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News

Officials issue update on High Glade Fire in Mendocino National Forest

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UPPER LAKE, Calif. – The Mendocino National Forest is currently fighting a fire located in a remote area north of High Glade Lookout on the Upper Lake Ranger District of the Mendocino National Forest.

The High Glade Fire was spotted this morning, as Lake County News has reported.

It is estimated to be approximately 350 acres and is 0 percent contained, according to a Saturday evening report from the Mendocino National Forest.

Smoke from the fire was highly visible Saturday afternoon in the mountains west of Interstate 5, the forest's report said.

Engine crews, hand crews and aviation resources are currently working on containing the fire, according to the Mendocino National Forest.

As winds died down Saturday afternoon, the rate of spread has slowed, giving fire crews the opportunity to make progress, officials said.

The cause of the fire is under investigation, according to forest officials.

Firefighters work on new wildland fires around the county

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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Firefighters are working to control several new wildland fires around Lake County.

New incidents in Upper Lake and Clearlake were reported throughout the day Saturday.

On Saturday morning, two fires were reported near Upper Lake, the Hunter off of Hunter Point and Elk Mountain roads, and the High Glade Fire, located off of Bartlett Springs Road near the High Glade fire lookout.

Northshore Fire Deputy Chief Pat Brown said the Hunter fire burned about five acres and destroyed one home, but firefighters were able to save two other residences.

A total of five engines, two water tenders, and one engine each from Lakeport and Kelseyville responded, he said.

Brown said it was while Northshore firefighters were out at the Hunter incident that they spotted the High Glade Fire.

Mendocino National Forest spokesperson Tamara Schmidt told Lake County News at 4 p.m. that the latest size estimate on the High Glade Fire was 350 acres.

Cal Fire also reported that it is assisting the Mendocino National Forest with ground and air resources on the fire.

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Just after 2 p.m. a fire was reported near the Cache Creek Dam outside of Clearlake.

The fire quickly grew from a few acres to an estimated 30 acres, with one structure threatened, according to reports from the scene and a Cal Fire update issued just before 4 p.m.

Cal Fire diverted three air tankers from the McCabe Fire at The Geysers to respond to the Dam Fire, with two helicopters also dispatched.

Work also was continuing on fires that had begun earlier in the week, including the Bruner Fire at the Kono Tayee subdivision near Lucerne.

Cal Fire said Saturday afternoon that the Bruner Fire was 50 acres and 90 percent contained.

Residents in the subdivision reported on Saturday they were still without power after more than a day.

Also on Saturday afternoon, Cal Fire reported that the McCabe Fire at The Geysers geothermal steamfield had grown again, reaching 3,500 acres with 25 percent containment.

The fire is located within Sonoma County, but moving toward Lake County, officials said.

Cal Fire said 12 residences are threatened by the fire. So far, one power plant cooling tower has been destroyed.

Approximately 783 personnel are assigned to the fire, along with 54 fire engines, 34 crews, four air tankers, two helicopters, seven dozers and eight water tenders.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

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Dry, windy conditions challenge firefighters; personnel remain on high alert

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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Gusting winds that have blown across Lake County in recent days are believed to have contributed to conditions that led to several fires late Thursday and during the day on Friday.

As much of the Northshore and Clearlake areas dealt with the damage from this week's windstorm, on Friday firefighters dealt with several wildland fires along the Northshore.

A fire that began Thursday night near Paradise Cove was fully contained at 15 acres on Friday morning, according to Cal Fire.

Cal Fire Battalion Chief Greg Bertelli, who had been at the scene of the blaze Thursday night, told Lake County News that despite the rain earlier this week, “With these winds, it's overriding any moisture we had.”

Early Friday afternoon, firefighters responded to a wildland fire on Bruner Drive in the Kono Tayee subdivision near Lucerne.

Northshore Fire Deputy Chief Pat Brown said the fire was between 20 and 25 acres Friday night.

An in-county strike team that included personnel from Northshore, Kelseyville, Lake County and Lakeport Fire protection districts, along with Cal Fire, responded, with a total of six engines and a water tender on scene, Brown said.

The fire, pushed by 30- to 40-mile-per-hour winds, damaged four homes, he said.

As for the cause, “It's related to a power issue,” Brown said.

While firefighters were working the Bruner incident, a driver stopped to look at the fire and was rear-ended, Brown said. A juvenile was injured and transported to Sutter Lakeside Hospital with what were believed to be minor injuries.

Later on Friday afternoon, firefighters also responded to a small wildland fire in the area of Clover Valley Road in Upper Lake. Brown estimated it was contained at close to five acres, with three engines and a water tender on scene.

Brown said Cal Fire was continuing to monitor the scenes at the Paradise Cove and Bruner incidents because of the windy, dry conditions.

Later in the evening, a small vegetation fire was reported on Elliott Street in Upper Lake after downed power lines caught trees and grass on fire, according to radio reports.

In neighboring Sonoma County, a fire that broke out early Friday morning in The Geysers geothermal steamfield had burned an estimated 2,500 acres by nightfall, with containment at 10 percent, according to Cal Fire.

Although it's fall, the county is still experiencing dry conditions on par with the summer months, according to Bertelli.

“Everything is burning like it's August or September,” he said.

Cal Fire hasn't yet declared an end to fire season in its Sonoma-Lake-Napa Unit. The 2012 fire season closed Nov. 5.

“We're still on heightened alert,” Bertelli said. “We haven't fully downstaffed as we normally would because of the weather.”

He asked that county residents continue to use caution and be fire safe.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

Legislators introduce bill regulating toy guns

NORTH COAST, Calif. – California state legislators on Friday announced plans to introduce legislation regulation imitation or “copycat” guns in an effort to stem a reoccurring tragedy involving the toys being mistaken for real firearms.

The Imitation Firearm Safety Act would amend California law to define what an imitation firearm is and what those imitations must look like to differentiate real guns from fake guns.

Currently, toy guns such as paintball, Airsoft and BB guns are not included in the California legal definition of imitation weapons.

The goal of the legislation is to prevent tragedies that occur when toy guns too closely resemble real firearms.

The announcement was made in Santa Rosa, the scene of a recent law enforcement-related shooting death of a local teenager, Andy Lopez, who was carrying a mock AK-47.

“Currently these copycat toys are manufactured to be virtually indistinguishable from real firearms,” said Sen. Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa) a joint author of the legislation. “Because the use of lethal force against a person carrying an imitation firearm is a significant threat to public safety, toys must look like toys and not lethal weapons.”

Last month in Santa Rosa, the 13-year-old Lopez was shot and killed by a sheriff deputy who believed the Airsoft gun he was carrying was a real AK-47.

“In the coming Legislative Session, I plan to reintroduce my bill that would require all BB, pellet and Airsoft guns to have their entire exterior surfaces painted a bright color,” said Sen. Kevin de Leon (D-Los Angeles) and joint author of the bill.

“This will give police an opportunity to easily identify toy guns for what they really are and avoid these types of tragedies,” said de Leon. “Toy gun replicas do not belong on the streets. They endanger children, teens and law enforcement. We can easily protect everyone involved with this simple solution. My strongest hope is that we can enact legislation this time so that no more families are forced to suffer the terrible grief the Lopez family has suffered today.”

A 1990 study commissioned by the Department of Justice found that there are more than 200 incidents per year in which imitation guns are mistaken for real firearms.

“As a social worker by training, I believe that prevention is a lot more effective than reaction,” said Assemblymember Mariko Yamada (D-Davis). “We can act to prevent tragic losses like Andy Lopez by taking this very straightforward, common-sense measure.”

“The loss of Andy Lopez is unfathomable, gut wrenching and tragic. My heart goes out to his family, friends, and classmates, and to the entire community,” said Assemblyman Marc Levine (D- San Rafael). “When a child is playing with a toy gun, there must be no doubt that the toy is not a real gun. Consequently, we need a law that fully protects our families from tragedies like this. I am proud to co-author this important legislation.”

According to law enforcement, one of the primary dangers posed by imitation firearms is that such guns are used by children and young adults who may not comprehend the seriousness of displaying them around unsuspecting law enforcement officers or around other armed individuals.

As a result, officers and community residents can find themselves in precarious situations when they are unable to distinguish imitation guns from handguns and assault weapons.

“This bill is good for all of us who have been heartbroken by the Andy Lopez tragedy,” said Sonoma County Supervisor Shirlee Zane. “I don’t want any other communities to have to suffer the loss of a child, as we have, because a toy gun was mistaken for a lethal firearm. Looking forward, at my urging, Sonoma County supervisors are in the process of building a Task Force that will explore, among other things, best practices for a civilian review committee, which i believe should be put in place as soon as possible.”

In a similar incident in 2010, a teenager was accidentally shot by the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) who misidentified the replica gun he was carrying.

The teenager and two of his friends were playing that evening in the middle of a dark street shooting pellets at one another with fake handguns.

When the two LAPD officers stopped to investigate, the boys ran away, but one produced a pellet gun that the LAPD officers mistook for a real handgun.

An officer who feared for his life shot the teenager in self-defense. The pellet gun looked identical to a real gun and it even had the exact dimensions of a Beretta 92F.

As a result of this accidental shooting, SB 798 (de León) was introduced in 2011 in collaboration with Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck to require distinguishing colors on BB guns. This measure would have allowed law enforcement to effectively discriminate between imitation and real firearms.

Though the measure failed passage in the Assembly Public Safety Committee, SB 1315 (De Leon) was signed by Gov. Brown last year to allow cities within the county of Los Angeles to enact local ordinances more restrictive than state law regulating the manufacture, sale, possession, or use of any BB device, toy gun, or replica of a firearm that substantially similar to existing firearms (Statutes of 2012, Chapter 214).

Space News: Infant galaxies merging near 'cosmic dawn'

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Astronomers using the combined power of the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) telescope and NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have discovered a far-flung trio of primitive galaxies nestled inside an enormous blob of primordial gas nearly 13 billion light-years from Earth.

“This exceedingly rare triple system, seen when the Universe was only 800 million years old, provides important insights into the earliest stages of galaxy formation during a period known as 'Cosmic Dawn,' when the Universe was first bathed in starlight,” said Richard Ellis, the Steele Professor of Astronomy at the California Institute of Technology and member of the research team. “Even more interesting, these galaxies appear poised to merge into a single massive galaxy, which could eventually evolve into something akin to the Milky Way.”

Researchers first detected this object, which appeared to be a giant bubble of hot, ionized gas, in 2009. Dubbed Himiko (after a legendary queen of ancient Japan), it is nearly 10 times larger than typical galaxies of that era and comparable in size to our own Milky Way.

Subsequent observations with the Spitzer Space Telescope suggested that Himiko might represent a single galaxy, which would make it uncharacteristically massive for that period of the early Universe.

“The new observations revealed that, rather than a single galaxy, Himiko harbors three distinct, bright sources, whose intense star formation is heating and ionizing this giant cloud of gas,” said Masami Ouchi, an associate professor at the University of Tokyo who led the international team of astronomers from Japan and the United States.

Areas of such furious star formation should be brimming with heavy elements such as carbon, silicon, and oxygen. These elements are forged in the nuclear furnaces of massive, short-lived stars like those bursting into life inside the three galaxies detected by Hubble.

At the end of their relatively brief lives, these stars explode as supernovas, seeding the intergalactic medium with a fine dust of heavy elements.

“When this dust is heated by ultraviolet radiation from massive newborn stars, the dust then re-radiates at radio wavelengths,” remarked Kotaro Kohno, a member of the team also with the University of Tokyo. “Such radiation is not detected in Himiko.”

“Surprisingly, observations with ALMA revealed a complete absence of the signal from carbon, which is rapidly synthesized in young stars. Given the sensitivity of ALMA, this is truly remarkable,” said Ouchi. “Exactly how this intense activity can be reconciled with the primitive chemical composition of Himiko is quite puzzling.”

The astronomers speculate that a large fraction of the gas in Himiko could be primordial, a mixture of the light elements hydrogen and helium, which were created in the Big Bang. If correct, this would be a landmark discovery signaling the detection of a primordial galaxy seen during its formation.

Ellis summed up the situation: “Astronomers are usually excited when a signal from an object is detected. But, in this case, it's the absence of a signal from heavy elements that is the most exciting result!”

The ALMA data were taken as part of the early science program with only a portion of the array's eventual full complement of 66 antennas.

Future research with the complete ALMA telescope and the next-generation of ground- and space-based observatories will look even further back in time, shedding more light on the origin and evolution of the first stars and galaxies.

The results are accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal.

ALMA, an international astronomy facility, is a partnership of Europe, North America and East Asia in cooperation with the Republic of Chile.

ALMA construction and operations are led on behalf of Europe by ESO, on behalf of North America by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), and on behalf of East Asia by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ).

The Joint ALMA Observatory (JAO) provides the unified leadership and management of the construction, commissioning and operation of ALMA.

The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National Science Foundation, operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities Inc.

Fire at The Geysers balloons to 2,500 acres

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This story has been updated.

NORTH COAST, Calif. – A fire that began at The Geysers geothermal steamfield during the midst of an early Friday morning windstorm jumped in size by the afternoon.

The McCabe Fire was reported just after 2 a.m. Friday, as Lake County News has reported.

At around 10 a.m. Friday it had been reported at 200 acres with 10 percent containment, with Cal Fire reporting that it had grown to 2,000 acres by about 4 p.m., and was up to 2,500 acres just before 6 p.m., with 10 percent containment.

Cal Fire said it is located within Sonoma County's boundaries but is headed toward Lake County.

The fire is threatening a number of structures, including two nearby geothermal power plants. Radio reports indicated it had damaged a cooling tower on one of the plants.

The winds that continued throughout Friday – and which forecasters expect to last until Saturday evening – appeared to be aiding the fire's rapid spread, with firefighters on scene reporting they were focusing on structure protection.

Cal Fire spokesperson Suzi Blankenship said the incident was displaying “erratic fire behavior” with long range spotting.

On Friday afternoon, Cal Fire said there were 32 fire engines, 18 fire crews and a total of 350 fire personnel assigned to the incident.

The fire's cause remains under investigation, Cal Fire said.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

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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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