Sunday, 05 May 2024

Community

LAKEPORT – The Lake County Rodeo returns next month for its 81st annual event.


The rodeo will be held at 7 p.m. Friday, July 9, and Saturday, July 10, at the Lake County Fairgrounds, 401 Martin St. in Lakeport.


On Saturday, July 10, the Lake County Rodeo Parade – formerly the All Horse Parade – will commence at 11 a.m. at the baseball fields at the fairgrounds in Lakeport, traveling on Martin to Main Street, north on Main Street to Ninth Street, and returning on Main and then to the fairgrounds.


This year the parade will feature antique tractors and farm equipment, plus a pet parade, in addition to many equestrian entries.


Applications for the parade are available at the Lake County Chamber of Commerce in Lakeport, 707-263-5092, CJS Ranch Supply in Middletown and Marie’s Feed in Clearlake.


This is a CSHA sanctioned parade and all CSHA (California State Horsemen’s Association) members will receive points for participating.


The parade is open to all equestrians, not just CSHA members.


Prizes will be awarded immediately following the parade and there will be a raffle for the participants.


Lonne Sloan is the chair of the parade and she has many years experience of organizing parades and knows horses, so she is the perfect person for the job. Sloan is ably assisted by Kirsten Spraktes and Teresa Harborth.


The Rodeo Association wishes to thank Lonne Sloan, CSHA judge Kim Cipro and all the volunteers for bringing this important piece of rodeo tradition to this 81st Annual Lake County Rodeo.


Sloan can be reached at 707-995-2515 or 707-349-0820.

LAKEPORT – Chef Christina Basor will host a raw foods dehydrator class on Sunday, June 27.


The class will take place from 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Hartley Lodge, 375 N. Main St., Lakeport.


The cost is $35, which includes lunch.


The class will cover essential dehydrator information, cheesy kale chips, energy cookies, crunchy fruit and nut granola, famous onion bread and all-American vegan burger.


Please RSVP by calling Basor at 707-489-3600 or e-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

The National Women’s Political Caucus (NWPC) said this week that it’s heartening to see more women, particularly Republican women, taking leadership roles and running for office, but said there will be a real celebration when these women are committed to issues directly impacting women’s lives, such as those the NWPC stands squarely behind – pay equity, reproductive rights and passage of the equal rights amendment.


Advancing progressive, pro-choice women to elected and appointed office, regardless of party affiliation, is the passion and purpose of the NWPC ( www.nwpc.org).


The multi-partisan grassroots organization, continues to recruit, support and elect women to further issues and causes essential to women. Making sure women are appointed to top government positions in representative numbers is fundamental to NWPC’s goal of achieving political gender parity by 2020.


“Women make up half the population, yet for too long we’ve been under-represented in our government,” said NWPC President Lulu Flores of Texas. “We deserve better.”


A diverse governing body is a stronger, more effective, and more representative governing body. However, of 535 members of Congress this year, only 90 or 16.8 percent are women.


Globally, the U.S. ranks a dismal 74th in number of women worldwide serving in parliament or congress.


When Flores recently attended briefings on equal pay for equal work and health care in Washington, D.C., she also observed the unveiling of the statue of Sojourner Truth, a suffragette and abolitionist whose life underscores the difference a committed woman can make in the struggle for justice.


“I’m proud and impressed with the caliber of women representing us in Congress, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Debbie Wasserman-Schulz of Florida, Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut, Sheila Jackson Lee of Texas, and others,” Flores said. “Seeing them in action drives home why more women are needed in office and why our work to get women like these elected is so important.


“Each of these office holders knows it is women who bring a special perspective and voice to the table; who bring a passion, commitment and true understanding to issues particularly important to women, plus the sensitivity to how all other issues impact women. They all express the need for more elected women for critical mass to be more effective.”


For example, the male-dominated establishment in Congress would not give Rep. DeLauro a hearing on her equal pay legislation until she had 200 co-sponsors. It took her almost 10 years to develop that kind of support.


Now that it’s passed in the House, it is up to the Senate to act. They are just two shy of the magic 35 needed to bring this up for vote. With other women’s groups, NWPC is reaching out to members of the Senate to educate and advocate for the passage of this bill. But it would have happened sooner if more women were in Congress.


Women typically come to politics to solve a problem. They come as moms, nurses, and teachers. Once elected, they change the debate from corporate profits to the impact laws will have on families. They demand changes in health care, social services and the environment.


While men can, and do, support and champion women’s issues, only women can bring the necessary insight, passion and urgency to these issues.


An example is Rep. Wassermann-Shultz who pushed for legislation on early breast cancer detection. She underwent a double mastectomy, chemotherapy and radiation all while never missing a day in Congress and ardently campaigning for Hillary Clinton’s candidacy for president.


Equal rights for women and freedom of choice are the fundamental tenants of the movement than shaped NWPC.


Founded in 1971, founding mothers include such prominent women as Gloria Steinem, author, lecturer and founding editor of Ms. magazine; former Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm; former Congresswoman and current president of Women USA Bella Abzug; Dorothy Height, president of the National Council of Negro Women; Jill Ruckelshaus, U.S. Civil Rights Commissioner; Ann Lewis, Political Director of the Democratic National Committee; Elly Peterson, former vice-chair of the Republican National Committee; LaDonna Harris, Indian rights leader; Liz Carpenter, author, lecturer and former press secretary to Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson; and Eleanor Holmes Norton, former chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.


With a winning record of candidates who have hit the ground running, The NWPC will continue to lead the way by identifying progressive, pro-Choice, pro-women’s rights candidates to run for office, training them to run winning campaigns, and standing beside them with the financial support of our PAC and our members through election day and beyond.


For more information, see www.nwpc.org. Follow NWPC on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1199994356&ref=pymk#!/NWPC.fb?ref=ts and Twitter at http://twitter.com/NWPC_updates.


Hidden Valley Lake resident Susanne La Faver represents Northern California NWPC on the national board and serves as secretary on the state board. She is a member of the Mendocino Caucus and an NWPC certified campaign trainer.

LAKEPORT – The 81st annual Lake County Rodeo is just around the corner, with fun expected for the whole family, including children.


The event will be held at 7 p.m. Friday, July 9, and Saturday, July 10, at the Lake County Fairgrounds, 401 Martin St. in Lakeport.


The rodeo will include a variety of contests and activities for children. The following are just a few of what the event has to offer.


To sign up call the Lake County Rodeo at 707-245-7431. Applications may be picked up at the Lake County Chamber office, 875 Lakeport Blvd. at Vista Point, in Lakeport, telephone 707-263-5092.


Mutton bustin'


On Friday and Saturday nights at the rodeo, a handful of excited children under the age of 8, will climb aboard wily, woolly sheep and hang on for the ride of their lives in the mutton bustin' competition.


The object is to stay on as the sheep, take off across the arena at a gallop. The contestants are judged on the length of the ride and their “style” much the same way a bull rider is judged.


Each contestant will receive a free T-shirt and the winners receive a silver belt buckle courtesy of CJS Ranch Supply.


Signups for this event are taken until there are eight contestants for each night.


Thank you to sponsor CJS Ranch Supply in Middletown, Fred Robinson who supplies the sheep and all the rodeo directors who bring the event to the arena each night.


Cutest cowpoke


Each year several youngsters, ages 4 to 8 years, enter this contest. One boy and one girl will be chosen as the winners.


The contest will be held at 6:30 p.m. at the Soper Reese Theater, Main Street in Lakeport on Friday, June 25.


The children are usually dressed in their “cowpoke” garb and they are interviewed as to their favorite animals, hobbies and such.


Interviews of the 2010 contestants will be conducted by the 2009 Lake County Rodeo Princess, Jocelyn Bennett.


The 2010 winners will be announced on Friday evening, July 9, at the opening night of the 81st Annual Lake County Rodeo at the fairgrounds in Lakeport.


They are driven into the Grand Arena in the Official Rodeo Truck. The winner’s official buckles will be presented by the 2010 sponsors, Clear Lake Junior Horsemen and Scotts Valley 4H Horse Group.


The Lake County Rodeo Association wishes to thank its sponsors mentioned above for their support of this contest and the 81st Annual Lake County Rodeo.

LAKEPORT – The next HazMobile event will be held on Friday, June 18, and Saturday, June 19, at Kmart, 2019 S. Main St., in Lakeport.


Hours will be from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Events may be canceled due to rain.


Households can bring up to fifteen gallons of toxic items free of charge. A charge will be made for amounts above 15 gallons.


Items that are accepted include paint, solvents, fuels, 5-gallon propane tanks, pool chemicals, pesticides, herbicides, dry cell batteries, fluorescent light tubes (up to 60 feet for free) and other toxins that cannot be put in the trash.


Excluded items that cannot be accepted are televisions, computer monitors, ammunition, explosives, radioactive materials or infectious wastes.


To learn how and where to properly dispose these items, please contact the Public Services office at

707-263-1980.


This is a residential service. Charges apply to businesses; phone 707-468-9786 for more information and business appointments.


Free recycled paint is available at Lake County Waste Solution Transfer Station at 230 Soda Bay Road in Lakeport on a first-come, first-serve basis in 5-gallon containers of tan, brown, gray and pink.


Used oil can be recycled year round at a number of sites in the county.


The HazMobile program is subsidized by the Lake County Public Services Department Solid Waste Division.


If you have any questions regarding this or any of Lake County’s Solid Waste programs, please call 707-262-1760 or the Hot Line number at 707-263-1980.

Upcoming Calendar

5May
05.05.2024
Cinco de Mayo
6May
05.06.2024 11:00 am - 4:00 pm
Senior Summit
8May
05.08.2024 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Fire preparedness town hall
12May
05.12.2024
Mother's Day
27May
05.27.2024
Memorial Day
14Jun
06.14.2024
Flag Day
16Jun
06.16.2024
Father's Day
19Jun
06.19.2024
Juneteenth

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