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Sheriff’s traffic stop leads to major methamphetamine seizure in Hidden Valley Lake

HIDDEN VALLEY LAKE, Calif. — A routine traffic stop by a Lake County Sheriff’s deputy in Hidden Valley Lake over the weekend quickly turned into a significant drug seizure.

The Lake County Sheriff’s Office said the stop on Sunday, April 6, led to the arrest of a Clearlake Oaks man and the seizure of a large amount of methamphetamine.

The sheriff’s office said the deputy was following a vehicle that made an abrupt turn without signaling, nearly causing an accident. The deputy turned around to conduct a traffic stop for the violation.

As the deputy pulled up to where the vehicle had stopped on a side road, he noticed the driver — identified as Nino Davis, 49 — outside his vehicle, kneeling down and glancing around.

When approached by the deputy, Davis disclosed that he was on probation and subject to an active search clause.

After confirming this information, the deputy conducted a search of both Davis and his vehicle, uncovering four one-pound packages of methamphetamine Davis had attempted to conceal underneath the vehicle.

Davis admitted to receiving the drugs outside of the county, with instructions to deliver them to an unknown location in Clearlake.

Davis was arrested on felony charges related to possessing a controlled substance for sale and transporting a controlled substance within and between counties. The sheriff’s office said he was transported to the Hill Road Correctional Facility, where he was booked on the above charges.

The seized narcotics totaled more than 1,800 grams — an amount equivalent to roughly 18,000 doses and an estimated 128,000 hours of drug influence removed from our streets, the sheriff’s office reported.

“We commend our deputy for his vigilance, professionalism, and dedication to protecting our community. His quick thinking and proactive efforts are a testament to the vital work our deputies do each day,” the sheriff’s office said.

While this seizure is a major step in removing drugs from the community, the sheriff’s office said it recognizes that the fight against drugs in our communities is far from over. “Together, with continued effort and community support, we can strive toward a safer, healthier and drug-free Lake County.”
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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 10 April 2025

Assembly Education Committee approves bill to strengthen Native American student rights to wear tribal regalia at graduation ceremonies

Schools would be prohibited from creating any process that would discourage or prevent Native American students from displaying any tribal adornment or ceremonial regalia at graduation ceremonies under a bill approved unanimously today by the Assembly Education Committee.

Assemblymember James C. Ramos (D-San Bernardino) introduced the bill, AB 1369.

“Despite existing legislation and constitutional protections to allow students to wear traditional tribal regalia at graduation ceremonies, Native American youth and their families continue to face obstacles and challenges. Graduation ceremonies are a time for young people, their families and tribal communities to share pride and joy in a major accomplishment. AB 1369 adds clarity to current law so that students’ and families’ celebration is not marred by unnecessary turmoil,” Ramos said.

He noted that regalia might include items such as eagle feathers or beading.

In 2018, the Legislature took action to protect student rights by passing AB 1248 (Chapter 804, Statutes of 2018). That bill stated, “A pupil may wear traditional tribal regalia or recognized objects of religious or cultural significance as an adornment at school graduation ceremonies.”

Despite this language, school districts continue to tell Native American students they cannot wear tribal regalia.

In 2021, the legislature passed Ramos’s AB 945 (Chapter 285, Statutes of 2021) which established a task force that would provide education leaders with policy, procedure, and best practices recommendations for the implementation of AB 1284.

California Indian Legal Services and the Tule River Indian Tribe are the AB 1369 sponsors, and it is also supported by the Fresno Unified School District, ACLU California Action, Habematolel Pomo of Upper Lake and Indigenous Justice.

AB 1369 will next go to the Assembly Judiciary Committee.
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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 10 April 2025

What causes the powerful winds that fuel dust storms, wildfires and blizzards? A weather scientist explains

 

When huge dust storms like this one in the Phoenix suburbs in 2022 hit, it’s easy to see the power of the wind. Christopher Harris/iStock Images via Getty Plus

Windstorms can seem like they come out of nowhere, hitting with a sudden blast. They might be hundreds of miles long, stretching over several states, or just in your neighborhood.

But they all have one thing in common: a change in air pressure.

Just like air rushing out of your car tire when the valve is open, air in the atmosphere is forced from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure.

The stronger the difference in pressure, the stronger the winds that will ultimately result.

A weather map with a line between high and low pressure stretching across the U.S.
On this forecast for March 18, 2025, from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, ‘L’ represents low-pressure systems. The shaded area over New Mexico and west Texas represents strong winds and low humidity that combine to raise the risk of wildfires. NOAA Weather Prediction Center

Other forces related to the Earth’s rotation, friction and gravity can also alter the speed and direction of winds. But it all starts with this change in pressure over a distance – what meteorologists like me call a pressure gradient.

So how do we get pressure gradients?

Strong pressure gradients ultimately owe their existence to the simple fact that the Earth is round and rotates.

Because the Earth is round, the sun is more directly overhead during the day at the equator than at the poles. This means more energy reaches the surface of the Earth near the equator. And that causes the lower part of the atmosphere, where weather occurs, to be both warmer and have higher pressure on average than the poles.

Nature doesn’t like imbalances. As a result of this temperature difference, strong winds develop at high altitudes over midlatitude locations, like the continental U.S. This is the jet stream, and even though it’s several miles up in the atmosphere, it has a big impact on the winds we feel at the surface.

Wind speed and direction in the upper atmosphere on March 14, 2025, show waves in the jet stream. Downstream of a trough in this wave, winds diverge and low pressure can form near the surface. NCAR

Because Earth rotates, these upper-altitude winds blow from west to east. Waves in the jet stream – a consequence of Earth’s rotation and variations in the surface land, terrain and oceans – can cause air to diverge, or spread out, at certain points. As the air spreads out, the number of air molecules in a column decreases, ultimately reducing the air pressure at Earth’s surface.

The pressure can drop quite dramatically over a few days or even just a few hours, leading to the birth of a low-pressure system – what meteorologists call an extratropical cyclone.

The opposite chain of events, with air converging at other locations, can form high pressure at the surface.

In between these low-pressure and high-pressure systems is a strong change in pressure over a distance – a pressure gradient. And that pressure gradient leads to strong winds. Earth’s rotation causes these winds to spiral around areas of high and low pressure. These highs and lows are like large circular mixers, with air blowing clockwise around high pressure and counterclockwise around low pressure. This flow pattern blows warm air northward toward the poles east of lows and cool air southward toward the equator west of lows.

A maps shows pressure changes don't follow a straight line.
A map illustrates lines of surface pressure, called isobars, with areas of high and low pressure marked for March 14, 2025. Winds are strongest when isobars are packed most closely together. Plymouth State University, CC BY-NC-SA

As the waves in the jet stream migrate from west to east, so do the surface lows and highs, and with them, the corridors of strong winds.

That’s what the U.S. experienced when a strong extratropical cyclone caused winds stretching thousands of miles that whipped up dust storms and spread wildfires, and even caused tornadoes and blizzards in the central and southern U.S. in March 2025.

Whipping up dust storms and spreading fires

The jet stream over the U.S. is strongest and often the most “wavy” in the springtime, when the south-to-north difference in temperature is often the strongest.

Winds associated with large-scale pressure systems can become quite strong in areas where there is limited friction at the ground, like the flat, less forested terrain of the Great Plains. One of the biggest risks is dust storms in arid regions of west Texas or eastern New Mexico, exacerbated by drought in these areas.

Downtown is barely visible through a haze of dust.
A dust storm hit Albuquerque, N.M., on March 18, 2025. Another dust storm a few dats earlier in Kansas caused a deadly pileup involving dozens of vehices on I-70. AP Photo/Roberto E. Rosales

When the ground and vegetation are dry and the air has low relative humidity, high winds can also spread wildfires out of control.

Even more intense winds can occur when the pressure gradient interacts with terrain. Winds can sometimes rush faster downslope, as happens in the Rockies or with the Santa Ana winds that fueled devastating wildfires in the Los Angeles area in January.

Violent tornadoes and storms

Of course, winds can become even stronger and more violent on local scales associated with thunderstorms.

When thunderstorms form, hail and precipitation in them can cause the air to rapidly fall in a downdraft, causing very high pressure under these storms. That pressure forces the air to spread out horizontally when it reaches the ground. Meteorologists call these straight line winds, and the process that forms them is a downburst. Large thunderstorms or chains of them moving across a region can cause large swaths of strong wind over 60 mph, called a derecho.

Finally, some of nature’s strongest winds occur inside tornadoes. They form when the winds surrounding a thunderstorm change speed and direction with height. This can cause part of the storm to rotate, setting off a chain of events that may lead to a tornado and winds as strong as 300 mph in the most violent tornadoes.

How a tornado forms. Source: NOAA.

Tornado winds are also associated with an intense pressure gradient. The pressure inside the center of a tornado is often very low and varies considerably over a very small distance.

It’s no coincidence that localized violent winds from thunderstorm downbursts and tornadoes often occur amid large-scale windstorms. Extratropical cyclones often draw warm, moist air northward on strong winds from the south, which is a key ingredient for thunderstorms. Storms also become more severe and may produce tornadoes when the jet stream is in close proximity to these low-pressure centers. In the winter and early spring, cold air funneling south on the northwest side of strong extratropical cyclones can even lead to blizzards.

So, the same wave in the jet stream can lead to strong winds, blowing dust and fire danger in one region, while simultaneously triggering a tornado outbreak and a blizzard in other regions.The Conversation

Chris Nowotarski, Associate Professor of Atmospheric Science, Texas A&M University

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

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Written by: Chris Nowotarski, Texas A&M University
Published: 10 April 2025

Lake County Library Literacy Program provides important training

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — As California Library Week is marked this week, the Lake County Library is preparing to train a new group of volunteers in its Literacy Program.

The Lake County Library Literacy Program will host a springtime new tutor training on Wednesday, April 16, at the Redbud Library, located at 14785 Burns Valley Road in Clearlake.

The training is free and will take place from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Light snacks and refreshments will be provided, along with training materials at no cost.

Tutors are in high demand at the Library Literacy Program, with more volunteer tutors needed in the Clearlake area, bilingual tutors for the English as a Second Language Program, and tutors available and willing to tutor at the Lake County Jail.

A recent survey of adult skills indicated 26% of Lake County adults have literacy skills at level one or below.

Many adults want to improve their reading and writing skills so they can access better jobs, further their own education, advocate for their children, and overall improve their way of life.

Through hard work and perseverance, adult learners can change their own, and their family’s lives, for the better. Becoming a tutor can help someone to a better future.

No experience is needed, and ongoing support and workshops are provided for tutors. Upon completion of the training, tutors will be matched with adult learners in a variety of settings around the county.

Those who would like to help adults improve their literacy skills are encouraged to attend.

Hosted by Literacy Program Coordinator Georgina Marie Guardado and facilitated by Lake County Literacy Coalition Board Member Pam Klier, participants will learn useful techniques for teaching adults to read and write.

Learn more about the Literacy Program online at https://www.lakecountyca.gov/836/Literacy-Program. 

For more information or to register for tutor training, please call 707-263-7633 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 09 April 2025

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