How to resolve AdBlock issue?
Refresh this page
How to resolve AdBlock issue?
Refresh this page
Lake County News,California
  • Home
    • Registration Form
  • News
    • Education
    • Veterans
    • Community
      • Obituaries
      • Letters
      • Commentary
    • Police Logs
    • Business
    • Recreation
    • Health
    • Religion
    • Legals
    • Arts & Life
    • Regional
  • Calendar
  • Contact us
    • FAQs
    • Phones, E-Mail
    • Subscribe
  • Advertise Here
  • Login

News

State plans expanded vaccine eligibility for Californians beginning in April

With supply of vaccines expected to significantly increase in the coming weeks, the state is expanding vaccine eligibility to more Californians.

Starting April 1, individuals aged 50 and over will be eligible to make an appointment, and individuals 16 and over will be eligible to make an appointment to be vaccinated starting on April 15.

“With vaccine supply increasing and by expanding eligibility to more Californians, the light at the end of the tunnel continues to get brighter,” said Gov. Newsom. “We remain focused on equity as we extend vaccine eligibility to those older than 50 starting April 1, and those older than 16 starting April 15. This is possible thanks to the leadership of the Biden-Harris Administration and the countless public health officials across the state who have stepped up to get shots into arms.”

Based on the current estimates, California expects to be allocated approximately 2.5 million first and second doses per week in the first half of April, and more than 3 million doses in the second half of April. California currently receives about 1.8 million doses per week.

These estimates may be adjusted as time goes on. The state has the capacity to administer more than 3 million vaccines per week, and is building the capacity to administer 4 million vaccines weekly by the end of April.

“We are even closer to putting this pandemic behind us with today’s announcement and with vaccine supplies expected to increase dramatically in the months ahead," said California Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly. "However, we are not there yet. It will take time to vaccinate all eligible Californians. During this time, we must not let our guard down. It is important that we remain vigilant, continue to wear masks and follow public health guidance."

In addition to increased allocations of vaccines to providers serving the hardest hit communities, the state has embarked on a series of initiatives to vaccinate those populations that have faced the highest rates of COVID infections before vaccines become available to the entire 16+ population.

These efforts include:

– Provider funding for programs to reach and vaccinate communities facing the biggest health disparities;
– Working with organized labor to reach essential workers;
– Partnering with agricultural organizations and community-based organizations to vaccinate agricultural workers;
– Allowing providers to target by ZIP code via My Turn with single-use codes (scheduled to launch at the end of March);
– Supporting a subset of community-based organizations currently partnering with the state on COVID-19 education to provide direct vaccination appointment assistance;
– Prioritizing currently eligible populations and allowing providers the discretion to vaccinate those who live in high-impact areas (County Healthy Places Index Quartiles 1 and 2), including families.

Even with expanded vaccine supplies, it is expected to take several months for willing Californians to be vaccinated. Based on public information shared by vaccine manufacturers and the federal government, California expects to receive several million vaccine doses per week starting sometime in April.

Along with the expanded eligibility and to align with upcoming federal guidance, California will update its vaccine allocation methodology.

This will transition over four weeks, beginning with the March 22 allocation (delivered to providers the following week), from one based on the distribution of the 65+ population, workers in the agriculture and food, education and child care, and emergency services sectors to one based on the distribution of the 16+ population across California.

This will be done in conjunction with completion of the shift to the state directly allocating vaccines to providers. The state will continue to double the amount of vaccine allocated to the lowest Healthy Places Index (HPI) quartile as announced on March 4.

Forty percent of COVID-19 cases and deaths have occurred in the lowest quartile of the HPI, developed by the Public Health Alliance of Southern California, which provides overall scores and data that predict life expectancy and compares community conditions that shape health across the state.

The rate of infections for households making less than $40,000 per year (5.7) is 84 percent higher than that of households with an income of $120,000 or more (3.1). At the same time, California’s wealthiest populations have received 50 percent more vaccinations when compared to the rate of our most vulnerable populations. This approach recognizes that the pandemic did not affect California communities equally and that the state is committed to doing better.

Estate Planning: Understanding death beneficiary accounts, wills and trusts

Dennis‌ ‌Fordham.‌ ‌Courtesy‌ ‌photo.‌ ‌

Estate planning often involves various asset types, such as, real property, tangible personal property, bank accounts, retirement accounts and life insurance.

How each asset type is managed during incapacity and transferred at death to beneficiaries also varies.

Real property, tangible personal property, and bank accounts can be transferred to a trust for lifetime management (in the event of incapacity) and distribution at death outside probate.

California law, under certain circumstances, permits assets omitted from a living trust to be transferred into the trust upon court petition.

Using a so-called, “Heggstad petition” assets titled in a decedent’s name may be retitled to the decedent’s trust.

This requires evidence that the settlor (who created the trust) had intended to transfer the omitted assets to the trust. Evidence can be in the form of a pour over will (leaving all assets in the decedent’s individual name to the trust), an assignment of assets to the trust, and the decedent’s declaration to hold assets in trust.

Next, a will speaks only at death and says who inherits the decedent’s probate assets. In California, probate is required when a deceased resident has an estate whose probate assets have a combined gross value over $166,250 (2020). Thus, people use a living trust to hold title to their real and tangible personal property.

The will, however, does not speak to “non-probate” assets, such as assets in a trust, joint tenancy assets (e.g., financial accounts and real property) that pass to the surviving joint tenant(s), and assets with designated death beneficiaries (e.g., bank accounts, brokerage accounts, retirement accounts and life insurance) that pass to the surviving beneficiaries.

Whether such assets should pass to the surviving joint tenant or designated death beneficiary, however, can be challenged. That is, if there is clear and convincing evidence showing a contrary intention by the decedent.

Such evidence needs to be specific and credible. A will itself can provide clear and convincing evidence that the decedent’s prior designation of a death beneficiary was no longer the person whom the decedent intended to inherit the account.

The fact that a decedent’s estate planning documents (e.g., wills and trusts) can be used to overturn designated death beneficiary forms raises concern. A person may intentionally leave certain financial accounts and real properties outside his living trust or will to different beneficiaries.

Estate planning documents may speak in general terms when discussing the allocation of assets whereas designated death beneficiary forms are very specific.

For example, a wife may name her second husband as death beneficiary on her transfer on death, or TOD, brokerage account but leave other assets in her living trust to her children.

The wife’s living trust may be accompanied by a general assignment assigning all her financial accounts (including brokerages) to her living trust.

That assignment, if executed after she named the husband as the TOD death beneficiary, might be offered by the children as arguable proof that she intended the TOD brokerage account to pass to her children under the trust.

Next, another way that complications may arise is with powers of attorney and joint tenancy bank accounts or when a principal either has more than one power of attorney, has more than one agent under the same power of attorney, or has an agent who is not the same as the joint tenant on a bank account.

Problems may arise if the agents and/or joint tenant(s), as relevant, do not act together in agreement to control the same assets or affairs.

The foregoing general discussion shows the importance of having a knowledgeable estate planning attorney who understands and can address such issues so that they do not later create problems.

Dennis A. Fordham, attorney, is a State Bar-Certified Specialist in estate planning, probate and trust law. His office is at 870 S. Main St., Lakeport, Calif. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and 707-263-3235.

Space News: Pandora mission would expand NASA’s capabilities in probing alien worlds

This illustration captures an exoplanet as it is about to cross in front of – or transit – its star. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.


In the quest for habitable planets beyond our own, NASA is studying a mission concept called Pandora, which could eventually help decode the atmospheric mysteries of distant worlds in our galaxy.

One of four low-cost astrophysics missions selected for further concept development under NASA’s new Pioneers program, Pandora would study approximately 20 stars and exoplanets – planets outside of our solar system – to provide precise measurements of exoplanetary atmospheres.

This mission would seek to determine atmospheric compositions by observing planets and their host stars simultaneously in visible and infrared light over long periods. Most notably, Pandora would examine how variations in a host star’s light impacts exoplanet measurements. This remains a substantial problem in identifying the atmospheric makeup of planets orbiting stars covered in starspots, which can cause brightness variations as a star rotates.

Pandora is a small satellite mission known as a SmallSat, one of three such orbital missions receiving the green light from NASA to move into the next phase of development in the Pioneers program. SmallSats are low-cost spaceflight missions that enable the agency to advance scientific exploration and increase access to space.

Pandora would operate in Sun-synchronous low-Earth orbit, which always keeps the Sun directly behind the satellite. This orbit minimizes light changes on the satellite and allows Pandora to obtain data over extended periods. Of the SmallSat concepts selected for further study, Pandora is the only one focused on exoplanets.

“Exoplanetary science is moving from an era of planet discovery to an era of atmospheric characterization,” said Elisa Quintana, an astrophysicist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and the principal investigator for Pandora. “Pandora is focused on trying to understand how stellar activity affects our measurements of exoplanet atmospheres, which will lay the groundwork for future exoplanet missions aiming to find planets with Earth-like atmospheres.”

Maximizing the scientific potential

Pandora concentrates on studying exoplanetary and stellar atmospheres by surveying planets as they cross in front of – or transit – their host stars.

To accomplish this, Pandora would take advantage of a proven technique called transit spectroscopy, which involves measuring the amount of starlight filtering through a planet’s atmosphere, and splitting it into bands of color known as a spectrum.

These colors encode information that helps scientists identify gases present in the planet’s atmosphere, and can help determine if a planet is rocky with a thin atmosphere like Earth or if it has a thick gas envelope like Neptune.

This mission, however, would take transit spectroscopy a step further. Pandora is designed to mitigate one of the technique’s most crucial setbacks: stellar contamination.

“Stars have atmospheres and changing surface features like spots that affect our measurements,” said Jessie Christiansen, the deputy science lead at the NASA Exoplanet Archive at Caltech in Pasadena, California, and a co-investigator for Pandora. “To be sure we’re really observing an exoplanet’s atmosphere, we need to untangle the planet’s variations from those of the star.”

Pandora would separate stellar and exoplanetary signals by observing them simultaneously in infrared and visible light. Stellar contamination is easier to detect at the shorter wavelengths of visible light, and so obtaining atmospheric data through both infrared and visible light would allow scientists to better differentiate observations coming from exoplanet atmospheres and stars.

“Stellar contamination is a sticking point that complicates precise observations of exoplanets,” said Benjamin Rackham, a 51 Pegasi b Postdoctoral Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge and a co-investigator for Pandora. “Pandora would help build the necessary tools for disentangling stellar and planetary signals, allowing us to better study the properties of both starspots and exoplanetary atmospheres.”

This illustration (not to scale) depicts Pandora’s orbital pattern in Sun-synchronous low-Earth orbit, located approximately 435 to 497 miles (700 to 800 kilometers) above Earth’s surface, as it observes its targeted exoplanets and stars. This orbit enables Pandora to obtain multiple observations of exoplanets over long periods and the Earthshine exclusion zone helps avoid reflected light from Earth. Credits: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.


Synergy in space

Joining forces with NASA’s larger missions, Pandora would operate concurrently with the James Webb Space Telescope, slated for launch later this year. Webb will provide the ability to study the atmospheres of exoplanets as small as Earth with unprecedented precision, and Pandora would seek to expand the telescope’s research and findings by observing the host stars of previously identified planets over longer periods.

Missions such as NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), Hubble Space Telescope, and the retired Kepler and Spitzer spacecraft have given scientists astonishing glimpses at these distant worlds, and laid a strong foundation in exoplanetary knowledge. These missions, however, have yet to fully address the stellar contamination problem, the magnitude of which is uncertain in previous studies of exoplanetary atmospheres. Pandora seeks to fill these critical gaps in NASA’s understanding of planetary atmospheres and increase the capabilities in exoplanet research.

“Pandora is the right mission at the right time because thousands of exoplanets have already been discovered, and we are aware of many that are amenable to atmospheric characterization that orbit small active stars,” said Jessie Dotson, an astrophysicist at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley and the deputy principal investigator for Pandora. “The next frontier is to understand the atmospheres of these planets, and Pandora would play a key role in uncovering how stellar activity impacts our ability to characterize atmospheres. It would be a great complement to Webb’s mission.”

A launch pad for exploration

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, or LLNL, in Livermore, California, is co-leading the Pandora mission with NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.

LLNL will manage the mission and leverage capabilities developed for other government agencies, including a low-cost approach to the telescope design and fabrication that enables this groundbreaking exoplanet science from a SmallSat platform.

NASA’s Pioneers program, which consists of SmallSats, payloads attached to the International Space Station, and scientific balloon experiments, fosters innovative space and suborbital experiments for early-to-mid-career researchers through low-cost, small hardware missions. Under this new program, Pandora would operate on a five-year timeline with a budget cap of $20 million.

Despite tight constraints, the Pioneers program enables Pandora to concentrate on a focused research question while engaging a diverse team of students and early career scientists from more than a dozen of universities and research institutes. This SmallSat platform creates an excellent blueprint for small-scale missions to make an impact in the astrophysics community.

“Pandora’s long-duration observations in visible and infrared light are unique and well-suited for SmallSats,” said Quintana. “We are excited that Pandora will play a crucial role in NASA’s quest for finding other worlds that could potentially be habitable.”

For more information about the Pioneers program, visit https://science.nasa.gov/astrophysics/programs/astrophysics-pioneers.

This illustration depicts Pandora’s use of transit spectroscopy to reliably identify an exoplanet’s atmospheric composition as it passes in front of its host star. Credits: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.

Thompson and local leaders discuss American Rescue Plan rollout



LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – One of Lake County’s members of Congress hosted local and regional leaders on Thursday in a discussion to update community members on the rollout of the American Rescue Plan.

Congressman Mike Thompson said during the online panel discussion that help is on the way for Americans thanks to the $1.9 trillion economic stimulus legislation, signed into law earlier this month by President Joe Biden.

In addition to $1,400 stimulus checks, the American Rescue Plan extends unemployment, subsidizes COBRA health insurance and extends the child tax credit, which Thompson said economists are reporting will cut childhood poverty in half.

The bill also will put children safely back in school, with $130 billion to fund school reopenings and help children regain lost learning.

He said it also will help ensure essential workers such as first responders, teachers and health care providers stay on the job.

A key priority in the bill is the vaccine rollout, according to Lake County Public Health Officer Dr. Gary Pace, who joined Thompson in the virtual meeting.

Pace said the bill gives a lot of hope that the community can finally move on to a life that’s not controlled by fear of the virus.

He said the vaccine distribution and rollout in California is the most exciting and impactful part of the bill, noting that for many months it’s been an “all hands on deck” approach with all staffing and resources going to vaccinations.

In Lake County, more than a third of all people age 16 and older have been vaccinated, with two-thirds of those age 75 and older receiving the vaccine, Pace said.

He said all residents of the county’s skilled nursing facilities are now vaccinated. Those facilities give an example of what the future can look like.

“Those places were a disaster in the fall,” he said, explaining that they were locked down and people were dying.

However, with residents now vaccinated, they are accepting visitors and it’s starting to look like normal life, with no new cases reported, he said.

Pace said the more people are vaccinated, the more we can get back to normal, with less suffering.

He said the funding will help get out the vaccines and also will help with communications, including educating people to address vaccine hesitancy.

“I believe we’re through the worst of the pandemic but it’s not over,” said Pace, adding that the vaccine is the best tool to address the coronavirus.

Critical help for local governments

Besides offering help to individuals, the American Rescue Plan is providing financial assistance to counties, cities and school districts.

The county of Lake is expected to receive $12.4 million, the city of Lakeport just over $900,000 and the city of Clearlake approximately $2,873,678, officials reported.

Local school districts are anticipated to receive the following amounts: Kelseyville Unified, $5,054,000; Konocti Unified School District, $13,835,000; Lakeport Unified School District, $3,239,000; Lucerne Elementary School District, $944,000; Middletown Unified School District, $2,454,000; and Upper Lake Unified School District, $2,848,000.

Officials on Thompson’s panel said the funding is supposed to arrive for local governments in two payments, with 50 percent expected to be disbursed by May 10.

Napa Mayor Scott Sedgley said the bill is great news for small cities like his.

“It’s going to make all the difference in the world,” he said, explaining they had to cut back on services.

Sedgley said cities are seeking to get payments directly from the federal government and not funneled through the state, an effort on which he said Thompson is working.

Separately, Lake County News checked in with Clearlake City Manager Alan Flora about the funds the city expects to receive.

“There has been little detailed information at this point. We are all still waiting on Treasury guidance,” Flora said Thursday.

“As we currently understand, the feds have 60 days from bill signing to pass the funds to the state and the state has 30 days to pass the funds to us,” he said.

That is consistent with the timeline given during the Thursday press conference, with Flora confirming the funds are to come in two payments.

Flora said the main categories for spending the $2,873,678 the city is set to receive include providing government services affected by revenue loss, providing premium pay to essential employees, addressing economic impacts through aid to households and small businesses, or investments in water, sewer and broadband infrastructure.

“This is pretty much all we know at this point,” Flora said. “We believe the biggest long term impact with this ‘one-time funding’ is likely best invested in local infrastructure, but we will need to see the actual guidance when it is released to determine for sure.”

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

Novato woman charged with double-fatal vehicle wreck to return to court in April

Keilah Marie Coyle, 21, of Novato, California, remains in custody on $2 million bail for vehicular manslaughter for a crash near Middletown, California, on Saturday, March 13, 2021, that killed two Clearlake residents. Lake County Jail photo.


LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – A Novato woman will return to court in April for further proceedings as she faces prosecution for a crash that killed two Clearlake residents earlier this month.

Keilah‌ ‌Marie‌ ‌Coyle,‌ ‌21,‌ was in court on Tuesday for her second court appearance, said Chief Deputy District Attorney Richard Hinchcliff.

On the night of March 13, authorities said Coyle was driving drunk in a 2003‌ ‌Ford‌ ‌F-250‌ ‌pickup‌ on Highway 29 north of Middletown when she crossed the double-yellow lines and collided head-on with a 2000 GMC van driven by Cassandra‌ ‌Elaine‌ ‌Rolicheck,‌ ‌53.

Rolicheck and her passenger, 47-year-old Miguel‌ ‌Maciel‌ ‌Dominguez, were declared dead at the scene, officials said.

Hours earlier, Coyle was involved in a noninjury hit-and-run crash in Sonoma County, which authorities are continuing to investigate.

Hinchcliff has charged Coyle with eight felony charges – two counts each of gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated, negligent vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated, gross vehicular manslaughter and driving under the influence causing injury. – and special allegations of causing great bodily injury to both victims and an enhancement that would give additional prison time on conviction for causing death to more than one person.

Hinchcliff said Coyle has hired Tim Hodson, an attorney from Sacramento, to represent her.

She will return to court on April 13 for the next hearing, which will include bail review, Hinchcliff said.

Until then, Coyle’s bail is still $2 million and she remains in custody at the Lake County Jail, jail records showed.

A previous version of this story incorrectly stated that Hodson is from Fairfield.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

McGuire’s bill establishing sweeping fire safety standards in high fire risk areas passes Senate committee

State Sen. Mike McGuire’s legislation confronting California’s increasing wildfire risk by establishing new safety standards for developments in high risk wildfire areas passed overwhelmingly in the Senate’s Governance and Finance Committee on Thursday.

The 2020 wildfire season burned more than 4.2 million acres, making it by far the largest in the history of California.

Eight out of the 10 largest wildfires in California history have occurred in the past 10 years, including the August Complex fire, which burned more than one million acres in the fall of 2020, making it the state’s first “gigafire” – a term for a fire that burns at least one million acres of land.

And in each of these major fires, tens of thousands of Californians ran for their lives, sometimes in the dark of night with just the clothes on their back, scrambling to find any way to escape the roaring flames.

McGuire’s office said the way the state strategically grows its communities has also come into question as the reality of mega fires has set in here in the Golden State.

Development practices in very high fire risk areas must change. If they don’t, more death and destruction will follow, McGuire’s office said.

In fact, the California Attorney General’s Office has already intervened with lawsuits on three development projects in the wildland urban interface because of their wildfire impacts.

“Over the last six years, we have all seen too much destruction and pain caused by this era of mega fires. Wildfires have clearly become a risk to the long-term livelihoods of millions of Californians. We must change the way we build in high fire risk zones, and if certain common sense health and safety requirements can’t be met, we shouldn’t be building at all. The new normal in California is here, and that is why we need SB 12,” Sen. McGuire said.

SB 12 sets up a transformational process for the State Fire Marshal to establish new standards that ensure developments as a whole are designed to withstand wildfire, not just the buildings within those developments.

This legislation states that if developments can’t meet these standards, locals can’t approve them.

And, crucially, these standards are tiered so that the standards get increasingly stronger as developments get larger. Larger developments put more people in the wildland urban interface and so they must meet higher standards than smaller developments.

As of 2010, California had 4.5 million homes in the wildland urban interface; two million of those are at high or extreme risk from wildfire, according to a 2018 analysis by Verisk, a data analytics firm.

Half of the buildings lost over the last decade in wildfires were in the WUI, built under current fire code standards.

McGuire’s office said SB 12 presents a comprehensive approach to ensuring data driven, fire-safe development. This would include providing enhanced ingress and egress routes (mandating primary and secondary access roads) along with mandated public safety vehicle access.

Mandated funding mechanisms for defensible space maintenance and vegetation management is embedded in this legislation along with mandated wildland fire hazard mitigation planning, among other critical policy items.

SB 12 is supported by the American Planning Association California Chapter, California Fire Chiefs and Fire Districts and the Sonoma Land Trust.
  • 1297
  • 1298
  • 1299
  • 1300
  • 1301
  • 1302
  • 1303
  • 1304
  • 1305
  • 1306

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

How to resolve AdBlock issue?
Refresh this page