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News

Space News: SETI’s ‘Noah’s Ark’ – a space historian explores how the advent of radio astronomy led to the USSR’s search for extraterrestrial life

The planetary radar, built in 1960 in Crimea, from which the Morse signal ‘MIR, Lenin, USSR’ was sent in November 1962. National Radio Astronomy Observatory Archive

As humans began to explore outer space in the latter half of the 20th century, radio waves proved a powerful tool. Scientists could send out radio waves to communicate with satellites, rockets and other spacecraft, and use radio telescopes to take in radio waves emitted by objects throughout the universe.

However, sometimes radio telescopes would pick up the artificial radio signals from telecommunications. This interference threatened sensitive astronomy observations, causing inaccurate data and even damaging equipment. While this interference frustrated scientists, it also sparked an idea.

During the Cold War, a new field emerged at the intersection of radio astronomy and radio communications. It put forward the idea that astronomers could search for radio communications from possibly existing extraterrestrial civilizations. Astronomy usually dealt with observing the universe’s natural phenomena. But this new field made the detection of technologically, or artificially produced radio waves, the object of a natural science.

This field has continued today and is now called the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, or SETI. SETI encompasses all that scientists do to search for intelligent life beyond Earth. It includes one of the original uses of radio telescopes: to study signals from across the galaxy in hopes of detecting intelligent messages.

When the idea behind SETI was first proposed and pursued in the 1960s, only two countries, the U.S. and the USSR, had the technical capability for it. As the only space powers at the time, they were the key actors affected by radio frequency interference.

As a historian of science, I’ve worked to make sense of what happened throughout the history of Soviet SETI during the space race by analyzing a range of primary sources. SETI captured the scientific imagination of many prominent Soviet astronomers in the 1960s and early 1970s.

Astronomers have not yet confirmed any detection of radio signals – or any other kinds of signs – from extraterrestrial civilizations. But many scientists are still searching, even as their bold ideas run into obstacles. Some evidence suggests humans might be the only intelligent life in the universe.

Soviet SETI: The golden age of radio astronomy

SETI is intertwined with the profound changes brought by radio astronomy. Up until the second part of the 20th century, scientists could see astronomical objects and phenomena only in optical or visible light. Optical light is the same kind of light that the human eye is sensitive to.

After World War II, scientists figured out that they could peacefully use radar antennas, developed for use in that war, to detect radio signals coming from objects out in the universe. Deciphering these signals allowed researchers to study astronomical objects in the universe. They learned, for example, about the most abundant element: hydrogen.

In the former Soviet Union, the prominent radio astronomy pioneer Iosif Samuilovich Shklovsky played a key role in detecting radio signals from hydrogen.

Scientists knew that every chemical element would absorb certain wavelengths of light and reflect others, and the light signals that an object absorbed or reflected could tell astronomers what element it was. Most hydrogen could not be observed directly in optical light, so astronomers didn’t spot it out in space until they started looking beyond the visible light spectrum.

Shklovsky figured out how to detect hydrogen with radio waves, which helped astronomers map the distribution and motion of hydrogen gas in and between galaxies.

Historians generally consider the year 1960 the start of the golden age of radio astronomy. After the detection of hydrogen, astronomers discovered previously unknown types of stars, such as pulsars and quasars. These phenomena offered scientists new insights into the nature of astrophysical phenomena and fundamental physics.

A journal cover in Russian
The Priroda issue in which Shklovsky’s article ‘Is Communication with Intelligent Beings of Other Planets Possible?’ was published. Priroda/RAS

Shklovsky later grew fascinated with the possibility of using radio waves to contact other intelligent beings in the universe. In 1960, he published an article on this topic in one of the country’s most prestigious scientific journals.

Shklovsky’s article soon expanded into a widely popular book called “Universe, Life, Intelligence,” published in 1962. That same year, the USSR’s Academy of Sciences sent its first radio message in the direction of Venus from a radar in Crimea.

The experiment involved bouncing radio signals off the surface of Venus to transmit the following words using Morse code: Lenin, USSR and mir, which in Russian means both world and peace. Even though statistically increasing radio interference risk, this message was mainly symbolic. The Soviet Union wanted to depict its technological might and wasn’t expecting to communicate with extraterrestrials. Soviet SETI was thus not yet a real pursuit.

A man sitting at a desk, writing with a pen.
Iosif S. Shklovsky at a SETI conference in Soviet Russia in 1975. NRAO/AUI/NSF

Starting an organized search

Shklovsky and the majority of other radio astronomers pursuing the search for extraterrestrial intelligence were all located in central Russia at the time. The USSR Academy of Sciences was also located there. But this group needed more formal measures to move their search from a few initiatives into a coordinated effort.

Due to concerns over unwanted public attention, the scientists organized a conference far from Moscow, at the Byurakan Astrophysical Observatory in the Soviet Republic of Armenia, in 1964. At this conference, researchers formed a group specifically dedicated to studying artificial radio signals from space. With this group, SETI became a top-down, state-led activity.

A journal cover reading 'CETI' in Cyrillic – which stands for SETI in English – in big letters, with a picture of a galaxy
A 1971 Conference Proceedings volume focused on SETI (CETI in Cyrillic) and was published in Russian.

With this validation, scientists could now theoretically look for artificial signals, potentially from an alien origin. However, any discussions about artificial radio signals were subject to strict government surveillance, given the fact that military satellites depended on them, too.

Soviet scientists faced several obstacles. For example, their own government’s secrecy made coordination difficult. The Cold War also set limits on developing SETI internationally. However, they had a green light to search and study peculiar signals they suspected had artificial origin.

International collaboration

Efforts to collaborate internationally on artificial signals culminated in 1971 with a symposium, again at Byurakan. There, about 50 scientists – the majority from the U.S. and the USSR, but also some from Czechoslovakia, Hungary, the U.K. and Canada – agreed to disagree on how to best conduct SETI.

Some in attendance compared this gathering to Noah’s Ark, because an almost equal number of prominent scientists from East and West of the Iron Curtain managed to meet that year. And the gathering took place in Armenia at the foot of Mount Ararat, located in neighboring Turkey. This mountain is where archaeologists believe Noah’s Ark may have beached.

After almost a week of discussion at Byurakan, the two geopolitical blocks designated an official SETI group. That group still exists today, and it still connects researchers all around the world who conduct SETI research. Given the secrecy around radio signals in space, this international SETI group marked a momentous diplomatic achievement at the height of the Cold War.

A black and white photo of a group of people gathered by a large hill, and a black and white photo of writing reading 'Pamir Expedition, Search for Single pulses from Extra-ter. civilizations'
Postcard with Soviet scientists conducting SETI experiments in the Pamir region of Tajikistan, with a note on the back to their U.S. correspondent. NRAO/AUI/NSF

SETI started in the Soviet Union with a few strong Moscow-based initiatives. It continued through group events in Armenia – from the first state-level Soviet conference to the international one.

SETI is the first and only domain of astronomy to study artificial radio signals themselves. It indirectly addressed radio frequency interference during a time when these frequencies were highly unregulated.

Stakeholder countries eventually addressed their radio frequency interference issues with international agreements on radio frequency usage and allocation. An international committee approved a feasible and comprehensive radio frequency allocation plan for the first time in the 1970s. This plan has been revised and renewed ever since. Today, space scientists and astronomers use an internationally agreed upon plan to minimize this interference.

Remarkably, SETI began even before this allocation plan. SETI continues its rich legacy today by continuing to search for signals – and along the way discovering new astrophysical objects and phenomena.The Conversation

Gabriela Radulescu, Guggenheim Postdoctoral Fellow, Smithsonian Institution

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

Supervisors add $60,000 for hunger relief amid surging demand for food

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approved an additional $60,000 for three more weeks of hunger relief as food insecurity continues to strain Lake County, despite the end of the federal shutdown and the disbursement of delayed benefits.

The amount adds to the previously approved $80,000 on Nov. 4, which provided two weeks of food support for local residents in need while the federal shutdown froze the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP — the federal program that funds CalFresh, which a quarter of Lake County’s population relies on for food.

The funding allowed the county to bolster local pantries and food banks, which saw “never-before-seen lengths” of food distribution lines over the past two weeks, Lake County Social Services Director Racheal Dillman Parsons reported at Tuesday’s meeting.

Even with boosted supply, “Unfortunately, not all families could be served,” she said.

The federal shutdown ended on Nov. 12 with a continuing resolution opening the government through Jan. 31, 2026. Litigation against the federal government withholding November SNAP funds have been dropped. 

Dillman Parsons said that the delayed November CalFresh benefits have been issued and December benefits “will be issued as usual.” 

However, food insecurity continues to linger in Lake County and food banks are continuing to see increased demands.

Part of that strain predates the shutdown and is compounded with unemployment and consumer prices, Dillman Parsons said. “The cost of food in particular, went up 3.1% over the last year,” she added. 

The longest federal shutdown in history has worsened the situation with its “residual effect,” as Dilman Parsons called it, continuing to impact the vulnerable residents who rely on food aid and live on fixed incomes. 

She noted that finances have been disrupted for many families, and children who depend on free school meals will lose access during the November and December holidays, which total about three weeks. 

In Lake County, individuals qualified for full CalFresh benefits receive just $292 a month. 

“So could you imagine feeding yourself on $292 a month? It's not very much,” Dillman Parsons said. “So between the food banks and what everybody's experienced, I think that there is a lot of food insecurity happening, and I think that this just kind of pushed it over the edge for people.”

She shared the experience of an individual living on a fixed income who has spent “hours over years” waiting in food bank lines.

“When I have to rely on more coming out of my pocket that means not turning on the heater so that I don't have to pay for heating,” a passage from her presentation slide read. “It means not picking up as many prescriptions so that I don't have to pay a copay. It means trying to spend more on credit cards for food.”

With Supervisor Eddie Crandell absent, the remaining four supervisors voted unanimously to approve another $20,000 per week for the next three weeks through Dec. 9, continuing the support for local food distributions. 

Dillman Parsons noted that the request for additional funds would be temporary, no longer than Dec. 31, “because the county doesn’t have unlimited funding.”

“But doing a little extra for the community during the holidays would be nice, if you have the ability to do it,” she added. “There’s certainly a need within our community.”

Local food distribution sites reported unprecedented demand for food

Soon after the Board of Supervisors approved the initial $80,000 and formed the ad hoc workgroup to administer the funds, the county entered into an agreement with Redwood Empire Food Bank. 

Over the past two weeks, the partnership provided $70,000 worth of food to 10 local feeding partners, including Clear Lake Gleaners and other nonprofit and faith-based organizations.

The workgroup spent another $9,500 ordering five pallets of “Meals Ready to Eat,” or MREs, to be distributed among eight sites around the county including all Peers Support Centers, Behavioral Health in Lucerne, and Social Services in Lower Lake, at approximately 250 MREs per site.

However, shipping has been delayed several times and the MREs had not yet arrived by Tuesday, Dillman Parsons said. 

The remaining $500 was used to purchase 50 10-punch bus passes to help individuals without transportation reach food distribution sites. 

So far, food distributors say they have seen “unprecedented demand” and “never-before-seen length” of food lines, according to Dillman Parson’s presentation. 

Just last week, Clear Lake Gleaners and its sub-contracted sites reported serving a total of 1,753 meals around their nine sites. 

“I’m surprised at the Finley numbers,” Supervisor Helen Owen said of the 793 individuals served at the site.

Dillman Parsons said it’s their main site so “people from everywhere will come there.”

Still, the overwhelming demand for food was not completely fulfilled. 

“We talked to them to serve about 600 on that day, and had to scramble to get the other 193 bags together…and still have to turn people away,” said Social Services Program Manager Tera Gandolfo of the Finley situation. 

It was estimated that 20 individuals were left unserved at the site, although Dillman Parsons said the Gleaners did not have a mechanism to track exactly how many families were turned away.

Gandolfo recalled the day directing traffic for the site on Thursday, Nov. 6, when the federal government was still in shutdown and CalFresh benefits had not rolled out. 

“Thank everybody for their time, for being out there in the cold and potential rain," Gandolfo said. “Also they came two plus hours earlier than they normally do, because they knew it was going to be a heavier request from everybody.”

She continued: “And the line didn't stop, and it went all the way down their street and around the corner, and it just didn't stop.”

Find most updated food distribution information and Thanksgiving community meals on the Social Services Department’s Facebook page. 

Food insecurity lingers into future uncertainties

While the federal government reopens and food benefit distribution has resumed, concerns over long-term food insecurity still persist, along with other complications. 

During public comment, Margaux Kambara noted the additional challenges faced by immigrants in need of food. 

“It would be helpful for the ad hoc committee to remind partners that some neighbors with immigration issues do not feel safe picking up food supplies; measures that partners can take to keep neighbors safe are appreciated,” she said. “Measures such as identifying private or employee only spaces at food distribution sites would go a long way.”

Supervisor Bruno Sabatier noted that even though SNAP benefits are currently budgeted through September of next year, that doesn’t guarantee there won’t be problems over food benefits again if another shutdown begins on Jan. 31, when “some more politics is being played.” 

“So I just think we need to be prepared, because we know Jan. 31 it's probably going to happen again,” he said. 

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

Thompson leads 34 members of Congress to demand reversal of cancellation of bike and pedestrian infrastructure grants

On Monday, Congressman Mike Thompson (CA-04) led a group of 34 members of Congress demanding the U.S. Department of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy reverse the department’s cancellation of bike and pedestrian infrastructure projects across the country. 

The group demanded the department honor existing grant agreements and reaffirm its commitment to building safer, more connected communities.

“Communities across America have spent years planning bike lanes, trails, and pedestrian infrastructure that save lives and strengthen local economies,” said Thompson, whose district includes Lake County. “The Department’s decision to revoke these grants undermines local priorities and ignores Congress’s clear directive to support non-vehicular transportation. We’re calling on Secretary Duffy to reverse course and uphold the commitments made to our communities.”

Reports in recent weeks have detailed a wave of cancellations affecting projects in states such as Alabama, Illinois, New Mexico, and Connecticut. 

Each project had been awarded discretionary federal funding through programs such as BUILD, Safe Streets and Roads for All, and Reconnecting Communities — initiatives explicitly designed to improve road safety and accessibility for all users, not just drivers.

The members highlight examples of canceled grants for important projects such as:

• An $11.7 million bike lane project in Fairfield, Alabama.
• A $675,000 trail improvement grant in McLean County, Illinois.
• An $11.5 million rail trail in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
• A $5.7 million greenway project in Connecticut.

The lawmakers point out that many local governments have already incurred planning and design costs based on signed federal agreements. 

The lawmakers stress that cancelling these grants deprives communities of resources promised to make travel safer and spur local economic growth.

“Congress funded these programs to make streets safer, support healthy communities, and reduce congestion,” wrote the lawmakers. “Cancelling them is not in the best interest of the Department, the communities we represent, or the quality of life of the American people.”

Thompson and his colleagues are urging Secretary Duffy to reinstate the cancelled projects and ensure future funding continues for non-vehicular transportation initiatives.

A full copy of the letter can be viewed below.


November 17, 2025

The Honorable Sean Duffy, Secretary
United States Department of Transportation
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE
Washington, DC 20590

Dear Secretary Duffy:

As congressional supporters of bike infrastructure funding, we write with serious concerns over the Department of Transportation ignoring Congressional and local priorities through its cancellation of numerous bike and pedestrian projects. Congress supports investments in making bicycling safer through several funding mechanisms because we see the returns in stronger local economies, healthier residents, and safer roads.

Reports indicate that DOT cancelled discretionary grants because they were awarded to bicycling-related projects. For example:

Reporting indicates an $11.7 million project to add bike lanes in Fairfield, Alabama, was cancelled because it ran “counter to DOT’s priority of preserving or increasing roadway capacity for motor vehicles.”

A news report about a cancelled BUILD grant worth $675,000 in McLean County,
Illinois notes that “the Transportation Department told the county that the grant no longer aligned with its priorities.”

In Albuquerque, New Mexico, local reporting on a cancelled $11.5 million BUILD grant to construct a seven-mile rail trail indicates, “DOT’s withdrawal letter provided little justification beyond stating the department is focusing on car-based projects rather than people-based projects like the Rail Trail, according to the city.” The article states the trail “is estimated to generate $1 million to $3.2 million in annual economic impact and increase property values in the area.”

And in Connecticut, the cancellation of a $5.725 million grant for a greenway was
explained as not aligning with the department’s priorities to improve the quality of life of the American people. If that is a priority for transportation grants, then, numerous studies have shown shared trails contribute greatly to improved quality of life.

These congressionally funded discretionary grant programs were specifically authorized and  funded to support multimodal and bicycling projects. In the case of BUILD, Safe Streets and Roads for All, the Reconnecting Communities Program, and others, these programs reflect the will of Congress to support local communities’ road safety needs and the will of local communities who sought these grants.

We understand that these discretionary grants have been signed and agreed upon by both parties, including your agency, and they reflect valuable work and resources invested by local communities. Grantees have often already incurred costs upon the expectation of their grant agreement being executed, and so far grantees have yet to be offered a recourse to appeal their cancellation.

Cancelling these grants is not in the best interest of the U.S. Department of Transportation, the communities we represent, or the quality of life of the American people. Communities should be able to rely on an agreement signed by the federal government to build safer roads and trails for everyone.

These are common sense improvements in American communities, chosen as priorities by
American communities. Bike infrastructure investments generate economic activity and save vulnerable road users’ lives.

We ask that the U.S. Department of Transportation reconsider its cancellation of the funding  agreements it signed with communities regarding non-vehicular modes of transportation, and  continue to sign agreements for future projects related to bicycling and walking infrastructure.

Thank you for your full and fair consideration of this matter, consistent with applicable statute  and agency guidelines. We look forward to an update on these grant agreements in the near  future and how you plan to support bike infrastructure projects.

I treat menopause and its symptoms, and hormone replacement therapy can help – here’s the science behind the FDA’s decision to remove warnings

Reanalyses of earlier research have shown that hormone therapy is safe and effective for many women going through menopause. monkeybusinessimages/iStock via Getty Images Plus

For more than 20 years, hormone therapy for menopause has carried a warning label from the Food and Drug Administration describing the medication’s risk of serious harms – namely, cancer, cardiovascular disease and possibly dementia.

On Nov. 10, 2025, the FDA announced that drugmakers should remove these “black box” safety warnings.

The Conversation U.S. asked Genevieve Hofmann, a women’s health nurse practitioner at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, to explain how the decision will affect health care for people going through menopause or postmenopause.

How did the FDA’s decision come about?

When people think of hormone therapy for menopause, they generally think of systemic estrogen and progestogens – for example, pills or patches that deliver hormones throughout the body.

Health care providers prescribed hormone therapy to manage symptoms of menopause such as hot flashes, night sweats and brain fog much more widely in the 1980s and 1990s than they do today. That’s because in the early 2000s, researchers analyzed data from a study called the Women’s Health Initiative and reported that hormone therapy increased the risk of breast cancer, heart disease, blood clots and stroke, as well as cognitive decline after menopause.

After this research was first published in 2002, the use of hormone therapy fell by 46% within six months – both because clinicians were reluctant to prescribe it and patients were fearful of taking it. In 2003, the FDA added black box warnings – the most serious warnings, indicating a risk of serious harm or death – to all estrogen-containing hormone products for menopause.

The FDA announced on Nov. 10, 2025, that it will ask drug companies to remove ‘black box’ warnings from hormone therapy for menopause.

But researchers soon pointed out methodological flaws in the analysis. And over the past two decades, careful reanalyses of data from that study, as well as newer studies, have shown that systemic hormone therapy is very safe for most women, though there are nuances surrounding its use.

Meanwhile, women’s health experts have been increasingly vocal in the past five years in calling to remove the black box warnings from a form of hormone menopause therapy that’s applied locally, not systemically. Topical localized estrogen is applied directly to the vagina and surrounding areas, usually in the form of a cream or vaginal insert. It’s used to treat the genitourinary syndrome of menopause, which manifests as genital and urinary symptoms.

Even though topical estrogen products are extremely safe and were not evaluated in the Women’s Health Initiative study, the FDA warnings were added to them, too.

In July 2025, the FDA held an expert panel to discuss what’s currently known about the risks and benefits of hormone therapy for menopause. At the meeting, most experts urged the agency to remove the warning labels on topical vaginal estrogen products.

The Nov. 10 announcement was the outcome of that discussion, and it included both systemic and topical hormone therapy.

Why is systemic estrogen no longer considered unsafe?

Researchers are now finding that the balance of risks and benefits of systemic hormone therapy for menopause seems to depend strongly on when someone starts hormones, as well as the type, dose and length of use.

For women under 60 or within 10 years of their final period, the therapy is much safer than it is for older women. A 2017 follow-up of Women’s Health Initiative participants showed that overall deaths from any causes actually decreased in this younger cohort of menopausal women taking hormones.

For women who are more than 10 years from their final menstrual period, starting hormone therapy may increase their risk of cardiovascular disease. Researchers now refer to this as the timing hypothesis. Newer studies also support this idea.

Also, some ways of delivering hormones to the body turned out to be safer than others. Taking estrogen orally, as pills or tablets, carries a higher risk of blood clots. Those risks go away when it’s delivered through the skin using a patch, gel or spray. Many more options for hormone therapy exist today than in the early 2000s.

Additionally, it’s well established that hormone therapy improves bone health by preventing bone loss. Some studies suggest that in younger menopausal women, it may actually protect against cardiovascular disease, though this link is not yet proven and needs more study.

Unfortunately, many people missed out on the timing window. In my practice, I see patients who went through menopause 10 or 15 years ago and either didn’t get hormone therapy at the time or stopped taking it when the initial Women’s Health Initiative results came out. Now, they are hearing about the benefits, and many want to try it. But their higher cardiovascular risk may overshadow the benefit.

What about topical estrogen?

Genitourinary syndrome of menopause is ubiquitous – it affects every person with ovaries who goes through menopause, and the symptoms tend to worsen with age.

They include vaginal dryness, painful sex and urinary issues such as an increase in urgency or frequency, along with incontinence. Urinary tract infections often tend to get more frequent with menopause, particularly in older women. Treating them can require multiple courses of antibiotics.

Tissues in the genitourinary area are loaded with estrogen receptors – proteins in cells that bind the hormone. So adding some estrogen back to these areas can help restore the quality and thickness of these tissues, and possibly even promote the growth of healthy bacteria around the vagina and the urinary tract. The treatment can greatly improve quality of life and promote better health and longevity.

Despite topical estrogen’s safety and effectiveness, the FDA did not distinguish between it and systemic estrogen when adding the black box warnings in 2003. For this reason, many providers whose patients have symptoms relating to the genitourinary syndrome of menopause have been reluctant to prescribe it. Often, providers simply don’t know that it has a different safety profile than systemic estrogen.

How will removing the black box warnings affect patients?

Overall, I see this as a big win for women and their ability to manage the symptoms of menopause. I think this will make clinicians and patients far less anxious about prescribing and taking this medication.

Clinicians like me who specialize in women’s health and menopause – and who have been following the research – have been safely prescribing hormone therapy all along. But many general practitioners who often lacked either menopause-specific training or the time and resources to stay on top of the latest findings have been more reluctant to do so.

Safety concerns that led to the black box warnings, especially in regard to local vaginal estrogen, have turned out to be overblown. While clinicians still need to consider who is a good candidate for systemic hormone use, the evidence shows that for most people, it is a safe option.

Even more important, patients who were previously convinced that hormone therapy was unsafe may feel more comfortable discussing it with their provider and considering it. And if they do receive a prescription for hormone therapy, I hope that the likelihood of them starting this effective treatment is no longer hindered by reading a scary package insert that was based on outdated evidence.

While this medication is not a silver bullet that reverses aging, starting hormones at the right time can safely improve symptoms that diminish people’s quality of life. So if you’re having symptoms that are bothersome, consider asking your provider about menopause hormone therapy to help manage them.The Conversation

Genevieve Hofmann, Assistant Professor of Nursing and Women's Health, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

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

Clearlake Animal Control: ‘Spot’ and the dogs

“Spot.” Photo courtesy of Clearlake Animal Control.

CLEARLAKE, Calif. — Clearlake Animal Control continues to have new additions to its lineup of dogs waiting for new homes.

The shelter has 49 adoptable dogs listed on its website.

This week’s dogs include “Spot,” a 2-year-old male pit bull mix with a brown and white coat.

Shelter staff said Spot has a lot of energy, loves to run and play with toys. “Spot walks well on leash and is very friendly and would love a home of his own,” shelter staff said.
 
The shelter is located at 6820 Old Highway 53. It’s open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. 

For more information, call the shelter at 707-762-6227, emailThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or visit Clearlake’s adoptable dogs here.

This week’s adoptable dogs are featured below.

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. 

Lake County Rotary clubs partner with Polly Klaas Foundation to stop the sex-trafficking and exploitation of children

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Polly Klaas Community Theater and the Polly Klaas Foundation have announced a new partnership with Lake County Rotaries including Kelseyville, Lakeport and Clearlake.

This collaboration unites three treasured local Rotary clubs in a shared mission to ensure the safety of the children in our communities.

An estimated 85% of missing children are classified as runaways, with many having been lured by adult predators online. 

National experts, including the Polly Klaas Foundation and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, have identified a disturbing rise in “online abductions,” with one in six runaway children ultimately trafficked for sex. 

Lake County is particularly vulnerable due to its rural geography, limited preventative resources, and proximity to trafficking corridors like Interstate 5 and major urban centers. The urgency to act is clear — and Rotary officials said they can lead this vital effort.

“Knowledge is our most powerful tool. Prevention through education can stop the grooming process before it begins,” the local Rotary clubs said in their announcement.

That's why they are partnering with the Polly Klaas Foundation to bring their Social Media Safety Education, or SMSE, program to Lake County middle schoolers and their families.

The Polly Klaas Foundation, or PKF, has over three decades of experience supporting families of missing children. Their SMSE program is grounded in real-world cases and designed to teach youth how online behavior can make them vulnerable to exploitation.

PKF is uniquely positioned to deliver this message with credibility and impact — they are not speaking in theory but from direct experience with victims and rescues. Their evidence-based approach addresses how online interactions can lead to real-life danger.

The goal is to give children the tools they need to understand the red flags and then how to safely disengage from these online threats.

The Polly Klaas Foundation was established in 1993 after the abduction and murder of 12-year-old Polly Klaas from her home in Petaluma.

In the beginning, the foundation’s primary focus was to help families of missing children. “Over time we have evolved to focus on child safety and prevention programs… so they do not go missing in the first place.”

PKF’s primary mission remains the recovery of missing children and keeping children safe within our communities. Through its services, they have helped more than 10,000 families find their missing children. PKF’s Social Media Safety Education program has quickly become PKF’s “crown jewel” in missing child prevention.

About the collaboration
 
The interactive SMSE class provides students with vital information to help keep them safe online, thus protecting them from online predators. 

“Educating the parents of our young adults may be the difference between life or unspeakable heartbreak,” said Lake County Rotary’s Mark Lipps.

PKF’s Executive Director, Ciara Shuttleworth, furthers this sentiment by saying, “It is no longer that a predator might come in through an unlocked door; what we address now is how to keep your children safe in their own bedrooms through online safety education.”

The Lake County Rotary clubs are hosting a series of public presentations early in 2026.

All of the presentations begin at 5:30 p.m. on the following dates:

• Thursday, Jan. 8: Kelseyville/Lakeport at Kelseyville High School.
• Tuesday, Jan. 27: Middletown Middle School.
• Wednesday, Jan. 28: Upper Lake/Lucerne at the middle school.
• Thursday, Jan. 29: Konocti Unified, English presentation at Obsidian Middle School
• Friday, Jan. 30: Konocti Unified, Spanish presentation at Obsidian Middle School.

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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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