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News

3.5-magnitude quake reported near The Geysers Wednesday

COBB, Calif. – A 3.5-magnitude earthquake was reported near The Geysers geothermal steamfield early Wednesday morning.

The US Geological Survey reported that the quake occurred at 2:02 a.m. at a depth of 1.6 miles, with its epicenter located three miles east of The Geysers, three miles south southwest of Cobb and three miles west northwest of Anderson Springs.

Nine shake reports from six zip codes – Middletown, Cloverdale, Larkspur, Santa Rosa, El Cerrito and Sacramento – were submitted to the USGS by 11 p.m. Wednesday.


A 3.4-magnitude quake was reported near Anderson Springs on June 29, as Lake County News has reported.

E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews.

Debt law could tighten access to docs under TRICARE

Low reimbursements are the No. 1 reason physicians say they turn away beneficiaries who use TRICARE Standard, the military’s fee-for-service insurance option, or TRICARE Extra, the preferred provider option, according to TRICARE health care provider surveys.


Access to health care for these two groups of beneficiaries could become an even bigger challenge thanks to the convoluted deficit-reduction deal hammered out last weekend between the Obama administration and leaders in Congress.


The Budget Control Act of 2011 (S. 365), which President Obama signed into law Aug. 2, establishes a two-step process toward reducing deficit spending by $2.4 trillion over the next decade.


Step one directs Congress to cut discretionary spending by $917 billion to include $350 billion from defense budgets base on priorities set by a roles and missions study.


Step two has Hill leaders establishing a 12-member committee of lawmakers, to be divided evenly between Democrats and Republicans, an arrangement that appears designed to produce gridlock. They are to identify an additional $1.5 trillion in reductions from entitlements and tax reforms.


This bipartisan committee is to report out legislation agreed to by at least seven of its members by Nov. 23, 2011, to produce the required cuts. The full Congress then must vote on the recommendations by Dec. 23.


With Republican leaders already vowing to assign to the committee only lawmakers rigidly opposed to revenue increases of any sort, including any tax bump for the wealthy or loophole closing for corporations, and Democrats vowing to protect Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, the likelihood of stalemate seems quite high.


That’s where the risk surfaces regarding access to health care for beneficiaries who rely on TRICARE Standard or Extra.


If the committee of 12 can’t agree or the full Congress votes down their plan, the Budget Control Act inflicts its own formula: automatic cuts of $1.2 billion, half to come out of future defense budgets and the other half from entitlement programs.


“The deal includes an automatic sequester on certain spending programs to ensure that—between the Committee and the trigger – we at least put in place an additional $1.2 trillion in deficit reduction by 2013,” a White House fact sheet on the arrangement explains.


The arbitrary cut “would be divided equally between defense and non-defense programs, and it would exempt Social Security, Medicaid, unemployment insurance, programs for low-income families, and civilian and military retirement. Likewise, any cuts to Medicare would be capped and limited to the provider side.”


This last sentence, underlined and made bold in the White House fact sheet, ignores the likelihood beneficiaries still would be hurt as more doctors, feeling underpaid, turn away Medicare and TRICARE patients.


Any cut in Medicare provider fees would tighten access to care for TRICARE beneficiaries too because, for the past 20 years, TRICARE physician fees, by law, have been linked to fees allowed under Medicare. If Medicare reimbursements are slashed, doctors who accept TRICARE Standard and Extra patients feel the same financial pain.


Retired Air Force Col. Mike Hayden, deputy director of government relations for Military Officers Association of American, said TRICARE users clearly have reason worry if the 12-member committee fails to reach a deal.


“Anything that lowers payments to providers will negatively impact beneficiary access to both TRICARE and Medicare,” Hayden said.


Spending-cut mandates in the new budget control law also could thwart efforts to correct a long-standing flaw in the Medicare fee formula, which has threatened access to care for TRICARE patients for many years.


The Balanced Budget Act of 1997 attempted to get Medicare costs under control by adopting a mechanism called Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) for setting spending targets for physician services. When annual targets are met, doctor rates are to be adjusted by medical inflation. When SGR targets are exceeded, doctor reimbursements are to be lowered.


The problem, critics charge, is that Congress set SGR targets too low from the start, failing to take account of cost growth factors such as additional physician services caused by advances in medical technology.


It won’t surprise observers of the debt-ceiling fiasco to learn that Congress has lacked the political will either to impose fee cuts called for under the SGR formula or to replace the formula with one more realistic. Instead, at least once a year, physicians who treat Medicare and TRICARE patients face the threat of an enormous cut to reimbursements.


The last temporary relief bill from SGR, passed in December 2010, avoided a whopping 25 percent cut in Medicare and TRICARE doctor payments set to take effect Jan. 1, 2011. In 2010, Congress passed multiple month-to-month stopgap measures rather than a permanent fix.


If Congress fails to correct the SGR formula again this year, the threatened fee cut hanging over Medicare and TRICARE physicians will climb near to 30 percent by the new deadline of Jan. 1, 2012.


Now a different automatic trigger mechanism, aimed at Medicare and TRICARE physicians by the new budget control law, Hayden said, “places the bigger problem – the looming SGR fix – definitely at risk.”


The Congressional Budget Office recently estimated that a one-year SGR fix costs the government $22 billion. A permanent fix would cost $280 billion over 10 years. Meanwhile, that hole in Medicare’s budget grows ever deeper, and physicians who treat Medicare and TRICARE patients face the growing threat of a deep fee cut.


So 14 years ago, an attempt to control Medicare costs produced an automatic and ineffective doctor fee formula. Today, another automatic solution to curb spending, designed for lawmakers who won’t make tough decisions on their own, threatens more mischief for patients and providers.


To comment, e-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., write to Military Update, P.O. Box 231111, Centreville, VA, 20120-1111 or visit: www.militaryupdate.com.


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Dump truck hits power pole near Hidden Valley Lake; repairs lead to blackout

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Traffic control was in effect on Highway 29 on Monday, August 15, 2011, due to work on power lines impacted by a dump truck's collision with a power pole. Photo by Sheila Pell.

 

 



HIDDEN VALLEY LAKE, Calif. – A downed telephone pole by the Shell gas station on Highway 29 stopped traffic and resulted in a darkened Hidden Valley Lake on Monday evening.


Officials said a large dump truck hit a power pole and sheared it to the ground at about 7 p.m. on private property near Putah Lane, just south of the gas station.


California Highway Patrol Office Kory Reynolds said that William Lahue, 67, of Central Valley, Calif., was backing a 1995 International dump truck when he failed to observe a power pole behind him. Reynolds said Lahue struck the pole and dislodged it.


Lahue was not injured in the collision and no power was lost to Pacific Gas & Electric customers, said Reynolds.


Charlie Laird, a fire apparatus engineer paramedic with South Lake County Fire, said the call came in at about 7:15 p.m.


While the crash didn't cause the outage, Laird said PG&E had to cut the power “for safety reasons” due to tension on the line.


“We requested they evacuate the (gas) station” for safety reasons, said South Lake County Fire Battalion Chief Scott Upton.


While there were no injuries, the incident drew a stream of emergency vehicles – two fire engines, one from Hidden Valley Lake and one from Middletown, along with an ambulance and CHP.


Construction workers who were working on the road when the incident took place slowed and directed traffic on Highway 29, which backed up for hours in both directions.


Power was restored at 3 a.m. Tuesday, Upton said.


Reynolds said CHP Officer Dan Frederick is investigating the collision.


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews.

'California Indian,' shot on local locations, to have Lake County premiere Aug. 26

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Chi (Gil Birmingham), Rich (Gary Farmer) and Nick (Timothy Ramos) at the marina, having devised a counter strategy to protect the tribe using their sovereign rights in the movie

CHP responds to numerous crashes, traffic issues Monday

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Monday proved a busy day for Lake County's California Highway Patrol officers, who responded to several crashes around the county.


CHP Officer Kory Reynolds said officers responded to six collisions, made an arrest during a traffic stop, and later arrested two drivers for driving under the influence after one crashed and went into Clear Lake and another hit the fountain at Konocti Harbor Resort & Spa.


The first arrest occurred after Officer Erich Paarsch made a traffic stop at 9:30 a.m. Monday for a registration violation on a motorcycle being ridden by Joseph Thomas, 27, of Clearlake, Reynolds said.


He said Thomas was detained as an investigation revealed that he was not licensed and a false registration tab was on the license plate.


During a search of Thomas a large sum of money was located as well as other evidence of drug trafficking. Thomas was booked into the Hill Road Correctional Facility for falsely displaying registration and was released on $5,000 bail, according to Reynolds.


In the first crash of the day, which Reynolds said occurred at 12:10 p.m., Scott Ekstrand of Kelseyville was driving his 1990 Buick La Sabre and attempting to turn right onto Highway 29 from C Street in Lower Lake when he failed to see an approaching 2006 Ford F-150 driven by Colleen Posey, 49, of Middletown, who also was heading northbound.


Ekstrand attempted his turn and collided with Posey. Reynolds said Posey was transported to St. Helena Hospital Clearlake with complaints of pain, but Ekstrand was not injured. Officer Randy Forslund is investigating the collision.


The day's next incident, at 1:35 p.m., involved Kenneth Dossey, 61, of Eureka, who was driving his 1994 Geo Tracker northbound on Highway 29 north of Diener Drive near Lower Lake at approximately 55 miles per hour, Reynolds said.


For unknown reasons Dossey allowed his vehicle to drift off the west shoulder. Reynolds said Dossey overcorrected and traveled across both lanes and exited the east shoulder, and the vehicle traveled down an embankment and struck two trees.


Reynolds said Dossey was taken by REACH to Santa Rosa Memorial hospital with a complaint of pain and lacerations to his head and face. Officer Mark Crutcher is investigating the collision.


At 3:20 p.m. Santiago Ricci, 53, of Lucerne was driving his vehicle, a 1980 Ford F-150, eastbound on Highway 20 west of Foothill Drive in Lucerne at approximately 55 miles per hour when he allowed his vehicle to drift off the south shoulder. Reynolds said the vehicle traveled through some brush and into Clear Lake.


Ricci was not injured in the collision and was located at the scene. Reynolds said Ricci was arrested for driving under the influence. Officer Brendan Bach is investigating the incident.


At 4:50 p.m., Lura Rockhold, 40, of Kelseyville was driving her vehicle, a 1997 Toyota 4Runner northbound on Wildcat Road in Kelseyville at approximately 10 miles per hour when she turned her vehicle to the right, causing her to collide with a bridge guardrail and overturn, Reynolds said.


He said Rockhold suffered a minor injury in the collision, which is being investigated by Officer Crutcher.


At 7 p.m. hours William Lahue, 67, of Central Valley, Calif., was backing a 1995 International dump truck on private property near Putah Lane in Hidden Valley Lake when he failed to observe a power

pole behind him and struck the pole, dislodging it, Reynolds said.


Lahue was not injured in the collision and no power was lost to Pacific Gas & Electric customers, Reynolds said. South Lake County Fire officials said a power outage that affected Hidden Valle Lake for several hours resulted from PG&E cutting the power for safety reasons. Officer Frederick is investigating the collision.


In the last incident of the day, which took place at 9:40 p.m., Raymond Casillias, 21, of Lakeport was driving a 1995 Saturn northbound on Soda Bay Road when he lost control of the vehicle and struck the rock fountain at the entrance to Konocti Harbor Resort in Kelseyville, Reynolds said.


Casillias and his three passengers were not injured in the collision, but Casillias was contacted at the scene and arrested for driving under the influence, Reynolds said. Officer Frederick is investigating the collision.


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews.

Firefighters contain Knoxville fire; work on mop up to continue

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Firefighters conducted backfiring operations on the eastern and northern aspects of the Knoxville fire near Lake Berryessa in Napa County, Calif., on Saturday, August 13, 2011. The backfires helped stop the fire's progress and shortened the campaign by an estimated two to three days. Photo by Gary McAuley.

 

 

 

 

Fire officials reported Monday that a wildland fire burning in rugged terrain near Lake Berryessa in Napa County had been contained, but mop up work on the area was continuing.


The Knoxville fire, which began Saturday afternoon, burned a total of 508 acres two miles north of Lake Berryessa, according to a Monday report from Cal Fire spokesperson Suzie Blankenship.


Blankenship's report noted that the fire was contained at 10 a.m. Monday. No evacuations were required and no structures were lost.


The cause remains under investigation, she said.


Throughout the weekend hundreds of firefighters from around the region – including from county fire protection districts including South Lake County Fire, Northshore Fire and Lake County Fire – participated in the effort, as Lake County News has reported.


Cal Fire said there were no injuries as a result of the blaze.


While the blaze is now under control, firefighters are continuing to clean up the fire area, located in steep and rugged terrain, according to Cal Fire.


The agency reported that three helicopters, 14 fire engines, six fire crews and 190 personnel remained on scene Monday.


Officials have stressed that the fire and the operations surrounding it have not impacted Lake Berryessa, which remains open to visitors.

 

Cooperating agencies on the fire included Cal Fire, Bureau of Land Management, California Highway Patrol, California Department of Fish and Game, Napa County Fire, South Lake Fire, Lake County Fire, Northshore Fire, Napa County Road Department and the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews.

 

 

 

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California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation crews leave the scene of the Knoxville fire in rural Napa County, Calif., on Saturday, August 13, 2011. The fire was contained on Monday, August 15, 2011. Photo by Gary McAuley.
 

 

 

 

 

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Aircraft, such as this plane pictured on Saturday, August 13, 2011, played a key part in battling the Knoxville fire near Lake Berryessa in Napa County, Calif., due to the rugged and steep terrain. The fire was contained on Monday, August 15, 2011. Photo by Gary McAuley.
 

 

 

 

 

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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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