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Clearlake Oaks Post Office set to fully reopen following vehicle crash

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — A Thursday vehicle crash resulted in injuries and led to a temporary closure of retail services at the Clearlake Oaks Post Office, which is set to reopen on Saturday.

The Clearlake Oaks Post Office is located at 13280 E. Highway 20.

“A runaway vehicle crashed through the building yesterday, forcing retail operations to be temporarily suspended,” a Friday statement from the US Postal Services’ San Francisco office said.

Sgt. Joel Skeen of the California Highway Patrol’s Clear Lake Area office said the crash occurred when a young woman accidentally stepped on her vehicle’s gas pedal rather than the brake pedal.

He said it caused a wall collapse and resulted in minor injuries to a little girl and an older man inside the building.

“Nobody was in need of medical transport so pretty minor overall, other than the building damage,” Skeen said, adding that no drugs or alcohol were suspected as factors in the crash.

Postal Service spokesperson Kristina Uppal said the vehicle hit the front entry portion of the building where the postal lobby is located, causing damage to a window, walls and postal equipment, and making it unsafe on Friday to open for retail services.

“Efforts are underway to make the building accessible and safe. We appreciate our customers' patience as we recover from this accident,” said Uppal.

Uppal said PO Box mail and packages were available for pick up at the rear entrance of the building during normal business hours on Friday, while retail operations were available at the Clearlake Post Office, 14500 Olympic Drive.

“This is again just a temporary closure of retail services only for the safety of our customers and staff,” Uppal said Friday.

Later on Friday, the Postal Service reported that the Clearlake Oaks Post Office would resume retail services and lobby access on Saturday on its regular schedule.

The Clearlake Oaks Post Office is open for retail operations and PO Box pickup from Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to noon.

Many retail services including temporary forwards, stamps and more are also available anytime, online at https://www.usps.com/.

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.

Thompson sworn in to serve in the 119th Congress

Congressman Mike Thompson. Courtesy photo.

On Friday, U.S. Representative Mike Thompson (CA-04) was sworn in as a member of the United States House of Representatives by Speaker of the House Mike Johnson.

The swearing-in ceremony for Thompson and hundreds of other recently elected House members took place after Johnson was reelected as speaker.

“It’s the honor of my life to serve the people of the community where I was born, grew up, raised my own family and live today,” said Thompson. “Over the next two years, my priority will remain the same: To deliver for the constituents of the Fourth District. That includes working to lower costs, improve community safety, fight climate change, and protect your fundamental rights and freedoms.”

Thompson was reelected on Nov. 5 to serve California’s Fourth Congressional District, which includes all of Lake and Napa counties, and parts of Solano, Sonoma and Yolo counties.

An Army veteran who reached the rank of staff sergeant in the 173rd Airborne Brigade and received the Purple Heart while serving in Vietnam, he became the first Vietnam veteran elected to the California Senate in 1990.

Thompson then ran successfully in 1998 for Congress, where he has served ever since.

On Friday, he was once again added to the rolls of the House upon executing the oath of office.

Thompson, a Democrat, is a senior member of the House Committee on Ways and Means, chairman of the House Gun Violence Prevention Task Force, co-chair of the bipartisan, bicameral Congressional Wine Caucus and a member of the fiscally-responsible Blue Dog Coalition.

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.

As whooping cough cases increase, state health officials encourage Tdap vaccination

State health officials said California is experiencing an increase in cases of whooping cough.

Also known as pertussis, whooping cough is a highly contagious bacterial disease that can be spread though coughing and can cause severe illness, especially in infants.

The California Department of Public Health, or CDPH, is urging all Californians — especially those who are pregnant and those who provide care to infants — to be up to date on their Tdap (tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis) vaccine to help prevent whooping cough.

Individuals vaccinated against whooping cough are protected against severe illness and complications due to whooping cough.

These complications can be most severe in infants, causing apnea (dangerous pauses in breathing) and can be fatal.

More than 2,000 cases of whooping cough were reported statewide between January and October 2024. 62 of those cases were infants less than four months of age who were hospitalized, including one infant who tragically died. During the same time range in 2023, there were less than 400 whooping cough cases reported in the state.

“Since the COVID-19 pandemic has subsided, many practices that had lowered instances of whooping cough are no longer in place, and we’re seeing the disease return to pre-pandemic levels,” said Dr. Tomás J. Aragón, CDPH director and State Public Health officer. “Infants are particularly vulnerable and that’s why CDPH especially encourages people who are pregnant to receive the Tdap vaccine in their third trimester which will pass along protective antibodies to the baby.”

Health officials’ recommendations

With whooping cough cases rising, ensure you are up to date on your whooping cough vaccine. Vaccination is recommended for all:

• Pregnant people between 27 and 36 weeks of pregnancy, even if they have received Tdap in the past.
• Adults, every 10 years.
• Adolescents aged 11 or 12 years (Tdap vaccine is also required for 7th grade advancement in California).
• Infants and young children receive their own whooping cough (DTaP) vaccines starting at 2 months through 4-6 years of age. Babies and children who haven't had all recommended doses are more likely to have serious complications.
Talk to your doctor or pharmacist about which vaccines are right for you and your family.

People with whooping cough have severe coughing attacks that can last for months. Infants too young for vaccination are at greatest risk for hospitalization and death.

Early signs of whooping cough are similar to symptoms of the common cold such as a runny or stuffy nose and low-grade fever. Babies with whooping cough may have trouble breathing, turn blue or stop breathing.

To protect infants from whooping cough, CDPH strongly urges maternal immunization with Tdap (tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis) vaccine in the last trimester (between 27 and 36 weeks) of every pregnancy.

When given during pregnancy, Tdap is approximately 90% effective in preventing infant hospitalizations due to whooping cough. It is also beneficial for all family members and caregivers of newborns to receive either the Tdap (for adults and children older than seven) or DTaP (for those seven years of age or younger) vaccines to prevent spreading whooping cough to infants.

CDPH said these vaccines are safe and effective and can be received at the same time as flu, COVID or RSV vaccines.

Tdap vaccines are widely available at many doctor offices and pharmacies. Schedule a vaccine appointment by visiting https://myturn.ca.gov/ or contacting your local pharmacy or health care provider.

Most health insurance plans, including Medi-Cal, cover Tdap vaccines. Individuals experiencing difficulty finding a place to get immunized may contact their health care provider or local health department for help.

The Vaccines For Children, or VFC, program is a federally funded program that provides vaccines at no cost to children (18 and younger) who might not otherwise be vaccinated because of an inability to pay. Contact your doctor to learn if they are enrolled in VFC or visit MyTurn to find a location based on your eligibility.

Get more information about whooping cough or pertussis by visiting CDPH’s Pertussis (Whooping Cough) webpage or CDC’s Whooping Cough Vaccination webpage.

Estate Planning: Enabling advisors to control the administration of a trust

Dennis Fordham. Courtesy photo.

Under California’s new Uniform Directed Trust Act, trusted advisors can be granted control of certain aspects of the trust administration as trust directors.

Also, settlors now can allow co-trustees to divide (compartmentalize) the trust administration between themselves such that co-trustees are no longer responsible for each other’s administration.

Thus, California now allows the trustee’s duties and powers to be segmented and allocated amongst two or more fiduciaries (legal representatives of the trust) who collectively administer the trust.

Until recently, the administration of the trust was always controlled and managed by one or more trustees with full authority and powers over the trust in their hands alone.

Trustees can still hire agents and delegate certain functions. Nonetheless, under Probate Code Section 16012 (a), “The trustee [still] has a duty not to delegate to others the performance of acts that the trustee can reasonably be required personally to perform and may not transfer the office of trustee to another person nor delegate the entire administration of the trust to a co-trustee or other person.”

That is, the trustee has certain non-delegable duties and even if there is a co-trustee involved, neither co-trustee could transfer all responsibility to the other co-trustee.

Now, however, a settlor can establish a trust that divides the trust administration across two or more fiduciaries and diminishes the trustee’s role; perhaps even reducing the trustee to simply holding title to trust assets and performing ministerial duties.

That is, advisors whom the trustee once might have appointed as agents under the trustee’s supervision may now be nominated by the settlor when establishing the trust as “trust directors” to oversee aspects of the trust administration.

As implied, the trust director directs (tells) the trustee to take action within the scope of the trust director’s authority. The directed trustee, as implied, is a trustee whose actions are directed (governed) by one or more trust directors, provided such directions are given within the trust director’s authorized scope of authority.

A trusted financial advisor might be appointed by the settlor as trust director for Investments. The financial advisor might be allowed to make certain investment choices that a trustee would otherwise not be allowed to perform such as investments that would violate the duty to diversify and/or not to invest in speculative / risky assets.

For example, the settlor may want the trust director for Investments to invest in certain possibly high gain / high risk assets (e.g., crypto currency) that the trustee could not do. Naturally, the trust instrument would need to waive California’s statutory diversification and risky asset rules that prohibit such trust investments.

Importantly, the directed trustee has no duty to supervise or to second guess the trust director’s own judgment in either using or not using the trust director’s authority and powers. Nonetheless, the directed trustee still cannot implement a direction given by the trust director if doing so would be a willful breach of the trustee’s fiduciary duty.

Furthermore, the directed trust act also allows co-trustees to control different aspects of a trust’s administration separately.

For example, a special co-trustee with a professional license may be given exclusive authority to control and to manage the settlor’s professional (licensed) practice (e.g., a dentistry), if the professional settlor became incapacitated or died.

The settlor’s spouse might be the other co-trustee with general control over all other trust assets. The settlor’s spouse still has authority to receive assets from the co-trustee managing the settlor’s professional practice (such as money if the practice were sold).

The spouse as general co-trustee would administer the trust for the benefit of the settlor’s family while the special co-trustee winds up the professional practice.

In sum, California law allows for responsibilities for a trust administration to be segmented amongst a variety of fiduciaries (representatives), with unequal and compartmentalized powers, in order to achieve more desired results.

The foregoing discussion is not legal advice. Anyone confronting such estate planning issues should consult with a qualified attorney.

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.

Space News: NASA’s micro-mission Lunar Trailblazer will make macro-measurements of the lunar surface in 2025

 

Lunar Trailblazer is planned to launch in early 2025. Lockheed Martin Space
César León Jr., Washington University in St. Louis

NASA’s upcoming Artemis II mission is slated to return astronauts to the Moon no sooner than April 2026. Astronauts were last on the Moon in 1972 during the Apollo 17 mission.

Artemis II will utilize NASA’s Space Launch System, which is an extremely powerful rocket that will enable human space exploration beyond Earth’s atmosphere. The crew of four will travel in an Orion spacecraft, which the agency launched around the Moon and successfully returned during the Artemis I mission.

But before Artemis II, NASA will send two missions to scout the surface of the lunar south pole for resources that could sustain human space travel and enable new scientific discoveries.

Planetary geologists like me are interested in data from Lunar Trailblazer, one of these two scouting missions. The data from this mission will help us understand how water forms and behaves on rocky planets and moons.

Starting with scientific exploration

PRIME-1, or the Polar Resources Ice Mining Experiment, will be mounted on a lunar lander. It’s scheduled for launch in January 2025.

Aboard the lander are two instruments: The Regolith and Ice Drill for Exploring New Terrain, TRIDENT, and the Mass Spectrometer for Observing Lunar Operations, MSOLO. TRIDENT will dig down up to 3 feet (1 meter) and extract samples of lunar soil, and MSOLO will evaluate the soil’s chemical composition and water content.

Joining the lunar mining experiment is Lunar Trailblazer, a satellite launching on the same Falcon 9 rocket.

Think of this setup as a multimillion-dollar satellite Uber pool, or a rideshare where multiple missions share a rocket and minimize fuel usage while escaping Earth’s gravitational pull.

Bethany Ehlmann, a planetary scientist, is the principal investigator of Lunar Trailblazer and is leading an operating team of scientists and students from Caltech’s campus. Trailblazer is a NASA Small, Innovative Mission for PLanetary Exploration, or SIMPLEx.

These missions intend to provide practical operations experience at a lower cost. Each SIMPLEx mission is capped at a budget of US$55 million – Trailblazer is slightly over budget at $80 million. Even over budget, this mission will cost around a quarter of a typical robotic mission from NASA’s Discovery Program. Discovery Program missions typically cost around $300 million, with a maximum budget of $500 million.

Building small but mighty satellites

Decades of research and development into small satellites, or SmallSats, opened the possibility for Trailblazer. SmallSats take highly specific measurements and complement data sourced from other instruments.

A diagram showing four small satellites scanning Earth's science and taking layers of science data.
Missions like NASA’s TROPICS use a network of small satellites to take more data than one satellite would be able to do alone. NASA Applied Sciences

Multiple SmallSats working together in a constellation can take various measurements simultaneously for a high-resolution view of the Earth’s or Moon’s surface.

SIMPLEx missions can use these SmallSats. Because they’re small and more affordable, they allow researchers to study questions that come with a higher technical risk. Lunar Trailblazer, for example, uses commercial off-the-shelf parts to keep the cost down.

These low-cost, high-risk experimental missions may help geologists further understand the origin of the solar system, as well as what it’s made of and how it has changed over time. Lunar Trailblazer will focus specifically on mapping the Moon.

A brief timeline of water discoveries on the Moon

Scientists have long been fascinated by the surface of our closest celestial neighbor, the Moon. As early as the mid-17th century, astronomers mischaracterized ancient volcanic eruptions as lunar mare, derived from the Latin word for “seas.”

Nearly two centuries later, astronomer William Pickering’s calculations suggested that the Moon had no atmosphere. This led him to conclude the Moon could not have water on its surface, as that water would vaporize.

However, in the 1990s, NASA’s Clementine mission detected water on the Moon. Clementine was the first mission to completely map the surface of the Moon, including the lunar poles. This data detected the presence of ice within permanently shadowed regions on the Moon in low resolution.

Scientists’ first water detection prompted further exploration. NASA launched the Lunar Prospector in 1998 and the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter in 2009. The India Space Research Organization launched its Chandrayaan-1 mission with the Moon Mineralogy Mapper, M3, instrument in 2008. M3, although not designed to detected liquid water, unexpectedly did find it in sunlit areas on the Moon.

These missions collectively provided maps showing how hydrous minerals – minerals containing water molecules in their chemical makeup – and ice water are distributed on the lunar surface, particularly in the cold, dark, permanently shadowed regions.

Novel mission, novel science

But how does the temperature and physical state of water on the Moon change from variations in sunlight and crater shadows?

Lunar Trailblazer will host two instruments, the Lunar Thermal Mapper, LTM, and an evolution of the M3 instrument, the High-resolution Volatiles and Minerals Moon Mapper, HVM3.

The LTM instrument will map surface temperature, while the HVM3 will measure how lunar rocks absorb light. These measurements will allow it to detect and distinguish between water in liquid and ice forms.

In tandem, these instruments will provide thermal and chemical measurements of hydrous lunar rock. They’ll measure water during various times of the lunar day, which is about 29.5 Earth days, to try to show how the chemical composition of water varies depending on the time of day and where it is on the Moon.

These results will tell researchers what phase – solid or liquid – the water is found in.

Scientific significance and what’s next

There are three leading theories for where lunar water came from. It could be water that’s been stored inside the Moon since its formation, in its mantle layer. Some geologic processes may have allowed it to slowly escape to the surface over time.

Or, the water may have arrived on asteroids and comets that collided with the lunar surface. It may even have been created by interactions with the solar wind, which is a stream of particles that comes from the Sun.

Lunar Trailblazer may shed light on these theories and help researchers make progress on several other big science questions, including how water behaves on rocky bodies like the Moon and whether future astronauts will be able to use it.The Conversation

César León Jr., Ph.D. Student of Planetary Geology, Washington University in St. Louis

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

First snow survey of the season shows snowpack near average for California

California Department of Water Resources staff members Jordan Thoennes (left), Water Resources engineer, and Andy Reising, Snow Surveys and Water Supply Forecasting Unit manager, conduct the first media snow survey of the 2025 season at Phillips Station in the Sierra Nevada. The survey is held approximately 90 miles east of Sacramento off Highway 50 in El Dorado County. Photo taken Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025. Photo by Nick Shockey/California Department of Water Resources.

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA — Recent storms have boosted California’s snowpack following a hot summer and fall.

The Department of Water Resources, or DWR, on Thursday conducted the first snow survey of the season at Phillips Station.

The manual survey recorded 24 inches of snow depth and a snow water equivalent of 9 inches, which is 91% of average for this location, DWR reported.

The snow water equivalent measures the amount of water contained in the snowpack and is a key component of DWR’s water supply forecast. Statewide, DWR said the snowpack is 108% of average for this date.

Recent years in California have been marked by extremely hot and dry conditions broken up by periods of intense rain and snow. So far, this water year has been no different, according to DWR’s report.

A record-breaking hot and dry summer continued well into the fall, but a powerful atmospheric river in November broke several rainfall records in Northern California. DWR said a series of storms in late December provided another boost.

“While our snowpack looks good now, we have a long way until April when our water supply picture will be more complete,” said DWR Director Karla Nemeth. “Extreme shifts between dry and wet conditions are continuing this winter and if the past several years are any indication, anything could happen between now and April and we need to be prepared.”

DWR’s electronic readings from 130 stations placed throughout the Sierra Nevada indicate that the statewide snowpack’s snow water equivalent is 10.7 inches, or 108% of average for this date, compared to 28% on this date last year.

California has seen this pattern before. In both 2013 and 2022, the January snowpack was well above average thanks to December storm activity, only for dry conditions to take over the rest of the winter, quickly erasing early season snow totals and continuing existing drought conditions across the state.

California Department of Water Resources staff members (from right) Andy Reising, Snow Surveys and Water Supply Forecasting Unit manager; Manon von Kaenel, Water Resources engineer; Angelique Fabbiani-Leon, state hydrometeorologist; and Jordan Thoennes, Water Resources engineer, conduct the first media snow survey of the 2025 season at Phillips Station in the Sierra Nevada. The survey is held approximately 90 miles east of Sacramento off Highway 50 in El Dorado County.  Photo taken January 2, 2025. Photo taken Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025. Photo by Nick Shockey/California Department of Water Resources.


“We are fortunate to have had several solid snow-producing atmospheric river systems so far this season,” said DWR’s Snow Surveys and Water Supply Forecasting Unit Manager Andy Reising. “The fall was extremely dry, so our healthy snow totals are thanks to a handful of big storm systems in November and late December. But to finish the year where we need to be, we will still need additional snow building at a regular pace throughout the winter.”

Major reservoirs statewide are currently 121% of average thanks to two consecutive years of above average snowpack conditions, which occurred after the driest three-year period on record in California.

DWR is preparing for these swings between extreme conditions by investing in climate resilience, including the use of Forecast Informed Reservoir Operations, floodplain and flood infrastructure improvements and groundwater recharge efforts that will ensure California is able to capture and use as much water during flood conditions as possible.

On average, the Sierra snowpack supplies about 30%t of California’s water needs. Its natural ability to store water is why the Sierra snowpack is often referred to as California's “frozen reservoir.”

Data from these snow surveys and forecasts produced by DWR’s Snow Surveys and Water Supply Forecasting Unit are important factors in determining how DWR manages the state’s water resources.

In other hydrology news, in the Mendocino National Forest, the season’s first snow measurements show below-average conditions.

At Anthony Peak in the Covelo Ranger District and Stony Creek river basin, the December snow measurement showed a depth of 21 inches with 8 inches of water content and 38 % density.

No available measurement at that site was available in December 2023, but in December 2022, the density at that site also was 38%

At Plaskett Meadows, in the Eel River basin, measurements are not expected until April.

A drone view of the course after the California Department of Water Resources conducted the first media snow survey of the 2025 season at Phillips Station in the Sierra Nevada. The survey is held approximately 90 miles east of Sacramento off Highway 50 in El Dorado County.  Photo taken Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025. Photo by Nick Shockey/California Department of Water Resources.
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Community

  • Sheriff’s Activities League and Clearlake Bassmasters offer youth fishing clinic

  • City Nature Challenge takes place April 24 to 27

Public Safety

  • Lakeport Police logs: Wednesday, Feb. 11

  • Lakeport Police logs: Tuesday, Feb. 10

Education

  • Ramos measure requiring school officer training in use of anti-opioid drug moves forward

  • Lake County Chapter of CWA announces annual scholarships 

Health

  • California ranks 24th in America’s Health Rankings Annual Report from United Health Foundation

  • Healthy blood donors especially vital during active flu season

Business

  • Employment law summit takes place March 9

  • Two Lake County Mediacom employees earn company’s top service awards

Obituaries

  • Terry Knight

  • Ellen Thomas

Opinion & Letters

  • Who should pay for AI’s power? Not California ratepayers

  • Crandell: Supporting nephew for reelection in supervisorial race

Veterans

  • State honors fallen chief warrant officer killed in conflict in Iran

  • CalVet and CSU Long Beach team up to improve data collection related to veteran suicides

Recreation

  • April Audubon program will show how volunteers can help monitor local osprey nests

  • First guided nature walk of spring at Anderson Marsh State Historic Park April 11

  • Second Saturday guided nature walks continue at Anderson Marsh State Historic Park

  • Wet weather trail closure in effect on Upper Lake Ranger District

Religion

  • Kelseyville Presbyterian Church plans Easter service

  • Easter ‘Sonrise’ Service returns to Xabatin Community Park

Arts & Life

  • ‘CIA’ delves into the shadowy world of an espionage thriller

  • ‘War Machine’ shifts the battlefield into uncharted territory

Government & Politics

  • Lake County Democratic Central Committee endorses Falkenberg

  • Crandell launches reelection campaign plans March 15 event

Legals

  • April 23 hearing on Lake Coco Farms Major Use Permit

  • NOTICE OF 30-DAY PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD & NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

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