Lakeport Police logs: Saturday, Jan. 10
Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026
00:00 EXTRA PATROL 2601100001
Occurred at Lake County Law Library on 3D....

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The city of Lakeport's National Night Out Against Crime will be held on Tuesday, Aug. 2.
The event will take place from 6 to 8 p.m. at the far north end of N. Main Street, just north of 16th Street.
The road will be closed on N. Main Street, starting from the intersection of 16th Street and North Main Street. The road closure will be from 4 to 8:30 p.m.
This event is coordinated to increase and improve police and community partnerships in the city.
City of Lakeport management and staff, city council members, Lakeport Police Officers and staff, Lakeport Fire Protection District, California Highway Patrol and other local safety officials will be on site to meet and greet local residents.
The event will feature free hot dogs courtesy of the Lakeport Grocery Outlet and cooked by the Kiwanis Club of Lakeport.
There also will be free popcorn and sno-cones. McGruff the Crime Dog and Chipper will be in attendance. Fill-Up the Clown will provide entertainment and balloon sculptures.
The event will have a youth game area and bicycle decorating contest, so organizers are asking that children bring their bicycles to participate.
Raffle prizes for children, under 18, will include two new bicycles with helmets and two new scooters with helmets and baseball mitts. There also will be raffle prizes for adults.
This event is being funded by Lakeport Police drug asset forfeiture funds and the generous donations of supplies and prizes by numerous local businesses and organizations including Kiwanis Club of Lakeport, Lake County News, Lakeport Grocery Outlet, Main Street Bicycles, KXBX 98.3 FM, Lake County 4-H, Lake County Fair, Servpro of Lake and Mendocino County, Pak N Mail, Lakeport Cinema 5, Jeff Morin Art and Saint Mary Immaculate Catholic Parish of Lakeport.
Follow the event on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/events/392951107564666/ .
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The county of Lake is seeking community members interested in serving on a number of county advisory boards and commissions.
The appointments will be approved by the Board of Supervisors.
The following is the list of vacancies.
Animal Control Advisory Board: Two vacancies – supervisorial District 2 and member-at-large.
Big Valley Groundwater Management Zone Commission: Seven vacancies – one member-at-large, four agriculture users category and two water district category.
Building Board of Appeals: Three vacancies – one representative each from supervisorial districts 2, 3 and 5.
Child Care Planning and Development Council: 10 vacancies – one consumer, two public agency, three community representative, two discretionary appointee and two child care provider.
Countywide Parks and Recreation Advisory Board: Four vacancies – one representative each from supervisorial districts 1, 2, 3 and 4.
East Region 3 Town Hall: Five vacancies – one member of Spring Valley Property Owners Association, one member of Clearlake Oaks Keys Property Owners Association, one member of Clearlake Oaks Business Association and two members-at-large.
Emergency Medical Care Committee: 10 vacancies – one community college district, one California Highway Patrol representative, two EMT representatives, one private ambulance company, one sheriff’s office representative, two fire departments and two emergency room affiliated medical care coordinators.
Fish and Wildlife Advisory Committee: One vacancy – Supervisorial District 2.
Hartley Cemetery District: Two vacancies – general membership (must live within the district boundaries and be registered to vote in Lake County).
Heritage Commission: Seven vacancies – one representative from each supervisorial district and two members-at-large.
In Home Support Services Public Authority Advisory Committee: Five vacancies – three senior consumer and two disabled consumers.
Lower Lake Cemetery District: Two vacancies – general membership (must live within the district boundaries and be registered to vote in Lake County).
Maternal, Child and Adolescent Health Advisory Board: Six vacancies – general membership.
Mental Health Board: Two vacancies – one member-at-large and one family member of a present/past consumer.
North Bay Cooperative Library Advisory Board: One Lake County representative.
Public Defender Oversight Committee: Two vacancies – one member of the general public, one attorney.
Section 8 Resident Advisory Board: Nine vacancies – general membership.
Solid Waste Appeals Panel: Two vacancies – one public member and one technical expert.
Solid Waste Task Force: One vacancy – public representative.
Upper Lake Cemetery District: One vacancy – general membership (must live within the district boundaries and be registered to vote in Lake County).
All vacancies are countywide unless stated, and are voluntary.
If you have questions regarding a vacancy on one of these advisory boards, contact the Clerk of the Board's Office at 707-263-2368.
Applications are available at the Lake County Courthouse, Clerk of the Board Office, Room 109, 255 N. Forbes St., Lakeport, or online at www.co.lake.ca.us on the Board of Supervisors page.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Board of Supervisors has approved the formation of a new municipal advisory council to represent the Cobb community.
The Cobb Area Council received unanimous support from the board at its meeting Tuesday morning.
It is the third such body that the Board of Supervisors has created to give communities around the county more input at the board level regarding important issues.
The first of those groups, the Middletown Area Town Hall, will mark its 10th anniversary this December.
In May, at the request of District 3 Supervisor Jim Steele, the board approved the East Region Town Hall, or EaRTH, to represent the Clearlake Oaks area, as Lake County News has reported.
On Tuesday, Eliot Hurwitz, one of the community members working on the effort, reported to the board that on June 9 more than 70 Cobb residents gathered at the Little Red Schoolhouse to consider forming the Cobb Area Council, receiving nearly unanimous approval.
As part of forming the council, Hurwitz said initial board members were proposed, including Hurwitz, Gary Prather, Jessica Pyska, Jessyca Lytle and Barbara Flynn. Cindy Leonard is to act as alternate.
Board of Supervisors Chair Rob Brown, to whom the council will act in an advisory capacity, said the timing for creating the council was good, and that there is a cohesive group in place to support it.
Fletcher Thornton, chair of the Middletown Area Town Hall, urged the new council to not dictate an agenda in setting up its bylaws.
He said such groups should be a platform for people to come and express their opinions about issues facing their areas.
“The town hall should be open to everybody that wants to come and speak,” he said.
Jessyca Lytle responded by explaining that the group did have draft bylaws drawn up, but were waiting for the board to approve the resolution so they could have public input and a vote on the bylaws at an upcoming meeting.
She said the group had spent many months looking at other municipal advisory councils, their bylaws and resolutions, as well as why they formed. In addition, she said they did outreach to community members to identify the greatest needs.
Lytle invited everyone – whether from Cobb or elsewhere – to attend the council's meetings. “We welcome anyone to come.”
She added, “This really, truly came from the community, not from the Board of Supervisors,” although Brown and County Counsel Anita Grant – as well as other county staff – helped them in the process.
Steele said forming the council was a good move on the part of the Cobb community. He said he's trying to get the same thing going on the Northshore's east end – with EaRTH – and then wants to do something similar for the west side of his district.
Brown said he's in regular contact with the council's members already about the many issues facing Cobb, and having a cohesive body to discuss those matters will save time and effort for everyone.
“There's a lot going on,” he said.
Brown passed the gavel to Supervisor Jeff Smith so he could move to offer the resolution forming the council, with an amendment removing a requirement that all of the council's communications be recorded with the Board of Supervisors.
The board approved that motion unanimously, and also gave its consent to Brown's motion to approve the five initial board members.
The Cobb Area Council will hold its first town hall meeting at 6 p.m. Tuesday, July 26, at the Little Red Schoolhouse, 15780 Bottle Rock Road.
Follow the group on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/CobbAreaCouncil/ .
Email Elizabeth Larson at
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lakeport City Council voted unanimously on Tuesday to place on the November ballot a one-cent sales tax measure that city officials said is necessary to meet public safety and road and infrastructure maintenance needs.
“Measure Z” would generate an estimated $1.5 million annually that would be collected by the State Board of Equalization, according to City Manager Margaret Silveira. The discussion begins at the 32:25 minute mark in the video above.
Funds would go toward a variety of uses, including police and public safety, road paving and repairs, park and facilities maintenance, and enhancing business attraction and youth programs, Silveira said.
Silveira said the measure will need only a 50 percent plus one majority vote to pass.
The proposed language of the measure is as follows:
“LAKEPORT PUBLIC SAFETY/ESSENTIAL CITY SERVICES MEASURE. To maintain/enhance general City services including: recruiting, hiring, retaining qualified police officers to improve neighborhood patrols, maintain response to property, burglary, violent crimes; paving/repairing local streets/potholes; enhancing business attraction/youth recreational programs; keeping Lakeport’s parks/pool safe and clean; shall the ordinance to enact a one-cent sales tax until ended by voters, providing about $1,500,000 annually, requiring independent audits, citizens’ oversight, all revenues controlled locally be adopted?”
If enacted, it would be the city's second sales tax measure. The first, Measure I, was passed by voters in November 2004, along with the advisory Measure J, a nonbinding measure that suggested uses for the funds including repair and maintenance of city streets, park and community service facilities, and the expansion of public services and programs.
Measure I is a half-cent tax that generates about $700,000 annually, Silveira said.
Lakeport's current sales tax rate is 8 percent, the same as Clearlake's. Silveira said that the sales tax rate will drop by a quarter of a percent in December due to the end of a temporary statewide sales tax enacted through Proposition 30.
That would mean that Lakeport's sales tax would be 8.75 percent if Measure Z were to pass, she said.
Silveira told the council that putting another sales tax measure forward is necessary due to the city's mounting financial challenges, including the impacts of the recession; the end of redevelopment, which cost the city about $900,000 annually; rising long-term obligations such as employee health care costs; and state takeaways.
While the city budget has remained balanced, “It's been very painstaking,” said Silveira, noting that the city has had to leave positions unfilled, put employee furloughs in place, gave no raises for several years and offer lower pension formulas, while the city's revenue projections have not improved.
Silveira said the city has collected almost $7.5 million from Measure I in the nearly 12 years since it passed, and has spent a total of $12.5 million on road and infrastructure projects.
While Silveira said most communities don’t use general fund money for roads since the recession, thanks to Measure I Lakeport has actually spent a lot of general fund money for roads.
The decision to place Measure Z on the ballot goes back to the city council's goal session earlier this year, when council members made public safety a top priority and directed city staff to look at additional revenue sources, said Silveira.
In April, the city hired a contractor to conduct a telephone survey, which showed strong public support for the proposed sales tax, Silveira said.
That same month, the council held a town hall meeting on public safety at which community members indicated they believed the police department was doing well but were concerned about officer retention, a rising crime rate and the need for increased services, according to Silveira.
Participants at a town hall the city held on economic priorities July 12 also had concerns about public safety and roads, Silveira.
Noting that the city can no longer depend on state resources for help, Silveira told the council, “We have to learn to support ourselves.”
She said an Area Planning Council report found that to simply maintain Lakeport's failing infrastructure would cost $2.5 million annually, while to slightly improve it the city would need $3.8 million annually.
Measure Z would help fill that gap, she said.
Silveira said three quarters of the measure's funds would be raised on purchases made by people from outside of the city, not just Lakeport's 4,700 residents. She explained that nearly 30,000 people are living, working or visiting Lakeport each day.
Based on that 30,000-person retail trade area population, the tax burden on each individual equates to roughly $59 annually, according to Silveira.
She said that a $100 purchase of taxable items at a Lakeport retailer would result in an additional tax of $1, or a 20-gallon fill up at the gas pump at $3 per gallon would result in an additional tax of 60 cents.
The city's general fund currently spends more than $805 annually for every resident on public safety, roads, parks, pool and other governmental purposes. The sales tax would result in an additional $319 of spending by the city annually for each city resident, Silveira said.
If Lakeport's sales tax rose to 8.75 percent, Silveira said it would be the same as Santa Rosa and Healdsburg, where many Lake County residents go to shop. She pointed out that Clearlake also is seeking a 1-percent sales tax this fall.
City Clerk Kelly Buendia went over the ordinance, which included specific language for the Board of Equalization to administer it. She said the document also included requirements for an independent audit and a citizens oversight committee.
Due to the short timeline, Buendia said the council needed to hold a public hearing and introduce and adopt the ordinance imposing the tax. That was to be followed by the resolution calling for the election and placing the measure on the November ballot, requesting approval by the Lake County Board of Supervisors for consolidation of the city's election with the Statewide General Election and requesting election services be provided by the county elections official.
Councilman Kenny Parlet cautioned that the new tax won't address all of the city's needs.
“We all need to be realistic and realize, that even if we get the 1 percent, that it’s not going to fix all of our problems, it’s not going to fix all the roads,” and the city isn't going to be able to add a lot of new programs, Parlet said.
He added, “We absolutely have to do this.”
During public comment, Wilda Shock, who lives in Lakeport and serves as the chair of the Lakeport Economic Development Advisory Committee, noted that at a recent town hall community members were asked about the kind of community they desired. They felt it was important to provide essential city services, including public safety, recreation, good quality of life, infrastructure, improvements and upgrades.
To attract new businesses, another of the desires expressed at the town hall, “The city needs a welcoming appearance that shows its residents care,” she said.
Shock recommended the council put the measure on the November ballot, and provide the opportunity for Lakeport residents and their neighbors to participate in improving the city.
Paula Capps said she opposes new taxes, and asked if the budget can be cut somewhere else. She said she sees government as overspending and pilfering money away with no oversight.
Council members responded that they had made cuts and had only a finite amount of money.
Dennis Rollins noted that the sales tax won't be applied to groceries, and said people think nothing of driving to Santa Rosa to go shopping, so he didn't think they would complain about paying a higher sales tax.
“I think it’s a really good deal for the city of Lakeport,” said Parlet.
Councilwoman Mireya Turner said she appreciated Capps' point of view and takes it seriously. She said transparency is essential so people can feel comfortable with the sales tax measure proposal.
For Turner, she said she was comfortable pursuing the measure after watching the city go through increasingly serious cuts during her nearly two years on the council.
Councilman Martin Scheel said Lakeport needed to become a self-help city, which would open up other funding sources.
He moved to introduce the ordinance, seconded by Turner and approved unanimously. Scheel also moved the resolution, with Turner again seconding, and the council voting 5-0.
In other business, the council approved the Westside Community Park Committee's proposal to name the park's dog park for former committee chair Ron Raetz, a retired educator.
“If it weren't for Ron, there wouldn't be a dog park,” said Rollins, the committee's current chair.
Shock reported that Charlie Jolin, founder of the park effort, was in favor of the action.
The council also approved participating in the National Night Out on Aug. 2. The city has previously taken part in the event, however last year the event was postponed and then canceled due to the summer's wildland fire.
Council members went on to adopt a resolution rescinding Resolution No. 2538 (2015) and revising prohibited parking zones within the city. Specifically, the new resolution delineated a no parking area 466 feet between the southern driveway entrance of the Gateway Business park to just south of Lakeport Boulevard along the west side of Bevins Street.
Other action included the council's adoption of a resolution approving an application for Community Development Block Grant program funding, and canceled the Oct. 4 meeting and nominated council members as voting delegates for the October League of California Cities Annual Conference.
Email Elizabeth Larson at
Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026
00:00 EXTRA PATROL 2601100001
Occurred at Lake County Law Library on 3D....
Friday, Jan. 9, 2026
00:00 EXTRA PATROL 2601090001
Occurred at Lake County Law Library on 3D....