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News

Clearlake Animal Control: ‘Chubbiana’ and the dogs

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 30 January 2026
“Chubbiana.” Photo courtesy of Clearlake Animal Control.

CLEARLAKE, Calif. — There are many dogs at Clearlake Animal Control — new ones and those that are still waiting — ready to go to their new homes.

The shelter has 56 adoptable dogs and puppies listed on its website.

This week’s dogs include “Chubbiana,” a female English bulldog mix. She has been spayed.

The shelter is located at 6820 Old Highway 53. It’s open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. 

For more information, call the shelter at 707-762-6227, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or visit Clearlake’s adoptable dogs here.

This week’s adoptable dogs are featured below.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, and on Bluesky, @erlarson.bsky.social. Find Lake County News on the following platforms: Facebook, @LakeCoNews; X, @LakeCoNews; Threads, @lakeconews, and on Bluesky, @lakeconews.bsky.social. 


Americans want heat pumps – but high electricity prices may get in the way

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Written by: Roxana Shafiee, Harvard University; Harvard Kennedy School
Published: 30 January 2026

Workers install an air-source heat pump at a home in Charlotte, Vt. Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images

Heat pumps can reduce carbon emissions associated with heating buildings, and many states have set aggressive targets to increase their use in the coming decades. But while heat pumps are often cheaper choices for new buildings, getting homeowners to install them in existing homes isn’t so easy.

Current energy prices, including the rising cost of electricity, mean that homeowners may experience higher heating bills by replacing their current heating systems with heat pumps – at least in some regions of the country.

Heat pumps, which use electricity to move heat from the outside in, are used in only 14% of U.S. households. They are common primarily in warm southern states such as Florida where winter heating needs are relatively low. In the Northeast, where winters are colder and longer, only about 5% of households use a heat pump.

In our new study, my co-author Dan Schrag and I examined how heat pump adoption would change annual heating bills for the average-size household in each county across the U.S. We wanted to understand where heat pumps may already be cost-effective and where other factors may be preventing households from making the switch.

Wide variation in home heating

Across the U.S., people heat their homes with a range of fuels, mainly because of differences in climate, pricing and infrastructure. In colder regions – northern states and states across the Rocky Mountains – most people use natural gas or propane to provide reliable winter heating. In California, most households also use natural gas for heating.

In warmer, southern states, including Florida and Texas, where electricity prices are cheaper, most households use electricity for heating – either in electric furnaces, baseboard resistance heating or to run heat pumps. In the Pacific northwest, where electricity prices are low due to abundant hydropower, electricity is also a dominant heating fuel.

The type of community also affects homes’ fuel choices. Homes in cities are more likely to use natural gas relative to rural areas, where natural gas distribution networks are not as well developed. In rural areas, homes are more likely to use heating oil and propane, which can be stored on property in tanks. Oil is also more commonly used in the Northeast, where properties are older – particularly in New England, where a third of households still rely on oil for heating.

Why heat pumps?

Instead of generating heat by burning fuels such as natural gas that directly emit carbon, heat pumps use electricity to move heat from one place to another. Air-source heat pumps extract the heat of outside air, and ground-source heat pumps, sometimes called geothermal heat pumps, extract heat stored in the ground.

Heat pump efficiency depends on the local climate: A heat pump operated in Florida will provide more heat per unit of electricity used than one in colder northern states such as Minnesota or Massachusetts.

But they are highly efficient: An air-source heat pump can reduce household heating energy use by roughly 30% to 50% relative to existing fossil-based systems and up to 75% relative to inefficient electric systems such as baseboard heaters.

Heat pumps can also reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, although that depends on how their electricity is generated – whether from fossil fuels or cleaner energy, such as wind and solar.

Heat pumps can lower heating bills

We found that for households currently using oil, propane or non-heat pump forms of electric heating – such as electric furnaces or baseboard resistive heaters – installing a heat pump would reduce heating bills across all parts of the country.

The amount a household can save on energy costs with a heat pump depends on region and heating type, averaging between $200 and $500 a year for the average-size household currently using propane or oil.

However, savings can be significantly greater: We found the greatest opportunity for savings in households using inefficient forms of electric heating in northern regions. High electricity prices in the Northeast, for example, mean that heat pumps can save consumers up to $3,000 a year over what they would pay to heat with an electric furnace or to use baseboard heating.

A challenge in converting homes using natural gas

Unfortunately for the households that use natural gas in colder, northern regions – making up around half of the country’s annual heating needs – installing a heat pump could raise their annual heating bills. Our analysis shows that bills could increase by as much as $1,200 per year in northern regions, where electricity costs are as much as five times greater than natural gas per kilowatt-hour.

Even households that install ground-source heat pumps, the most efficient type of heat pump, would still see bill increases in regions with the highest electricity prices relative to natural gas.

Installation costs

In parts of the country where households would see their energy costs drop after installing a heat pump, the savings would eventually offset the upfront costs. But those costs can be significant and discourage people from buying.

On average, it costs $17,000 to install an air-source heat pump and typically at least $30,000 to install a ground-source heat pump.

Some homes may also need upgrades to their electrical systems, which can increase the total installation price even more, by tens of thousands of dollars in some cases, if costly service upgrades are required.

In places where air conditioning is typical, homes may be able to offset some costs by using heat pumps to replace their air conditioning units as well as their heating systems. For instance, a new program in California aims to encourage homeowners who are installing central air conditioning or replacing broken AC systems to get energy-efficient heat pumps that provide both heating and cooling.

Rising costs of electricity

A main finding of our analysis was that the cost of electricity is key to encouraging people to install heat pumps.

Electricity prices have risen sharply across the U.S. in recent years, driven by factors such as extreme weather, aging infrastructure and increasing demand for electric power. New data center demand has added further pressure and raised questions about who bears these costs.

Heat pump installations will also increase electricity demand on the grid: The full electrification of home heating across the country would increase peak electricity demand by about 70%. But heat pumps – when used in concert with other technologies such as hot-water storage – can provide opportunities for grid balancing and be paired with discounted or time-of-use rate structures to reduce overall operating costs. In some states, regulators have ordered utilities to discount electricity costs for homes that use heat pumps.

But ultimately, encouraging households to embrace heat pumps and broader economy-wide electrification, including electric vehicles, will require more than just technological fixes and a lot more electricity – it will require lower power prices.The Conversation

Roxana Shafiee, Environmental Fellow, Center for the Environment, Harvard University; Harvard Kennedy School

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

New sewer spill incident command team reports on plans, progress

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Written by: LINGZI CHEN AND ELIZABETH LARSON
Published: 29 January 2026
A map of the 2026 Robin Lane Sewer Spill area divided into zones. The map was released at the third sewer spill town hall on Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2026. 


CLEARLAKE, Calif. – County and city of Clearlake officials on Wednesday held a town hall at Clearlake City Hall to update residents on recovery progress and next steps following the Robin Lane sewage spill two and a half weeks ago.

The two-hour meeting was the third weekly town hall-style session with officials and residents since Jan. 11, when a force main on Robin Lane ruptured.

The failure released an estimated 2.9 million gallons of raw sewage from a sewer system owned and operated by the Lake County Sanitation District, which is overseen by Lake County Special Districts.

More than 200 properties relying on private water wells across an area of about 297 acres have been impacted and remain under a public health advisory not to use well water.

Wednesday marked the 18th day residents had been without clean running water.

The immediate response to the spill was led by Lake County Special Districts. Command was transferred Monday to a joint command between the city of Clearlake and the Lake County Office of Emergency Services. 

County officials including Environmental Health Director Craig Wetherbee, Special Districts Administrator Robin Borre, Health Services Director Anthony Arton, Public Health Officer Dr. Bob Bernstein and Social Services Director Rachael Dillman Parson were in attendance.

Also on hand were city staff and officials, including City Council members Dirk Slooten, Mary Wilson and Russ Cremer. Cremer lives in the spill area and whose well has been impacted.

City-led assessments at affected properties began Tuesday.

Officials at the meeting say they are actively collecting information from impacted residents and will make “data-driven” decisions regarding resources and solutions toward recovery.

“It’s continuing to take way longer than I want it to and I can only imagine what you guys are feeling,” said District 2 Supervisor Bruno Sabatier.

Undersheriff Corey Paulich, who also is the deputy director for the Office of Emergency Services, said the city and his agency established the incident command team on Monday and began making plans.

“Our role is recovery,” and trying to get everyone back to their homes,” Paulich said.

Beginning on Monday, the incident command sent out assessment teams working across the spill area, which has been mapped out in six zones.

The area directly impacted by the sewage flow was mapped out as “Zone A1” which encompasses south of Pond Road, north of Rumsey, west of Robin Lane and east of Pamela Lane.

Within that area, everyone who “needed a tank will have a tank,” said Paulich.

Paulich said the assessment teams were able to test the majority of houses in every zone with the exception of a couple, which will be done on Thursday. The test results will take about 24 hours.

The estimated cost of that testing is $300 per well per day, costs that are expected to be covered by a $750,000 appropriation approved by the Board of Supervisors last week. Those funds also will cover water tanks meant to be a temporary solution for the residents needing a backup water source.

City Manager Alan Flora said they wouldn’t be able to do the work without the new team in place.

He said the goal for this incident command team is very simple – to get people back in their homes as quickly as possible. 

The assessment teams covered 60 to 70 percent of the parcels on Tuesday; the remainder should have been contacted on Wednesday. Those spill area residents who didn’t receive outreach are asked to contact the city.

Flora said the team hopes to start reducing the incident’s scope and they expect to move to an updated advisory for water use as soon as Thursday. 

Well sanitization has been ongoing in the spill area. When a well is tested and gets two negative tests in a row – 24 hours apart – for E. coli and coliform, the property owner will get a notification with test results and information on how to treat their wells going forward, Flora said.

After two clean tests, residents will get the all clear to use their wells, he said.

Flora also reported that a hydrologist has been hired to assist with studying the aquifer and helping to understand the spill’s impact on it.

Community members seek answers

The nearly 100 people in attendance spent about an hour and a half asking questions about numerous topics – in particular, who will get the backup water tanks, soil testing and safety, how the money approved by the Board of Supervisors will be spent, how much longer it might take to solve the water quality program and why some properties where wells are testing positive for contaminants aren’t on the map.

Cassandra Hulbert, who lives in the spill area, is immunocompromised and has two disabled children. Her well continues to have “hot” tests showing high levels of E. coli and coliform, but she said she’s yet to get a water tank, while she’s watched them go in at nearby properties.

In response to questions about tank distribution and prioritization, Sgt. Ben Moore said it was location based, and the new data and test results will help guide where tanks go.

Stephanie Piseno, who along with husband Juan runs a day care at their home on Robin Lane, said she made claims on her homeowners and day care insurance and is going to lose them as a result. She’s also losing children who previously attended her day care, and she is concerned about her children being able to play outside.

“I don’t even know what to do,” she said, adding that she’s never going to feel comfortable or safe on her property.

Flora said they are working on possible long-term plans and outside funding sources to connect to public water and the sewer system itself.

When asked by a spill area resident about who is going to oversee Lake County Special Districts to ensure they are doing property maintenance, Flora said the Board of Supervisors and the State Water Board have oversight. 

He added that there have been issues in the sewer system “for a significant period of time.” The Clearlake City Council is very concerned about the situation, and they want to have a role in the governance of Special Districts. 

Asked about when residents could expect a return to normalcy, Paulich responded, “I don’t know that we can give you a date.”

The incident team isn’t yet committing to another town hall, however, daily communication to the community about the incident will resume on Thursday, Flora said.

Flora said the city of Clearlake’s website will be the main source of information, with a webpage dedicated to the incident. 

“All of the resources that we have available will be posted there,” he said.

Additional information requests about the incident can be directed to Administrative Services Director/City Clerk Melissa Swanson, who also is acting as the incident’s public information officer, at 707-994-8201, Extension 106.

Staff reporter Lingzi Chen contributed to this report. She is a 2024-2026 California Local News Fellow. Email her at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. 

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, and on Bluesky, @erlarson.bsky.social. Find Lake County News on the following platforms: Facebook, @LakeCoNews; X, @LakeCoNews; Threads, @lakeconews, and on Bluesky, @lakeconews.bsky.social. 

Thompson, Masui call for Noem impeachment, ICE funding cuts after Minneapolis killings

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Written by: Lake County News Reports
Published: 29 January 2026

Congressman Mike Thompson and Congresswoman Doris Matsui are calling for urgent oversight, transparency and accountability of the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the wake of two killings in Minneapolis this month.

Thompson (CA-04) and Matsui (CA-07) on Tuesday held a press conference outside the John E. Moss Federal Building, which houses ICE personnel in Sacramento, warning that unchecked federal enforcement is putting lives at risk in California and across the country.

Following the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, Thompson, Matsui and their Democratic colleagues are demanding a stop to ICE funding and DHS Secretary Kristi Noem’s removal from office.

They said the chaos in Minneapolis is the latest escalation in Americans’ concerns about federal agencies operating without sufficient oversight.

“Like so many Americans, I am sickened by ICE’s killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis,” said Congressman Thompson. “This is just the latest in ICE’s abuses across our country, including in Sacramento. Enough is enough. There is nothing legal, moral, ethical, nor humane with what’s going on in Minnesota and our Republican colleagues in Congress need to grow some courage and join us to impeach Kristi Noem, cut ICE funding, and stop the chaos.”

“From Sacramento to Minneapolis, we are seeing the same dangerous pattern: more force, less transparency, and no accountability from DHS and ICE,” said Congresswoman Matsui. “This is the fifth time I have stood outside this building demanding answers from a rogue agency. The fact that we are here again shows how persistent and unchecked this abuse of power has become. Secretary Kristi Noem must be held accountable, ICE needs to get out of our communities, and Congress must stop funding abuse disguised as enforcement. We will not stop fighting until there is real and independent accountability.” 

“NorCal Resist affirms our commitment to our immigrant community and to defending fundamental democratic and human rights values this administration seeks to ignore through immigration enforcement,” said Giselle Garcia, program director, NorCal Resist. “May all representatives in Congress oust each transgressor and hold them accountable for their crimes against humanity. May the people continue to resist in the face of repression and fight for the world we deserve.” 

Congressman Thompson and Congresswoman Matsui were among the first members of Congress to co-sponsor articles of impeachment against Noem, citing systemic failures in leadership and oversight. 

Last week, Thompson and Matsui also voted no on legislation to provide funding to DHS, arguing that Congress must not continue to expand the power and resources of agencies that have demonstrated a pattern of terrorizing communities and trampling constitutional rights.

In addition to voting against funding for ICE last week, Congressman Thompson has introduced legislation to require ICE agents to wear body cameras and prohibit them from wearing masks or police insignia. 

Thompson also has hosted numerous “Know Your Rights” workshops for local businesses and community members to help people learn their rights when interacting with federal agents.

The legislative fight for DHS funding now moves to the U.S. Senate, where lawmakers face a critical decision: approve DHS funding or hold the line. 

With lives at stake, Congressman Thompson and Congresswoman Matsui reiterated that Congress cannot continue to fund DHS.

Thompson represents California’s Fourth Congressional District, which includes all or part of Lake, Napa, Solano, Sonoma and Yolo counties. 

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