Agriculture

LAKEPORT, Calif. – With the farmers' market season now over, the community will say goodbye until next year to the bustling open-air markets that kept kitchens full of fresh, healthy, locally grown fruits and vegetables.


However, a new service is now available in Lake County that will allow consumers, businesses, hospitals, jails, restaurants, schools and other industries to conveniently purchase local, fresh produce on a weekly basis year-round.


Marc Hooper, chairman of www.lakecountygrown.com, a partnership of local growers, agencies and the local Farm Bureau, is enthusiastic about the launch of the online farmers’ market concept.


An idea that has been building momentum in communities throughout California, the online farmers’ market is just another way to encourage healthy eating and support our local farmers throughout the year.


Shopping at the virtual farmers’ market is very simple, or “EASY”:


  • E – Enter the online marketplace at www.lakecountygrown.com for quick access to a wide variety of fresh, locally grown produce.

  • A – All participating local growers will harvest their produce Wednesday and Thursday and list it online.

  • S – So you can place your orders from Thursday at 6 p.m. through Tuesday at noon; no order is too small. Products are grouped in varying size for purchase by the general consumer and for institutional purchase.

  • Y – You can pick up your purchase between 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. on Thursdays at Mt Konocti Growers. Direct delivery options are available for large institutional orders.


The pilot test of www.lakecountygrown.com began in August with a group of 12 growers and 12 consumers representing a wide variety of potential customers. All participants went through the entire process, including delivery, pick up and purchasing.


“All participants were very pleased at how easy the online system is to use,” said Hooper. “The system really exceeded our expectations.”


The committee will be inviting all certified Lake County growers to participate, which will offer Lake County consumers an even wider variety of locally grown, healthy produce to select from.


The committee is adamant that only growers who are certified by the agricultural commissioner as Lake County growers will be allowed to participate. The system will not be opened to any growers outside the county.


The online ordering system is one component of a California Department of Food and Agriculture grant awarded to Lake County Health Services in 2009.


The purpose of the grant is to increase Lake County consumption and production of specialty crops, which include vegetables, fruit and tree nuts.


The online ordering system is being developed through collaboration among Lake County Health Services, the Health Leadership Network and Lake County Farm Bureau.


“This online ordering system offers exceptional access to healthy, fresh produce,” said Susan Jen, director of the Health Leadership Network. “It supports the vitality of our community in two important ways: by making it easy for everyone to access nutritious, wholesome food and by boosting our economy via support of local farmers.”


Look for the “Eat Fresh, Buy Lake County Grown” that denotes various ways this project is striving to promote the vibrant health of our community.


For more information on the online ordering system, visit www.lakecountygrown.com.

 

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SACRAMENTO – California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) Secretary A.G. Kawamura has announce the opportunity to serve as a reviewer on the 2011 Specialty Crop Block Grant Technical Review Committee.


The role of the Technical Review Committee is to review, evaluate and make recommendations on applications to fund projects that will ensure the continued competitiveness of California specialty crops.


CDFA forwards recommendations along to the USDA, which funds the block grants through the federal Farm Bill.


Individuals interested in serving on the committee are urged to apply by Nov. 10, 2010.


It is anticipated that $55 million will be made available in 2011, with up to $17 million to be allocated to California specialty crops, which are defined as fruits, vegetables, tree nuts, dried fruits, horticulture, and nursery crops (including floriculture).


The Specialty Crop Technical Review Committee will consist of individuals who are interested in specialty crops and who may represent government and non-government organizations.


Members receive no compensation and are required to complete CDFA’s Specialty Crop Block Grant Conflict of Interest form, and the Fair Political Practices Commission’s Statement of Economic Interests form.


Committee members are entitled to payment for necessary traveling expenses in accordance with the rules of the California Department of Personnel Administration.


The timeframe for reviewing applications is between January 2011 and June 2011.


By establishing the Technical Review Committee, CDFA is adhering to the Specialty Crop Competitiveness Act, which encourages the development of state plans through a competitive process to ensure maximum public input and benefit.


Individuals seeking consideration should submit a resume and letter of interest to work on behalf of California’s specialty crop industry.


Applications should be sent by email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., attention Kathy Alameda, Federal Funds Manager, at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County Farmers' Finest market season ends this week at both the Library Park and Steele Wines locations.


At the Wednesday Market, held from 4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. in Lakeport, they will celebrate the end of the market's first season at that location with a cooking demonstration at 5 p.m. with Esther Oertel, who will do her magic with apples and dried fruit.


Hang out until the end and celebrate with your favorite vendors as they gather around drinking hot beverages.


At the Saturday market, which takes place from 8:30 a.m. to noon in Finley, there will be a soup tasting featuring seasonal ingredients from Sky Hoyt and Colleen Seely starting at 9:30 a.m. until they run out.


Come in costume and join them for an “after market potluck.”


Both markets are open rain or shine all the time, and they look forward to the new season starting in May 2011.


Please visit www.lakecountyfarmersfinest.org and sign up to receive the “Freshest News,” sent whenever something is fresh or new.


Farmers' Finest also offers a big “thank you” to all who support our farmers – at the markets and behind the scenes.

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President Bill Clinton stumps for Congressman Mike Thompson in his reelection bid during a campaign appearance at the Uptown Theatre in Napa, Calif., on Sunday, October 17, 2010. Photo by John Jensen.



 



NAPA, Calif. – The nation's 42nd president made a special campaign appearance in support of North Coast Congressman Mike Thompson on Sunday.


A roar from the crowd of more than 800 people greeted President Bill Clinton when he stepped onto the stage with Thompson Sunday afternoon in the Uptown Theatre in Napa.


In the hours before the “Get-Out-the-Vote” rally, Thompson supporters as well as those supporting Loren Hanks, the Republican going up against him in this year's election, lined Third Street in front of the theater.


Some chanted slogs – “We like Mike,” “Mike take a hike” and “U.S.A.” – and carried signs and flags while braving the rain and cold weather.


Lake County residents also made the trip, including Randy Ridgel, chair of the county's Republican Party, who was there to support Hanks and also held a U.S. flag with “Don't tread on me” written on it.


A truck with Hanks banners drove past the theater, as did a large RV with “Tea Party Express” written on the front and “Tea Party Empress” on the back.


The hour-long rally was the 83rd campaign appearance this election season for Clinton, who met with Thompson supporters for a reception beforehand.


With the economy still lagging, concerns have mounted as the election has closed in that the Democrats might lose enough seats to give Republicans a majority in Congress once more.


In introducing Clinton, Thompson told the crowd, “This is the most critical election, I think, of my life,” urging everyone to get out and vote and encourage their family, friends and neighbors to do the same in order to prevent the rollback of legislation passed under the Democratic-dominated Congress.


When Clinton stepped up to the podium, he told the crowd, “It may be raining outside but the sun is shining in here.”


Over the next 50 minutes, Clinton gave a conversational talk that was part old-time revival, and part history and economics lesson, with some football thrown in.


Thompson, Clinton noted, was the first elected official he endorsed when he came onto the national scene, and it was a decision Clinton took pride in making. “I think he's been a fabulous congressman for you.”


Clinton said Republicans have threatened to launch investigations into the Obama administration if they win the majority in November. It's something he said Obama has refused to do to his predecessor, but a tactic which Republicans are willing to pursue to stop progress.


Thompson, he added, is good at working across the aisle, and understands that one way to get America back on its feet is to put it back in the lead in developing such industries as clean energy.


Plus, Clinton said, Thompson is running “against a guy who doesn't live here,” a dig at Hanks, who reportedly doesn't reside in the First Congressional District.


Clinton said the polls predicting Republicans will take over in November are predicated on the assumption that the electorate in 2010 is different from that of 2008. He acknowledged that young people don't realize that what they voted for two years ago can be turned back if control of Congress changes.


During this campaign season, Clinton said he wanted to make himself available to people like Thompson who had supported his wife, Hillary, in her run for the presidency two years. Thompson had been an early and staunch supporter of Hillary Clinton, telling this reporter in 2008 that he felt she would make a great president.


Now secretary of state, Hillary Clinton is precluded from making campaign appearances, so Bill Clinton said he was taking on the task in the midst of the work with his foundation – which has charitable efforts under way around the world – and his continuing study of the U.S. Economy.


During his talk Clinton had taken some humorous jabs at the Tea Party, but he said that while he could go on for a half hour with such stories, it actually wasn't irrelevant.


He was concerned that more attention would be paid in the reporting of his visit to such comments about the Tea Party rather than what he emphasized were the more important, crucial issues – where America is now and how to fix the country.


Rhetoric, he said, has obscured the real issues – including rampant spending that he said dug the country into a hole which the current administration has had little time to try to dig out of, and political forces that won't “man up” and be honest about who they are.


Clinton said the financial collapse started four months before Obama took office and while the country isn't out of the woods yet, it has stopped digging.


If the country had kept his budget, Clinton asserted, the country would have been totally out of debt by 2015.


Referring to football, Clinton said people watch the films and look at the facts, but when it comes to the future of the country and its people, the facts don't seem to matter as much.


The country's financial crisis bottomed out on July 1, 2009, said Clinton, noting that the country has recovered by about 70 percent, more than Germany, Japan and the United Kingdom have managed to do.


Still, jobs that are in that last 30 percent, and people are still plagued by mortgage problems and financial fears, he said.


He believes the stimulus, health care and Wall Street reform bills are working, but more needs to be done, and investing in small business, green technology and infrastructure can offer the fastest and most significant results. But, Clinton said, there is a threat to stop the stimulus before it is finished.


The stimulus is designed to bolster the economy and transition to green technologies that can mitigate the damaging effects of global warming, he said, describing the potential melting of the poles and other environmental conditions.


“Why not rescue the planet and save the economy at the same time?” he asked.


There are trillions in uncommitted bank loans, and stopping the stimulus, he suggested, would cause a new meltdown and lead to the need for a new bailout, which Clinton said would delay the country's financial recovery “Lord only knows” how long.


Clinton said there are three million jobs posted for hire in the country that have remained empty for more than three weeks, with training needed to prepare people to fill them. He suggested that technology can be used to provide information about where the jobs are and what is needed to get people employed, which could be aided by giving states and employers money for training.


Clinton devoted considerable time to concern about student loan reform being turned back. He said the U.S. Has fallen from being the country with the most four-year college degree holders to No. 9.


Costs of attending college caused many young people to drop out of school, but student aid reform has been passed that will save students and the country billions, Clinton said. Such reform, he argued, will change the future of America, but it hasn't gotten coverage because it's not as funny – in the context of this year's elections – as witchcraft or wrestling.


“This is revolutionary,” he said of the student loan changes under way.


Clinton said Republicans have vowed to repeal the legislation, an action which would add $60 billion to the national debt.


The two major parties, he said, have very different ideas about how America should work. “You need to tell that to everybody you can,” he said.


Clinton said in the 12 years before his presidency the country's debt went from $1 trillion to $4 trillion.


“We repealed trickle-down economics,” he said, adding that when people asked him what new idea he brought to Washington, DC, he replied, “Arithmetic.”


He said Republicans “talked tough but they acted soft,” getting rid of pay as you go requirements for legislation, borrowing huge amounts from China and in turn dropping enforcement of trade regulations with China by 80 percent.


“This is not rocket science,” he said. “Trickle-down economics does not work and they have promised to give it back to us on steroids.”


Based on what Republicans have stated they will do if they win back control of Congress in November, the country can look forward to the repeal of health care and student loan reform, while tax cuts will be implemented for the rich, defense spending will be increased and an attempt will be made to privatize Medicare. Those measures will add $3 trillion to the country's deficit over several years' time, Clinton said.


There will be 25 to 50 percent cuts for everything else, like air traffic control, Clean Air Act enforcement, occupational safety laws and the National Park Service, said Clinton. “Nobody's talking about the facts.”


He said it makes no sense to push Obama out after he's had so little time to try to set things straight, when the Republicans had years to push the country deeper into debt.


Recalling his humble upbringing, Clinton told the crowd, “I want every child in this country to have the same chance I did,” noting that no one in his family had a college education before him, and many of them worked hard and died on the land.


Clinton credited Thompson with adding a provision to the health care reform that requires that 85 cents of every dollar goes to health care costs, not profits. It's reforms like those, said Clinton, that are at stake.


He challenged the crowd to go out and help spread the word.


“You have to make the choice,” he said, explaining that if people understand the facts, things will be fine.


He emphasized that there is nothing wrong with the United States that can't be fixed by its inherent strengths.


Afterward, Thompson told reporters that he enjoyed working with Clinton again.


Asked about Clinton's concerns about rhetoric versus facts in the media, Thompson agreed, saying there is a propensity to reduce things to the simplest of terms.


He suggested there is an effort to create noise and drown out meaningful discussion on issues like health care and government reform.


On Sunday night Clinton made another campaign appearance, this time in San Jose for gubernatorial candidate Jerry Brown and Gavin Newsom, who is seeking the lieutenant governor's job this November.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

LAKEPORT, Calif. – A man who had fled the state after being sought for illegal contracting and other charges was sentenced to state prison on Friday.


Richard John Williams, 66, was sentenced by Judge Arthur Mann to four years and eight months in state prison for charges of grand theft, failing to appear, and contracting without a license, according to Senior Deputy District Attorney Rachel Abelson.


Mann also ordered Williams to pay four victims more than $20,000 in restitution, Abelson said.


Williams had been scheduled to appear for sentencing on April 27, 2009, when Abelson said he failed to appear and Judge Mann issued a no bail warrant. Williams had numerous previous arrests, including an arrest for a paving scam.


The Lake County District Attorney’s Office filed an additional felony case for failing to appear while out on bail with a special allegation that Williams committed that crime while he was released on bail in a felony.


Thanks to the investigators at the Contractor’s State Licensing Board, Oklahoma Law Enforcement and local bail bondsman Rob Brown, Williams was apprehended in Oklahoma and was eventually extradited back to Lake County to face charges in July of this year, Abelson said.


On Aug. 27, 2010, Williams entered into pleas of no contest to a felony charge of failing to appear, with the special allegation and a misdemeanor count of contracting without a license, Abelson said.


Once Williams was re-apprehended in July he was represented by attorney Katherine Elliott of Ukiah, while Abelson prosecuted the case.


Abelson said the original case against Williams was investigated by investigators from the Contractor’s State Licensing Board, Karen Nicley and Stuart Rind, the latter now an investigator with the Department of Insurance.


The subsequent two cases were a joint effort with Contractor’s State Licensing Board Investigator

and the District Attorney's Office's Investigations Bureau, she said.


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The USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) in California has set the application deadline for fiscal year 2011 Farm Bill conservation programs funding as Nov. 12.


The deadline includes all California Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) and Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program (WHIP) initiatives, except the EQIP Organic Initiative. The EQIP Organic Initiative sign up deadline will be provided at a later date.


NRCS’s EQIP program initiatives eligible for this sign up include, but are not limited to:


  • Water quality – animal feeding operations (AFO);

  • Water conservation / drought response;

  • Wildlife habitat improvements;

  • California air quality;

  • Grazing lands management;

  • Forest lands management.


To date in 2010, California NRCS has obligated over $74 million in EQIP funds for over 5,600 contracts and 821,000 acres statewide. However, the number of applications received this past year far exceeds the amount of funding available.


NRCS is anticipating similar funding for 2011. Farmers and ranchers are encouraged to start their application process as soon as possible to ensure consideration for this funding cycle.


For the 2010 EQIP program, Lake County farmers and ranchers were awarded contracts enrolling approximately 8,000 acres into the EQIP program. EQIP funds are a way for landowners to solve a resource problem such as fixing a nuisance gully.


It can also be used to address regulatory concerns like water quality rules or to receive incentives for water conservation.


The primary resource concerns being addressed in Lake County for 2011 include:


  • Irrigation efficiency, including system retrofits and system conversions;

  • Erosion, including gullies, roads, and stream banks;

  • Grazing and livestock management, including, water quality improvements (fencing), stock water, and grazing management;

  • Buffers addressing, animal waste, nutrients, pesticides, or sediments in water;

  • Water quality projects that address runoff from headquarters or heavy use areas;

  • Forestry conservation activity plans;

  • Forestry projects identified in a FMP or NTMP or other forestry plan;

  • Wildlife habitat for Clear Lake Hitch as well as other wildlife concerns;

  • Air quality diesel engine conversion or conversion of burning to chipping;

  • Hoop houses.


Organic EQIP will address:


  • Cropland – conversion to organic production or assistance with organic production.


NRCS invites landowners to apply before the Nov. 12 deadline by visiting the Lakeport NRCS Office at 889 Lakeport Blvd, Lakeport CA, or calling 707-263-4180, Extension 15, for an application packet.


Specific information about EQIP in Lake County also can be found on the Internet at www.ca.nrcs.usda.gov.


NRCS is celebrating its 75th year of "Helping People Help the Land." Since its inception in 1935, NRCS has worked in partnership with private landowners and a variety of local, state and federal conservation partners to deliver conservation based on specific, local needs.

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