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News

Clearlake City Council to discuss water rates, grand jury report

CLEARLAKE, Calif. — The Clearlake City Council this week will have a discussion about water rates and the city’s response to the latest grand jury report.

The council will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 5, in the council chambers at Clearlake City Hall, 14050 Olympic Drive.

The agenda can be found here.

The meeting will be broadcast live on the city's YouTube channel or the Lake County PEGTV YouTube Channel.

Community members also can participate via Zoom. The webinar ID is 860 0557 5706, the pass code is 064173. One tap mobile is available at +16694449171,,86005575706#, or join by phone at 669-444-9171 or 253-205-0468.

The public will not be allowed to provide verbal comment during the meeting if attending via Zoom. The public can submit comments in writing for City Council consideration by commenting via the Q&A function in the Zoom platform or by sending comments to Administrative Services Director/City Clerk Melissa Swanson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. To give the City Council adequate time to review your comments, you must submit your written emailed comments prior to 4 p.m. on the day of the meeting.

On Thursday, the council will hear a presentation from Adventist Health Clear Lake regarding development of a business improvement district, present a proclamation Declaring September 2024 as Senior Center Month and hear an update from the city’s Recreation and Events Division.

Under business, the council will hold a discussion regarding setting water rates.

The council also will consider a response to the 2023-24 Grand Jury report on the city’s animal shelter.

On the meeting's consent agenda — items that are considered routine in nature and usually adopted on a single vote — are warrants; City Council minutes; continuation of the director of emergency services/city manager proclamation declaring a local emergency for winter storms; and minutes of the July 10 Lake County Vector Control District Board meeting.

Following the open portion of the meeting, the council will go into closed session to discuss the existing litigation against Highlands Mutual Water Co. and the Koi Nation’s suit against the city. They also will conduct a performance evaluation of City Manager Alan Flora, and discuss liability claims filed by Barbara Dryden and Andrew and Bailey Hulett.

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: 03 September 2024

East Region Town Hall meets Sept. 4

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The East Region Town Hall, or ERTH, will meet on Wednesday, Sept. 4.

The meeting will begin at 4 p.m. at the Moose Lodge, located at 15900 Moose Lodge Lane in Clearlake Oaks.

The meeting will be available via Zoom. The meeting ID is 830 2978 1573, pass code is 503006.

On Wednesday, there will be updates on the new John T. Klaus Park, which will be located on nearly 600 acres along Highway 20 east of Clearlake Oaks.

There also will be information on the general plan and Shoreline Area Plan, the commercial cannabis report and Cannabis Ordinance Task Force.

Tony Morris will offer updates on the Spring Valley community, including a proposed water increase that will be the focus of a Sept. 10 public hearing, and the restoration of Wolf Creek.

ERTH Board member Maria Kann will speak about traffic and condition issues on High Valley Road.

There also will be discussion of resident concerns at the Lake Village Estates senior community and a discussion of the Clearlake Oaks Consolidated Lighting District.

The group also will get its usual report from Supervisor EJ Crandell.

ERTH’s next meeting will take place on Oct. 2.

ERTH’s members are Denise Loustalot, Jim Burton, Tony Morris, Pamela Kicenski and Maria Kann.

For more information visit the group’s Facebook page.
Details
Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 03 September 2024

Retirement doesn’t just raise financial concerns – it can also mean feeling unmoored and irrelevant

 

Retirement doesn’t just lead to concerns about money. It also raises questions about one’s usefulness in the world. LaylaBird/E+ via Getty images

Most discussions of retirement focus on the financial aspects of leaving the workforce: “How to save enough for retirement” or “How do you know if you have enough money for retirement?”

But this might not be the biggest problem that potential retirees face. The deeper issues of meaning, relevance and identity that retirement can bring to the fore are more significant to some workers.

Work has become central to the modern American identity, as journalist Derek Thompson bemoans in The Atlantic. And some theorists have argued that work shapes what we are. For most people, as business ethicist Al Gini argues, one’s work – which is usually also one’s job – means more than a paycheck. Work can structure our friendships, our understandings of ourselves and others, our ideas about free time, our forms of entertainment – indeed our lives.

I teach a philosophy course about the self, and I find that most of my students think of the problems of identity without thinking about how a job will make them into a particular kind of person. They think mostly about the prestige and pay that come with certain jobs, or about where jobs are located. But when we get to existentialist philosophers such as Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, I often urge them to think about what it means to say, as the existentialists do, that “you are what you do.”

How you spend 40 years of your life, I tell them, for at least 40 hours each week – the time many people spend at their jobs – is not just a financial decision. And I have come to see that retirement isn’t just a financial decision, either, as I consider that next phase of my life.

Usefulness, tools and freedom

For Greek and Roman philosophers, leisure was more noble than work. The life of the craftsperson, artisan – or even that of the university professor or the lawyer – was to be avoided if wealth made that possible.

The good life was a life not driven by the necessity of producing goods or making money. Work, Aristotle thought, was an obstacle to the achievement of the particular forms of excellence characteristic of human life, like thought, contemplation and study – activities that express the particular character of human beings and are done for their own sake.

And so, one might surmise, retirement would be something that would allow people the kind of leisure that is essential to human excellence. But contemporary retirement does not seem to encourage leisure devoted to developing human excellence, partly because it follows a long period of making oneself into an object – something that is not free.

German philosopher Immanuel Kant distinguished between the value of objects and of subjects by the idea of “use.” Objects are not free: They are meant to be used, like tools – their value is tied to their usefulness. But rational beings like humans, who are subjects, are more than their use value – they are valuable in their own right, unlike tools.

And yet, much of contemporary work culture encourages workers to think of themselves and their value in terms of their use value, a change that would have made both Kant and the ancient Greek and Roman philosophers wonder why people didn’t retire as soon as they could.

A couple sit at their kitchen table with a laptop open and their bills spread out in front of them.
Retiring could also mean giving up an identity. FatCamera/ E+ via Getty images

‘What we do is what we are’

But as one of my colleagues said when I asked him about retirement: “If I’m not a college professor, then what am I?” Another friend, who retired at 59, told me that she does not like to describe herself as retired, even though she is. “Retired implies useless,” she said.

So retiring is not just giving up a way of making money; it is a deeply existential issue, one that challenges one’s idea of oneself, one’s place in the world, and one’s usefulness.

One might want to say, with Kant and the ancients, that those of us who have tangled up our identities with our jobs have made ourselves into tools, and we should throw off our shackles by retiring as soon as possible. And perhaps from the outside perspective, that’s true.

But from the participant perspective, it’s harder to resist the ways in which what we have done has made us what we are. Rather than worry about our finances, we should worry, as we think about retirement, more about what the good life for creatures like us – those who are now free from our jobs – should be.The Conversation

Marianne Janack, John Stewart Kennedy Professor of Philosophy, Hamilton College

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

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Written by: Marianne Janack, Hamilton College
Published: 03 September 2024

Lucerne man held on $1 million bail for assaulting and injuring police officers

Cletus Manuel Rouillard. Lake County Jail photo.

LAKEPORT, Calif. — A Lucerne man has been arrested and is being held in the Lake County Jail on $1 million bail after he assaulted two Lakeport Police officers on Saturday.

Cletus Manuel Rouillard, 21, was taken into custody on three felonies and two misdemeanors on Saturday evening following the incident.

Lakeport Police Chief Dale Stoebe told Lake County News that shortly before 7:15 p.m. Saturday, officers contacted two people in a domestic argument for the second time in approximately 20 minutes.

During this second contact, Rouillard — who had been consuming alcohol prior to the officers’ arrival — became very agitated and confrontational with the other party, in violation of a peaceful contact restraining order, Stoebe said.

Stoebe said the officers attempted to handcuff Rouillard after advising that he was being arrested, at which time he became physically combative with the officers.

During the physical resistance to the arrest, Rouillard choked and caused head trauma to one of the officers, Stoebe said.

“Another officer suffered a head laceration before Rouillard was handcuffed and transported away from the scene,” Stoebe said.

A medical call was dispatched shortly before 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the area of Lakeshore Boulevard at Green Street on the report of multiple people with injuries, according to radio traffic.

Stoebe said Rouillard and one police officer received treatment for minor injuries and were released.

“The officer is recovering away from work for a few days,” Stoebe said.

Rouillard was booked into the Lake County Jail on attempted second-degree murder on a peace officer, which is the charge for which the $1 million bail is set; along with felony battery on a police officer with injury, and obstructing or resisting an officer.

He also was arrested on misdemeanors of contempt of court for disorderly behavior and obstructing or resisting a peace officer or emergency medical technician.

He is due to appear in Lake County Superior Court for arraignment on Wednesday.

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: 02 September 2024
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