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Community

Wet weather trail closure continues for Upper Lake and Covelo Ranger Districts

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Written by: Mendocino National Forest
Published: 28 October 2021
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA — Mendocino National Forest officials have terminated the wet weather trail closure order for the Grindstone District.

Officials have issued a new wet weather trail closure, Forest Order No. 08-21-08, beginning at 6 a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 28, for Upper Lake and Covelo Ranger districts.

Temporary wet weather trail closures go into effect when two inches of rainfall occur within a 24-hour period or when the soils are saturated.

The wet weather off-highway vehicle, or OHV, trail closures restrict the use of OHV trails when conditions are too wet to sustain use without causing soil loss, impacting water quality, damaging trail tread and putting public safety at risk.

These limited duration closures will remain in place until no measurable precipitation is recorded within 48 consecutive hours.

By issuing these closures as precipitation events occur, the forest provides for public safety, protects natural resources during and after storms and allows time for trails to dry out prior to resuming use.

The restrictions may be implemented anytime during this fall and winter season through June 2022.

Trail users can check the precipitation data online before traveling to the forest: https://bit.ly/RAWSdata. Look at MNF02 Portable (Howard Mill) rain gauge on the Upper Lake Ranger District. If Howard Mill rain gauge is inoperable, the Konocti location will be used for the Upper Lake Ranger District.

When closures occur, information will be posted on the Forest website and social media.

The restrictions prohibit the use of motor vehicles on National Forest System trails within the Upper Lake Ranger District on the Mendocino National Forest pursuant to 36 CFR 261.55(b).

All forest orders, including Forest Order No. 08-21-08 (wet weather closure), are posted here.

Bill extending Firefighter Bill of Rights to seasonal employees is signed by governor

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Written by: Editor
Published: 27 October 2021
As extreme wildfire conditions have taken hold across the state of California over the past several years, Cal Fire has become more reliant on seasonal firefighters to protect communities and save lives than ever before.

More than 1,600 men and women have signed up to be seasonal firefighters this season alone.

The importance of these seasonal firefighters has also grown exponentially over the last decade with the loss of 4,000 inmate firefighter positions.

Even with the increased importance of these 10-month seasonal firefighter positions, these brave men and women aren’t protected under the same workplace laws, or the Firefighter Bill of Rights, as their full time peers. This is in spite of the fact that seasonal and full time firefighters perform the same work.

This has now changed with the passage of Sen. Mike McGuire’s SB 206. This groundbreaking bill extends workplace protections under the Firefighter Bill of Rights to the 1,600 hardworking seasonal firefighters who are keeping California safe.

“Seasonal firefighters are doing the same backbreaking work as their full-time peers. They put themselves in harm’s way fighting the largest wildfires in American history and are on the front lines protecting our communities and saving lives. It’s past time for the state to provide equal protections for equal work,” Sen. McGuire said. “We are grateful to Gov. Newsom for signing this critical bill and are forever grateful for the hardworking men and women protecting our state from wildfires.”

The original Firefighter Bill of Rights, passed in 2007, authorizes key workplace protections for full-time firefighters in the state of California.

Seasonal firefighters, who work side by side with their full-time counterparts year after year have not been afforded these basic and crucial protections under the Firefighter Bill of Rights.

Under SB 206, seasonal firefighters, after their first year of working a season, will be included in the protections provided in the Firefighters Bill of Rights.

“California has become more reliant on seasonal firefighters over the last many years as the Golden State’s fire season has exploded: in 2020, more than 4 million acres — 4% of the land in California — burned in a record-setting year. This bill is a critical step in the right direction to protect seasonal firefighters who are protecting our communities,” Sen. McGuire said.

Tuleyome hosts ‘Nature & You’ lecture on Potter Valley Project Oct. 28

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Written by: Editor
Published: 27 October 2021
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA — Please join Tuleyome for an online monthly “Nature & You” Zoom lecture at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 28.

This lecture by Alicia Hamann, executive director of Friends of the Eel River, will cover the past, present and future of the Eel River watershed.

The Eel River watershed covers a large section of northwestern California, encompassing parts of six counties, from Lake County in the southeast to Humboldt County in the northwest.

The headwaters of the mainstem of the Eel River are in the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument.

Specifically, the lecture will be discussing the Potter Valley Project — the two dams and diversion in the headwaters of the Eel River undergoing a relicensing process.

This relicensing process could result in the removal of at least one of the dams and some very big changes for the Pillsbury basin region.

This lecture will be online in a Zoom meeting and registration is required. Please register with this link.

Registered participants will be sent an email with login information. If you're registered, you'll also be sent a link to a recording of the lecture even if you were not able to attend.

Forest Road M1 closed at Bar Creek slide

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Written by: Mendocino National Forest
Published: 26 October 2021
A slide at Bar Creek in the Mendocino National Forest in Northern California has closed Forest Road M1. Photo courtesy of the Mendocino National Forest.

MENDOCINO NATIONAL FOREST, Calif. — Weekend storms have triggered a landslide on Forest Road M1 at Bar Creek, about three miles north of the Eel River Work Center.

Forest officials have closed the road to assess damage and plan repairs.

Officials ask visitors and residents to avoid traveling in the area.

To reach areas north of the landslide, the alternate route is to take Forest Road M4 north to Forest Road M2. From M2, take Forest Road 23N39 (Espee Ridge Road) west.

The route will add approximately two hours of driving time, and conditions of those roads are unknown at this time.

In areas where a wildfire has occurred, significant rainfall and wind create hazards. Roads within the August Complex and Ranch Fire areas are subject to falling trees, landslides, rockfall, erosion, debris flows and flooding.

All visitors should be aware of the hazards of traveling through a burned area and prepare for an alternate route in case roads become impassable.
  1. USDA approves SNAP/CalFresh Food replacement in California counties due to extreme wind and public safety power shutoffs
  2. Sterling Shores plans fall yard sale
  3. Scotts Valley Advisory Council to meet Oct. 25
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