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Space News: Earth-size stars and alien oceans – an astronomer explains the case for life around white dwarfs

White dwarf stars, like this one shown shrouded by a planetary nebula, are much smaller than stars like our Sun. NASA/R. Ciardullo (PSU)/H. Bond (STScI)

The Sun will someday die. This will happen when it runs out of hydrogen fuel in its core and can no longer produce energy through nuclear fusion as it does now. The death of the Sun is often thought of as the end of the solar system. But in reality, it may be the beginning of a new phase of life for all the objects living in the solar system.

When stars like the Sun die, they go through a phase of rapid expansion called the Red Giant phase: The radius of the star gets bigger, and its color gets redder. Once the gravity on the star’s surface is no longer strong enough for it to hold on to its outer layers, a large fraction – up to about half – of its mass escapes into space, leaving behind a remnant called a white dwarf.

I am a professor of astronomy at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. In 2020, my colleagues and I discovered the first intact planet orbiting around a white dwarf. Since then, I’ve been fascinated by the prospect of life on planets around these, tiny, dense white dwarfs.

Researchers search for signs of life in the universe by waiting until a planet passes between a star and their telescope’s line of sight. With light from the star illuminating the planet from behind, they can use some simple physics principles to determine the types of molecules present in the planet’s atmosphere.

In 2020, researchers realized they could use this technique for planets orbiting white dwarfs. If such a planet had molecules created by living organisms in its atmosphere, the James Webb Space Telescope would probably be able to spot them when the planet passed in front of its star.

In June 2025, I published a paper answering a question that first started bothering me in 2021: Could an ocean – likely needed to sustain life – even survive on a planet orbiting close to a dead star?

An illustration showing a large bright circle, with a very small white dot nearby.
Despite its relatively small size, a white dwarf – shown here as a bright dot to the right of our Sun – is quite dense. Kevin Gill/Flickr, CC BY

A universe full of white dwarfs

A white dwarf has about half the mass of the Sun, but that mass is compressed into a volume roughly the size of Earth, with its electrons pressed as close together as the laws of physics will allow. The Sun has a radius 109 times the size of Earth’s – this size difference means that an Earth-like planet orbiting a white dwarf could be about the same size as the star itself.

White dwarfs are extremely common: An estimated 10 billion of them exist in our galaxy. And since every low-mass star is destined to eventually become a white dwarf, countless more have yet to form. If it turns out that life can exist on planets orbiting white dwarfs, these stellar remnants could become promising and plentiful targets in the search for life beyond Earth.

But can life even exist on a planet orbiting a white dwarf? Astronomers have known since 2011 that the habitable zone is extremely close to the white dwarf. This zone is the location in a planetary system where liquid water could exist on a planet’s surface. It can’t be too close to the star that the water would boil, nor so far away that it would freeze.

A diagram showing a sun, with three planets at varying distances away. The closest one is labeled 'too hot' the next 'just right' and the farthest 'too cold'
Planets in the habitable zone aren’t so close that their surface water would boil, but also not so far that it would freeze. NASA

The habitable zone around a white dwarf would be 10 to 100 times closer to the white dwarf than our own habitable zone is to our Sun, since white dwarfs are so much fainter.

The challenge of tidal heating

Being so close to the surface of the white dwarf would bring new challenges to emerging life that more distant planets, like Earth, do not face. One of these is tidal heating.

Tidal forces – the differences in gravitational forces that objects in space exert on different parts of a nearby second object – deform a planet, and the friction causes the material being deformed to heat up. An example of this can be seen on Jupiter’s moon Io.

The forces of gravity exerted by Jupiter’s other moons tug on Io’s orbit, deforming its interior and heating it up, resulting in hundreds of volcanoes erupting constantly across its surface. As a result, no surface water can exist on Io because its surface is too hot.

A diagram showing Jupiter, with four Moons orbiting around it. Io is the Moon closest to Jupiter, and it has four arrows pointing to the planet and other moons, representing the forces exerted on it.
Of the four major moons of Jupiter, Io is the innermost one. Gravity from Jupiter and the other three moons pulls Io in varying directions, which heats it up. Lsuanli/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

In contrast, the adjacent moon Europa is also subject to tidal heating, but to a lesser degree, since it’s farther from Jupiter. The heat generated from tidal forces has caused Europa’s ice shell to partially melt, resulting in a subsurface ocean.

Planets in the habitable zone of a white dwarf would have orbits close enough to the star to experience tidal heating, similar to how Io and Europa are heated from their proximity to Jupiter.

This proximity itself can pose a challenge to habitability. If a system has more than one planet, tidal forces from nearby planets could cause the planet’s atmosphere to trap heat until it becomes hotter and hotter, making the planet too hot to have liquid water.

Enduring the red giant phase

Even if there is only one planet in the system, it may not retain its water.

In the process of becoming a white dwarf, a star will expand to 10 to 100 times its original radius during the red giant phase. During that time, anything within that expanded radius will be engulfed and destroyed. In our own solar system, Mercury, Venus and Earth will be destroyed when the Sun eventually becomes a red giant before transitioning into a white dwarf.

For a planet to survive this process, it would have to start out much farther from the star — perhaps at the distance of Jupiter or even beyond.

If a planet starts out that far away, it would need to migrate inward after the white dwarf has formed in order to become habitable. Computer simulations show that this kind of migration is possible, but the process could cause extreme tidal heating that may boil off surface water – similar to how tidal heating causes Io’s volcanism. If the migration generates enough heat, then the planet could lose all its surface water by the time it finally reaches a habitable orbit.

However, if the migration occurs late enough in the white dwarf’s lifetime – after it has cooled and is no longer a hot, bright, newly formed white dwarf – then surface water may not evaporate away.

Under the right conditions, planets orbiting white dwarfs could sustain liquid water and potentially support life.

Search for life on planets orbiting white dwarfs

Astronomers haven’t yet found any Earth-like, habitable exoplanets around white dwarfs. But these planets are difficult to detect.

Traditional detection methods like the transit technique are less effective because white dwarfs are much smaller than typical planet-hosting stars. In the transit technique, astronomers watch for the dips in light that occur when a planet passes in front of its host star from our line of sight. Because white dwarfs are so small, you would have to be very lucky to see a planet passing in front of one.

The transit technique for detecting exoplanets requires watching for the dip in brightness when a planet passes in front of its host star.

Nevertheless, researchers are exploring new strategies to detect and characterize these elusive worlds using advanced telescopes such as the Webb telescope.

If habitable planets are found to exist around white dwarfs, it would significantly broaden the range of environments where life might persist, demonstrating that planetary systems may remain viable hosts for life even long after the death of their host star.The Conversation

Juliette Becker, Assistant Professor of Astronomy, University of Wisconsin-Madison

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

Thompson visits Lake County, meets with constituents for Cobb town hall

Congressman Mike Thompson speaks to about 80 community members during his "Coffee with our Congressman" event at the Little Red Schoolhouse in Cobb, California. Photo by Elizabeth Larson/Lake County News.


COBB, Calif. — Community members had the chance to hear directly from their member of Congress and ask questions at a Thursday afternoon town hall in Cobb.

Congressman Mike Thompson, accompanied by his field representative, Luca Moretti, spent the day in Lake County on Thursday, meeting with constituents and agencies.

They started the day in Clearlake, taking part in the weekly Judges Breakfast and making stops along the way before arriving early Thursday afternoon at the Little Red Schoolhouse in Cobb for the "Coffee with our Congressman" event.

Thompson’s visit comes as California is about to head into a highly contested election season regarding Proposition 50.

Signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom on Aug. 21, the measure — also known as the Use of Legislative Congressional Redistricting Map Amendment or the Election Rigging Response Act — will be on the Nov. 4 ballot.

Newsom and state legislators are taking the measure to voters in response to the Texas redistricting measure which is seeking to increase Republican seats in that state. 

California’s redistricting measure, if approved by voters, would see Thompson’s District 4 shift south, taking only a portion of southern Lake County along with parts of Napa and Sonoma counties, and the southern Sacramento Valley. 

The northern part of Lake County would be wound into a new District 1, which also would include parts of Mendocino and Sonoma counties, Glenn, Tehama, Butte, Plumas, Sierra and Lassen counties. 

Congressman Doug LaMalfa, a Republican who has been in Congress since 2013, and with whom Thompson has worked on legislation, would be up against a Democratic challenger in the race for that seat, considered to be the most likely seat to flip to the Democrats. Thompson is confident that in that configuration, District 1 will indeed go to the Democrats.

As for who will run for the Democrats, Mike McGuire, Lake County’s representative in the State Senate, now serving as the Senate’s pro tem, is considered a front runner, but so far has not confirmed he’ll enter the race.

Thompson is an avowed believer in, and supporter of, independent non-partisan commissions that draw the lines for congressional districts.

In an interview before the town hall with veteran broadcaster Bill Groody and Lake County News, he said he believes such commissions should be used nationwide.

“I've always supported legislation to make that the law in all 50 states. I think every state should use that model and I am totally against mid-decade redistricting. The only reason you do that is for political reasons and that's what started us down the course we're on right now. The president of the United States called the governor of Texas and said, ‘Steal five seats. I want five more Republicans in Congress,’” Thompson said.

He said he thinks Newsom responded appropriately, and it’s a fight that has to be made. “As much as I don't like it, as much as I would like to keep what we have now, I think it's absolutely necessary for our republic and for our democracy,” Thompson said.

Later, during the town hall, Thompson explained that the razor-thin, three-seat majority the Republicans now hold in the House of Representatives — the thinnest margin between the two major parties since the Great Depression — is because North Carolina did its own mid-decade redistricting several years ago.

Fielding questions from constituents

About 80 people from around Lake County came to hear Thompson at the Thursday afternoon event, which lasted over an hour. 

In addition to the matter of redistricting, topics raised by community members during the question and answer period included home insurance; affordability, including utilities; protecting the U.S. Constitution; the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s recent raid of the home of John Bolton, Trump’s former National Security Adviser who has become a vocal Trump critic; immigration and law enforcement; and protection of public lands.

One of the many concerns raised involved National Guard deployments, most recently in Washington, DC. Thompson pointed out that Trump has the power for such a deployment in Washington, DC, and while he’s using it now, he previously claimed he didn’t have the authority to do it when he’d been criticized for not deploying them during the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

Veteran and Cobb-area resident Lance Giroux asked Thompson about posse comitatus, a reference to the 1878 Posse Comitatus Act which presents the use of the U.S. Army and Air Force for domestic law enforcement unless by an act of Congress or if authorized by the U.S. Constitution.

“To me, this is insane,” Giroux said of Trump’s use of the military. 

Giroux also was concerned about immigration officers showing up wearing masks. Thompson said he has co-authored legislation to stop law enforcement from wearing masks, which is designed to instill fear and has a negative impact on local policing efforts. 

Brenna Sullivan asked Thompson about the outsized impact of federal policy on rural areas and the likelihood of another attempted federal land sale. 

Thompson said Sen. Mike Lee of Utah indicated he plans to make another attempt at selling off federal lands.

He also recalled his efforts to get the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument formed, which he said was a communitywide effort that ultimately came to fruition through President Barack Obama’s use of the Antiquities Act. 

There also were questions about Lake County-specific issues, such as the proposed name change of the town of Kelseyville.

Jim Comisky, a longtime Lake County resident and retired Sonoma Valley Fire District battalion chief, asked Thompson about the name change matter.

The Board of Supervisors put the matter to all Lake County residents on the November ballot as Measure U. The final vote was 70.58% “no” versus 29.42% that supported the change.

However, the final decision will be up to the U.S. Board on Geographic Names.

“We need to get some closure,” said Comisky.

Thompson called up District 5 Supervisor Jessica Pyska, who was on hand at the town hall, to give an update. Pyska said the California Advisory Committee on Geographic Names needs to make a recommendation to the federal agency first, and that hasn’t happened yet, despite her asking them to do so.

David Becker asked what people can do to get others involved. 

Thompson emphasized local political and community involvement. 

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. 

Clearlake Animal Control: ‘Jelly Bean’ and the dogs

“Jelly Bean.” Photo courtesy of Clearlake Animal Control.

CLEARLAKE, Calif. — Clearlake Animal Control has dogs waiting to get out of the shelter this week.

The shelter has 45 adoptable dogs listed on its website.

This week’s dogs include “Jelly Bean,” a 7-month-old female mixed breed dog with a black and brown coat.

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, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., visit Clearlake Animal Control on Facebook or on the city’s website.

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. 

Rural women are at a higher risk of violence − and less likely to get help

Rural areas have higher rates of violence against women than suburban and urban places. pocketlight/E+ via Getty Images

I have been teaching a course on rural criminology since 2014, and most of my students are surprised by the information on violence against women presented to them.

Due to the lack of media attention to rural areas, my students come to class with the impression that all countrysides and small towns are safer than urban and suburban locales. In reality, rates of violent crime are often higher in many rural communities, and at times there’s even more silence around it.

Nearly 50 years of research shows that male violence against women knows no geographical or demographic boundaries. It occurs among all socioeconomic groups and in almost all communities, regardless of their size and location. Yet, crime in rural and remote places is reported to the police at lower rates than in urban areas.

Most criminology scholars do not study violence of any type in rural communities, which partly contributes to the widespread belief that rural women are safer than their urban and suburban counterparts. Media reporting also overlooks brutal forms of violence perpetrated by men in intimate relationships with women.

Hidden in plain sight

Janet, from rural southeast Ohio, whom I interviewed along with sociologist Martin Schwartz in 2003, like some other women in this region we talked to, was beaten by her husband after going through brutal degradation:

“He wanted sex … or with his buddies or made me have sex with a friend of his. … He tied me up so I could watch him have sex with a 13-year-old girl. And then he ended up going to prison for it.”

Janet is by no means an outlier. I analyzed aggregate 1992 to 2005 National Crime Victimization Survey data along with criminologists Callie M. Rennison and Molly Dragiewicz. This data conclusively shows that rural women across the U.S. report physical and sexual violence at higher rates than those in more densely populated areas.

Research also shows that rural women in the U.S. are more likely to be killed by their current or former male partners compared to their urban and suburban counterparts. A study looking at data from 2005 to 2017 across 16 states, for example, found that female homicide rates are higher in rural places.

Another rural Ohio woman told Schwartz and me about the violence she suffered in her relationship: “He’d come home and pull a double barrel and cock both barrels and said he was going to kill me. And it was like, wait a minute here, you know, it was two o’clock in the morning.”

Why are rural women at higher risk?

Research conducted since 1988 has identified several reasons for rural women being at higher risk of violence compared to those living in urban and suburban places. These include geographic and social isolation, widespread acceptance of violence against women, and community norms prohibiting women from seeking social support. What makes it even worse is the absence of effective social support services and the higher rates of gun ownership.

A woman on the floor, face hidden in her knees, with the looming shadow of a man’s fist beside her.
Geographic and social isolation can make rural women more vulnerable. funky-data/E+ via Getty Images

Many social workers, for example, must travel vast distances to reach rural battered women, often at their own expense. What is more, rural abusers “feed off” their female partners’ isolation.

As a woman Schwartz and I interviewed from Meigs County, Ohio, told us, “I didn’t have a car. I wasn’t allowed to go anywhere.” Her husband, however, who had “plenty of cars,” disabled them to stop her from seeking freedom and independence. “He taught me a lot about cars and I knew what parts I need. And there would be no spare. So, I couldn’t leave.”

In rural sections of Ohio and other states, as my research uncovered, there is common acceptance of abuse of women. In many rural areas, community norms often prohibit survivors from publicly talking about their experiences and from seeking help.

As one Appalachian woman put it: “I don’t sit around and share. I keep it to myself. Um, I, I believe that’s part of my mental illness. But I’m not one to sit around and talk about what’s happened.”

Jackie, another rural Ohio woman Schwartz and I interviewed, said that numerous women in her community suffer in silence: “It’s like we see, but we don’t. It’s like three monkeys: don’t see, don’t hear, don’t speak.”

Other women told similar stories of the unwillingness of people in their community to help them.

Gun ownership is a strong correlate of intimate partner violence in rural parts of the U.S.: In rural areas, 46% of adults own guns compared to 19% in urban places. Moreover, firearms are used in 54% of all rural domestic homicides.

What Neil Websdale, director of Arizona State University’s Family Violence Center, stated nearly 30 years ago still holds:

“Rural culture, with its acceptance of firearms for hunting and self-protection, may include a code among certain men that accepts the casual use of firearms to intimidate wives and intimate partners. In urban areas, it is more difficult for abusers to discharge their weapons and go undetected. People in the country are more familiar with the sound of gunshots and often attribute the sound to legitimate uses such as hunting.”

Gun ownership can create safety concerns for social workers, many of whom work alone.

Pathways to prevention

One, albeit highly controversial, prevention strategy is banning the possession, purchase, sale and transfer of handguns, which are the weapons men use the most to kill women regardless of where they live. That would greatly reduce the rate of male-to-female homicide in rural places, as it would in more densely populated areas.

For example, it is estimated that 38% fewer women are shot to death by intimate male partners in states where background checks are required for all handgun owners.

Similarly, the federal Violence Against Women Act includes provisions that, when an order of protection – also referred to as a restraining order – is granted, it leads to the person being restrained losing any gun permits or permission to keep guns at home.

This, in turn, leads to a reduction in intimate femicide. A number of states have gone further than the federal law, extending gun possession bans to people under temporary – not just permanent – restraining orders. Such bans have further reduced intimate partner homicide, by a best estimate of 14%.

Libraries as safe spaces

Rural libraries have proven to be a vital resource in the struggle to end interpersonal forms of abuse of women. They are more accessible in many U.S. rural communities than are shelters, public transportation and other services.

Rural librarians can direct survivors to legal assistance and domestic violence service websites, help find books and pamphlets that are useful for survivors, and provide programming for survivors’ children if survivors need time to think about their options.

The librarian could also help survivors travel from the library to the nearest shelter and work with the police to provide transportation assistance. Moreover, the librarian could help connect survivors with shelter workers via telephone and arrange for the arrival of survivors and their children at a shelter.

We are starting to see attorneys offering survivors legal advice in rural public libraries and providing libraries with information kiosks that include materials on legal issues related to the abuse of women.

A word of caution, though, is necessary. Libraries and other places that offer services to abused rural women require architectural changes that preclude people from hearing survivors talk about their violent experiences.

The chances that people might overhear survivors talking is much greater in smaller communities and hence more likely to jeopardize the safety of survivors and their children.

A multipronged strategy is always necessary. For example, some experts in the field call for setting up women’s police stations and safe houses in rural areas. They also recommend getting rural men to participate in anti-violence and anti-sexist community-based activities, such as holding town hall meetings to raise awareness about violence against women.

All too often, people think of ending violence as an event simple enough to fit on a bumper sticker or the side of a coffee mug. Just leave, and then it will be over.

Unfortunately, for a large number of women and children, particularly in rural areas, leaving and ending up in a safe place is a complex, ongoing process, and for some women and children it is one that never ends.The Conversation

Walter S. DeKeseredy, Professor of Sociology, West Virginia University

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

Governor deploys new teams to fight crime in major California cities

On Thursday, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the next phase of his crime-fighting efforts, which involve deploying new California Highway Patrol crime suppression teams.

The teams will work directly with local law enforcement in major cities and regions across the state — San Diego, Inland Empire, Los Angeles, Central Valley, Sacramento, and the San Francisco Bay Area.

Newsom’s office said the deployment comes as crime is dropping statewide.

“When the state and local communities work together strategically, public safety improves. While the Trump Administration undermines cities, California is partnering with them — and delivering real results. With these new deployments, we’re doubling down on these partnerships to build on progress and keep driving crime down,” Newsom said.
 
Thursday’s announcement builds on successful CHP efforts already underway in Oakland, Bakersfield, and San Bernardino. 

CHP officers assigned to Crime Suppression Teams will saturate high-crime areas, target repeat offenders, and seize illicit weapons and narcotics. 

Enforcement will take place in the San Diego, Inland Empire, Los Angeles, Central Valley, Sacramento and the San Francisco Bay Area regions.

“These crime suppression teams will provide critical support to our local partners by focusing on crime where it happens most,” said CHP Commissioner Sean Duryee. “By combining resources, intelligence, and personnel, we can better disrupt criminal activity and strengthen the safety and security of communities across California.”

The Crime Suppression Teams will:

• Identify and suppress criminal activity in high-crime areas through data and intelligence-led policing.
• Conduct proactive enforcement operations designed to deter and disrupt organized crime.
• Provide increased CHP visibility and presence in communities most impacted by crime.
• Support local law enforcement by sharing intelligence, coordinating enforcement, and assisting with investigations.
• Maintain strict accountability through structured leadership, clear reporting, and operational oversight.
• Combined with significant financial investment from the state, these partnerships have brought positive change to Bakersfield, San Bernardino and Oakland. 
 
Positive results in Bakersfield, San Bernardino and Oakland

In 2024, Gov. Newsom deployed officers for regional partnerships in Bakersfield, San Bernardino, and Oakland. So far, officials have made over 9,000 arrests, recovered nearly 5,800 stolen vehicles, and confiscated over 400 firearms. 

Bakersfield: Since April 2024, a CHP partnership in Bakersfield has led to 859 felony arrests, 721 misdemeanor arrests, 2,654 DUI arrests, 1,386 stolen vehicles recovered, and 114 firearms seized. Bakersfield's 2024 crime rates were the lowest since 2021, with a 57% drop in homicides and 60% fewer shootings.

Oakland: By late 2024, Oakland significantly reduced crime, with an overall 34% decrease year-over-year. Preliminary 2024 data showed a 25% drop in robbery, nearly 50% in burglary, and 33% in vehicle theft. Since joint efforts began in February 2024, officials have made 73 felony arrests, 420 misdemeanor arrests, 1,528 DUI arrests, recovered 4,257 stolen vehicles, and seized 247 illicit firearms.

San Bernardino: Since October 2024, a collaborative law enforcement effort in the area has significantly reduced property theft and violent crime, including gun violence. Officials have made 357 felony arrests, 1,617 misdemeanor arrests, 170 DUI arrests, seized 145 stolen vehicles, and removed 82 illicit firearms.
 
Reducing crime in California

Due to what Newsom’s office called “thoughtful investments” in public safety since 2019, nearly every major crime category, including violent crime and homicides, dropped in 2024, according to data released by the California Department of Justice. 

Adding to positive preliminary results of lower crime in key areas statewide, data compiled by the eight most populous California cities for the first six months of 2025 show overall violent crime is down 12.5% compared to 2024. Other non-California cities experienced an 11.8% decline in violent crime. 

According to the Major Cities Chiefs Association, there’s been a 20% drop in homicides and 19% decrease in robberies in California so far in 2025. 

The largest overall declines in violent crime were reported by the police departments in Oakland (30%) and San Francisco (22%). While Los Angeles County is represented by three law enforcement agencies in this dataset, taken together, the overall violent crime declined by 11% in the region. 

Overall, California has generally seen homicide, robbery, and property crime rates at or below pre-pandemic levels.
 
Comparing California to other states 

California’s 2024 homicide rate was the second lowest it has been since at least 1966. The overall number of homicides in California decreased by nearly 12% since 2023. 

When compared to other states, California’s homicide rates (5.1) have historically been lower. According to CDC data from 2023, the latest year available for all states, Louisiana (19.3) and Mississippi (19.4) homicide rates are nearly four times higher than California; Alabama (14.8), Missouri (10.4); and Tennessee (11.4), Arkansas (11.3), South Carolina (11.3) are all more than double California’s rate.
 
Significant public safety investments 

While Republicans in Congress pushed their “big beautiful betrayal” bill that cut law enforcement funding, California has shown what real public safety looks like: serious investments, strong enforcement, and real results.

California has invested $1.7 billion since 2019 to fight crime, help local governments hire more police, and improve public safety. In 2023, as part of California’s Public Safety Plan, the governor announced the largest-ever investment to combat organized retail crime in state history, an annual 310% increase in proactive operations targeting organized retail crime, and special operations across the state to fight crime and improve public safety.

Last August, Gov. Newsom signed into law the most significant bipartisan legislation to crack down on property crime in modern California history. 

These bipartisan bills offer new tools to bolster ongoing efforts to hold criminals accountable for smash-and-grab robberies, property crime, retail theft, and auto burglaries. 

While California’s crime rate remains at what Newsom’s office said are near-historic lows, these laws help California adapt to evolving criminal tactics to ensure perpetrators are effectively held accountable.

As part of the state’s largest-ever investment to combat organized retail crime, Gov. Newsom announced last year that the state distributed $267 million to 55 communities to help local communities combat organized retail crime. 

These funds have enabled cities and counties to hire more police, make more arrests, and secure more felony charges against suspects.

Supervisors unanimously back Guenoc Valley project

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday unanimously approved the new environmental report and all permit requests for the Guenoc Valley project, paving the way for the large-scale luxury resort and residential development in south Lake County.

While supervisors raised clarifying questions about water supply and road maintenance related to the project, both the board and speakers during public comment voiced overwhelming support, citing the project’s potential for economic growth, job opportunities, and design features to address wildfire risk, evacuation, education and other concerns.

On July 24 and Aug. 8, the Lake County Planning Commission discussed the project over the course of two meetings. In the July meeting, officials, local community leaders and residents were mostly critical, raising concerns over wildfire risks and high-density workforce housing. 

Before the commission’s second meeting, some commissioners and community representatives toured the site during visits organized by the developer, as they disclosed.

Later, the August meeting showed shifted community attitudes and mostly support. Ultimately, the commission recommended to the Board of Supervisors that it approve most requests by the project applicant. 

After three hours of presentations, public comment and board deliberations, the Board of Supervisors unanimously approved the project’s updated environmental impact report, or EIR, along with all permits and amendment requests.

Those approvals included zoning changes to create a new district for mixed-use development, and rezoning part of the Santa Clara site from single-family to two-family residential — a higher density change that the Planning Commission deadlocked on in its August 8 meeting, resulting in an automatic denial and appeal to the board.

The Guenoc Valley Mixed Use Planned Development Project is a luxury destination that at full buildout will include up to 400 hotel rooms, 450 resort residential units, 1,400 residential estates and 500 workforce co-housing units on a portion of the 16,000-acre, 82-parcel Guenoc property.

The project applicant is San Francisco-based Lotusland Investment Holdings. Its owner, Chinese developer Yiming Xu, immigrated from China to Canada in 1996. Since the early 2000s, he has been involved in various real estate and luxury resort developments in China. Xu has owned the property since 2016. 

According to the project’s official website, the Guenoc Valley project development is led by Lotusland’s developing partners, Jonathan Breene and Adrian Zecha of Mahaman, as well as Yiming Xu’s son, Alex Xu.

Lake County News submitted a letter with questions to the board as public comment for the meeting right before the meeting. The questions included asking if anyone in the county had any information about the project’s financing, Lotusland’s owner, the company’s financial capacity — or at least how much the project will cost. 

They were not brought up during the board meeting, and by the time of publication of this story, none of the supervisors had responded. 

Fire, water, roads — and the unanswered

This wasn’t Lotusland’s first try.

The Planning Commission and Board of Supervisors approved their environmental reports and permits in 2020. Lawsuits by environmental groups and intervention by the California Attorney General paused progress, citing inadequate community evacuation analysis. Now the project returned with a new EIR.

Annalee Sanborn of Acorn Environmental explained the fire mitigation measures in the updated EIR: an additional Grange Road connector for emergency access and evacuation route for evacuation, a new fire station and several temporary refuge points. 

Joshua Dimon, UC Berkeley Disaster Lab Lead scientist, later told the board that the fire mitigation features will reduce fire intensity across the site by about 50%. Dimon’s team conducted the wildfire risk assessment for the updated EIR. 

Sanborn explained the project’s "significant and unavoidable” environmental impact on aesthetics, agricultural and forestry resources, greenhouse gas emissions, noise and transportation. 

And she also noted that the EIR measured “extremely conservative impacts” to farmland or biological habitats. “But the actual impacts will be lower once houses are designed,” Sanborn added. 

In fact, the developer and the two environmental groups reached a habitat conservation agreement on Aug. 7 to protect 3,717 acres within the Guenoc property, alongside implementation of measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, with $2 million for additional off-site conservation.

Rod Hodil, attorney for the project applicant, said that the developer had entered into a “non-binding” agreement with Middletown’s Callayomi County Water District for a potential  purchase of one off-site well. 

“That is my line in the dirt, Middletown water,” said District 1 Supervisor Helen Owen, of whose district the project is located, asking adding it as a condition for approval, instead a non-binding term. 

“I think this is a phenomenal project. I think it's an amazing opportunity. My only concern left is the nonbinding,” Owen said. “It's my responsibility to protect the people of Middletown, and I know that there's people in Middletown right now that are needing water.”

Deputy County Counsel Nicole Johnson said that the condition of drilling up to one well was already added to the use permit. 

Supervisor Bruno Sabatier also asked if there is any fee to support maintenance of county roads, such as Butts Canyon Road, which will see heavy traffic from the Guenoc Valley project. He pointed to the agreement with Brassfield Winery, where a per-case fee helps maintain High Valley Road, and suggested a comparable per-stay fee on hotel or resort guests.

“I would personally rather not walk away today with a developer agreement that says nothing about the future of [Butts Canyon] Road, even though there’s potential for thousands of people to travel every single day to get to work, let alone the people that will be staying there,” he said. 

Johnson said now it was “a big picture” and fees related to roads are more granular for future analysis.

“I think we can wait for the specific development plans; I don’t think we need to do that today,” said Supervisor Jessica Pyska. 

“I just wanted to make the statement, because we're kind of giving a little bit of a blessing today to move forward. But to me, there's something that I feel could be missing,” Sabatier said. 

The biggest appeal: Promises on job prospects

During the developers’ presentation, Breene told the board that the project could generate $3.8 billion in economic benefits for Lake County over 25 years, including $2.47 billion in labor income, $635 million in local taxes and $212 million in state taxes. It would also create an estimated 2,688 jobs annually. 

The outlook of job creation and economic impact appealed to the audience in the board chambers, including supervisors and the public. 

During public comment, Max Hopkins said the project is a “once-in-a-lifetime” opportunity. 

“What this project presents is truly a monumental future with education, employment opportunities in an environmentally sensitive and just astounding process,” he said.

“I can tell you that we need this, we need this injection into our county,” said Amanda Martin, Chief Executive chief executive officer of the Lake County Chamber of Commerce, citing the needs of the local hospitality industry that has struggled in recent years. “The indirect economic infusion into our county will be huge.”

During the board discussion, Pyska said Napa County supervisors “are always asking” for more Lake County employees to work in their resorts because “nobody can afford to live in Napa; They live in our county.”

“So I said you can have them for a little while,” Pyska said, drawing laughter from the audience in the chamber. “But they're going to be working here, and we're going to be keeping them here.”

The promises made during the meeting were significant and appealing. 

During public comment, Margaux Kambara voiced her support for the project as a great opportunity. Also she brought up the concern:  “A lot of communities were promised big things, and the developer didn't deliver, or the big corporation came to town, started building and then left and did not hire the dozens, the scores of local people that were promised.”

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

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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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