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News

CHP: Secure yourself every trip, every time

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Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 23 December 2012

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Even though California’s seat belt requirement was put into law more than a quarter of a century ago, there are some drivers and passengers who still resist the few seconds it takes to safely buckle up, or they may not properly secure a child in a car seat.  

The simple act of not buckling up can have life-changing consequences, such as injuries or death.     

“An overwhelming majority of Californians are buckling up, yet there is still work to be done,” said California Highway Patrol (CHP) Commissioner Joe Farrow. “Our goal is to save lives, and one way to help achieve that is to have every single person traveling in a motor vehicle wear a seat belt or safely secured in an appropriate child passenger safety seat.”

To accomplish this mission, the CHP received a federal grant to help fund a campaign that educates drivers on the importance of passenger restraints.  

Efforts from the statewide Vehicle Occupant Restraint Education and Instruction II (VOREI II) campaign are already underway and will continue through Sept. 30, 2013.

The objective of the VOREI II grant is to reduce the number of unrestrained vehicle occupants killed or injured in traffic collisions through educational classes and child safety seat inspection events.  

In addition, grant-funded child safety seats will be distributed to motorists and CHP officers will conduct additional seat belt enforcement out on the roadways.

According to the CHP’s Statewide Integrated Traffic Records System, in 2010, the most-recent year statistics are available, 439 people were killed and more than 9,000 others were injured in collisions where those involved were not buckled up.

“Wearing a seat belt, or using a child safety seat, will dramatically improve a person’s chances of survival if they are involved in a crash,” added Commissioner Farrow. “Buckle up every trip, every time. It might save your life.”

Funding for this program was provided by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

Space News: Christmas Sky show

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Written by: Dr. Tony Phillips
Published: 23 December 2012

Just when you thought Christmas was over: At the end of the day on Dec. 25, a pair of holiday lights will pop out of the deepening twilight. Jupiter and the Moon are having a Christmas conjunction.

It’s a beautiful apparition, visible all around the globe. Even city dwellers, who often miss astronomical events because of light pollution, can see the show.

Separated by less than 2 degrees, the bright pair will beam right through urban lights.

For anyone who gets a telescope for Christmas, the timing is perfect.

Jupiter and the Moon are among the most satisfying targets for backyard optics. A quick sweep of the telescope from Jupiter to the Moon and back again will reveal Jupiter’s storms and cloud belts, the Moon’s mountains and impact craters, and of course the four Galilean satellites circling the giant planet like a miniature solar system.

Jupiter’s trademark Great Red Spot will also be on display – and it is worth a look.

Astronomers recently announced that the enormous swirling storm, twice as wide as the planet Earth, is “spinning up.”

Actually, explains planetary scientist Glenn Orton of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, “the Red Spot is shrinking.”

He likens it to “the iconic picture of a figure skater pulling her arms in to spin faster. As the size contracts, the spin rate increases.”

John Rogers, head of the British Astronomical Association’s Jupiter Section, noticed the phenomenon in recent pictures of Jupiter snapped by amateur astronomers.

He was able to track a dark cloudy feature as it swirled three times around the Red Spot’s central vortex.

The circulating streak completed the circuit in only 4.0 days, shorter than the 4.5 days Rogers measured in 2006 using the same method.

Looking back in time, “the trend of decreasing rotation period has been consistent at least since Voyager visited Jupiter in 1979,” said Rogers.

As the spot shrinks, it also changes shape. Decades ago the Red Spot looked like a sausage – now it’s more circular.

What happens next is hard to say. “Perhaps the Red Spot will continue to shrink and eventually disappear,” speculated Rogers. “Or perhaps it will be rejuvenated if some new storm arises to reinforce it.”

One thing is certain, Christmas night is a good time to look. The Red Spot will be transiting Jupiter’s middle for observers across North America and will be perfectly positioned for telescopic observations.

But you don’t need a telescope to enjoy the show.

Step outside at sunset on Dec. 25 and look east. After all, Christmas isn’t really over until you’ve seen the holiday lights.

Dr. Tony Phillips works for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

DA: Not enough evidence to prosecute suspect for Clearlake businessman’s death

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 22 December 2012

CLEARLAKE, Calif. – Lake County’s district attorney said Friday that he does not have enough evidence to pursue the prosecution of the suspect in the June death of a Clearlake businessman.

District Attorney Don Anderson said that after six months of investigation, there’s not enough evidence to prove exactly what caused the death of 44-year-old Edward Alden, a popular barber who died June 25 of injuries he sustained days earlier.

Based on the findings of the investigation, review of medical records and interviews with the pathologist, Anderson said he won’t seek prosecution of the chief suspect in the case, Franklin Reed, because the circumstances surrounding Alden’s injuries and actual cause of death cannot be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.

Complicating the investigation are changing or inconsistent stories from witnesses, Anderson said.

“This is devastating,” said Rochelle Davis, one of Alden’s longtime friends.

Alden’s sister Angela Beatty, who reopened his salon at 14656 Lakeshore Dr., said her family was told Wednesday of the decision.

“None of us are happy,” she said, adding that her mother was “not doing that good” as a result.

Alden’s family said he suffered major head injuries after being assaulted at his W. 40th Avenue home late on the night of June 16, a chronology which differs by less than an hour from that offered by investigators, who believe the fight actually happened shortly after midnight on June 17.

His family has held that Reed attacked Alden and kicked him in the head repeatedly.

Early on the morning of June 17, Alden was found unresponsive in his home by his roommate, Sarah Felder, and flown by air ambulance to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital.

He never regained consciousness, and after nine days his family had him removed from life support, as Lake County News reported in an in-depth article on the case earlier this year: http://bit.ly/Rtt2Al .

Anderson’s Friday report said that the investigation revealed that there were several phone calls exchanged between Alden, Reed and a third man, Robert Winter – Alden’s cousin – on the evening of June 16.

There also were several threats made and mutual arrangements to meet and fight, with the report stating that Alden invited Reed and Winter to his home to fight. Anderson said the chronology of events put them at Alden’s home shortly after midnight.

“The accounts of the ensuing fight are conflicting and some witnesses changed their account of the events during the course of the investigation,” Anderson said.

Anderson said it appears that Alden and Reed squared off and began fighting. “The fight appears to be a mutual combat between Alden and Reed.”

Alden was knocked to the ground and may have been kicked while down by either Reed or by Alden’s “girlfriend,” Anderson’s report said.

That female subject is not named, but Alden’s family said Felder had been living at Alden’s home, although they denied the two were romantically involved.

Anderson said the stories from witnesses conflict about whether Alden was knocked unconscious and then drug into the residence by Felder, or whether he walked into the house on his own.

Once he was back inside the house, Alden called another person and related that he was in a fight but was all right. “Alden says he was going to get into the shower and they talk of retaliation,” the report said.

An unconscious Alden is later found by paramedics in the bathtub, with injuries to his head and face, Anderson said. Alden was then transported to the hospital where he was placed on life support and died eight days later.

Anderson said the pathologist who examined Alden’s body suggested that the cause of death might have been caused by the combination of the assault and a high alcohol level.  

Alden’s blood alcohol level at the time of the fight was estimated to be .36, Anderson said. However, the pathologist could not testify with certainty to what the actual cause of death was.

“In the final analysis, based on medical evidence, this office can not determine the exact cause of death, an essential element in a homicide case such as this. If the death was solely caused by the injuries to the head it would have to first prove who inflicted the injuries,” Anderson said in his report.

“It is known Franklin Reed punched Alden and there is conflicting stories that he may have also kicked him,” said Anderson, adding that one witness said Felder accidentally kicked Alden while he was on the ground, when she was trying to kick at Reed.

Additionally, Anderson said his office would have to prove that Alden’s head injuries occurred during the assault and not during “an intervening event.”

Anderson said Alden was conscious and able to have a phone conversation after the fight. He then got into the bathtub, where he was found unconscious.

“There is no evidence that Alden did or did not receive head injuries after the fight, in part because of his extreme intoxication,” Anderson said.

The brief fight between Alden and Reed appeared to be mutual combat, with no weapons used by either. “It can not be proved that one side used extensive, prolonged or aggravated force against the other. The possibility of self defense can also not be ruled out,” Anderson said in his report.

Based on what investigators have compiled so far, Anderson said it cannot be proved beyond a reasonable doubt that any one person is guilty of killing Alden or of any lesser included offense.  

Anderson said that if any additional evidence is obtained at any time, the case will be reviewed for prosecution.

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.

PG&E employees donate nearly $350,000 to North Bay, North Coast communities

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Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 22 December 2012

NORTH COAST, Calif. – Pacific Gas and Electric Co. this week reported that its employees and retirees have raised nearly $350,000 to support nonprofit organizations and schools throughout the North Bay and North Coast regions.

The following donations were provided by local employees and retirees through PG&E’s annual giving initiative, Campaign for the Community:

  • Marin County: $97,850.67;
  • Napa County: $14,810.40;
  • Sonoma County: $124,538.60;
  • Solano County: $31,321.40;
  • Lake County: $4,574.79;
  • Mendocino County: $14,386.80;
  • Humboldt County: $51,839.61.

Throughout PG&E’s entire service area in Northern and Central California, employees and retirees raised a total of $6 million – the most ever pledged in the campaign’s history, exceeding last year’s total by $700,000.

Tony Earley, chairman, CEO and president of PG&E Corp., praised employees for their generosity, calling it “an incredible outpouring of support for our customers in this time of economic need.”

“Our customers have always been able to count on PG&E and its employees to give back to our communities. That spirit of service is alive through our volunteerism and giving throughout the year, but it has never been more evident than during this campaign,” Earley said.

The money raised by PG&E’s Campaign for the Community will be distributed throughout 2013 to 5,400 schools and nonprofit organizations, including environmental organizations, community centers, food banks, animal shelters, veterans groups and many others, to help keep important programs and services alive in local communities.

Through PG&E’s Campaign for the Community, employees can designate donation recipients and contribute amounts of their choosing through payroll deductions or onetime donations. This year, pledges were made by 8,500 employees, 41 percent of PG&E’s workforce, and more than 400 retirees.

In addition, PG&E’s employee resource groups raised $126,000 through community events, from funny slipper contests and food sales to dinners with PG&E officers. Last year, these employee led fundraising events earned nearly $100,000 for the community.

Since 2000, PG&E employees and retirees have raised more than $43 million through Campaign for the Community benefitting schools and nonprofit organizations in communities where PG&E employees live and work, primarily in Northern and Central California. These monies are in addition to the $23 million that PG&E donates annually throughout its service area.

  1. Space News: Why the world didn’t end yesterday
  2. Clear Lake Area CHP office offers holiday travel tips
  3. Commercial Dungeness crab season in Northern California delayed once more
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