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News

Atmospheric river to bring rain this week

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Lake County and the rest of the North Coast region are expected to experience heavy rainfall for much of this week.

The National Weather Service’s Eureka office said a strong atmospheric river “will bring a prolonged period of moderate-to-heavy rainfall beginning on Tuesday afternoon and continuing into the weekend.”

Forecasts said the heaviest rainfall is expected on Wednesday with 2 to 4 inches of rain across the area.

“Persistent rain is expected Thursday through Saturday with 1 to 3 inches of rainfall most likely each day. Excessive heavy rainfall will increase the flooding potential of small streams, low-lying and poor drainage areas,” the National Weather Service reported.
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The National Weather Service said the prolonged period of moderate to heavy rainfall mid to late week will increase the risk of flooding.

In addition to the rain, there will be windy conditions with wind speeds topping 30 miles per hour from Monday through Wednesday.

Daytime temperatures are forecast to range from the high 40s to low 50s this week. At night, temperatures are expected to be in the high 20s on Monday and the 30s on Tuesday before turning to the 40s through Friday. Temperatures at night are forecast to drop into the 30s again over the weekend.

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.
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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 18 November 2024

Lakeport City Council to hear navigation center feasibility presentation, consider adopting tobacco retail license ordinance

LAKEPORT, Calif. — The Lakeport City Council will discuss a study on a navigation center to address homelessness and consider a new tobacco retail license ordinance this week.

The council will meet Tuesday, Nov. 19, at 6 p.m. in the council chambers at Lakeport City Hall, 225 Park St.

The agenda can be found here.

If you cannot attend in person, and would like to speak on an agenda item, you can access the Zoom meeting remotely at this link or join by phone by calling toll-free 669-900-9128 or 346-248-7799.

The webinar ID is 973 6820 1787, access code is 477973; the audio pin will be shown after joining the webinar. Those phoning in without using the web link will be in “listen mode” only and will not be able to participate or comment.

Comments can be submitted by email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. To give the city clerk adequate time to print out comments for consideration at the meeting, please submit written comments before 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 19.

On the agenda is a presentation of the Navigation Center Feasibility Study, which aims to help address homelessness in the city.

The council will hear the study’s findings, and discuss potential locations and services for the center.

Community members are invited to come and be part of the discussion, and to learn about the project.

The meeting also will include a presentation on the proposed Lake County Regional Housing Trust Fund by Deputy County Administrative Officer for Housing Lisa Judd.

Under business, City Manager Kevin Ingram will introduce an ordinance adding a tobacco retailer license to the Lakeport Municipal Code and set a public hearing for Dec. 17.

Also on Tuesday, the council will meet new Public Works employee Robert Schneider; consider an ordinance adopting an administrative remedies procedure for challenges to fees, charges and assessments and set a public hearing for Dec. 17; and receive and file the FY 2024 unaudited actual financial update.

On the consent agenda — items considered noncontroversial and usually accepted as a slate on one vote — are ordinances; minutes of the City Council’s regular meeting on Oct. 15 and special meeting on Oct. 15; approval of application 2024-037, with staff recommendations, for the 2024 Dickens Faire event; approval of application 2024-038, with staff recommendations, for the Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony; approval of application 2024-002, with staff recommendations, for the 2025 Children’s Festival; adoption of a resolution approving a compensation and benefits program for unrepresented employees for the period of July 1, 2024 to June 30, 2028; and receipt and filing of the receipt and filing of the Measure Z Advisory Committee draft minutes.

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.
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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 18 November 2024

Purrfect Pals: More new cats for adoption

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Lake County Animal Care and Control has several new cats and kittens that it is offering for adoption this week.

The kittens and cats at the shelter that are shown on this page have been cleared for adoption.

Call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278 or visit the shelter online for information on visiting or adopting.

The shelter is located at 4949 Helbush in Lakeport.

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.

 

 
 
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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 18 November 2024

Is AI dominance inevitable? A technology ethicist says no, actually

 

AI is powerful technology, but that doesn’t mean we should adopt it unquestioningly. SIphotography/iStock via Getty Images

Anyone following the rhetoric around artificial intelligence in recent years has heard one version or another of the claim that AI is inevitable. Common themes are that AI is already here, it is indispensable, and people who are bearish on it harm themselves.

In the business world, AI advocates tell companies and workers that they will fall behind if they fail to integrate generative AI into their operations. In the sciences, AI advocates promise that AI will aid in curing hitherto intractable diseases.

In higher education, AI promoters admonish teachers that students must learn how to use AI or risk becoming uncompetitive when the time comes to find a job.

And, in national security, AI’s champions say that either the nation invests heavily in AI weaponry, or it will be at a disadvantage vis-à-vis the Chinese and the Russians, who are already doing so.

The argument across these different domains is essentially the same: The time for AI skepticism has come and gone. The technology will shape the future, whether you like it or not. You have the choice to learn how to use it or be left out of that future. Anyone trying to stand in the technology’s way is as hopeless as the manual weavers who resisted the mechanical looms in the early 19th century.

In the past few years, my colleagues and I at UMass Boston’s Applied Ethics Center have been studying the ethical questions raised by the widespread adoption of AI, and I believe the inevitability argument is misleading.

History and hindsight

In fact, this claim is the most recent version of a deterministic view of technological development. It’s the belief that innovations are unstoppable once people start working on them. In other words, some genies don’t go back in their bottles. The best you can do is harness them to your good purposes.

This deterministic approach to tech has a long history. It’s been applied to the influence of the printing press, as well as to the rise of automobiles and the infrastructure they require, among other developments.

vintage cars mix with traffic in a small city street
The dominance of automobiles and the infrastructure that supports them over many decades only seems inevitable in hindsight. Bbeachy2001/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY

But I believe that when it comes to AI, the technological determinism argument is both exaggerated and oversimplified.

AI in the field(s)

Consider the contention that businesses can’t afford to stay out of the AI game. In fact, the case has yet to be made that AI is delivering significant productivity gains to the firms that use it. A report in The Economist in July 2024 suggests that so far, the technology has had almost no economic impact.

AI’s role in higher education is also still very much an open question. Though universities have, in the past two years, invested heavily in AI-related initiatives, evidence suggests they may have jumped the gun.

The technology can serve as an interesting pedagogical tool. For example, creating a Plato chatbot that lets students have a text conversation with a bot posing as Plato is a cool gimmick.

But AI is already starting to displace some of the best tools teachers have for assessment and for developing critical thinking, such as writing assignments. The college essay is going the way of the dinosaurs as more teachers give up on the ability to tell whether their students are writing their papers themselves. What’s the cost-benefit argument for giving up on writing, an important and useful traditional skill?

In the sciences and in medicine, the use of AI seems promising. Its role in understanding the structure of proteins, for example, will likely be significant for curing diseases. The technology is also transforming medical imaging and has been helpful in accelerating the drug discovery process.

But the excitement can become exaggerated. AI-based predictions about which cases of COVID-19 would become severe have roundly failed, and doctors rely excessively on the technology’s diagnostic ability, often against their own better clinical judgment. And so, even in this area, where the potential is great, AI’s ultimate impact is unclear.

In retrospect, using AI to help diagnose COVID-19 patients was problematic.

In national security, the argument for investing in AI development is compelling. Since the stakes can be high, the argument that if the Chinese and the Russians are developing AI-driven autonomous weapons, the United States can’t afford to fall behind, has real purchase.

But a complete surrender to this form of reasoning, though tempting, is likely to lead the U.S. to overlook the disproportionate impact of these systems on nations that are too poor to participate in the AI arms race. The major powers could deploy the technology in conflicts in these nations. And, just as significantly, this argument de-emphasizes the possibility of collaborating with adversaries on limiting military AI systems, favoring arms race over arms control.

One step at a time

Surveying the potential significance and risks of AI in these different domains merits some skepticism about the technology. I believe that AI should be adopted piecemeal and with a nuanced approach rather than subject to sweeping claims of inevitability. In developing this careful take, there are two things to keep in mind:

First, companies and entrepreneurs working on artificial intelligence have an obvious interest in the technology being perceived as inevitable and necessary, since they make a living from its adoption. It’s important to pay attention to who is making claims of inevitability, and why.

Second, it’s worth taking a lesson from recent history. Over the past 15 years, smartphones and the social media apps that run on them came to be seen as a fact of life – a technology as transformative as it is inevitable. Then data started emerging about the mental health harms they cause teens, especially young girls. School districts across the United States started to ban phones to protect the attention spans and mental health of their students. And some people have reverted to using flip phones as a quality of life change to avoid smartphones.

After a long experiment with the mental health of kids, facilitated by claims of technological determinism, Americans changed course. What seemed fixed turned out to be alterable. There is still time to avoid repeating the same mistake with artificial intelligence, which potentially could have larger consequences for society.The Conversation

Nir Eisikovits, Professor of Philosophy and Director, Applied Ethics Center, UMass Boston

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

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Written by: Nir Eisikovits, UMass Boston
Published: 18 November 2024
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