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Cal Fire exclusive use helicopters depart the Sonoma-Lake-Napa Unit for the season

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA — The two Type-1 helicopters contracted by Cal Fire for exclusive use towards aerial firefighting operations left the Sonoma-Lake-Napa Unit (LNU) for the season on Tuesday.

Helitanker 8PJ, a CH-47 Chinook operated by PJ Helicopters, was based at the Napa County Airport (KAPC) starting back on June 3.

Helitanker 05PJ, a UH-60A+ Blackhawk also operated by PJ Helicopters, was based at the Sonoma County Airport (KSTS) starting on June 16.

The two exclusive use helicopters combined to fly 80 missions on wildfires where they dropped a combined total of 1,140,450 gallons of water on fires in 2025.

“The helicopters we contract exclusively for the use of aerial firefighting operations are a strategic investment we make in wildfire preparedness and rapid response, providing an added layer of protection for the communities we serve,” said Cal Fire Sonoma-Lake-Napa Unit Chief Matt Ryan. “They are a symbol of the strength and readiness that Cal Fire brings to the region and complement our overall world-renowned aviation program that is the largest civil aerial firefighting fleet in the world.”

Helitanker 8PJ delivered 451,100 gallons of water on its 28 wildfire missions in 2025, which included 29.1 hours of night flying missions. Its night flight capabilities were relied on heavily during the Pickett Fire outside of Calistoga, as Helitanker 8PJ flew 12.6 hours at night on the 6,819-acre fire between Aug. 21 to 24.

Helitanker 05PJ flew 52 wildfire missions this year and dropped 689,350 gallons of water on fires. Its utility was on display here in the greater San Francisco Bay Area and beyond across California. 

During the Pickett Fire, Helitanker 05PJ conducted 19 flights. It was also deployed down to the Gifford Fire in San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties between Aug. 8-15 where it conducted 21 aerial firefighting missions. 

The Gifford Fire is the largest wildfire in the state this year at 131,614 acres.

Even with the departure of the two exclusive use helicopters, Cal Fire LNU still has four aerial assets available for firefighting and rescue operations. 

Copter 612, based at the Boggs Mountain Helitack Base in Lake County, is a Sikorsky S70i with a fixed tank that can hold up to 1,000 gallons of water. Its primary mission is rapid initial attack
on wildfires and complex rescue operations.

At the Sonoma Air Attack Base in Santa Rosa are two S-2T Airtankers (AT85 and AT86) and one OV-10 Air Tactical Aircraft (AA140).

So far this year from Jan. 1 through Oct. 28, the Sonoma-Lake-Napa Unit has seen 352 wildfires that have burned 8,331 acres. 

Why is it so hard to adjust when clocks ‘fall back’?

Daylight saving time ends this Sunday at 2 a.m. It was introduced in 1918 as a way to conserve energy by making the most of summer’s daylight hours. 

But some people say that shifting our clocks is its own form of energy drain. 

That’s because many feel disoriented for days, or even weeks, after we “spring forward” or “fall back” by an hour. We asked neurologist Louis Ptacek, MD, who studies circadian rhythms, why this disruption to our internal clocks throws us for a loop and what we can do to make the adjustment easier.

What is a circadian clock and why is it important?  

A circadian clock, or circadian rhythm, is the 24-hour cycle of waking and sleeping in response to daylight and darkness.

When you’re sleeping and the sun comes up, your eyes sense the light even when they’re closed. That light sends a signal to the master clock in your brain saying, “Hey, the day is starting, time to get up.” Your body prepares by raising your body temperature and blood pressure and nudging your digestive tract and immune system to become more active.  

As nighttime comes on, the body winds it all back down. 

How does changing our clocks by an hour impact our internal clock?

Like an alarm clock, your circadian clock tells you it’s time to get up. When we “fall back” the day begins an hour earlier than the clock is anticipating, which make you feel like things aren’t the way they’re supposed to be. Similarly, toward the end of the day, you’re ready for bed at an early hour.  

All of this affects our physiology. When we’re thrown off like this, we’re more prone to making errors. Research shows that the number of car accidents usually goes up a bit when we change our clocks, people make mistakes at work — all because we’re out of sync with the environment.   

Are some affected more than others? If not, what makes the difference?

There are differences from person to person. It relates to what we call “chronotype,” the body’s natural preference for what time to wake up and to go to sleep. Some of us are morning larks, others are night owls, and some are in between. Night owls will typically do better than others when we set our clocks back, like we will this coming weekend. Morning larks will do better springing forward. 

Why can changing clocks affect people’s mood so much?

We know that our exposure to light has a strong connection with both our mood and our biological clock, but we don’t understand much about how mood and the biological clock are connected. It seems that our mood is affected by how well we’re aligned the solar day. Disrupting that alignment in people who are sleep-deprived or prone to depression can increase their risk of becoming depressed.

Understanding how that happens could benefit people who are not aligned with the solar day, like people who work night shift or people who frequently travel across time zones. It’s a question my lab is hoping to study in the future. We’ve identified a gene that’s at a nexus where mood and circadian rhythms are regulated, but there’s much more to learn about this connection. 

How can people mitigate the impact of daylight saving? 

Changing our clocks presents us with an opportunity to align ourselves better with the natural day and night.

• Ease into the change a few days beforehand. Get enough rest so that you’re not sleep deprived or living out of sync with your circadian rhythm.
• Change your sleep schedule by 15-30 minutes to counter the time change – 15 mins later for falling back, 15 mins earlier for springing forward. 
• Shift your mealtimes the same way and remember that it’s healthier to eat during the day than late at night.

Robin Marks writes for the UC San Francisco News Center.

Supervisors hear report on September fish die-off

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The work to understand the cause of a September fish die-off in Clear Lake is continuing.

This week, the Board of Supervisors heard the latest on the ongoing efforts from scientists and local officials as part of a report from the Lake County Fish and Wildlife Advisory Committee.

At the start of September, a fish die-off was reported in Clear Lake. At that time, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife told Lake County News that the die-off was believed to have been related to low levels of dissolved oxygen in the water.

Luis Santana, chair of the Lake County Fish and Wildlife Advisory Committee and fish and wildlife director of Robinson Rancheria’s Danoxa Fish and Wildlife Department, presented the update to the board on Tuesday.

He explained during the discussion that he’s close to completing a full report on the die-off, and also is studying the case involving the discovery in September of a white sturgeon that had been living in the lake, which isn’t part of its natural range.

Santana said the fish kill occurred during the first couple of weeks in September. County residents shared photos with him of the incident.

In one case, a Soda Bay resident told him that they had been out on the lake the night before, “and everything seemed fine, but then the next morning, when they took a walk down the shoreline, there was a bunch of dead fish all over the place.”

Santana responded to the area on Sept. 7 and began doing water quality readings, specifically measuring dissolved oxygen levels. He took a shoreline sample and found that it was bad — but not so bad that fish couldn’t survive.

Fish like the Clear Lake hitch, Sacramento sucker and related fish should have about five milligrams per liter of dissolved oxygen in the water, but they can survive at lower dissolved oxygen levels, Santana said.

However, Santana said that once the dissolved oxygen levels drop to around 2.0 milligrams per liter, fish start to die. 

When he conducted measurements at the shoreline in Soda Bay, he got a reading of 3.95 milligrams per liter, still survivable but not good for the overall fitness of fish. 

Santana said a shoreline measurement is not really accurate for dissolved oxygen because wave action will provide some dissolved oxygen.

So he went out the next day to get vertical profiles of the lake. Launching from Keeling Park in Nice, Santana said as he was passing Lucerne he saw what he initially thought were waves but which he estimated were millions of threadfin shad, an introduced — not native — species to Clear Lake. He said the shad is a bait fish that the bass — also not native — love to eat.

When he saw the shad, Santana stopped at a spot in the middle of the lake and took dissolved oxygen measurements. Three feet below the lake’s surface, the dissolved oxygen measured 0.52 milligrams per liter. At 17 feet deep, it was 0.28 milligrams per liter, and at the lake’s bottom it was 0.22 milligrams per liter.

When he reached Dorn Bay, near the area where he first conducted measurements the previous day, Santana said the dissolved oxygen levels were not much better and below the 2 milligrams per liter level at which fish tend to die. At seven feet below the surface, the measurement was 1.0 milligrams per liter, falling to 0.2 milligrams at 13 feet down.

“So basically, in the entire water column, it was not suitable for fishes in the area,” Santana said.

The fish he saw dying included Sacramento blackfish, threadfin shad, largemouth bass, black crappie and bluegill. 

Santana said he found more measurements that were similar when heading back across the lake toward Keeling Park, and he saw still more fish species — including bullhead catfish, channel catfish and hitch — impacted.

He said the low dissolved oxygen levels impacted the entire ecosystem as far as fish were concerned.

Supervisor Bruno Sabatier thanked Santana for his presentation. “Definitely, if you live around the lake there, you can't not know about the fish kill that occurred this year and previous years. Typically it is dissolved oxygen,” he said.

Sabatier added, “It's been a bit of a stranger year for the lake, where the lake has not appeared to have as much algae. Now, algae can be in many different stages. It doesn't have to be on the top floating, but typically what we find is the dissolved oxygen does occur when we have the mats and other things where it gets really bad during the summertime.”

He asked if there was a culprit for the dissolved oxygen levels in Clear Lake this year, adding, “The lake just looked vastly different than what I was expecting.”

Santana said algae decomposition causes low dissolved oxygen levels, explaining that when the plants decompose, they suck oxygen from the water, and as a result fish kills occur.

However, “In this instance, that definitely wasn't it. I think it was lake turnover, but I can't really prove that, because I wasn't taking samples year round to be able to say, ‘Hey, this is what's occurring,’” Santana said.

Lake turnover explains what happens when a lake’s layers mix on a seasonal basis — typically in the spring and fall — causing the temperature to be more uniform through the water column. The process also moves dissolved oxygen from the surface of the water throughout the water body, while also distributing nutrients from the lake bottom through other lake layers. 

Santana called the die-off “a really weird event,” because the lake was looking really good and the bass in the lake were massive in size.

He said, however, that the situation wasn’t the result of algae. Santana cited findings from Big Valley Rancheria’s environmental department which monitors the lake, and its data concluded the same thing.

Chris Childers of Lake County Water Resources Department said they did vertical profiles on Clear Lake on Sept. 10 and found the same thing that Santana did —  very, very low dissolved oxygen from the surface all the way down to the bottom and all three arms of the lake.

Childers thanked Santana for his work, noting that it’s great that “we can all collaborate and work together and make things happen.”

Angela DePalma-Dow, executive director of the Lake County Land Trust and a former Water Resources staffer, thanked Santana and Childers for their work.

DePalma-Dow, who has worked with lakes in six different states, offered an explanation for conditions that are seen in small and large lakes alike.

Fish die-offs happen in some years and not in others, and DePalma-Dow said that while there wasn’t that much cyanobacteria — or algae — in Clear Lake this year, there were other things that grew a lot, and they tend to die at the end of the season, like the plants in a vegetable garden.

“So if you have a lot of things growing in your garden at the end of the year, right now, in fall, stuff will start to die, and that can consume oxygen. So that is one factor,” she said.

DePalma-Dow said she looked at seasonal patterns going back to 2012. In that year and in 2016, Lake County had a very significant drought, which was followed by a flood year in 2017.

She said there was a significant fish die-off in the drought year, followed by high water levels. The pattern continued in 2020 to 2022, with lower water levels, followed by more water in 2023 and 2024.

“So there's some patterns where you see drought and then flood years where you have a lot of growth of vegetation, a lot of space, a lot of disturbed soils that can contribute to algae and plant growth that all then died and could create these fish kill events,” she said, adding that these “are natural processes.

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. 

Police seek missing girl

Rory Nychole Verling. Courtesy photo.


UPDATE: Police said that Rory was located on the morning of Thursday, Oct. 30.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Clearlake Police Department is asking for the community’s help in finding a missing teenager.

Rory Nychole Verling, 14, is described as a white female, 5 foot 9 inches, 130 lbs, blond/orange hair, blue eyes, and was last seen wearing a red shirt and checkered pajama pants, police said.

If you have any information regarding Rory's whereabouts, please contact the Clearlake Police Department at Clearlake Police Department, 707-994-8251, Extension 1, or text a tip to CLEARLAKEPD, followed by your message, at 888777.

Thompson, Neal, Ways & Means Democrats introduce bill to restore historic renewable energy investments

On Wednesday, Ranking Member of the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Tax Policy Mike Thompson (CA-04), Ranking Member of the House Ways and Means Committee Richard E. Neal (MA-01), and the Democratic membership of the Ways & Means Committee announced the introduction of H.R. 5862, the Energy Independence and Affordability Act, or EIAA. 

The EIAA would restore Rep. Thompson’s historic renewable energy tax incentives passed in the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act. 

In July, the president signed H.R. 1, which he called the “One Big Beautiful Bill” but which Thompson called “the Big, Ugly Bill — into law, eliminating what Thompson and his colleagues said were “wildly successful” incentives.
 
“I haven’t met anyone in our community who said, ‘I wish Congress would raise my energy bills,’” said Rep. Thompson. “But that’s exactly what happened when Congressional Republicans gutted the clean energy tax incentives I created. These investments were fully paid for, they lowered costs, they created jobs, and they positioned America to lead in the global clean energy economy. We can’t afford to fall behind — not to China, and not on the fight against climate change. That’s why I’m leading the fight now to restore these critical climate provisions." 

Thompson was joined at a press conference by Ranking Member Richard E. Neal and Representatives Terri Sewell and Steven Horsford.

“Families are struggling under Trump’s economy, and Republican cuts to clean energy tax credits mean higher costs for everyone and stunting the green energy economy we’ve been working so hard to build,” said Ranking Member Richard E. Neal. “The American Energy Independence and Affordability Act means restoring the great work of our green energy leader, Tax Subcommittee Ranking Member Mike Thompson, and supercharging high-paying jobs in our communities, lowering household energy costs, and giving us a fighting chance to save our climate. I am grateful for his leadership championing this critical legislation, and urge my Republican colleagues to join us in doing right for the people.”

The American Energy Independence and Affordability Act restores key provisions from the Inflation Reduction Act to ensure America continues leading the transition to clean, affordable, and reliable energy.

What the bill does:

• Restores the full clean electricity production and investment tax credits for wind, solar, and other zero-emission power sources.
• Extends incentives for energy efficient homes and commercial buildings, helping families and businesses cut utility bills through modern, efficient technologies.
• Reinstates clean-vehicle tax credits for consumers and businesses to accelerate America's transition to electric and zero-emission vehicles.
• Supports domestic manufacturing of clean energy components and strengthens U.S. supply chains.
• Extends the clean hydrogen production credit, advancing next-generation clean fuel production.

The bill’s authors said families are already feeling the pain from high energy costs, supply-chain shocks caused by reckless tariffs and rising utility bills. 

Thompson’s office said the legislation delivers real relief by restoring incentives that make homes more efficient, lower energy bills, support clean and renewable power, and expand access to affordable clean vehicles.

“Restoring these incentives will strengthen our energy independence, lower utility bills, boost domestic production, and create thousands of good-paying jobs here at home,” the announcement about the bill said.

Endorsing organizations include American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy; Sonoma Clean Power Authority; Citizens Climate Lobby; Sierra Club; Natural Resources Defense Council; Ava Community Energy (Local Bay Area); Napa Climate Now!, a 350 Bay Area Group; City of Napa; City of St. Helena; City of Calistoga; and League of Conservation Voters.

“This legislation is exactly what cash-strapped homeowners and domestic manufacturers need — and need today,” said Jackie Wong, senior vice president, climate and energy at NRDC. “The Republicans' tax bill slashed this support for clean energy so they could hand out a tax cut to the richest Americans. That means higher bills for consumers and fewer opportunities for workers. Restoring these incentives will help shore up domestic investments while keeping utility bills in check.”

“Congress made the growing energy affordability crisis worse for families, businesses, and communities this year when it passed legislation to terminate important energy- and cost-saving tax incentives,” said Alexander Ratner, Senior Federal Policy Counsel for the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE). “Representative Mike Thompson’s new bill would make life less expensive for Americans by restoring crucial tax incentives. The Energy Independence and Affordability Act would lower monthly energy bills, help build new homes with lower costs, and reduce growing strain on the electric grid.”

“The Sonoma Clean Power Authority is proud to support this urgently needed legislation, and thanks Congressman Thompson for his continued leadership in confronting the defining challenge of our time: the climate crisis,” said Geof Syphers, CEO of the Sonoma Clean Power Authority. “We urge Congress to enact this proposal without delay.”

“Sierra Club is proud to endorse Rep. Mike Thompson’s bill, the American Energy Independence and Affordability Act, which restores popular key clean energy tax credits that were eliminated under the Trump administration’s Big Ugly Bill,” said Mary Davison, Sierra Club Redwood Chapter Political Chair. “The American Energy Independence and Affordability Act will move the U.S. toward a better future by encouraging the development of clean energy, putting more EVs on the roadways, and increasing energy efficiency. It will also help to lower costs, create jobs, strengthen the American economy, and support global U.S. leadership in clean energy.”

“This bill is exactly what is needed to protect America's leadership in renewable energy,” said Chris Benz of Napa Climate NOW!, a 350 Bay Area group. “Renewable energy is now the cheapest and least polluting source of electricity, and it should be available to all Americans everywhere.”

“We applaud Congressman Mike Thompson for his leadership on the American Clean Energy Independence and Affordability Act,” said the League of Conservation Voters Vice President of Federal Policy Matthew Davis. “This is a critical step to restoring clean energy incentives that lower energy costs for families and businesses, strengthen energy security, create jobs, and boost U.S. manufacturing. At a time when congressional Republicans have shut down the government and driven up electricity prices 10% this year, Rep. Thompson and other Democrats are doing the work to advance clean, affordable, and reliable energy.”

The Energy Independence and Affordability Act is co-sponsored by 114 Democratic members of Congress. 

Thompson represents California’s Fourth Congressional District, which includes all or part of Lake, Napa, Solano, Sonoma and Yolo counties. 

Fed lowers interest rates as it struggles to assess state of US economy without key government data

Markets were expecting the Fed to cut rates a quarter point. AP Photo/Seth Wenig

When it comes to setting monetary policy for the world’s largest economy, what data drives decision-making?

In ordinary times, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and voting members of the Federal Open Market Committee, which usually meets eight times a year, have a wealth of information at their disposal, including key statistics such as monthly employment and extensive inflation data.

But with the federal shutdown that began Oct. 1, 2025, grinding on, government offices that publish such information are shuttered and data has been curtailed. As a result, Powell and his Fed colleagues might have considered the price of gas or changes in the cost of coffee to arrive at their decision to cut interest rates a quarter point at their latest monetary policy meeting, which ended Oct. 29, 2025.

The Federal Reserve’s mandate is to implement monetary policy that stabilizes prices and promotes full employment, but there is a delicate balance to strike. Not only do Powell and the Fed have to weigh domestic inflation, jobs and spending, but they must also respond to changes in President Donald Trump’s global tariff policy.

As an economist and finance professor at the University of Notre Dame, I know the Fed has a tough job of guiding the economy under even the most ideal circumstances. Now, imagine creating policy partially blindfolded, without access to key economic data.

But, fortunately, the Fed’s not flying blind – it still has a wide range of private, internal and public data to help it read the pulse of the U.S. economy.

Key data is MIA

The Fed is data-dependent, as Powell likes to remind markets. But the cancellation of reports on employment, job openings and turnover, retail sales and gross domestic product, along with a delay in the September consumer price information, will force the central bank to lean harder on private data to nail down the appropriate path for monetary policy.

Torsten Slok, chief economist for the Apollo asset management firm, recently released his set of “alternative data,” capturing information from a wide range of sources. This includes ISM PMI reports, which measure economic activity in the manufacturing and services sectors, and Bloomberg’s robust data on consumer spending habits.

“Generally, the private data, the alternative data that we look at is better used as a supplement for the underlying governmental data, which is the gold standard,” Powell said in mid-October. “It won’t be as effective as the main course as it would have been as a supplement.”

But at this crucial juncture, the Fed has also abruptly lost one important source of private data. Payroll processor ADP had previously shared private sector payroll information with the central bank, which considered it alongside government employment figures. Now, ADP has suspended the relationship, and Powell has reportedly asked the company to quickly reverse its decision.

espresso falls from a coffee machine into a blue cup
With some key data unavailable, the Fed may pay more attention to the price of a cup of coffee to help determine how to set interest rates. AP Photo/Julio Cortez

Internal research

Fortunately for the Fed, it has its own sources for reliable information.

Even when government agencies are working and producing economic reports, the Federal Reserve utilizes internal research and its nationwide network of contacts to supplement data from the U.S. Census Bureau, the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Since the Fed is self-funded, the government shutdown didn’t stop it from publishing its Beige Book, which comes out eight times a year and provides insight into how various aspects of the economy are performing.

Its Oct. 15 report found that consumer spending had inched down, with lower- and middle-income households facing “rising prices and elevated economic uncertainty.” Manufacturing was also hit by challenges linked to higher tariffs.

Leading indicators

And though no data is being released on the unemployment rate, historical data shows that consumer sentiment can act as a leading indicator for joblessness in the U.S.

According to the most recent consumer confidence reports, Americans are significantly more worried about their jobs over the next six months, as compared to this time last year, and expect fewer employment opportunities during that period. This suggests the Fed will likely see an uptick in the unemployment rate, once the data resumes publishing.

And if you did notice an increase in the price of your morning coffee, you’re not mistaken – both private and market-based data suggest inflation is a pressing concern, with expectations that price increases will remain at about the 2% target set by the Fed.

It’s clear that there is no risk-free path for policy, and a wrong move by the Fed could stoke inflation or even send the U.S. economy spiraling into a recession.

Uncertain path ahead

At the Fed’s September monetary policy meeting, members voted to cut benchmark interest rates by 25 basis points, while one member advocated for a 50-point cut.

It was the first interest rate cut since December – one that Trump had been loudly demanding to help spur the U.S. economy and lower the cost of government debt. Following the Oct. 29 interest rate cut, markets expect the FOMC to reduce rates by another quarter of a percentage point in December. That would lower rates to a range of 3.5%-3.75%, from 3.75%-4% currently, which would give the labor market a much-needed boost.

But there’s lots of uncertainty about where rates are headed from here. On Oct. 29, Powell said there is no guarantee the Fed will cut rates in December – and the future beyond that is even less certain. He suggested the lack of government data due to the shutdown may be an argument in favor of holding rates steady.

At quarterly meetings, members of the Federal Open Market Committee give projections of where they think the Fed’s benchmark interest rate will go over the next three years and beyond to provide forward guidance to financial markets and other observers.

The median projection from the September meeting suggests the benchmark rate will end 2026 a little lower than where it began, at 3.4%, and decline to 3.1% by the end of 2027. With inflation accelerating, Fed officials will continue to weigh the weakening labor market against the threat of inflation from tariffs, immigration reform and their own lower interest rates – not to mention the ongoing impact of the government shutdown.

Unfortunately, I believe these risks will be difficult to mitigate with just Fed intervention, even with perfect foresight into the economy, and will need help from government immigration, tax and spending policy to put the economy on the right path.

This article was updated on Oct. 29 with paraphrased quote from Jerome Powell.The Conversation

Jason Reed, Associate Teaching Professor of Finance, University of Notre Dame

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

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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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