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Space News: The rush to return humans to the Moon and build lunar bases could threaten opportunities for astronomy

 

A lunar base on the Moon would include solar panels for power generation, and equipment for keeping astronauts alive on the surface. ESA - P. Carril

The 2020s have already seen many lunar landing attempts, although several of them have crashed or toppled over. With all the excitement surrounding the prospect of humans returning to the Moon, both commercial interests and scientists stand to gain.

The Moon is uniquely suitable for researchers to build telescopes they can’t put on Earth because it doesn’t have as much satellite interference as Earth, nor a magnetic field blocking out radio waves. But only recently have astronomers like me started thinking about potential conflicts between the desire to expand knowledge of the universe on one side and geopolitical rivalries and commercial gain on the other, and how to balance those interests.

As an astronomer and the co-chair of the International Astronomical Union’s working group Astronomy from the Moon, I’m on the hook to investigate this question.

Everyone to the south pole

By 2035 – just 10 or so years away – American and Chinese rockets could be carrying humans to long-term lunar bases.

Both bases are planned for the same small areas near the south pole because of the near-constant solar power available in this region and the rich source of water that scientists believe could be found in the Moon’s darkest regions nearby.

Unlike the Earth, the Moon is not tilted relative to its path around the Sun. As a result, the Sun circles the horizon near the poles, almost never setting on some crater rims. There, the never-setting Sun casts long shadows over nearby craters, hiding their floors from direct sunlight for the past 4 billion years, 90% of the age of the solar system.

These craters are basically pits of eternal darkness. And it’s not just dark down there, it’s also cold: below -418 degrees Fahrenheit (-250 degrees Celsius). It’s so cold that scientists predict that water in the form of ice at the bottom of these craters – likely brought by ancient asteroids colliding with the Moon’s surface – will not melt or evaporate away for a very long time.

A close-up shot of the Moon's surface, with the left half covered in shadow, and the right half visible, with gray craters. Tiny blue dots in the center indicate PSRs.
Dark craters on the Moon, parts of which are indicated here in blue, never get sunlight. Scientists think some of these permanently shadowed regions could contain water ice. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

Surveys from lunar orbit suggest that these craters, called permanently shadowed regions, could hold half a billion tons of water.

The constant sunlight for solar power and proximity to frozen water makes the Moon’s poles attractive for human bases. The bases will also need water to drink, wash up and grow crops to feed hungry astronauts. It is hopelessly expensive to bring long-term water supplies from Earth, so a local watering hole is a big deal.

Telescopes on the Moon

For decades, astronomers had ignored the Moon as a potential site for telescopes because it was simply infeasible to build them there. But human bases open up new opportunities.

The radio-sheltered far side of the Moon, the part we never see from Earth, makes recording very low frequency radio waves accessible. These signals are likely to contain signatures of the universe’s “Dark Ages,” a time before any stars or galaxies formed.

Astronomers could also put gravitational wave detectors at the poles, since these detectors are extraordinarily sensitive, and the Moon’s polar regions don’t have earthquakes to disturb them as they do on Earth.

A lunar gravitational wave detector could let scientists collect data from pairs of black holes orbiting each other very closely right before they merge. Predicting where and when they will merge tells astronomers where and when to look for a flash of light that they would otherwise miss. With those extra clues, scientists could learn how these black holes are born and how they evolve.

The cold at the lunar poles also makes infrared telescopes vastly more sensitive by shifting the telescopes’ black body radiation to longer wavelengths. These telescopes could give astronomers new tools to look for life on Earth-like planets beyond the solar system.

And more ideas keep coming. The first radio antennae are scheduled to land on the far side next year.

Conflicting interests

But the rush to build bases on the Moon could interfere with the very conditions that make the Moon so attractive for research in the first place. Although the Moon’s surface area is greater than Africa’s, human explorers and astronomers want to visit the same few kilometer-sized locations.

But activities that will help sustain a human presence on the Moon, such as mining for water, will create vibrations that could ruin a gravitational wave telescope.

Also, many elements found on the Moon are extremely valuable back on Earth. Liquid hydrogen and oxygen make precious rocket propellant, and helium-3 is a rare substance used to improve quantum computers.

But one of the few places rich in helium-3 on the Moon is found in one of the most likely places to put a far-side, Dark Ages radio telescope.

Finally, there are at least two internet and GPS satellite constellations planned to orbit the Moon a few years from now. Unintentional radio emissions from these satellites could render a Dark Ages telescope useless.

The time is now

But compromise isn’t out of the question. There might be a few alternative spots to place each telescope.

In 2024, the International Astronomical Union put together the working group Astronomy from the Moon to start defining which sites astronomers want to preserve for their work. This entails ranking the sites by their importance for each type of telescope and beginning to talk with a key United Nations committee. These steps may help astronomers, astronauts from multiple countries and private interests share the Moon.The Conversation

Martin Elvis, Senior Astrophysicist, Smithsonian Institution

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

Lucerne man charged in Lake County’s first fentanyl homicide case

Joe Nathan Boggs Jr., 27, of Lakeport, California. Lake County Jail photo.


LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The investigation into the November 2023 death of a Lakeport teenager has led to the first Lake County case in which an individual has been charged with homicide for furnishing fentanyl.

The Lake County Sheriff’s Office said Joe Nathan Boggs Jr., 27, of Lucerne, was arrested early Friday morning for second degree murder for the death of 17-year-old Illeanna Makena Frease.

He also was booked for possession of drugs for sale, transportation of a controlled substance for sale and furnishing a controlled substance to a minor.

Boggs’ bail is set at $1 million. He’s due to be arraigned in Lake County Superior Court on Monday.

Frease died Nov. 10, 2023. She was a member of the Elem Indian Colony.

The sheriff’s office released her name in connection with the case with the permission of her family.

“The Lake County Sheriff’s Office wants to extend its condolences to Illeanna’s family and friends,” Sheriff's spokesperson Lauren Berlinn wrote in her report on the case.

In a Friday afternoon Facebook post, Frease’s mother, Michaela John, remembered her daughter, known as “Illi,” as a bright young woman “loved fiercely by all who knew her — especially her siblings. She had her whole life ahead of her before she was tragically taken from us on November 10, 2023.”

John said her daughter graduated high school early at age 16, “despite experiencing the adversity and isolation that comes with growing up Native in Lake County, California. Her sweet, loving, determined spirit was her greatest strength. She was also a descendant of a long line of women who shared that strength, were survivors of genocide, and became back bones of their respective tribal nations.”

She said of Boggs, who also is Native American, “He trafficked my daughter and poisoned her to death. This drug trafficking, predatory murderer operated both on and off tribal lands openly, with no regard for the damage he was causing. Without accountability.”

The background of the case

Berlinn said the sheriff’s office was dispatched to a coroner’s case at Sutter Lakeside Hospital regarding Frease on the day of her death.

During the initial coroner’s investigation, it was believed Frease died from an overdose, Berlinn said.

Berlinn said an autopsy was conducted, and once toxicology reports were received in February, it was determined that Frease had overdosed from a combination of fentanyl and alcohol.

With the confirmation of the toxicology results, the Sheriff’s Office Major Crimes Unit initiated a criminal investigation to determine who provided the fentanyl to Frease, Berlinn said.

“Throughout the investigation, detectives interviewed witnesses, authored search warrants, and reviewed digital data from cell phones and social media,” Berlinn said in the statement.

Based on the evidence, Berlinn said investigators determined Boggs was responsible for providing the fentanyl to Frease, which ultimately led to her death.

The sheriff’s Major Crimes Unit held a briefing with the Lake County District Attorney’s Office and it was determined Boggs would be prosecuted for Frease’s murder, Berlinn said.

On Thursday, Berlinn said sheriff’s detectives obtained an arrest warrant for Boggs, which led to his arrest the following day.

Lake County Superior Court records show that Boggs has an extensive criminal record stretching back to 2017 that includes felony cases with charges involving drugs, vandalism, assault for a domestic violence case, grand theft and possession of a gun by a convicted felon.

Convictions in 2018 for drugs — which included Boggs and another man being arrested after attempting to sell drugs to an undercover detective — as well as in 2019 for assault, in 2022 for grand theft and 2023 for a felon in possession of a firearm led to state prison terms, according to court records.

Revocation of Boggs’ post release community supervision — which is provided to inmates released from the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation — led to county jail sentences in May of 2022 and January of 2023.

Court records also showed that two days before he was arrested in the Frease homicide case, Boggs was arraigned for a misdemeanor drug offense.

Berlinn encouraged anyone who believes they have any information regarding the Frease case to contact the Lake County Sheriff’s Office Major Crimes Unit Tip Line at 707-262-4088 and either Sgt. Jeff Mora or Det. Michael Nakahara will contact them.

Berlinn said that, within the last few years, law enforcement agencies across California and the country have successfully investigated and prosecuted fentanyl homicide cases.

“Illeanna’s case is Lake County’s first arrest for a fentanyl homicide,” Berlinn wrote in her report on the case. “The Lake County Sheriff’s Office will continue to combat the fentanyl crisis in Lake County and hold fentanyl dealers accountable.”

Illeanna Frease. Courtesy photo.

A devastating epidemic

Over the past decade fentanyl has become a national public health crisis, impacting people of all ages, walks of life, and ethnic and cultural backgrounds.

The Drug Enforcement Administration established National Fentanyl Awareness Day in May to raise awareness on “the serious dangers of fentanyl poisoning from fake pills and other illicit drugs.”

Lake County has been hard-hit by the crisis.

Frease’s death in late 2023 came at a time when there were other deaths of young Lake County residents — some of them tribal members like Frease — which prompted local agencies and tribes to issue a December statement that noted that there were “multiple incidents of youth opioid overdose” that had happened in Lake County communities.

“Each is a tragic and stark reminder consumption of drugs, even once, can prove fatal. With the rise of fentanyl, xylazine and similar chemical compounds, events such as these have become far too common. Families, school cohorts and communities are rocked to the core, and we grieve with those most affected,” the statement said.

Officials also took that opportunity to urge parents to speak to their children about drug use.

Among youth and young adults aged 15 to 24, the average annual overdose death rate is 12.6 out of every 100,000, the county reported.

Officials also reported that in 2022, more than 100,000 people died due to overdose in the United States; of those, 79 were Lake County residents.

The California Overdose Surveillance Dashboard showed that in 2022, in California there were 6,473 deaths and 21,316 emergency room visits related to fentanyl overdose.

The dashboard’s report on Lake County showed that black and Native American populations have been hit particularly hard by the opioid-related overdose epidemic, and are the populations with the leading numbers of deaths.

The Northshore communities of Nice and Lucerne have the highest overdose rates, based on the dashboard’s statistics.

The Indian Health Service quoted a Centers for Disease Control report that said that the American Indian and Alaska Native population had the highest drug overdose death rates in both 2020 and 2021, at rates of 42.5 and 56.6 deaths per 100,000 persons. Those numbers include a 33% increase in drug overdose deaths from 2020 through 2021.

“Tribal communities are experiencing an increase in overdoses stemming from polysubstance use. This is primarily caused by unintentional polysubstance use, which is when a person who takes drugs mixed or cut with other substances, like fentanyl, without their knowledge,” the Indian Health Service reported.

In Frease’s case, “Illeanna lost her life to an ever growing form of genocide, she was poisoned by Fentanyl,” her mother said in the Friday Facebook post.

“Lake County will attempt to prosecute this monster but that is not enough,” John wrote. “Prosecuting an individual drug trafficker is a band aide. Many individuals, many different systems failed my daughter – and she suffered the ultimate consequence of our community’s inaction. Our Tribal nations and Tribal people must act now, before more children like Illeanna are lost. Justice for Illeanna’s murder, and other missing and murdered Tribal people statewide, requires a call to action and a call for resources for a tribal task force that not only holds predators accountable on and off tribal lands but actively pursues justice for our Tribal people and Native Nations. We are in a dire need. This is an epidemic. To save lives we need resources on the ground and warriors on the front lines. The same old approach, 8-5 advocacy, nepotism, and lateral violence felt and experienced throughout Indian Country must stop.”

She added, “Awareness is not enough. We’re at war for the lives of our youth, the future is in our hands. I pray and fight for justice for my daughter, and yours.”

If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, help is available. Call or text 988 or chat at https://988lifeline.org/.

To learn how to get support for mental health, drug or alcohol issues, visit https://www.lakecountyca.gov/173/Behavioral-Health-Services.

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.


Red flag warning set to begin Saturday night

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — With winds expected to pick up on Saturday and Sunday, the National Weather Service has issued a red flag warning for Lake County.

The warning will be in effect from 11 p.m. Saturday through 5 a.m. Monday in areas below the 2,000 foot elevation mark.

At the same time, the National Weather Service said a previously issued fire weather watch is no longer in effect.

The National Weather Service said a red flag warning means that critical fire weather conditions
are either occurring now, or will shortly.

A combination of strong winds, low relative humidity, and warm temperatures can contribute to extreme fire behavior, the agency said.

Forecasters said a persistent dry air mass will keep low relative humidity values across Lake County, with strong, gusty west-northwest winds from 30 to 40 miles per hour developing on Sunday.

“This will yield a critical fire weather threat Sunday morning into Monday, particularly for the
south and east side of Lake County,” the forecast said.

Minimum relative humidity values are forecast to be in the mid 10 to around 20 percent on Sunday and Monday. Poor relative humidity recoveries in the 30 to 45 percent range overnight, the National Weather Service said.

Temperatures will be warm but not overly hot for the weekend and first half of the new week, ranging up to the low 90s during the day and high 40s at night.

Later in the week, conditions will get hotter, with temperatures rising to near the century mark during the day. Nighttime conditions see temperatures in the high 50s.

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.

Senate Insurance Working Group established to find legislative pathways to help stabilize market

In an effort to help address California’s growing insurance crisis, Senate President pro Tempore Mike McGuire (D-North Coast) on Friday announced the formation of the Senate’s Insurance Working Group.

The group is tasked with finding legislative pathways to help stabilize the insurance market for homeowners and consumers across the state, and explore how we can reduce the risk of homes lost to wildfires.

“California is making historic investments to reduce fire risk, make our communities more fire safe, and aggressively respond to wildfire. That said, despite these massive investments, and along with the solutions Governor Newsom and Commissioner Lara have implemented, more must — and can — be done to stabilize the market. Too many Californians are being left without options to protect their families and insure their life possessions,” McGuire said. “I’m incredibly grateful to these Senators who have stepped up and will be working hard to tackle the state’s insurance crisis and find additional real, meaningful solutions to meet this moment.”

Members of the group include Co-Chairs Majority Leader Lena Gonzalez (D-Long Beach) and Insurance Committee Chair Senator Susan Rubio (D-Baldwin Park), Senator Marie Alvarado-Gil (D-Jackson), Senator Josh Becker (D-Menlo Park), Senator Catherine Blakespear (D-Encinitas), Senator Dave Cortese (D-San Jose), Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa), Senator John Laird (D-Santa Cruz), Senator Monique Limón (D-Santa Barbara), and Senator Steve Padilla (D-San Diego).

The news comes two days after Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara released additional details of his plan to increase the writing of homeowners and commercial insurance policies in areas of the state with high wildfire risk and so transform the insurance market, as Lake County News has reported.

Governor increases California National Guard deployment to crack down on fentanyl smuggling

Cracking down on illicit drugs and those who smuggle them into California, Governor Gavin Newsom on Friday announced he is more than doubling the California National Guard’s Counter Drug Taskforce operations statewide, including at ports of entry along the border, from 155 to now nearly 400 service members.

Embedded in cross-government initiatives to combat transnational criminal organizations and the trafficking of illegal narcotics — like fentanyl — these CalGuard members with the Counter Drug Taskforce have been hired, trained, and placed at key locations statewide.

“Our top priority is the safety of our communities statewide. By working with state, local, and federal partners to take down transnational organizations and the illegal drugs they attempt to bring into our state, the state’s Counter Drug Taskforce is making a profound difference to hold smugglers accountable and take deadly drugs off our streets,” said Newsom.

During a recent visit to the border, Gov. Newsom was able to see firsthand the significant progress the Task Force has made.

“Beginning in 2022, the CalGuard’s Counter Drug Taskforce deployed 30 servicemembers to the San Ysidro, Otay Mesa, Tecate, and Calexico Ports of Entry to support our federal partners,” said CalGuard Major General Matthew Beevers. “Due to significant initial success, in 2023, we doubled our force across those Ports of Entry. Under Governor Newsom’s leadership and broad Congressional support, our Counter Drug Taskforce has grown from 155 full-time servicemembers to 392 today.”

Specifically, the Taskforce focuses on gathering information to interdict illegal narcotics trafficking, utilizing air and ground assets to build criminal investigations, and supporting personnel at border ports of entry to stop illegal narcotics trafficking.

Background to the effort

In May, Newsom announced CalGuard operations supported the seizure of 5.8 million pills containing fentanyl this year alone.

Last year, the governor increased the number of CalGuard service members deployed to interdict drugs at U.S. ports of entry along the border by approximately 50%.

The operations CalGuard supported resulted in the record seizure of 62,224 pounds of fentanyl in 2023 — a 1066% increase since 2021.

CalGuard’s coordinated drug interdiction efforts in the state are funded in part by California’s $30 million investment to expand CalGuard’s work to prevent drug trafficking by transnational criminal organizations and support from the Biden-Harris Administration to address humanitarian and security efforts.

A majority of fentanyl is smuggled into the U.S. at ports of entry by U.S. citizens, not by migrants seeking asylum, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

Synthetic opioids like fentanyl contribute to nearly 70% of overdose deaths. Gov. Newsom recently launched opioids.ca.gov, a one-stop tool for Californians seeking resources for prevention and treatment, as well as information on how California is working to hold Big Pharma and drug-traffickers accountable in this crisis.

The state is now set to purchase life-saving naloxone for approximately half of the current market price — saving more lives with this drug and maximizing taxpayer dollars.

The Governor’s Master Plan for Tackling the Fentanyl and Opioid Crisis provides a comprehensive framework to address the opioid and fentanyl crisis, including through aggressive steps to support overdose prevention efforts, hold the opioid pharmaceutical industry accountable, crack down on drug trafficking, and raise awareness about the dangers of opioids, including fentanyl.

In support of President Biden’s bilateral cooperation agreement with China on counternarcotics, the governor spoke with Chinese President Xi Jinping in October about combating the transnational shipping of precursor chemicals used to create fentanyl.

Space News: Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts

 

The Sun can send out eruptions of energetic particles. NASA/SDO via AP

NASA has set its sights on the Moon, aiming to send astronauts back to the lunar surface by 2026 and establish a long-term presence there by the 2030s. But the Moon isn’t exactly a habitable place for people.

Cosmic rays from distant stars and galaxies and solar energetic particles from the Sun bombard the surface, and exposure to these particles can pose a risk to human health.

Both galactic cosmic rays and solar energetic particles, are high-energy particles that travel close to the speed of light.

While galactic cosmic radiation trickles toward the Moon in a relatively steady stream, energetic particles can come from the Sun in big bursts. These particles can penetrate human flesh and increase the risk of cancer.

Earth has a magnetic field that provides a shield against high-energy particles from space. But the Moon doesn’t have a magnetic field, leaving its surface vulnerable to bombardment by these particles.

During a large solar energetic particle event, the radiation dosage an astronaut receives inside a space suit could exceed 1,000 times the dosage someone on Earth receives. That would exceed an astronaut’s recommended lifetime limit by 10 times.

NASA’s Artemis program, which began in 2017, intends to reestablish a human presence on the Moon for the first time since 1972. My colleagues and I at the University of Michigan’s CLEAR center, the Center for All-Clear SEP Forecast, are working on predicting these particle ejections from the Sun. Forecasting these events may help protect future Artemis crew members.

An 11-year solar cycle

The Moon is facing dangerous levels of radiation in 2024, since the Sun is approaching the maximum point in its 11-year solar cycle. This cycle is driven by the Sun’s magnetic field, whose total strength changes dramatically every 11 years. When the Sun approaches its maximum activity, as many as 20 large solar energetic particle events can happen each year.

Both solar flares, which are sudden eruptions of electromagnetic radiation from the Sun, and coronal mass ejections, which are expulsions of a large amount of matter and magnetic fields from the Sun, can produce energetic particles.

A coronal mass ejection erupting from the Sun.

The Sun is expected to reach its solar maximum in 2026, the target launch time for the Artemis III mission, which will land an astronaut crew on the Moon’s surface.

While researchers can follow the Sun’s cycle and predict trends, it’s difficult to guess when exactly each solar energetic particle event will occur, and how intense each event will be. Future astronauts on the Moon will need a warning system that predicts these events more precisely before they happen.

Forecasting solar events

In 2023, NASA funded a five-year space weather center of excellence called CLEAR, which aims to forecast the probability and intensity of solar energetic particle events.

Right now, forecasters at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Space Weather Prediction Center, the center that tracks solar events, can’t issue a warning for an incoming solar energetic particle event until they actually detect a solar flare or a coronal mass ejection. They detect these by looking at the Sun’s atmosphere and measuring X-rays that flow from the Sun.

Once a forecaster detects a solar flare or a coronal mass ejection, the high-energy particles usually arrive to Earth in less than an hour. But astronauts on the Moon’s surface would need more time than that to seek shelter. My team at CLEAR wants to predict solar flares and coronal mass ejections before they happen.

Two illustrations of a sphere with purple and green lines coming off it. On the left, the purple lines are coming off the top and the green lines off the bottom. On the right, the lines are scattered around and overlapping.
The solar magnetic field is incredibly complex and can change throughout the solar cycle. On the left, the magnetic field has two poles and looks relatively simple, though on the right, later in the solar cycle, the magnetic field has changed. When the solar magnetic field looks like the illustration on the right, solar flares and coronal mass ejections are more common. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Bridgman, CC BY

While scientists don’t totally understand what causes these solar events, they know that the Sun’s magnetic field is one of the key drivers. Specifically, they’re studying the strength and complexity of the magnetic field in certain regions on the Sun’s surface.

At the CLEAR center, we will monitor the Sun’s magnetic field using measurements from both ground-based and space-based telescopes and build machine learning models that predict solar events – hopefully more than 24 hours before they happen.

With the forecast framework developed at CLEAR, we also hope to predict when the particle flux falls back to a safe level. That way, we’ll be able to tell the astronauts when it’s safe to leave their shelter and continue their work on the lunar surface.The Conversation

Lulu Zhao, Assistant Research Scientist in Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering, University of Michigan

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

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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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