Numerous agencies join search for missing Clearlake girl; aunt calls situation ‘devastating’

CLEARLAKE, Calif. – The search for a missing Clearlake girl grew on Monday, as agencies from around the region joined the effort and her worried family waited for news.
Authorities have been searching for 9-year-old Mikaela Renee Lynch since Sunday afternoon, after her father reported her missing from her family’s home on Harbor Drive, as Lake County News has reported.
It’s believed that the girl – who has autism and cannot speak – wandered away from home, and may not have been clothed when she left. She had last been seen playing in the family’s yard.
She is described as a white female, 4 feet tall and weighing 70 pounds, with brown hair and blue eyes.
Lt. Tim Celli of the Clearlake Police Department said Monday that numerous agencies had joined the search.
In addition to Clearlake and Lake County officials, Napa, Sonoma, Marin and Contra Costa had sent personnel and resources to assist, Celli said.
The child’s family continued to wait and hope for her safe return.
“I have never seen parents more in love with their child than Michael and Bari. This is devastating,” said the girl’s aunt, Yvonne Heidt, who lives in Texas.
Efforts to find the girl began immediately on Sunday, with Clearlake Police personnel and volunteers, Lake County Fire, Northshore Dive Team, K-Corps and even community members assisting, according to reports from the scene.
REACH and California Highway Patrol sent helicopters to fly over Cache Creek, which is near the girl’s home.
Witnesses said officials went door to door, blocked off the street and even searched cars leaving the area.
Early Monday, dogs were being used to search, police said.
Police were staging at the Mormon Church, located at 14970 Lakeview Way, not far from where the child was last seen.
Clearlake City Councilman Joey Luiz was at the church on Monday afternoon, and said at that point 125 volunteers were estimated to be on scene, with more arriving.
“The effort from all the professionals and volunteers is outstanding and relentless,” Luiz said. “If anyone can get little Mikaela home safe it is this amazing group of people.”
For community members who want to help volunteer, they can go to the Mormon Church and find a walk-in volunteer sign up area, according to police.
Anyone with information on her whereabouts is asked to contact the Clearlake Police Department at 707-994-8251 or call 911.
Email Elizabeth Larson at
Supervisors to discuss Lakeside Heights response, preparations for upcoming fire season
LAKEPORT, Calif. – An update on the continuing emergency situation at Lakeside Heights, as well as a consideration of the coming fire season, will be taken up by the Board of Supervisors this week.
The meeting will take place beginning at 9 a.m. Tuesday, May 14, in the board chambers on the first floor of the Lake County Courthouse, 255 N. Main St., Lakeport. It will be broadcast live on TV8.
At 9:25 a.m., the board will get an update from staff on the landslide at Lakeside Heights in north Lakeport.
Over the last several days, the cluster of 29 hilltop homes off of Hill Road has gained national media attention because of the destructive ground movement, which has resulted in more than half of the homes being mandatorily or voluntarily evacuated.
Officials and residents alike are struggling to find the root cause of the issue, with homeowners being told by their insurance companies that the damage so far is not covered by policies.
During the Tuesday morning discussion, the board will consider services recommendations for the continued response to the situation and proposed safety regulations in response to the local emergency.
In other business, with the year’s dry conditions leading to concerns about a bad fire season, at 10 a.m. the board will discuss recommendations for preparing for the summer, and also will consider the coordinated all-agency response to last year’s Wye and Walker fires.
The full agenda follows.
TIMED ITEMS
9 a.m. A-1 to A-4: Approval of consent agenda, which includes items that are expected to be routine and noncontroversial, and will be acted upon by the board at one time without discussion; presentation of animals available for adoption at Lake County Animal Care and Control; consideration of items not appearing on the posted agenda, and contract change orders for current construction projects.
9:05 a.m.: Citizen’s input. Any person may speak for three minutes about any subject of concern, provided that it is within the jurisdiction of the Board of Supervisors and is not already on the agenda. Prior to this time, speakers must fill out a slip giving name, address and subject (available in the clerk of the board’s office, first floor, courthouse).
9:10 a.m., A-5: (a) Presentation of proclamation designating the week of May 12-18, 2013, as Police Officers Week; (b) presentation of proclamation designating the week of May 12-18, 2013, as Safe Boating Week; and (c) presentation of proclamation designating the month of May 2013 as Mental Health Month.
9:15 a.m., A-6: Hearing, nuisance assessment confirmation and proposed recordation of notice of lien in the amount of $4,057.71 - 16744 Hofacker Lane, Lower Lake, CA (APN 122-221-08 - Jesse
McGuire).
9:25 a.m., A-7: (a) Update on Lakeside Heights Subdivision; (b) consideration of services recommendations for continued response; and (c) consideration of proposed safety regulations in response to the local emergency.
9:30 a.m., A-8: To be continued to June 18 at 9:45 a.m. – public hearing, consideration of proposed ordinance adding Article Seven to Chapter Seven of the Lake County Code to provide support for Public, Educational and Governmental (PEG) Cable Television Access Facilities.
9:45 a.m., A-9: Public hearing, consideration of proposed resolution approving resolutions and capital fire facility and equipment plans submitted by Lake County Fire Agencies and updating the Lake County Capital Fire Facility and Equipment Plan.
10 a.m., A-10: Consideration of coordinated all-agency response to last year’s Wye and Walker fires, and recommendations to prepare for the upcoming fire season.
NONTIMED ITEMS
A-11: Supervisors’ weekly calendar, travel and reports.
A-12: Advanced from May 7, consideration of proposed ordinance amending Article I of Chapter 6 of the Lake County Code relating to emergency organization and functions; second reading.
A-13: Carried over from April 23 and May 7, consideration of proposed resolution authorizing the chair to sign a notice of completion for the Middletown Library/Senior Center.
A-14: Consideration of proposed letter regarding allocation of Proposition 39 funds.
A-15: Consideration of proposed letter of opposition to Assembly Bill AB 52 (Gatto) Native Americans: California Environmental Quality Act.
A-16: Consideration of proposed findings of fact and decision in the appeal of Friends of Cobb Mountain - AB 13-01.
A-17: Consideration of request to authorize out of state travel for Senior Victim Witness Domestic Violence Advocate Kerri Smith and one non-county employee to attend the Office on Violence Against Women (OVW) Advocacy Conference for GTEAP Grantees in New Orleans, LA on June 25-27.
CLOSED SESSION
A-18: 1.Conference with Labor Negotiator: (a) County Negotiators: A. Grant, L. Guintivano, S. Harry, M. Perry, and A. Flora; and (b) Employee Organization: Deputy District Attorney's Association, Lake County Deputy Sheriff's Association, Lake County Correctional Officers Association, Lake County Employees Association and Lake County Safety Employees Association.
A-18: 2. Public employee performance evaluation: Public Works and Water Resources Director Scott De Leon and Community Development Director Rick Coel.
CONSENT AGENDA
C-1: Approve minutes of the Board of Supervisors meeting held on May 7, 2013.
C-2: (a) Adopt proclamation designating the week of May 12-18, 2013, as Police Officers Week; (b) adopt proclamation designating the week of May 12-18, 2013 as Safe Boating Week; and (c) adopt proclamation designating the month of May 2013 as Mental Health Month.
C-3 Approve plans and specifications for construction Clearlake Oaks Senior Center, and authorize the county administrative officer/purchasing agent to advertise for bids.
C-4: Adopt resolution approving a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Department of Agriculture to provide an Animal Damage Control Program for the County of Lake.
C-5: Adopt resolution approving the standard agreement between the county of Lake and Partnership Health Plan for behavioral health services and authorizing the director of Behavioral Health to sign the
agreement.
C-6: Waive 900 hour limit for extra help Park Maintenance Worker Chris Taylor.
C-7: Approve job description and salary grade (A12) of facility caretaker.
C-8: Waive 900 hour limit for extra help Eligibility Worker II Joanne Ruddock.
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Leaks discovered in county water system at Lakeside Heights; repairs made, monitoring continues

LAKEPORT, Calif. – Two leaks within the county’s water system were discovered this week as officials continue to try to zero in on what is contributing to a landslide at the Lakeside Heights subdivision.
A second leak detection test that revealed the previously undiscovered leaks was completed on Thursday at the north Lakeport subdivision, according to a Friday evening report from county public information officer Kevin Ingram.
Lakeside Heights, a 29-home subdivision located off of Hill Road, has been the scene of moving earth, several destroyed homes, and many more homes evacuated mandatorily or voluntarily since late March.
Lake County Special Districts, which oversees the public sewer and water systems serving the subdivision, had asked for the second leak detection test due to concerns that continual ground movement over the past month had the potential to compromise the water infrastructure, Ingram said.
A previous leak detection test, conducted on March 25, concluded there were no leaks in the public water system, suggesting instead that there may have been an issue with the homeowners association’s irrigation pipeline, as Lake County News has reported.
The two leaks found this week were both located on Oxford Drive, Ingram said.
He said Special Districts repaired both leaks on Friday.
Ingram added that Special Districts will continue to conduct regular monitoring of its system and perform periodic leak detection tests in order to ensure that continued slide movement does not lead to additional leaks within the existing public water and sewer infrastructure serving the subdivision.
Tom Ruppenthal, vice president of operations for the testing firm Utility Services Associates, oversaw the second round of tests this week.
He characterized the leaks as being “small in the scheme of things,” but added that he couldn’t discuss the testing further and that it would be up to the county to release his full findings.
Subdivision residents Garey Hurn and Randall Fitzgerald said they watched the testing and repairs this week.
The two men said it was estimated that one of the leaks, not far from Fitzgerald’s home, was putting out about 10 gallons of water a minute, with the second leak farther up the hill putting out about 20 gallons a minute.
Based on those amounts, Hurn estimated that during the past 60 days – a timeframe he is using based on the earth movement subdivision residents have reported seeing – the leaks have put out 2.5 million gallons of water into the hillside, which he said equates to roughly 125 swimming pools that contain 20,000 gallons each.

He pointed out that the estimated amount of water that’s saturated the ground is a much greater surface area than the compromised and slipping hillside.
“I’m thinking that volume of water is definitely a major contributing factor” to the landslide, Hurn added.
Scott Spivey, whose home on Lancaster Road slid into a hole that developed in the hillside, said the home had been there since 1985 and there was never a problem.
He’d lived in the gray two story home for 11 years before he started noticing sticking doors, stress cracks on the side of door headers and, then, the most significant damage, including a large crack on the home’s exterior.
Spivey and his wife were given a 48-notice the weekend of March 23 in advance of the home being red-tagged.
“This wasn’t a natural thing,” Spivey said. “There’s something going on there.”
His insurance company won’t cover any of the damage to the home, Spivey said, and that’s causing residents to consider taking legal action elsewhere.
Meanwhile, Fitzgerald – who has watched many of his immediate neighbors move due to voluntary evacuation orders – said Lancaster Road is breaking in two about 50 feet from his home.
“We may have only a couple of weeks before Lancaster is completely gone,” Fitzgerald said.
With the recently identified leaks now being fixed, on Friday fences were put up around the landslide area on Lancaster Road, Fitzgerald said.
Next Tuesday, the Board of Supervisors will get another update from county staff on the situation at Lakeside Heights. Hurn said homeowners are planning to meet later that day.
At a previous homeowners meeting held last week, the group gathered names to place on a petition submitted to Gov. Jerry Brown’s office, asking that he declare an emergency in response to the situation.
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Initiative efforts seek rent control for senior mobile home parks in county, city of Lakeport
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Efforts are under way to place initiatives that would implement rent control in senior mobile home parks on upcoming Lakeport and county ballots.
Lakeport resident Nelson Strasser is the chief proponent of the initiative effort in Lakeport, and he has joined forces with the Save Our Seniors Committee, which is working on the countywide initiative. So far, no initiative is under way to govern the city of Clearlake.
City Attorney Steve Brookes and County Counsel Anita Grant both provided ballot titles and summaries for the parallel efforts, and the required legal notices were published.
Strasser said he and the Save Our Senior Committee gathered about 200 signatures – of which he estimated 60 to 70 were for Lakeport residents – last Friday and Saturday, and also registered 10 new voters.
“We’re pretty enthused,” he said, adding that it appeared to be an “easy sell” once they explained their purpose.
The language of the initiatives are, for the most part, similar on their main points, said Strasser, with some minor exceptions.
Both call for rent control to be imposed in senior mobile home parks, which the county measure defines as “one where at least one inhabitant of 80 percent of the mobile homes is over 55 years of age and which has at least two mobile homes.” Strasser’s measure defines such parks as have one inhabitant age 65 or older in 80 percent of the homes.
The two measures also would roll back all rental rates to those in effect on Jan. 1, 2012, and prohibit all space rental increases in senior mobile home parks unless there is an increase in Social Security benefits, and then only to the extent of that percentage increase. Violations would result in misdemeanor penalties in both proposed initiatives.
The measures allow capital improvement costs, including reasonable financing costs, to be passed through to residents in a senior mobile home park only if a majority of homeowners occupying spaces affected by the pass through consent to the improvement. Government-mandated expenses could be passed through to tenants; in the county measure, passing on such costs would require a 90-day written notice.
The county measure requires that space rentals decrease proportionately to any reduction in Social Security benefits; prohibits any rent increase in a senior mobile home park when a tenant moves from a space due to illness, incapacity, death or the sale of the mobile home; and would not apply to leases more than 12 months in duration, to mobile home spaces constructed after 1991 and mobile homes which are not the tenant’s primary residence.
The Lakeport measure would provide “limited exemptions for rent control for mobile home spaces with leases over 12 months in duration, for mobile home spaces constructed after 1991, and where the mobile home space is not the tenant’s principal residence,” and forbid rent increases when a mobile home space is transferred to a new mobile home owner or occupant.
Strasser said he’s aiming to get the Lakeport initiative on the ballot this November, and must collect 415 signatures by July 1.
For the county initiative, Lake County Registrar of Voters Diane Fridley said it will require a minimum of 2,115 signatures, which is based on a percentage of the total number of ballots cast during the Nov. 2, 2010, gubernatorial election.
Fridley said the county initiative’s proponents have 180 days from April 12 – when they picked up the copy of the final ballot title and summary from her office – to collect the necessary signatures.
They have not so far requested a special election, which Fridley said would require them to collect a greater number of signatures. She said there is not enough time for them to get on the November ballot, so if they make their deadline it would go on the next statewide election ballot, which would be in June 2014.
The origins of the effort
Strasser purchased a mobile home in Fairgrounds Village Senior Park in Lakeport more than a year ago.
He began spearheading a rent control movement after the park’s new owners began to implement large rent increases, including a recent 7.5-percent hike. He said that raised his rent from $330 to $355 each month.
He said there are no limits on the amount of rent that can be increased at a time, with only a 90-day notice required.
For many seniors in the parks, Strasser said they don’t have a means to go elsewhere if the rents get too high, and called the high rent increases “vulture capitalism.”
Strasser circulated a petition among fellow park residents, getting between 40 and 50 signatures, and then, during citizen’s input at a Lakeport City Council meeting last August, he asked the council to consider implementing rent control in senior mobile home parks. However, the council since has taken no action to hold a separate discussion on the matter.
He wanted to pursue an initiative, and said he met with City Manager Margaret Silveira and Brookes, who asked him to come up with an alternative, so he called the owner of his park and asked if they would commit to a year of not raising space rents.
Strasser said the park’s owner never called back – he’s still not heard from them – and he decided to move forward on the initiative, which he crafted based on successful initiatives elsewhere. It would form the basis, with some minor changes, for the county initiative, according to Save Our Seniors Committee member Heather Powers.
Powers, a resident at Sterling Shores Estates in north Lakeport, said she became involved in the county initiative effort after being involved with the attempt to negotiate a fair rent contract with the park owner, which she said has raised rents there about 44 percent over a seven-year period.
After finding out about Strasser’s plans, she said the idea came up to pursue a countywide initiative, using language similar to Strasser’s. Eventually, the Save Our Seniors Committee was formed in April, growing out of a homeowners association group.
Brookes said he has concerns about the constitutionality of Strasser’s initiative, specifically, because of due process concerns, retroactivity and issue of “taking” from the property owners.
Strasser believes the measure will hold up, and said he doesn’t see evidence of a taking.
Eric Johnson, spokesman for the California Department of Housing and Community Development, said rent control is a complex issue.
“There are some state rules on how rent control is implemented,” he said.
While state Housing and Community Development has jurisdiction for mobile home parks in relation to making sure they adhere to codes and standards – and provide livable standards including sewer and trash collection – “We don’t enforce the rent control,” Johnson said.
That leaves it up to the jurisdictions. Brookes said there are administrative complexities for the jurisdictions where rent control is implemented, and he expects that the city of Lakeport – and, separately, the county – would need to create bureaucracies to track whether rent control rules were being implemented and followed.
This isn’t the first time that some kind of rent control effort has taken place in Lakeport. In 1988 there was an effort to get an initiative on the ballot to require the city to implement a rent control committee, but that ultimately failed. Brookes said he doesn’t recall any other rent control efforts in the city.
“There’s a lot of municipalities that have rent control,” said Strasser, explaining that many are tied to the Consumer Price Index.
The local measures are tied to Social Security increases, which relies on a weighted CPI, which Strasser considered the most fair approach.
The city of Ukiah has a rent stabilization ordinance in place for mobile homes, as do dozens of other jurisdictions around the state, including Alameda, Sonoma and Ventura counties, and the cities of Calistoga, Concord, Cotati, Milpitas, Morgan Hill, Novato, Santa Rosa, Sebastopol and Sonoma, according to a list provided by the San Luis Obispo Mobilehome Residents Assistance Panel.
A minority of areas, including San Luis Obispo County, the cities of Cathedral City, Delano, East Palo Alto, Escondido, Hemet, Indio, Lancaster, Rancho Mirage, Rohnert Park and Santa Monica, had rent control implemented through initiative, based on the panel’s list.
Weighing issues for parks
According to the California Department of Housing and Community Development, there are about 100 mobile home and RV parks in all of Lake County – including the cities of Lakeport and Clearlake. Available mobile home spaces in the parks range from as few as two spaces up to as many as 158.
Regarding the many parks in the county’s jurisdiction, Powers said the committee hasn’t directly identified all of the parks where the initiative would apply other than Sterling Shores. The owners of that park – Shamrock Millco-Sterling Shores LLC of Paradise Valley, Ariz. – did not respond to a call seeking comment from Lake County News.
In addition to his own park, among the parks in Lakeport that Strasser identified as fitting the senior mobile home park definition was Lakeport Lagoons on South Main Street.
Manager Paula Duggan said she didn’t think the initiative was necessary as, in the case of her park, “We always try to keep it well below the CPI.”
Duggan added, “There’s times that we don’t raise the rent for three or four years because we’re trying to be fair to the residents.”
She acknowledged that some people have come to her park from Sterling Shores because of high land leases there, and said some mobile home park owners are looking to get rich and price out residents. That’s not the case with Arton Inc. of Redwood City, which owns Lakeport Lagoons, she said.
Northport Trailer Resort in the county doesn’t fit the definition of a senior mobile home park, but Mary Ann McQueen, who along with husband Jerry has owned the park since 1988, is familiar with efforts to stabilize rents.
The McQueens, whose park has 26 mobile home spaces as well as 20 RV spots, were among the park owners who signed onto a resolution passed by the Board of Supervisors in September 2008 calling for rent stabilization for all of the county’s mobile home residents.
She said Sterling Shores – which had been a proponent of the measure – ultimately didn’t sign on to that effort.
That 2008 agreement called for maximum rental increase of between 3 and 7 percent at a time, she said.
“I understand their frustration,” McQueen said of tenants who have formed to address high rents.
However, she cautioned that rent control measures have been expensive to implement in jurisdictions where they have been adopted.
She said park owners also have to contend with ever-increasing costs, among them, water and sewer, repairs, construction and hiring.
Strasser said the initiative proponents plan to be at local grocery stores and other locations gathering signatures on Fridays and Saturdays. Those who want to volunteer to assist can contact him at
Email Elizabeth Larson at
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