spinning black hole spraying out highly energetic particles. Come too close to one, and you’d get sucked in by its gravitational pull, or burn up from the intense heat surrounding it. But ironically, studying black holes and their jets can give researchers insight into where potentially habitable worlds might be in the universe.

As an astrophysicist, I’ve spent two decades modeling how black holes spin, how that creates jets, and how they affect the environment of space around them.

What are black holes?

Black holes are massive, astrophysical objects that use gravity to pull surrounding objects into them. Active black holes have a pancake-shaped structure around them called an accretion disk, which contains hot, electrically charged gas.

The plasma that makes up the accretion disk comes from farther out in the galaxy. When two galaxies collide and merge, gas is funneled into the central region of that merger. Some of that gas ends up getting close to the newly merged black hole and forms the accretion disk.

There is one supermassive black hole at the heart of every massive galaxy.

Black holes and their disks can rotate, and when they do, they drag space and time with them – a concept that’s mind-boggling and very hard to grasp conceptually. But black holes are important to study because they produce enormous amounts of energy that can influence galaxies.

How energetic a black hole is depends on different factors, such as the mass of the black hole, whether it rotates rapidly, and whether lots of material falls onto it. Mergers fuel the most energetic black holes, but not all black holes are fed by gas from a merger. In spiral galaxies, for example, less gas tends to fall into the center, and the central black hole tends to have less energy.

One of the ways they generate energy is through what scientists call “jets” of highly energetic particles. A black hole can pull in magnetic fields and energetic particles surrounding it, and then as the black hole rotates, the magnetic fields twist into a jet that sprays out highly energetic particles.

Magnetic fields twist around the black hole as it rotates to store energy – kind of like when you pull and twist a rubber band. When you release the rubber band, it snaps forward. Similarly, the magnetic fields release their energy by producing these jets.

A diagram showing an accretion disk and black hole spraying out a jet of particles, surrounded by magnetic field lines.
The accretion disk around a black hole can form a jet of hot, energetic particles surrounded by magnetic field lines. NASA, ESA, and A. Feild (STScI), CC BY

These jets can speed up or suppress the formation of stars in a galaxy, depending on how the energy is released into the black hole’s host galaxy.

Rotating black holes

Some black holes, however, rotate in a different direction than the accretion disk around them. This phenomenon is called counterrotation, and some studies my colleagues and I have conducted suggest that it’s a key feature governing the behavior of one of the most powerful kinds of objects in the universe: the radio quasar.

Radio quasars are the subclass of black holes that produce the most powerful energy and jets.

You can imagine the black hole as a rotating sphere, and the accretion disk as a disk with a hole in the center. The black hole sits in that center hole and rotates one way, while the accretion disk rotates the other way.

This counterrotation forces the black hole to spin down and eventually up again in the other direction, called corotation. Imagine a basketball that spins one way, but you keep tapping it to rotate in the other. The tapping will spin the basketball down. If you continue to tap in the opposite direction, it will eventually spin up and rotate in the other direction. The accretion disk does the same thing.

Since the jets tap into the black hole’s rotational energy, they are powerful only when the black hole is spinning rapidly. The change from counterrotation to corotation takes at least 100 million years. Many initially counterrotating black holes take billions of years to become rapidly spinning corotating black holes.

So, these black holes would produce powerful jets both early and later in their lifetimes, with an interlude in the middle where the jets are either weak or nonexistent.

When the black hole spins in counterrotation with respect to its accretion disk, that motion produces strong jets that push molecules in the surrounding gas close together, which leads to the formation of stars.

But later, in corotation, the jet tilts. This tilt makes it so that the jet impinges directly on the gas, heating it up and inhibiting star formation. In addition to that, the jet also sprays X-rays across the galaxy. Cosmic X-rays are bad for life because they can harm organic tissue.

For life to thrive, it most likely needs a planet with a habitable ecosystem, and clouds of hot gas saturated with X-rays don’t contain such planets. So, astronomers can instead look for galaxies without a tilted jet coming from its black hole. This idea is key to understanding where intelligence could potentially have emerged and matured in the universe.

Black holes as a guide

By early 2022, I had built a black hole model to use as a guide. It could point out environments with the right kind of black holes to produce the greatest number of planets without spraying them with X-rays. Life in such environments could emerge to its full potential.

Looking at black holes and their role in star formation could help scientists predict when and where life was most likely to form.

Where are such conditions present? The answer is low-density environments where galaxies had merged about 11 billion years ago.

These environments had black holes whose powerful jets enhanced the rate of star formation, but they never experienced a bout of tilted jets in corotation. In short, my model suggested that theoretically, the most advanced extraterrestrial civilization would have likely emerged on the cosmic scene far away and billions of years ago.The Conversation

David Garofalo, Professor of Physics, Kennesaw State University

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

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Written by: David Garofalo, Kennesaw State University
Published: 12 April 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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