Friday, 26 July 2024

News

LUCERNE – A fire destroyed a home in the hills above Lucerne Monday night.


The two-story A-frame home, located on the Jones Ranch, was reported to be on fire at about 6:20 p.m., according to radio reports.


For nearly an hour Northshore Fire Department personnel struggled through rain and snow to get firefighting equipment to the building, which was situated in a remote hilltop location above the town. Fire personnel also reported there initially was confusion about the home's exact location.


When they arrived firefighters radioed that they did not have a water source because a nearby storage tank was empty. That required a water tender to make the treacherous trip back down the hill for a refill shortly before 9 p.m.


The glow of the fire could be seen as far away as Lakeport, and appeared to double in size by 8:30 p.m.


The fire appeared to be out by 10:30 p.m.


Northshore Fire personnel reported late Monday that the house was newly built and its owners had not yet moved in.


No injuries were reported to fire personnel.


Harold LaBonte contributed to this report.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


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LAKEPORT If the balminess of Saturday lured you into the beautiful outdoors of Lake County, get ready to put your coat back on because there's a chance of snow Sunday night.


After a high of 69 degrees on Saturday in Lakeport according to a personal weather station on the Weather Underground Web site, the National Weather Service in Sacramento is forecasting that a weather system from the Gulf of Alaska will move over the county Sunday night, lowering temperatures and bringing a chance of rain and snow.


Beginning tonight and into early next week, the National Weather Service expects this cold weather system will bring below normal temperatures and precipitation, with snow levels around 1,500 feet by Monday morning with the possibility of dropping below 1,000 feet by Tuesday morning.


Daytime highs today are expected to reach the upper 40s, the National Weather Service reported, with lows around 30 degrees and a chance of rain mixed with snow.


The forecast for Monday is for daytime highs near 45 with a 30-percent chance of precipitation and a low of 28, according to the National Weather Service.


The sun should return on Tuesday, the weather service reported, with highs near 48 and lows in the mid 20s.


The National Weather Service reminds Lake County motorists to expect winter driving conditions and cold temperatures until Tuesday.


E-mail Terre Logsdon at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


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LAKEPORT – Mendocino College officials are awaiting an appraisal before making an offer on property that would be the future home of the college's Lake County Center.


Mendocino College officials are looking seriously at 31-acre parcel located at 2565 Parallel Drive in Lakeport and owned by Tom Adamson, a Scottsdale, Ariz.-based developer who has proposed building a 130-lot subdivision on the site, as Lake County News as reported.


Measure W, a 67.5 million passed by voters in November 2006, sets aside $15 million for the college to purchase land, and begin improvements and building, college President and Superintendent Kathy Lehner told Lake County News in the fall.


The college Board of Trustees, at its Jan. 9 meeting, indicated its desire to move forward with the purchase, said Lehner.


As soon as the appraisal is completed – which she said should be within the next few weeks – “We are going to move forward with making that offer,” said Lehner.


Lehner said this week that buying land for a new center wouldn't be possible without the bond, especially in the current state fiscal crisis.


This week Lehner also had to meet with state officials to assess the college's fiscal situation.


“This is worse than last year,” said Lehner, comparing the current situation to five years ago.


It's still too early to be entirely certain of how Mendocino College will be affected, Lehner said.


That's largely because there are months of budget haggling to go through between the Legislature and the governor.


If cuts proposed in the current draft of the governor's budget went through, Lehner said financial aid, CalWORKS – which offers temporary financial support to families with minor children – and programs for students needing academic help and for single mothers would suffer.


She added that the college can anticipate no cost of living increase next year, a challenge as the college's expenses continue to rise.


An example: the college's health insurance costs have historically risen 13 percent a year, Lehner explained.


One way of giving themselves some breathing room is by not immediately filling vacant jobs, said Lehner.


College officials are scheduled to meet with staff Friday morning in Ukiah to discuss the fiscal challenges ahead.


Lehner suggested the year ahead isn't going to be an easy one, fiscally speaking. “It's not going to be pretty.”


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


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LAKE COUNTY – Some snow fell Monday morning but not enough so far to cause road shutdowns.


Snow fell briefly in Lakeport shortly before 11 a.m., with snow also reported in the Clearlake Riviera and in Cobb.


The California Highway Patrol reported that there was heavy snow on a portion of the Hopland Grade on Highway 175.


However, CHP reported no snow-related accidents, and there were no weather-related closures or chain requirements on any of the local highways as of shortly before 1 p.m. Monday, according to Caltrans.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


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HIGH VALLEY – One of the county's picturesque areas will serve as a backdrop for the Oprah Winfrey Show's Martin Luther King Jr. Day special.


The Lake County Marketing and Economic Development Program reported Friday that Harpo Productions filmed a segment on location at Brassfield Estate in High Valley earlier this month.


The one-day shoot included a sweeping aerial shot with panoramic views of hillsides, according to Debra Sommerfield, the county’s deputy administrative officer for Economic Development.


Dozens of children from East Lake Elementary School in Clearlake Oaks participated in the production, as well as children from three schools in the Sacramento area: Michael J. Castori Elementary School, Northwood Elementary School and Hagginwood Elementary School, Sommerfield reported.


The segment is scheduled to be part of a tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., slated to air on The Oprah Winfrey Show on Monday, Jan. 21, on stations KCRA-3 Sacramento at 4 p.m. and KGO-7 San Francisco at 4 p.m.


“We are extremely honored that Harpo Productions chose a location in Lake County to film a segment of The Oprah Winfrey Show,” said Kelly Cox, Lake County's chief administrative officer. “We have been working diligently to make something like this happen here.”


Sommerfield said it was an exciting project that generated a tremendous amount of community support.


“The team at Brassfield Estate has been so gracious and so willing to work to make this happen,” she said. “The principal, teachers and staff at East Lake School, the school district and the Lake County Office of Education all have been extremely supportive, even working through the holidays to coordinate many of the logistics.”


Members of the Lake County Marketing and Economic Development Program worked with a location scout and the production team at Harpo Productions to suggest potential locations in Lake County for the segment, Sommerfield reported.


As part of its ongoing economic development efforts, the Lake County Marketing and Economic Development Program has been reaching out to the motion picture and television industry to attract film and TV production to the area as a means of showcasing the beauty of Lake County and to foster the economic vitality that often comes with movie and television production.


“It is so rewarding to see a community pull together and to see the community pride that comes from being part of a project like this,” Sommerfield said.


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LAKE COUNTY – A man sent to prison for committing a murder in Clearlake nearly two decades ago has been denied parole.


At a Jan. 16 parole hearing at California State Prison, Solano – located in Vacaville – the Board of Parole Hearings denied 67-year-old Oreno Baddie parole for the third time, according to Lake County's Chief Deputy District Attorney Richard Hinchcliff.


On May 14, 1989, Baddie shot and killed Cesario P. Martinez in Clearlake, Hinchcliff reported.


Investigation reports by the Clearlake Police Department revealed that two days prior to the murder, Martinez obtained a stereo from Baddie that resulted in a disagreement over ownership of the stereo, and Baddie began threatening to kill Martinez, according to Hinchcliff's report.


Martinez, who was warned of the threats by an officer, did not take the threats seriously and attempted to contact Baddie to resolve the dispute and calm him down, said Hinchcliff.


When Martinez knocked on Baddie’s door to speak to him, Baddie retrieved a gun and confronted Martinez who was standing outside and was unarmed, Hinchcliff reported.


Baddie told Martinez he was under citizen’s arrest and ordered him to lie on the ground, Hinchcliff explained. When Martinez refused to lie down, Baddie shot him five times in the chest, lower back, thigh, forearm and wrist. Martinez died that day at the hospital.


According to Hinchcliff, Baddie later told investigators that he shot Martinez because he was afraid he would get away. It was reported that Baddie had been heavily using drugs and alcohol in the days preceding the shooting.


Baddie was convicted by a jury of second-degree murder and personal use of a firearm on Jan. 8, 1990, and on Oct. 26, 1990 was sentenced by Superior Court Judge John J. Golden to a term of 17 years to life.


The Jan. 16 hearing was the third for Baddie, who Hinchcliff had previously been denied parole at hearings in 2001 and 2004.


Hinchcliff has appeared before the Parole Board at all of Baddie's hearings to argue against his release.


On Jan. 16 Hinchcliff traveled to Vacaville for the hour-and-a-half-long “lifer hearing.”


He said he asked the Parole Board of Hearing commissioners to once again deny Baddie parole because he had not attended any drug and alcohol rehabilitation classes during his 17 years in prison, and still presented an unreasonable danger to the public if released on parole.


The commissioners agreed and denied Baddie parole, stating that the crime was committed for a trivial reason, was committed in a callous manner, that Baddie had not made sufficient programming efforts in prison and that he still presented a danger to the public if released at this time, said Hinchcliff.


Baddie’s next parole hearing will be in 2010, Hinchcliff said.


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Mountain lions and humans can co-exist as long as precautions are taken, says Game Warden Lynette Shimek. Department of Fish and Game file photo.

 


LAKE COUNTY – It can be unnerving to see a mountain lion, but a local game warden says that as long as county residents are careful they can live side by side with the big cats.


Clearlake Riviera residents reported to Lake County News on Saturday that a large mountain lion was spotted in the brush near their home that afternoon.


Lynette Shimek, one of Lake County's Department of Fish and Game wardens, emphasized the low threat level that mountain lions actually pose with regard to humans, but also suggested caution in order to allow humans and animals to live together.


Shimek said the county is home to many mountain lions, and Fish and Game receives numerous reports of the animals from all over Lake County.


One older animal – dubbed the “Buckingham Lion” – often is seen while crossing the road to the lake, said Shimek, who added that the big cat has never hurt anybody.


She estimated that the most calls reporting sightings come from the Clearlake Riviera and Hidden Valley Lake. That's because those areas have high concentrations of both people – who see the mountain lions – and deer, a mountain lion food source.


The coming together of deer and people causes another issue, said Shimek: people tend to feed the deer, which over time lose their ability to forage and feed on their own.


Feeding deer is illegal, said Shimek. It also brings deer close to people, and where there are deer there will be mountain lions.


Shimek said Fish and Game is constantly trying to educate the public about the realities of sharing their environment with mountain lions.


The risk to humans, said Shimek, is normally very low.


However, there are warning signs that people should watch for, Shimek added.


Mountain lions are very secretive. If they're spotted close to a home during the day, don't run away when they see a human or show aggressive signs when a human is near – such as flattening their ears, flattening their body to the ground or lashing their tail – then Shimek said Fish and Game wants to know about it.


“Very few people ever see a mountain lion,” said Shimek.


However, when they do, it's likeliest to happen early in the morning or at night, said Shimek.


The time between dusk and dawn is when people should keep pets and children close to home or indoors to be safe, she said.


Only in cases of livestock predation or where a risk is posed to public safety does Fish and Game actually trap or – in some cases – kill mountain lions, said Shimek.


The emphasis, she said, is on learning to take precautions and live with wildlife.


When seeing a mountain lion in the wild that isn't posing any threat, rather than being worried people should instead count their blessings, said Shimek, because it's a sign the animals are still a part of the environment.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


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LAKE COUNTY – A power outage Friday afternoon left thousands of customers from Lakeport to Cobb without power for several hours.


The outage began at 12:04 p.m., said Susan Simon, a spokesperson for Pacific Gas and Electric Co.


Initially, 13,000 customers in Lakeport and Kelseyville were affected, said Simon.


The power outage appeared to reach as far as Cobb, where a resident reported to Lake County News that the power also was out at his home Friday afternoon.


Within about an hour, according to Simon, all but 3,000 customers had their power restored.


By 5:30 p.m., there still remained 1,300 customers without power, said Simon, with the last part of the outage centered around Kelseyville.


Somewhere between 6 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. the last of the customers had the power go back on in their homes, Simon said.


The cause, said Simon, was a squirrel.


“A squirrel came in contact with a piece of equipment and as a result of that we lost power to three separate substations,” said Simon.


Simon did not have specifics on where it was precisely that the fatal meeting between squirrel and power equipment took place.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


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LAKE COUNTY – The United Way is looking for Lake County organizations to fund in several important service areas.


Fritz Ward, marketing director for United Way of Sonoma-Mendocino-Lake, said the organization is seeking funding proposals for projects in four “focused funding” areas from nonprofits in its three service counties.


Those focus areas include after-school and summer programs focused on youth in grades four through eight; parenting and social-skills training for parents; emergency food and shelter, transitional and permanent supportive housing programs; and senior food and mental-health programs, according to Chanda Zirkelbach, vice president of the agency's Community Impact division.


Ward said United Way wants to find the best partner agencies doing the best work in their communities.


A volunteer group reviews applications and conducts site visits, he said.


The selection process, Ward added, is based strictly on merit.


“There's almost always more need than money,” he added.


Those groups who do receive funding have their performance monitored, Ward said.


Last year, Catholic Charities-Lake County Rural Food Project received $14,000 and the Redwood Coast Seniors-Meals on Wheels/Mental Health Outreach program received $90,000, Zirkelbach reported.


Ward said the United Way believes it's more important to give more money to one program that is doing great work than break that funding up to try to cover many smaller efforts.


Applications became available Jan. 15, with the submission deadline set for Feb. 25.


For information on how to apply or to learn how to access United Way's online application, contact Zirkelbach at 707-528-4485, Extension 110, or e-mail at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


There will be an applicant orientation Feb. 1 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. at the Santa Rosa Transit Department Training Room 103, located at 45 Stony Point Road, Santa Rosa.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


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LAKE COUNTY The county's unemployment rate is continuing to rise, according to the latest figures from the state.


Lake County’s December 2007 unemployment rate was 9.0 percent, up 0.8 percent from last month and 1.8 percent above the year-ago, December 2006 rate, reported Dennis Mullins of the Employment Development Department's Labor Market Information Division for the North Coast Region.


According to previous Employment Development Department reports, Lake County's 2007 unemployment numbers were consistently higher than those in 2006.


Mullins reported that Lake County's rate compares to a seasonally unadjusted rate of 5.9 percent for California and 4.8 percent for the U.S.


The county's December 9.0 percent unemployment rate tied it with Lassen County for 38th place statewide, according to Employment Development Department statistics.


Some surrounding county rates included 6.5 percent for Mendocino, and 4.7 percent for Sonoma, Mullins reported.


Marin had the lowest rate in the State with 3.9 percent, according to Mullins, while Colusa and Imperial Counties had the highest at 17.9 percent.


Lake County's civilian workforce reached 26,950 in December, up 10 from November and 820 more than December 2006, state statistics showed.


Total industry employment increased 560 jobs (3.9 percent) between December 2006 and December 2007, ending the year-over period with 14,970.

 

Year-over job growth occurred in farm; manufacturing; trade, transportation and utilities; information; private educational and health services; and government, Mullins reported.


Mullins added that year-over job losses occurred in natural resources, mining, and construction; financial activities; professional and business services; and other services. Leisure and hospitality had no change over the year.


The farm sector led industry gainers adding 390 jobs over the year, Mullins reported. Government was up 140; private educational and health services, and trade, transportation and utilities gained 70 and 50 respectively. Manufacturing and information were up 10 jobs each.


Natural resources, mining and construction led decliners dropping 60 jobs, according to Mullins. Financial activities was down 30; professional and business services, and other services were down 10 jobs each for the period.


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UKIAH – A Lucerne man was picked up during an enforcement conducted by a task force that monitors convicted sex offenders.


Jesse Raymond Heilig, 25, was arrested on two felony warrants for violations of probation on Thursday morning, according to a report from Lt. Kurt Smallcomb of the Mendocino County Sheriff's Office.


A Mendocino County Sheriff's sergeant – assigned to the Sexual Assault Felony Enforcement Team (also known as SAFE) – arrested Heilig at an East Stanley Street address, Smallcomb reported.


Heilig was transported to the county jail, said Smallcomb, where bail was set at a no-bail status.


Heilig is a registered sex offender, and is listed on the Megan's Law Web site because of his conviction for rape of a drugged victim.


The SAFE Program is funded by a grant and allows local sheriff's offices to spend more time investigating sex offenders that may be out of compliance with the 290 PC (sexual offenders registration law) requirements, Smallcomb reported.


Lake County also participates in the SAFE Program, as Lake County News has reported.


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Lake County and Sacramento fans poured in to support Faded At Four Sunday night during the Bodog Battle of the Bands at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco. Pictured is lead singer Jon Foutch. Audience votes determine if they move on to the finals. The top prize is $1 million and a recording contract. Photo by Suzette Cook-Mankins.

 


LAKE COUNTY – For an intrepid band of Lake County musicians, stardom could be just around the corner.


For the last seven months, Faded At Four has been among thousands of bands across the United States, Canada and Europe battling to win a $1 million recording contract.


Band members include guitarists Brian Kenner of Lakeport and Chris Murphy of Kelseyville, bass guitarist Martin Scheel of Lower Lake, drummer Chris “Pencil” Sanders of Clearlake, and lead singer and Upper Lake native Jon Foutch.


Foutch said the band got into the Bodog Battle of the Bands last June, a competition that he said started with 4,500 bands.


Faded At Four submitted a profile, a picture and a single to join the competition, much of which has taken place through Internet voting, he explained.


In the San Francisco region, where Faded At Four is competing, Internet voting quickly took the band to a No. 1 ranking.


“We were absolutely floored,” said Foutch.


The band, which has an “aggressive” rock/metal sound, soon finished third nationwide in the online voting, said Foutch.


The competition then moved into live performances. During the third round of the competition, held Sunday at San Francisco's Great American Music Hall for the western region, Faded At Four placed second overall, said Foutch.


The performance was witnessed by three busloads of fans who made the trip to San Francisco, said Foutch.


“The energy level was through the roof,” he said.


It's been a year of hard work and success for Faded At Four, whose original members joined forces five years ago, said Foutch. The band in its current form has been together for two years.


Foutch, who attended American River College and Sonoma State, met Scheel while in college.


Eventually, they decided that they wanted to form a band.


“I'd figured out at some point after I'd gotten out of school that I could sing,” said Foutch, who was born and raised in Lake County and works as the facility administrator of the local dialysis clinic.


Besides singing he played drums for the band in the beginning. “It wasn't pretty,” he laughed.


Then the band met up at a party with Sanders, who joined as their drummer.


Last summer, opportunities began coming together for Faded At Four, which had been playing at Konocti Harbor Resort and Spa, said Foutch.


After regular appearances at the resort – playing in its clubs, showroom and amphitheater – Faded At Four was asked to open for Kid Rock during X.S. Weekend, an important accomplishment for the band, Foutch said.


Faded At Four is one of 48 U.S. bands now poised for the next round in the Bodog Battle of the Bands competition, which Foutch said will be televised on the Fuse Network.


On March 12, the band is set to compete with other 11 West Coast bands at The Avalon Club in Hollywood, said Foutch. From that performance, one winning band will emerge.


The West Coast winner will then advance to a final round of 10 bands – one from each of the four U.S. regions – based in San Francisco, Oklahoma, Denver and New York – plus five bands chosen from Europe and Canada.


There also will be one wild card spot. The 44 U.S. bands that are left after the top four are chosen will compete for that spot through online voting, said Foutch.


The competition – which he said has been likened to “Survivor” for bands – will then move into a reality television format.


“It's getting unbelievably competitive,” he said, adding that there are many great bands in the competition.


Faded At Four's members practice individually all the time, and get together twice a week to practice together, Foutch said.


Besides the hard work and talent, the band credits its network of fans and supporters for helping it advance this far.


“The fans have been so important to us,” said Foutch.


They're hoping to organize a trip for fans to Hollywood for March's phase of the competition, he said.


The farther along they advance, the more real it all gets, said Foutch. “This can really, really happen.”


Winning, he added, isn't necessary to benefit from the competition. The visibility it generates brings with it other chances. “It affords us a really, really good opportunity.”


Most of the band members have wives and children, and Foutch – a dad himself – said the decision to compete and take a shot at fame wasn't made lightly.


Ultimately, he said, they want to offer better lives for their families.


Foutch said friends of the band are joking about someday being able to say they “knew them when.” But for Foutch, Lake County will always be home.


“There's no place that I'd rather live than I live right now,” said Foutch, who lives in a home built by his ancestors.


If fame comes his way, Foutch said, “You take anybody and everyone you love with you.”


To learn more about Faded At Four, how to support the group in the Bodog Battle of the Bands or to hear the band's music, visit www.fadedatfour.com. You can also visit the band's MySpace page at www.myspace.com/fadedatfour.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

 

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Bass guitarist Martin Scheel during the Sunday performance in San Francisco. Photo by Suzette Cook-Mankins.
 

 

 

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