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News

Red flag warning set to begin Saturday night

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — With winds expected to pick up on Saturday and Sunday, the National Weather Service has issued a red flag warning for Lake County.

The warning will be in effect from 11 p.m. Saturday through 5 a.m. Monday in areas below the 2,000 foot elevation mark.

At the same time, the National Weather Service said a previously issued fire weather watch is no longer in effect.

The National Weather Service said a red flag warning means that critical fire weather conditions
are either occurring now, or will shortly.

A combination of strong winds, low relative humidity, and warm temperatures can contribute to extreme fire behavior, the agency said.

Forecasters said a persistent dry air mass will keep low relative humidity values across Lake County, with strong, gusty west-northwest winds from 30 to 40 miles per hour developing on Sunday.

“This will yield a critical fire weather threat Sunday morning into Monday, particularly for the
south and east side of Lake County,” the forecast said.

Minimum relative humidity values are forecast to be in the mid 10 to around 20 percent on Sunday and Monday. Poor relative humidity recoveries in the 30 to 45 percent range overnight, the National Weather Service said.

Temperatures will be warm but not overly hot for the weekend and first half of the new week, ranging up to the low 90s during the day and high 40s at night.

Later in the week, conditions will get hotter, with temperatures rising to near the century mark during the day. Nighttime conditions see temperatures in the high 50s.

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: 15 June 2024

Senate Insurance Working Group established to find legislative pathways to help stabilize market

In an effort to help address California’s growing insurance crisis, Senate President pro Tempore Mike McGuire (D-North Coast) on Friday announced the formation of the Senate’s Insurance Working Group.

The group is tasked with finding legislative pathways to help stabilize the insurance market for homeowners and consumers across the state, and explore how we can reduce the risk of homes lost to wildfires.

“California is making historic investments to reduce fire risk, make our communities more fire safe, and aggressively respond to wildfire. That said, despite these massive investments, and along with the solutions Governor Newsom and Commissioner Lara have implemented, more must — and can — be done to stabilize the market. Too many Californians are being left without options to protect their families and insure their life possessions,” McGuire said. “I’m incredibly grateful to these Senators who have stepped up and will be working hard to tackle the state’s insurance crisis and find additional real, meaningful solutions to meet this moment.”

Members of the group include Co-Chairs Majority Leader Lena Gonzalez (D-Long Beach) and Insurance Committee Chair Senator Susan Rubio (D-Baldwin Park), Senator Marie Alvarado-Gil (D-Jackson), Senator Josh Becker (D-Menlo Park), Senator Catherine Blakespear (D-Encinitas), Senator Dave Cortese (D-San Jose), Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa), Senator John Laird (D-Santa Cruz), Senator Monique Limón (D-Santa Barbara), and Senator Steve Padilla (D-San Diego).

The news comes two days after Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara released additional details of his plan to increase the writing of homeowners and commercial insurance policies in areas of the state with high wildfire risk and so transform the insurance market, as Lake County News has reported.
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Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 15 June 2024

Governor increases California National Guard deployment to crack down on fentanyl smuggling

Cracking down on illicit drugs and those who smuggle them into California, Governor Gavin Newsom on Friday announced he is more than doubling the California National Guard’s Counter Drug Taskforce operations statewide, including at ports of entry along the border, from 155 to now nearly 400 service members.

Embedded in cross-government initiatives to combat transnational criminal organizations and the trafficking of illegal narcotics — like fentanyl — these CalGuard members with the Counter Drug Taskforce have been hired, trained, and placed at key locations statewide.

“Our top priority is the safety of our communities statewide. By working with state, local, and federal partners to take down transnational organizations and the illegal drugs they attempt to bring into our state, the state’s Counter Drug Taskforce is making a profound difference to hold smugglers accountable and take deadly drugs off our streets,” said Newsom.

During a recent visit to the border, Gov. Newsom was able to see firsthand the significant progress the Task Force has made.

“Beginning in 2022, the CalGuard’s Counter Drug Taskforce deployed 30 servicemembers to the San Ysidro, Otay Mesa, Tecate, and Calexico Ports of Entry to support our federal partners,” said CalGuard Major General Matthew Beevers. “Due to significant initial success, in 2023, we doubled our force across those Ports of Entry. Under Governor Newsom’s leadership and broad Congressional support, our Counter Drug Taskforce has grown from 155 full-time servicemembers to 392 today.”

Specifically, the Taskforce focuses on gathering information to interdict illegal narcotics trafficking, utilizing air and ground assets to build criminal investigations, and supporting personnel at border ports of entry to stop illegal narcotics trafficking.

Background to the effort

In May, Newsom announced CalGuard operations supported the seizure of 5.8 million pills containing fentanyl this year alone.

Last year, the governor increased the number of CalGuard service members deployed to interdict drugs at U.S. ports of entry along the border by approximately 50%.

The operations CalGuard supported resulted in the record seizure of 62,224 pounds of fentanyl in 2023 — a 1066% increase since 2021.

CalGuard’s coordinated drug interdiction efforts in the state are funded in part by California’s $30 million investment to expand CalGuard’s work to prevent drug trafficking by transnational criminal organizations and support from the Biden-Harris Administration to address humanitarian and security efforts.

A majority of fentanyl is smuggled into the U.S. at ports of entry by U.S. citizens, not by migrants seeking asylum, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

Synthetic opioids like fentanyl contribute to nearly 70% of overdose deaths. Gov. Newsom recently launched opioids.ca.gov, a one-stop tool for Californians seeking resources for prevention and treatment, as well as information on how California is working to hold Big Pharma and drug-traffickers accountable in this crisis.

The state is now set to purchase life-saving naloxone for approximately half of the current market price — saving more lives with this drug and maximizing taxpayer dollars.

The Governor’s Master Plan for Tackling the Fentanyl and Opioid Crisis provides a comprehensive framework to address the opioid and fentanyl crisis, including through aggressive steps to support overdose prevention efforts, hold the opioid pharmaceutical industry accountable, crack down on drug trafficking, and raise awareness about the dangers of opioids, including fentanyl.

In support of President Biden’s bilateral cooperation agreement with China on counternarcotics, the governor spoke with Chinese President Xi Jinping in October about combating the transnational shipping of precursor chemicals used to create fentanyl.
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Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 15 June 2024

Space News: Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts

 

The Sun can send out eruptions of energetic particles. NASA/SDO via AP

NASA has set its sights on the Moon, aiming to send astronauts back to the lunar surface by 2026 and establish a long-term presence there by the 2030s. But the Moon isn’t exactly a habitable place for people.

Cosmic rays from distant stars and galaxies and solar energetic particles from the Sun bombard the surface, and exposure to these particles can pose a risk to human health.

Both galactic cosmic rays and solar energetic particles, are high-energy particles that travel close to the speed of light.

While galactic cosmic radiation trickles toward the Moon in a relatively steady stream, energetic particles can come from the Sun in big bursts. These particles can penetrate human flesh and increase the risk of cancer.

Earth has a magnetic field that provides a shield against high-energy particles from space. But the Moon doesn’t have a magnetic field, leaving its surface vulnerable to bombardment by these particles.

During a large solar energetic particle event, the radiation dosage an astronaut receives inside a space suit could exceed 1,000 times the dosage someone on Earth receives. That would exceed an astronaut’s recommended lifetime limit by 10 times.

NASA’s Artemis program, which began in 2017, intends to reestablish a human presence on the Moon for the first time since 1972. My colleagues and I at the University of Michigan’s CLEAR center, the Center for All-Clear SEP Forecast, are working on predicting these particle ejections from the Sun. Forecasting these events may help protect future Artemis crew members.

An 11-year solar cycle

The Moon is facing dangerous levels of radiation in 2024, since the Sun is approaching the maximum point in its 11-year solar cycle. This cycle is driven by the Sun’s magnetic field, whose total strength changes dramatically every 11 years. When the Sun approaches its maximum activity, as many as 20 large solar energetic particle events can happen each year.

Both solar flares, which are sudden eruptions of electromagnetic radiation from the Sun, and coronal mass ejections, which are expulsions of a large amount of matter and magnetic fields from the Sun, can produce energetic particles.

A coronal mass ejection erupting from the Sun.

The Sun is expected to reach its solar maximum in 2026, the target launch time for the Artemis III mission, which will land an astronaut crew on the Moon’s surface.

While researchers can follow the Sun’s cycle and predict trends, it’s difficult to guess when exactly each solar energetic particle event will occur, and how intense each event will be. Future astronauts on the Moon will need a warning system that predicts these events more precisely before they happen.

Forecasting solar events

In 2023, NASA funded a five-year space weather center of excellence called CLEAR, which aims to forecast the probability and intensity of solar energetic particle events.

Right now, forecasters at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Space Weather Prediction Center, the center that tracks solar events, can’t issue a warning for an incoming solar energetic particle event until they actually detect a solar flare or a coronal mass ejection. They detect these by looking at the Sun’s atmosphere and measuring X-rays that flow from the Sun.

Once a forecaster detects a solar flare or a coronal mass ejection, the high-energy particles usually arrive to Earth in less than an hour. But astronauts on the Moon’s surface would need more time than that to seek shelter. My team at CLEAR wants to predict solar flares and coronal mass ejections before they happen.

Two illustrations of a sphere with purple and green lines coming off it. On the left, the purple lines are coming off the top and the green lines off the bottom. On the right, the lines are scattered around and overlapping.
The solar magnetic field is incredibly complex and can change throughout the solar cycle. On the left, the magnetic field has two poles and looks relatively simple, though on the right, later in the solar cycle, the magnetic field has changed. When the solar magnetic field looks like the illustration on the right, solar flares and coronal mass ejections are more common. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Bridgman, CC BY

While scientists don’t totally understand what causes these solar events, they know that the Sun’s magnetic field is one of the key drivers. Specifically, they’re studying the strength and complexity of the magnetic field in certain regions on the Sun’s surface.

At the CLEAR center, we will monitor the Sun’s magnetic field using measurements from both ground-based and space-based telescopes and build machine learning models that predict solar events – hopefully more than 24 hours before they happen.

With the forecast framework developed at CLEAR, we also hope to predict when the particle flux falls back to a safe level. That way, we’ll be able to tell the astronauts when it’s safe to leave their shelter and continue their work on the lunar surface.The Conversation

Lulu Zhao, Assistant Research Scientist in Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering, University of Michigan

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

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Written by: Lulu Zhao, University of Michigan
Published: 15 June 2024
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