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The small grass fire was reported at around 11 a.m. at the corner of Big Valley and Renfro, said Capt. Jim Dowdy of the Kelseyville Fire Protection District.
It was located on the roadside and began burning into an open field, said Dowdy. No structures were threatened.
The first Kelseyville engine on scene was able to contain the fire, said Dowdy, with a Lakeport Fire Protection District engine coming for backup being canceled before arrival.
Dowdy said the fire was held to a quarter-acre in size, and contained within about 10 minutes.
The cause is still under investigation, he said.
Red flag conditions for high winds were expected in the area today, said Dowdy, adding, “We're not really seeing any right now.”
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The incident currently is under investigation by the Lake County District Attorney's Office, which was called in to head up the case, as Lake County News has reported.
Clearlake Police Chief Allan McClain said Thursday that 26-year-old Sean Pryor was shot after confronting officers with weapons. Pryor is at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital in stable condition.
Based on policy and standard procedure, the officer who shot Pryor is on paid administrative leave and his name will not be released, McClain said in his report.
McClain said that at 10 a.m. Wednesday officers responded to an address in the 16000 block of 33rd Avenue on a report of an adult male inside the residence destroying property who had threatened to kill the other occupants.
When officers arrived they could hear someone breaking items inside the residence, McClain said.
Officers attempted to talk with Pryor, who McClain said was very agitated, uncooperative and refused to come to the door.
McClain said his officers obtained a key to the residence from family members and entered the residence through the front door.
As the officers entered the house Pryor confronted them, allegedly holding a large knife or machete in one hand, according to McClain.
McClain said Pryor had poured a flammable liquid onto the linoleum floor entry way. The first officer through the door slipped on the wet floor and fell to the ground, and when the officer went down Pryor attempted to light the flammable liquid but the liquid failed to ignite.
Pryor continued to move toward the officers and as Pryor stood over the officer on the ground the officer fired his weapon, McClain.
The officers on scene called for an ambulance and administered first aid to Pryor who was taken to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital for treatment.
The District Attorney’s Office is investigating this incident and any further comments regarding this investigation will come from their office, McClain said.
McClain urged anyone with information regarding this investigation to contact Lake County District Attorney Investigator John Flynn at 707-263-2722.
Caltrans announced this week that Lake Transit was among several rural North Coast transit agencies receiving more than $3 million in funds from the American Recover and Reinvestment Act of 2009.
Lake Transit Authority received the most of any North Coast transit group, with an award of $1,113,956 for replacement buses and to catch up on preventative maintenance.
In Del Norte County, Redwood Coast Transit was awarded $484,529, the city of Arcata received $220,000, the city of Eureka was awarded $150,000, Humboldt Transit Authority was awarded $519,516 and Mendocino Transit Authority received $606,000.
Caltrans reported that, statewide, $34 million was awarded to 77 rural agencies.
Lake Transit General Manager Mark Wall said they began monitoring the stimulus bill at the start of the year. He said they talked to Congressman Mike Thompson's office in order to try to influence the bill.
At the same time, they were trying to find a way to close the funding gap after the state diverted all transit funding.
“We lost 100 percent of our transit funds,” he said, which amounts to about $500,000, or 25 percent of the agency's operational budget.
Overall, the award equals nearly a third of the agency's 2009-10 budget, which includes $2,025,000 for operations and $1.5 million for capital, Wall said.
Actually applying for the stimulus funds was much like the process of applying for regular federal grant funding, which Lake Transit receives every year. “The process was similar but a little more complex this time,” Wall said, with more reporting, required monthly, on these funds.
The stimulus money included no operating funds, but it did provide preventive maintenance, some of which Lake Transit was having to take from its operational budget. Wall said that helped them make their budget this year.
A total of four applications were required to get all of the funding, Wall said.
Wall said they received $205,946 for three smaller, paratransit buses and $205,000 for preventive maintenance.
They also were able to apply for intercity funding because they operate routes outside of the county, he said.
Lake Transit received $360,000 to replace four of its larger buses, $24,000 for equipment such as radios and $120,000 for bus shelters.
“We did pretty well,” he said.
Wall said they're now in the process of having to “hurry up and spend it.”
He said Caltrans was swamped with those and other grant applications from around the state. Phil Frisbie of Caltrans' District 1 office in Eureka said those applications are being processed in the agency's Sacramento office.
Wall said Lake Transit is kind of in “survival mode,” so looking into purchasing hybrid buses is off into the future.
He said their priorities are to keep everything operating, replace the buses that need to be retired out and put in bus shelters.
If they hadn't received the federal grants, said Wall, “We would have had to cut a couple of bus routes,” and the lack of funding for vehicles could have led to reliability issues.
“So this is essential to us,” he said.
Battle over state funding continues
Despite the fact that voters approved statewide propositions such as 116 and 108, which allocated funds to transportation, the governor and the legislature diverted the funds away from agencies like Lake Transit, said Wall.
At the beginning of the year, Lake Transit was told it would receive $501,000 from the state transit system, an amount which had grown from $285,000 several years before due to the inflation in gas prices. The laws included an increase for agencies based on inflation.
“When gas prices go up suddenly, transit agencies naturally pay a lot more for fuel,” and the demand for ridership grows, Wall said.
Wall said Lake Transit's ridership grew significantly when gas prices peaked, and they've kept many of those riders even after prices dropped.
The California Transit Association sued the state over the fund raid and won. The Schwarzenegger administration appealed, but the Third Appellate Court upheld the ruling and declared the public transit funding raids illegal.
The case has since been submitted to the California Supreme Court, said California Transit Association spokesman Jeff Wagner.
Wagner said it's estimated that the state has taken nearly $4 billion since the association filed its suit in 2007.
He told Lake County News that the association has yet to be notified about whether the California Supreme Court will hear the case. The court typically observes a 60-day self-imposed deadline to decide on appeal petitions, and the deadline is fast approaching, since the state's appeal was filed on Aug. 11.
If the court does accept the case, a decision could occur around March 2010, but he said it's conceivable there could be a delay in action to buy the Legislature and administration another budget cycle to get their house in order.
Wagner said the association has been advised the the court can't compel the Legislature to repay the money that it has taken, although state officials have indicated that they would be liable for the funds. “We’re not certain how the court might ultimately rule on that aspect of things,” he said.
That leaves the association in a holding pattern for now, he said.
Wall said if the appellate court decision is upheld, Lake Transit is owned more than $1.4 million in back funds.
“We need that money,” he said.
“When we look ahead another year or so, we get out to 2011, and we may be cutting service, because this federal money will be gone,” he said.
Lake Transit is currently in the process of implementing some new changes, including adding service to its route three, from Clearlake to Calistoga and St. Helena. People wanting to travel back and forth to Napa County will find that they have more schedule options, including Saturday operations.
In addition, Lake Transit has taken their route one, from Clearlake to Lakeport, and made it into two routes. One of those routes, route eight, is a Lakeport loop that runs every two hours. The main route one won't see a real change, Wall added.
He said those changes should soon be included on Lake Transit's Web site, www.laketransit.org/ .
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Hosted by the Lake County Winery Association at Six Sigma Ranch and Winery, the competition will determine the winners in the first ever, comprehensive judging of Lake County wines.
The competition will culminate in a tasting that will take place from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Six Sigma Ranch and Winery, 13372 Spruce Grove Rd., Lower Lake.
Kaj Ahlmann, chairman of the Lake County Winery Association, said the competition is a great way to spread the word about Lake County's outstanding wines.
The contest is in two parts, the first of which took place in August when a panel of professional wine judges narrowed down the field of 168 wines down to 38 of the best that Lake County has to offer.
The prestigious panel of judges, made up of wine experts from around the country, included Steve Heimoff of The Wine Enthusiast Magazine; Deborah Parker Wong of The Tasting Panel Magazine; Traci Dutton of Culinary Institute of America; Doug Frost, master sommelier and master of wine; Chris Sawyer, “sommelier to the stars”; Tom DiNardo, sommelier and wine appraiser; Bob Foster, California Grapevine Newsletter; Alan Goldfarb, AppellationAmerica.com; Mike Dunne, Sacramento Bee; and Martha Dunne, Winegigs.com.
The second part of the competition is where the “people’s choice” aspect is engaged, and that is what is taking place this Saturday.
The public is invited to come and judge for themselves the best of what Lake County's wines. Attendees of the inaugural event will have the opportunity to blind taste all 38 of the judges’ nominations.
In addition to the finalists there will be 20 other wines to sample which earned from the judges awards of distinction.
Food will also be available, provided by Teo’s Lakeside Bistro, Nice; Main Street Pizza, Lakeport; Bigg's 155 Diner, Lakeport; and Twin Pine Casino's Manzanita Restaurant, Middletown.
Tickets are $25. You must be 21 years of age or older to purchase.
For more information, call 707-994-4068 or 707-355-2762 or visit www.lakecountywineries.org .
Ross A. Christensen is Lake County News' food and wine writer. Follow him on Twitter, http://twitter.com/Foodiefreak .
Billed as America's largest day of doing good, Make A Difference Day is scheduled to take place on Saturday, Oct. 24.
The Lake County Office of Education’s AmeriCorps program is holding its 10th annual “Make A Difference Day” food drive on that date from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
The event is a collaboration between the Lake County Office of Education’s AmeriCorps Program, the Lake County Hunger Task Force, Catholic Charities and the Lake County Community Action Agency.
During the years the food drive has collected and distributed more than 25,000 pounds of nonperishable foods within Lake County.
All donations are distributed to local families though the Lake County Community Action Agency in Clearlake and Lakeport, Catholic Charities based in Middletown, and all Lake County senior centers.
Volunteers will be collecting food at Hardester's Market in Middletown, Cobb and Coyote Valley; Safeway in Clearlake and Lakeport; Ray's Food Place in Clearlake; Red & White Market in Clearlake Oaks; Sentry Market in Nice; and Bruno’s Shop Smart and Grocery Outlet in Lakeport.
If you are interested in volunteering for this or one of the many other opportunities available here in Lake County, call your local AmeriCorps office at 707-263-6291 for more information.
The shooting occurred Wednesday morning, according to District Attorney Jon Hopkins.
A man at a residence on 33rd Avenue was injured in the shooting, Hopkins said. The officer was not hurt.
The names of the officer and the victim haven't been released.
Clearlake Police Chief Allan McClain and Lt. Craig Clausen didn't return calls for comment on Wednesday.
However, Hopkins said his office is now in charge of the incident, including releasing information about it.
“We've actually taken over the investigation because it's an officer-involved incident,” said Hopkins, which is part of a protocol that's invoked when such situations occur.
“It was Chief McClain's request that we come in and investigate the case,” he said.
Four of Hopkins' investigators were on scene since Wednesday morning, along with two state Department of Justice criminalists assisting with processing the scene under a search warrant, Hopkins said. He joined them in the afternoon and stayed until the evening.
Hopkins said he anticipated scene processing continuing into the night, with interviews also taking place Wednesday and into Thursday, although interviews could possibly take longer.
He was not prepared to release specifics about the incident or what led to the shooting, explaining that he is still verifying information and didn't want to comment preliminarily.
“That will be part of our investigation, getting all that information so it's accurate,” hes aid.
He said Clearlake Police officials have been present during the investigation, and some evidence may be stored with that agency.
Hopkins said he couldn't estimate when the investigation would be concluded or the results released.
The last officer-involved shooting the District Attorney's Office was called in to investigate took place at York's Mobile Home Park on Old Highway 53 in June 2008, as Lake County News has reported.
In that case, 63-year-old David Vestal was shot after allegedly pointing a shotgun at officers.
That investigation – which wasn't released until this past February, seven months after the incident – found no wrongdoing on the part of the officer.
Vestal's daughter, who was present at the incident along with her young son and boyfriend, later filed a lawsuit against the city which was paid by the city's insurance carrier.
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