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News

Clearlake sewer spill released nearly three million gallons of sewage, county officials say

Roads in the spill area were temporarily closed even after the spill was contained as county personnel worked on mitigation. The spill continued for 37.5 hours. Photo by Lingzi Chen/Lake County News.


CLEARLAKE, Calif. – A week after several million gallons of wastewater were spilled onto dozens of properties in Clearlake, residents there are facing uncertainty about the safety of their well water and struggling to find solutions in the midst of disrupted lives.

An estimated 2.9 million gallons of sewage were released during the Robin Lane sewer spill in Clearlake, county staff said in an email response to Lake County News’ request on Saturday.

The disclosure came a week after the rupture of a county-operated 16-inch force main on Sunday, Jan. 11 that resulted in a massive sewage spill. The spill lasted from last Sunday morning through Monday night.

The initial report filed with the state emergency services on Jan. 11 by Lake County Special Districts – the agency that operates the wastewater system – listed the volume of sewage released as 2,000 gallons. 

The newly disclosed estimate is roughly 1,450 times higher.

The report to the state was updated on Thursday with the 2.9 million gallon figure, but was not released to the public until Lake County News again requested the total spill size on Saturday. Lake County News had previously requested that figure on Jan. 12.

“Staff was able to contain and recover much of the spill,” the county’s email response provided through Chief Deputy County Administrative Officer Matthew Rothstein said. It did not specify how much sewage was recovered.

“Draft reports have been filed with the State Water Board, and the final reporting will show how much of the sewage was contained and recovered, when final numbers are received from the engaged pumper trucks,” the email added. 

“Remarkably,” the email said, “only approximately 3,900 gallons were released into the drainage ditch that ran to Burns Creek and into Clear Lake.”

The volume of the sewage spill, however, is not merely a seven-digit figure on paper; it has been felt by impacted residents and workers on the ground.

For workers responding to the incident, it meant pumping sewage away around the clock. “They had to just continuously pump 24/7,” said Lori Baca, customer service supervisor for Lake County Special Districts, during a Wednesday night town hall at Clearlake City Hall. 

She explained that crews ran into parts shortages and multiple valve installation failures before the spill was finally stopped at 9:55 p.m. Monday.

“They worked their butts off to try to shut it off,” said Supervisor Bruno Sabatier at the town hall. “Unfortunately, it's very frustrating when everything seems to fail. It was just horrible the way it went down.”

For impacted residents, it means life “upended,” in Sabatier’s words. 

Stephanie and Juan Piseno run an in-home child care business on Robin Lane in Clearlake, California, which has been temporarily closed because of a massive sewage spill. The situation has left the family without its main source of income. Photo by Lingzi Chen/Lake County News.

Child care home forced to close over drinking water safety

Stephanie and Juan Piseno run an in-home child care business on Robin Lane and have been caring for 11 children until Jan. 11, when the sewer system ruptured near their home, sending a massive sewage spill across the road and into what Juan described as “a river of poop and pee.” 

“So we have to close it, and we don’t know when we can reopen,” Stephanie said Wednesday afternoon, standing in her kitchen, four days after the spill started. 

“That’s the family’s only income,” she said, trying to steady her voice but choking. “Our income is gone. We have to pay a mortgage for a house that we can't live in.”

The habitat has to be safe and have clean running water to be licensed as a child care home, Juan said.

“We care about the safety of all the kids,” Stephanie added. And in a soft tone with a reluctant smile, “We don’t even want our kids here,” she said. 

The couple have four children of their own, with the youngest just 2 years old, who, as the conversation went on, was crawling on the floor with a bright, innocent smile. Her mom scooped her up from the floor.

The broken force main, located near the northern end of Robin Lane just over 500 yards up from the Pisenos’ home, extends along the road.

The sewage flow that flooded the area was initially marked by the county as enclosed by Pond Road, Rumsey Road, Pamela Lane and Robin Lane. 

On Friday, the county revised the impact area map and expanded it by eight times – from an estimated 40 acres to 357 acres, based on a Lake County News assessment of the impacted area – to include east of Smith Lane, west of Old Highway 53, south of Pond Road and north of Bowers Avenue. 

This revision of the impact zone was due to water testing results obtained by Lake County Environmental Health, and is subject to change, according to the county's announcement. 

The Pisenos’ home is among the first announced 58 properties that have been impacted, many of which rely on a private well for everyday use of water, including drinking. 

Public notification of the incident and warnings against the use of well water, however, did not come timely.

“I went outside around 12:30 in the afternoon because I noticed the water flowing,” Stephanie said of Sunday in a text message. “I got a [Nixle] alert at 4 p.m. not to drink the water.”

So had the family of six been drinking water from the well until 4 p.m.? 

“Pretty much yes,” Stephanie replied. “We thought it was a small situation at first [and] didn't think our personal well would be impacted.”

The first Nixle Stephanie received about the matter came at 11:20 a.m. and asked her to avoid the area “due to a sewage leak.” 

The first Nixle alert advising against consuming well water arrived at 3:58 p.m.

In fact, Lake County Special Districts was notified of sewage running down the street at 7:30 a.m. on Jan. 11, according to Baca’s statements at the town hall. 

The agency filed its initial report with California Governor's Office of Emergency Services, or Cal OES, at 9:39 a.m. Jan. 11, reporting just 2,000 gallons of sewage had been released and that no waterways – a reference to the nearby creek or lake – had been impacted. 

That initial report also stated that the spill was “stopped and contained” just two hours after it began. However, in total, the spill lasted 37.5 hours, Clearlake City Manager Alan Flora told the City Council during its Thursday night meeting.

The county’s first press release reached Lake County News’ inbox and Facebook page around 3:30 p.m. Jan. 11, followed by the Nixle alert to residents about water use around 4 p.m. – both more than eight hours after the incident began and over six hours after the Special Districts’ first official filing with Cal OES.

Still, not all residents in the area have access to Nixle or social media like Facebook where government agencies communicate sewage leak, potential water contamination and public health advice. 

Shean Heape, who lives on Old Highway 53 with his wife, said they immediately stopped using well water after seeing the alerts in the afternoon. 

“Everything got shut off first for me,” said Heape, who then started making phone calls to alert neighbors. 

Only on Monday, Heape found out that there were neighbors around without any access to Nixle alerts or the internet. 

“Some neighbors are on flip phones,” he said. “Not everybody has everything.”

Straw wattles were placed in the spill area in an effort to keep the wastewater from residences. Photo by Lingzi Chen/Lake County News.

Seeking test results and explanations

Although Robin Lane is within the city limit of Clearlake, it remains a private road. Residents on the street and City Manager Flora said the city does not pave it. 

It is an unpaved, dirt road – with numerous potholes especially toward the south end near Rumsey – which turned muddy and carried an “atrocious” smell as the sewage flowed through, as described by Christina Huron, who lives next door to the Pisenos.

Standing in her driveway, Huron pointed to an area carved out by straw wattles leading into her property. Sewage was directed there and pooled in her front yard, she said, when two trucks were positioned in front of her house, sucking sewage as it flowed “all across our property” and onto a neighbor’s property farther down the road before returning to Pamela Lane.

“We have gotten nothing but two and a half gallons of water,” she said of the only help she received on Sunday and Monday, when the spill was still active.

A few hours after the Thursday morning interview outside her property – where straw wattles lining the road separated her from the Lake County News reporter – Huron said in an email she had just received the well testing results, which suggested her well may be among the most contaminated in the area.

“Coliform 2419.6” and “E.coli 2419.6,” she sent the numbers over. 

“I was told these are off the charts numbers and they can’t calculate any higher than these numbers,” Huron said of what she had learned from the call with staff from Environmental Health.

The U.S. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says coliform is a water quality indicator, and that “a positive test for fecal coliforms or E. coli likely means that poop (feces), and the harmful germs in poop, have gotten into your well water.”

Lake County News reached out to the county, requesting explanations on what these readings mean and what kind of risks and level of seriousness these numbers signify, along with questions on overall well testing results and progress, on Thursday and Friday. 

No information on these questions has been provided so far either through public updates or direct correspondence with Lake County News. 

It appears later that for some, it’s even difficult to acquire their own results. 

Stephanie Piseno said she called Environment Hall three times on Friday asking for well testing readings for her home. 

“They just told me ‘positive’ but no numbers,” she said in a text message. 

So far, the overall extent of contamination remains unknown to the public.

A crew works on repairs in the spill area on Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026, in Clearlake, California. Photo by Lingzi Chen/Lake County News.

The relocation conundrum

Even before the public health officer advised residents relying on private wells to relocate, Cassandra Hulbert, who also lives on Robin Lane, knew she had to find a safe place for her family to stay. 

Hulbert has two disabled children and an autoimmune disorder herself. She said her priority was keeping her children and herself safe and alive. 

“We’ve been placed in a hotel – and only one other family has – and that’s because we pushed and pushed and pushed,” Hulbert said Wednesday afternoon during an interview on Robin Lane.

She explained that she returns every day to feed her four chickens, three rabbits, four cats and two giant mastiffs that she cannot bring with her to the hotel. 

At that moment, she said the family was told to move out of the hotel room on Thursday, and that she was ready to fight. 

“If I need to physically be there and state my case and fight – fight the good fight – that's what I'm prepared to do,” she said. 

Over the past week, Hulbert has been among a group of outspoken neighbors in the impacted area who organized resources, called public agencies for information and advocated for affected residents while caring for their own families.

“We have elderly, we have disabled, we have pets and horses that are two feet deep in poop water,” she said of the vulnerable residents and animals impacted that need help and support, which in her opinion, don’t come easily. 

“I’m really exhausted,” she said on Friday. 

After the Wednesday town hall, Hulbert said she had the hotel room for the family extended until next Tuesday. 

“Not ideal but more days than yesterday,” she said in a text message. 

Hulbert isn’t waiting until Tuesday, but has been actively talking to officials every day including Supervisor Sabatier. 

“I just wanted to make sure we were gonna get word before Tuesday morning if it was extended or not,” she said on Saturday in a text message. 

With an expanded impact area, Clearlake City Manager Flora said the number of properties impacted would be bigger than the previously stated 58. 

Since Public Health Officer Dr. Robert Bernstein advised relocation on Wednesday, how many households have relocated remains unknown. Also unknown is the anticipated duration of stay for those who have got a hotel room. 

The Piseno family of six also managed to secure a hotel room coming out of the Wednesday town hall, also with a Tuesday expiration date for that assistance. 

Stephanie Piseno said on Friday that she has no idea what’s going to happen next for the relocation, or when they can return home safely.

Huron on Thursday said she missed the life before this “catastrophe.”

“Everything was green because we just had rain. Everything was beautiful,” she said, looking around the yard. “And it's just sewage.”

Saturday afternoon, Huron said some people are getting water tanks and portable toilets. “My husband is on the phone now talking with special districts because we were supposed to receive those too,” she said in a text message.

“Straw wattles have been removed and our driveway and walkway were sprayed with a disinfectant,” she added in her update. 

At least the stray cats scouting nearby no longer have to leap over the wattles while wandering around potentially contaminated soil as seen on Wednesday. 

Email staff reporter Lingzi Chen at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. 

Helping Paws: New dogs to meet

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County Animal Care and Control has new puppies and dogs waiting to meet their new families.

The dogs available for adoption this week include mixes of Belgian Malinois, Chihuahua, corgi, Doberman Pinscher, German shepherd, husky, Labrador retriever, mastiff, pit bull terrier, Rottweiler and shepherd.

Dogs that are adopted from Lake County Animal Care and Control are either neutered or spayed, microchipped and, if old enough, given a rabies shot and county license before being released to their new owner. License fees do not apply to residents of the cities of Lakeport or Clearlake.

Those animals shown on this page at the Lake County Animal Care and Control shelter have been cleared for adoption.

Call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278 or visit the shelter online for information on visiting or adopting.

The shelter is located at 4949 Helbush in Lakeport.

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. 

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American farmers, who once fed the world, face a volatile global market with diminishing federal backing

American farmers face a changing future for their businesses. Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images

President Donald Trump appears to have upended an 85-year relationship between American farmers and the United States’ global exercise of power. But that link has been fraying since the end of the Cold War, and Trump’s moves are just another big step.

During World War II, the U.S. government tied agriculture to foreign policy by using taxpayer dollars to buy food from American farmers and send it to hungry allies abroad. This agricultural diplomacy continued into the Cold War through programs such as the Marshall Plan to rebuild European agriculture, Food for Peace to send surplus U.S. food to hungry allies, and the U.S. Agency for International Development, which aimed to make food aid and agricultural development permanent components of U.S. foreign policy.

During that period, the United States also participated in multinational partnerships to set global production goals and trade guidelines to promote the international movement of food – including the U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization, the International Wheat Agreement and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.

When U.S. farmers faced labor shortfalls, the federal government created guest-worker programs that provided critical hands in the fields, most often from Mexico and the Caribbean.

At the end of World War II, the U.S. government recognized that farmers could not just rely on domestic agricultural subsidies, including production limits, price supports and crop insurance, for prosperity. American farmers’ well-being instead depended on the rest of the world.

Since returning to office in January 2025, Trump has dismantled the U.S. Agency for International Development. His administration has also aggressively detained and deported suspected noncitizens living and working in the U.S., including farmworkers. And he has imposed tariffs that caused U.S. trading partners to retaliate, slashing international demand for U.S. agricultural products.

Trump’s actions follow diplomatic and agricultural transformations that I research, and which began with the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Feed the world, save the farm

Even before the nation’s founding, farmers in what would become the United States staked their livelihood on international networks of labor, plants and animals, and trade.

Cotton was the most prominent early example of these relationships, and by the 19th century wheat farmers depended on expanding transportation networks to move their goods within the country and overseas.

A drawing of people on foot and on horseback gathering cattle into a wooden pen.
Workers load cattle on a train for shipment to market in the late 19th century. Bettmann via Getty Images

But fears that international trade could create economic uncertainty limited American farmers’ interest in overseas markets. The Great Depression in the 1930s reinforced skepticism of international markets, which many farmers and policymakers saw as the principal cause of the economic downturn.

World War II forced them to change their view. The Lend-Lease Act, passed in March 1941, aimed to keep the United States out of the war by providing supplies, weapons and equipment to Britain and its allies. Importantly for farmers, the act created a surge in demand for food.

And after Congress declared war in December 1941, the need to feed U.S. and allied troops abroad pushed demand for farm products ever higher. Food took on a significance beyond satisfying a wartime need: The Soviet Union, for example, made special requests for butter. U.S. soldiers wrote about the special bond created by seeing milk and eggs from a hometown dairy, and Europeans who received food under the Lend-Lease Act embraced large cans of condensed milk with sky-blue labels as if they were talismans.

Ropes hoist large boxes aboard a ship.
Crates of American hams, supplied through the Lend-Lease Act, are loaded on a ship bound for Britain in 1941. Bettmann via Getty Images

Another war ends

But despite their critical contribution to the war, American farmers worried that the familiar pattern of postwar recession would repeat once Germany and Japan had surrendered.

Congress fulfilled farmers’ fears of an economic collapse by sharply reducing its food purchases as soon as the war ended in the summer of 1945. In 1946, Congress responded weakly to mounting overseas food needs.

Large bags are stacked in a pile, each with a tag on it saying it came from the U.S. to help Europe.
Bags of Marshall Plan flour wait in New York for shipment to Austria in 1948. Ann Ronan Picture Library/Photo12/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

More action waited until 1948, when Congress recognized communism’s growing appeal in Europe amid an underfunded postwar reconstruction effort. The Marshall Plan’s more robust promise of food and other resources was intended to counter Soviet influence.

Sending American food overseas through postwar rehabilitation and development programs caused farm revenue to surge. It proved that foreign markets could create prosperity for American farmers, while food and agriculture’s importance to postwar reconstruction in Europe and Asia cemented their importance in U.S. foreign policy.

Farmers in the modern world

Farmers’ contribution to the Cold War shored up their cultural and political importance in a rapidly industrializing and urbanizing United States. The Midwestern farm became an aspirational symbol used by the State Department to encourage European refugees to emigrate to the U.S. after World War II.

American farmers volunteered to be amateur diplomats, sharing methods and technologies with their agricultural counterparts around the world.

By the 1950s, delegations of Soviet officials were traveling to the Midwest, including Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev’s excursion to Iowa in 1959. U.S. farmers reciprocated with tours of the Soviet Union. Young Americans who had grown up on farms moved abroad to live with host families, working their properties and informally sharing U.S. agricultural methods. Certain that their land and techniques were superior to those of their overseas peers, U.S. farmers felt obligated to share their wisdom with the rest of the world.

The collapse of the Soviet Union undermined the central purpose for the United States’ agricultural diplomacy. But a growing global appetite for meat in the 1990s helped make up some of the difference.

U.S. farmers shifted crops from wheat to corn and soybeans to feed growing numbers of livestock around the world. They used newly available genetically engineered seeds that promised unprecedented yields.

Expecting these transformations to financially benefit American farmers and seeing little need to preserve Cold War-era international cooperation, the U.S. government changed its trade policy from collaborating on global trade to making it more of a competition.

In a large auditorium, people sit at a long table on a stage and sign papers.
World leaders sign the Marrakesh Agreement, creating the World Trade Organization, in 1994. Jacques Langevin/Sygma/Sygma via Getty Images

The George H.W. Bush and Clinton administrations crafted the North American Free Trade Agreement and the World Trade Organization to replace the general agreement on trade and tariffs. They assumed American farmers’ past preeminence would continue to increase farm revenues even as global economic forces shifted.

But U.S. farmers have faced higher costs for seeds and fertilizer, as well as new international competitors such as Brazil. With a diminished competitive advantage and the loss of the Cold War’s cooperative infrastructure, U.S. farmers now face a more volatile global market that will likely require greater government support through subsidies rather than offering prosperity through commerce.

That includes the Trump administration’s December 2025 announcement of a US$12 billion farmer bailout. As Trump’s trade wars continue, they show that the U.S. government is no longer fostering a global agricultural market in which U.S. farmers enjoy a trade advantage or government protection – even if they retain some cultural and political significance in the 21st century.The Conversation

Peter Simons, Lecturer in History, Hamilton College

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

Lake County Creative Economy Town Hall set for Jan. 20

LAKEPORT, Calif. – A community meeting this week will explore the creative economy.

The Lake County Creative Economy Town Hall will take place from 1 to 4 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 20, at the Soper-Reese Theater, 275 S. Main St. in Lakeport.

Admission is free, and anyone engaged with the creative economy in the Northern California Region is invited to attend.

The California Arts Council will host the event, with support from the Shasta County Arts Council in collaboration with the Lake County Arts Council.

The Creative Economy Town Halls are a series of statewide California events, led by the California Arts Council and partners, to gather input from artists, cultural workers, and leaders to implement California’s first Creative Economy Strategic Plan.

The plan will focus on workforce, business stability, cultural tourism, and economic recovery through arts and culture. 

These events allow creatives to share local needs and shape policies for a more inclusive, vibrant creative sector, with recent sessions held in the Bay Area and Central Valley, and more planned.

Organizers want to hear from those working in arts and culture — in both creative and "noncreative" roles — about what it will take to keep California the world leader in a thriving creative economy. 

Participants’ input will shape policy, programs and resources. 

The town halls also seek to collect stories to share through the campaign.

Please RSVP if you plan to attend.

Space News: From a new flagship space telescope to lunar exploration, global cooperation – and competition – will make 2026 an exciting year for space

The U.S. is planning a crewed flight around the Moon in 2026. AP Photo

In 2026, astronauts will travel around the Moon for the first time since the Apollo era, powerful new space telescopes will prepare to survey billions of galaxies, and multiple nations will launch missions aimed at finding habitable worlds, water on the Moon and clues to how our solar system formed.

Together, these launches will mark a turning point in how humanity studies the universe – and how nations cooperate and compete beyond Earth. Coming from one of the world’s largest astrophysical research institutes, I can tell you, the anticipation across the global space science community is electric.

Mapping the cosmos at unprecedented scales

Several of the most ambitious missions slated for launch in 2026 share a common goal: to map the universe on the largest possible scales and reveal how planets, galaxies and the largest cosmic structures evolved over billions of years.

The centerpiece of this effort is NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope. Construction completed on the Roman telescope in December at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, and if all goes well, it could launch as early as fall 2026.

What makes Roman more special than NASA’s other flagship space telescopes is not just what it will see, but how much of the sky it can see at once. Its 300-megapixel camera can capture regions of sky about 100 times larger than the Hubble Space Telescope’s field of view while maintaining comparable sharpness – like switching from studying individual tiles to surveying the entire mosaic at once.

During its five-year primary mission, Roman is expected to discover more than 100,000 distant exoplanets, map billions of galaxies strewn across cosmic time and help scientists probe dark matter and dark energy – the invisible scaffolding and mysterious forces that together account for 95% of the cosmos.

Roman also carries a coronagraph, a pathfinder instrument that can block out a star’s blinding light to directly photograph planets orbiting around it. The technology could pave the way for future missions, like NASA’s planned Habitable Worlds Observatory, capable of searching for signs of life on Earth-like worlds.

Two engineers in a clean room wearing protective suits looking at the mirror of the assembled Roman space telescope
NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is now fully assembled following the integration of its two major segments on Nov. 25, 2025, at the agency’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. The mission is slated to launch by May 2027, but the team is on track for launch as early as fall 2026. NASA/Jolearra Tshiteya

Over in Europe, the European Space Agency’s PLATO mission, short for PLAnetary Transits and Oscillations of stars mission, is scheduled to launch in December 2026 aboard Europe’s new Ariane 6 rocket. PLATO will monitor about 200,000 stars using an array of 26 cameras, searching for small, rocky planets in their stars’ habitable zones, while also determining the stars’ ages.

For China, 2026 is expected to mark a milestone of a different kind: the launch of its first large flagship space telescope dedicated to astrophysics. The Xuntian space telescope, also known as the Chinese space station telescope, is currently expected to launch in late 2026. Xuntian will survey enormous regions of the sky with image quality comparable to Hubble’s, but with a field of view more than 300 times larger.

Like NASA’s Roman Space Telescope, Xuntian is designed to tackle some of modern cosmology’s biggest questions. It will hunt for dark matter and dark energy, survey billions of galaxies and trace how cosmic structure evolved over time. Uniquely, Xuntian will co-orbit with China’s Tiangong space station, allowing astronauts to service and upgrade it and, potentially, extending its life for decades.

An illustration of a space telescope, which looks like a metal cylinder with two solar panels attached to either side.
A recent rendering of China’s Xuntian space station telescope, which is on track to launch in late 2026. China National Space Administration

Together with the new Vera C. Rubin Observatory on the ground, which will repeatedly scan the entire southern sky to capture how the universe changes over time, the Roman, PLATO and Xuntian space telescopes will study the cosmos not just as it is but as it evolves.

Global milestones in human spaceflight

While robotic observatories quietly expand our view of the cosmos, 2026 will also mark a major step forward for human spaceflight.

NASA’s Artemis II mission, now readying for launch as early as April 2026, will send four astronauts on a 10-day journey around the Moon and back. It will be the first time humans have traveled beyond low Earth orbit since Apollo 17 in December 1972.

Across the globe, India is preparing to reach a similarly historic milestone. Through its Gaganyaan program, the Indian Space Research Organisation is planning a series of uncrewed test flights in 2026 as it works toward sending astronauts to space. If that happens, India would become only the fourth nation to achieve human spaceflight on its own – a significant technological and symbolic achievement.

Meanwhile, China will continue regular crewed flights to its Tiangong space station in 2026, part of a broader effort to build the experience, infrastructure and technologies needed for its planned human missions to the Moon later in the decade.

In parallel, NASA is relying increasingly on commercial spacecraft to carry astronauts to and from the International Space Station, freeing the agency to focus its own human spaceflight efforts on deep-space missions beyond Earth.

Together, Artemis II, Gaganyaan and China’s ongoing crewed space station missions reflect a renewed global push toward human exploration beyond Earth orbit – one in which governments and commercial partners alike are laying the groundwork for longer missions and a sustained human presence in space.

The origin and geology of the Moon and Mars

Another set of 2026 missions focuses on a more grounded question: how rocky worlds – and the resources they contain – came to be.

Japan’s Martian Moons eXploration mission, slated to launch in late 2026, will travel to Mars, spend three years studying both of its small, potato-shaped moons – Phobos and Deimos – and collect a surface sample from Phobos to bring back to Earth by 2031.

Scientists still debate whether these moons originated as captured asteroids or debris from an ancient giant impact with Mars. Returning pristine material from Phobos could finally settle that question and reshape our understanding of how the inner solar system evolved.

China’s Chang'e 7 mission, expected to launch in mid-2026, will head to the Moon’s south pole, a region of intense scientific and strategic interest. The mission includes an orbiter, lander, rover and a small flying “hopper” designed to leap into permanently shadowed craters, where sunlight never reaches. These craters are thought to harbor water ice, a resource that could one day support astronauts or be converted into rocket fuel for deeper-space missions.

The Chinese and Japanese missions both highlight how planetary science and exploration are becoming increasingly intertwined, as understanding the geology of nearby worlds also informs future human activity.

It’s the Sun’s solar system, we’re just living in it

In 2025, powerful solar storms forced airlines to reroute and ground flights, disrupted radio communications and pushed vivid auroras far beyond their usual polar haunts – lighting up skies as far south as Florida. These events are reminders that space is not a distant abstraction: Activity on the Sun can have immediate consequences here on Earth.

Not all of 2026’s major missions look outward into deep space. Some are focused on understanding the dynamic space environment that surrounds our own planet.

In a notable example of international cooperation, the solar wind magnetosphere ionosphere link explorer, SMILE – a joint mission between the European Space Agency and the Chinese Academy of Sciences – is scheduled for launch in spring 2026.

SMILE will provide the first global images of how Earth’s magnetic field responds to the constant stream of charged particles flowing from the Sun. That interaction drives space weather, including solar storms that can disrupt satellites, navigation systems, power grids and communications.

Understanding those interactions is critical not only for protecting modern infrastructure on Earth but also for safeguarding astronauts and spacecraft operating beyond the planet’s protective magnetic shield.

At a time of growing geopolitical tension in space, the mission also stands out as a rare and consequential example of sustained scientific cooperation between Europe and China.

The global stakes

These missions unfold against a complex geopolitical backdrop. The United States and China are both racing to return humans to the Moon by the end of the decade.

Yet for all the competition, space science remains profoundly collaborative. Japan’s Martian Moons eXploration mission carries instruments from NASA, ESA and France. International teams share data, expertise and the sheer wonder of discovery. The universe, after all, belongs to no one nation.

Having spent my career studying the universe, I see 2026 as a year that reflects both the rivalries and the shared ambitions of space exploration today. Competition is real, but so is cooperation at a scale that would have been hard to imagine a generation ago. From the search for habitable worlds around distant stars to plans for returning humans to the Moon, the work is global – and the sky is shared by all.The Conversation

Grant Tremblay, Federal Astrophysicist and External Relations Lead at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Smithsonian Institution

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

Clearlake sewer spill impacted area significantly expands as key questions remain unanswered

The county of Lake provided this new map of the area impacted by the spill, which began on the morning of Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026. The purple outline represents the initial spill area of about 40 acres. The total size of the overall area is estimated at 357 acres. 

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The county of Lake on Friday reported a significantly expanded area affected by the Robin Lane sewage spill and announced a work plan for the weekend. 

Meanwhile, key questions about contamination, mitigation and assistance remain unanswered.

A new map included in the county’s Friday multi-departmental update shows the affected area stretching east of Smith Lane, west of Old Highway 53, south of Pond Road and north of Bowers Avenue — enclosing roughly 357 acres, according to calculations using Google Maps. 

That expanded area is over eight times larger than the area previously marked based on this calculation conducted by Lake County News. 

The report that came at 6 p.m. on Friday, right before a three-day holiday starts, included a new map of impacted areas, and three separate contributions from the Environmental Health, Special Districts and the Public Health Officer. 

The impact area map was revised “due to [water] test results received,” said the Environmental Health section of the update.

However, the update did not disclose any well or water testing data or provide any interpretation of the results that would indicate the level or extent of contamination, nor did it provide any kind of timeline or data in terms of mitigation and recovery work. 

Guidance advising affected residents to temporarily relocate remains in effect for all areas included in the newly drawn map, according to Public Health Officer Dr. Robert Bernstein in the update. 

The Robin Lane sewer spill began on Sunday morning with the rupture of a 16-inch force main operated by the Lake County Sanitation District.

Lake County Special Districts was notified at around 7:30 a.m. Sunday, and the flow was finally stopped at 9:55 p.m. Monday, according to Lori Baca, the agency’s customer service supervisor. 

The spill was initially reported to have impacted 58 properties in the area south of Pond Road and north of Rumsey Road, east of Pamela Lane and west of Robin Lane in and around the city of Clearlake.

With the significant expansion of the impact area, the county did not provide an updated number of properties affected. 

Lake County News followed up on Friday evening. 

“Unfortunately, I don’t have an immediate answer,” said Chief Deputy County Administrative Officer Matthew Rothstein, who is also a county spokesperson, in an email. “But will ensure that is discussed and an update is provided tomorrow.”

A text message was also sent to Clearlake City Manager Alan Flora with the same question on the number of affected properties.

“It would be more but I don’t have a number,” he replied. 

Cleanup work continues while well testing pauses during long weekend

Lake County Special Districts reported that ongoing cleanup work has occurred at “most area properties, with lime treatment applied and decontamination of properties and driveways affected by sewage.”

Meanwhile, seven properties have reported experiencing “periodic ponding,” according to the Special Districts section on the Friday update. “Those properties have been pumped throughout the day.”

Work will continue on Saturday to disinfect driveways — in the affected area that have not been treated to date — with Decon30, a disinfectant cleaner used in water damage restoration and general cleaning, the statement said.

The Special Districts section said “Residents unable to access their properties due to health and safety concerns have been placed in hotels.” It did not indicate how many residents — out of all living in the impacted area who are under a public health advice to relocate — were placed in a hotel and how long the stay would last. 

Environmental Health reported that their teams conducted water testing on Thursday, “blanketing the entire area affected by the spill.” 

“A small number of parcels have not yet been sampled due to lack of owner approval to access the property,” the Friday report said, adding that no testing will be conducted over the long weekend through Monday as the lab will not be able to process samples during the period. 

The update said wells are currently undergoing the “shock stage,” meaning they are being sanitized with chlorine. Wells can only be retested 24 to 48 hours after the shock process is completed. But it did not mention the number or percentage of wells that have been tested and “shocked.”

Key questions left unanswered 

The county provided “door-to-door notices on status regarding affected wells,” according to the update. But it did not publicly provide any data indicating overall progress or preliminary results from the testing conducted so far.

Questions that remain unanswered involve how many wells have been tested so far, the severity of any contamination detected, how many households have temporarily relocated, what assistance the county’s local emergency proclamations made residents eligible for and when impacted households can expect that help to become available.

These were among the questions that Lake County News posed to county officials on Thursday and Friday, with the most recent one sent out at 4:17 p.m. Friday. 

None of them was addressed by the update released later in the evening, and no additional replies were received. 

The next town hall is expected to be held on Wednesday, Jan. 21, at 6 p.m. at Clearlake City Hall. 

Editor’s note: The county released an update in which the date of the town hall was corrected from Jan. 22 to Jan. 21.

Email staff reporter Lingzi Chen at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. 

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Community

  • Lake County Wine Alliance offers sponsor update; beneficiary applications open 

  • Mendocino National Forest announces seasonal hiring for upcoming field season

Public Safety

  • Lakeport Police logs: Thursday, Jan. 15

  • Lakeport Police logs: Wednesday, Jan. 14

Education

  • Woodland Community College receives maximum eight-year reaffirmation of accreditation from ACCJC

  • SNHU announces Fall 2025 President's List

Health

  • California ranks 24th in America’s Health Rankings Annual Report from United Health Foundation

  • Healthy blood donors especially vital during active flu season

Business

  • Two Lake County Mediacom employees earn company’s top service awards

  • Redwood Credit Union launches holiday gift and porch-to-pantry food drives

Obituaries

  • Rufino ‘Ray’ Pato

  • Patty Lee Smith

Opinion & Letters

  • The benefits of music for students

  • How to ease the burden of high electric bills

Veterans

  • CalVet and CSU Long Beach team up to improve data collection related to veteran suicides

  • A ‘Big Step Forward’ for Gulf War Veterans

Recreation

  • Wet weather trail closure in effect on Upper Lake Ranger District

  • Mendocino National Forest seeking public input on OHV grant applications

  • State Parks announces 2026 Anderson Marsh nature walk schedule 

  • BLM lifts seasonal fire restrictions in central California

Religion

  • Kelseyville Presbyterian to host Ash Wednesday service and Lenten dinner Feb. 18

  • Kelseyville Presbyterian Church to hold ‘Longest Night’ service Dec. 21

Arts & Life

  • Auditions announced for original musical ‘Even In Shadow’ set for March 21 and 28

  • ‘The Rip’ action heist; ‘Steal’ grounded in a crime thriller

Government & Politics

  • Lake County Democrats issue endorsements in local races for the June California Primary

  • County negotiates money-saving power purchase agreement

Legals

  • March 3 hearing on ordinance amending code for commercial cannabis uses

  • Feb. 12 public hearing on resolution to establish standards for agricultural roads

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