The Lake County Outdoor Passion Play. Courtesy photo. LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lake County Outdoor Passion Play, one of the largest of such events in the country, will stage its 39th consecutive presentation at 4 p.m. on May 18 and 19.
The drama involves about 150 performers portraying the last days of Christ’s life on earth on a massive 85-acre outdoor setting on the shores of Clear Lake.
Rev. Philip J. Ryan and his then-fellow priest, Paul Moran, started the play on what was, in 1981, a private ranch owned by the Beltramo family.
The Lake County Passion Play formally incorporated in 1990. A few years after the deaths of Mr. and Mrs. Red Beltramo in the late 1990s, the 85-acre ranch was purchased by the organization. All cast and crew members are volunteers as are the Lake County Passion Play Board of Directors.
“This year’s performance will be offered not only as a witness of the cast and crew’s faith in Him crucified, but also out of remembrance for all our loved ones who have past – especially our late producer, Father Philip J. Ryan whose death was in December 2017,” said Rob Haun who has been the director of the Play for over 10 years.
As Father Ryan has said in the past, “The ground level, where the audience sits, is the perfect setting. It is all flat, so people can see.”
The performances take place on various stages and hillsides accompanied by an outdoor sound system. Attendees should bring their own outdoor chairs.
In keeping with the tradition of the first passion plays started in the 13th century, the Lake County Passion Play also instructs all faithful Christians about the key aspect of our faith: God so loved his creation that He sent us only Son to suffer and die for the remission of sin. The play is presented as a prayer and an act of love by the cast and crew.
Some have compared the Lake County Passion Play to others such as at Oberammergau in Germany; Spearfish, South Dakota; and Eureka Springs, Arkansas. Their response has been that the Lake County Play is by far the best.
The hills and the rocks of Lake County are very similar to that of the Holy Land. The handmade costumes are simple, yet colorful. The cast and crew work hard every year to capture the essence of life as it was when Jesus walked the Earth.
Smoking, food, drinks and pets are prohibited. The penitential nature of the performance is not for eating. Local spring water is available as are bathroom facilities.
There are only two performances – in English – lasting about two hours each. Admission continues to be free, as requested by the Beltramo family, but helpful donations are accepted.
As part of their conviction, and after Ryan’s example, the cast and crew members continue the work of maintaining the Passion Play grounds throughout the year.
The many wildfires in Lake County over the past four years have not broken the spirit of the people determined to continue presenting the play.
Organizers say it is only by the grace of God, and the wonderful support of local firefighters that the grounds were not completely burned after an accident last year that started a small grass fire on the grounds.
In the words of St. Teresa of Calcutta, “Come and see,” – and organizers invite community members “to allow the Holy Spirit to work by watching how Jesus suffered and died for each one of us.”
The Lake County Outdoor Passion Play. Courtesy photo.
A cormorant like this one is among the kinds of birds participants can expect to see during the Heron Days tours. Courtesy photo. LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Redbud Audubon Society’s popular annual Heron Days event is filling up slots on its upcoming tours.
The event takes place over two weekends at two different locations: Lakeside County Park on Saturday, April 27, and Sunday, April 28, and at Clear Lake Campground on Cache Creek in Clearlake on May 4 and 5.
This event features pontoon boat tours to view birds and other wildlife on Clear Lake.
Tickets are going fast for this year’s tours at both locations. Many tours for April 27 (leaving from Lakeside County Park) are sold and the April 28 tours from the same location are filling up fast as well.
The May 4 and 5 tours into Anderson Marsh from the Clear Lake Campground are also filling fast. Three tours are already sold out but May 5 from Clear Lake Campground still has plenty of openings.
Check out www.redbudaudubon.org to see what is still available, register for a boat ride and pay online.
If you can’t pay via the website for some reason, call the Audubon phone number: 707- 263-8030 and leave a message but please note reserving by phone makes extra work for volunteers.
The 90 minute tours will leave between the hours of 8 a.m. and 11 a.m. The tour fee is $30.
Tours from Lakeside County Park follow the shoreline where numerous grebes, cormorants and other wildlife can be viewed as well as an active Great-blue Heron rookery, or nesting site.
The trip from Clear Lake Campground travels into Anderson Marsh and along Cache Creek, which is the location of another heron rookery and may be hosting nesting and mating Western and Clarks Grebes.
On April 21, Christians will be celebrating Easter, the day on which the resurrection of Jesus is said to have taken place. The date of celebration changes from year to year.
The reason for this variation is that Easter always falls on the first Sunday after the first full moon following the spring equinox. So, in 2020, Easter will be celebrated on April 12, and on April 4 in 2021.
I am a religious studies scholar specializing in early Christianity, and my research shows that this dating of Easter goes back to the complicated origins of this holiday and how it has evolved over the centuries.
Easter is quite similar to other major holidays like Christmas and Halloween, which have evolved over the last 200 years or so. In all of these holidays, Christian and non-Christian (pagan) elements have continued to blend together.
Easter as a rite of spring
Most major holidays have some connection to the changing of seasons. This is especially obvious in the case of Christmas. The New Testament gives no information about what time of year Jesus was born. Many scholars believe, however, that the main reason Jesus’ birth came to be celebrated on December 25 is because that was the date of the winter solstice according to the Roman calendar.
Since the days following the winter solstice gradually become longer and less dark, it was ideal symbolism for the birth of “the light of the world” as stated in the New Testament’s Gospel of John.
Similar was the case with Easter, which falls in close proximity to another key point in the solar year: the vernal equinox (around March 20), when there are equal periods of light and darkness. For those in northern latitudes, the coming of spring is often met with excitement, as it means an end to the cold days of winter.
Spring also means the coming back to life of plants and trees that have been dormant for winter, as well as the birth of new life in the animal world. Given the symbolism of new life and rebirth, it was only natural to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus at this time of the year.
The naming of the celebration as “Easter” seems to go back to the name of a pre-Christian goddess in England, Eostre, who was celebrated at beginning of spring. The only reference to this goddess comes from the writings of the Venerable Bede, a British monk who lived in the late seventh and early eighth century. As religious studies scholar Bruce Forbessummarizes:
“Bede wrote that the month in which English Christians were celebrating the resurrection of Jesus had been called Eosturmonath in Old English, referring to a goddess named Eostre. And even though Christians had begun affirming the Christian meaning of the celebration, they continued to use the name of the goddess to designate the season.”
Bede was so influential for later Christians that the name stuck, and hence Easter remains the name by which the English, Germans and Americans refer to the festival of Jesus’ resurrection.
The connection with Jewish Passover
It is important to point out that while the name “Easter” is used in the English-speaking world, many more cultures refer to it by terms best translated as “Passover” (for instance, “Pascha” in Greek) – a reference, indeed, to the Jewish festival of Passover.
In the Hebrew Bible, Passover is a festival that commemorates the liberation of the Jewish people from slavery in Egypt, as narrated in the Book of Exodus. It was and continues to be the most important Jewish seasonal festival, celebrated on the first full moon after the vernal equinox.
At the time of Jesus, Passover had special significance, as the Jewish people were again under the dominance of foreign powers (namely, the Romans). Jewish pilgrims streamed into Jerusalem every year in the hope that God’s chosen people (as they believed themselves to be) would soon be liberated once more.
On one Passover, Jesus traveled to Jerusalem with his disciples to celebrate the festival. He entered Jerusalem in a triumphal procession and created a disturbance in the Jerusalem Temple. It seems that both of these actions attracted the attention of the Romans, and that as a result Jesus was executed around the year A.D. 30.
Some of Jesus’ followers, however, believed that they saw him alive after his death, experiences that gave birth to the Christian religion. As Jesus died during the Passover festival and his followers believed he was resurrected from the dead three days later, it was logical to commemorate these events in close proximity.
Some early Christians chose to celebrate the resurrection of Christ on the same date as the Jewish Passover, which fell around day 14 of the month of Nisan, in March or April. These Christians were known as Quartodecimans (the name means “Fourteeners”).
By choosing this date, they put the focus on when Jesus died and also emphasized continuity with the Judaism out of which Christianity emerged. Some others instead preferred to hold the festival on a Sunday, since that was when Jesus’ tomb was believed to have been found.
In A.D. 325, the Emperor Constantine, who favored Christianity, convened a meeting of Christian leaders to resolve important disputes at the Council of Nicaea. The most fateful of its decisions was about the status of Christ, whom the council recognized as “fully human and fully divine.” This council also resolved that Easter should be fixed on a Sunday, not on day 14 of Nisan. As a result, Easter is now celebrated on the first Sunday after the first full moon of the vernal equinox.
The Easter bunny and Easter eggs
In early America, the Easter festival was far more popular among Catholics than Protestants. For instance, the New England Puritans regarded both Easter and Christmas as too tainted by non-Christian influences to be appropriate to celebrate. Such festivals also tended to be opportunities for heavy drinking and merrymaking.
The fortunes of both holidays changed in the 19th century, when they became occasions to be spent with one’s family. This was done partly out of a desire to make the celebration of these holidays less rowdy.
But Easter and Christmas also became reshaped as domestic holidays because understandings of children were changing. Prior to the 17th century, children were rarely the center of attention. As historian Stephen Nissenbaumwrites,
“…children were lumped together with other members of the lower orders in general, especially servants and apprentices – who, not coincidentally, were generally young people themselves.”
From the 17th century onward, there was an increasing recognition of childhood as as time of life that should be joyous, not simply as preparatory for adulthood. This “discovery of childhood” and the doting upon children had profound effects on how Easter was celebrated.
Yet it was only in the 17th century that a German tradition of an “Easter hare” bringing eggs to good children came to be known. Hares and rabbits had a long association with spring seasonal rituals because of their amazing powers of fertility.
When German immigrants settled in Pennsylvania in the 18th and 19th centuries, they brought this tradition with them. The wild hare also became supplanted by the more docile and domestic rabbit, in another indication of how the focus moved toward children.
As Christians celebrate the festival this spring in commemoration of Jesus’ resurrection, the familiar sights of the Easter bunny and Easter eggs serve as a reminder of the holiday’s very ancient origins outside of the Christian tradition.
This is an updated version of a piece published on March 21, 2018.
When NASA's Curiosity Mars rover landed in 2012, it brought along eclipse glasses. The solar filters on its Mast Camera, or Mastcam, allow it to stare directly at the Sun.
Over the past few weeks, Curiosity has been putting them to good use by sending back some spectacular imagery of solar eclipses caused by Phobos and Deimos, Mars' two moons.
Phobos, which is as wide as 16 miles (26 kilometers) across, was imaged on March 26, 2019 (the 2,359th sol, or Martian day, of Curiosity’s mission); Deimos, which is as wide as 10 miles (16 kilometers) across, was photographed on March 17, 2019 (Sol 2350). Phobos doesn't completely cover the Sun, so it would be considered an annular eclipse. Because Deimos is so small compared to the disk of the Sun, scientists would say it's transiting the Sun.
In addition to capturing each moon crossing in front of the Sun, one of Curiosity's Navigation Cameras (Navcams) observed the shadow of Phobos on March 25, 2019 (Sol 2358). As the moon's shadow passed over the rover during sunset, it momentarily darkened the light.
Solar eclipses have been seen many times by Curiosity and other rovers in the past. Besides being cool — who doesn't love an eclipse? — these events also serve a scientific purpose, helping researchers fine-tune their understanding of each moon's orbit around Mars.
Before the Spirit and Opportunity rovers landed in 2004, there was much higher uncertainty in the orbit of each moon, said Mark Lemmon of Texas A&M University, College Station, a co-investigator with Curiosity's Mastcam. The first time one of the rovers tried to image Deimos eclipsing the Sun, they found the moon was 25 miles (40 kilometers) away from where they expected.
"More observations over time help pin down the details of each orbit," Lemmon said. "Those orbits change all the time in response to the gravitational pull of Mars, Jupiter or even each Martian moon pulling on the other."
These events also help make Mars relatable, Lemmon said: "Eclipses, sunrises and sunsets and weather phenomena all make Mars real to people, as a world both like and unlike what they see outside, not just a subject in a book."
To date, there have been eight observations of Deimos eclipsing the Sun from either Spirit, Opportunity or Curiosity; there have been about 40 observations of Phobos.
There's still a margin of uncertainty in the orbits of both Martian moons, but that shrinks with every eclipse that's viewed from the Red Planet's surface.
Native plants are being planted along Middle Creek near Upper Lake, Calif., in a cooperative effort involving the Mendocino National Forest and the Habematolel Pomo of Upper Lake tribe. Photo courtesy of the Mendocino National Forest. UPPER LAKE, Calif. – The Mendocino National Forest and the Habematolel Pomo of Upper Lake are teaming up on a project to reestablish native riparian vegetation along Middle Creek on the Upper Lake Ranger District.
The Middle Creek restoration project involves planting traditional native plants and protecting them with fencing in order to stabilize the stream bank and enhance aquatic habitat.
In March, forest and tribal staff planted a variety of native plants including juncus and sedge along the creek.
The riparian restoration work will reduce soil erosion, provide better water quality for the Clear Lake Hitch to spawn – a very important food source historically for the Pomo of the Clear Lake basin – and reintroduce a variety of traditional native plants used by the Habematolel Pomo for basketry and other purposes.
Officials said this collaboration is intended to be an ongoing effort which will require future plantings and maintenance of those plants started.
“This project is bringing the Forest Service and local tribes together with a common purpose,” said Mendocino National ForestHeritage Program Manager Mike Dugas. “Working side by side, we strengthen relationships and discover new ways to reach our shared goals.”
A team planting native plants along Middle Creek near Upper Lake, Calif. Photo courtesy of the Mendocino National Forest.
LUCERNE, Calif. – A local man was seriously injured early Friday morning in a wreck in which authorities said he was driving a car that was found to have been stolen, and he subsequently was arrested for driving under the influence.
Jerry L. Thorpe, 47, of Nice sustained major injuries in the solo-vehicle crash, which occurred at 4:40 a.m. Friday, according to the California Highway Patrol’s Clear Lake Area office.
The CHP said Thorpe was driving a red 1994 Acura Integra westbound on Highway 20, east of Bender Drive in Lucerne, when he lost control of the car, which then traveled off the roadway to the north before hitting a tree.
Thorpe was flown by the REACH 7 air ambulance to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital for treatment, the CHP said.
The CHP said investigators determined that Thorpe’s vehicle was previously reported stolen out of Santa Rosa, and he also was arrested on suspicion of DUI for drugs.
Authorities released Thorpe to the hospital for treatment of his injuries, the CHP said.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
Guns found in a vehicle driven by Richard Leslie Styles, 51, of San Bruno, Calif., on Tuesday, April 9, 2019. Photo courtesy of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.
KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – Three Bay Area residents were taken into custody this week after a Lake County Sheriff’s deputy conducted a vehicle stop and found a cache of firearms and marijuana.
Richard Leslie Styles, 51, of San Bruno; Mandeep Singh Deol, 43, of Union City; and Bleu Mariah Debardeleben, 39, of Hayward, were arrested following a Tuesday vehicle stop, according to Lt. Corey Paulich of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.
At 6:10 a.m. Tuesday a Lake County Sheriff’s Office deputy was patrolling in the area of Bottle Rock Road and Sulphur Creek Road, Kelseyville when he observed a gray Volvo with a brake light out and conducted an enforcement stop for the violation, Paulich said.
Paulich said the deputy contacted the driver who was identified as Styles, along with his passengers Deol and Debardeleben.
The deputy smelled an overwhelming odor of marijuana coming from the vehicle. Paulich said the deputy also observed that the entire passenger compartment of the Volvo was filled with Home Depot moving boxes. Styles told the deputy that each box contained 2 to 3 pounds of marijuana.
During a search of the vehicle, the deputy located a glass pipe and small plastic bag containing suspected methamphetamine. Paulich said the deputy also located 14 firearms in the trunk that were wrapped in a sleeping bag, bolt cutters and a sock containing $77 in quarters.
From left, Bleu Mariah Debardeleben, 39, of Hayward; Mandeep Singh Deol, 43, of Union City, Calif.; and Richard Leslie Styles, 51, of San Bruno, Calif., were arrested for various charges following a vehicle stop on Tuesday, April 9, 2019. Lake County Jail photos.
Paulich said the deputy questioned all three occupants regarding the items that had been located, but they refused to provide any additional information.
Styles and Debardeleben were both prohibited from possessing firearms as they had previously been convicted of a felony, Paulich said.
All three subjects were placed under arrest and transported to the Lake County Jail where they were booked into custody, according to Paulich.
Styles was booked on charges of being a felon in possession of a firearm and possession and transportation of marijuana for sale. He remains in custody with bail set at $150,000.
Deol was booked on charges of possession and transportation of marijuana for sale, possession of drug paraphernalia and drug addict in possession of a firearm. He remains in custody with bail set at $50,000.
Debardeleben was charged with felon in possession of a firearm, possession and transportation of marijuana for sale, possession of a controlled substance while armed, and false ID to a peace officer. She remains in custody with bail set at $90,000.
Marijuana found in a vehicle driven by Richard Leslie Styles, 51, of San Bruno, Calif., on Tuesday, April 9, 2019. Photo courtesy of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.
California Department of Fish and Wildlife officials collected evidence in Lassen County, Calif., in the state’s largest raptor poaching case. Photo courtesy of California Department of Fish and Wildlife. NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – The largest raptor poaching case in known California history has ended in a conviction in Lassen County, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife announced.
Richard Parker, 68, of Standish pleaded guilty to crimes associated with poaching in excess of 150 raptors and other wildlife on his rural Lassen County property.
He was sentenced to 90 days in jail and given a $75,000 fine and five years of probation.
Probation terms include full search authority, prohibitions on possessing firearms, hunting and fishing, and a requirement to obey all laws.
The two firearms used during the commission of the crimes were ordered destroyed by the court.
In March 2018, wildlife officers assigned to Lassen County received an anonymous tip from someone who reportedly witnessed a man killing a hawk near the town of Standish.
The wildlife officer conducted covert surveillance of the suspect, then visited the private property and discovered nine dead raptors.
The entire local Lassen/Plumas County wildlife officer squad later returned to the property with a search warrant. A search of the home and 80-acre property turned up more than 150 carcasses of protected birds and other wildlife in various states of decay, along with spent rifle casings.
Most of the birds were red-tailed hawks, but several other species of hawks, other nongame birds and an owl were found. Four of the birds were migratory ferruginous hawks, which are uncommon in the area.
Officers also located two dead bobcats and one taxidermied mountain lion, all of which were suspected to be unlawfully taken.
A CDFW wildlife veterinarian and avian specialist analyzed the first nine carcasses collected. However, investigators sent the majority of the carcasses to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Forensics Laboratory in Ashland, Ore., where wildlife forensic scientists meticulously necropsied 159 samples to determine cause of death.
The 400-page necropsy report significantly contributed to the Deputy Attorney General's ability to effectively prosecute the case.
"We are pleased to work with the California Attorney General's Office, as well as CDFW's Office of General Counsel, to put this egregious poacher out of business," said David Bess, CDFW deputy director and chief of the Law Enforcement Division. "The case came together as a result of collaboration of our local wildlife officers and laboratory and wildlife biology staff from the state and federal governments."
"Poaching is not a game, it's a serious crime," said Attorney General Xavier Becerra. "Richard Parker willfully and egregiously disregarded California law to kill protected wildlife, including hawks. To anyone who breaks our laws for illegal sport, know that we will prosecute and hold you accountable."
CDFW also expresses appreciation to Lassen County District Attorney Melyssah Rios for her contribution to the monumental effort put forth to bring this case to closure.
The case developed from a tip originating with a member of the public who saw something amiss.
Anyone who believes they are witness to unlawful poaching or pollution activity is encouraged to call CalTIP, CDFW's confidential secret witness program, at 888-334-2258 or send a text with the tip411 app.
Both methods allow the public to provide wildlife officers with factual information to assist with investigations.
Callers may remain anonymous, if desired, and a reward can result from successful capture and prosecution.
Wildlife officers investigate the death of numerous raptors in Lassen County, Calif., in the state’s largest raptor poaching case. Photo courtesy of California Department of Fish and Wildlife.
Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday announced the findings of his strike force charged with examining California’s catastrophic wildfires, climate change and our energy future.
The strike force report sets out steps the state must take to reduce the incidence and severity of wildfires, including the significant wildfire mitigation and resiliency efforts the governor has already proposed.
It renews the state’s commitment to clean energy and outlines actions to hold the state’s utilities accountable, as well as recommended changes to stabilize California’s utilities to meet the energy needs of customers and the economy.
“Under the status quo, all parties lose – wildfire survivors, energy consumers and Californians committed to addressing climate change. The imperative now is on action. The strike force will continue its work going forward to advance the ideas generated in the report,” said Gov. Newsom.
In his State of the State address, the governor called for the creation of a strike force to develop a comprehensive strategy, within 60 days, to address the destabilizing effect of catastrophic wildfires on the state’s electric utilities.
He charged the strike force with developing a comprehensive strategy to ensure California’s “continued access to safe affordable power” and to “seek justice for fire victims, fairness for employees and protection for consumers.”
The report, “Wildfires and Climate Change: California’s Energy Future,” can be read below.
The report comes at a time when wildfires are not only more frequent, but far more devastating. Fifteen of the 20 most destructive wildfires in the state’s history have occurred since 2000; 10 of the most destructive fires have occurred since 2015.
Beginning on his first full day in office, Gov. Newsom has taken decisive action to strengthen California’s emergency preparedness and response capabilities to mitigate wildfires and build community resilience.
An aurora is seen dancing across the night sky prior the launch of AZURE rockets at the Andøya Space Center in Norway. Credit: NASA/Lee Wingfield. NASA successfully launched the Auroral Zone Upwelling Rocket Experiment or AZURE mission on April 5 from the Andøya Space Center in Norway.
Two Black Brant XI-A sounding rockets were launched at 6:14 and 6:16 p.m. EDT on April 5 carrying scientific instruments for studying the energy exchange within an aurora.
The AZURE mission is designed to make measurements of the atmospheric density and temperature with instruments on the rockets and deploying visible gas tracers, trimethyl aluminum, or TMA, and a barium/strontium mixture, which ionizes when exposed to sunlight. The vapors were released over the Norwegian Sea at 71 through 150 miles altitude.
These mixtures, using substances similar to those found in fireworks, created colorful clouds that allow researchers to track the flow of neutral and charged particles with the auroral wind.
By tracking the movement of these colorful clouds via ground-based photography and triangulating their moment-by-moment position in three dimensions, AZURE will provide valuable data on the vertical and horizontal flow of particles in two key regions of the ionosphere over a range of different altitudes.
Many people believe the Earth’s atmosphere “ends” some 20-30 miles above the ground. However, the air we breathe does not abruptly end at some predefined point – instead, it gradually thins.
One of two Black Brant XI rockets leaves the launch pad at the Andøya Space Center in Norway. Credits: NASA/Lee Wingfield.
At 150 to 200 miles above Earth, the “air” is extremely thin and these vapor clouds disperse rapidly and follow the winds which can be moving at a few hundred miles per hour.
AZURE is one of nine missions being conducted as part of the Grand Challenge Initiative, or GCI – Cusp, a series of international sounding rocket missions planned for launch in 2018 – 2020.
NASA and U.S. scientists are joining those from Norway, Japan, Canada and other countries to investigate the physics of heating and charged particle precipitation in this region called the geomagnetic cusp – one of the few places on Earth with easy access to the electrically charged solar wind that pervades the solar system.
NASA previously conducted two missions in December 2018 and two in January 2019 as part of the Initiative.
The final two NASA missions – the Cusp Heating Investigation and the Cusp Region Experiment – are scheduled for November 2019.
AZURE is supported through NASA’s Sounding Rocket Program at the agency’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia. NASA’s Heliophysics Division manages the sounding rocket program.
Keith Koehler works for the NASA Wallops Flight Facility in Wallops Island, Va.
Colorful clouds formed by the release of vapors from the two AZURE rockets allow scientist to measure auroral winds. Credits: NASA/Lee Wingfield.
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – The Clearlake City Council voted unanimously on Thursday night to direct the city manager to sign a letter of intent with a firm interested in purchasing the city’s airport property.
City Manager Alan Flora asked the council to allow him to move forward with the letter with Village Investment Partners, or VIP, led by Barry Johnson and John Glikbarg. The staff report and letter begin on page 195 of the agenda packet below.
Flora said the airport property, formerly known as Pearce Field, is made up of eight parcels totaling a little more than 27 acres.
He said there have been a number of attempts over the years to encourage a large-scale development on the property.
Now, Village Investment Partners wants to purchase the property and proceed with developing it, as well as two neighboring properties – the first, the former Outrageous Waters water park and another parcel on the corner of Old Highway 53 and Highway 53, Flora said.
The letter, which Flora said is the next step, gives Village Investment Partners a six-month window to determine interest from retailers. If that exists, the city and the firm would then negotiate a purchase contract.
Flora said the airport had been transferred from the ownership of the city’s redevelopment agency to the city as part of the redevelopment dissolution process that took place several years ago.
The land was transferred with the idea of long-range public use, so if the city intends to sell it, Flora said the sale must be approved by the former redevelopment agency’s oversight board.
He said the city hopes that Village Investment Partners is successful in attracting potential retail and commercial tenants as they would like to move forward.
Councilman Dirk Slooten noted the airport is a prime piece of property for retail development and he hopes the firm succeeds. However, “I have some concerns.”
Slooten said developing it as a retail center would be a tremendous asset to the community, both offering additional shopping opportunities and generating more sales tax for the city.
With Slooten having questions, Realtor Dave Hughes, a Village Investment Partners representative, came forward to offer answers.
Slooten asked about the level of interest from large home improvement chains like Home Depot and Lowe’s. A decade ago, when a Roseville firm was negotiating with the city to purchase the airport for a regional commercial center, Lowe’s was the anchor tenant.
Hughes said it’s not entirely true that the two companies aren’t interested, adding that Lowe’s is “on hold.”
“We have hopes for others,” said Hughes, adding, “We’re already working on it even though we don’t have the agreement yet.”
Slooten asked about when they would be coming back with confirmation of interest.
Hughes said that if Village Investment Partners went to Home Depot tomorrow and it indicated it was ready to commit, they wouldn’t wait six months, the window of time given in the intent letter to begin negotiating the purchase. He added that they could also bring in a smaller company, such as a regional chain.
Noting that the land’s development previously got sidetracked by a Sierra Club lawsuit over the city choosing not to complete an environmental impact report, or EIR, Slooten said he hopes those kinds of issues will be resolved so there is no last-minute project derailment. He said that an EIR is probably going to be required.
Hughes said Village Investment Partners has an EIR in its plans. He said he believed the city’s negative declaration for the previous development proposal had been more than adequate and attributed pushback to “big box syndrome.”
He pointed out that Kelseyville Lumber, when it put forward the plans for its current location on the outskirts of Kelseyville, changed the general land designation, built a building bigger than what Lowe’s had proposed, did it all with a negative declaration and wasn’t sued.
Councilwoman Joyce Overton, who was on the council when the previous project was considered, said the issues revolved around the process for the negative declaration. She said an argument is going to be made that a development at the airport needs an environmental study.
“It was a disappointment that that all happened,” she said, adding that she wants to make sure the project goes through.
Councilman Phil Harris said he’s “extraordinarily supportive” of the project, which he said would make an enormous impact on the community.
Councilman Russ Cremer said it will bring both jobs and revenue, and he hopes it also will entice developers to build new homes.
“This project, we should be wholeheartedly behind,” Cremer said, adding that it will probably need an EIR but they don’t need to beat it to death. “Get ‘er done.”
During public comment, Chuck Leonard, a former councilman who had voted for the regional shopping center project 10 years ago, said, “The EIR was not the problem.”
Leonard said the negative declaration was bigger than most EIRs and covered everything.
He recalled that the Sierra Club’s issue was that if the center was built, it would destroy Clearlake’s downtown, “whatever that is.”
The Sierra Club lawsuit, filed in March 2010, alleged that the city violated the California Environmental Quality Act by certifying the mitigated negative declaration in lieu of preparing a full EIR, which the group maintained was required because there is “substantial evidence in the administrative record” that the project will have “numerous significant environmental effects,” as Lake County News has reported.
Leonard also criticized Overton during the meeting, saying he was surprised she supported the new project because she had been against the previous one, which she denied. Her voting record from 2010 showed that Overton voted for the project but had voted against allowing it to move forward with only the mitigated negative declaration.
Clearlake resident Pattie Duke said the city needed different kinds of commercial tenants – she suggested a Barnes and Noble – to draw shoppers from around Lake County.
Overton moved to direct Flora to sign the intent letter, which received multiple seconds and an enthusiastic unanimous vote from the council.
In other business on Thursday, Chief Andrew White delivered the Clearlake Police Department’s annual report and administered the oath to Tim Celli – who has been promoted from lieutenant to captain – and new Community Service Officer Daniel Costancio; the council discussed the gravel road maintenance checklist and construction maintenance guide; the council adopted an ordinance amending the Clearlake Municipal Code relating to abandoned vehicles; and proclamations were given declaring April 14 to 20 as Public Safety Telecommunicators Week, declaring April as Child Abuse Awareness Month and Sexual Assault Awareness Month, and declaring support for the 2020 Census.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.