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Thompson, 130 House Democrats call on House Speaker Johnson to address gun violence

In the wake of the deadly school shooting at the Annunciation Catholic School in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Gun Violence Prevention Chairman Mike Thompson led 130 Democrats in a letter calling on Speaker Johnson to listen to the prayers of millions of Americans and take action to end gun violence.

“Scripture shows examples of leaders like Moses and David standing up to evil to protect their people. Their prayers were not passive but supported them to action. Will this generation of Republican leaders pray not only for the victims, but also for the strength to end gun violence?” wrote the lawmakers.

“Will this generation of Republican leaders look their children and grandchildren in the eyes knowing that they worked to protect them from the leading cause of death for kids and teens?

“Republicans are not bystanders in the gun violence epidemic. You control the White House, House and Senate. The President ended the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention, made guns that fire like a fully automatic machinegun legal, and diverted law enforcement dedicated to fighting gun violence to other roles. The House and Senate are off to a terrible start spending $1.7 billion to make silencers, sawed off shotguns and short barreled rifles less expensive and proposing devastating cuts to the law enforcement agency that fights gun violence,” they continued.

“Your actions and inactions will be judged for eternity both by all those who follow you in public office and by what Lincoln called ‘a just God.’ Join us in the essential cause of protecting American children from the brutal and unnecessary horrors of any more gun violence,” the lawmakers concluded.

In Johnson’s short tenure as Speaker of the House, gun violence has killed more than 74,640 people and injured another 55,601 people. Gun violence is the leading cause of death for children, teenagers and law enforcement.

Thompson’s office reported that, for decades, Republicans and Democrats have worked together to pass bipartisan bills to help prevent gun violence:

• In 1934, Congress passed the National Firearms Act to regulate machineguns, silencers, sawed off shotguns and short barreled rifles because they were the weapons of choice for gangsters.
• In 1993, Congress passed the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act which required background checks. 
• In 1994, Congress passed the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act, which temporarily restricted access to certain classes of extraordinarily dangerous firearms and large capacity magazines. 
• In 2022, Congress passed the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act which expanded background checks for 18–20-year-olds, cracked down on gun traffickers, closed a loophole exploited by domestic abusers, funded school mental health and encouraged the expansion of state red flag laws. 

These bills saved lives, but more action is needed, Thompson’s office reported.

This Congress, members of the Gun Violence Prevention Task Force have introduced legislation to expand background checks, keep guns out of the hands of people who are a danger to themselves or others, and regulate weapons that are being used by criminals to harm our communities. Congressional Republicans can and should help pass this legislation, the lawmakers said.

Read the full text of the letter below. 


Dear Speaker Johnson,

Since you were elected as Speaker of the House on October 25, 2023, more than 74,640 people in our country have been killed and another 55,601 have been injured by gun violence. In response to the devastating school shooting in Minnesota while children were gunned down in prayer, former Republican Representative Trey Gowdy asked the question that millions of Americans are asking you: “I mean, how many school shootings does it take…” before we do something?

Gun violence is the leading cause of death for children, teenagers and law enforcement. This crisis is unsustainable and will be addressed by this generation of leaders or the next, but we are not bound to endure this pain forever.

In previous generations Republicans have joined Democrats in combatting gun violence.

In 1934, Congress passed the National Firearms Act to regulate machineguns, silencers, sawed off shotguns and short barreled rifles because they were the weapons of choice for gangsters. Leaders acted and saved lives.

In 1993, Congress passed the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act which required background checks. Leaders acted and saved lives.

In 1994, Congress passed the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act which temporarily restricted access to certain classes of extraordinarily dangerous firearms and large capacity magazines. Leaders acted and saved lives.

In 2022, Congress passed the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act which expanded background checks for 18–20-year-olds, cracked down on gun traffickers, closed a loophole exploited by domestic abusers, funded school mental health and encouraged the expansion of state red flag laws. Leaders acted and saved lives.

While each of these laws has reduced gun violence and saved lives, more action is needed now.

Scripture shows examples of leaders like Moses and David standing up to evil to protect their people. Their prayers were not passive but supported them to action.

Will this generation of Republican leaders pray not only for the victims, but also for the strength to end gun violence?

Will this generation of Republican leaders look their children and grandchildren in the eyes knowing that they worked to protect them from the leading cause of death for kids and teens?

Will this generation of Republican leadership protect kids from gun violence while praying, or at school, or in the grocery store, or at a parade…?

Will this generation of Republican leaders join Democrats in action to protect our kids?

Republicans are not bystanders in the gun violence epidemic. You control the White House, House and Senate. The President ended the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention, made guns that fire like a fully automatic machinegun legal, and diverted law enforcement dedicated to fighting gun violence to other roles. The House and Senate are off to a terrible start spending $1.7 billion to make silencers, sawed off shotguns and short barreled rifles less expensive and proposing devastating cuts to the law enforcement agency that fights gun violence.

In your heart, we are sure that you already know the right thing to do. Former Representative Trey Gowdy, reflected on the terrible school shooting in Minnesota saying, “The only way to stop it is to identify the shooter ahead of time or keep the weapons out of their hands.”

As members of the Gun Violence Prevention Task Force, we have been working tirelessly on polices that keep people safe including keeping firearms out of the hands of those who are a danger to themselves or others; giving law enforcement and the courts the ability to intervene before a crisis has taken place; and restricting access to firearms and devices that are unacceptably dangerous like ghost guns, bump stocks or other devices and firearms that shoot dozens of rounds in seconds. 

Your actions and inactions will be judged for eternity both by all those who follow you in public office and by what Lincoln called “a just God.”. Join us in the essential cause of protecting American children from the brutal and unnecessary horrors of any more gun violence.


Members of Congress who signed onto the letter include: 

Alma Adams; Gabe Amo; Yassamin Ansari; Jake Auchincloss; Becca Balint; Nanette Barragán; Joyce Beatty; Wesley Bell; Suzanne Bonamici; Brendan Boyle; Julia Brownley; Shontel Brown; Salud Carbajal; André Carson; Sean Casten; Kathy Castor; Joaquin Castro; Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick; Judy Chu; Gilbert Cisneros; Yvette Clarke; Emanuel Cleaver; Jim Costa; Joe Courtney; Angie Craig; Jasmine Crockett; Jason Crow; Danny Davis; Madeleine Dean; Diana DeGette; Suzan DelBene; Christopher Deluzio; Mark DeSaulnier; Maxine Dexter; Lloyd Doggett; Sarah Elfreth; Veronica Escobar; Adriano Espaillat; Dwight Evans; Bill Foster; Valerie Foushee; Laura Friedman; Maxwell Frost; John Garamendi; Jesús García; Sylvia Garcia; Daniel Goldman; Jimmy Gomez; Josh Gottheimer; Al Green; Jahana Hayes; James Himes; Chrissy Houlahan; Glenn Ivey; Jonathan Jackson; Pramila Jayapal; Henry Johnson; Julie Johnson; Sydney Kamlager-Dove; Robin Kelly; Timothy Kennedy; Ro Khanna; Raja Krishnamoorthi; John Larson; Stephen Lynch; Seth Magaziner; Doris Matsui; Lucy McBath; April McClain Delaney; Jennifer McClellan; Betty McCollum; James McGovern; LaMonica McIver; Gregory Meeks; Robert Menendez; Grace Meng; Kweisi Mfume; Dave Min; Gwen Moore; Joseph Morelle; Kelly Morrison; Jared Moskowitz; Frank Mrvan; Kevin Mullin; Jerrold Nadler; Richard Neal; Joe Neguse; Donald Norcross; Eleanor Norton; Johnny Olszewski; Ilhan Omar; Frank Pallone; Jimmy Panetta; Nancy Pelosi; Scott Peters; Brittany Pettersen; Mark Pocan; Mike Quigley; Delia Ramirez; Jamie Raskin; Andrea Salinas; Linda Sánchez; Mary Gay Scanlon; Janice Schakowsky; Bradley Schneider; Hillary Scholten; David Scott; Terri Sewell; Lateefah Simon; Greg Stanton; Suhas Subramanyam; Thomas Suozzi; Eric Swalwell; Mark Takano; Shri Thanedar; Bennie Thompson; Mike Thompson; Dina Titus; Jill Tokuda; Paul Tonko; Norma Torres; Lori Trahan; Derek Tran; Juan Vargas; Marc Veasey; Nydia Velázquez; Debbie Wasserman Schultz; Bonnie Watson Coleman; Nikema Williams; Frederica Wilson.

The Gun Violence Prevention Task Force was formed in the aftermath of the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012 and has been instrumental in passing a number of gun violence prevention measures. The Task Force numbers over 160 members of Congress. The Gun Violence Prevention Task Force played a leadership role in securing the most significant gun violence prevention legislation in 30 years with the passage of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, higher funding to run the background checks program and research gun violence, and programs to break the cycle of violence.

AI has a hidden water cost − here’s how to calculate yours

How many AI queries does it take to use up a regular plastic water bottle’s worth of water? kieferpix/iStock/Getty Images Plus

Artificial intelligence systems are thirsty, consuming as much as 500 milliliters of water – a single-serving water bottle – for each short conversation a user has with the GPT-3 version of OpenAI’s ChatGPT system. They use roughly the same amount of water to draft a 100-word email message.

That figure includes the water used to cool the data center’s servers and the water consumed at the power plants generating the electricity to run them.

But the study that calculated those estimates also pointed out that AI systems’ water usage can vary widely, depending on where and when the computer answering the query is running.

To me, as an academic librarian and professor of education, understanding AI is not just about knowing how to write prompts. It also involves understanding the infrastructure, the trade-offs, and the civic choices that surround AI.

Many people assume AI is inherently harmful, especially given headlines calling out its vast energy and water footprint. Those effects are real, but they’re only part of the story.

When people move from seeing AI as simply a resource drain to understanding its actual footprint, where the effects come from, how they vary, and what can be done to reduce them, they are far better equipped to make choices that balance innovation with sustainability.

2 hidden streams

Behind every AI query are two streams of water use.

The first is on-site cooling of servers that generate enormous amounts of heat. This often uses evaporative cooling towers – giant misters that spray water over hot pipes or open basins. The evaporation carries away heat, but that water is removed from the local water supply, such as a river, a reservoir or an aquifer. Other cooling systems may use less water but more electricity.

The second stream is used by the power plants generating the electricity to power the data center. Coal, gas and nuclear plants use large volumes of water for steam cycles and cooling.

Hydropower also uses up significant amounts of water, which evaporates from reservoirs. Concentrated solar plants, which run more like traditional steam power stations, can be water-intensive if they rely on wet cooling.

By contrast, wind turbines and solar panels use almost no water once built, aside from occasional cleaning.

Large concrete towers emit vapor into the atmosphere.
Cooling towers, like these at a power plant in Florida, use water evaporation to lower the temperature of equipment. Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Climate and timing matter

Water use shifts dramatically with location. A data center in cool, humid Ireland can often rely on outside air or chillers and run for months with minimal water use. By contrast, a data center in Arizona in July may depend heavily on evaporative cooling. Hot, dry air makes that method highly effective, but it also consumes large volumes of water, since evaporation is the mechanism that removes heat.

Timing matters too. A University of Massachusetts Amherst study found that a data center might use only half as much water in winter as in summer. And at midday during a heat wave, cooling systems work overtime. At night, demand is lower.

Newer approaches offer promising alternatives. For instance, immersion cooling submerges servers in fluids that don’t conduct electricity, such as synthetic oils, reducing water evaporation almost entirely.

And a new design from Microsoft claims to use zero water for cooling, by circulating a special liquid through sealed pipes directly across computer chips. The liquid absorbs heat and then releases it through a closed-loop system without needing any evaporation. The data centers would still use some potable water for restrooms and other staff facilities, but cooling itself would no longer draw from local water supplies.

These solutions are not yet mainstream, however, mainly because of cost, maintenance complexity and the difficulty of converting existing data centers to new systems. Most operators rely on evaporative systems.

A simple skill you can use

The type of AI model being queried matters, too. That’s because of the different levels of complexity and the hardware and amount of processor power they require. Some models may use far more resources than others. For example, one study found that certain models can consume over 70 times more energy and water than ultra‑efficient ones.

You can estimate AI’s water footprint yourself in just three steps, with no advanced math required.

Step 1 – Look for credible research or official disclosures. Independent analyses estimate that a medium-length GPT-5 response, which is about 150 to 200 words of output, or roughly 200 to 300 tokens, uses about 19.3 watt-hours. A response of similar length from GPT-4o uses about 1.75 watt-hours.

Step 2 – Use a practical estimate for the amount of water per unit of electricity, combining the usage for cooling and for power.

Independent researchers and industry reports suggest that a reasonable range today is about 1.3 to 2.0 milliliters per watt-hour. The lower end reflects efficient facilities that use modern cooling and cleaner grids. The higher end represents more typical sites.

Step 3 – Now it’s time to put the pieces together. Take the energy number you found in Step 1 and multiply it by the water factor from Step 2. That gives you the water footprint of a single AI response.

Here’s the one-line formula you’ll need:

Energy per prompt (watt-hours) × Water factor (milliliters per watt-hour) = Water per prompt (in milliliters)

For a medium-length query to GPT-5, that calculation should use the figures of 19.3 watt-hours and 2 milliliters per watt-hour. 19.3 x 2 = 39 milliliters of water per response.

For a medium-length query to GPT-4o, the calculation is 1.75 watt-hours x 2 milliliters per watt-hour = 3.5 milliliters of water per response.

If you assume the data centers are more efficient, and use 1.3 milliliters per watt-hour, the numbers drop: about 25 milliliters for GPT-5 and 2.3 milliliters for GPT-4o.

A recent Google technical report said a median text prompt to its Gemini system uses just 0.24 watt-hours of electricity and about 0.26 milliliters of water – roughly the volume of five drops. However, the report does not say how long that prompt is, so it can’t be compared directly with GPT water usage.

Those different estimates – ranging from 0.26 milliliters to 39 milliliters – demonstrate how much the effects of efficiency, AI model and power-generation infrastructure all matter.

Comparisons can add context

To truly understand how much water these queries use, it can be helpful to compare them to other familiar water uses.

When multiplied by millions, AI queries’ water use adds up. OpenAI reports about 2.5 billion prompts per day. That figure includes queries to its GPT-4o, GPT-4 Turbo, GPT-3.5 and GPT-5 systems, with no public breakdown of how many queries are issued to each particular model.

Using independent estimates and Google’s official reporting gives a sense of the possible range:

  • All Google Gemini median prompts: about 650,000 liters per day.
  • All GPT 4o medium prompts: about 8.8 million liters per day.
  • All GPT 5 medium prompts: about 97.5 million liters per day.
A small black spigot spews a stream of water over a green grass lawn.
Americans use lots of water to keep gardens and lawns looking fresh. James Carbone/Newsday RM via Getty Images

For comparison, Americans use about 34 billion liters per day watering residential lawns and gardens. One liter is about one-quarter of a gallon.

Generative AI does use water, but – at least for now – its daily totals are small compared with other common uses such as lawns, showers and laundry.

But its water demand is not fixed. Google’s disclosure shows what is possible when systems are optimized, with specialized chips, efficient cooling and smart workload management. Recycling water and locating data centers in cooler, wetter regions can help, too.

Transparency matters, as well: When companies release their data, the public, policymakers and researchers can see what is achievable and compare providers fairly.The Conversation

Leo S. Lo, Dean of Libraries; Advisor to the Provost for AI Literacy; Professor of Education, University of Virginia

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

Hammond Park closed until early 2026 for upgrades 

NICE, Calif. — Lake County Parks and Recreation has announced Hammond Park in Nice will be temporarily closed to allow for significant upgrades and improvements. 

The closure began on Tuesday, Sept. 2.

The improvements are made possible through a $2.3 million grant from the Statewide Park Development and Community Revitalization Program, as well as local funds from Quimby Park Development fees and the County General Fund.

The planned improvements include new playground equipment, walking trails, sports fields, lighting, dog park improvements and more. 

Parks and Recreation said these improvements are designed to increase recreational opportunities, improve accessibility, and create a safer, more enjoyable park experience for all residents.

Construction is expected to be completed by early 2026.

During the construction period, the park will remain closed to the public to ensure safety. 

Alternative recreation opportunities are available in Upper Lake, Nice and Lucerne, officials said. 

If you have any questions, please call the Lake County Public Services office at 707-262-1618, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

September is Library Card Sign Up Month

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — A Lake County Library card is powerful and free for residents of Lake County. 

This small but mighty card unlocks a world of resources at the four branches of the Lake County Library.

There are three options to get a library card. Residents can visit their local library branch, can call their local branch over the phone, or can visit the library website and apply online. 

The address of the library website is http://library.lakecountyca.gov. 

For many years now, a Lake County Library card has provided free access to materials from the Lake, Sonoma and Mendocino County libraries. Altogether that's access to over a half a million physical items. Lake County alone owns over 125,000 items.

The entire Lake County collection contains more than 7,000 DVDs, as well as books, audiobooks and music CDs. 

Patrons can search the library catalog online and request to pick up materials at their local branch. 

Just recently, the library launched a new library online catalog that makes browsing and searching the library collection even easier.

Your library card allows you to access resources even outside the walls of the library. The library’s bookmobile visits communities like Kelseyville, Cobb, and the Northshore weekly, expanding access to the library. 

For those who can’t make it to a physical location you can request items to be sent to you through our Books by Mail service

The Lake County Library also provides a wealth of digital resources. A library card provides digital access to over one million eBooks, eAudiobooks, streaming movies, television shows, eMagazines, digital comics, and music. These digital items can be accessed on computers, smartphones, tablets, and compatible televisions.

A library card also allows access to many online resources that provide job training, skill building, and creative development. Video learning sites like LinkedIn Learning can help residents prepare for a new job. Creativebug offers virtual arts and crafts classes at the beginner to advanced level. For kids, digital resources like BookFlix help with early learning. These premium resources are all free with a library card.

Visit your local branch during September and take advantage of the array of free resources available.

Lakeport Library
1425 N. High St.
Lakeport, CA 95453
(707) 263-8817
Tue 10-5 | Wed 10-7 | Thu-Sat 10-5

Redbud Library (Clearlake)
14785 Burns Valley Road
Clearlake, CA 95422
(707) 994-5115
Tue 10-5 | Wed 10-7 | Thu-Sat 10-5

Middletown Library
21256 Washington St.
Middletown, CA 95461
(707) 987-3674
Tue-Fri 10-5 | Sat 10-5

Upper Lake Library
310 Second St.
Upper Lake, CA 95485
(707) 275-2049
Tue-Fri 12-5 | Sat 10-3

Visit the Lake County Library Website at http://library.lakecountyca.gov. 

Celebrate 175 years of statehood with California State Parks at birthday block party in front of State Capitol

Get ready for a celebration 175 years in the making.

On Tuesday, Sept. 9, California State Parks is throwing a birthday block party in front of the State Capitol in Sacramento to celebrate the historic anniversary of California becoming America’s 31st state in 1850.

From 6 to 9 p.m., enjoy music, food trucks, family-friendly activities and a laser display 30 minutes after sunset as Californians come together to celebrate this historic milestone. 

Partygoers can enjoy free food truck fare, birthday cake, and California-grown treats (while supplies last).

“As we come together to protect rights and safeguard California’s future, we also do so to celebrate the past 175 years that have made this state the global leader that it is today,” said Gov. Gavin Newsom

“As we celebrate 175 years of California, we honor the generations who shaped this great state and nurtured a culture of building dreams, innovating, and daring to imagine something better — for all of us! I’m filled with pride in California’s legacy and the enduring promise that our people and our spirit will continue to lead and inspire the world,” said First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom.

State Parks staff and volunteers will be dressed in period attire and will engage with partygoers as they interpret the history of the Capitol Building, Admission Day and the state’s rich and diverse past. 

There will also be opportunities to learn more about California history through hands-on activities from the California State Railroad Museum, Sutter’s Fort State Historic Park, the State Indian Museum State Historic Park and the Sacramento History Museum.

The block party will showcase the natural and cultural treasures and living history found in California’s 280 state parks, inspiring visitors throughout this 175th year of statehood and beyond. Additional state agencies and departments are expected to participate.

“At California State Parks, we help preserve and celebrate everything that makes the Golden State truly golden,” said State Parks Director Armando Quintero. “Throughout this 175th year of California statehood, I invite all Californians to explore the abundant and diverse places that make up the nation’s largest state park system. It’s all waiting just for you to foster a deep connection with nature, ignite a spirit of exploration, and inspire a passion for California’s shared landscapes, rich histories and enduring legacy.”

Find more events celebrating 175 golden years of statehood at Celebrate.ca.gov. 

PG&E plans virtual North Coast Customer Town Hall Sept. 4 

NORTH COAST, Calif. —  Pacific Gas and Electric Co. is hosting an interactive virtual town hall for customers in the North Coast Region on Thursday, Sept. 4.

The town hall will take place from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.

The event can be accessed via the below link, by phone or through PG&E’s website, pge.com/webinars. 

The link is https://bit.ly/4nzVg36 or dial in at +1 888-810-3952; the conference ID is 1345040#.

The event will be geared toward residents in Lake, Humboldt, Marin, Mendocino, Napa, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma and Trinity counties.

PG&E said it will share more about what it is doing to reduce wildfire risk and make its system safer.

During the meeting, the company will provide the latest updates on local wildfire safety work and safety resources available to customers. 

PG&E said this is also an opportunity for participants to ask questions, share feedback and connect with their local PG&E leaders, including North Coast Regional Vice President Dave Canny.

American Sign Language interpretation will be available, along with dial-in numbers for those who aren’t able to join online. For the full virtual events schedule, additional information on how to join and recordings and presentation materials from past events, visit pge.com/webinars. 

Customers can find opportunities to engage with PG&E representatives in the area by visiting pge.com/openlines.  

More information and resources to help you and your family prepare for and stay safe in the event of an emergency can be found at safetyactioncenter.pge.com. 

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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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